Friday, September 10, 2010

China demands Japan release detained boat captain AP

BEIJING Chinas foreign minister demanded that Tokyo immediately release the captain of a Chinese fishing boat that collided with two Japanese patrol vessels near disputed islands. But a Japanese court ruled he can be held 10 more days, deepening the diplomatic spat.

Yang Jiechi made the demand Friday to Ambassador Uichrio Niwa after the Japanese envoy was summoned for the third time over the crash.

Hours after Yangs protest, a Japanese court allowed prosecutors to keep the captain in custody until Sept. 19 before deciding whether to press charges against him, Naha District Court spokesman Yasuhide Yamashiro said.

Late Friday, China announced that it was postponing talks scheduled earlier with Japan on the East China Sea issue in a sign of its anger. The talks, scheduled for mid-September, would have been the second governmental meeting over the territorial disputes in that area.

"The Japanese side has ignored Chinas repeated solemn representations and firm opposition, and obstinately decided to put the Chinese captain under the so-called judiciary procedures. China expresses strong discontent and grave protest to the move," said Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu.

"Japan will reap as it has sown, if it continues to act recklessly," she warned.

China has said the confrontation could damage its relations with Japan, showing the sensitivity of the territorial dispute, one of several that trouble Chinas ties with its Asian neighbors. As the robust Chinese economys demand for resources grows, Beijings commercial ships are venturing farther from shore and its more powerful navy is enforcing claims in disputed waters.

The collisions occurred Tuesday after the Chinese fishing boat ignored warnings from the patrol vessels to leave the area and then refused to stop for an inspection, Japans coast guard said.

The incident happened off Japans Kuba island, just north of disputed islands known as Senkaku in Japanese and Diaoyu in Chinese. The islands, about 120 miles 190 kilometers east of Taiwan, are controlled by Japan but are also claimed by China and Taiwan.

Yang told Niwa that captain Zhan Qixiong, his crew and boat had to be freed immediately, a ministry statement said.

In Tokyo, Foreign Minister Katsuya Okada told a news conference Friday that it was regrettable that Niwa had been summoned by Yang.

"We are only taking proper steps based on law because there was an alleged obstruction of public duties in our territorial waters," Okada said.

On Thursday, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu said it was "absurd, illegal and invalid" for Japan to be applying its domestic laws to the case.

The spat has stirred nationalistic passions in China, with newspapers and activists calling for a tough stand against any threats to Chinas territorial claims.

"It is our territory and were entitled to exercise sovereignty," said Sun Peng, a 32-year-old software developer in Shanghai who has campaigned against Japan.

Sun said diplomatic efforts with Japan were a waste of time.

Japans coast guard has said Zhan could be released in a few days if he accepts the allegation that he obstructed public duties, resulting in the collision, and pays a fine. If not, he would likely have to stand trial.

The other 14 crew members have remained on the fishing boat, the coast guard said. They cannot land in Japan because they do not have passports but are free to return home if China sends a vessel to pick them up, it said.

Last month, a Chinese survey ship allegedly entered Japans disputed exclusive economic zone without prior notification, breaking a previous agreement between the countries. In April, a Chinese helicopter came within 300 feet 90 meters of a Japanese military monitoring vessel in the vicinity of a Chinese naval exercise.

___

Associated Press Writer Mari Yamaguchi in Tokyo contributed to this report.



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25 slain in Mexican city; 85 escape border prison AP

CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico Gunmen killed 25 people in a series of drug-gang attacks in Ciudad Juarez, marking the deadliest day in more than two years for the Mexican border city. Farther east on the border, 85 inmates scaled the walls of a prison and escaped Friday in Mexicos biggest jail break in recent memory.

Despite the violence, President Felipe Calderon hotly disputed a statement this week by U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton saying Mexico resembled Colombia two decades ago.

"These kind of comments like the ones made by Secretary of State Clinton ... so careless, so lacking in seriousness, are very painful for Mexico, because they damage Mexicos image terribly," Calderon told the Spanish-language network Univision.

"I think the main thing we have in common with Colombia is that both of our countries suffer from U.S. drug consumption," Calderon said. "We are both victims of the enormous American consumption of drugs, and now the sales of weapons."

The toll in Thursdays attacks in Ciudad Juarez included 15 people killed when attackers stormed four homes in three hours, said Arturo Sandoval, a spokesman for the Attorney Generals Office of Chihuahua state, where Ciudad Juarez is located.

In the worst of those attacks, gunmen burst into a house and killed two young men � then killed four others for being witnesses.

Sandoval said it was the highest single-day murder toll in the city across from El Paso, Texas, since March 2008. He did not give more details of how many died back then, or say what day.

Two graffiti message appeared in Ciudad Juarez threatening Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, the fugitive head of the Sinaloa drug cartel.

"You are killing our sons. You already did, and now we are going to kill your families," one sign read.

In the border city of Reynosa, across the border from McAllen, Texas, 85 inmates � 66 of whom were convicted or on trial for federal charges like weapons possession or drugs � scaled the Reynosa prisons 20-foot 6-meter walls using ladders, said the Tamaulipas state public safety secretary, Jose Garza Garcia.

Garza Garcia said 44 prison guards and employees were under investigation. Two were missing.

"The guards evidently helped in the escape," he said. So far this year a total of 201 inmates have escaped from prisons in Tamaulipas.

Fridays escape was the largest single mass prison breakout in recent years. In 2009, armed assailants believed to be working for the Zetas drug gang broke 53 inmates out of a prison in the northern state of Zacatecas while guards stood by and did nothing to stop them.

Ciudad Juarez, with a population of 1.3 million, has become one of the worlds most dangerous cities amid a turf war between the Sinaloa and Juarez cartels.

Violence has continued unabated despite the deployment of thousands of soldiers to the city this year. Federal police, including a special investigative unit, later took over security in the city as part of a new strategy announced by President Felipe Calderon.

More than 2,100 people have been killed this year in Ciudad Juarez, putting the city on pace to surpass its previous high of 2,700, set last year.

Daily homicide tolls routinely reach double digits in Juarez; 24 people were killed Aug. 15.

Also Friday, Sandoval confirmed that a U.S. resident kidnapped in Ciudad Juarez last month was found dead.

Saul de la Rosa, 27, was abducted along with two other people when he crossed into Ciudad Juarez on Aug. 28. All three bodies were found Sept. 2, and Sandoval said documents found on De la Rosa indicated he was a U.S. resident.

Elsewhere in Mexico, at least five people were killed in the southern Pacific coast state of Guerrero, where various cartels are also fighting for territory, state police reported. One body was found floating in the ocean in a beach town just north of the resort city of Acapulco, his hands and feet bound.

In central Morelos state, a prison riot left one inmate dead and eight wounded. Guerrero and Morelos state have both been battlegrounds for control the Beltran Leyva cartel since its leader, Arturo Beltran Leyva, was killed in a December shootout with Marines.

One of the alleged kingpins fighting for control of Morelos, U.S.-born Edgar "La Barbie" Valdez Villarreal, was captured Aug. 30 by federal police, but different accounts of how he was caught have since emerged.

The Mexican government has said the arrest was the result of a 1 1/2-year investigation and a carefully planned raid involving agents specially trained abroad.

But a copy of the booking report obtained by The Associated Press and other media outlets Thursday indicates the officers who arrested him did not initially know who they had caught. The officers report says they detained Valdez after chasing him in a suspicious three-vehicle convoy for several miles.

On Friday, Valdezs U.S. lawyer, Kent Schaffer, told The Associated Press that Mexican authorities lured Valdez to a business 10 miles from his ranch by having a detained associate call and ask to meet him. He said Valdez drove to the place, got out of the car and found himself surrounded.

Schaffer said Valdez told him the associate was forced to make the call at gunpoint.

"He wasnt pulled over for traffic. He wasnt chased at all," Schaffer said. "From what I understand, an associate of Mr. Valdez was ordered at gunpoint to send him a message telling him to come meet."

A federal police spokesman, who was not authorized by department rules to be quoted by name, said an associate of Valdezs apparently did call Valdez just before he was caught, but said that happened while police were tailing the associates car in Mexico City.

When the associate noticed the police, he opened fire and was killed in the ensuing gunbattle near a major shopping center, the spokesman said.

Also Friday, Mexicos attorney general said video tapes distributed by authorities showing Valdez giving a rambling account of his drug dealings are considered "interviews," and could not be formally submitted as evidence because his lawyer was not present. Attorney General Arturo Chavez said that in formal statements with his lawyer present, Valdez did not admit to the activities he acknowledged on the tapes.

Schaffer also said he filed an official request with the U.S. Embassy in Mexico City asking that the U.S. government request Valdez be deported to face trial in the United States, where he faces charges in three states for allegedly trucking in tons of cocaine.

A Mexican judge last week ordered Valdez held for 40 days while prosecutors here decide whether to formally file organized crime and other charges. Mexican authorities have said deportation is a possibility but have made no decision.

