Friday, August 27, 2010

Police say exchange of fire erupts in NW Pakistan AP

PESHAWAR, Pakistan A heavy exchange of fire erupted Saturday at an office of security forces in northwest Pakistan, but the motive behind the attack was not immediately clear, police said.

Police official Dost Mohammed said it was unclear who fired at the office of the security forces in Peshawar, the capital of troubled Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province where militants often target police and security forces. Troops immediately surrounded the area were responding to the attack, he said.

The area where the incident happened is located near the American Consulate, but police said that building was not the target of the attack. TV footage showed commandos and police surrounding the consulate and checking vehicles.

The firing began at about 6 a.m. and was continuing after small intervals, Mohammed said.

The building that came under attack belonged to an army intelligence agency, and captured terror suspects were being questioned there at the time of the shooting, two other local police officials said. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the issue.

The shooting began hours after suspected U.S. missiles struck two vehicles carrying militants in northwest Pakistan and killed four of them.

The overnight missile attack happened in the troubled Kurram tribal region bordering Afghanistan. The slain men were from Talibans Haqqani network, which is blamed for launching attacks across the border against the American and NATO forces in Afghanistan, two intelligence officials said.

Although the CIA has repeatedly targeted militant positions in Pakistans tribal regions, such strikes in Kurram are rare.



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Police say exchange of fire erupts in NW Pakistan AP

PESHAWAR, Pakistan A heavy exchange of fire erupted Saturday at an office of security forces in northwest Pakistan, but the motive behind the attack was not immediately clear, police said.

Police official Dost Mohammed said it was unclear who fired at the office of the security forces in Peshawar, the capital of troubled Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province where militants often target police and security forces. Troops immediately surrounded the area were responding to the attack, he said.

The area where the incident happened is located near the American Consulate, but police said that building was not the target of the attack. TV footage showed commandos and police surrounding the consulate and checking vehicles.

The firing began at about 6 a.m. and was continuing after small intervals, Mohammed said.

The building that came under attack belonged to an army intelligence agency, and captured terror suspects were being questioned there at the time of the shooting, two other local police officials said. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the issue.

The shooting began hours after suspected U.S. missiles struck two vehicles carrying militants in northwest Pakistan and killed four of them.

The overnight missile attack happened in the troubled Kurram tribal region bordering Afghanistan. The slain men were from Talibans Haqqani network, which is blamed for launching attacks across the border against the American and NATO forces in Afghanistan, two intelligence officials said.

Although the CIA has repeatedly targeted militant positions in Pakistans tribal regions, such strikes in Kurram are rare.



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Suspected US missile strike kills 4 in NW Pakistan AP

PARACHINAR, Pakistan Suspected U.S. missiles struck two vehicles carrying militants in northwest Pakistan, killing four of them, intelligence officials said Saturday.

The overnight attack happened in the Kurram tribal region bordering Afghanistan. The slain men were from Talibans Haqqani network, which is blamed for launching attacks across the border against the American and NATO forces in Afghanistan, one of the three intelligence officials said.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media.

Although the CIA has repeatedly targeted militant positions in Pakistans tribal regions, such strikes in Kurram are rare.

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Associated Press Writer Rasool Dawar contributed to this report from Dera Ismail Khan.



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Suspected US missile strike kills 4 in NW Pakistan AP

PARACHINAR, Pakistan Suspected U.S. missiles struck two vehicles carrying militants in northwest Pakistan, killing four of them, intelligence officials said Saturday.

The overnight attack happened in the Kurram tribal region bordering Afghanistan. The slain men were from Talibans Haqqani network, which is blamed for launching attacks across the border against the American and NATO forces in Afghanistan, one of the three intelligence officials said.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media.

Although the CIA has repeatedly targeted militant positions in Pakistans tribal regions, such strikes in Kurram are rare.

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Associated Press Writer Rasool Dawar contributed to this report from Dera Ismail Khan.



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Justice Dept signs off on United-Continental deal AP

MINNEAPOLIS The Justice Department said Friday that it has no more antitrust concerns about the deal that would combine United and Continental into the worlds largest airline.

To win that approval, the airlines had to open the door to Southwest Airlines at Continentals hub in Newark, N.J., where it is the dominant carrier. The Justice Department said leasing takeoff and landing permission to Southwest in Newark cleared up its main competitive concern.

Shareholders at Continental Airlines Inc. and United parent UAL Corp. are set to vote on the deal on Sept. 17, and the Transportation Department has to approve it. The airlines now expect the deal to close by Oct. 1.

The combined airline would leapfrog Delta Air Lines Inc. to become the worlds biggest airline. Delta itself grabbed the top spot by buying Northwest Airlines in 2008.

The Justice Department said it thoroughly investigated the United-Continental deal and concluded that their two networks mostly complemented each other, with overlaps on a limited number of routes.

But Newark stood out. Continental had 70.9 percent of Newarks passengers during the year that ended in June. United is only Newarks fifth-biggest airline, but most of its hubs also connect directly to Newark.

Continental and United operate 442 daily roundtrip flights in and out of Newark. The deal with Southwest will give it enough of Continentals slots to operate 18 roundtrip flights there by June 2011.

The move increases competition for Continental at its Newark hub, as well as for United. Currently, Southwest operates a few flights at New Yorks LaGuardia Airport but none at Newark or Kennedy.

Southwest is getting slots at both peak and off-peak travel times, Continental Chairman and CEO Jeff Smisek told workers in a memo. Smisek will be CEO of the combined airline, which is to be called United and based in Uniteds hometown of Chicago.

Southwests entrance to Newark wont change the estimates for revenue gains and cost savings from combining United and Continental, United Chairman and CEO Glenn Tilton told employees in a message on Friday.

"We vigorously compete with Southwest throughout our network," he said.

Mike Boyd, an airline and airport consultant in Colorado, said giving up a few slots at Newark was an easy decision for the combining giants.

"United and Continental want to get this merger done," Boyd said, and if federal regulators "stick their nose in there and say, Give something up, theyre going to give it up."

Bob Jordan, Southwest Airlines Co.s executive vice president for strategy, said Newark would complement his airlines service at LaGuardia and increase competition in the New York market. Southwest, which is based in Dallas, said it was still deciding what cities it will serve from Newark. From LaGuardia, it flies only to Chicago and Baltimore.

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Koenig reported from Dallas.



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Admin. official: FDA to inspect large egg farms AP

WASHINGTON The Food and Drug Administration is planning to inspect all of the countrys largest egg farms before the end of next year following the massive recall of tainted eggs linked to a salmonella outbreak that has sickened as many as 1,500 people.

An Obama administration official says inspectors will visit about 600 large egg farms that produce 80 percent of the nations eggs. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the plan has not yet been announced. This will be the first government effort to inspect large egg farms, as most of them have gone largely uninspected for decades.

The FDAs plan for heightened inspections came after more than half a billion eggs linked to cases of salmonella poisoning were recalled from two Iowa farms this month. The inspections will be conducted as part of new FDA rules put in place this July to prevent salmonella in shell eggs.

The inspections will begin in September with the farms deemed highest risk to consumer safety, the official said. The new inspection plan covers all egg farms that have 50,000 or more hens.

The FDA will also be adjusting the training of the agencys inspectors based on findings from the ongoing investigations at Iowas Wright County Egg and Hillandale Farms, the two farms linked to the salmonella outbreak, the official said.

The aim of the inspections, and the new egg rules, are to prevent an outbreak before it starts. In the past, the government has traditionally only inspected egg facilities, along with many other types of farms, after there is an outbreak. The FDA said it has not inspected either of the two Iowa farms despite at least one of the companies long history of health, safety, environmental and immigration violations.

When on the farms, inspectors will be looking for safety violations that could increase the chance of salmonella entering the egg supply. They will be looking for proper refrigeration of the eggs, adherence to employee sanitation standards and any unsafe bacteria around the farms, among other things.

The rules, which also require producers to do more testing for salmonella and take other precautions, had languished for more than a decade after President Bill Clinton first proposed that egg standards be toughened. The FDA said in July that the new safeguards could reduce the number of salmonella cases by nearly 60 percent.

Food safety advocates have pushed for such improvements in inspections for years. The FDA has traditionally focused on food manufacturing facilities instead of farms as the agencys authority was muddled and there were few standards in place.

Those rules would be bolstered by food safety legislation passed by the House last year and pending in the Senate. The bill would provide more money to the FDA for inspections and enforcement.

The lack of oversight has become a bigger problem as the egg industry, like many other food industries, has consolidated over recent years, placing fewer, larger businesses in control of much of the nations egg supply to consumers.

The FDA said this week that investigators had confirmed the presence of salmonella at Wright County Egg and in feed used by both farms. FDA officials have said they are still investigating how the contamination happened but so far do not expect the recall to expand beyond the two farms.

