Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Obama firm, wont yield on tax hike for wealthiest AP

CLEVELAND Politically weakened but refusing to bend, President Barack Obama insisted Wednesday that Bush-era tax cuts be cut off for the wealthiest Americans, joining battle with Republicans � and some fellow Democrats � just two months before bruising midterm elections.

Singling out House GOP leader John Boehner in his home state, Obama delivered a searing attack on Republicans for advocating "the same philosophy that led to this mess in the first place: cut more taxes for millionaires and cut more rules for corporations."

Obama rolled out a trio of new plans to help spur job growth and invigorate the sluggish national economic recovery. They would expand and permanently extend a research and development tax credit that lapsed in 2009, allow businesses to write off 100 percent of their investments in equipment and plants through 2011 and pump $50 billion into highway, rail, airport and other infrastructure projects.

The package was assembled by the presidents economic team after it became clear that the recovery was running out of steam. There was a political component, too: With Democrats in danger of losing control of the House in November, Obama is under heavy pressure to show voters that he and his party are ready to do more to get the economy moving and get millions of jobless Americans back to work.

However, none of Wednesdays proposals, nor Obamas call for allowing tax rates to rise for the wealthiest Americans, seems likely to be acted on by Congress before the elections, reflecting the battering Obama and congressional Democrats have taken in public opinion polls.

Obama made one of his strongest appeals yet to allow the tax cuts passed under President George W. Bush � in 2001 and 2003 � to expire at the end of the year on schedule, but just for individuals earning more than $200,000 annually or joint filers earning over $250,000. The changes would affect dividend and capital gains rates and various other tax benefits as well as income from wages and salaries.

The presidents strategy � pushing for legislation to save some tax cuts but not all � carries its own risks. Since all the tax breaks would expire automatically at the end of the year if Congress failed to act, that could result in sweeping increases for taxpayers at every income level � a major blow to recovery hopes and a colossal dose of blame for voters to parcel out to lawmakers and the White House.

Some influential Democrats, and Obamas own former budget director, Peter Orszag, have suggested a compromise might be necessary � one to temporarily extend all the tax cuts, perhaps for a year or two � given the current election-year animosity between the two parties.

But in his remarks in Cleveland, Obama strongly signaled he wasnt about to sign off on any such deal.

"Let me be clear to Mr. Boehner and everyone else. We should not hold middle class tax cuts hostage any longer," the president said. The administration "is ready this week to give tax cuts to every American making $250,000 or less," he said. It was a slight misstatement of his own position, since the $250,000 would apply to household income. The threshold for individuals would be $200,000

White House officials said Cleveland was picked as the speech site expressly because Boehner, who probably would become House speaker if Republicans take back control of the chamber in November, laid out his partys economic agenda here in a fiery Aug. 24 speech.

At that time, the Ohio Republican called for Obama to fire key economic advisers and to support an extension of all the Bush tax cuts.

Boehner kept up the attack on Wednesday. "If the president is really serious about focusing on jobs, a good start would be taking the advice of his recently departed budget director and freezing all tax rates, coupled with cutting of federal spending to where it was before all the bailouts, government takeovers and `stimulus spending sprees," he said after Obama spoke.

Earlier, Boehner was even more specific on ABCs "Good Morning America," saying Congress should freeze all tax rates for two years and pare back federal spending to 2008 levels. The deep recession began in December 2007.

White House press secretary Robert Gibbs noted that keeping the Bush tax cuts in effect just for two more years would represent a change from past calls by Boehner to keep them in place permanently.

"My question for him is: Are they abandoning the permanent or are they going with the two-year plan? Ive seen him saying permanent so many times that I tend to believe that," Gibbs told reporters aboard Air Force One. "Thats his plan and I think that continues to be his plan."

Republicans, and some Democrats, argue that the fragile state of the economy makes this a poor time to raise taxes on anyone � and that increases could stifle wealthier peoples appetite for spending.

Obama argued that the rich are more likely to save additional money than spend it. And he said the struggling U.S. economy cant afford to spend $700 billion to keep lower tax rates in place for the nations highest earners.

That $700 billion is what the nonpartisan congressional Joint Committee on Taxation estimates it would cost the Treasury to continue tax cuts for top earners over 10 years. What Obama wants to do would cost just over $3 trillion over the same period, the panel estimates.

The debate over the Bush tax cuts is an unwelcome one for dozens of vulnerable Democratic incumbents just weeks before Election Day. Already, a handful of Democrats in conservative or swing districts, such as Reps. Gerry Connolly in the northern Virginia suburbs of Washington, D.C., and Bobby Bright in southeastern Alabama, have come out publicly for extending all the cuts � at least temporarily.

Sen. Michael Bennet, D-Colo., engaged in a tight re-election battle, said he "would not support additional spending in a second stimulus package" and that any new initiatives such as Obamas infrastructure package should be paid for with leftover funds in the $814 billion stimulus package passed last year.

Still other embattled Democrats, wary of alienating middle-class voters, are siding with Obama. In central Ohio, for example, Rep. Mary Jo Kilroy has said the tax cuts for higher earners should be repealed but middle-income people should see no tax increases.

Obama acknowledged recovery had slowed noticeably, with unemployment hovering just under 10 percent.

"The middle class is still treading water, while those aspiring to reach the middle class are doing everything they can to keep from drowning," he said.

Polls have shown a steady slippage in Obamas approval ratings and an accompanying rise in Republican prospects for winning House and Senate seats in November. That has chipped away at Obamas leverage to get things done in Congress.

Obama has sought to frame the election as a choice between continuing his policies or reinstating those pursued by Bush. He acknowledged in an interview with ABC after his speech that "if the election is a referendum on are people satisfied about the economy as it currently is, then were not going to do well, because I think everybody feels like this economy needs to better than its been doing."

The excerpt was aired Wednesday on ABCs evening news. Fuller portions of the interview were airing Thursday morning on "Good Morning America."

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Tom Raum reported from Washington. Associated Press writers Stephen Ohlemacher and Erica Werner in Washington contributed to this report.



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Mexican mayor killed, massacre suspects arrested AP

MEXICO CITY Hooded gunmen killed the mayor of a small town in the northern Mexico state of San Luis Potosi on Wednesday, and prosecutors announced the arrest of seven suspects in the massacre of 72 migrants in August.

President Felipe Calderons office issued a statement saying he "energetically condemned" the slaying of the mayor of El Naranjo � the third mayor to be killed in Mexico in less than a month.

Amid the violence, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said that Mexico is "looking more and more like Colombia looked 20 years ago, where the narco-traffickers control certain parts of the country, not significant parts."

Her comments raised hackles in Mexico.

"Of course we do not agree with the statement in this regard, given that there are very important differences between what Colombia faced then and what Mexico faces today," Mexican government security spokesman Alejandro Poire said.

Mexican officials say drug cartels are not allied with domestic rebel insurgencies, do not have political influence or following and do not exercise formal control of large swaths of the country, as they did in Colombia in the 1980s and 1990s.

But attacks like Wednesdays shooting death of El Naranjo Mayor Alexander Lopez Garcia suggest cartels are targeting civilian government in Mexico.

The San Luis Potosi state prosecutors office said Lopez Garcia was killed by a squad of four hitmen who pulled up in a vehicle.

Two of the attackers burst into Lopez Garcias office and killed him before fleeing. The rural township of about 20,000 people borders the violent-wracked state of Tamaulipas, where 72 migrants were massacred by drug gunmen in August.

There was no immediate information on the motive in the attack, but the style of the slaying resembles methods used by Mexicos drug cartels.

Lopez Garcia wa the third Mexican mayor slain in the last month. On Aug. 29, the mayor of a town just across the state line in Tamaulipas was shot to death and his daughter wounded. The mayor of Santiago, a town in the neighboring state of Nuevo Leon, was found murdered Aug. 18, a crime for local police officers allied with a drug gang are suspected.

Clinton made her statements Wednesday in Washington at the Council on Foreign Relations, where she said drug cartels are "morphing into, or making common cause with, what we would consider an insurgency in Mexico and in Central America."

"These drug cartels are now showing more and more indices of insurgency," Clinton said. "All of a sudden, car bombs show up which werent there before."

Clinton also suggested that "we need to figure out what are the equivalents" for Mexico and Central America of the U.S. Plan Colombia � in which American special forces teams train Colombian troops and U.S. advisers are attached to Colombian military units.

Mexico has long rejected allowing U.S. troops on its soil, except for a single symbolic presence: Mexicos Senate has authorized a U.S. detachment to march in next weeks Bicentennial parade.

Clinton acknowledged Plan Colombia was controversial, but added that "there were problems and there were mistakes, but it worked."

Later, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Arturo Valenzuela said Clintons comments shouldnt be misinterpreted.