___

Associated Press writers Alexandra Olson and E. Eduardo Castillo contributed to this report.



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Islam controversies cast shadow over 9/11 events AP

NEW YORK They will read the names, of course, the names of every victim who died in the Sept. 11 attacks. The bells will ring. And then that moment of unity will give way to division as activists hoist signs and march, some for and some against a planned mosque two blocks from ground zero.

This 9/11 is more political and contentious than the eight before it, with grieving family members on opposite sides of the mosque battle.

The debate became so heated that President Barack Obama felt the need to remind Americans: "We are not at war against Islam."

It was uncertain Friday whether hushed tones would replace the harsh rhetoric that threatened to overshadow the commemoration of the terrorist attacks that killed nearly 3,000 people in New York, Washington and Shanksville, Pa.

The son of an anti-Muslim pastor in Florida confirmed that his father would not � at least for now � burn copies of the Quran, a plan that inflamed much of the Muslim world and drew a stern rebuke from Obama. But Terry Jones got on a plane and was headed to New York on Friday night, said an associate, K.A. Paul. Jones has said he wants to meet with the imam behind the proposed mosque.

Activists in New York insisted their intentions were peaceful.

"Its a rally of remembrance for tens of thousands who lost loved ones that day," said Pamela Geller, a conservative blogger and host of the anti-mosque demonstration. "Its not a political event, its a human rights event."

The site of the proposed mosque and Islamic center is already used for services, but it was padlocked Friday, closed until Sunday. Police guarded the block, and worshippers were redirected to a different prayer room 10 blocks away.

More than 2,000 supporters of the project, waving candles and American flags, held a vigil near the proposed Islamic centers site Friday evening instead of Saturday, saying they wanted to avoid entangling the mosque controversy and the Sept. 11 observance.

Organizers "believe that tomorrow is a day for mourning and remembrance," said Jennifer Carnig, a spokeswoman for the New York Civil Liberties Union, one of the vigils sponsors.

For Jones, pastor of a 50-member Pentecostal church in Florida, it was to be a day to burn the Quran. He backed off that threat after drawing angry protests across the Muslim world, a call from the secretary of defense and impassioned pleas to call it off from religious and political leaders and his own daughter.

"There will be no Quran burning tomorrow," Jones 29-year old son, Luke Jones, told reporters outside his fathers Gainesville church Friday. He added that he could not predict what might happen in the future.

Terry Jones had previously said he would cancel his plan if the leader of the planned New York Islamic center, Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf, would agree to move the project to another location.

Jones claimed Thursday that an imam in Florida had told him the mosque would be moved. That imam later said Jones was mistaken, that he had only arranged a meeting with Rauf in New York on Saturday.

Rauf, however, said that wasnt true, either, that he had no plans to meet with Jones, although he added in a statement Friday that he is open to seeing anyone "seriously committed to pursuing peace."

The carefully worded text seemed to leave open the possibility of a meeting, but only if Jones proved himself to be a serious peacemaker. With that caveat, it would seem unlikely that the imam would meet with a man whose threat to desecrate the Muslim holy book stirred anger and protest and even some bloodshed in the Islamic world.

In Afghanistan, 11 people were injured Friday in scattered protests of Jones plan. Only a few thousand people attended those rallies and no large-scale demonstrations were reported elsewhere. In Indonesia, the worlds most populous Muslim country, cleric Rusli Hasbi told 1,000 worshippers at Friday prayers that whether or not Jones burns the Quran, he has already "hurt the heart of the Muslim world."

As on other 9/11 anniversaries, official ceremonies were planned at the three locations where the terrorists struck. Obama will be at the Pentagon, Vice President Joe Biden will go to New York, and first lady Michelle Obama and former first lady Laura Bush will travel to Shanksville.

Obama told a White House news conference that Sept. 11 would be "an excellent time" for the country to reflect on the fact that there are millions of Muslims who are American citizens, that they also are fighting in U.S. uniforms in Afghanistan, and "we dont differentiate between them and us. Its just us."

Biden will attend the largest commemoration, at a park near ground zero, where 2,752 people were killed when Muslim extremists flew planes into the twin towers of the World Trade Center. Houses of worship in the city will toll bells at 8:46 a.m., when the first plane struck the north tower, and three more times to mark the moment the second plane hit the south tower and to observe the times each tower fell.

Activists are organizing a pair of rallies � one against the planned Islamic center, one supporting it � to follow the official ceremony.

Sally Regenhard, who lost her firefighter son, Christian Regenhard, planned to attend the morning ceremony and the anti-mosque protest.

"The purpose is to speak out and express our feelings that this mosque, the location of it, is a grievous offense to the sensitivity of 9/11 families," Regenhard said. "Theres nothing political about people who want to speak out against something they think is so wrong, so hurtful and so devastating."

But Donna Marsh OConnor, whose pregnant daughter, Vanessa, was killed in the attacks, supports the mosque. She said she strongly opposes the anti-mosque rally and the political motivations behind it.

"Its more of the same hate-mongering and fear-mongering thats been going on for years," OConnor said. "People have a right to free speech. But if theyre talking about sensitivities to 9/11 families, why are they rallying and doing events on a day we should spend thinking about those we lost?"

John Bolton, who was U.S. ambassador to the United Nations under President George W. Bush, was expected to send a videotaped message of support to the anti-mosque rally, as was conservative blogger Andrew Breitbart. Anti-Islam Dutch politician Geert Wilders, who advocates banning the Quran and taxing Muslim women who wear head scarves, plans to address the crowd in person, as do a handful of Republican congressional candidates who have made opposition to the mosque a centerpiece of their campaigns.

Also Saturday, former Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin was expected to observe the anniversary in Alaska with Fox News TV host Glenn Beck.

New York Archbishop Timothy Dolan spoke out Friday against Saturdays planned New York protests, saying Sept. 11 "has become a holy day in our community and our nation."

"We must never allow Sept. 11th to become a time for protest and division," he added. "Instead, this day must remain a time for promoting peace and mutual respect."

___

Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Tom Hays, Verena Dobnik, David Caruso and Colleen Long in New York, Ayi Jufridar in Lhokseumawe, Indonesia; Robert Reid in Kabul; Darlene Superville, Anne Flaherty and Lolita C. Baldor in Washington; and AP Legal Affairs Writer Curt Anderson in Miami.



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3rd drill to the rescue for Chiles trapped miners AP

SAN JOSE MINE, Chile Chile is sparing no expense to rescue its 33 trapped miners, mounting three separate drilling efforts to carve escape tunnels through nearly a half-mile of solid rock and collapsed mine shafts. The latest � an oil-well drill so big it takes 40 trucks to carry it � began arriving Friday.

The drill will be nearly 150 feet 45 meters tall when assembled at the gold and copper mine where the main shaft collapsed Aug. 5. Its huge size has required rescuers to level rocks and lay a concrete platform over an area nearly the size of a football field on the hilltop, where only a dozen trucks at a time have room to unload their cargo.

Relatives of the miners � now stuck underground for 36 days � applauded the caravans arrival, waving Chilean flags as the trucks rolled past their tents, known as "Camp Hope." The government also has established a 24/7 presence at the mine, providing families with food, shelter and support in the hot days and frigid nights of their Atacama desert vigil.

The oil drill is the governments Plan C, joining two mining-industry drills that have been carving other escape holes since last week. Just building its platform is taking two weeks.

Used by the countrys state oil company in northern Chile, it drills the fastest of the three, and is capable of reaching the miners in 45 days after it becomes operational. But its power also increases the risk of rockfalls, so rescuers plan to aim it for the very bottom of the mine, some distance away from the other two efforts, which are aimed closer to the miners refuge.

Meanwhile, Plan B suffered setbacks when the second drill struck an iron support beam for a mine shaft at 880 feet 268 meters, destroying a drill bit. Engineers have had to lower magnets down the shaft to recover the broken metal, said a governnment official who insisting on speaking anonymously becuse she was not authorized to talk with the news media.

A replacement drill part was rushed from the United States, and Andre Sougarret, a Codelco mining company engineer overseeing the effort, estimated that it would be operating by late Friday.

At roughly $2,000 a yard meter, the three drilling efforts alone could cost an estimated $4.2 million or more, and the overall rescue effort will be much more costly once all the other government efforts to support the miners are included.

For now, the costs are largely being borne by the state-owned Codelco copper company and Enap oil company, as well as private firms: the La Escondida and Ines de Collahuasi copper companies, and drilling companies and their operators.

It remains to be seen if the government will compensate these firms, and the presidency has avoided making any public cost estimates. Both Finance Minister Felipe Larrain and Mining Minister Laurence Golborne have said that no cost evaluations have been conducted.

Diego Hernandez, Codelcos presidentm, said that "its not the time" to estimate costs, adding that the companys only concern now is getting the miners out as soon as possible.