The number of illnesses, which can be life-threatening, especially to those with weakened immune systems, is expected to increase. No deaths have been reported due to the outbreak.

CDC epidemiologist Dr. Christopher Braden said this is the largest outbreak of this strain of salmonella since the start of the agencys surveillance of outbreaks in the late 1970s.

Thoroughly cooking eggs can kill the bacteria. But health officials are recommending people throw away or return the recalled eggs.

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Online:

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

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

Foodsafety.gov: http://ping.fm/tYo7C

Egg Safety Center industry recall information: http://ping.fm/kRCGh



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Violence targets police, media in Mexico massacre AP

REYNOSA, Mexico A car explodes outside a police station, another outside a television station. A drug gang is suspected of massacring 72 migrants. A prosecutor investigating those deaths suddenly disappears.

Mexicos drug cartels seem to be adopting the tactics of war zones half a world away.

The violence has contributed to fewer migrants crossing the border into the U.S., officials say, because they have to traverse some of Mexicos most dangerous territory to get to Texas. Mexican officials, meanwhile, warn there likely will be more bloodshed in the coming months.

"Violence will persist and even intensify," President Felipe Calderon said Friday at a forum on security where he vowed he would not back down.

The two car explosions happened early Friday morning less than 45 minutes apart in Ciudad Victoria, the capital of the northern state of Tamaulipas near where the slaughtered migrants were found.

The first exploded in front of the offices of the Televisa network and the second in front of transit police offices. There were no injuries, though both caused some damage to buildings, and the Televisa blast knocked out the networks signal for several hours.

The network described the explosion as a car bomb, but the state attorney generals office could not confirm that.

If the explosions were car bombs, it would mean a total of four so far this year in Mexico � a new and frightening tactic that officials say the cartels are using in the escalating drug war.

The prosecutor, Roberto Jaime Suarez, disappeared Wednesday, a day after the 72 bodies were discovered at a ranch outside the northern town of San Fernando, officials said. A transit police officer in the cartel-dominated town was also missing.

No drug gangs claimed responsibility for the violence.

But the massacres lone survivor, 18-year-old Luis Freddy Lala Pomavilla, said the killers identified themselves as Zetas, a group started by former Mexican army special forces soldiers and is now a lethal drug gang that has taken to extorting migrants.

Lala, who is recovering from a gunshot wound to the neck and is under heavy guard, told investigators the migrants from Central and South America were intercepted on a highway by five cars, according to his statement that The Associated Press had access to Friday.

More than 10 gunmen jumped out and identified themselves as Zetas, Lala said. They tied up the migrants and took them to the ranch, where they demanded the migrants work for the gang. When most refused, they were blindfolded, ordered to lie down and shot.

Lalas mother, who lives in the United States with her husband, said she spoke to her son Friday for the first time since the attack. She said shed been trying to reach him since he didnt arrive at their home as scheduled.

"Every afternoon, I was buying phone cards to call the coyote smuggler and find out where my son is," she said. "I did nothing but call and call and call, and there was never an answer."

Then a Mexican hospital worker called and told them their son had been in "an accident."

The AP is not identifying the woman or her location because of potential danger.

Lala has been offered a humanitarian visa that would allow him to stay in Mexico, Immigration Commissioner Cecilia Romero said Friday. But his mother said he was pleading for her to help him get to the U.S.

Investigators have identified 31 of the dead migrants, whose bodies were taken to Reynosa, a city across the border from McAllen, Texas. Those identified include 14 Hondurans, 12 Salvadorans, four Guatemalans and one Brazilian.

The migrants were killed Sunday, Honduran Deputy Foreign Minister Alden Rivera said, citing a Mexican government report. The bodies were already decomposing when Mexican marines found them Tuesday, bound, blindfolded and slumped against a wall at the ranch outside San Fernando.

Rivera said only the 31 identified dead carried documents. Investigators are collecting DNA from the rest, but Rivera said it may be impossible to identify more.

Meanwhile, the bodies of 14 people were found dumped in various locations around the Pacific Coast resort of Acapulco on Friday, and the bodies of eight people who had been shot and burned were found in a car outside the border city of Ciudad Juarez.

The U.S. State Department issued a new warning for Americans living or traveling in Mexico, particularly in border cities. U.S. diplomats in the northern industrial city of Monterrey were told to move their children out of the area � which is also plagued by fighting between the Zetas and its rivals � after a deadly shootout last week in front of the American Foundation School, where many American students are enrolled.

The Mexican government, however, continued to stress that violence is limited to certain parts of the country.

Government security spokesman Alejandro Poire broke the wave of violence down to seven conflicts, and said 80 percent of more than 28,000 drug-related killings since late 2006 have been confined to just 162 of nearly 2,500 Mexican cities.

Kidnappings and attacks on government security patrols are rampant on the highways surrounding San Fernando. Last month, the bodies of 15 people were dumped in the middle of the road from San Fernando to Matamoros, a city across the border from Brownsville, Texas.

Drug gangs have terrorized news organizations in the area, where journalists have been killed and newspaper offices attacked to quiet coverage.

In Tamaulipas, many newspapers and TV stations have simply stopped reporting on the violence. The day after the massacre was discovered, local newspapers carried headlines about the new school year. Even the national Mexican media have covered the story without bylines, as did the Brownsville Herald in Texas.

Mexicos "increasing insecurity" has contributed to a sharp drop in the numbers of migrants in Mexico over the past year, the immigration commissioner said. But Romero said the U.S. economic slump and tighter border security are the main factors.

Mexican immigration agents have rescued 2,750 migrants this year, some stranded in deserts and others who were being held captive by organized crime gangs, Romero added. In Tamaulipas, alone, agents rescued 812 migrants kidnapped by drug gangs, she said. Many of those migrants told authorities the cartels tried to force them into drug trafficking.

"We perhaps saved them from being massacred like the 72 that we lost this time," she said.

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Associated Press writers Olga R. Rodriguez, Katherine Corcoran and Alexandra Olson in Mexico, Juan Carlos Llorca in Guatemala and Samantha Henry in the United States contributed to this report.



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Venezuela pol raffles breast implants for campaign AP

CARACAS, Venezuela A Venezuelan politician is holding an unusual raffle to raise campaign cash. The grand prize: breast implants. For a little under $6 a ticket, donors get the chance to win the pricey operation free of charge.

Breast enlargement is widely popular in image-conscious Venezuela. In recent years as many as 30,000 women have had the operation annually, according to the nations Plastic Surgery Society.

Gustavo Rojas, who is running as an alternate for the National Assembly in Sept. 26 elections, said there is a great demand for the surgery.

The prize for his fund-raising effort may be a little unusual, Rojas conceded Friday, but he said its like raffling off a TV set or a telephone.



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Brewer condemns report to UN mentioning Ariz. law AP

PHOENIX Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer demanded Friday that a reference to the states controversial immigration law be removed from a State Department report to the United Nations human rights commissioner.

The U.S. included its legal challenge to the law on a list of ways the federal government is protecting human rights.

In a letter to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Brewer says it is "downright offensive" that a state law would be included in the report, which was drafted as part of a UN review of human rights in all member nations every four years.

"The idea of our own American government submitting the duly enacted laws of a state of the United States to review by the United Nations is internationalism run amok and unconstitutional," Brewer wrote.

Arizonas law generally requires police officer enforcing other laws to investigate the immigration status of people they suspect are illegal immigrants.

Critics say it would lead officers to target Hispanics. Supporters, including Brewer, say the law prohibits racial profiling and other human rights abuses.

The U.S. Justice Department sued to block the measure, arguing federal law trumps the states authority to enforce immigration laws.

A federal judge in July sided with the Justice Department and blocked enforcement of the laws most controversial provisions a day before it was scheduled to take effect.

In its report, the State Department does not specifically allege that Arizonas law would lead to racial profiling.

"A recent Arizona law, S.B. 1070, has generated significant attention and debate at home and around the world," the report says. "The issue is being addressed in a court action that argues that the federal government has the authority to set and enforce immigration law. That action is ongoing; parts of the law are currently enjoined."

A State Department spokesman had no immediate comment on Brewers letter.

Brewer, a Republican, is running for election in November. Her popularity in Arizona and her national profile have soared since she signed the immigration measure in April.



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American imprisoned in N. Korea returns to Boston AP

BOSTON An American held captive for seven months in North Korea stepped off a plane in his hometown Friday, looking thin but joyful as he hugged the former president who had helped win his release and family and friends surrounded him in a group embrace.

Aijalon Gomes was accompanied by former President Jimmy Carter, who had flown to Pyongyang to negotiate his freedom. Gomes, who had been teaching English in South Korea, was imprisoned and sentenced to eight years hard labor for crossing into the North from China on Jan. 25 for unknown reasons.