"What we are concerned about is the fact that you see the development of phenomena of car bombs that can affect innocent people and these are terrorist acts, you can define them as terrorist acts," Valenzuela said.

"But the term insurgency should not be viewed in the same way we would refer to a Colombian insurgency. Not an insurgency of a militarized group within a society that is attempting to take over the state for political reasons."

He said what was happening in Mexico is an escalation of violence by criminal organizations, not an insurgency.

Also Wednesday, the Mexican government announced that marines had arrested seven gunmen suspected of killing 72 Central and South American migrants last month in the worst drug cartel massacre to date.

Four of the suspects were arrested after a Sept. 3 gunbattle with marines, and the other three were captured days later, spokesman Alejandro Poire said at a news conference.

Poire alleged the seven belong to the Zetas drug gang, but he gave no further details on their identities or what led to their arrests.

Investigators believe the migrants were kidnapped by the Zetas and killed after refusing to work for the cartel.

The arrests "will help determine exactly what happened in San Fernando, Tamaulipas, and its a significant step toward ending the impunity surrounding assaults on migrants by organized crime," Poire said.

A total of eight suspects are now in custody: Marines arrested a teenager after a shootout with gunmen at the ranch the day they discovered the bodies. Three gunmen were killed during that battle.

In addition, marines last week found the bodies of three other men suspected of participating in the massacre after an anonymous caller told authorities where to find them. Officials say they have no information on who made the call, but in the past drug gangs have handed over suspects in especially brutal killings that draw too much attention.

A Honduran man who also survived the slaughter and is under police protection in Mexico later identified the three dead men as having been among the killers.

The latest arrests were announced one day after authorities found the bodies of two men believed to be those of a state detective and a local police chief who participated in the initial investigation of the massacre.

The two officers went missing a day after the migrants were found in San Fernando, a town about 100 miles 80 kilometers south of Brownsville, Texas.

The Tamaulipas state Attorney Generals Office said identification documents found on the bodies matched those of the missing officials, state detective Roberto Suarez Vazquez and Juan Carlos Suarez Sanchez, who was head of the Public Safety department of San Fernando.

The two bodies were found in a field about 30 miles 50 kilometers northeast of San Fernando.

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Associated Press Writer Mark Stevenson contributed to this report.



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NKorea marks key anniversary amid succession moves AP

SEOUL, South Korea North Korea marked its 62nd founding anniversary Thursday with patriotic songs and commentaries admiring leader Kim Jong Il, amid uncertainty over whether the secretive country has begun a rare political meeting believed aimed at promoting one of Kims sons as his successor.

State media reported Monday that delegates to the Workers Party were gathering in Pyongyang to elect new party leaders in what would be North Koreas first major political conference in 30 years. By Thursday morning, however, there had been no word on whether the meeting - slated to take place in "early September" - has begun.

Analysts believe Kim will use the conference to give his third and youngest son - Kim Jong Un - a key party position in efforts to hand over power to him and extend the Kim dynasty into a third generation.

Kim Jong Il himself took over power in 1994 when his father, North Korea founder Kim Il Sung, died of heart failure in communisms first hereditary transfer of power.

North Korea watchers had earlier predicted the meeting was to start Monday and end before Thursday - the 62nd birthday of the Norths establishment. They, however, speculate now that the meeting was put off by several days due to leader Kims falling health, recent flooding and other matters.

"Its because of Kim Jong Ils health. There is no other reason," said Ha Tae-keung, chief of Open Radio for North Korea, a Seoul-based station specializing in North Korea affairs, citing unidentified sources in Pyongyang.

"He has to be in the conference at least five hours, though he will be sitting most of time. I think hes trying to find a day when he is well enough to do that," he said.

Kim - long said to be suffering from diabetes and a kidney ailment - had a stroke in 2008, sparking fears about instability and a possible power struggle in the nuclear-armed country if he were to die without anointing a successor.

The Norths recent flooding, which likely disrupted the countrys roads and outdated railways, is believed to have caused delays in local party delegates arriving at Pyongyang for the conference, said Jo Sung-rae from the Seoul-based activist group Pax Koreana. He cited unidentified sources in North Korea.

Ha said the conference was to start on Thursday for a two-day run, but Jo said it could begin Friday or early next week - after the foundation anniversary.

On Thursday, the Norths state TV broadcast patriotic songs calling for loyalty to Kim Jong Il, calling him a "great, friendly general."

The countrys main Rodong Sinmun newspaper also issued a lengthy editorial urging its 24 million people to unite behind Kim to support his "military-first policy" and achieve an inter-Korean unification.

The founding anniversary is a major holiday in North Korea, along with the birthdays of Kim Jong Il and his father, who have ruled the country surrounded by strong personality cults.

South Koreas spy agency believes the North has launched a propaganda campaign promoting Kim Jong Un, including songs and poems praising him.

Little is known about Kim Jong Un, including his exact age, and there are no confirmed photos of him as an adult. A former sushi chef to Kim Jong Il wrote in a 2003 memoir that Jong Un looks and acts just like his father and is the leaders favorite among his three known sons.



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South Korea imposes independent sanctions on Iran AP

SEOUL, South Korea South Korea said it will ban many financial dealings with Iran and impose other penalties as part of a U.S.-led campaign to enforce sanctions against the country over its disputed nuclear enrichment program.

The measures announced Wednesday by Seoul add to new, unilateral sanctions imposed by the U.S., Europe and others to pressure Iran to return to negotiations on its nuclear program, which Tehran insists is peaceful but critics say is a quest to develop atomic weapons that could spark a Middle East arms race.

Seoul targeted 102 entities with the sanctions, including the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps and the Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines plus 24 individuals , Foreign Ministry spokesman Kim Young-sun said Wednesday.

The measures prohibit foreign exchange transactions with the targets of the measures except with special authorization, and they also halt existing banking relations and prohibit the opening of new branches or representative offices in South Korea, Kim said. The targeted individuals are also banned from entering South Korea, Kim said.

South Korea will also heavily penalize the Seoul branch of Bank Mellat, one of the 15 targeted Iranian banks, for violating laws on foreign exchange transactions, a government statement said, without elaborating.

The Seoul branch of Bank Mellat has "facilitated hundreds of millions of dollars in transactions for Iranian nuclear, missile and defense entities," the statement said.

Kim said the sanctions further reinforce United Nations resolution 1929 against Iran, the latest in a series of measures taken by the international community in an effort to halt Irans nuclear program.

"South Korea expects Iran to join international efforts for nuclear nonproliferation and take steps to faithfully implement its obligations under the relevant U.N. Security Council resolutions," he said.

The United States welcomed South Koreas decision.

"These actions strengthen the growing international resolve to prevent proliferation and Irans development of nuclear weapons and to press Iran to return to serious negotiations on its nuclear program and meet its international obligations," U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said in a joint statement.

The U.N. approved a fourth round of sanctions against Iran in early June over accusations that it is seeking to develop atomic weapons. Iran denies its nuclear program is militaristic in nature and says it has a right to conduct uranium enrichment for peaceful purposes.

The U.S. also independently imposed new sanctions against Iran and has urged other countries to follow suit.

So far, the European Union, Australia, Canada and Japan have joined the international campaign against Iran.

Seoul has been cautious in taking action against Iran, trying to balance its diplomatic interests with the U.S., a key ally, and its economic interests with Iran.

Iran is South Koreas third-largest trading partner in the Middle East, with two-way trade totaling nearly $10 billion last year, according to the Korea International Trade Association. It is also South Koreas fourth-biggest supplier of crude oil, accounting for 9.8 percent of its oil imports, according to the Korea National Oil Corp.

Seoul said it will prohibit new investments and contracts that could enrich Irans petroleum and gas industry, and called on South Korean companies to exercise "restraint and caution" in carrying out existing contracts.

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Associated Press writer Matthew Lee contributed to this report from Washington.



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Appeals court lets government halt torture lawsuit AP

SAN FRANCISCO A sharply divided federal appeals court on Wednesday threw out a lawsuit challenging a controversial post-Sept. 11 CIA program that flew terrorism suspects to secret prisons.

The complaint was filed by five terrorism suspects who were arrested shortly after 9/11 and say they were flown by a Boeing Co. subsidiary to prisons around the world where they were tortured. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals cited national security risks when it dismissed the mens case in a 6-5 ruling Wednesday.

The case could have broad repercussions on the national security debate as it makes its way toward the Supreme Court, and it casts a spotlight on the controversial "extraordinary rendition" program the Bush administration used after 9/11.

The Obama administration subsequently said it would continue to send foreign detainees to other countries for questioning, but rarely - and only if U.S. officials are confident the prisoners will not be tortured.

The appeals court reinforced the broad powers of the president to invoke the so-called "state secrets privilege" to stop lawsuits involving national security almost as soon as they are filed.