Codelco can afford the rescue in any case. On Friday, it reported earnings of $2.5 billion in the first half of 2010 thanks to higher global copper prices. That was about 3 1/2 times its profit during the same period last year.

___

Associated Press Writer Federico Quilodran contributed to this report.



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Iran postpones American womans release AP

TEHRAN, Iran Iran on Friday postponed the planned release of an American woman jailed along with two friends for more than a year, state media reported, dealing a blow to the hopes of three U.S. mothers who have pleaded for the trios freedom.

Iranian officials had said that Sarah Shourd, who was detained with her friends near Irans border with Iraq, would be released on Saturday. But the IRNA state news agency quoted the deputy chief of communication for the Iranian presidents office, Mohammed Hassan Salilhimaram, as saying that would not happen.

He said details of the decision would be announced later, but Tehrans chief prosecutor, Abbas Jafari Dolatabadi, blamed the fact that "judicial procedures have not been done," according to the semiofficial ILNA news agency.

It was the latest in a series of mixed messages from Tehran in a case that has deepened tensions between the U.S. and Iran, a relationship already strained over Washingtons suspicions that Tehran is trying to manufacture nuclear weapons � something Iran denies.

Shourd and two friends, Shane Bauer and Josh Fattal, were arrested along the Iran-Iraq border in July 2009, and Tehran has accused them of illegally crossing the border and spying. Their families say they were hiking in Iraqs scenic north and that if they crossed the border, they did so unwittingly.

The U.S. State Department and relatives said they had no immediate information about the reports.

The announcement of the delay came hours after state media reported that President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad had personally intervened to secure Shourds release as an act of clemency in part because of the "special viewpoint of the Islamic Republic of Iran on the dignity of women."

Patrick Clawson, deputy director at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, said the last-minute quarrels over Shrouds release highlight the internal fissures in Irans power structure between Ahmadinejad and others such as the prosecutor who could see him overreaching his authority.

"There are all kinds of internal pressures," he said. "A case like this shows there are various factions at play."

A judicial official close to the prosecutors office said that Dolatabadi believes the release is unacceptable because Shourd should first stand before the court and then the amnesty will be granted.

The official spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the issue.

Shourds name was not among the official list of prisoners freed at the end of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, suggesting that prosecutors want the Americans to first face trial before any kind of pardon or clemency is considered.

Typically, inmates released during Ramadan have already been convicted.

In some recent cases of high-profile foreigners jailed and released in Iran, authorities have first conducted trials and issued sentences.

In May, a French academic, Clotilde Reiss, was freed after her 10-year sentence on espionage-related charges was commuted. American freelance journalist Roxana Saberi was convicted of spying before being released in May 2009.

Canadian-Iranian journalist Maziar Bahari of Newsweek was freed on $300,000 bail in October 2009 after nearly four months detention following the crackdown after the disputed presidential election. He was later sentenced in absentia to more than 13 years in prison and 50 lashes.

In 2007, Iran released 15 British sailors without a trial after being held for nearly two weeks for allegedly crossing into Iran along its river border with Iraq. Some were paraded on television to deliver confessions for trespassing.

The delay in Shourds release is sure to further fuel concerns over her health, which her family has said is deteriorating.

The 31-year-old has been held in solitary confinement, and her mother has said shes been denied treatment for serious health problems, including a breast lump and precancerous cervical cells.

Shourds planned release had provided a long-sought sign of hope to the Americans families, who have been pleading with Iranian officials to free their children since their arrest.

Now, they are once again left wondering what is going to happen.

"We dont know anything," said Samantha Topping, a New York publicist working with the families. She said the families knew only what they were hearing from media about a delayed release.

___

Associated Press writer Brian Murphy contributed to this report from Dubai, United Arab Emirates.



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Crews search ash-covered homes after blast kills 4 AP

SAN BRUNO, Calif. All that was left of some houses Friday were chimneys, rising from still smoldering ruins. Burned-out cars sat along ash-covered streets. And a rescue worker with a dog searched door to door for missing people.

The day after a gas line ruptured and a towering fireball roared through a suburban San Francisco neighborhood, killing four people, officials were trying to determine what led to a blast that raised questions about the safety of similar lines that crisscross towns across America.

"It was pretty devastating," Fire Chief Dennis Haag said. "It looks like a moonscape in some areas."

At least 50 people were hurt, with seven suffering critical injuries in the explosion Thursday evening that left a giant crater and laid waste to dozens of 1960s-era homes in the hills overlooking San Francisco Bay.

The utility that operates the 30-inch diameter line said it was trying to find out what caused the steel gas pipe to rupture and ignite. Federal pipeline safety inspectors were also on the scene Friday afternoon.

"It was just an amazing scene of destruction," National Transportation Safety Board vice chairman Christopher Hart said.

Some residents said they smelled gas in the neighborhood over the past several weeks. The utility said it was checking its records for the complaints, but added that none of its crews were at work on the line Thursday.

Compared to the tens of thousands of miles of gas pipelines across the country, accidents are relatively rare.

In 2009, there were 163 significant accidents involving natural gas pipelines, killing 10 people and injuring 59.

Transmission lines like the one that burst in San Bruno deliver natural gas from its source to distribution lines, which then carry it into neighborhoods before branching off into homes.

Over the past two decades, federal officials tallied 2,840 significant gas pipeline accidents nationwide � including 992 in which someone was killed or required hospitalization, according to the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration.

Those accidents killed 323 people and injured 1,372.

Experts say the nations 296,000 miles of onshore natural-gas lines routinely suffer breakdowns and failures.

More than 60 percent of the lines are 40 years old or older and almost half were installed in the 1950s and 1960s, according to a recent analysis by the Pipeline Safety Trust, a nonprofit advocacy group based in Bellingham, Wash.

Most of the older pipelines lack anticorrosion coatings that are prevalent in the industry today, said Carl Weimer, executive director of the trust, which was set up following a 1999 explosion that killed three people in Bellingham.

"The industry always says that if you take care of pipelines, theyll last forever," Weimer said. "But what we see over and over again is companies are not doing that and corrosion and other factors are causing failures."

And once a high-pressure pipeline fails, he added, anything can trigger a deadly blast. A cigarette or rocks smashing as high-pressure gas shoots by. Even someone answering a cell phone can cause a spark, because it is battery-powered, Weimer said.

Federal investigators will analyze the pipelines condition, along with its maintenance history, pressure levels and the safeguards put in place to prevent pressure from building up, Hart said. The NTSB will also look at the training and experience of the people who operated the pipeline and screen them for alcohol and drugs.

State Assemblyman Jerry Hill, who represents San Bruno and surrounding cities, said he has heard multiple reports from constituents who had alerted PG&E of gas odors in the neighborhood before the disaster.

The residents "deserve to know if PG&E used the correct procedures in the days and weeks leading up to this disaster," Hill said.

PG&E President Chris Johns said the company has heard the reports of a gas odor in the area before the blast.

"Right now, we havent got confirmation about that, but we have records that we are going back right this minute to try to confirm what exactly those phone calls look like and when they occurred, and we will report back as soon as we know something," he said.

By midafternoon Friday, the utility could not confirm the residents reports of gas odors, but said it was "looking into it."

The damaged section of pipe was isolated and gas flow to the area was stopped. Haag said PG&E crews were still not able to access the site of the ruptured line Friday because it was covered with water.

This is not the first time a deadly explosion occurred on a PG&E gas line. The utility has had 19 significant pipeline incidents since 2002, but there was only one fatality, according to records provided by the trust.

In 2008, the state regulators inspected a leaky PG&E pipeline in the Sacramento suburb of Rancho Cordova that had been repaired, and found that the company wasnt properly training its workers to recognize potentially dangerous leaks.

PG&E agreed to update its safety training, and a deadline was set for Dec. 31, 2008.

On Christmas Eve, the pipeline exploded, killing a 72-year-old man and injuring five others.

An NTSBs final report on the blast concluded that PG&E used a wrong pipe to repair the gas line two years before and that residents had reported a gas smell before the explosion.

In response to the findings, the company said it had taken "extraordinary measures" to ensure a blast like that wouldnt happen again.

PG&E has not returned calls seeking a response to its history.

On Friday at an evacuation center, residents anxiously awaited word on the fate of their homes.

Others, like Freddy Tobar and his wife Nora, thought about the house they lost. He saw flames shooting up outside his window and then through his home. He grabbed his chihuahua and ran outside, getting second degree burns on his arms and the side of his face.

The couple saw the house burning to the ground on the news, and returned Friday to find it completely destroyed.

"We have to start from zero again. When you start remembering it gets too sad," Nora Tobar said.

"But the most important thing is that were alive," she said.

Four firefighters suffered minor smoke inhalation injuries and were treated and released, Haag said.

Haag said crews walked through the neighborhood Friday morning and revised the damage estimate to 38 structures destroyed and seven significantly damaged. Dozens of other homes suffered less severe damage in the fire, which burned 15 acres.

