Friday, September 3, 2010

BP: Failed blowout preventer removed from well AP

NEW ORLEANS BP PLC said the blowout preventer that failed to stop oil from spewing into the Gulf of Mexico was removed from the companys well on Friday afternoon.

The process of raising it to the surface was to be painstaking because engineers want to make sure not to damage or drop the contraption. The blowout preventer wasnt expected to reach the surface until Saturday, at which point government investigators will take possession of it.

A BP spokesman said in an e-mail to The Associated Press that the 50-foot, 300-ton device was detached from the wellhead at 1:20 p.m CDT.

Earlier in the day, a vessel had latched onto the equipment to raise it from a mile beneath the sea.

Undersea video showed the device suspended in the water. A crane on the Helix Q4000 was being used for the task.

The blowout preventer is considered a key piece of evidence in the spill investigation. Investigators will examine it and hope to gain insight into why the device failed to prevent the spill. Late Friday, the government said another blowout preventer had successfully been placed on the blown-out well.

The April 20 explosion aboard the Deepwater Horizon killed 11 workers and led to 206 million gallons of oil spewing from BPs undersea well.

Investigators know the explosion was triggered by a bubble of methane gas that escaped from the well and shot up the drill column, expanding quickly as it burst through several seals and barriers before igniting.

But they dont know exactly how or why the gas escaped. And they dont know why the blowout preventer didnt seal the well pipe at the sea bottom after the eruption, as it was supposed to. While the device didnt close � or may have closed partially � hearings have produced no clear picture of why it didnt plug the well.

Lawyers will be watching closely, as hundreds of lawsuits have been filed over the oil spill. Future liabilities faced by a number of corporations could be riding on what the analysis of the blowout preventer shows.

The raising of the blowout preventer followed Thursdays removal of a temporary cap that stopped oil from gushing into the Gulf in mid-July. No more oil was expected to leak into the sea, but crews were standing by with collection vessels just in case.

The government wanted to replace the failed blowout preventer first to deal with any pressure that is caused when a relief well BP has been drilling intersects the blown-out well.

Once that intersection occurs sometime after Labor Day, BP is expected to use mud and cement to plug the blown-out well for good from the bottom.



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9 people killed in New Zealand plane crash AP

WELLINGTON, New Zealand Nine people have died after a light aircraft belonging to a skydiving company crashed Saturday on New Zealands South Island, police said.

The plane burst into flames after takeoff from an airstrip at Fox Glacier, said Ian Henderson, a spokesman for local ambulance services. The pilot and eight passengers were killed, Greymouth Police Senior Sgt. Allyson Ealam said.

Henderson did not immediately know the ages, gender or nationalities of the dead.

Police said the aircraft was a Fletcher fixed-wing plane of a type designed and built in New Zealand.

Fox Glacier is on the western coast of the South Island, about 90 miles 150 kilometers from the main city Christchurch.



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SKorean foreign minister offers to resign AP

SEOUL, South Korea South Korean Foreign Minister Yu Myung-hwan has offered to resign over his ministrys controversial hiring of his daughter, an official said Saturday.

Yu made his offer to President Lee Myung-bak after he was accused of nepotism when his daughter was handed a midlevel post handling free trade affairs in his ministry.

Presidential spokeswoman Kim Hee-jung confirmed that Lee was informed of the resignation offer, but she did not say whether the president will accept it.

Yu said he was "sorry to have caused trouble to the public," over his daughters hiring, his spokesman said, according to Yonhap news agency. The foreign ministry spokesman was not immediately available for comment.

Lee, who has ordered a thorough audit into possible rigging of the hiring process, will likely accept the resignation offer, Yonhap said, citing an unidentified presidential official.

The resignation offer comes at a crucial time for South Korea as it is preparing to host the summit of the Group of 20 rich and developing economies in November.

It also comes amid diplomatic efforts mainly by China and North Korea to restart stalled talks aimed at ending North Koreas nuclear weapons programs.



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Pakistan Taliban say their bomber kills 43 Shiites AP

QUETTA, Pakistan A suicide bombing claimed by the Pakistani Taliban killed at least 43 Shiite Muslims at a procession in southwest Pakistan. The assault sharply drove up the toll of sectarian assaults in a country battered by massive flooding.

To the northwest in Pakistans restive tribal regions, two suspected U.S. missile strikes killed at least seven people in an area controlled by one of the main groups battling Americans in neighboring Afghanistan, Pakistani intelligence officials said.

Two other militant bombings left at least two people dead and several wounded on a day convulsed by the violence that threatens the stability of Pakistans weak civilian government � an essential but problematic Western ally in the fight against Islamist militants.

The first attack of the day was a roadside bombing in the northwestern city of Peshawar that killed one police officer and wounded three others, officials said.

Hours later, a suicide attack on a mosque belonging to the minority Ahmadi sect killed at least one person and wounded several others in the nearby town of Mardan.

Soon after, a blast killed at least 43 people in the southwestern city of Quetta at a Shiite procession calling for solidarity with Palestinians, Quetta Police Chief Ghulam Shabir Sheikh said. He said 78 people were wounded and several were in critical condition.

Quetta police officer Hamid Shakil told local television six or seven of the dead appeared to have fatal bullet wounds, and said they may have been killed by participants in the procession who opened fire wildly after the attack.

Pakistani Taliban commander Qari Hussain Mehsud told The Associated Press one of his militant carried out the suicide bombing.

"We proudly take its responsibility," he said. "Our war is against America and Pakistan security forces, but Shiites are also our target because they too are our enemies."

He said he was proud the U.S. had added the Pakistani Taliban to its international terrorism blacklist on Wednesday, and he threatened attacks in the U.S. and Europe in coming days that would resemble a recent attempted car bombing in Times Square.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon strongly condemned the terrorist bombings. "These attacks, which deliberately targeted Shiite Muslims and killed or injured scores of civilians, are unacceptable," U.N. associate spokesman Yves Sorokobi said at U.N. headquarters in New York.

White House press secretary Robert Gibbs says the timing of the violence makes the attacks "even more reprehensible," coming during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan and as Pakistan recovers from devastating floods.

Also Friday, two Pakistani intelligence officials told the AP three suspected American missiles hit a house in a village near Miran Shah, the main town in North Waziristan, Friday evening.

The Taliban-allied Haqqani network controls the northwestern tribal area of North Waziristan along the Afghan border but its fighters are hunted by U.S. drone aircraft that regularly unleash deadly missile attacks.

The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to release the information to the media, said the identity of the slain was not immediately clear.

The officials said a second suspected U.S. missile strike killed two people in a vehicle in the North Waziristan village of Datta Khel. They said the men were believed to be foreign militants.

The attack in Quetta was the weeks second claimed by the Pakistani Taliban and targeting Shiites, who by some estimates make up about 20 percent of the population in the mostly Sunni Muslim country, although figures are imprecise and disputed.

A triple suicide attack Wednesday night killed 35 people at a Shiite ceremony in the eastern city of Lahore.

Shiite leader Allama Abbas Kumaili said the attacks were a result of government failure and appealed to participants to remain peaceful despite anger that led to local unrest after the bombing.

"We understand these are attempts to set Sunni and Shiite sects against each other," he said. "Our government concentrates all its efforts to secure VIPs. Common men are not their priority."

Government officials have said they cannot protect outdoor gatherings from attacks, and Interior Minister Rehman Malik called Thursday for Shiites to hold religious ceremonies indoors.

Quetta, the capital of Baluchistan province, has been described by Western officials as a base for the leadership of the Afghan Taliban but attacking there would be an expansion of the range of the Pakistan Taliban. The Pakistani group is seeking to overthrow the countrys government as it seeks to recover from flooding that has caused massive displacement, suffering and economic damage.

The floods, spawned by heavy rains weeks ago have killed more than 1,600 people and affected about 20 million. The waters are still swamping rich agricultural land in the southern provinces of Sindh and Punjab.

Flood victims say they have received little government help, and most assistance has come to them from private charities. The International Committee of the Red Cross warned Thursday that survivors anger was beginning to hamper those aid efforts.

About 500 survivors blocked a key road in the Sindh town of Gharo on Friday to protest inadequate food and drinking water.

The White House said Friday that President Barack Obama has ordered an additional $33 million to aid Pakistani flood victims. The U.S. has already provided aid funding and military helicopters to help rescue operations.

___

Mahsud reported from Dera Ismail Khan. Associated Press Writers Rasool Dawar in Mir Ali, Riaz Khan in Peshawar, Vincent Thian in Gharo, and Edith M. Lederer at the United Nations contributed to this report.



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Report: Blackwater created shell companies AP

WASHINGTON The security company Blackwater Worldwide formed a network of 30 shell companies and subsidiaries to try to get millions of dollars in government business after the company faced strong criticism for reckless conduct in Iraq, The New York Times reported Friday.

The newspaper said that it was unclear how many of the created companies got American contracts but that at least three of them obtained work with the U.S. military and the CIA.

Sen. Carl Levin, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, has asked the Justice Department to see whether Blackwater misled the government when using the subsidiaries to gain government contracts, according to the Times.