"The attorney general adopted a new policy last year to ensure the state secrets privilege is only used in cases where it is essential to protect national security, and we are pleased that the court recognized that the policy was used appropriately in this case," Justice Department spokesman Matthew Miller said.

President George W. Bush invoked the privilege at least 39 times during his administration, the most of any president in history, according to according to research by University of Texas, El Paso, political science professor William Weaver. Critics of the practice had hoped President Barack Obama would curtail its use and were disappointed when his administration continued defending the lawsuit after Bush left office.

The terror suspects sued Boeing subsidiary Jeppesen Dataplan in 2007, alleging that the extraordinary rendition program amounted to illegal "forced disappearances." They alleged that the San Jose-based subsidiary conspired with the CIA to operate the program.

A trial court judge quickly dismissed the lawsuit after the Bush administration took over defense of the case from Chicago-based Boeing and invoked the state secrets privilege, demanding a halt to the litigation over concern that top secret intelligence would be divulged.

A three-judge panel of the appeals court reinstated the lawsuit in 2009, but the full court overturned that ruling Wednesday.

"We have thoroughly and critically reviewed the governments public and classified declarations and are convinced that at least some of the matters it seeks to protect from disclosure in this litigation are valid state secrets," Judge Raymond Fisher wrote for the majority. "The governments classified disclosures to the court are persuasive that compelled or inadvertent disclosure of such information in the course of litigation would seriously harm legitimate national security interests."

Judge Michael Daly Hawkins wrote for the five dissenting judges, who said the lawsuit was dismissed too quickly and that the men should be allowed to use publicly disclosed evidence to prove their case.

"They are not even allowed to attempt to prove their case by the use of nonsecret evidence in their own hands or in the hands of third parties," Hawkins wrote.

Ben Wizner, the American Civil Liberties Union lawyer who represents the five men, said he will ask the U.S. Supreme Court to take the case.

"If this decision stands," Wizner said, "the United States will have closed its courts to torture victims while extending complete immunity to its torturers."

The Bush administration was widely criticized for its practice of extraordinary rendition - whereby the CIA transfers suspects overseas for interrogation. Human rights advocates said renditions were the agencys way to outsource torture of prisoners to countries where it is permitted practice.

Three of the five plaintiffs have been released from prison, Wizner said.



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Fla. minister determined to hold 9/11 Quran burn AP

GAINESVILLE, Fla. A top general, the secretary of state, the White House and political and religious leaders from around the world have decried a plan by the leader of a small Florida church to burn copies of Islams holiest text to mark the 9/11 attacks. The Rev. Terry Jones is not backing down.

Despite the mounting pressure to call off Saturdays bonfire, Jones said at a Wednesday news conference that he also has received much encouragement, with supporters mailing copies of the Quran to his Dove Outreach Center of about 50 followers. The plan comes as an emotional debate continues over a proposed Islamic center near the ground zero site of the 2001 terrorist attacks in New York.

"As of right now, we are not convinced that backing down is the right thing," said Jones, 58, who took no questions.

Jones was flanked by an armed escort and said he has received more than 100 death threats since announcing in July that he would stage "International Burn-a-Quran Day." Muslims consider the Quran the word of God and insist it be treated with the utmost respect.

The book, according to Jones, is evil because it espouses something other than biblical truth and incites radical, violent behavior among Muslims.

Fearing the burning could spark anti-American violence, the State Department ordered U.S. embassies around the world to assess their security. The posts are to warn American citizens in countries where protests may occur.

The move came a day after Gen. David Petraeus, the top U.S. and NATO commander in Afghanistan, e-mailed The Associated Press to say the burning would endanger troops and that "images of the burning of a Quran would undoubtedly be used by extremists in Afghanistan � and around the world � to inflame public opinion and incite violence."

Petraeus spoke Wednesday with Afghan President Karzai about the matter, according to a military spokesman Col. Erik Gunhus.

"They both agreed that burning of a Quran would undermine our effort in Afghanistan, jeopardize the safety of coalition troopers and civilians," Gunhus said, and would "create problems for our Afghan partners ... as it likely would be Afghan police and soldiers who would have to deal with any large demonstrations."

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said that the pastors plans were outrageous, and along with Defense Secretary Robert Gates, urged Jones to cancel the event.

"It is regrettable that a pastor in Gainesville, Florida, with a church of no more than 50 people can make this outrageous and distrustful, disgraceful plan and get the worlds attention, but thats the world we live in right now," Clinton said in remarks to the Council on Foreign Relations.

Not just the Democratic administration has weighed in. Ex-Alaska governor and former Republican candidate for vice president Sarah Palin said in a Facebook post that though people have the constitutional right to burn the Quran if they choose, doing so would be an "insensitive and an unnecessary provocation � much like building a mosque at ground zero."

"I would hope that Pastor Terry Jones and his supporters will consider the ramifications of their planned book-burning event," she wrote. "It will feed the fire of caustic rhetoric and appear as nothing more than mean-spirited religious intolerance. Dont feed that fire."

Conservative radio and television host Glenn Beck wrote in an Internet blog that burning the Quran is like burning the flag or the Bible � something people can do in the United States, but shouldnt. Legal experts have said the burning would likely be protected by the First Amendments right to free speech.

"Our good Muslim friends and neighbors will be saddened," Beck wrote. "It makes the battle that they face inside their own communities even harder."

Pakistans ambassador to the United States, Husain Haqqani, called on Beck to denounce the plan that he said would set off a massive reaction in parts of the Muslim world.

In Afghanistan, the plan provoked outrage.

"It is the duty of Muslims to react," said Mohammad Mukhtar, a cleric and candidate for the Afghan parliament in the Sept. 18 election. "When their holy book Quran gets burned in public, then there is nothing left. If this happens, I think the first and most important reaction will be that wherever Americans are seen, they will be killed. No matter where they will be in the world they will be killed."

Muslims consider the Quran along with any printed material containing its verses or the name of Allah or the Prophet Muhammad to be sacred. Any intentional damage or show of disrespect Quran is deeply offensive.

Jones Dove Outreach Center is independent of any denomination. It follows the Pentecostal tradition, which teaches that the Holy Spirit can manifest itself in the modern day. Pentecostals often view themselves as engaged in spiritual warfare against satanic forces.

The Vatican also denounced the protest and a religious watchdog group, Military Religious Freedom Foundation, said it would send a copy of the Quran to the Afghan National Army for every one that might be burned.

Actress Angelina Jolie, in her capacity as a goodwill ambassador for the U.N.s refugee agency, condemned the protest during a trip to Pakistan to raise awareness about the floods in the largely Muslim country.

Jones neighbors in Gainesville, a city of 125,000 anchored by the sprawling University of Florida campus, also have said they disapprove. At least two dozen Christian churches, Jewish temples and Muslim organizations in the city have mobilized to plan inclusive events � some will read from the Quran at their own weekend services. A student group is organizing a protest across the street from the church on Saturday.

And Gov. Charlie Crist, who is running as an independent candidate for U.S. Senate, said hed be closely monitoring what happens to try to ensure safety.

"In addition to being offensive, the Gainesville protest puts at risk those brave Americans who are fighting abroad for the freedoms and values that we believe in as Americans," Crist said in a statement.

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Associated Press writers Kimberly Dozier and Robert Reid in Kabul, Curt Anderson in Miami and Matthew Lee, Mark Sherman and Anne Flaherty in Washington contributed to this report.



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Clinton, Gates denounce planned Quran burning AP

WASHINGTON The top two national security advisers in President Barack Obamas Cabinet on Wednesday denounced plans by a small church in Florida to burn the Muslim holy book to commemorate the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, saying it would inflame tensions and put Americans abroad at risk.

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Defense Secretary Robert Gates said the plan was ill-advised and echoed concerns first raised by the U.S. commander in Afghanistan, Gen. David Petraeus, who warned that the proposed weekend event would place the lives of American troops in jeopardy there and elsewhere. U.S. officials in Iraq agreed.

Underscoring the administrations concern about the potential impact of the Quran burning, the State Department ordered U.S. embassies and consulates around the world to assess their security and warn Americans if they believe anti-American protests may occur. At least one post, the U.S. Embassy in Algeria, issued a security alert on Wednesday.

In remarks to the Council on Foreign Relations think tank in Washington, Clinton called the plans "outrageous" and "aberrational" and said they do not represent America or American values of religious tolerance and inclusiveness.

She also lamented that the tiny Dove World Outreach Center congregation in Gainesville had gotten so much attention for what she called a "distrustful and disgraceful" means of marking the ninth anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

"It is regrettable that a pastor in Gainesville, Fla., with a church of no more than 50 people can make this outrageous and distrustful, disgraceful plan and get the worlds attention, but thats the world we live in right now," Clinton said. "It is unfortunate, it is not who we are."

Through a Pentagon spokesman, Col. David Lapan, Gates added his voice to the growing controversy.