Haag said Friday afternoon a quarter of the homes were still too hot to search. He said he didnt know of anyone confirmed missing, though officials were still waiting for all residents to check in.

A 44-year-old woman and her young daughter are among those feared dead, although officials have not released any names.

Agustin Macedo said his 44-year-old daughter, Jacqueline Greig, and his granddaughter were killed. Macedo said he was too upset to give any more information, including how he knew his family members fate. The granddaughters age and name werent known.

Greig lived in a house just yards from the source of the blast. Greig worked at the California Public Utilities Commission. Executive Director Paul Clanon announced to staff Friday morning that Greig was missing.

Shares of PG&E Corp. fell sharply Friday. PG&E shares closed down $4.03, or about 8 percent, at $44.21 during the regular session. The drop slashed $1.57 billion from the companys market capitalization, based on its 390.75 million shares outstanding at July 29.

___

Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Barbassa, Sudhin Thanawala, Terence Chea and video journalist Haven Daley in San Bruno; Dearen, Marcus Wohlsen and John S. Marshall in San Francisco; Garance Burke in Fresno, Calif.; Matthew Brown in Billings, Mont.; and Joan Lowy in Washington.



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Colombian rebels kill 8 police in mortar attack AP

BOGOTA, Colombia Leftist rebels firing homemade mortars killed at least eight police officers and wounded four in a pre-dawn attack Friday on a police barracks near the countrys border with Ecuador, the defense minister said.

Two police officers were missing after the attack by guerrillas of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, on a barracks housing 80 police in the town of San Miguel, said the minister, Rodrigo Rivera.

FARC rebels have for years used Ecuador as a refuge, crossing the San Miguel river to attack Colombian forces. It was not known whether that was the case Friday, but Rivera immediately made contact with Ecuadorean officials to discuss the possibility. A bridge spanning the river is about a mile from the attacked barracks.

The FARC and Colombias No. 2 rebel group, the ELN, have stepped up attacks on security forces since President Juan Manuel Santos took office Aug. 7. At least 28 police officers and soldiers have been killed, 17 in the past week.

Santos was defense minister under his predecessor, Alvaro Uribe, who weakened the rebels with billions in U.S. military aid. But many analysts believe the rebels cannot be defeated by arms alone.

A cross-border raid into Ecuador by Colombias military in March 2008 killed a top FARC commander and 25 others, prompting Ecuador to break off diplomatic relations. Ties are only now being fully restored.

This version CORRECTS that 80 police officers were at barracks rather than 80 rebels attacked post; number of attackers unknown.



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Crews try to reach smoldering homes after blast AP

SAN BRUNO, Calif. All that was left of some houses Friday were chimneys, rising from still smoldering ruins. Burned-out cars sat along ash-covered streets. And a rescue worker with a dog searched door to door for missing people.

The day after a gas line ruptured and a towering fireball roared through a suburban San Francisco neighborhood, killing four people, officials were trying to determine what led to a blast that raised questions about the safety of similar lines that crisscross towns across America.

"It was pretty devastating," Fire Chief Dennis Haag said. "It looks like a moonscape in some areas."

At least 50 people were hurt, with three suffering critical burns in the explosion Thursday evening that left a giant crater and laid waste to dozens of 1960s-era homes in the hills overlooking San Francisco Bay.

The utility that operates the 30-inch diameter line said it was trying to find out what caused the steel gas pipe to rupture and ignite.

Some residents said they smelled gas in the neighborhood over the past several weeks. The utility said it was checking its records for the complaints, but added that none of its crews were at work on the line Thursday.

Compared to the tens of thousands of miles of gas pipelines across the country, accidents are relatively rare, but usually deadly.

In 2008, there were 44 significant accidents involving gas transmission or distribution pipelines, killing 365 people and injuring 1,553.

Transmission lines like the one that burst in San Bruno deliver natural gas from its source to distribution lines, which then carry it into neighborhoods before branching off into homes.

Over the past two decades, there have been more than 5,600 significant pipeline accidents nationwide � including more than 1,000 in which someone was killed or required hospitalization, according to the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration.

Experts say the nations 296,000 miles of onshore natural-gas lines routinely suffer breakdowns and failures.

More than 60 percent of the lines are 40 years old or older and almost half were installed in the 1950s and 1960s, according to a recent analysis by the Pipeline Safety Trust, a nonprofit advocacy group based in Bellingham, Wash.

Most of the older pipelines lack anticorrosion coatings that are prevalent in the industry today, said Carl Reimer, executive director of the trust, which was set up following a 1999 explosion that killed three people in Bellingham, Wash.

"The industry always says that if you take care of pipelines, theyll last forever," Reimer said. "But what we see over and over again is companies are not doing that and corrosion and other factors are causing failures."

And once a high-pressure pipeline fails, he added, anything can trigger a deadly blast. A cigarette or rocks smashing as high-pressure gas shoots by. Even someone answering a cell phone can cause a spark, because it is battery-powered, Reimer said.

State Assemblyman Jerry Hill, who represents San Bruno and surrounding cities, said he has heard multiple reports from constituents who had alerted PG&E of gas odors in the neighborhood before the disaster.

The residents "deserve to know if PG&E used the correct procedures in the days and weeks leading up to this disaster," Hill said.

PG&E President Chris Johns said the company has heard the reports of a gas odor in the area before the blast.

"Right now, we havent got confirmation about that, but we have records that we are going back right this minute to try to confirm what exactly those phone calls look like and when they occurred, and we will report back as soon as we know something," he said.

By midafternoon Friday, the utility could not confirm the residents reports of gas odors, but said it was "looking into it."

The damaged section of pipe was isolated and gas flow to the area was stopped. Haag said PG&E crews were still not able to access the site of the ruptured line Friday because it was covered with water.

This is not the first time a deadly explosion occurred on a PG&E gas line. The utility has had 19 significant pipeline incidents since 2002, but there was only one fatality, according to records provided by the trust.

In 2008, the state regulators inspected a leaky PG&E pipeline in the Sacramento suburb of Rancho Cordova that had been repaired, and found that the company wasnt properly training its workers to recognize potentially dangerous leaks.

PG&E agreed to update its safety training, and a deadline was set for Dec. 31, 2008.

On Christmas Eve, the pipeline exploded, killing a 72-year-old man and injuring five others.

A National Transportation Safety Boards final report on the blast concluded that PG&E used a wrong pipe to repair the gas line two years before and that residents had reported a gas smell before the explosion.

In response to the findings, the company said it had taken "extraordinary measures" to ensure a blast like that wouldnt happen again.

PG&E has not returned calls seeking a response to its history.

On Friday at an evacuation center, residents anxiously awaited word on the fate of their homes.

Carlene Vasquez began crying when her son came up to her and showed her his cell phone, which had a picture of their house, still standing. "Oh my house," she said. "Thats my house."

Four firefighters suffered minor smoke inhalation injuries and were treated and released, Haag said.

Haag said crews walked through the neighborhood Friday morning and revised the damage estimate to 38 structures destroyed and seven significantly damaged. Dozens of other homes suffered less severe damage in the fire, which burned 15 acres.

Haag said Friday afternoon a quarter of the homes were still too hot to search. He said he didnt know of anyone confirmed missing, though officials were still waiting for all residents to check in.

___

Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Barbassa, Sudhin Thanawala, Terence Chea and video journalist Haven Daley in San Bruno; Dearen, Marcus Wohlsen and John S. Marshall in San Francisco; Matthew Brown in Billings, Mont.; and Joan Lowy in Washington.



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Report: Iran cancels Americans release AP

TEHRAN, Iran An Iranian news agency says Tehran has canceled the planned release of a jailed American woman because the necessary legal procedures have not been completed.

The report about the delayed release of Sarah Shourd has not appeared on official news agencies or state television and could not be confirmed.

ILNA quotes Tehran chief prosecutor Abbas Jafari Dolatabadi as saying Friday that "because the judicial procedures have not been done, the release of the American suspect ... has been canceled."

Iranian officials had announced that they would free Shourd Saturday.

Shourd and two friends were arrested along the Iran-Iraq border in July 2009. Iran has accused them of illegal border crossing and spying. Their families say they were hiking and that if they crossed the border, they did so unwittingly.

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

TEHRAN, Iran AP � Irans president intervened to secure the release of Sarah Shourd, one of three Americans jailed for more than 13 months, in part because of her gender, a news agency reported Friday.

Iranian officials have announced that on Saturday they will free Shourd, although they have said nothing about the fate of her two colleagues � Shane Bauer and Josh Fattal.

The three Americans were arrested along the Iran-Iraq border in July 2009, and Iran has accused them of illegally crossing the border and spying. Their families say they were hiking in Iraqs scenic north and that if they crossed the border, they did so unwittingly.