It said Levins committee found that North Carolina-based Blackwater, which now is known as Xe Services, went to great lengths to find ways to get lucrative government work despite criminal charges and criticism stemming from a 2007 incident in which Blackwater guards killed 17 Iraqi civilians. A committee chart outlines the web of Blackwater subsidiaries.

Messages left late Friday with spokespeople for the Michigan Democrat and Xe were not immediately answered.

The 2007 incident and other reports of abuses by Blackwater employees in Iraq led to criminal investigations and congressional hearings, and resulted in the company losing a lucrative contract with the State Department to provide security in Iraq.

But recently the company was awarded a $100 million contract to provide security for the agency in Afghanistan, prompting criticism from some in Congress. CIA Director Leon Panetta said that the CIA had no choice but to hire the company because it underbid others by $26 million and that a CIA review concluded that the contractor had cleaned up its act.

Last year, Panetta canceled a contract with Xe that allowed the companys operatives to load missiles on Predator drones in Pakistan, and shifted the work to government personnel.

However, the Times quoted former Blackwater officials as saying that at least two Blackwater-affiliated companies, XPG and Greystone, obtained secret contracts from the CIA to provide security to agency operatives.

The newspaper said the network of subsidiaries, including several located in offshore tax havens, were uncovered as part of the Armed Services Committees examination of government contracting and not an investigation solely into Blackwater. But Levin questioned why Blackwater would need to create so many companies with various names to seek out government business, according to the Times.

The report quoted unidentified government officials and former Blackwater employees as saying that the network of companies allowed Blackwater to obscure its involvement in government work from contracting officials and the public, and to ensure a low profile for its classified activities.



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Powerful 7.1 quake hits New Zealands South Island AP

WELLINGTON, New Zealand A powerful 7.1-magnitude earthquake damaged buildings, cut power and knocked fleeing residents off their feet on New Zealands South Island early Saturday, but there were so far no deaths and only two injuries reported.

Panicked residents in their pajamas ran into the streets of the southern city of Christchurch after the pre-dawn quake, residents said. There were reports of some people trapped in damaged buildings � though none appeared to be crushed by rubble � and a few looters broke into some of the damaged shops in the city of 400,000, authorities said.

Chimneys and walls had fallen from older buildings, roads had been blocked, traffic lights out and power, gas and water supplies disrupted, Christchurch Mayor Bob Parker said. He warned that continuing aftershocks could cause masonry to fall from damaged buildings.

"The fronts of at least five buildings in the central city have collapsed, and rubble is strewn across many roads," Christchurch resident Angela Morgan told The Associated Press. "There is quite significant damage, really, with reports that some people were trapped in damaged houses."

Suburban dweller Mark OConnell said his house was full of smashed glass, food tossed from shelves, with sets of drawers, TVs and computers tipped over.

"We were thrown from wall to wall as we tried to escape down the stairs to get to safety," he told the AP.

The quake, which hit 19 miles 30 kilometers west of Christchurch according to the state geological agency GNS Science, shook a wide area, with some residents saying buildings had collapsed and power was severed. No tsunami alert was issued.

GNS Science initially reported the quake as magnitude 7.4, but later downgraded it after re-examining quake records. The U.S. Geological Survey, in America, measured the quake at 7.0.

Army troops were on standby to assist, Minister of Civil Defense John Carter said, as a state of civil emergency was declared.

"I think weve been extremely lucky as a nation that theres been no fatalities," Carter told reporters, though he said infrastructure damage was major. Earthquake and insurance specialists would give government an initial damage assessment within 48 hours, he said.

Parker said the quake caused "a lot of damage to our key infrastructure ... water, waste water sewerage systems ... but the most important thing is that there has been no loss of life."

Christchurch fire service spokesman Mike Bowden said a number of people had been trapped in buildings by fallen chimneys and blocked entrances, but there were no reports of people pinned under rubble. Rescue teams were out checking premises.

Christchurch Hospital said it had treated two men with serious injuries and a number of people with minor injuries.

One man was hit by a falling chimney and was in serious condition in intensive care, while a second was badly cut by glass, hospital spokeswoman Michele Hider said.

Christchurch police reported road damage in parts of the city of 400,000 people, with a series of sharp aftershocks rocking the area. Police officers cordoned off some streets where rubble was strewn about. Video showed parked cars crushed by heaps of fallen bricks, and buckled roads.

"There is considerable damage in the central city and weve also had reports of looting, just shop windows broken and easy picking of displays," Police Inspector Mike Coleman told New Zealands National Radio.

Police Inspector Al Stewart told the radio that some people had been arrested for looting.

"We have some reports of people smashing storefront windows and trying to grab some property that is not theirs ... weve got police on the streets and were dealing with that," he said.

The quake hit at 4:35 a.m. 1635 GMT shaking thousands of residents awake, New Zealands National Radio reported. Some 12 aftershocks have rocked the region since, ranging from 5.3 to 3.9 in magnitude, GNS Science reported on its web site.

Prime Minister John Key, Carter and Energy Minister Gerry Brownlee were to fly to Christchurch to inspect damage and review the situation, officials said.

Key said his sister, who lives in Christchurch, messaged him that "they had had an enormous earthquake and it had been terrifying ... that it went on for so long and was so violent they were getting knocked off their feet."

Civil defense agency spokesman David Millar said at least six bridges in the region had been badly damaged, while the historic Empire hotel in the port town of Lyttelton was "very unstable" and in danger of collapse. Several wharves at the port had been damaged, while roads, shops and other buildings in rural towns around Christchurch had also suffered damage, with some shop fronts knocked down in the jolt.

Inspector Coleman said residents of the citys low-lying eastern suburbs had been advised to be ready to evacuate their properties, after power, gas, sewerage and water systems were cut by the quake.

Resident Colleen Simpson said panicked residents ran into the street in their pajamas. Some buildings had collapsed, there was no power, and the mobile telephone network had failed.

"Oh my God. There is a row of shops completely demolished right in front of me," Simpson told the Stuff news Web site.

Kiwirail rail transport group spokesman Kevin Ramshaw said 13 mostly freight trains had been halted on South Island lines, with some damage already confirmed to rail lines north of Christchurch.

Christchurch International Airport was closed after the quake as a precaution, as experts checked runways and terminal buildings, a spokesman said.

New Zealand sits above an area of the Earths crust where two tectonic plates collide. The country records more than 14,000 earthquakes a year � but only about 150 are felt by residents. Fewer than 10 a year do any damage.

New Zealands last major earthquake was a magnitude 7.8 in South Islands Fiordland region on July 16, 2009 � a temblor that moved the southern tip of the country 12 inches 30 centimeters closer to Australia, seismologist Ken Gledhill said at the time.

This version corrects police officials name to Al Stewart in paragraph 17



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Official: Honduran helped massacre survivor flee AP

TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras A Honduran who survived the massacre of 72 migrants in Mexico helped untie the only other survivor � a wounded Ecuadorean � and the two fled together, an official said Friday.

In an interview with El Heraldo newspaper, Honduran Deputy Foreign Minister Alden Rivera revealed details for the first time about the escape.

Mexican officials had previously said there was only one survivor of the massacre � the Ecuadorean who stumbled wounded to a military checkpoint and alerted marines. The Mexicans said when they learned that a Honduran also survived, they kept it a secret to protect him. But Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa revealed the information earlier this week.

Investigators believe the Zetas drug gang kidnapped the migrants and gunned them down after they refused to work for the cartel.

Marines found the bound, blindfolded bodies slumped against a wall last week after raiding the ranch in the northern state of Tamaulipas, which has been embroiled in a vicious turf battle between the Zetas and their former employer, the Gulf Cartel.

Mexican officials say cartels have increasingly been recruiting vulnerable migrants to smuggle drugs.

After the shooting stopped, the Honduran survivor managed to untie himself, then helped free the Ecuadorean, who had been shot in the neck, Rivera said.

Rivera did not say whether the Honduran was hurt but the Ecuadorean survivor, Luis Freddy Lala Pomavilla, told state-run television in Ecuador on Thursday that the Honduran somehow managed to avoid being shot.

Lala, 18, was flown home to Ecuador on Sunday after recovering from his wounds at a Mexican hospital. He is now under a witness protection program in Ecuador. The Honduran is under the protection of Mexican security forces.

Rivera said the two migrants fled the ranch together but when they heard gunshots behind them, they separated.

Lala said he approached two groups of people who refused to help him until he finally reached the marine checkpoint.

The Honduran, Rivera said, walked for a long time until he found a migrant shelter. Rivera revealed no other details about the migrants escape, but said he was in good health and had been in contact with his family in Honduras.

Lala told Ecuadorean television that a total of 76 migrants were traveling together � Hondurans, Ecuadoreans, Guatemalans and at least one Brazilian.

But a spokesman for Mexicos Attorney Generals Office, Ricardo Najera, said Friday that 77 people were in the group: the 72 killed, the two survivors and three Mexicans whose whereabouts were unknown.

The Mexicans were two drivers and an assistant, he said, adding the information came from the testimony of the Honduran and the Ecuadorean migrants.

In a statement that Lala gave to Mexican investigators, he said one migrant agreed to work with the Zetas, but did not reveal what happened to that person. The Associated Press has access to that statement last week.