North Koreas state-run news agency reported last month that Gomes had attempted suicide, leading his family to ask for his release on humanitarian grounds. North Korea said this week it would release Gomes to Carter if the former president went to get him.

Gomes hugged Carter and then his mother before his loved ones encircled him, praying and waving their hands skyward. One man gripped a small American flag, and others held a banner behind them that read: "Welcome home Disciple of the Lord Aijalon Mahli Gomes. Salvation is ours."

The banner also pictured a Christian cross and contained biblical references to Acts, Psalms, and Job, an Old Testament book about a man who survived great tribulation.

Gomes mother and family members hugged Carter and shook his hand before the group headed inside the terminal, as Gomes smiled and waved at loved ones along the way. A few minutes later, Carter reboarded the plane and left Boston.

In a statement released earlier Friday, the family thanked Carter and said it felt blessed to welcome Gomes home after what it called "a long, dark and difficult period."

"Im just joyful and grateful that my son is home and thank President Jimmy Carter for making sure that he was home safely," Gomes mother, Jacqueline McCarthy, said as she left her home for the airport. "I thank God, I thank God, for everything everyone has done for us."

The family also thanked the North Korean government "for caring for Aijalon during his darkest days, then agreeing to release him on humanitarian grounds."

The statement requested privacy so Gomes could recover from the ordeal, saying that although he was returning home, "the journey towards healing really just begins today." The family passed by media microphones at the airport without commenting.

But later outside McCarthys home, several of Gomes relatives spoke to the media and said Gomes appeared to be fine physically.

"He looks well, he looks very well," his uncle Michael Farrow said.

His 19-year-old brother, Milton McCarthy Jr., described feeling "an overwhelming amount of joy and happiness" when he hugged Gomes.

"It was just like they said, a prayer being answered," he said. "It was truly a blessing."

Family members said theyd had a limited chance to speak with Gomes and added he wasnt expected back at his mothers home Friday, though they didnt say where he was staying.

"Hes just grateful to be home, and hes just thanking God for his safe return," his cousin Ron Odom said.

In Washington, the Department of State welcomed the news of Gomes release, saying officials are "relieved that he will soon be safely reunited with his family," spokesman P.J. Crowley said.

It was unclear what led Gomes to enter the repressive nation. He may have been emulating fellow Christian Robert Park, who was detained after he crossed into North Korea in December to highlight its human rights record, said Jo Sung-rae, a South Korean human rights advocate who met with Gomes. Park was expelled some 40 days later after issuing an apology carried by North Korean state media.

Gomes attended rallies in Seoul in January calling for Parks release and was arrested in North Korea just two weeks later.

Gomes, whose full name is pronounced EYE-jah-lahn GOHMZ, grew up the inner-city Boston neighborhood of Mattapan, then headed to college at Bowdoin in Maine before going to South Korea to teach several years after graduating.

He was the fourth American in a year arrested for trespassing in North Korea, which fought the U.S. during the 1950-53 Korean War and does not have diplomatic relations with Washington. Journalists Laura Ling and Euna Lee were arrested last March and released only after former President Bill Clinton made a similar trip to Pyongyang to plead for their freedom.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon welcomed Gomes release and commended Carter. He took the occasion to appeal to donors for emergency humanitarian aid to North Korea, which has been affected by recent flooding, U.N. spokesman Martin Nesirky said at U.N. headquarters in New York.

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Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Jay Lindsay in Boston, Matthew Lee in Washington, Carol Druga in Atlanta and Edith Lederer in New York.

This version CORRECTS typo in 6th paragraph, smiled instead of smiling.



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Violence targets police, media in Mexico massacre AP

REYNOSA, Mexico A car explodes outside a police station, another outside a television station. A gang is suspected of massacring 72 migrants. A prosecutor investigating those deaths suddenly disappears. Mexicos drug cartels seem to be adopting the tactics of war zones half a world away.

The violence appears to have contributed to fewer migrants crossing the border into the U.S., officials say, as they have to traverse some of Mexicos most dangerous territory to get to Texas. Mexican officials, meanwhile, warned that there likely will be more in the coming months.

"Violence will persist and even intensify," President Felipe Calderon said at a forum on security where he vowed he would not back down.

If authorities confirm the explosions were car bombs, it would mean a total of four such explosives have been used this year in Mexico � a new and frightening tactic that officials say the cartels are using in the escalating drug war.

No drug gangs claimed responsibility for Fridays violence in the northern state of Tamaulipas.

A survivor of the massacre, however, said the killers identified themselves as Zetas, a group of former Mexican army special forces who are now a lethal drug gang that has taken to extorting migrants.

Kidnappings and attacks on government security patrols are rampant in the highways surrounding San Fernando, where the bodies of the 72 Central and South American migrants were discovered on a ranch Tuesday, bound, blindfolded and slumped against a wall.

Last month, the bodies of 15 people were dumped in the middle of the highway from San Fernando to Matamoros, a city across the border from Brownsville, Texas.

The violence extends from Matamoros along the Texas border to Ciudad Juarez, across from El Paso, Texas.

The two car explosions happened less than 45 minutes apart in Ciudad Victoria, the Tamaulipas state capital, the Attorney Generals Office said. The first exploded in front of the offices of the Televisa network and the second in front of transit-police offices.

There were no injuries, though both caused some damage to buildings and knocked out the signal of the Televisa network for several hours.

The network described the explosion as a car bomb, but the state attorney generals office said the cause of the explosions have not been determined.

Drug gangs have terrorized news organizations in northern Mexico, and journalists have been killed and newspaper offices attacked to quiet coverage.

In Tamaulipas, many newspapers and television stations have simply stopped reporting on the violence. The day after the massacre was discovered, local newspapers carried headlines about the new school year. Even the national Mexican have covered the story without bylines, as did the Brownsville Herald in Texas.

Investigators have identified 31 of the migrants, whose were taken to Reynosa, a city across the border from McAllen, Texas. Those identified include 14 Hondurans, 12 Salvadorans, four Guatemalans and one Brazilian.

Meanwhile, the bodies of 14 people were found dumped in various locations around the Pacific Coast resort of Acapulco, while the U.S. State Department issued a new warning for Americans living or traveling in Mexico, particularly in border cities.

The State Department told U.S. diplomats in the northern industrial city of Monterrey to remove their children from the area after a deadly shootout last week in front of the American Foundation School, where many American students are enrolled.

The Mexican government, however, continued to stress in the security forum that the violence is limited to certain parts of the country.

Government security spokesman Alejandro Poire broke the wave of violence down to seven conflicts, and said 80 percent of more than 28,000 drug-related killings since late 2006 are confined to just 162 of nearly 2,500 Mexican cities.

Mexicos "increasing insecurity" has contributed to a sharp drop in immigration over the past year, Immigration Commissioner Cecilia Romero said during a conference call with reporters in Mexico City. But she stressed that the U.S. economic slump and tighter border security has been mostly to blame.

Still, the Gulf Coast corridor where the migrants were intercepted is a popular route for people leaving desperate situations in their home countries.

The massacres lone survivor, 18-year-old Luis Freddy Lala Pomavilla, came from a family in a poor, remote Ecuadorean village and left for the United States to try to support his pregnant, 17-year-old wife, according to reports in the Ecuadorean press. Their first child died at six months, according El Comercio newspaper.

Lala, who is recovering from a gunshot wound to the neck and is under heavy security protection, told investigators that the migrants were intercepted on a highway by five cars, according to his statement that The Associated Press had access to Friday.

More than 10 gunmen jumped out and identified themselves as Zetas, Lala said. They tied up the migrants and took them to the ranch. There, the Zetas demanded that the migrants work for them. Only one accepted. The rest were blindfolded and ordered to lie down on the ground next to a wall. The gunmen then opened fire.

The fate of the migrant who agreed to work for the Zetas was unclear.

The father of one of the Guatemalan victims said he had received calls in the days before the massacre from "people with Mexican accents" demanding $2,000 to free his relative, said Andrea Furlan, spokeswoman for Guatemalas foreign ministry.

Lala has been offered a humanitarian visa that would allow him to stay in Mexico, Romero said.

The prosecutor, Roberto Jaime Suarez, disappeared Wednesday in San Fernando, where the bodies of the migrants were found, the state attorney generals office. A transit police officer in the town is also missing.

Calderon said Suarez was involved in the initial investigation of the massacre. The federal Attorney Generals Office has since taken the lead in the case.

Mexican immigration agents have rescued 2,750 migrants this year, some stranded in deserts and others who were being held captive by organized crime gangs, Romero added. In Tamaulipas, alone, agents rescued 812 migrants kidnapped by drug gangs, she said. Many of those migrants told authorities the cartels tried force them into drug trafficking.