Irans Mehr news agency quoted Foreign Ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast on Friday as saying that President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad intervened to secure Shourds release in part because of the "special viewpoint of the Islamic Republic of Iran on the dignity of women."

Mehmanparast said freeing Shourd was an act of clemency for Eid al-Fitr, the feast that marks the end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

Irans Culture Ministry also sent reporters a text message telling them to come on Saturday morning to a palace used by Irans presidency in north Tehran to witness Shourds release. The ceremony was previously planned for a hotel near the prison where the three are being held.

The 31-year-old Shourd has been held in solitary confinement, and her mother says shes been denied treatment for serious health problems.

Nora Shourd has said her daughter told her in a telephone call in August that prison officials have denied her requests for medical treatment. The mother said they talked about her daughters medical problems, including a breast lump and precancerous cervical cells.

Shourds release could be a calculated move by Iran to soften international criticism of its judiciary. Iran has faced a growing storm of protest over a stoning sentence for a woman convicted of adultery that has been temporarily suspended.

There was no word on the fate Bauer, 28, or his friend and cellmate Fattal, 28.

Shourd and Bauer, who had been dating before being captured, got engaged while in prison.

For Bauers mother, Cindy Hickey, Shourds release isnt exactly what she was looking for, but it does offer some hope.

"Of course I want Shane home. Id like them all released," Hickey said. "We expected all three to be released, but one release is a positive move and hopefully the other two will follow."

The imprisonment of the Americans has deepened tensions between the U.S. and Iran, a relationship already strained over Washingtons suspicions that Tehran is trying to manufacture nuclear weapons � something Iran denies.

Iranian leaders have repeatedly suggested a link between their jailing and that of a number of Iranians by the United States whose release Tehran demands.

Following the news of Shourds planned release, the State Department has said U.S. officials are in contact with Swiss diplomats who handle Washingtons affairs in Iran. The Swiss Embassy in Tehran has handled consular affairs for the U.S. for about 30 years, since after the 1979 Iranian revolution.

Normal protocol would be to turn a freed American over to Swiss diplomats to be taken to the embassy.

A Swiss Foreign Ministry spokesman, Adrian Sollberger, said Friday that Switzerland has been working for more than a year to secure the Americans release, but declined to discuss the plans to free Shourd because "talks are currently under way."

There are direct commercial flights to Geneva a few times a week. While flights to Dubai, such as the one taken by the Americans mothers when they visited their children earlier this year, are much more frequent, they are probably all booked because of the holidays.



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US troops brave grenade attacks in key Afghan town AP

SENJERAY, Afghanistan Pfc. Sean Provenzano saw it whiz by out of the corner of his eye: a dark object hurled from a rooftop as he patrolled the medieval maze of alleyways in this fort-like walled village at the center of Americas Afghan surge.

It bounced off his M-4 Carbines gun-sight and landed in the dirt a few yards away. At first he mistook it for a rock � kids here often throw them at U.S. troops. But when it rose up and began spinning like a top, he realized it was something far more dangerous.

"GRENADE" the 25-year-old screamed, diving to the ground as the explosion sprayed a deadly burst of shrapnel across the street.

Through a cloud of black smoke and brown dust, Provenzano heard a colleague calling his name. He was alive, unscathed, and incredibly, so was everyone else.

U.S. forces deployed to this village in southern Afghanistans Kandahar province as part of Barack Obamas troop surge say they came with the noblest intentions: to build up government and security forces, protect the population, make this a safer place. But after a relentless spate of grenade attacks � tossed anonymously over walls and down from rooftops at soldiers patrolling the labyrinthine town � they now keep their distance from the people theyre trying to protect.

The change of heart � nine years after the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks that triggered the war � underscores the profound challenges American forces face in securing this insurgent stronghold, where sympathy for the Taliban runs high and the radical Islamist movement was born in 1994. NATO commanders say a major operation will be launched this month here in Zhari district to clear guerrilla fighters who use the cover of grape vineyards and pomegranate orchards to stage attacks.

"When we first came here, we were giving candy away and water bottles. But as soon as we saw a little kid throw a grenade over the wall, that was it, we dont give em anything anymore," said Provenzano, of the 101st Airborne Divisions 1st Battalion, 502nd Infantry Regiment.

"We make sure they keep their distance," he said of the population. "You keep em away from you as long as you can, because its only a matter of time before someone gets hurt."

U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates visited the joint Afghan-U.S. outpost at Senjeray last week and said he was "encouraged" by signs of progress. But Zhari remains a battlefield where firefights erupt daily. The lush green fields fed by the Arghandab river, just south of the village, are virtual no-go zones controlled by Taliban fighters, and progress in building local governance is painfully slow.

On Wednesday, insurgents ambushed a convoy carrying district chief Kareem Jan, killing one of his guards and getting close enough to steal one of his vehicles. The midday attack on Highway 1 was the third attempt on his life since he assumed office in late May.

Grenade assaults against U.S. forces occur mostly when they move into walled Senjeray. They began in earnest in June, and "a significant amount" of troops have been wounded but none killed, said Capt. Nick Stout, a 27-year-old U.S. company commander from Lake Orion, Michigan.

Soldiers say the assaults are aimed at demoralizing or disrupting their operations. Stout said the Taliban or their sympathizers are "trying everything they can to keep us out."

"But you have to continue to get out there, you have to keep them at bay," Stout said. Because "if we dont go in, things could get a lot worse."

Some grenade throwers are "impressionable teenagers" influenced by Taliban propaganda, he said. The youngest is believed to have been 10 or 11 years old.

Troops have captured several, but most escape easily, jumping across rooftops, fleeing through ubiquitous doors, tunnels and passageways hidden inside the sprawling compounds. Others simply blend in with everyone else.

As Provenzanos squad headed into Senjeray on Tuesday accompanied by Afghan police, they scanned rooftops and spread out to lower the risk of multiple injuries in case of an attack.

As light faded from the warren of narrow streets lined with steep brown earthen walls, women and children carrying clay vases of water stepped out of wooden doorways and stared silently. Turbaned men with long beards sat on idling motorcycles, hands crossed, observing the troops as they passed.

Provenzano was at the rear of his squad when the pineapple grenade was thrown at him.

"By the time it skipped off my weapon, I had about three seconds to get as far away as possible," Provenzano said afterward. "If he had thrown it a second later, it would have blown me to pieces, guaranteed."

After the blast, the Toms River, New Jersey native stood up, knees shaking, and shook off the dust.

Immediately afterward, troops raided two compounds. They flung a flash-bang grenade over the wall of one but found no suspects.

In the second home � where troops believed the attacker lay in wait on a rooftop � a soldier burst through the metal front door, knocking it off its hinges. Inside, they found two middle-aged women crying hysterically, and a horde of screaming kids. An elderly man said through an interpreter he heard the blast but knew nothing more about it.

There were doors and passageways in the compound, some draped with rugs and silk veils.

Whoever threw the grenade was likely long gone.

"Pretty much every time, they say they didnt see anything and dont know whos doing it," said Staff Sgt. Brandon Griffis, 26, of Pendleton, Indiana.

"Its very, very frustrating, because were here to help," he said. But "they dont want to be seen speaking to us, because these Taliban come into their homes and say theyre going to kill their family if they say anything."

Griffis found a toy machine gun made of wood in the home, and smashed it against a wall.

"I told the kid it belonged to, You cant be running around the streets with this. At night, this could be mistaken for a real weapon," Griffis said.

Stout said his company had become more aggressive in hunting down attackers as a result � more patrols, more searches, more suspects detained.

Troops say the attacks only make them want to go into Senjeray more. But in the battle to win over hearts and minds, some are finding their own changing.

At the hilltop base, Provenzano said he finds himself angry at the townspeople and distrusting everyone in Senjeray. "I dont care about these people a bit."

Asked what his main goal here was, Provenzano was blunt: "to survive."

Griffis, the staff sergeant, said the anger was understandable � and temporary.

Anybody who "just had a grenade thrown at them is probably going to be a little pissed off," Griffis said. "But when I hear soldiers say that, I always say, You gotta look at the bigger picture, you gotta look at what were here to do."



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US, Iraq sign deal to settle Saddam-era claims AP

BAGHDAD Iraq has agreed to pay $400 million to Americans who say they were abused by Saddam Husseins regime, U.S. and Iraqi officials said Friday.

The agreement, recently signed by U.S. and Iraqi officials, represents a significant step forward for Iraq and could bring an end to years of legal battles by Americans who claim to have been tortured or traumatized under Saddams regime.

But the deal is likely to anger Iraqis who consider themselves the victims of both Saddam and the 2003 U.S. invasion, and wonder why they should pay money for wrongs committed by the ousted dictator.

The American Embassy spokesman in Iraq, David Ranz, said the agreement "to settle claims of American victims of the Saddam Hussein regime," was signed Sept. 2. He gave no details of the agreement, including who the specific claimants are or the dollar amount involved.