During a meeting in Guatemala, meanwhile, Central American foreign ministers urged Mexico to find the killers and take steps to avoid more atrocities.

"We call on Mexican authorities to take measures as soon as possible to avoid events like the one that occurred in Tamaulipas," said Honduran Foreign Minister Mario Canahuati.



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Earl threatens Mass. with wind, rain, surf AP

CHATHAM, Mass. A weakening but still dangerous Hurricane Earl steamed toward the gray-shingled cottages and fishing villages of Cape Cod on Friday night, disrupting peoples vacations on the unofficial final weekend of the short New England summer.

Packing winds of 75 mph, the storm swirled up the Eastern Seaboard after sideswiping North Carolinas Outer Banks, where it caused flooding but no injuries and little damage. The storm was swinging of New York City, Long Island and the rest of the mid-Atlantic region, but was expected to bring rain and high winds as it passes just off Cape Cod, Nantucket Island and Marthas Vineyard late Friday night.

Vacationers pulled their boats from the water and canceled Labor Day weekend reservations on Nantucket, the well-to-do resort island and old-time whaling port expected to get the worst of the storm. Shopkeepers boarded up their windows. Swimmers in New England were warned to stay out of the water � or off the beach altogether � because of the danger of getting swept away by high waves.

Airlines canceled dozens of flights into New England, and Amtrak suspended train service between New York and Boston.

No large-scale evacuations were ordered for Cape Cod, where fishermen and other hardy year-round residents have been dealing with gusty noreasters for generations.

"We kind of roll with the punches out here. Its not a huge deal for us," said Scott Thomas, president of the Nantucket Chamber of Commerce.

On Cape Cod, Ellen McDonough and a friend waited for one of the last ferries to Nantucket before service was suspended because of the approaching storm. "Its not a 3-foot snowstorm. I think us New Englanders are tough," McDonough said. "Weve had this weekend planned, and no hurricane is going to stop us."

Nantucket Police Chief William Pittman warned island residents against complacency, saying Earl was still a dangerous storm with severe winds.

By midday Friday, Earl had dropped to a Category 1 storm � down from a fearsome Category 4 with 145 mph winds a day earlier. By 8 p.m., Earl was a weak hurricane with maximum sustained winds just above the threshold for a hurricane. It seemed likely to be a tropical storm by the time it passed about 50 to 75 miles southeast of Nantucket.

As Earl lost steam and veered farther east, the National Hurricane Center reduced the New England areas under a hurricane warning to Cape Cod, Nantucket and Marthas Vineyard, the elite vacation spot that President Barack Obama left just last weekend.

The National Weather Service was forecasting winds up to 65 mph on Nantucket with gusts up to 85 mph. On Cape Cod, winds up to 45 mph with gusts of up to 60 mph were expected. At 9 p.m., Nantucket was seeing rain, rough surf and winds gusts of 31 mph.

"Weve had some localized flooding on some roads � nothing that a really bad rainstorms at this time of the summer dont already create," Nantucket Assistant Town Manager Gregg Tivnan said Friday night. Officials, however, were expecting heavier rain later in the night.

The last time the Cape was hit directly by a hurricane was 1991, when Bob brought 75 mph gusts that ripped through the regions grassy dunes, snapped trees and tore roofs off the weathered gray homes.

Few seemed worried about a repeat Friday in Chatham, a fishing village at Cape Cods eastern edge where tourists strolled past the bookstores, cafes and ice cream parlors on Main Street. A few stores had put plywood over their windows, including the Ben Franklin Old Fashioned Variety Store. "Cmon Earl, were ready for you," a handwritten note read.

Earl was staying far off New Jersey and the eastern tip of New Yorks Long Island as it made its way north. But it kicked up dangerous riptides up and down the coast. In New Jersey, two young men apparently died earlier this week in the rough surf caused by Earl and the hurricane before it, Danielle.

Rain from the outer bands of the hurricane forced a 25-minute delay at the U.S. Open tennis tournament in New York City. It also forced the postponement of a Red Sox-White Sox game in Boston.

On the Outer Banks, officials had urged tens of thousands of visitors and residents to leave the dangerously exposed islands as the storm closed in, but hundreds chose to wait it out in their boarded-up homes.

Earls winds had dropped to 105 mph by the time the storm brushed past the ribbon of islands before dawn, and the storm center got no closer to shore than 85 miles. Hurricane-force winds, which start at 74 mph, apparently did not even reach the Outer Banks, said the National Hurricane Centers chief forecaster, James Franklin.

North Carolina Gov. Beverly Perdue said there was no serious damage and urged people to get back out for the Labor Day weekend to "have a little fun and spend some money."

In Rhode Island, the popular tourist destination Block Island was expecting gusts as high as 60 mph. Gov. Don Carcieri warned of possible flooding on the mainland, and asked people to stay off the roads, but added: "Everything looks like weve dodged this."

Twenty miles out off the Maine coast, lobstermen on Matinicus Island were cautious after getting fooled by Hurricane Bill, which missed the mainland last year but sent tides and rough seas that destroyed their traps. This time, they moved their gear to the safety of deeper water or pulled their traps out altogether.

At Maines Acadia National Park, officials closed most of a road where a 7-year-old girl was swept to her death by a 20-foot wave last year while watching the swells from Bill.

___

Associated Press writers Mike Baker in Buxton, N.C.; Jeffrey Collins in Columbia, S.C.; Michelle Smith in Providence, R.I.; David Sharp in Portland, Maine; and Lyle Moran, Denise Lavoie, Jay Lindsay and Rodrique Ngowi in Boston contributed to this report.



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Powerful 7.1 quake hits New Zealands South Island AP

WELLINGTON, New Zealand A powerful 7.1-magnitude earthquake struck much of New Zealands South Island early Saturday and caused widespread damage, but there were just two reports of serious injuries. Looters broke into some damaged shops in Christchurch, police said.

The quake, which hit 19 miles 30 kilometers west of the southern city of Christchurch according to the state geological agency GNS Science, shook a wide area, with some residents saying buildings had collapsed and power was severed. No tsunami alert was issued.

GNS Science initially reported the quake as magnitude 7.4, but later downgraded it after re-examining quake records. The U.S. Geological Survey, in America, measured the quake at 7.0.

Christchurch Mayor Bob Parker declared a state of emergency four hours after the quake rocked the region, warning people that continuing aftershocks could cause masonry to fall from damaged buildings.

The emergency meant parts of the city would be closed off and some buildings closed as unsafe, he said.

Minister of Civil Defense John Carter said a state of civil emergency was declared as the quake was "a significant disaster," and army troops were on standby to assist.

Parker said the "sharp, vicious earthquake has caused significant damage in parts of the city ... with walls collapsed that have fallen into the streets."

Chimneys and walls had fallen from older buildings, with roads blocked, traffic lights out and power, gas and water supplies disrupted, he said.

"The fronts of at least five buildings in the central city have collapsed and rubble is strewn across many roads," Christchurch resident Angela Morgan told The Associated Press.

"Roads have subsided where water mains have broken and a lot of people evacuated in panic from seaside areas for fear of a tsunami," she said, adding that "there is quite significant damage, really, with reports that some people were trapped in damaged houses."

Christchurch fire service spokesman Mike Bowden said a number of people had been trapped in buildings by fallen chimneys and blocked entrances, but there were no reports of people pinned under rubble. Rescue teams were out checking premises.

Christchurch Hospital said it had treated two men with serious injuries and a number of people with minor injuries.

One man was hit by a falling chimney and was in serious condition in intensive care, while a second was badly cut by glass, hospital spokeswoman Michele Hider said.

Christchurch police reported road damage in parts of the city of 400,000 people, with a series of sharp aftershocks rocking the area. Police officers cordoned off some streets where rubble was strewn about. Video showed parked cars crushed by heaps of fallen bricks, and buckled roads.

"There is considerable damage in the central city and weve also had reports of looting, just shop windows broken and easy picking of displays," Police Inspector Mike Coleman told New Zealands National Radio.

Police Inspector Alf Stewart told the radio that some people had been arrested for looting.

"We have some reports of people smashing storefront windows and trying to grab some property that is not theirs ... weve got police on the streets and were dealing with that," he said.

Suburban dweller Mark OConnell said his house was full of smashed glass, food tossed from shelves, with sets of drawers, TVs and computers tipped over.

"She was a beauty, we were thrown from wall to wall as we tried to escape down the stairs to get to safety," he told the AP. "It was pitch black with the power cut and we walked through smashed glass everywhere on the floor."

The quake hit at 4:35 a.m. 1635 GMT shaking thousands of residents awake, New Zealands National Radio reported. Some 12 aftershocks have rocked the region since, ranging from 5.3 to 3.9 in magnitude, GNS Science reported on its web site.

Prime Minister John Key, Carter and Energy Minister Gerry Brownlee were to fly to Christchurch to inspect damage and review the situation, officials said.

Civil defense agency spokesman David Millar said at least six bridges in the region had been badly damaged, while the historic Empire hotel in the port town of Lyttelton was "very unstable" and in danger of collapse. Roads, shops and other buildings in rural towns around Christchurch had also suffered damage, with some shop fronts knocked down in the jolt.