"We perhaps saved them from being massacred like the 72 that we lost this time," Romero said.



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Guard troops to deploy to Arizona border on Monday AP

PHOENIX The first of 532 National Guard troops are set to begin their mission in the southern Arizona desert on Monday under President Barack Obamas plan to beef up U.S.-Mexico border security, although they wont have any law enforcement authority.

About 30 troops will start their jobs on the border Monday, and waves of more troops will be deploying every Monday until all 532 are expected to be on the Arizona border by the end of September. In May, Obama ordered 1,200 National Guard troops to boost security along the border.

California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has said the first of 224 National Guard troops allocated for his state have finished their training and are expected to be deployed to the states border on Wednesday.

Troops in New Mexico were in different stages of training and dont yet know when theyll be deployed on the border. A Texas National Guard spokesman did not immediately return a call for comment.

The troops will be "extra eyes and ears" for U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents, and though they will have guns for self-defense, they will not have the authority to arrest anyone, said Arizona National Guard spokesman Lt. Valentine Castillo.

He said if troops spot illegal immigrants, they must report them to the Border Patrol, whose agents would make the arrest.

The troops will be stationed in the desert at "strategic locations" along the border, he said, but did not provide specifics.

Mario Escalante, a spokesman for the Border Patrols Tucson sector, said the troops will use binoculars, night-vision equipment, remote cameras and computers to conduct surveillance on the border, and will have radios to communicate with Border Patrol agents.

Theyll be set up at high points in various locations in the desert, he said.

"Having those resources and deploying them adequately makes us more effective," he said.

Obama was all but compelled to act on illegal immigration after the passage of a tough new Arizona law thrust the border problem into the public spotlight.

Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer cited government inaction when she signed the law, which reignited that national illegal immigration debate, caused the governors popularity to soar in the state and turned her into a national figure.

The law went into effect July 29 after a judge ruled to block its most controversial sections, including a part that required officers to check a persons immigration status while enforcing other laws. Brewer is appealing the decision and says shell take it all the way to the Supreme Court.

Brewer has been a sharp critic of the National Guard deployment, saying the troops arent enough and that Obama should have sent 6,000 along the border, half of them to Arizona.

But in March 2009, Brewer wrote Defense Secretary Robert Gates asking for 250 National Guard troops, less than half the amount now being sent.

Brewer spokesman Paul Senseman did not immediately return a call for comment Friday afternoon.

Santa Cruz County Sheriff Tony Estrada, whose territory is along the Mexico border and includes Nogales, said any additional manpower on the border is welcome and will help.

"Its definitely a start," he said. "Any more boots on the ground, theyll make things safer and itll make the border more secure, especially for the Border Patrol � they have a humongous task out there, not only with illegal immigration but drugs."

But he said thered have to be "thousands and thousands" of troops on the border to come close to having any major impact on illegal immigration.

"The border will never be sealed," he said. "Theyll find ways to go under it through tunnels, go through ports of entry with false documents or false claims; they find ways of going over, and they find ways to go around it."

Former President George W. Bush sent 6,000 National Guard troops to the border in June 2006, and they also had no arrest power. Those troops were pulled out in July 2008.



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PR police arrest runaway Russian in homicide case AP

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico A Russian man who walked out of a Puerto Rico courtroom before a judge could consider a negligent homicide charge against him has been detained at the airport.

Authorities say Dodik Siyunov was not under guard when he left the court. He was arrested later Friday before boarding a plane at the Luis Munoz Marin International Airport.

Prosecutor Ines Escobar says Siyunovs lawyer told the judge after his 27-year-old client left that he intended to travel back to New York, where he lives.

The judge approved the negligent homicide charge against Siyunov in absentia.

Siyunov is accused of running over a couple in Palmas del Mar on Aug. 10, killing a 21-year-old woman and injuring her 23-year-old husband.

This version CORRECTS charge in headline to negligent homicide instead of murder.



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Billionaire sues hi-tech giants

The co-founder of Microsoft, Paul Allen, is suing several high-tech giants for infringing patents held by a firm he founded in the 1990s.

The legal action against Apple, Yahoo, Facebook, Google and eBay, as well as six other firms, asserts that web technologies first developed by Interval Licensing have been infringed.

The patents are key to how e-commerce and search websites worked, it says.

Google, Facebook and eBay immediately said they would fight the accusations.

"This lawsuit against some of Americas most innovative companies reflects an unfortunate trend of people trying to compete in the courtroom instead of the marketplace," a Google spokesman said in a statement.

"Innovation - not litigation - is the way to bring to market the kinds of products and services that benefit millions of people around the world."

A Facebook spokesman called the action "completely without merit".

Key technology

In the suit filed in the US District Court in Washington on Friday, Interval said it was seeking damages and a halt to the alleged violations of its patents.

"Start Quote

We will do whatever is necessary. This is an important step"

End Quote David Postman Interval Licensing

The four patents concerned essentially involve using web browsers to find information; letting users know when items of interest appear; and enabling adverts, stock quotes, news update or video images to pop up on a computer screen while the user is engaged in another activity.

The company also alleges that it helped fund outside projects including research by Larry Page and Sergey Brin that resulted in Google.

The other companies named in the lawsuit are AOL, YouTube, Netflix, Office Depot, OfficeMax and Staples.

Interval does not name a precise figure for damages, but a spokesman told the BBC that it would be "determined as this progresses".

"We will do whatever is necessary. This is an important step. It is the first time that Paul Allen has filed a suit like this," David Postman said.

"Some of the technology developed by people working for Paul Allen a decade ago is now key to this search and e-commerce space. It is part of our daily life on the web and has shown itself to be of value to the industry today."

Patent activity

There has been a recent flurry of patent lawsuits involving Silicon Valley companies.

Apple, Nokia and HTC are involved in a long-running dispute over patent infringements involving smartphones.

Oracle has fired off its own legal action against Google, alleging that the search giants Android mobile phone operating system infringed patents Oracle now holds for the open-source Java programming language, acquired through its purchase of Sun Microsystems.

There has also been an increase in people buying up companies to leverage the patent portfolio. But Mr Postman said that is not the case with Mr Allens action.

"We are not asserting patents that other companies have filed, nor are we buying patent originally assigned to someone else. These are patents developed by and for Interval," he explained.

Mr Allen co-founded Microsoft with Bill Gates in 1975, and later started Interval in 1992. At its height, the company employed over 110 scientists, physicists and engineers.

The Wall Street Journal said among those who worked there were Robert Shaw, a co-creator of chaos theory; Max Mathews, who wrote the first widely used computer programme for music; and David Reed, one of the founders of the TCP/IP internet protocol.

Mr Allen, who made billions of dollars from his Microsoft shares, recently pledged most of his $31.5bn fortune to charity.

Last year, he revealed he had been diagnosed with non-Hodgkins lymphoma.



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Sudan leader defies arrest warrant, visits Kenya AP

NAIROBI, Kenya Sudans president defied an international arrest warrant by visiting Kenya on Friday, causing an outcry from the International Criminal Court which fruitlessly pressured authorities here into arresting the man accused of masterminding the genocide in Darfur.

Rather than arrest Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, who was invited along with other regional leaders for the signing of Kenyas new constitution, officials here treated him with the dignity accorded a head of state. Wearing a dark suit and tie, al-Bashir had a front-row position for the historic ceremony.

The ICC has no police force and depends on member states to enforce its orders. Al-Bashirs presence in Kenya underscored that the system to bring the worlds worst human rights violators to justice depends on member states and raised doubts about Kenyas willingness to hand over suspects expected to soon be charged by the ICC for postelection violence that left more than 1,000 Kenyans dead in 2007-08.

Al-Bashir was charged in March 2009 with five counts of crimes against humanity and two of war crimes for allegedly orchestrating atrocities in Darfur, a region of Sudan. In July, the ICC charged him with three counts of genocide, the first time the worlds first permanent war crimes tribunal has issued genocide charges.

Darfurs ethnic African rebels rose up in 2003, accusing Sudans Arab-dominated central government of neglect and discrimination. U.N. officials estimated 300,000 people died and 2.7 million were displaced.

In The Hague, Netherlands, where the ICC is based, the judges said in a written order that Kenya "has a clear obligation to cooperate" in enforcing arrest warrants. The court also ordered its registrar to inform the U.N. Security Council of al-Bashirs presence in Kenya "in order for them to take any measure they may deem appropriate."

"His presence there is a slap on the souls of the victims of the genocide in Darfur," said Ahmed Hussain Adam, spokesman for the Justice and Equality Movement, the most powerful rebel group in Darfur.