A senior Iraqi government official confirmed the deal has been signed, and said Iraq agreed to pay about $400 million. He said the money would be given to Americans who were affected by the Iraqi invasion of neighboring Kuwait in 1990.

Saddams government held hundreds of Americans hostage during the run-up to the Gulf War, using them as human shields in hopes of staving off an attack by the U.S. and its allies.

Many of the Americans pursued lawsuits for years against Saddams government. The Americans kept up their legal fight after Saddam was overthrown in 2003 and a new government came to power. CBS News correspondent Bob Simon, who was held for more than a month during the Gulf War, was one of the people suing Iraq.

The Iraqi official did not say specifically who would receive money from the settlement, but said the deal was connected to the Gulf War.

"This agreement is related to the invasion of Kuwait during the former regime time. Saddam detained U.S. citizens as human shields, and he did torture," said the official, who did not want to be named due to the sensitivity of the issue.

The settlement, which was first reported by the Christian Science Monitor, could help Iraq shake off U.N. sanctions imposed following Saddams invasion of Kuwait. Baghdad would need the help of the United States to remove the sanctions, and the settlement may remove what has been a stumbling block between the two sides.

Ranz said Iraq still has to go through several steps for the agreement to be finalized. He did not say what those steps are.

Generally such agreements have to be approved by the Cabinet, but this settlement would likely be extremely unpopular among Iraqis who survived years under Saddam only to suffer vicious sectarian fighting after the American invasion.

Approving such a settlement would likely be politically toxic for any Iraqi government, and the matter is further complicated by the fact that Iraq is in month six without a new government after the March 7 elections.

__

Associated Press writers Qassim Abdul-Zahra in Baghdad and Matthew Lee in Washington contributed to this report.



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Castro says he was misinterpreted on Cuban economy AP

HAVANA Fidel Castro says his comments about Cubas communist economic model were misinterpreted by a visiting American journalist.

Appearing at the University of Havana on Friday, the 84-year-old ex-president says he meant "exactly the opposite" of the quote contained in a blog by Atlantic magazine reporter Jeffrey Goldberg.

Goldberg wrote Wednesday that he asked Castro if Cubas economic system was still worth exporting to other countries. He said that Castro replied: "The Cuban model doesnt even work for us anymore."



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Spanish miners in Day 9 of underground protest AP

INSIDE LAS CUEVAS MINE, Spain Far, far away from a Chilean mine where 33 trapped men struggle to cope as they await rescue, 50 Spanish miners are also deep in the earths bowels � but by their own choice.

Friday marked Day 9 of an unusual coal miners protest, a sit-in staged 1,650 feet 500 meters underground. No showers, no toilets, no Internet and soot-dusted mattresses are a small price to pay, the miners reason, in exchange for a more hopeful future for their beleaguered industry.

Their strike in northern Palencia province is the culmination of a long dispute over unpaid wages and the future of an antiquated industry struggling to survive as it competes with gas-fired electrical utility plants and heavily subsidized renewable energy projects. To make matters worse, all these sources of energy are seeking aid from a government grappling with a recession, high unemployment and a debt crisis.

Spains coal mining industry employs about 10,000 people, down from 50,000 in the late 1970s.

The Spaniards underground vehemently deny any suggestion they are cashing in on the South American crisis where the Chileans have been trapped in a cramped shelter for a month, saying the two dramas overlap only in time. They acknowledge their plight is by choice, nowhere near as perilous and can end whenever they choose.

"You have to think about their situation. Their thing is about survival. Ours is about asserting ourselves," said Juan Carlos Liebana, 41, wearing a white hard hat turned gray with coal soot. "We send them hope and unity."

His colleagues sat in near silence at a long wooden table in the dim light. They read newspapers sent down daily by relatives and ate hot food like pasta and bean soup, gaining strength by looking at family photographs and messages.

Like a makeshift clothesline, a rope attached to one wall where coal is collected from the mines shafts exhibits letters and pictures from the miners children.

One crayon rendering showed a man dressed in a miners blue jumpsuit standing next to a small boy. It read: "Daddy, I love you and I miss you. Hang in there so nothing happens to you. Love, Ivan."

Daddy is Eugenio del Amo, who turned 41 on Sept. 4 in the mine called Las Cuevas, Spanish for "the caves." He got the artwork from his 10-year-old son on his birthday.

"I didnt cry because I was embarrassed the other guys would see me. But dont think I didnt want to," he said Friday.

The mines foreman, Eluterio Arto, a barrel-chested man of 42, choked up and looked away as he pointed to a drawing he got a few days ago from his three children. One part of it depicts him with a flashlight-equipped hard hat and a jackhammer digging away at a wall of coal. His smallest child, Alberto, 6, misspelled "cuevas" as "cuebas."

"We love you so much," the children wrote.

The miners earn euro1,000 to euro3,000 $1,275 to $3,820 a month, the highest wages going to "picadores," those doing the most dangerous job of crawling into cramped spaces with heavy jackhammers to extract coal that has been loosened with dynamite blasts.

The strike in Palencia began when the miners employer, a company called UMINSA, told them they would not be paid on time for August. The miners, however, insist their main gripe is much broader: Prime Minister Joe Luis Rodriguez Zapateros failure to implement a decree that would subsidize utility companies running old coal-fired plants so they will use a certain percentage of Spanish coal instead of importing coal from developing countries such as South Africa.

The decree was signed in February but has been held up by the European Union amid concerns that the subsidies may hinder free-market competition.

Just outside the Palencia mine is an idle electrical power plant, its giant cooling tower and slim smokestack free of the steam that would indicate it is up and running. A pile of coal five stories high sits nearby, unwanted. Like the rest of Spains coal-fired plants, it simply cannot compete on price when the government auctions off slots to generate power.

The government has been buying up the coal itself to help mining companies, but the miners dismiss this is as a makeshift solution.

Zapatero said earlier this week he is aware of the miners concerns and is trying to find a solution, but his government has been a big proponent of renewable energy. His Industry Ministry has scheduled a Sept. 15 meeting with the mining unions over their demands.

Union representatives came down into the Palencia mine to talk to the strikers Friday and explain their latest proposals to the government, which include the threat of a general strike.

One miner, Manuel Linares, who is 44 but looks closer to 60, interrupted the union official.

"We are not leaving this damned mine until that decree is implemented" he blurted out.

Further north in Leon province, 14 coal miners at another pit are staging a similar underground strike. Miners and supporters above ground clashed with police Friday, firing slingshots, tearing down signs and overturning heavy metal carts used to move coal in the mines.

Las Cuevas is a gloomy place of filthy, backbreaking work, a sharp contrast to the pretty countryside above that has granite hills where lizards scamper and apple trees grow wild.

Miners are taken to work in a 5-minute ride down a long, arched tunnel where water trickles on the ground. Every now and then, a sharp crack rings out overhead, as tons of settling soil bursts a sturdy nut on one of the mines support girders.

"Its actually good, because the earth is doing what it needs to do," Isidro Llorente, a 42-year-old assistant picador, tells a doubting AP reporter.

Some of the miners at Las Cuevas came from the construction industry, the collapse of which sent once high-flying Spain into a shocking recession. Jorge Carballo, 33, used to be a builder but got laid off and headed down into the earth two years ago to support his wife and 2-year-old daughter Natalia.

"There was nothing else. In this region, there is simply nothing else," Carballo said.



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Cholera stalks West Africa as rains spread disease AP

GANJUWA, Nigeria Patients jammed rudimentary clinics and health workers in surgical masks sprayed anti-bacterial solution on muddy paths as the government struggled to contain a cholera epidemic that has killed nearly 800 Nigerians in two months.

The worst epidemic in Nigeria in 19 years is spreading to Cameroon, Chad and Niger, where it has killed hundreds more.

At a maternity clinic and a nearby hospital in Ganjuwa, patients with blank eyes lay contorted on fouled mattresses from severe diarrhea triggered by the cholera. Small children laying under traditional brightly colored cloth were hooked up to IV tubes as doctors tried to save them by rehydrating them intravenously.

As more and more patients arrived and occupied all the beds in the wards, doctors had to put them into storerooms and concrete hallways wet with human waste.

Throughout villages like Ganjuwa and cities across West Africa, lack of clean drinking water is allowing the waterborne bacterial disease to bloom. In Nigeria, 13,000 people have been sickened, according to the nations Health Ministry.

Salisu Garba needs only to look at a communal trash pit outside his familys home in Ganjuwa to see how the cholera bacteria sickened and ultimately killed his 20-year-old brother. Seasonal rains have turned the trash pit into a pond of raw sewage, which seeps into nearby wells, infecting Garbas family and others in this rural village in northern Nigeria.

"That pond is a source of worry," Garba said. "We dont have any hope."

"These areas become breeding ground for cholera," said Chris Cormency, a UNICEF official monitoring the epidemic.