"No one is questioning the right to do these things. We are questioning whether thats advisable considering the consequences that could occur," Lapan said. "Gen. Petraeus has been very vocal and very public on this, and his position reflects the secretarys as well."

Petraeus on Tuesday said that "images of the burning of a Quran would undoubtedly be used by extremists in Afghanistan - and around the world - to inflame public opinion and incite violence." In addition, Gen. Ray Odierno, the former top commander in Iraq, said Wednesday he feared extremists will use the incident to sow hatred against U.S. troops overseas.

In Iraq, where almost 50,000 American troops are still serving, U.S. Ambassador to Iraq James Jeffrey and the commander of U.S. forces in Iraq, Gen. Lloyd Austin, joined in the condemnation, calling the plan "disrespectful, divisive and disgraceful."

"As this holy month of Ramadan comes to a close and Iraqis prepare to celebrate Eid al-Fitr, we join with the citizens of Iraq and of every nation to repudiate religious intolerance and to respect and defend the diversity of faiths of our fellow man," they said in a joint statement released by the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad.

Despite the widespread condemnation, church Pastor Terry Jones has vowed to go ahead with the event.

Clinton appealed for Jones to reconsider and cancel. And, in the event he goes ahead with the plan, she suggested to laughter from the audience, that the news media ignore it.

"We are hoping that the pastor decides not to do this," she said. "Were hoping against hope that if he does, it wont be covered as an act of patriotism."

"We want to be judged by who we are as a nation, not by something that is so aberrational and we will make that case as strongly as possible."

It was not immediately clear how many embassies had completed the security review ordered by Washington, but the U.S. Embassy in Algiers issued a notice to Americans in Algeria saying that "media reports of the upcoming threatened Quran burning by a small Gainesville, Fla., group could affect the security of U.S. citizens overseas."

"If the event proceeds, it could trigger reaction and protests in Muslim countries around the world, possibly including Algeria," the notice said.



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Obama wont yield on tax hike for wealthiest AP

CLEVELAND Politically weakened but refusing to bend, President Barack Obama insisted Wednesday that Bush-era tax cuts be cut off for the wealthiest Americans, joining battle with Republicans - and some fellow Democrats - just two months before bruising midterm elections.

Singling out House GOP leader John Boehner in his home state, Obama delivered a searing attack on Republicans for advocating "the same philosophy that led to this mess in the first place: cut more taxes for millionaires and cut more rules for corporations."

Obama rolled out a trio of new plans to help spur job growth and invigorate the sluggish national economic recovery. They would expand and permanently extend a research and development tax credit that lapsed in 2009, allow businesses to write off 100 percent of their investments in equipment and plants through 2011 and pump $50 billion into highway, rail, airport and other infrastructure projects.

The package was assembled by the presidents economic team after it became clear that the recovery was running out of steam. There was a political component, too: With Democrats in danger of losing control of the House in November, Obama is under heavy pressure to show voters that he and his party are ready to do more to get the economy moving and get millions of jobless Americans back to work.

However, none of Wednesdays proposals, nor Obamas call for allowing tax rates to rise for the wealthiest Americans, seems likely to be acted on by Congress before the elections, reflecting the battering Obama and congressional Democrats have taken in public opinion polls.

Obama made one of his strongest appeals yet to allow the tax cuts passed under President George W. Bush - in 2001 and 2003 - to expire at the end of the year on schedule, but just for individuals earning more than $200,000 annually or joint filers earning over $250,000. The changes would affect dividend and capital gains rates and various other tax benefits as well as income from wages and salaries.

The presidents strategy - pushing for legislation to save some tax cuts but not all - carries its own risks. Since all the tax breaks would expire automatically at the end of the year if Congress failed to act, that could result in sweeping increases for taxpayers at every income level - a major blow to recovery hopes and a colossal dose of blame for voters to parcel out to lawmakers and the White House.

Some influential Democrats, and Obamas own former budget director, Peter Orszag, have suggested a compromise might be necessary - one to temporarily extend all the tax cuts, perhaps for a year or two - given the current election-year animosity between the two parties.

But in his remarks in Cleveland, Obama strongly signaled he wasnt about to sign off on any such deal.

"Let me be clear to Mr. Boehner and everyone else. We should not hold middle class tax cuts hostage any longer," the president said. The administration "is ready this week to give tax cuts to every American making $250,000 or less," he said. It was a slight misstatement of his own position, since the $250,000 would apply to household income. The threshold for individuals would be $200,000

White House officials said Cleveland was picked as the speech site expressly because Boehner, who probably would become House speaker if Republicans take back control of the chamber in November, laid out his partys economic agenda here in a fiery Aug. 24 speech.

At that time, the Ohio Republican called for Obama to fire key economic advisers and to support an extension of all the Bush tax cuts.

Boehner kept up the attack on Wednesday. "If the president is really serious about focusing on jobs, a good start would be taking the advice of his recently departed budget director and freezing all tax rates, coupled with cutting of federal spending to where it was before all the bailouts, government takeovers and stimulus spending sprees," he said after Obama spoke.

Earlier, Boehner was even more specific on ABCs "Good Morning America," saying Congress should freeze all tax rates for two years and pare back federal spending to 2008 levels. The deep recession began in December 2007.

White House press secretary Robert Gibbs noted that keeping the Bush tax cuts in effect just for two more years would represent a change from past calls by Boehner to keep them in place permanently.

"My question for him is: Are they abandoning the permanent or are they going with the two-year plan? Ive seen him saying permanent so many times that I tend to believe that," Gibbs told reporters aboard Air Force One. "Thats his plan and I think that continues to be his plan."

Republicans, and some Democrats, argue that the fragile state of the economy makes this a poor time to raise taxes on anyone - and that increases could stifle wealthier peoples appetite for spending.

Obama argued that the rich are more likely to save additional money than spend it. And he said the struggling U.S. economy cant afford to spend $700 billion to keep lower tax rates in place for the nations highest earners.

That $700 billion is what the nonpartisan congressional Joint Committee on Taxation estimates it would cost the Treasury to continue tax cuts for top earners over 10 years. What Obama wants to do would cost just over $3 trillion over the same period, the panel estimates.

The debate over the Bush tax cuts is an unwelcome one for dozens of vulnerable Democratic incumbents just weeks before Election Day. Already, a handful of Democrats in conservative or swing districts, such as Reps. Gerry Connolly in the northern Virginia suburbs of Washington, D.C., and Bobby Bright in southeastern Alabama, have come out publicly for extending all the cuts - at least temporarily.

Sen. Michael Bennet, D-Colo., engaged in a tight re-election battle, said he "would not support additional spending in a second stimulus package" and that any new initiatives such as Obamas infrastructure package should be paid for with leftover funds in the $814 billion stimulus package passed last year.

Still other embattled Democrats, wary of alienating middle-class voters, are siding with Obama. In central Ohio, for example, Rep. Mary Jo Kilroy has said the tax cuts for higher earners should be repealed but middle-income people should see no tax increases.

Obama acknowledged recovery had slowed noticeably, with unemployment hovering just under 10 percent.

"The middle class is still treading water, while those aspiring to reach the middle class are doing everything they can to keep from drowning," he said.

Polls have shown a steady slippage in Obamas approval ratings and an accompanying rise in Republican prospects for winning House and Senate seats in November. That has chipped away at Obamas leverage to get things done in Congress.

___

Tom Raum reported from Washington. AP Writers Stephen Ohlemacher and Erica Werner in Washington contributed to this report.



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One in four gives fake net names

More than a quarter of people online have lied about their name and more than one in five has done something online they regret, says a new report.

The behavioural and psychological impacts of online life are outlined in a report from the security firm Norton.

The report suggests that two-thirds of web users have been hit by cybercrime, with the costs and time to resolve the crime varying widely around the world.

But a large amount of online dishonesty came from the respondents themselves.

Seventeen percent of respondents to Nortons survey had lied online about thier age or where they live, while nine percent lied about their financial or relationship status - all more than the fraction that lied about their appearance 7%.

The study, "Norton Cybercrime Report: The Human Impact", reveals telling details not only about the proportion of web users struck by cybercrime, but the disparity among countries as to the costs to each cybercrime victim.

In the UK, 59% of respondents have been victimised; on average, the respondents "most recent experience with cybercrime" required 25 days to resolve, at a cost to them of $153 �99.

While the corresponding times in Brazil and India were both significantly higher at 43 and 44 days respectively, the costs were vastly different.

Brazil had the highest cost among the countries surveyed, at $1408 �907, while in India it was just $114 �73.

Sweden had the quickest average resolution time, at just nine days and at a cost on average of $178.

Double standard

More telling perhaps are the attitudes of survey respondents with regard to the ethics of their own behaviour.