President Barack Obama said he was disappointed at the presence of al-Bashir, saying in a statement "we consider it important that Kenya honor its commitments to the ICC and to international justice, along with all nations that share those responsibilities."

Kenyan Foreign Affairs Minister Moses Wetangula defended the invitation, saying al-Bashir is the "head of state of a friendly neighbor state."

Al-Bashir later skipped out on a state luncheon hosted by the Kenyan president. Earlier this year, he traveled to Chad, another ICC member state that also opted not to apprehend him.

Wetangula argued that Kenya did not act on the ICC warrant because the African Union has decided no member should arrest the Sudanese leader. Other AU members such as South Africa, though, have indicated that they would arrest al-Bashir if he visited their countries.

Al-Bashirs stop in Kenya was kept under wraps until the last minute. A schedule of heads of state sent out Thursday evening indicated that Sudan would be represented by the countrys first vice president.

Al-Bashir is the first sitting head of state indicted by the worlds first permanent war crimes tribunal since it was established in 2002. He refuses to recognize the courts jurisdiction.

While the Kenya trip only marked only his second trip to an ICC member state, al-Bashir has visited Ethiopia, Eritrea, Egypt and Libya, attended an Arab League summit in Qatar and performed a pilgrimage to Islams holiest city, Mecca, in Saudi Arabia.

A top Kenyan human rights activist, Njonjo Mue, said al-Bashirs visit should worry those seeking justice for Kenyas spasm of violence more than two years ago.

"If Kenya cannot arrest and transfer al-Bashir, it is unlikely it will arrest and transfer its top politicians and businessmen who may be indicted," Mue, the head of the Kenya chapter of the International Center for Transitional Justice, told The Associated Press.

ICC prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo has said he believes that crimes against humanity were committed during the violence after Kenyas 2007 election. He has said he expects the investigation to conclude by the end of this year, culminating in charges against up to roughly a half-dozen people who allegedly directed the violence.

___

Larson reported from Johannesburg. Associated Press writers Mike Corder in The Hague, Netherlands and Tom Maliti in Nairobi also contributed to this report.

___

Online:

International Criminal Court member states: http://ping.fm/YSEDV



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Federal contractor charged with leaking secrets AP

WASHINGTON The Obama administration is accusing an analyst who worked at the State Department of leaking top secret information about North Korea to a reporter. Its the latest move in an aggressive campaign to crack down on leaks, even as the administration supports proposed legislation that would shield reporters from having to identify their sources.

Steven Kim, who worked at State as a federal contractor, is named in a federal indictment unsealed Friday.

The Justice Department says he passed information about U.S. intelligence about a foreign country to a Fox News reporter. The country is believed to be North Korea. He is pleading innocent.

The administration recently arrested an Army official for leaking documents to a website and charged a former intelligence official with leaking information about NSA mismanagement.



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2 cars explode in Mexico where 72 bodies found AP

SAN FERNANDO, Mexico Two cars exploded early Friday in a northern state where officials are investigating the killing of 72 Central and South American migrants, while a prosecutor investigating the massacre has disappeared.

The prosecutor, Roberto Jaime Suarez, disappeared Wednesday in the town of San Fernando, where the bodies of the migrants were found, the Tamaulipas state attorney generals office said in a statement. A transit police officer in the town is also missing.

President Felipe Calderon, speaking during a forum on security, said Suarez, a Tamaulipas state prosecutor, was involved in the initial investigation of the massacre, which authorities have blamed on the Zetas drug cartel. The federal Attorney Generals Office has since taken the lead in the case.

The two car explosions happened less than 45 minutes apart in Ciudad Victoria, the Tamulipas state capital, the Attorney Generals Office said. The first exploded in front of the offices of the Televisa network and the second in front of transit-police offices.

There were no injuries, though both caused some damage to buildings and knocked out the signal of the Televisa network for several hours. The explosion outside Televisa was felt for several blocks.

The network described the explosion as a car bomb, but the state attorney generals office said the cause of the explosions have not been determined.

If confirmed, it would mean a total of four car bombs in Mexico this year � a new and frightening tactic in the countrys escalating drug war.

The first exploded July 5 in the northern border city of Ciudad Juarez, across the border from El Paso, Texas, killing a federal police officer and two other people. The second, which caused no injuries, happened just two weeks ago in front of police headquarters in Ciudad Victoria.

Just north of Ciudad Victoria, heavily guarded investigators working at a private funeral home in San Fernando identified 31 of the 72 massacred migrants, whose bodies were discovered on a ranch Tuesday, bound, blindfolded and slumped against a wall.

Those identified include 14 Hondurans, 12 Salvadorans, four Guatemalans and one Brazilian, the state attorney generals office said.



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Cuba embraces 2 surprising free-market reforms AP

HAVANA Cuba has issued a pair of surprising free-market decrees, allowing foreign investors to lease government land for up to 99 years � potentially touching off a golf-course building boom � and loosening state controls on commerce to let islanders grow and sell their own fruit and vegetables.

The moves, published into law in the Official Gazette on Thursday and Friday and effective immediately, are significant steps as President Raul Castro promises to scale back the communist states control of the economy while attempting to generate new revenue for a government short on cash.

"These are part of the opening that the government wants to make given the countrys situation," said Oscar Espinosa Chepe, a state-trained economist who is now an anti-communist dissident.

Cuba said it was modifying its property laws "with the aim of amplifying and facilitating" foreign investment in tourism, and that doing so would provide "better security and guarantees to the foreign investor."

A small army of investors in Canada, Europe and Asia have been waiting to crack the market for long-term tourism in Cuba, built on drawing well-heeled visitors who could live part-time on the island instead of just hitting the beach for a few days.

It may also help the country embrace golf tourism. Investment firms have for decades proposed building lavish 18-hole courses ringed by luxury housing under long-term government leases. Cuba currently has just two golf courses nationwide, but the Tourism Ministry has said it wants to build at least 10 more.

Endorsing 99-year property agreements might be a first step toward making some golf developments a reality, but also makes it easy to imagine a Cuban coastline dotted with timeshares, luxury villas and other hideaways that could serve as second homes.

Cuba has allowed leases of state land for up to 50 years with the option to extend them for an additional 25, but foreign investors had long pressed tourism officials to endorse 99-year lease deals to provide additional peace of mind to investors.

John Kavulich, a senior policy adviser for the U.S.-Cuba Trade and Economic Council in New York, said Mexico has used similar leaseholds to encourage foreign investment despite restrictions on non-Mexicans owning coastal property � but that Cubas similarities with Mexico end there.

"I dont think its going to open a floodgate. I think it may turn on a tap so that people know theres water," he said. "Certainly its an improvement. However ... making one change isnt a panacea to solving the issues that companies have in evaluating their opportunities in Cuba."

The islands ever-weak economy has been rocked by the global financial crisis and a sustained drop in prices of the countrys chief natural resources.

Cuban officials have tried before to balance their drive for an egalitarian society with an appeal to foreigners seeking to own a piece of paradise. Scrambling for revenue in the late 1990s, the government authorized private foreign ownership of posh apartments in Havana and even signed a $250 million deal for beachfront apartments and timeshares with a Canadian company.

Many of those projects stalled, however, failing to draw enough foreign investment. Meanwhile, some overseas businessmen bought Havana apartments but allowed Cubans to live in them � violating rules barring islanders from doing so. The government eventually bought out most of the residences it had hoped would be owned by foreigners.

The decree allowing expanded sale of farm products, meanwhile, could have far greater impact on ordinary Cubans. It authorizes them to produce their own agricultural goods � from melons to milk, on a small scale � and sell them from home or using special kiosks on their property.

The decree marked the first major expansion of self-employment since Castro said in an address before parliament Aug. 1 that the government would reduce state controls on small businesses � a big deal in a country where about 95 percent of people work for the state.

The new law allows Cubans to grow whatever they wish and sell it, but will require them to pay taxes on what they earn.

Chepe, who was jailed for his political beliefs in 2003 but later paroled for health reasons, said the decree would stamp out inefficiencies that plague the state farming system, calling it an "intelligent move."

"In Cuba, the problem has not only been production, but also distribution," he said.

Cubans already sell fruits, cuts of pork, cheese and other items on the sides of highways across the country, fleeing into the bushes whenever the police happen past. Fridays measure would legalize such practices, while ensuring the state takes a cut of the profits.

The new rules are consistent with other efforts by Castros government, which has allowed minor free-market openings while also seeking to eliminate black-market income.

Authorities have moved to approve more licenses for private taxis while getting tough on unauthorized gypsy cabs. They also made it easier to get permits for home improvements and increased access to building materials, while more strictly enforcing prohibitions against illegal building.