Inspector Coleman said residents of the citys low-lying eastern suburbs had been advised to be ready to evacuate their properties, after power, gas, sewerage and water systems were cut by the quake.

Resident Colleen Simpson said panicked residents ran into the street in their pajamas. Some buildings had collapsed, there was no power, and the mobile telephone network had failed.

"Oh my God. There is a row of shops completely demolished right in front of me," Simpson told the Stuff news Web site.

Kiwirail rail transport group spokesman Kevin Ramshaw said 13 mostly freight trains had been halted on South Island lines, with some damage already confirmed to rail lines north of Christchurch.

Christchurch International Airport was closed after the quake as a precaution, as experts checked runways and terminal buildings, a spokesman said.

The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said "no destructive widespread tsunami threat existed, based on historical earthquake and tsunami data."

New Zealand sits above an area of the Earths crust where two tectonic plates collide. The country records more than 14,000 earthquakes a year � but only about 150 are felt by residents. Fewer than 10 a year do any damage.

New Zealands last major earthquake was a magnitude 7.8 in South Islands Fiordland region on July 16, 2009 � a tremblor which moved the southern tip of the country 12 inches 30 centimeters closer to Australia, seismologist Ken Gledhill said at the time.

Gledhill, director of GNS Sciences "GeoNet" national earthquake monitoring project, said the islands geographic shift showed the immensity of the forces involved.



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Obama planning new package of economic aid AP

WASHINGTON Eager to jumpstart the economy ahead of crucial midterm elections, President Barack Obama said Friday he intends to unveil a new package of proposals, likely including tax cuts and targeted spending, to spark job growth.

Obama spoke in the Rose Garden after the August jobs report came out better than expected, showing the private sector adding 67,000 new jobs last month and revising upward the numbers from June and July. But unemployment ticked upward to 9.6 percent as more people entered the job market, and the president said it wasnt good enough.

"Thats why we need to take further steps to create jobs and keep the economy growing, including extending tax cuts for the middle class and investing in the areas of our economy where the potential for job growth is greatest," Obama said.

"We are confident that we are moving in the right direction, but we want to keep this recovery moving stronger and accelerate the job growth thats needed so desperately."

Administration officials say a big new stimulus bill like last years $814 billion measure is not in the offing - nervous lawmakers looking to Novembers balloting would not be expected to approve an expensive new measure. But Obama said hed be proposing a new set of ideas next week. Hes likely to detail them during a speech on the economy Wednesday in Cleveland, midway through an economy-focused week capped by a rare White House news conference.

Obamas package could include a number of provisions that have languished in Congress for much of the year, including infrastructure bonds for municipalities and extensions for a series of tax breaks for businesses and individuals that expired at the end of 2009. Democratic leaders are considering making one of the tax breaks permanent, for businesses that invest in research and development.

They are also considering extending a law passed in March that exempts companies that hire unemployed workers from paying Social Security taxes on those workers through December. Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., has proposed extending the exemption an additional six months.

Obama is continuing to prod the Senate to pass a bill that calls for about $12 billion in tax breaks for small businesses and a $30 billion fund to help unfreeze small business lending. Republicans have likened the bill to the unpopular bailout of the financial industry. And the president wants to make permanent the portion of George W. Bushs tax cuts affecting the middle class.

The House has already passed many of the provisions, but they have stalled in the Senate because Republicans and Democrats could not agree on how to pay for them.

Jim Manley, spokesman for Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said Reid hoped to be able to get the small business measure through once the Senate goes back in session later this month but the prospect for other ideas was cloudier. Moreover, some of the ideas are relatively small bore, so even if they did pass in the next month or two its unlikely theyd make a real dent in the economy before the elections.

Departing White House economist Christina Romer told The Associated Press that the new proposals would be "targeted measures aimed at particular problems or incentivizing a particular area of the economy." Romer is leaving her post as chair of the presidents Council of Economic Advisers on Friday to return to the University of California, Berkley.

___

Associated Press writers Julie Pace and Stephen Ohlemacher contributed to this report.

This version corrects price tag of stimulus bill to new estimate of $814 billion.



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Will heir be unveiled at North Korean convention? AP

SEOUL, South Korea North Korea is preparing its largest political meeting in 30 years, and leader Kim Jong Il is expected to appoint a son to a key Workers Party position in what would be the strongest sign yet of a succession movement in the secretive communist country.

The meeting would be the first major party gathering since the landmark 1980 congress where Kim was confirmed as the man who would take over from his father as the countrys next leader.

History may repeat itself this week. Now 68 and believed to be in failing health, Kim is expected to appoint his youngest son to a key party post.

The exact date of the political gathering, set for "early September," has not been announced, but analysts have said it could open as soon as Monday. Local party officials have been busy electing delegates to the conference, according to dispatches in the Norths state-run Korean Central News Agency.

While the conference is not a top-level party congress such as the one held in 1980, it is the biggest Workers Party meeting since then and appears to have been convened to address urgent matters � quite likely a transfer of power, analysts said.

Its widely believed that Kim, who has ruled his nation of 24 million people with absolute authority since 1994, has been grooming his third and youngest son, Kim Jong Un, to succeed him since reportedly suffering a stroke in August 2008.

The regime has launched a propaganda campaign promoting the succession, including songs and poems praising the junior Kim, according to South Koreas spy agency. North Korean soldiers and workers reportedly pledged allegiance to the son on his birthday in January.

The process has been shrouded in secrecy.

There are no confirmed photos of Kim Jong Un, apart from one widely circulated by the foreign media of him as a boy. His name is never mentioned in state media, and though he is said to be in his late 20s, even his exact age remains unclear. When asked about him, North Korean government officials routinely deny knowing anything about the son.

He has two elder brothers, but a former sushi chef to Kim Jong Il wrote in a 2003 memoir the third son looks and acts just like his father and is the leaders favorite. The eldest, Kim Jong Nam, was favored to succeed his father until he was caught sneaking into Japan on a fake passport to visit a Disney resort in 2001. Kim Jong Il considers the middle son, Kim Jong Chul, too "girlish" to lead, the sushi chef wrote in a book written under the pen name Kenji Fujimoto.

The secrecy is reminiscent of Kim Jong Ils own rise in communisms first hereditary transfer of power.

Kim Jong Il was 31 when he won a key post in the ruling Workers Party in 1973 � an appointment seen as a key step in the path to succeeding his father, North Korea founder Kim Il Sung, as the nations leader. His position as successor was made public at the party congress in 1980.

That historic succession took place when Kim Il Sung died of heart failure in 1994.

Similarly, the young son is expected to step into the limelight at this months political gathering of local representatives by assuming his first public party role, analysts say.

"Its almost certain that he will get a crucial party post," said Cheong Seong-chang of the private Sejong Institute in South Korea, a North Korea expert who has followed the succession issue closely for years. "If he doesnt get a post, that will be news."

What position and whether it will be disclosed by state media remains to be seen. Analysts said North Korea may well keep the sons appearance and position under wraps.

Some believe he will be granted the same post his father took 37 years ago: party secretary authorized to supervise party members and appoint top party, government and military officials, and he may be elected to the powerful "politburo" of the partys Central Committee as well.

Others dont think Kim Jong Il will give the son a high-profile job quite yet since he is still young and needs time to learn about state affairs.

"Jong Un would be given a working-level job that would give him room to take measure of the partys operations," said Prof. Kim Yong-hyun at Seouls Dongguk University.

However, Kim Jong Un may not have the benefit of two decades of training that his father had. Kim Jong Il, said to be suffering from diabetes and a kidney ailment, has appeared thinner and grayer in recent appearances.

"Another hereditary succession will be completed in 2012," predicted Ha Tae-keung, chief of Open Radio for North Korea, a Seoul-based station that claims to have an extensive network of contacts inside North Korea.

The year 2012 is the centenary of Kim Il Sungs birth, and the date already is being promoted as a significant milestone in North Korean history.

After the conference, the son can be expected to assume other top jobs one by one, including supreme commander of North Koreas 1.2 million-member army and general secretary of the Workers Party, analysts said. Kim Jong Il also took up those positions in the years before taking over as leader.

Cheong said he expects the sons name to appear in state media from the first day of the meeting, which he said would be aimed at dispelling questions at home and abroad about Kim Jong Uns status as heir apparent.

However, Prof. Yang Moo-jin of the University of North Korea Studies in Seoul said the sons presence will be kept out of official dispatches. Publicly presenting the son as the successor would make Kim Jong Il a lame-duck leader, he said.

North Korea cant afford any more political damage right now, he said.

Pyongyang is already suffering under widespread international sanctions for conducting nuclear and missile tests, and its economic woes are feared worse following a botched currency redenomination in November and recent flooding in the northwest.

The regime is also grappling with international pressure to come clean over the deadly sinking of a South Korean warship that killed 46 sailors � an attack Pyongyang flatly denies engineering.

Provocative acts such as the sinking of the Cheonan and the firing of artillery near the sea border with South Korea have been seen by some as decisions pinned to the young future leader to build his political clout.

However, the world can expect a new era in the impoverished, nuclear-armed nation once he takes power, Ha said.