Cormency said the disease began in Nigeria and then spread to neighboring Cameroon, where more than 300 people have died and 5,000 have fallen ill. In Chad, more than 40 have died and 600 are sickened, while the disease also has popped up in nearby Niger, he said. It was not immediately clear how many people were affected there.

After someone was found sick with cholera on a train in Cameroon, the other 1,500 people onboard panicked. Health officials gave out antibiotics and tried to decontaminate the train, media in Cameroon reported.

Cholera is a fast-developing, highly contagious infection that causes diarrhea, leading to severe dehydration and possible death. The current outbreak is the worst in Nigeria since 1991, when 7,654 people died, according to the World Health Organization.

Cholera is easily preventable with clean water and sanitation but in places like West Africa, sanitation often remains an afterthought in teeming city slums and mudwalled villages.

In Nigeria, almost half the countrys 150 million people lack access to clean water and proper sanitation, according to the WHO, even though the government earns billions of dollars a year as one of Africas top oil exporters.

Poor sanitation "is the backbone of this disease," said Adamu Abubakar, a Red Cross official in Bauchi state, a rural region of rolling mountains and pasturelands where Ganjuwa sits.

Doctors at the maternity clinic, which during this crisis has been transformed into a cholera hospital, try to keep the disease from spreading by waving off well-wishers and preventing ill mothers from holding their children.

The poorly funded clinics put patients on torn, yellow foam mattresses, with only a plastic bucket underneath to catch the waste that drains off.

The seriously ill receive drugs through an IV. Many can be treated simply by remaining well hydrated during the illness. Abubakar and other Red Cross officials offered powdered mixes to families in Ganjuwa on a recent morning and gave advice.

In Bauchi, the state capital, the major state hospital has a clinic staffed by Doctors Without Borders, where more than 100 cholera patients are being treated. Officials say many more cholera sufferers are in local clinics or at home in other states throughout Nigerias north.

Volunteers carrying large sprayers moved through the littered, narrow dirt streets of Ganjuwa and into family compounds, spraying a chlorine solution designed to kill the cholera bacteria. The teams also dumped chlorine tablets into wells.

Dr. Musa Dambam Mohammed, a Bauchi state health official, said the local government has chlorinated every well in the region and informed the public about how to avoid contracting the illness.

However, the chlorine wears off over time, leaving the wells again susceptible to cholera. And the rains have not stopped. They flush sewage out of small holes at the base of mud walls along narrow dirt paths and into the trash-pit pond near Garbas family compound, where chickens peck at refuse and children learn to read the Quran from wooden tablets.

But now, everyone here knows the danger lurking in the algae-covered water.

"Within two hours you can be dehydrated," Garba said. "You cannot even stand on your toes."

___

Online:

United Nations Children Fund: http://www.unicef.org



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Congo suspends mining in volatile area AP

KINSHASA, Congo Congos president has ordered a mining suspension in volatile eastern Congo.

President Joseph Kabila ordered the indefinite suspension Wednesday near the mining hub of Walikale, where more than 240 people were treated for rape last month. Kabila says authorities want to weed out what he says is "a kind of mafia involved in minerals exploitation" that he accused of fueling conflicts.

Local rights activist Jason Luneno Maene said Friday he supports the suspension and would like to see them in three mineral-rich provinces.

Conflict in eastern Congo has been fueled by festering ethnic hatred left over from the 1994 slaughter of a half-million Tutsis in Rwanda, and Congos subsequent civil wars which drew neighboring countries in a rush to plunder Congos mineral wealth.



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Boxing game to aid health fight

Overweight middle-aged men in Teesside could soon be using an exercise-based video game to improve their health.

Researchers are using the game to enthuse a population that is typically reluctant to take up sport or exercise.

The game uses a home-grown motion capture rig built from LED clusters and inertial measurement units.

Social clubs in Teesside are being sought as a venue for the trials of the technology and the approach to improving fitness and health.

Fast punch

Project leader Dr Iain Spears from the University of Teesside said despite the success of the Wii and its motion capture system, it was necessary for the researchers to make their own system to ensure that participants could not cheat.

"When people first get a Wii they do all the swings like a tennis player and play the proper tennis shots," said Dr Spears. "But theres a tendency for people to start just flicking the wrist once they get the hang of it."

The accelerometers in console capture systems typically cannot distinguish between full-blown strokes and the smaller flicks, he said.

Alternative console-based motion capture systems based around cameras were also unsuitable, he said, because their frame rates were typically too slow to capture the high-speed movements of participants.

"They only work at 30 frames per second; that would not capture the motion of a punch, its too quick," he said.

Greater sensitivity was also needed, he said, to ensure that estimates of the energy participants expended were accurate.

Punch power

The home grown system is based around a combination of sensors set on a controller in each hand, a head band and a chest piece. The two controllers for the hands are linked to the belt via a rubber resistance band so participants have to expend real effort to throw a punch.

LEDs on the hand-held controllers, chest piece and head band allow a computer system to keep an eye on fist, body and head movements.

"Its basically a cross between the new Sony PlayStation Move and Nintendo Wii controllers," said Dr Spears.

The "exergaming" system being developed is based around shadow boxing against a computer opponent. As well as striking the opponent, players will also have to avoid being struck by the computer-controlled sparring partner.

"The exercise will be high-intensity interval training, with relatively brief periods of playing the game interspersed with recovery periods, like a scaled down version of boxing rounds," said Dr Alan Batterham, a professor of exercise science who is a co-researcher on the project.

"There is a growing body of evidence that brief, relatively high-intensity exercise of this type is beneficial for health," he said.

"We are developing and pilot testing the exercise programme, but we believe that a 10-15 minute session in total, three times a week, may be sufficient to benefit participants," said Dr Batterham.

The EPSRC-funded project is aimed at poorer middle-aged men living in the North East, a population which, the researchers claim, is typically hard to reach and to convince to take up exercise.

Staff for the project are being sought, said Dr Spears, and once they are recruited work will start on finding the first subjects. Those that take part will be monitored extensively to check that they do not compensate for being more active in one area of life by being more slothful in others.

Social clubs in Teesside will be the venue for the trials and, said Dr Spears, friends will be encouraged to take each other on, albeit virtually.

"Its a way of getting people to do the activity associated with boxing in a safe environment where they are not getting hit on the head," said Dr Spears.

Venues for the trials and the first intake of subjects are now being sought, said Dr Spears. If the trial of the exergaming system proves successful, he said, the team plans to apply for more cash to expand the number of people that go through it.



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Priest sex abuse linked to 13 suicides in Belgium AP

BRUSSELS Hundreds of sex abuse victims have come forward in Belgium with harrowing accounts of molestation by Catholic clergy that reportedly led to at least 13 suicides and affected children as young as two, an independent Belgian commission said Friday.

Professor Peter Adriaenssens, chairman of the commission, said the abuse in Belgium may have been even more rampant than the 200-page report suggests, because his panels work was interrupted and all its files seized in a June 24 raid by Belgian judicial authorities who are conducting their own probe.

Adriaenssens, a child psychiatrist who has worked with trauma victims for 23 years, said nothing had prepared him for the stories of abuse that blighted the lives of victims. He called the reports findings "a body blow" to the Roman Catholic Church in Belgium.

Belgian church authorities said they would react on Monday to the report. The Vatican had no immediate comment.

The reports findings are the latest embarrassment for Belgiums Catholic Church, which is still reeling after the April resignation of Bruges Bishop Roger Vangheluwe, who admitted to having sexually abused a nephew for years when he was a priest and bishop.

Fridays report lists 507 witnesses who came forward with stories of molestation at the hands of clergy over the past decades. It says those abused included children who were two, four, five and six years old.

Family members or friends said 13 victims committed suicide that "was related to sexual abuse by clergy," the report said. Six other witnesses said they had attempted suicide.

"It is notable how often one issue comes back in the witness reports: the high number of suicides," the report said.

The number of those coming forward with their stories and testimonies, however, could be only a fraction of those actually abused, Adriaenssens said. He added that many priests cooperated with the panel, which was founded by Belgian bishops and had the support of the church there but worked independently.

"We saw how priests, called up by the commission and asked to help seek the truth, were willing to set up the list of 10, 15, 20 victims they abused during boarding school while the commission knew only of one," he said.

Belgian Archbishop Andre-Joseph Leonard, who was appointed earlier this year, said he will come forward with a new initiative Monday on how to deal with cases of abuse, prevent further abuse and help victims seek closure.

His spokesman Jurgen Mettepenningen said the archbishop didnt comment Friday so as not to distract attention from the reports contents.

Leonards predecessor, Cardinal Godfried Danneels, acknowledged Wednesday that damage control often took precedence in Belgium over concerns for victims in sexual abuse cases involving clergy.

The crisis in the Belgian church was exacerbated last month, when secret tapes were published of Danneels speaking with the man whom Vangheluwe abused and suggesting a cover-up until Vangheluwe was to retire in 2011. Danneels said Wednesday he should have asked Vangheluwe to resign immediately.