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Cuba embraces 2 surprising free-market reforms AP

HAVANA Cuba has issued a pair of surprising free-market decrees, allowing foreign investors to lease government land for up to 99 years � potentially touching off a golf-course building boom � and loosening state controls on commerce to let islanders grow and sell their own fruit and vegetables.

The moves, published into law in the Official Gazette on Thursday and Friday and effective immediately, are significant steps as President Raul Castro promises to scale back the communist states control of the economy while attempting to generate new revenue for a government short on cash.

"These are part of the opening that the government wants to make given the countrys situation," said Oscar Espinosa Chepe, a state-trained economist who is now an anti-communist dissident.

Cuba said it was modifying its property laws "with the aim of amplifying and facilitating" foreign investment in tourism, and that doing so would provide "better security and guarantees to the foreign investor."

A small army of investors in Canada, Europe and Asia have been waiting to crack the market for long-term tourism in Cuba, built on drawing well-heeled visitors who could live part-time on the island instead of just hitting the beach for a few days.

It may also help the country embrace golf tourism. Investment firms have for decades proposed building lavish 18-hole courses ringed by luxury housing under long-term government leases. Cuba currently has just two golf courses nationwide, but the Tourism Ministry has said it wants to build at least 10 more.

Endorsing 99-year property agreements might be a first step toward making some golf developments a reality, but also makes it easy to imagine a Cuban coastline dotted with timeshares, luxury villas and other hideaways that could serve as second homes.

Cuba has allowed leases of state land for up to 50 years with the option to extend them for an additional 25, but foreign investors had long pressed tourism officials to endorse 99-year lease deals to provide additional peace of mind to investors.

John Kavulich, a senior policy adviser for the U.S.-Cuba Trade and Economic Council in New York, said Mexico has used similar leaseholds to encourage foreign investment despite restrictions on non-Mexicans owning coastal property � but that Cubas similarities with Mexico end there.

"I dont think its going to open a floodgate. I think it may turn on a tap so that people know theres water," he said. "Certainly its an improvement. However ... making one change isnt a panacea to solving the issues that companies have in evaluating their opportunities in Cuba."

The islands ever-weak economy has been rocked by the global financial crisis and a sustained drop in prices of the countrys chief natural resources.

Cuban officials have tried before to balance their drive for an egalitarian society with an appeal to foreigners seeking to own a piece of paradise. Scrambling for revenue in the late 1990s, the government authorized private foreign ownership of posh apartments in Havana and even signed a $250 million deal for beachfront apartments and timeshares with a Canadian company.

Many of those projects stalled, however, failing to draw enough foreign investment. Meanwhile, some overseas businessmen bought Havana apartments but allowed Cubans to live in them � violating rules barring islanders from doing so. The government eventually bought out most of the residences it had hoped would be owned by foreigners.

The decree allowing expanded sale of farm products, meanwhile, could have far greater impact on ordinary Cubans. It authorizes them to produce their own agricultural goods � from melons to milk, on a small scale � and sell them from home or using special kiosks on their property.

The decree marked the first major expansion of self-employment since Castro said in an address before parliament Aug. 1 that the government would reduce state controls on small businesses � a big deal in a country where about 95 percent of people work for the state.

The new law allows Cubans to grow whatever they wish and sell it, but will require them to pay taxes on what they earn.

Chepe, who was jailed for his political beliefs in 2003 but later paroled for health reasons, said the decree would stamp out inefficiencies that plague the state farming system, calling it an "intelligent move."

"In Cuba, the problem has not only been production, but also distribution," he said.

Cubans already sell fruits, cuts of pork, cheese and other items on the sides of highways across the country, fleeing into the bushes whenever the police happen past. Fridays measure would legalize such practices, while ensuring the state takes a cut of the profits.

The new rules are consistent with other efforts by Castros government, which has allowed minor free-market openings while also seeking to eliminate black-market income.

Authorities have moved to approve more licenses for private taxis while getting tough on unauthorized gypsy cabs. They also made it easier to get permits for home improvements and increased access to building materials, while more strictly enforcing prohibitions against illegal building.



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Chilean family survives quake, faces mine collapse AP

COPIAPO, Chile Carola Narvaez breathed in the Atacama Deserts cold dawn air and slowly began to exhale the story of how her family survived a devastating earthquake and worked to rebuild their lives � only for her husband to end up trapped deep inside a Chilean mine.

A tale of two disasters, Narvaezs account embodies the challenges still faced by the poor in Chile despite two decades as Latin Americas economic darling. It is a story of incredible misfortune, unwavering faith and a love she said has only been strengthened by adversity.

Narvaezs husband, Raul Bustos, is a heavy-machinery mechanic whose skills have always been in demand. For years he has made a living repairing the equipment that rips copper, the lifeblood of Chiles economy, out of the earth, or helping build massive ships in ports along the nations 4,000-mile 6,400-kilometer coastline.

Six months ago Friday, the family was living in the port city of Talcahuano, 300 miles 500 kilometers south of the capital, where Raul was working for Chilean shipbuilder Asmar.

Like most Chileans, the couple were sound asleep when one of the most powerful earthquakes registered in a century struck the central coast Feb. 27.

What the earthquake did not knock down, the tsunami it triggered washed away. While the familys home survived, ships in Asmars yards were pushed into the street and the builders operations destroyed.

Having to support his wife and two small children, Bustos looked to northern Chile, where mines dot the barren lunar landscape. Two months later he found his way to the San Jose mine, one of hundreds of midsize operations digging into the rocky, red earth in search of copper, gold and other minerals. Narvaez stayed behind with their children, 5-year-old Maria Paz and 3-year-old Vicente.

But when word arrived of the Aug. 5 collapse at the mine, Narvaez left the kids with her parents and rushed to the mine site, where she has camped out since.

"In the earthquake we just had to keep on living. We had our lives," Narvaez said as she sat in a tent camp just outside the gates leading to the copper and gold mine where Raul is buried 2,200 feet 700 meters underground. "This is the same. It is producing much anguish, isolation, fear. But were alive. My husband is alive down in that mine, and we will have another happy ending."

Bustos and the 32 other miners � the most experienced of whom make about $1,000 a month � were trapped Aug. 5 by a massive collapse of the main access shaft, which corkscrews more than four miles seven kilometers into the mountain. They were cut off from the outside world for 17 days until Sunday, when rescuers successfully sank a narrow bore-hole down to their shelter after seven failed attempts. Two additional bore-holes were later drilled.

Narvaez said Friday her hopes were further bolstered after seeing her husband on a 45-minute video the miners made with a small camera sent to them via one of the bore-holes.

Also, the notes that she has passed back and forth with her husband have helped.

In a strong voice, she read one of them aloud.

"My little thing, you should know the words you sent me made me cry," her husband wrote on a piece of smudged, lined paper, referring to an earlier note she sent him. "They have always been with me, along with my God who gave me strength to overcome anxiety."

In the note, Bustos tells his wife that he nicknamed the first drill that finally reached the miners after the couples daughter, Maria Paz, because it was "the winner, who never loses, and it broke through."

Relatives of the trapped miners repeat the same answer when asked what drove their men to toil underground in a small mine that does not have the same safety regulations as larger operations.

"There is plenty of work outside of mining in the Atacama, mostly in agriculture," said Lila Ramirez, whose 63-year-old husband, Mario Gomez, is also trapped in the mine. "But a man wants to work in the mine because it is a way to improve the economic situation of a home, to create a life of dignity."

Chiles average annual per-capita growth rate of 4.1 percent over the past two decades makes it the most successful of all Latin American nations, according to the World Bank. Per-capita incomes have doubled and the nation is perched on the edge of joining the ranks of the worlds developed nations.

Yet 14 percent, or 2.3 million, of Chiles 16 million people still live below the poverty line, according to Bank statistics. Several million more are scraping by just above it.

Some of them risk their lives in the mines of the Atacama Desert � home to great mineral wealth that makes up 40 percent of Chiles export income � and where hard, dangerous labor gives them a chance at a better life.

Other regions of Chile have made strides in fighting poverty.

But even as Atacama has experienced "dynamic growth," according to a recent report from the U.N. Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean, it has not reduced poverty levels.

Warming her hands around an open-air fire, Narvaez, 36, an administrator in a health-care company, said poverty certainly was not looming for her family.

But a desire to climb Chiles socioeconomic ladder drove her husband to start working in the San Jose mine just weeks after the tsunami washed away his other job. Since April, he has alternated seven-day shifts in the mine with weeklong stretches at home with family back in Talcahuano, 700 miles 1,125 kilometers away.

"Mining is one of the best-paid jobs a man can get in Chile," Narvaez said. "But it means your husband is moving around, is often away and only comes back home for short periods."