"Hell be provocative until he feels his leadership is bolstered, but he will eventually choose the path for openness and reform," he said. "There is no other option."

This version corrects year to 1973 in graf 12, and 37 years graf 17



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UPS cargo plane crashes near Dubai airport AP

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates A UPS cargo plane with two crew members on board crashed shortly after takeoff Friday outside Dubai, officials said.

The state news agency WAM, quoting the General Civil Aviation Authority, reported that the "bodies of two pilots" had been found at the scene, but UPS did not confirm that.

The plane went down inside an Emirati air base near a busy highway intersection about 10 miles 16 kilometers southeast of Dubais international airport. WAM said the crash occurred in an unpopulated desert area, suggesting there may not have been casualties on the ground.

Smoke rose from the crash site, which was shielded from the highway by walls. Migrant laborers from a nearby camp gathered along the roadside to watch.

UPS spokeswoman Kristen Petrella said the Boeing 747-400 � which has a wingspan of 212 feet 64.6 meters and length of 232 feet 70.7 meters � went down at about 8 p.m. in Dubai 12 p.m. EST. Flight 6 was en route to the UPS hub in Cologne, Germany, she said. Petrella said the plane had two crew members but the company has not confirmed any casualties.

UPS, an Atlanta-based company formally known as United Parcel Service Inc., is the worlds largest shipping company.

"This incident is very unfortunate and we will do everything we can to find the cause," UPS airline and international operations manager Bob Lekites said in a statement.

A Dubai-based spokesman for the General Civil Aviation Authority, Ismail al-Baroushi, said an investigation was under way, but it was "too early to speculate" on the cause of the crash.

A witness, who refused to give his name, said he was sitting on the balcony of his home when he heard a "big boom."

"There was fire and too much smoke," he said.

In October 2009, a Sudanese Boeing 707 cargo plane crashed in the desert outside Dubai after taking off from Sharjah airport north of Dubai, killing six crew members. Emirati regulators have banned the planes Sudanese owner, Azza Transport, from operating in the country.

There are about 300 747 freighters in service, carrying about half the worlds air cargo.

UPS planes have been involved in four accidents since 1985, none fatal, according to an aviation safety database. The most recent involved a fire that broke out in the cargo hold of a McDonnell Douglas DC-8 en route from Atlanta to Philadelphia. Smoke was billowing from the plane when it landed, but the three pilots were able to evacuate safely, said the database, maintained by the Flight Safety Foundation of Alexandria, Va.

In 2005, pilot error cause the nose gear of a McDonnell Douglas MD-11F to collapse during a landing in Anchorage, causing $10 million in damages to the plane.

Prior to Fridays accident, five major airline accidents have been linked to Dubai Airport since 1973, with no fatalities, according to the database. The most recent was on March 12, 2007, when a Biman Bangladesh Airlines Airbus A310 with 236 passengers and crew members aborted a takeoff. The plane came to rest at the end of the runway with a collapsed nose gear.

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Associated Press Airlines Writer Samantha Bomkamp in New York and AP writers Michael Casey in Dubai and Joan Lowy in Washington contributed to this report.



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Powerful 7.4 quake hits New Zealands South Island AP

WELLINGTON, New Zealand A powerful 7.4-magnitude earthquake struck much of New Zealands South Island early Saturday. No tsunami alert was issued and there were no reports of injuries.

The quake, which hit 19 miles 30 kilometers west of the southern city of Christchurch, shook a wide area with some residents there saying buildings had collapsed and power was severed.

Christchurch police reported some road damage in parts of the city of 400,000 people, with a series of sharp aftershocks rocking the area. Police officers cordoned off some streets where rubble was strewn about from the quake.

Christchurch resident Colleen Simpson said panicked residents ran into the street in their pajamas. Some buildings had collapsed, there was no power, and the mobile telephone network had failed.

"Oh my God. There is a row of shops completely demolished right in front of me," Simpson told the Stuff news website.

Another person from Christchurch, Kevin OHanlon, said the jolt was extremely powerful.

"I was awake to go to work and then just heard this massive noise and boom, it was like the house got hit. It just started shaking. Ive never felt anything like it," he told the news website.

The earthquake was 21 miles 33 kilometers below the Earths surface, the geological agency GNS Science said. Radio reports said items were tossed from store shelves and roof tiles cracked by the strong temblor.

The quake hit at 4:35 a.m. shaking thousands of residents awake, New Zealands National Radio reported.

The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said "no destructive widespread tsunami threat existed, based on historical earthquake and tsunami data."

New Zealand sits above an area of the Earths crust where two tectonic plates collide. The country records more than 14,000 earthquakes a year � but only about 150 are felt by residents. Fewer than 10 a year do any damage.



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Earl sideswipes NC, takes aim at New England AP

CHATHAM, Mass. A weakening Hurricane Earl swiped past North Carolina on Friday on its way to New England, where officials warned residents that it still packed dangerous winds that could topple trees or damage the areas picturesque gray-shingled cottages.

Earl dropped to a Category 1 storm � down from a powerful Category 4 a day earlier � with sustained winds of 85 mph. The storm could weaken to a tropical storm by the time it passes about 50 to 75 miles southeast of Nantucket on Friday night, said National Hurricane Center Director Bill Read.

"The good news on Earl is it has been steadily weakening, maybe even a little quicker than forecast," Read said.

Nantucket police chief William Pittman warned island residents against complacency, saying Earl was "still a dangerous storm" with severe winds that could be stronger than those carried by the gusty noreasters the island is used to absorbing.

The National Hurricane Center reduced the New England areas under a hurricane warning to just Cape Cod and the islands. The rest of the New England coast remained under tropical storm warnings and watches.

The National Weather Service was forecasting winds up to 65 mph on Nantucket with gusts up to 85 mph. On Cape Cod, winds up to 45 mph with gusts of up to 60 mph were expected.

Earl sideswiped North Carolinas Outer Banks early Friday, flooding the vacation islands but causing no injuries and little damage. The storms winds had dropped by then to 105 mph from 145 mph a day before.

Hurricane-force winds, which start at 74 mph, apparently did not reach the Outer Banks, said the National Hurricane Centers chief forecaster, James Franklin. Officials had urged some 35,000 visitors and residents on the Outer Banks to leave the dangerously exposed islands as the storm closed in, but hundreds chose to wait it out in their boarded-up homes.

Nancy Scarborough of Hatteras said she had about a foot of water underneath her home, which is on stilts. "Once it goes down, it shouldnt take long to get things back together," she said.

In Massachusetts, Gov. Deval Patrick declared a state of emergency Thursday as he urged residents not to panic.

On Friday, many seemed to be following his advice. Traffic was light on both bridges to and from Cape Cod, where the air was still and heavy rains started in the late morning.

In downtown Chatham, a quaint fishing village at Cape Cods eastern edge, tourists strolled the bookstores, cafes, candy shops and ice cream parlors on Main Street, largely unconcerned about the coming storm.

A handful of stores had put plywood over their windows, including the Ben Franklin Old Fashioned Variety Store. "Cmon Earl, were ready for you," a handwritten note read.

In a parking lot near downtown, five large utility trucks sat waiting and linemen milled about, ready to fix any possible power outages. A handful of people walked on a beach nearby, the waves gently lapping the sand.

In Barnstable, Ellen McDonough, of Boston, and a friend were waiting Friday morning for one of the last ferries to Nantucket before service was stopped around noon. The two had planned a Labor Day weekend getaway to the island and didnt see Earl as a good reason to cancel.

"Its not a three-foot snow storm. I think us New Englanders are tough," McDonough said. "Weve had this weekend planned, and no hurricane is going to stop us."

Scott Thomas, president of the Nantucket Island Chamber of Commerce, said island residents were taking the coming storm in stride.

"This is not something that is really unheard of for us, in terms of being prepped for it and being ready to handle something like this," he said. "We kind of roll with the punches out here; its not a huge deal for us."

Thomas Kinton Jr., executive director of the Massachusetts Port Authority, which runs Logan International Airport in Boston, said he didnt expect major commercial airlines to cancel flights because of Earl. Cape Air, which serves Cape Cod, will be ending its flights at midday Friday, he said.

"The potential impacts to Logan airport are lessening as the hurricane gets closer," Kinton said.

In New York City, officials were on alert but said they expected to see only side effects of the storm � mostly rain and high winds, with possible soil erosion on the beaches and flooding along the oceanside coasts of Brooklyn and Queens.

In Rhode Island, Gov. Donald Carcieri signed a disaster declaration Thursday, giving emergency workers access to state and federal resources to deal with problems that may be caused by the hurricane. Block Island, a popular Rhode Island tourist destination, was expected to gusts as high as 60 mph.

At Acadia National Park in Maine officials closed most of a road where thousands of visitors gathered last year to watch the swells from Hurricane Bill, and a 20-foot wave swept a 7-year-old girl to her death.

Just off the coast of Maine and New Hampshire, some island residents decided to play it safe and return to the mainland.

Robert Bohlmann, emergency management agency director in York County, Maine, said some homes on the rocky Isles of Shoals belong to fishermen who have no intention of leaving.

"You couldnt get them off the island if you dragged them," Bohlmann said. "Its their homes and theyre dont want to leave."