Many felt it was "legal" to download a music track, album, or film without paying 17,14 and 15% respectively, and 17% view plagiarism as an acceptable practice.

Nearly a third had e-mailed or posted pictures of someone else without permission, and a quarter had secretly viewed someone elses browsing history.

Orla Cox, a security operations manager for Symantec, told BBC News that she was unsurprised about the surveys findings on the respondents honesty.

"A lot of people, while they want to get information about other people on the web, they themselves would like to remain somewhat anonymous, to hide some of their own information so as to be not too easily identifiable on the web," she said.

"I dont think its always a bad thing but certainly people are trying to create a whole different identity for themselves for nefarious purposes."



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Peru president: New Yorker Berenson not a threat AP

LIMA, Peru President Alan Garcia says he doesnt consider Lori Berenson a threat to Peru, suggesting he may be inclined to commute the New Yorkers accomplice-to-terrorism sentence so she can go home.

A three-judge panel returned the 40-year-old Berenson and her toddler son to prison on Aug. 18 after prosecutors objected to her May parole, calling her a danger to society.

Garcia said in an interview with CNN broadcast Tuesday night that while he understands many Peruvians feel Berenson should complete her 20-year term, he personally has sympathy for the activist and her 16-month-old son, Salvador.

"How much can Peru really fear a woman who spent 15 years in prison?" Garcia said. "She has a little boy, and that moves me a lot."

She "is not a threat to Peru. Thats over. Its part of the past," he added.

In a response to a question about the cases political sensitivity in Peru, Garcia noted that he has the power to commute Berensons sentence and expel her and mentioned three factors that, to his mind, argue for clemency.

In addition to his belief that Berenson is not a threat and his feelings of compassion for mother and child, Garcia said that relations with Washington and U.S. public opinion must be weighed as well as the ordeals effect on Berensons parents.

Before being ordered back to prison, Berenson made regular visits to the U.S. Embassy for meetings with consular officials.

Garcia did not say when he might issue a decision on commutation but has indicated in the past that he wanted to wait for the judicial process to run its course.

Berensons attorney Anibal Apari, who is also Salvadors father, told The Associated Press on Wednesday that the judge who ordered her paroled has now received police verification of Berensons domicile.

Berenson was returned to prison based on prosecutors arguments that her attorneys did not quickly inform police of where she would live once paroled.

Berenson was arrested in 1995 and accused of helping Tupac Amaru rebels plan an attack on Perus Congress.

A military court sentenced her to life in prison for treason but, following pressure from Berensons parents and the U.S. government, she was retried and convicted in 2001 by a civilian court on the lesser charge of collaborating with terrorism.



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Report: Castro says Cuban model doesnt work AP

HAVANA Fidel Castro told a visiting American journalist that Cubas communist economic model doesnt work, a rare comment on domestic affairs from a man who has conspicuously steered clear of local issues since stepping down four years ago.

The fact that things are not working efficiently on this cash-strapped Caribbean island is hardly news. Fidels brother Raul, the countrys president, has said the same thing repeatedly. But the blunt assessment by the father of Cubas 1959 revolution is sure to raise eyebrows.

Jeffrey Goldberg, a national correspondent for The Atlantic magazine, asked if Cubas economic system was still worth exporting to other countries, and Castro replied: "The Cuban model doesnt even work for us anymore" Goldberg wrote Wednesday in a post on his Atlantic blog.

He said Castro made the comment casually over lunch following a long talk about the Middle East, and did not elaborate. The Cuban government had no immediate comment on Goldbergs account.

Since stepping down from power in 2006, the ex-president has focused almost entirely on international affairs and said very little about Cuba and its politics, perhaps to limit the perception he is stepping on his brothers toes.

Goldberg, who traveled to Cuba at Castros invitation last week to discuss a recent Atlantic article he wrote about Irans nuclear program, also reported on Tuesday that Castro questioned his own actions during the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis, including his recommendation to Soviet leaders that they use nuclear weapons against the United States.

Even after the fall of the Soviet Union, Cuba has clung to its communist system.

The state controls well over 90 percent of the economy, paying workers salaries of about $20 a month in return for free health care and education, and nearly free transportation and housing. At least a portion of every citizens food needs are sold to them through ration books at heavily subsidized prices.

President Raul Castro and others have instituted a series of limited economic reforms, and have warned Cubans that they need to start working harder and expecting less from the government. But the president has also made it clear he has no desire to depart from Cubas socialist system or embrace capitalism.

Fidel Castro stepped down temporarily in July 2006 due to a serious illness that nearly killed him.

He resigned permanently two years later, but remains head of the Communist Party. After staying almost entirely out of the spotlight for four years, he re-emerged in July and now speaks frequently about international affairs. He has been warning for weeks of the threat of a nuclear war over Iran.

Castros interview with Goldberg is the only one he has given to an American journalist since he left office.

___

On the Web: http://ping.fm/TWL5w



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European pressure mounts on Iran over stoning case AP

BRUSSELS European Union nations and the continents biggest human rights organization slammed Iran on Wednesday for its plans to stone a woman convicted of adultery, increasing the global pressure on Tehran over a case it has tried to frame as a criminal matter and not one of human rights.

The plight of Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani , a 43-year-old mother of two, has cast a harsh light on Irans version of Islamic justice and taken multiple twists. Iran appears to have put the stoning on hold for now but has also indicated Ashtiani could be hanged for her conviction of playing a role in her husbands 2005 murder.

Even as Iran insists the case is a matter for its own courts and society, the global outcry has grown.

On Wednesday, the European Union Parliament in Strasbourg, France, passed a resolution condemning Tehran, a move that comes on the heels of EU Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso calling stoning "barbaric." The vote passed by a huge 658-to-1 margin with 22 abstentions. The vote against was an error and was to be amended in the parliamentary records later.

Sweden summoned Irans ambassador to protest the sentence.

"It is important that we are not passive in a case that � except for her own destiny � has become a symbol for the repression in Iran," Swedens Foreign Minister Carl Bildt said. "We are against the death penalty in all cases, but stoning is a specifically vile form of the death penalty."

German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle released a statement saying he is "deeply worried for Ms. Ashtianis life."

"Iran has to respect human rights, especially because it committed to do so under international law," Westerwelle said. It is "not a question of religion, but a question of fundamental human dignity."

The sentiments were echoed by the 47-nation Council of Europe, the continents biggest human rights organization. It called on the Islamic republics parliamentary speaker, Ali Larijani, to do his utmost to fully repeal the sentence.

"This inhuman sentence and the mistreatment that Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani is suffering cast a tragic shadow on your country," wrote Mevlut Cavusoglu, President of the Councils Parliamentary Assembly.

On Irans state-run Press TV, Foreign Ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast repeated previous statements that plans to carry out the stoning have been "stopped" while judiciary officials also study the punishment for Ashtianis conviction of playing on role in her husbands 2005 murder.

Ashtianis lawyer, Houtan Javid Kian, told The Associated Press there has been no change in her case and the stoning sentence was suspended but not officially canceled. He has said Ashtiani was never formally put on trial on the charge of being an accomplice to murder and was not allowed to mount a defense.

On Monday, Kian said he had received word that his client was lashed 99 times last week in a separate punishment after British newspaper ran a picture of an unveiled woman mistakenly identified as Ashtiani. The newspaper, the Times of London, apologized for the error.

There has been no official Iranian confirmation of the new punishment.

The Vatican has hinted at the possibility of behind-the-scenes diplomacy to try to save Ashtiani. Some Western officials, including Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini, have said they dont believe Iran will carry out the stoning following the international outcry.

But Iran has at times struck a defiant tone. Even an offer of asylum from Brazil � which is on friendly terms with Tehran � went nowhere.

Mehmanparast accused the United States and other Western countries of trying to "exploit" the case and turn it into a "political charade."

"Our country has been under a lot of political pressure by the U.S. and other Western countries over its nuclear work," he noted.

The European Parliament, however, insisted universal human rights were what was at stake.

In its resolution, it said that "a sentence of death by stoning can never be justified."

-------------

Associated Press Writers Nasser Karimi in Tehran, Malin Rising in Stockholm and Juergen Baetz in Berlin contributed to the story.



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Muslim mason immortalized at French cathedral AP

PARIS A Muslim stone mason who spent nearly four decades helping to restore an ancient Roman Catholic cathedral has been immortalized, as a winged gargoyle peering from the facade of the edifice with the inscription "God is Great" at his clawed feet.

This sign of friendship that spans religions is rooted in the Medieval tradition and the city of Lyons links to its large Muslim population. But a widely publicized outcry from a tiny extreme-right group has forced the diocese into damage control.

"This has nothing to do with religion. Its a sculptor who wants to pay homage to a construction site chief," said Michel Cacaud, rector of the cathedral. "Thats all."