Narvaez has become close friends with Cristy Coronado, the wife of trapped miner Juan Aguilar. Coronado traveled 900 miles 1,450 kilometers north from the couples hometown in Los Lagos to a tent camp outside the San Jose mine.

Aguilar had been working at San Jose for a year � since before the earthquake.

"It is common in Chile for husbands to live far away from their wives in search of work, traveling back and forth, away from us for stretches of time," Coronado said. "It is a fact of life for those wanting to make more money."

Narvaez acknowledged that overcoming two disasters in six months was tough, but expressed optimism that rescuers will be able to free the men. Nor does she feel cursed.

"If it were bad luck, then there would be a bad ending," she said. "Neither of these disasters will have a bad ending."

Religious faith and love have helped her endure a year full of trials.

"Faith is what allows us to feel alive but it is love that keeps us here waiting," she said, motioning around at the tents where the trapped miners relatives are staying. "If not, there would not be a single person in this camp. Love, more than faith, is what motivates me."



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SAfrican girl survives attack, then dies in crash AP

JOHANNESBURG A South African girl who survived a criminal attack that shocked the nation was among those killed when a train hit a school van this week, a family spokesman said Friday.

Liesel Augis was only six years old when she was raped, beaten unconscious with a brick and thrown into a fire by a family friend in 2006. She survived and became known as "Little Rock" because of her strength and resilience.

On Wednesday, Liesels bus driver went around a closed railroad crossing gate and the van was hit by a train. Nine children died at the scene in Cape Town, and a 10th died Friday. Only the driver and four children survived.

Family spokesman Malvern de Bruyn said that Liesel had a zest for life, and the accident has left a deep scar in the family and the nation.

"We could see she was someone who wanted to defy anything that would cut her life," de Bruyn said.

Liesels 2006 attacker, Abraham James, was sentenced to 28 years in jail without parole.

Her attack was one of many that took place between 2000 and 2006 by several assailants at a stretch of open land in a suburb of Cape Town now known as "Bushes of Devil."

The familys plight did not end with her attack. Days after James arrest, unknown people tried to set fire to Liesels home. De Bruyn said he had to find a refuge for them in the same area.

After the attack Liesel started school at the Good Hope Primary School in Kuilsrivier, a suburb of Cape Town. She had to conceal her name and the incident from her schoolmates, de Bruyn said.

"We could not divulge her real name, only the school principal knew the name," de Bruyn said. But "the private school opened their arms to our child and gave all the support she needed."

Even Liesel would not talk about the incident, and would only refer to herself as "Little Rock," the name de Bruyn gave her, he said. The pseudonym suppressed her pain and her anger, but allowed her to build friendships without being taunted at school, he said.

De Bruyn derived the name from the 1956 march in which some 20,000 women protested against the introduction of pass books that the apartheid government required them to carry at all times which restricted them to certain areas. The women then chanted, "you struck a rock, you struck a woman."

"I named her Little Rock because she was as tough as a rock like those women who fight against apartheid," he said.

Liesels problems were compounded by a family that was destitute and lived in a shack, he said.

She was only able to go to school after a trust fund called The Little Rock Foundation was started for her and other child victims of rape. Local academics, non-governmental organizations and the community of Greater Blue Downs in western South Africa contributed to the foundation.

The family that had to deal with the attacks, now has to deal with their little girls death. Police said they are investigating a case of homicide against the van driver.

Liesel will be buried on Sept. 4 along with nine other victims from Wednesdays crash.



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Sony obtains ban on PS3 hack chip

Sony has won a temporary ban to prevent Australian distributors selling a hardware hack for the PlayStation 3 PS3.

The PS3Jailbreak "dongle" allows gamers to play homemade and pirated games on the games console.

The ban prevents OzModChips, Mod Supplier and Quantronics from importing, distributing or selling the device.

Sony has until August 31 to makes its case to the court for a permanent ban.

If it fails, the chips could go on sale on 1 September.

The firm declined to comment on the proceedings. The Australian distributors could not be reached.

The court order also gives Sony control of all of the dongles in the firms possession and allows the electronics giant to test the devices - including "destructive analysis" - to see how they work.

Homebrew games

PS3Jailbreak is a dongle containing software that allows users to save games to the consoles hard drive.

It is the first product to crack the security on the PS3.

It was met with scepticism when videos of the device - posted by OzModChips - first appeared online in early August.

At the time, a spokesperson for Console Pro, another distributor based in the Netherlands, told BBC News the "dongle converts a retail unit into a dev unit".

Dev units are used by developers to test code for the machine.

"Dev mode means it will run any - even unsigned - code," said the spokesperson. "Using a simple backup maker or player software, you can play backed-up [saved] games without the actual disc being in the PS3."

The legality of these products - commonly called modchips - differs by country.

In Australia they are legal, whilst in the UK a recent court case brought by Nintendo said that "game copiers" were illegal to import, advertise or sell.

Proponents of modchips say they are the only way to play homemade games, known as "homebrews".

It is not known whether distributors in other countries have been served similar notices.

But, a spokesperson for Console Pro told BBC News in the wake of Fridays ban that the firm had "not heard anything from Sony or any lawyer or court yet".

"I really doubt Sony has grounds to ban this dongle."



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Corps: New Orleans levee upgrades nearly ready AP

NEW ORLEANS Five years after Hurricane Katrina flooded more than 80 percent of this city, the Army Corps of Engineers says billions of dollars of work has made the city much safer and many of its defenses could withstand a storm as strong as the deadly 2005 hurricane.

Surprisingly, many locals � even the vocal critics of the Army Corps � say its assessment of work done on the levee system is not far off the mark.

Since Katrina flooded New Orleans on Aug. 29, 2005, and killed more than 1,800 people, New Orleans has become a round-the-clock construction site and Congress gave the Army Corps more than $14 billion to fix and upgrade the levees and other defenses. Numerous breaches in the hurricane protection system led to the flooding that devastated the New Orleans area. The corps says about half of the work is complete, and the rest should be finished by next summer.

"The good news is that the Corps of Engineers has done an about-face in its sense of urgency," said Sandy Rosenthal, the executive director of Levees.Org, a citizens group formed after Katrina thats waged numerous battles with the corps. "By their actions, words and deeds, it looks like they are doing everything they can to meet their deadline."

The threat of flooding from another storm remains a top concern in the city, which has a population thats about 80 percent of what it was before Katrina.

The corps has given itself until June 2011 to make the city safer from big storms, and says it will meet the deadline. Once the upgrades are complete, the corps says very little of the city would flood if a storm like Katrina were to hit again.

The corps brass say that even such a storm were to hit tomorrow, the city would be in much better shape.

"This could handle Hurricane Katrinas storm surge if Hurricane Katrina followed the same path it did during 2005," said Col. Robert A. Sinkler, the corps official in charge of levee work, as his boat cruised by a massive dam-like wall being built across two miles of open water and marsh near New Orleans Lower 9th Ward.

The massive $1.3 billion, 26-foot-high structure is meant to keep storm surge out of the Industrial Canal, long considered the "Achilles heel" in New Orleans levee system.

The agency likes to call a 23-mile stretch of levee and floodwall its building along St. Bernard Parish the "Great Wall of St. Bernard." The levee-and-wall structure will include enough steel to build 28 Eiffel Towers. The agency plans to complete two miles of the 30-foot high structure every month.

The work is critical to protect St. Bernard, a parish where nearly every building was flooded in Katrina. Fewer than 60 percent of its structures have been rebuilt, and its population is still down by about 35 percent.

Victor B. Zillmer, the corps engineer overseeing work on the storm surge barrier, said the wall was rock solid. He said enough concrete was used in it to "fill a football field 93 feet high."

He added: "Its kind of like an iceberg too. You see about 10 percent of it up here. Most of it is actually down below."

"All in all, its better protection than we had in the past. Whether or not its enough, who knows," said Tom Jackson, a past president of the American Society of Civil Engineers and commissioner with the Southeast Louisiana Flood Protection Authority-East, a state panel formed after Katrina to oversee levee work in New Orleans.

Jackson agreed that the levee system should be able to handle a Katrina-like storm once upgrades are done. Still, he said there are many lingering concerns � including signs of corrosion on some of the new flood walls.

Many unknowns rermain because the new system has yet to be tested by a major storm.

"Its like combat: Defend your perimeter. Where are my weakest points on my perimeter? Water will find the weakest point," said J. David Rogers, an engineer and levee expert at the Missouri University of Science and Technology in Rolla, Mo.

Rogers said Katrina exposed numerous weak points � floodgates that did not close, porous ground and sewer lines that undermined defenses.

Rogers said that while "everybodys attention is focused on what failed the last time," the next major storm could expose new weak points.

Despite the uncertainties, residents are feeling better about their chances.