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Associated Press writers Mike Baker in Buxton, N.C.; Jeffrey Collins in Columbia, S.C.; David Sharp in Portland, Maine; Lyle Moran, Denise Lavoie and Jay Lindsay in Boston contributed to this report.



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Airport official: plane crashes outside Dubai AP

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates An aircraft believed to be a cargo plane crashed Friday outside Dubai, an airport official said. There was no immediate word on casualties.

Some unconfirmed reports said the plane went down on a stretch of highway, but the state news agency WAM reported the crash was in an unpopulated desert area.

The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity under standing rules for releasing information to reporters, said he could not provide more details.

In October 2009, a Sudanese Boeing 707 cargo plane crashed in the desert outside Dubai, killing six crew members.

Emirati regulators have banned the planes Sudanese owner, Azza Transport, from operating in the country.



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Airport official: plane crashes outside Dubai AP

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates An aircraft believed to be a cargo plane crashed Friday outside Dubai, an airport official said. There was no immediate word on casualties.

Some unconfirmed reports said the plane went down on a stretch of highway, but the state news agency WAM reported the crash was in an unpopulated desert area.

The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity under standing rules for releasing information to reporters, said he could not provide more details.

In October 2009, a Sudanese Boeing 707 cargo plane crashed in the desert outside Dubai, killing six crew members.

Emirati regulators have banned the planes Sudanese owner, Azza Transport, from operating in the country.



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Government: Mozambique lost $3M because of riots AP

MAPUTO, Mozambique Mozambiques economy has lost more than $3 million because of deadly riots over the rising prices of food and other goods, the government said Friday, as state media reported new protests in two other towns.

Those losses include damaged property and lost production, state radio reported citing a government report. Computers, chairs and other equipment were looted from bank branches during riots, and loads of corn and cement were taken from railway cars.

Mozambicans have seen the price of a loaf of bread rise 25 percent in the past year � and fuel and water costs also have gone up. The increases have had a dramatic effect in the southeastern African nation where more than half the population lives in poverty.

Among those who have been hardest hit by the violence are the thousands of hawkers who make their living on the streets of the capital, said Antonio Fernando, the minister of trade and industry. Mozambique can only solve its economic woes if people are working, he said.

"These kinds of things can drive away foreign investors," Fernando said of the deadly riots.

On Wednesday, protesters threw stones, burned tires and looted shops, and police opened fire on them. At least seven people were killed and scores wounded. Traffic was returning to normal Friday, and it appeared few people were responding to calls for more protests.

State radio and TV reported police scattered protesters in two provincial towns Friday. There were no reports of injuries.

The Mozambique Workers Organization, the countrys largest trade union federation, has called for workers to be allowed to get back to their factories and offices. In a statement Friday, the federation condemned the vandalism and violence that accompanied the strike, and said dialogue was the only way to resolve concerns about high prices.

The government, which sets the price of bread, fuel and water has said that it will remain firm on the higher prices. It has said keeping food prices low is difficult because so much of the countrys food has to be imported: Mozambique grows only 30 percent of the wheat it needs.

Civil war consumed Mozambique for 17 years after independence from Portugal in 1975. That devastation has slowed progress in agricultural development, said Franck Black, an expert on Mozambique with the African Development Bank.

From 1994 to 2006, Mozambique saw annual GDP growth of about 8 percent, fueled largely by foreign interest in its raw and hydroelectric resources and growing confidence war would not return. Little of the new wealth, though, has trickled down to the impoverished majority.

Black said he was confident the government wanted the wealth spread more equitably, and said its macroeconomic policies were strong.

"The trickle down does take some time," he said.

Telmo Fernandes, managing partner of Portuguese consulting firm who was accompanying a delegation of eight Portuguese companies visiting Mozambique, told reporters in Maputo on Friday that entrepreneurs from his country saw investment here as a long-term proposition, while this weeks disturbances "are temporary."

____

Associated Press Writer Donna Bryson in Johannesburg contributed to this report.



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Ex-UK deputy PM wants answers on tabloid scandal AP

LONDON Britains former deputy prime minister pressed Friday for police to reveal more about what is alleged to have been a pattern of illegal eavesdropping at a major tabloid newspaper.

John Prescott said he believes he was among those targeted by the best-selling News of The World tabloid. He urged police, who investigated phone hacking by the newspaper, to reveal whether the papers journalists tried to spy on his private conversations.

"The only way the truth can come out is really to have it properly investigated," Prescott told the BBC. "I think it demands at least that."

Prescott is one of several public figures who are pushing for a fresh inquiry into News of The Worlds activities following a New York Times report alleging that breaking in to voicemail messages was a matter of routine in the papers newsroom, and that the editor, Andy Coulson, had participated in dozens or even hundreds of meetings where the hacking was discussed.

The Times cited a dozen former News of the World reporters as the sources of its information � and said that one current reporter had only recently been linked to an attempt to hack into an unidentified public figures phone.

Others pressing for a new investigation include Labour lawmaker Tom Watson and former Scotland Yard official Brian Paddick.

Coulson resigned in January 2007 after his royal editor, Clive Goodman, was found guilty of intercepting phone messages left for palace officials, including some from princes William and Harry. Goodmans accomplice, private investigator Glenn Mulcaire, was also convicted. Both were sentenced to several months in prison.

The News of the World has always characterized the scandal as a singular event, saying that Coulson and other senior figures at the paper had no knowledge of the hacking. Coulson has denied having anything to do with phone hacking.

The Times report � and the cascade of British media coverage that has followed it � threatens to taint Britains Conservative-led government because Coulson has since been hired as Prime Minister David Camerons top media aide. Camerons Downing Street office has so far backed Coulson.

The News of the World has contested the Times report, saying in a statement that "we reject absolutely that any suggestion or assertion that the activities of Clive Goodman or Glenn Mulcaire ... were part of a culture of wrongdoing at the News of the World and were specifically sanctioned or accepted at senior level in the newspaper."

The paper acknowledged that one of its journalists faced a "serious allegation" and had been suspended from reporting duties pending an investigation into his activities. But it followed that admission with an attack on the Times, suggesting that the paper had devoted "enormous resources" to investigating the News of The World out of corporate self-interest.

The News of the World is owned by News International Ltd., a subsidiary of Rupert Murdochs News Corp., whose U.S. media outlets include Fox Television, the New York Post, and the Wall Street Journal � which is in fierce competition with the New York Times.

The scandal also has the potential to embroil a host of public figures � celebrities, sports stars, politicians, and even senior members of law enforcement. The Financial Times reported Friday that as many as 10 lawmakers feel they could have been targeted, and The Guardian newspaper reported that documents held by Mulcaire, the private investigator, listed the names of Ian Blair, Scotland Yards former police commissioner, and Paddick, its former deputy assistant commissioner.

The scandal also raises questions about Scotland Yard itself.

The New York Times claimed that the investigation into the phone hacking was limited to the attempt to spy on the royal family in part because the force was busy investigating a major terrorist plot � but also because of the allegedly cozy relationship between the police force and the tabloid.

A Scotland Yard official speaking to The Associated Press emphasized the former point and denied that the force had failed to follow up on clear leads.

But he revealed that the force had recovered a huge load of telephone numbers over the course of the investigation.

The official said that detectives found nearly 3,000 cell phone numbers over the course of their investigation into the hacking and that hundreds of people were thought to have been targeted, although he cautioned that investigators believed far fewer had their phones actually broken into.



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PS3 hack escapes court challenge

Sonys battle to block the distribution of a hack for its PlayStation 3 PS3 has been won in an Australian court but lost on the internet.

The court ruled on Friday that a ban on distribution of the PS3Jailbreak "dongle", first issued on 27 August, would be made permanent.

However, on Thursday the software code behind the hack was released on the internet as "open-source".

The hack permits homemade games to be played on the console.

It has also already been modified by other hackers to permit the playing of pirated games.

The ban prevents OzModChips, ModSupplier and Quantronics from importing, distributing or selling the device in Australia, although it names the "supplier" as Chinese firm China Sun Trading Limited.

The court order demands that the distributors hand over any stocks of the dongles.

Distributors in other countries have received substantially similar court documents banning the sale of the dongles.

However, the courts action was pre-empted when another group of hackers decided to develop and release PSGroove, the code behind the hack, on the internet.

Mathieu Hervais told BBC News he is one of about 20 hackers involved in the development of PSGroove.

"We want people to run the software they like on the system they paid for without it having to be licensed by Sony," he said.

"We released it on the internet because we believe in openness, choice and innovation from everyone.

"We understand games console makers point of view as well when it comes to protecting their income or business models, we just believe compromises could be made to keep everyone happy."

Sony declined to comment on the court case or the release of the open-source code.



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7 defendants convicted in Portugal sex abuse trial AP

LISBON, Portugal A Portuguese court found six men and one woman guilty Friday of crimes relating to child sex abuse in a major trial that lasted nearly six years, a prosecution lawyer said.

Chief prosecutor Miguel Matias told the AP all seven defendants were found guilty of crimes including sexually abusing minors and adolescents, raping children and running a pedophile ring at a state-run childrens home in Lisbon during the 1990s.