France, where Islam is the second religion, has worked to get Muslims to integrate into the French culture, while at the same time confronting cases of Islamophia, from desecration of Muslim graves to attacks on mosques.

Ahmed Benzizine, a practicing Muslim born in Algeria, a former French colony, sees the gargoyle in his image as "a message of peace and tolerance."

"When I started to work in churches ... exactly 37 years ago, it was considered a sin that a Muslim enter a place of worship other than a mosque," he said.

He has worked off and on since 1973 at Saint Jean Cathedral, which dominates the old city of Lyon and has been honored as a UNESCO World Heritage site.

Benzizine, who arrived in France in 1970, is tickled to see his likeness on the facade of the cathedral, which dates to the 12th to 14th centuries and combines both Gothic and Roman architecture.

"It looks like me except for the ears," said the 59-year-old Benzizine. "Theyre pointed like the devil. But the sculptor told me that angels have pointed ears, too."

But he takes his celebrity with humility.

"I dont like to stare at it as people then say, Hes the gargoyle," Benzizine said in a telephone interview. But he said he liked the idea that hell still be around, in stone, when his friends are long gone. "I tell my buddies ... Im present in this stone so I can tell them if the neighborhood has changed," he said, laughing.

For Emmanuel Fourchet, the sculptor who immortalized Benzizine in stone, "it was an occasion to pay tribute."

"Ive known him for more than 20 years. He was already working in churches when I wasnt even a stone mason apprentice. This is an acknowledgment."

Gargoyles, usually grotesque creatures with open mouths originally used as water spouts, dot the facades of the cathedrals of France and elsewhere. The sculptures, often part animal, were popular in Medieval times.

Experts say that, beyond their plumbing function, they may have been used to scare off evil. What is clear is that Benzizine is not the first artisan to find his likeness on a cathedral, in his case with wings and clawed, bird-like feet.

"Its a long tradition, to represent the artisans who worked on a site ... either for humor, derision or to pay them homage," said Cacaud, who "of course" gave his OK to adding Benzizine to the cathedrals collection of gargoyles.

The Benzizine gargoyle has been in place for some six months, but until recently, few people noticed. However, a recent campaign by a small extreme-right group denouncing the likeness of a Muslim on a Catholic institution and the inscription proclaiming "God is Great" in French and Arabic � Dieu est grand, Allahu Akbar � has put everyone on the defensive, even Benzizine.

"Just the fact that its written in Arabic, it shocked a minority," because it evokes Islam, he said. But, Benzizine insisted, "God IS great. Its not talking about Mohammed," the Muslim prophet and founder of the Islamic faith. He noted that he works on all historic monuments, be they cathedrals, mosques or synagogues.

The extreme-right group, Identity Youth of Lyon, said on its website that the "clearly symbolic" inscription is "the manifestation of a conquering Islam."

"How many Ave Marias are inscribed on how many mosques?" it asked.

The diocese of Lyon is quick to point out that the small group stands alone in criticizing the gargoyle; the Rev. Cacaud said parishioners have not complained.

For the diocese, the gargoyle named Ahmed is actually the fruit of two traditions: honoring artisans in a cathedrals stone work, and embodying the Christian-Islamic dialogue that is part of Lyons recent religious history.

In Frances third-largest city, a delegate of the archdiocese is devoted to relations with Islam. In 2007 Cardinal Philippe Barbarin, archbishop of Lyon, and local Muslim leader Azzedine Gaci led a pilgrimage to Tibhirine, an Algerian village where seven Trappist monks were executed in 1996 by radical Islamic insurgents.

"There is no religion that doesnt say God is great, be one Christian, Jewish, Muslim," said Cacaud.

But the gargoyle, he insisted, is a way to honor a faithful worker and "to say simply and solely thank you."

___

AP Television News producer Anthony Laurent in Lyon contributed to this report.



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Pakistan to charge 3 over failed Times Square bomb AP

ISLAMABAD Pakistan will soon bring terrorism charges against three men alleged to have helped the failed Times Square bomber meet up with militant leaders close to the Afghan border and sent him money to carry out the attack, a senior police officer said Wednesday.

The three have been held since soon after the May 1 attempted car bombing, but the announcement marks the first time the authorities here have formally acknowledged their arrest. They had previously been picked up by the countrys secretive intelligence agencies.

The three to be charged were identified as Shoaib Mughal, Shahid Hussain and Humbal Akhtar. All three are educated, relatively wealthy Pakistanis.

An intelligence officer said an unspecified number of other suspects were still under investigation, but confirmed that two people previously held had been released. He identified one of those as Salman Ashraf, the co-owner of a catering company the U.S. Embassy accused of terrorist ties. The officer spoke on customary condition of anonymity.

Islamabad Police Deputy Inspector General Bin Yamin said Mughal, Hussain and Akhtar would soon be charged in court with terrorism offenses.

He did not give specifics, but terrorism crimes can be punished by death in Pakistan. It was unclear if the men had been appointed lawyers yet. Terrorism trials in Pakistan are always behind closed doors and often last for many months, if not years.

Yamin described them as having "militant minds" and a strong hatred for America.

Pakistani-American Faisal Shahzad has pleaded guilty to terrorism and weapons charges in the United States in connection with the botched bombing.

Yamin said the three suspects had close ties to the leadership of the Pakistani Taliban, a militant group based in the northwest that has claimed responsibility for the plot.

He said the three helped Shahzad to travel to the northwest and meet militant leaders there.

They also sent him $13,000 in the United States when he ran short of money, he said.

Intelligence officers have previously said they had evidence Mughal uploaded video and audio messages from the Pakistan Taliban, including two audio messages from the groups commander, Hakimullah Mehsud, soon after the attack.

An officer has said Mughal was a computer engineer who had a large computer dealership in Islamabad.

Akhtars wife said soon after his detention that he had graduated from a private university in Islamabad and worked briefly for the government before starting a graphic design business. She said he had no connection to terrorism.

Ashrafs arrest was announced the same evening the U.S. Embassy in Pakistan issued a warning saying that his catering company, Hanif Rajput Catering Service, was suspected of ties to terrorist groups. The firm had previously catered events for the embassy.

"I just say I want to say thank God that my son is back with me with full dignity and honor," said his father, Rana Ashraf Khan, who has long maintained his innocence.



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Ireland to split Anglo Irish into good, bad banks AP

DUBLIN Ireland plans to split its most troubled financial institution, Anglo Irish Bank, in two as part of wider efforts to reassure international lenders that the Irish are dealing with their debt crisis.

Finance Minister Brian Lenihan said Wednesdday that dividing Anglo � nationalized in early 2009 on the edge of insolvency � into "good" and "bad" banks would represent the least costly outcome to Irish taxpayers.

The government has already plowed nearly euro23 billion $29 billion into the specialist lender, and analysts warn that the total bill could top euro35 billion � a fifth of Irish GDP.

From the start, Lenihan said Ireland would not let Anglo collapse Lehman-style because of the risk it would panic international investors into abandoning Ireland and toppling the nations other four locally run banks too.

It introduced a blanket government guarantee to insure all international bondholders against losses, which means any defaults would be covered by taxpayers here.

But as Anglos losses mounted, the government had to resist pressure to shut down the bank speedily, arguing this would mean a "fire sale" of badly devalued properties and land into a recession-ravaged market. European regulators, after months of behind-the-scenes haggling, appear to have agreed.

Lenihan said the "good" splinter of Anglo would become a deposit-only bank "completely separated from Anglos loan assets."

The bad bank would gradually dispose of Anglos largely dysfunctional book of loans to Irelands construction and property barons, many of whom were bankrupted by the 2008 collapse of the property market.

An estimated euro77 billion of those loans, many of them provided by Anglo, are already being transferred at heavy discounts to Irelands state-run National Asset Management Agency, a new vehicle for managing toxic property-based debts.

The European minister for competition, Joaquin Almunia, welcomed the Irish plans for Anglo but withheld formal EU approval, noting that "important aspects still need to be clarified." Full agreement is expected by the end of the month.

Almunia said he viewed the Irish plans "positively as it would deal better with the distortions of competition." He contrasted this with Irelands initial plan submitted in May, which would have allowed the pared-down new Anglo to retain the best loans from its current book and to resume new-loan activity.

The stunning failure of Anglo � which recorded more losses than any other bank worldwide in 2009 and appears on course to do the same this year � has been eroding international confidence in the ability of Ireland to keep financing and paying its own mounting national debt.

Irelands deficit is already the highest in Europe in GDP terms because of the Anglo costs. The rates paid on Irish government bonds have reached a series of record highs in recent weeks versus Europes German benchmark.

On Wednesday, 10-year Irish treasuries were commanding premiums of 6.05 percent, some 3.8 percentage points above German bonds � just off Mondays Irish high of 3.91 points dating back to the creation of the euro. During previous rounds of the banking crisis, Irish bonds traded broadly in a range of 1 point to 3 points above the interest paid on German bonds.