David Warino, a 46-year-old operations manager at a shipyard in Avondale, La., said he bought a two-story house next to the site of a breach on the 17th Street Canal in New Orleans because he felt confident.

"This seemed like a safe spot," Warino said. "Were on high ground. The corps rebuilt the wall here."



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Recession may have pushed U.S. birth rate to new low AP

The U.S. birth rate has dropped for the second year in a row, and experts think the wrenching recession led many people to put off having children. The 2009 birth rate also set a record: lowest in a century.

Births fell 2.7 percent last year even as the population grew, numbers released Friday by the National Center for Health Statistics show.

"Its a good-sized decline for one year. Every month is showing a decline from the year before," said Stephanie Ventura, the demographer who oversaw the report.

The birth rate, which takes into account changes in the population, fell to 13.5 births for every 1,000 people last year. Thats down from 14.3 in 2007 and way down from 30 in 1909, when it was common for people to have big families.

"It doesnt matter how you look at it � fertility has declined," Ventura said.

The situation is a striking turnabout from 2007, when more babies were born in the United States than any other year in the nations history. The recession began that fall, dragging stocks, jobs and births down.

"When the economy is bad and people are uncomfortable about their financial future, they tend to postpone having children. We saw that in the Great Depression the 1930s and were seeing that in the Great Recession today," said Andrew Cherlin, a sociology professor at Johns Hopkins University.

"It could take a few years to turn this around," he added, noting that the birth rate stayed low throughout the 1930s.

Another possible factor in the drop: a decline in immigration to the United States.

The downward trend invites worrisome comparisons to Japan and its lost decade of choked growth in the 1990s and very low birth rates. Births in Japan fell 2 percent in 2009 after a slight rise in 2008, its government has said.

Not so in Britain, where the population took its biggest jump in almost half a century last year and the fertility rate is at its highest level since 1973. Frances birth rate also has been rising; Germanys birth rate is lower but rising as well.

"Our birth rate is still higher than the birth rate in many wealthy countries and we also have many immigrants entering the country. So we do not need to be worried yet about a birth dearth" that would crimp the nations ability to take care of its growing elderly population, Cherlin said.

The new U.S. report is a rough count of births from states. It estimates there were 4,136,000 births in 2009, down from 4,251,095 in 2008 and more than 4.3 million in 2007.

The report does not give details on trends in different age groups. That will come next spring and will give a clearer picture who is and is not having children, Ventura said.

Last springs report, on births in 2008, showed an overall drop but a surprising rise in births to women over 40, who may have felt they were running out of time to have children and didnt want to delay despite the bad economy.

Women postponing having children because of careers also may find they have trouble conceiving, said Mark Mather of the Population Reference Bureau, a Washington-based demographic research group.

"For some of those women, theyre going to find themselves in their mid-40s where its going to be hard to have the number of children they want," he said.

Heather Atherton is nearing that mark. The Sacramento, Calif., mom, who turns 36 next month, started a home-based public relations business after having a baby girl in 2003. She and her husband upgraded to a larger home in 2005 and planned on having a second child not long afterward. Then the recession hit, drying up her husbands sales commissions and leaving them owing more on their home than it is worth. A second child seemed too risky financially.

"However, we just recently decided that its time to stop waiting and just go for it early next year and let the chips fall where they may," she said. "We cant allow the recession to dictate the size of our family. We just need to move forward with our lives."

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Online:

CDC report: http://www.cdc.gov/nchs

Birth trends: http://tinyurl.com/28b2gjc



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UN: Attacks on Hutus in 1990s could be genocide AP

JOHANNESBURG A draft U.N. report says the Rwandan army that ended the 1994 slaughter of more than 500,000 people retaliated with barbaric killings in Congo two years later that also could be classified as a genocide.

The report also says Rwandas rebel allies, tied to the current Congolese president, helped kill tens of thousands of Hutus � the majority of whom were women, children, the sick and the elderly.

"Upon entering a locality, they ordered the people to gather together ... Once they were assembled, the civilians were bound and killed by blows of hammers or hoes to the head."

The systematic and widespread attacks "could be classified as crimes of genocide" by a competent court, the draft said.

The leaked report is a major embarrassment to Rwandan President Paul Kagame, an ally of the United States and Britain and whose government long has claimed the moral high ground for ending the 1994 genocide of Tutsis that included the killings of some moderate Hutus.

Le Monde, the French newspaper that first leaked the report, says Kagame is threatening to withdraw Rwandan troops in the U.N.-African peacekeeping force in Darfur, Sudan, if the genocide allegations are officially published.

Congos President Joseph Kabila was also a commander of the Congolese rebels named in the report at the time of the attacks. Congos government on Friday denied the accusations and derided the report as partisan, incomplete and unjustifiable.

"The deeds are presented as if it is the Congolese who are the assassins, the genociders, when it is totally the opposite," it said in a 50-page response to the U.N.

Rwandas government said the report was "dangerous and irresponsible," risked creating more instability in the region, and suggested it was leaked to divert attention from U.N. peackeepers failure to protect civilians in a recent mass rape atrocity.

"It is immoral and unacceptable that the United Nations, an organization that failed outright to prevent genocide in Rwanda and the subsequent refugees crisis, a direct cause for so much suffering in Congo and Rwanda, now accuses the army that stopped the genocide of committing atrocities" in Congo, said spokesman Ben Rutsinga.

He said the investigators did not meet with Rwandan officials though they found time for 200 nongovernment organizations and that their report was "based on questionable methodology, sourcing and shockingly low standard of proof."

Investigators, though, said they required two independent sources for each of the 600 incidents documented in their 545-page report.

In Geneva, spokesman Rupert Colville said Friday he was disappointed that the draft from the High Commissioner for Human Rights was leaked. He said changes were still being finalized, but declined to say if they included the use of the word "genocide."

The report, whose publication has been delayed for a year, said Hutus in Congo � both Rwandan refugees and Congolese � were clearly targeted.

Witnesses said the soldiers "displayed a clear desire for revenge in their massacres of the Congolese Hutu Banyarwanda, targeting villages where Tutsis had been persecuted in the past."

At least 350 civilians were slain in a massacre in eastern Rutshuru town in October 1996, the report said. In the days leading up the massacres, soldiers appealed to people who had fled the area to return home.

"In the afternoon, the soldiers began to compile a register and asked people of Nande ethnic origin to return home. They then separated the men and women ... The women were taken to the Maison de la Poste, where they were executed. The men were bound and led in pairs to a sand quarry ... All of them were then executed with blows of hammers."

"The numerous deaths cannot be attributed to the hazards of war or seen as equating to collateral damage," it said.

The leaked report notes that Rwanda permitted Hutus to return home in large numbers, but says that does not "rule out the intention of destroying part of an ethnic group as such and thus committing a crime of genocide."

Kagames fighters also have been accused of massacring Hutu civilians in Rwanda during fighting to end the genocide � charges his government strenuously denies.

More than 1 million Hutus fled to neighboring Congo in the aftermath of Rwandas genocide. The refugees included perpetrators of the genocide who used refugee camps as bases to attack Rwandan and Congolese Tutsis in Congo and launch attacks into Rwanda.

Jason Stearns, the chief investigator of a U.N. panel on Congos arms embargo, said the draft report is the first systematic investigation of atrocities over that period, especially massacres of Hutu refugees.

"I think this report has rocked the Rwandan government ... Its going to be incredibly damaging to Rwandas international reputation," said Stearns, who is also writing a book, "Dancing in the Glory of Monsters," that covers the 1993-2003 period investigated in the report.

The U.N. secretary general commissioned the report after mass graves were discovered in 2005 and investigators went to Congo in 2008. The identities of alleged perpetrators are being held in a confidential database.

Rwandas 1994 genocide was sparked when a plane carrying then-President Juvenal Habyarimana was shot down as it approached Kigali, Rwandas capital. The slaughter ended when Kagame � now Rwandas president � led a group of Tutsi rebels to overthrow the Hutu government.

In 1996, Rwanda invaded Congo, saying it was going after those who committed the genocide. A second invasion two years later exploded into a regional war involving eight countries.

The U.N. report, which should be published next week, describes atrocities committed by the many Congolese rebel factions as well as by troops from Uganda, Burundi, Zimbabwe and Angola.

But the most egregious cases involving the largest numbers of victims involve Rwandan troops fighting with Congolese rebel forces to kill Hutus.

The report calls for justice, urging prosecutions of "those who bear the greatest responsibility." But it noted a lack of political will to pursue war crimes in Congo and a general impunity � both charges the Congolese government denied.

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Associated Press writers Bradley S. Klapper in Geneva and Edmund Kagire in Kigali, Rwanda contributed to this report.



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