Matias, speaking during a lunch break on the trials final day, said the court was due to hand down sentences later Friday. He could not immediately provide a breakdown of the crimes the court ruled were proven.

All defendants have the right to appeal.

The trial, believed to be Portugals longest, included testimony from more than 800 witnesses and experts, including 32 alleged victims, and shocked the country.

The abuse centered on Casa Pia, a 230-year-old institution caring for roughly 4,500 needy children, most of them living in dormitories at its premises around the capital.

The defendants include a national television celebrity and a retired ambassador in a case that shook public trust in the countrys institutions when the allegations emerged in 2002.

Ana Peres, the lead judge in a three-judge panel, read a summarized version of the courts decisions, some of which was televised. The full document reportedly stretches to almost 2,000 pages.

The victims � now aged between 16 and 22 � have given chilling testimony during the trial and identified their alleged abusers by pointing to them across the courtroom.

"Some of the accounts could be considered pornographic," Peres told the small courtroom where a few members of the public were present.

A 53-year-old former driver at the Casa Pia, Carlos Silvino, confessed to more than 600 crimes and incriminated the other defendants.

They include Carlos Cruz, a popular television presenter with a three-decade career in show business, and Jorge Ritto, a decorated career diplomat and former UNESCO ambassador. Three other men are also charged with child sex abuse, including a doctor and a former Casa Pia ombudsman. A 68-year-old woman, Gertrudes Nunes, is charged with providing her house for meetings between the children and the alleged pedophiles.

The six denied the charges and said their lives have been ruined by the allegations.

The former ombudsman, Manuel Abrantes, said the allegations wrecked his career and family life.

"My life was destroyed overnight," he said.

The claims that a pedophile ring had preyed on children at the state institution for years rocked the publics faith in the authorities, who appeared unable to protect the most vulnerable members of society.

The protracted trial has also fueled outrage about Portugals notoriously slow legal system.



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Fidel Castro dusts off military uniform AP

HAVANA Fidel Castro dusted off his military fatigues for the first time since stepping down as president four years ago, a symbolic act in a Communist country where little signals often carry enormous significance.

The revolutionary leader wore the cap and uniform � minus the star and laurels he held as commander in chief � at a speech early Friday to students at the University of Havana. The clothing was sure to revive speculation the 84-year-old is seeking a larger role in Cuban politics after turning power over to his younger brother Raul.

Castro repeated his warning that the world stands on the brink of a nuclear conflagration due to tension pitting the United States and Israel against Iran. Castro has repeated the message since emerging from seclusion in July.



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Kenya allows Intl Criminal Court to open office AP

NAIROBI, Kenya Kenya on Friday allowed the International Criminal Court to open an office in the country, a development that comes after Kenyas commitment to the court came into question when the nation hosted Sudans indicted leader last week.

ICC Prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo is investigating top Kenyan leaders and businesspeople for their roles in the countrys December 2007 to February 2008 post-election violence that killed more than 1,000 people.

On Friday, Kenya granted the ICC immunity from legal challenges, tax exemptions and other privileges in a letter signed by Foreign Affairs Minister Moses Wetangula.

The move comes only a week after Kenya hosted Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir during a ceremony for Kenyas new constitution.

Al-Bashir faces charges of genocide and crimes against humanity at the ICC stemming from the violence in Sudans Darfur region. Despite being a party to the statute that created the ICC, Kenya did not arrest al-Bashir, arguing that such a move would destabilize Sudan.

That decision provoked an international outcry, including words of rebuke from President Barack Obama, and it raised doubts about the countrys willingness to hand over Kenyan suspects expected to soon be charged by the ICC.

The ICC does not have its own police to enforce arrest warrants and it relies on member states such as Kenya to execute them.

Kenyan Cabinet leaders, including Wetangula, met with ICC Registrar Silvana Arbia on Friday.

"We have agreed to comply with every aspect of the ICC request for the privileges and immunity which their officers require to be able to undertake their work," said Minister of State for Internal Security George Saitoti, who chairs the Cabinet subcommittee on the ICC.

"I trust that the government of Kenya will fully respect its obligations under the Rome Statute," which established the ICC, Arbia said after receiving the letter.

The ICC registrar has been in Kenya since Wednesday to seek government assurances it will cooperate with the court and educate the public about how it operates.

Moreno Ocampo has said he believes crimes against humanity were committed during Kenyas political violence.

The court allowed him to open an investigation in April and he has said he expects the investigation to conclude by the end of this year. Moreno Ocampo has said he expects to charge up to roughly a half-dozen people who allegedly directed the violence.



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Police say attacks on Pakistani minorities kill 23 AP

QUETTA, Pakistan Suicide bombings targeting religious minorities killed at least 23 people in Pakistan on Friday, driving up the toll of sectarian assaults in a country already battered by massive flooding.

A blast killed at least 22 people in the southwestern city of Quetta at a Shiite procession calling for solidarity with Palestinians, Police Chief Ghulam Shabir Sheikh said. Police said dozens were wounded and some were in critical condition.

Some Shiite youths fired in the air after the blast, and Qazi Abdul Wahid, a senior police official, said officers were trying to control the situation.

Shiite leader Allama Abbas Kumaili appealed to participants to remain peaceful.

"We understand these are attempts to bring Sunni and Shiite sects against each other," he said.

The attack in Quetta was the second this week on Pakistani Shiites, who by some estimates comprise about 20 percent of the population in the mostly Sunni Muslim country, although figures are imprecise and disputed.

A triple suicide attack Wednesday night killed 35 people at a Shiite ceremony in the eastern city of Lahore.

Kumaili said the attacks against minority sects were a result of government failure.

"Our government concentrates all its efforts to secure VIPs. Common men are not their priority," he said.

Government officials have said they cannot protect outdoor gatherings from attacks, and Interior Minister Rehman Malik called Thursday for Shiites to hold religious ceremonies indoors.

Baluchistan provincial police chief Malik Iqbal said officials had warned organizers of the Quetta ceremony to stick inside a security cordon after intelligence agents received reports about a possible terror attack.

"They violated the route," Iqbal said. "We had warned them not to extend their rally out of the cordon."

Wednesdays attack in Lahore, and a host of other assaults on religious minorities, was claimed by the hardline Sunni Pakistani Taliban, which is seeking to overthrow a Western-backed government shaken most recently by flooding that has caused massive displacement, suffering and economic damage.

Earlier Friday, a suicide attack on a mosque belonging to the minority Ahmadi sect killed at least one person and wounded several others in the northwest Pakistani town of Mardan.

Military and law-enforcement officials also have been battered by militant violence, particularly along the border with Afghanistan. Officials said a roadside bomb attack in the capital of the northwests Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province Friday killed one police officer and wounded three others.

The floods, spawned by heavy rains weeks ago in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and elsewhere in the mountains of northern Pakistan, have killed more than 1,600 people and affected about 20 million people. The waters are still swamping rich agricultural land in the southern provinces of Sindh and Punjab.

Flood victims say they have received little government help, and most assistance has come to them from private charities. The International Committee of the Red Cross warned Thursday that survivors anger was beginning to hamper those aid efforts.

About 500 survivors blocked a key road in the Sindh town of Gharo on Friday to protest inadequate food and drinking water.

"We have blocked traffic today to draw government attention toward our problems. We are living at a government building without food," said Deedar Ahmad, 25, who said he fled with about 1,000 people from a nearby flooded village.

Survivor Ali Nawaz said the government had housed flood victims but was not providing food, electricity, water or adequate shelter.

"We cannot sleep because of the fears of snakes," he said.

The flooding, and anger over the government response, has raised fears about the stability of Pakistans government, seen as a problematic but essential Western ally in the fight against Islamist militants in Afghanistan and Pakistans own restive tribal areas.

The Pakistani Taliban has issued veiled threats against Western aid workers but a recent wave of attacks have focused instead on religious minorities, particularly Shiites and Ahmadis.

Police official Ahsanullah Khan said the bomber in Fridays attack on the Ahmadi mosque in the northwest town of Mardan appeared to have detonated himself after he was prevented from entering the building.

In May, two teams of seven militants armed with hand grenades, suicide vests and assault rifles attacked two Ahmadi mosques in Lahore, killing 97 and wounding dozens.

Many mainstream Muslims consider the Ahmadis heretics for believing that their founder, Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, was a savior foretold by the Quran, Islams holy book. They say Ahmadis are defying the basic tenet of Islam that says Muhammad is the final prophet.

Ahmadis argue that their leader was the savior rather than a prophet.

Under pressure from Islamists, Pakistan in the 1970s declared Ahmadis a non-Muslim minority. Pakistani Ahmadis � who number between 3 million and 4 million � are prohibited from calling themselves Muslims or engaging in practices such as reciting Islamic prayers.

___

Khan reported from Peshawar. Associated Press Writer Vincent Thian contributed to this report from Gharo.



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Police: Attack on Pakistan minority mosque kills 1 AP

PESHAWAR, Pakistan A suicide attack on a mosque belonging to a minority sect killed at least one person and wounded several others in northwest Pakistan on Friday, police said.

Pakistan has been hit by dozens of attacks on religious minorities in recent years, including a triple suicide attack Wednesday night that killed 35 people at a Shiite ceremony in the eastern city of Lahore.