The growing interest-rate gap versus German bonds, a benchmark of safety, illustrates how investors consider loans to Ireland a higher-risk investment. Only Greece, subject of an EU-led financial rescue package, has higher bond rates in the 16-nation euro zone.

The shares of all three publicly listed Irish banks � Allied Irish, Bank of Ireland, and Irish Life & Permanent � all fell Wednesday on the Dublin stock exchange. The government has provided billions in support to Allied and Bank of Ireland and has become the biggest shareholder in both. But it has provided no aid to Irish Life & Permanent, which limited its loan exposure to residential mortgages rather than property developers.

The EU has yet to decide whether the latest billions being funneled into Anglo and other banks will be included in Irelands 2010 national debt calculations, or will be treated as off-book investments as Ireland hopes. If the former, economists expect Irelands 2010 deficit to exceed 20 percent of GDP; if the latter, the figure might decline to nearer 11 percent.

Ireland, midway through an austerity program involving tax hikes and spending cuts, says it is aiming to return to the 3 percent EU deficit ceiling by 2014. But analysts say this is extremely unlikely given the fragility of the Irish economy and rising unemployment.

Also fueling investor uncertainty is the long-term fate of Irelands bank guarantee, an emergency measure introduced in 2008 to deter a flight of foreign capital from the countrys five domestically owned banks.

The national insurance plan � which offered a sweeping guarantee to all depositors and institutional lenders to Irish banks � was due to expire Sept. 29.

EU authorities in June extended that guarantee to the end of the year for all retail depositors. Almunia said Wednesday that the EU intends to offer the same extension for the more controversial element of the insurance, which guarantees to refund corporate and interbank deposits and debt securities in event of a bank default.



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10 arrested in European raids on Internet piracy AP

BRUSSELS Belgian police say 10 people have been arrested in raids across Europe against hackers who put illegal copies of movies and television series on the Internet.

Five of the arrests were in Belgium, where the computer crime unit led an operation that fanned out over 12 other nations, including Britain, Germany and France.

Police spokeswoman Tine Hollevoet said the other arrests were made in Poland, Norway and Sweden, where, together with Belgium, the alleged leaders of four computer piracy networks were being held.

Hollevoet said the international raids sought to neutralize 48 servers distributing illegal material.

In Belgium, the suspects were charged with membership in a criminal organization, computer fraud, hacking and piracy.



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Father of UK Prime Minister Cameron dies in France AP

LONDON British Prime Minister David Camerons father died in France on Wednesday after suffering a stroke while on vacation, the leaders office said.

Cameron flew to a hospital in Toulon, on the French Riviera, to be at his 77-year-old fathers side, arriving shortly before he died, spokesman Steve Field told reporters in London.

"It is with deep regret we can confirm that Ian Cameron died earlier this afternoon. He passed away shortly after the prime minister arrived at the hospital in France where he was undergoing treatment," Camerons office said in a statement.

Camerons father had suffered "a stroke and heart complications while on holiday in France," the statement said.

Field said Cameron planned to stay in France overnight, but remained in charge of British affairs.

Camerons father, a retired stockbroker, previously had had both of his legs amputated and used a wheelchair.

In an interview before Britains election in May, Cameron described his fathers refusal to allow his disability to impede his life.

"My father is a huge hero figure for me. Hes an amazingly brave man because he was born with no heels � quite a disability," Cameron told ITV television. "I think I got my sense of optimism from him."

French President Nicolas Sarkozy provided a helicopter to transport Cameron from a French airport to the hospital as he rushed from London to see his father, Field said.

Cameron canceled meetings and a scheduled appearance to answer questions from lawmakers to travel to France with his brother and other family members. He was not accompanied by his wife or children.

The British leader had returned to work Tuesday following the birth of his fourth child � Florence Rose Endellion Cameron � on Aug. 24.

Cameron and his wife, Samantha, have two other children, Elwen and Nancy. Their eldest son Ivan, who had epilepsy and cerebral palsy, died last year aged 6.

Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg stood in for the 43-year-old Cameron at the House of Commons questions session, the weekly showdown that offers lawmakers the chance to address the prime minister directly.

___

Associated Press Writer Jenny Barchfield in Paris contributed to this report



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Romanian Gypsy leader compares Sarkozy to Nazis AP

COSTESTI, Romania A Romanian Gypsy leader on Wednesday compared French President Nicolas Sarkozy to Romanias pro-Nazi wartime leader, following the expulsion of hundreds of Gypsies from France.

Speaking during an annual Gypsy feast held on a hill at the foots of the Carpathian Mountains, Iulian Radulescu told the Associated Press that Gypsies � also known as Roma � are being unfairly expelled from France.

France has sent back about 1,000 Gypsies to Romania and Bulgaria in recent weeks as part of its crime fighting measures. Sarkozy has linked Roma to crime, calling the camps in which some of them live, sources of trafficking, exploitation of children and prostitution.

There are between 10 million and 12 million Gypsies in the EU, most living in dire circumstances, victims of poverty, discrimination, violence, unemployment, poverty and bad housing. An estimated 1.5 million of them live in Romania, a country of 22 million, which has the largest population of Gypsies in Europe.

Both France and Romania are members of European Union, and under the rules governing the 27-member bloc its citizens can travel freely within the union, but the governments are also legally permitted to send citizens of other EU countries home if they cant find work or support themselves.

The expulsions have been criticized from several quarters including the Roman Catholic Church and the United Nations, and even some members of Sarkozys government.

Dressed in a gray suit and sitting inside a white marquee tent, Radulescu said that hundreds of Gypsies are paying the price "for the crimes of the few."

"It is not right to be expelled if you are a law-abiding citizen," the 71-year-old Radulescu said.

Radulescu compared the expulsions to the ones carried out by Romanias pro-Nazi dictator Marshal Ion Antonescu, who ruled the country during the World War II.

Antonescu deported 25,000 Gypsies from Romania to the Soviet region of Trans-Dniester in 1942. Some 11,000 Gypsies died from exposure, typhus, starvation and thirst after they were deported from Romania. A lack of wartime records makes it difficult to determine the overall number of Gypsies killed during the Holocaust, but according to the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, it is between 220,000 and 500,000.

"Sarkozy is doing what Antonescu did," Radulescu said. He also urged Gypsy leaders to try and stop crime within their communities.

A French foreign ministry spokesman, Bernard Valero, dismissed the comments, saying he declined to enter into "fruitless debates."

"We consider that it is an European problem that should be solved with an European solution," Valero said.

The issue of expulsion will top the agenda of planned talks between French Immigration Minister Eric Besson and the Minister for European Affairs, Pierre Lelouche, who will visit Romania on Thursday, Valero said.

Romanias President Traian Basescu sent his adviser Peter Eckstein to tell the revelers that he supports their freedom of movement within the European Union, but also urged them to send their children to school.

At the festival, Gypsies roasted pigs and chicken on open spits, while children played on merry go rounds and listened to Gypsy pop and French rap music.

Another Gypsy leader Florin Cioaba told hundreds gathered that they are being discriminated in Europe.

"There is one set of laws for European citizens and different laws for the Roma," Cioaba said.

___

Associated Press writer Alison Mutler in Bucharest, and Daphne Rousseau in Paris contributed to this report.



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UN chief in Rwanda over threatened Sudan pullout AP

KIGALI, Rwanda U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon met with Rwandas president Wednesday after he threatened to withdraw thousands of Rwandan peacekeepers if the United Nations publishes a report accusing Rwandas army of possible genocide in the 1990s.

The joint U.N.-African Union peacekeeping mission in Darfur is commanded by a Rwandan, Lt. Gen. Patrick Nyamvumba, and Rwanda has more than 3,200 troops and 86 police in the nearly 22,000-strong force.

U.N. officials and diplomats have said a Rwandan pullout from Darfur would be a major blow at a time of increasing violence and fresh efforts to end the seven-year conflict.

Ban and President Paul Kagame did not talk to journalists after their meeting, and the U.N. chief went straight to the airport.

Ban said there that he had asked Rwanda and other countries mentioned in the report to send in their comments to the U.N. by the end of September. The release of the report has been delayed until Oct. 1.

"Both the president and I are disappointed that the draft report had been leaked. The United Nations is interested in establishing all the facts relating to DRC Congo uncovered by this mapping exercise," Ban told journalists at the airport just before leaving Rwanda without taking questions from journalists.

Ban also said he will discuss the report again with Kagame when the Rwandan leader goes to New York later this month for a global meeting to discuss the worlds progress in reducing poverty, disease and illiteracy.

A draft of the U.N. report leaked in late August accuses Rwandan troops and allies tied to Kagame of slaughtering tens of thousands of Hutus in neighboring Congo. The alleged attacks came two years after those troops stopped Rwandas 1994 genocide, which killed more than 500,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus.