Most of the attacks have been claimed by the hardline Sunni Pakistani Taliban, which is seeking to destabilize a Western-backed government already shaken by flooding that has caused massive displacement, suffering and economic damage.

In May, two teams of seven militants armed with hand grenades, suicide vests and assault rifles attacked two Ahmadi mosques in Lahore, killing 97 and wounding dozens.

Police official Ahsanullah Khan said the bomber in Fridays attack appeared to have detonated himself after he was prevented from entering the mosque in the town of Mardan.

Many mainstream Muslims consider the Ahmadis heretics for believing that their founder, Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, was a savior foretold by the Quran, Islams holy book. They say Ahmadis are defying the basic tenet of Islam that says Muhammad is the final prophet.

Ahmadis argue that their leader was the savior rather than a prophet.

The sect spread into Muslim-majority Pakistan after British India was partitioned and now claims 160 million adherents in 180 countries, according to a spokesman, Aslam Daud.

Under pressure from Islamists, Pakistan in the 1970s declared Ahmadis a non-Muslim minority. Pakistani Ahmadis � who number between 3 million and 4 million � are prohibited from calling themselves Muslims or engaging in practices such as reciting Islamic prayers.



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Gates says US making progress in Afghan war AP

COMBAT OUTPOST SENJERAY, Afghanistan U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates says he saw and heard evidence the U.S. counterinsurgency strategy is taking hold in critical Kandahar province.

Gates on Friday toured U.S. bases in the thick of fighting in Kandahar city and the Taliban haven of Zhari district, west of the city.

Gates says he came away from his visit encouraged by what he saw. He added that signs of progress are incremental but growing.

But, he says, theres still a long way to go.

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

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan AP � As the last of 30,000 U.S. reinforcements arrive in Afghanistan, U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates on Friday got a firsthand look at operations in the dangerous south where Afghan and international troops are ramping up security.

Gates traveled to Kandahar province, a region where U.S., Afghan and NATO forces are trying to rout insurgents from their strongholds and bolster governance. The Taliban are fighting back, waging a fear and intimidation campaign to keep local Afghans from siding with international forces and the Afghan government.

"You guys are in the forward foxhole and what makes a difference in the whole campaign is your success here in Kandahar city," Gates told U.S. troops at Camp Nathan Smith, headquarters for U.S. operations in the largest city in southern Afghanistan.

Gates spoke with a couple dozen U.S. service members in a courtyard ringed with heavily armored all-terrain vehicles designed to help them survive the homemade bombs that are the biggest death threat to coalition troops. They were part of the 1st Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, which arrived Aug. 18, and has already lost eight soldiers � seven last Monday alone in two separate explosions.

"Unfortunately, there are going to be more tough days ahead," Gates said. "You know that better than anybody."

One soldier asked Gates why the U.S. doesnt go after insurgents hiding in neighboring Pakistan. The United States is pressing Islamabad to expand its pursuit of insurgents farther into North Waziristan, a border area next to Afghanistan often described as lawless.

"I think the likelihood of direct U.S. military engagement in Pakistan is very low," Gates said.

For the past 18 months, Pakistan has realized the importance of fighting insurgents on its soil and has effectively squeezed militant groups � in some cases, concentrating them in the border area of North Waziristan. U.S. officials are looking for assurances that Pakistan will not end its efforts there because of the demands created by this years historic floods.

"Everyone understands that the sanctuaries on the other side of the border are a big problem" and the joint U.S.-Pakistan objective is to expunge those hideouts, Gates said. "Unfortunately the flooding in Pakistan is going to delay any operation in North Waziristan for some time."

From Camp Nathan Smith, Gates traveled west of Kandahar to violent Zhari district, which Lt. Gen. David Rodriguez calls "one of the critical districts" outside the city.

Speaking to reporters at a command outpost there, Rodriguez predicted that U.S. and Afghan forces will be able to show some progress in Kandahar province before the end of the year and in time for an important end-of-year evaluation of the war by the Obama administration.

Rodriguez would not characterize the expected progress as significant. He said it would be piecemeal and gradual.

For instance, by the end of the year, Rodriguez predicted that Afghans would feel less intimidation from insurgents and local governing councils would be better representative of the people and less dominated by local powerbrokers.



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Suicide blast at Tajik police office injures 25 AP

DUSHANBE, Tajikistan A suicide car bomb blast on Friday tore through police offices in Tajikistans second-largest city, injuring 25 people, local officials said.

Tajikistans Deputy Interior Minister Sharif Nazarov told The Associated Press the car filled with explosives hit the offices of the police organized-crime division in Khujand at 8 a.m. Friday morning.

The suicide bomber drove his car into the office compounds gates when another vehicle was leaving. No deaths have been reported so far apart from the bomber.

Tajikistans top investigators are to fly to Khujand to probe the attack.

Impoverished Tajikistan is plagued by crime. The country bordering northern Afghanistan is one of the main conduits for smuggling Afghan opium and heroin.



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Democrats spend early to knock out GOP challengers AP

WASHINGTON Republican Jesse Kelly was still basking in the glow of his victory in an Arizona congressional primary when the Democratic congresswoman hes trying to unseat released a scathing TV ad branding him "a risk" who would gamble away peoples retirement savings.

It took Rep. Gabrielle Giffords campaign just hours to start hitting Kelly on the airwaves for his stance on Social Security. Thats because Giffords, like dozens of other Democrats around the country facing tough re-election bids in a political environment that favors the GOP, was trying to score a knockout punch against her rival before he had a chance to introduce himself to voters.

Its a time-tested tactic in political campaigns, particularly when an incumbent is facing a lesser-known challenger, or when a seat is up for grabs after a lawmakers retirement or departure. And with Democrats at risk of losing their grip on Congress in the November elections, going negative early and often is regarded as a necessity.

Polls show voters leaning toward the GOP � disillusioned with President Barack Obama, dissatisfied with the direction of the country and skittish about the sagging economy. So the idea, strategists and campaign watchers say, is for Democrats and their allies to portray Republicans as an even worse alternative to the devil they know.

"Things are looking so bad for Democrats that their only hope is to come out early and simply disqualify the Republican," said University of Wisconsin political scientist Ken Goldstein, who studies political advertising.

Unlike in most years, when the party in power can afford to boast about its candidates in the early stages of a race before going hard after its opponents in the closing days, Democrats are skipping the pleasantries this particularly grim year, Goldstein added.

"Usually people like to serve a little sorbet before the main course, but things are so dire now that theyre jumping right into dinner," he said.

Giffords had the financial wherewithal to do so, knowing that her challenger didnt have the means to hit back. Her campaign had nearly $2 million in cash as of last month, according to federal disclosures, while Kelly had less than $80,000 in the bank.

Democrats House campaign arm took a similar tack this week in its first advertisement of the political season, hammering Wisconsin Republican congressional candidate Sean Duffy. It charged that the former district attorney and reality TV personality, whos running to succeed retiring Democratic Rep. Dave Obey, favors privatizing Social Security.

"Remember the crash?" an announcer asks over a sinister soundtrack in the ad, which intersperses images of worried-looking women and senior citizens with pictures of Duffy.

His campaign says he doesnt back privatizing the federal retirement program.

Thats nothing compared with a pair of ominous advertisements a labor union began airing late this month on behalf of endangered Democratic Rep. Dina Titus of Nevada.

The American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees shelled out $750,000 to run ads bashing Titus rival Joe Heck. One calls Heck "dangerous to women" because of his stance against requiring insurance companies to cover a cervical cancer vaccine. The closing frame reads, "Warning. Joe Heck Dangerous."

Advertisements like that are already dominating the election season even before its customary Labor Day kickoff. Ad spending by candidates, parties and outside groups is way up, and negative spots are dominating, according to figures compiled by political ad tracker Evan Tracey.

As of last week, Tracey found, candidates for state and federal office had spent $395 million on ads for the November elections � nearly 40 percent more than at this point in the 2006 midterm elections � and more than half the ads had been negative. Political parties and outside groups had been even more negative, going on the attack nearly 80 percent of the time.

Democrats arent the only ones accentuating the vicious this year.

In one recent ad, Nevada Republican Sharron Angle pins the states surging unemployment and foreclosure rate and plummeting home values on Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, saying he has "dragged Nevada down to perhaps its lowest point ever."

In Indiana, Republican Dan Coats is bashing his opponent, Democratic Rep. Brad Ellsworth, for voting to close the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, charging that he wanted to let terrorists into the country and give them the same rights as Americans.

Independent groups advertising on behalf of Republicans have also come out early with an onslaught of negative TV spots that tie embattled Democrats to Obama and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., in hopes of making Election Day a referendum on the partys leadership.

Democrats only hope this fall is to resist that and instead convince voters theyd get a worse deal with Republicans.

Rep. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., the partys House campaign chief, has been making the case on a national level in recent days, saying voters arent satisfied with things now but dont want to go back to policies that created the current economic mess.

Asked recently whether Democrats were willing to be "cold-blooded" in hitting the GOP with advertising, Van Hollen said, "Our candidates are out there. Theyre going to be drawing clear distinctions."



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