In a letter to the U.N., Rwandas Foreign Affairs Minister Louise Mushikiwabo had described the leaked report from the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights as "fatally flawed" and "incredibly irresponsible."

On Wednesday, she was more measured in her comments, saying that Rwanda was happy Ban came to listen to the governments views on the report.

"My government has very simple demands and that is that our concerns and our worries and indeed our revolt concerning the draft report that was leaked to the media a few weeks ago, be heard," Mushikiwabo told journalists at the airport after the U.N. chief had left the country.

Mushikiwabo declined to say whether Rwanda would follow through on its threat to withdraw its troops from U.N. missions in Sudan, saying a final report is yet to be written.

Last week, Rwanda Defense Force spokesman Lt. Col. Jill Rutaremara said the country has finalized a contingency withdrawal plan from Sudans Darfur region and from southern Sudan if the U.N. publishes the "outrageous and damaging report."

Rwanda has nearly 300 troops and police serving in the more than 13,000-strong U.N. peacekeeping mission in semiautonomous southern Sudan. They are enforcing a 2005 agreement with the government that ended Africas longest civil war � a key mission ahead of a January referendum on independence for South Sudan.

In addition, Rwanda has small contingents in U.N. peacekeeping missions in Chad, Haiti and Liberia.

The report says the Rwandan troops and their Congolese rebel allies targeted Hutus and killed tens of thousands over months, the majority of whom were women, children, the sick and the elderly who posed no threat. Most were bludgeoned to death with hoes, axes and hammers, it said.

Rwanda invaded Congo in 1996, saying it was going after those who committed the genocide. Many were in refugee camps in Congo, which they used as a base for attacks on Tutsis in Congo and for cross-border raids into Rwanda. Rwandan rebels remain in Congo and have been terrorizing the population ever since.

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Associated Press Writer Edith M. Lederer at the United Nations contributed to this report.



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European police in pirate raids

Police have conducted a series of raids across Europe in one of its biggest crackdowns on file-sharing.

Police targeted 48 sites in countries including the Netherlands, Czech Republic and Hungary.

In Sweden, seven premises were raided including PRQ, which is believed to host Pirate Bay and whistle-blowing website WikiLeaks.

Co-ordinated by Belgian police, the operation was the culmination of a two-year investigation.

Off-network

Swedish prosecutors said the raids targeted a network called "The Scene" which offered downloads of films before they were available on DVD.

Umea University was among the premises targeted.

So far the raids have resulted in four arrests in Sweden and servers and computers have been seized from all seven Swedish premises, according to the Swedish police.

They said the raids had no links to WikiLeaks.

Belgian police are expected to make a statement later today.

Authorites across the globe have toughened their stances on illegal file-sharing in recent months, with governments including the UK, introducing tough new policies to deter individuals.

Mark Mulligan, an analyst with research firm Forrester, questioned the wisdom of both the raids and increased legislation.

"File-sharing operations are no longer centralised and any server is only ever going to be a cog in the wheel," he said.

"This is just like customs seizing drugs - it doesnt really affect the level of drug trafficking."

"These things are necessary but the simple fact is that the judiciary and legislative bodies move much slower than technology. There are now dozens of different ways to share music off-network," he added.



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BP: Multiple companies, teams contributed to spill AP

NEW ORLEANS Oil giant BP PLC said in an internal report released Wednesday before a key piece of evidence has been analyzed that multiple companies and work teams contributed to the massive Gulf of Mexico spill that fouled waters and shorelines for months.

In its 193-page report posted on its website Wednesday, the British company describes the incident as an accident that arose from a complex and interlinked series of mechanical failures, human judgments, engineering design, operational implementation and team interfaces.

BP spread the blame around, and even was critical of its own workers conduct, but it defended the design of its well and it was careful in its assessments. It already faces hundreds of lawsuits and billions of dollars of liabilities. In public hearings, it had already tried to shift some of the blame to rig owner Transocean Ltd. and cement contractor Halliburton. BP was leasing the rig from Transocean and owned the well that blew out.

The report was generated by a BP team led by Mark Bly, BPs head of safety and operations.

BPs report is far from the final word on possible causes of the explosion, as several divisions of the U.S. government, including the Justice Department, Coast Guard and Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement, are also investigating.

Also, a key piece of the puzzle � the blowout preventer that failed to stop the oil from leaking from the well off the Louisiana coast � was raised from the water Saturday. As of Tuesday afternoon, it had not reached a NASA facility in New Orleans where government investigators planned to analyze it, so those conclusions were not be part of BPs report.

The April 20 rig explosion 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.

The details of BPs internal report were closely guarded � and only a short list of people saw it ahead of its release.

There were signs of problems prior to the explosion, including an unexpected loss of fluid from a pipe known as a riser five hours before the explosion that could have indicated a leak in the blowout preventer.

Witness statements show that rig workers talked just minutes before the blowout about pressure problems in the well.

At first, nobody seemed too worried, workers have said. Then panic set in.

Workers called their bosses to report that the well was "coming in" and that they were "getting mud back." The drilling supervisor, Jason Anderson, tried to shut down the well.

It didnt work. At least two explosions turned the rig into an inferno.

Members of Congress, industry experts and workers who survived the rig explosion have accused BPs engineers of cutting corners to save time and money on a project that was 43 days and more than $20 million behind schedule at the time of the blast.

In its report, BP defended the wells design, which has been criticized by industry experts.

"The investigation team reviewed the decision to install a 9 7/8 in. x 7 in. long string production casing rather than a 7 in. production liner, which would have been tied back to the wellhead later, and concluded that both options provided a sound basis of design."



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Austrian kidnap victim details ordeal in new book AP

VIENNA An Austrian woman kidnapped at age 10 says she was repeatedly beaten, starved and forced to do housework half-naked during her 8 1/2 years at the mercy of a man who admired Hitler and considered himself an Egyptian god.

In a new book about her ordeal, Natascha Kampusch also describes how her abductor, Wolfgang Priklopil, shaved off all her hair and shackled her to him on his bed once she turned 14.

Priklopil snatched Kampusch off a Vienna street on her way to school in 1998 and held her prisoner in a dungeon under his suburban home until she fled in August 2006. He committed suicide within hours of her escape. The case horrified Austrians and made headlines around the world.

In "3,096 Days," penned with the help of two authors, Kampusch describes Priklopil as a paranoid, unpredictable and cleanliness-obsessed man who systematically tormented her physically and verbally.

"In many respects, the kidnapper was a beast and more cruel than can possibly be depicted," Kampusch wrote, according to an English edition to be released Sept. 16 in Britain.

Over the years, he attacked her using not only his hands and feet but also a sack of cement, pruning shears and even a crowbar.

"Sometimes he beat me so long it felt like hours," Kampusch wrote.

Priklopil found other ways to humiliate her.

"In the house I always had to work half-naked, and in the garden I was principally not allowed to wear any knickers," Kampusch wrote. "It was one of the ways to keep me down."

He also deprived her of food, telling her she was fat and ugly.

"The kidnapper knew precisely which buttons he had to push to land blows to my self esteem, and he pressed them mercilessly," wrote Kampusch, who weighed a mere 38 kilograms 84 pounds at age 16.

Kampusch describes how, as a teenager, she spent nights in Priklopils bed with her wrists tied to his.

"The man who beat me, locked me in the cellar and starved me, wanted to cuddle," she wrote.

She also recalled the horror of having her hair shaved off because Priklopil considered every single strand a danger, to be potentially used by police to trace her.

"Not even the minutest hair was allowed to remain. Anywhere."

The now 22-year-old was later allowed to grow out her hair but had to die it "peroxide blond" to conform to her captors image of the ideal woman: "obedient, hardworking, blond."

Kampusch describes how, in desperation, she tried to strangle herself several times using pieces of clothing and attempted to commit suicide by setting fire to paper and toilet rolls on a hotplate in her underground cell. At the last minute, her "will to survive" resurfaced.

But there were moments when Kampusch stood up to the man who once told her he was an Egyptian god from the science fiction series "Stargate." Not only did she refuse to call Priklopil "maestro" or "my lord," she also resisted kneeling in front of him. At 15, she said she even "punched" him in the stomach.

Although Kampusch wrote that she couldnt stand a chance against him, "fighting back became vital to my survival."

Kampusch attempts to explain why Priklopil kidnapped her, saying he wanted someone for whom he was "the most important person in the world."

"Today I believe that Wolfgang Priklopil, in committing a terrible crime, wanted to create nothing more than his own little perfect world with a person that could be there just for him," she wrote.

Kampusch will officially present "3,096 Days" in the Austrian capital Thursday. English editions will also be available in some countries, including Australia, South Africa, New Zealand, Canada and India.



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