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3 Afghan insurgents killed in NATO airstrike AP

KABUL, Afghanistan An Afghan insurgent commander who was allegedly planning bombings in Kabul on the eve of the Sept. 18 parliamentary elections and two of his associates have been killed in an airstrike, NATO said Friday.

The military alliance said in a statement that intelligence sources tracked Nur Mohammed and two armed militants to a field in the remote Musahi district of Kabul province. Coalition aircraft carried out the airstrike Thursday night after ensuring no civilians were present, it added.

The statement said the senior insurgent commander was planning attacks in the capital before the Sept. 18 parliamentary elections. The Taliban has vowed to attack polling stations and warned Afghans not to participate in what it called a sham vote.

The insurgents want to topple the pro-Western government in Kabul and drive foreign troops from the country, and have boycotted or sought to sabotage all aspects of the political process, including elections.

"This was a very successful strike which stopped a very dangerous individual from conducting further attacks against Afghan civilians and Afghan and coalition forces," U.S. Air Force Col. James Dawkins said in the statement.

"The Afghan people deserve to cast their votes without fear of attacks from the insurgent groups," he said. "We are continuously tracking them and taking action before theyre able to carry out their plans."

The Afghan government and its Western allies hope the elections for the lower house of parliament will help consolidate the countrys fragile democracy and political stability, eventually allowing for the withdrawal of the roughly 140,000 NATO-led troops in the country.

But many Afghans and international observers fear the vote could turn bloody if the Taliban carry out their threats.

Also Friday, NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen urged European nations to boost their presence to meet the 2,000 troop increase requested by the U.S. primarily to train Afghan police and the military.

He said NATO-led troops wont be in Afghanistan forever, but "we wont leave until the Afghan security forces are ready," said Fogh Rasmussen in Madrid. "The Taliban can bomb, they can assassinate, but they cant take power. They cant win."

"They must put down their weapons and cut all links to terrorist groups I think the best point is to let the Afghan government negotiate from a point of strength," Fogh Rasmussen said.

___

Associated Press writer Alan Clendenning contributed to this report from Madrid.



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9/11 politicized by mosque, Quran controversies AP

NEW YORK In the past, the anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks was marked by somber reflection and a call to unity, devoid of politics. No more.

This years commemoration of the attacks that killed nearly 3,000 people in New York, Washington and Shanksville, Pa., promises to be the most political and contentious ever, because of a proposed Islamic center and mosque near ground zero, and a Florida pastors plan to burn the Quran � and the debate those issues have engendered over religious freedom.

As in other years, official ceremonies are planned at the three locations the terrorists struck. President Barack Obama will attend a commemoration at the Pentagon, while Vice President Joe Biden will attend the ceremony at ground zero. First lady Michelle Obama and former first lady Laura Bush will travel to Shanksville to observe the anniversary there.

Obama told a news conference that Saturday will be a day to commemorate not only heartbreak, but also the "enduring values and resilient spirit" of America, and he said citizens should find a way to serve their fellow citizens and rekindle the unity and common purpose felt in the wake of the terrorist attacks.

Biden will attend the largest of the three � the New York ceremony at a park near ground zero, where 2,752 people were killed when Muslim extremists flew planes into the twin towers of the World Trade Center. The ceremony there will pause four times: twice to mark the times each plane hit the towers, and twice to observe the times the towers fell. Houses of worship in the city have been asked to toll their bells at 8:46 a.m., when the first plane struck the north tower.

But this time, along with the formal ceremonies, activists for and against the proposed Islamic center are planning their own events to capture the emotion of the day for political purposes.

Terry Jones, the pastor of a small, independent church in Gainesville, Fla., shot to international notoriety by threatening to mark 9/11 by burning copies of the Quran � a plan he canceled under pressure from the White House but now says hes reconsidering.

In Afghanistan, at least 11 people were injured Friday in scattered protests over Jones plan. Only a few thousand people attended those rallies and no large-scale demonstrations were reported elsewhere. In Indonesia, the worlds most populous Muslim country, cleric Rusli Hasbi told 1,000 worshippers at Friday prayers that whether or not he burns the Quran, Jones had already "hurt the heart of the Muslim world."

Also on Saturday, former Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin was expected to observe the anniversary in Alaska with Fox News TV host Glenn Beck. The two conservative celebrities hosted a Tea Party rally last month at the Lincoln Memorial.

Nowhere do emotions run higher than in New York, where the proposed Islamic center just two blocks north of ground zero has inflamed passions before the commemoration.

Activists are organizing a pair of rallies � one against the planned Islamic center, one supporting it � to follow New Yorks official ceremony at a park southeast of the trade center site.

The anti-mosque rally has bitterly divided family members of those who died in the attacks, with some planning to attend the rally and speak, while others denounce it as unnecessary and wrong.

Sally Regenhard, who lost her firefighter son, Christian Regenhard, in the attacks, said she would attend the city ceremony in the morning where the names of the dead are read aloud, as she has done each year since the attacks. Then, she planned to head over to the anti-mosque rally.

"The purpose is to speak out and express our feelings that this mosque, the location of it, is a grievous offense to the sensitivity of 9/11 families," Regenhard said. "Theres nothing political about people who want to speak out against something they think is so wrong, so hurtful and so devastating."

But Donna Marsh OConnor, whose pregnant daughter, Vanessa, was killed in the attacks, supports the mosque. She said she strongly opposes the planned rally and the political motivations behind it.

"Its more of the same hate mongering and fear mongering thats been going on for years," OConnor said. "People have a right to free speech. But if theyre talking about sensitivities to 9/11 families, why are they rallying and doing events on a day we should spend thinking about those we lost?

The rally is being hosted by Pamela Geller, a conservative blogger who has actively opposed the planned Islamic center since the projects inception.

John Bolton, who served as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations under President George W. Bush, was expected to send a videotaped message of support to the rally, as was conservative journalist Andrew Breitbart. Geert Wilders, a Dutch politician who advocates banning the Quran and taxing Muslim women who wear head scarves, planned to address the crowd in person, as do a handful of Republican congressional candidates who have made opposition to the mosque a centerpiece of their campaigns.

In an interview with The Associated Press, Geller said the rally would be "respectful" and was not intended to provoke violence or other inappropriate behavior on what has typically been a somber, mournful anniversary.

"Its a rally of remembrance for tens of thousands who lost loved ones that day," Geller said. "Its not a political event, its a human rights event."

Former 9/11 Commision chairman Lee Hamilton said the U.S. relationship with the Islamic world "is one of the really great foreign policy challenges of the next decades."

"Were not going to solve it in a year or two or five or even 10 years. The kind of debates were having today in New York City and Florida and other places reflects that. How do we get right, how do we line up this relationship better than we do," Hamilton said.

New York Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly told reporters this week his department was prepared for the rally and had already deployed additional security at the mosque site since its been the target of protests already.

But, Kelly said, police werent anticipating major problems.

"We have no reason to anticipate violence at these demonstrations. ... There is no indication, no intelligence that would indicate violence occurring," Kelly said.

___

Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Tom Hays and Colleen Long in New York, Ayi Jufridar in Lhokseumawe, Indonesia; Robert Reid in Kabul; Anne Flaherty and Lolita C. Baldor in Washington; and AP Legal Affairs Writer Curt Anderson in Miami.



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Broadband switch too difficult

Telecommunications watchdog Ofcom has found that nearly half of consumers think that changing their broadband or landline provider is "too much hassle".

Ofcom is now suggesting a system in which a new provider "takes the lead" in performing the switch.

However, Ofcom notes it must protect consumers from the growing practice of "slamming" in which the switch occurs without the consumers consent.

Ofcom is engaged in a consultation on the issue and welcomes public comment.

Bundled up

"There are a lot of different switching processes in the communications market, some the industry came up with, some the previous regulators sorted out - so its not surprising that people dont find it easy to switch," an Ofcom spokesperson told BBC News.

However, Ofcom is aware that an effort to make switching easier opens concerns of switching without a consumers informed consent.

"There needs to be some level of consumer protection in there, but the process needs to be simple enough for people to take advantage of competition, better services and cheaper prices," the spokesperson explained.

The effort will be complicated by the fact that in 50% of cases, telecoms services are part of "bundles" including mobile, landline, television and/or broadband.

Sebastien Lahtinen of broadband information site ThinkBroadband says the proposal is not without its potential pitfalls, one of which could be a rise in high-pressure sales tactics from providers.

"We welcome the review by Ofcom of the switching process as it is clearly causing frustration for consumers," he told BBC News.

"However, any improvements on the current systems should ensure that the consumer is able to make an informed decision about switching.

"What we need is a system similar to that used by banks which permits the transfer of direct debits and standing orders from one bank to another. A similar process for communications services could include details of any services within the bundle, including those which cannot be transferred, and consumers could then make a decision on how to proceed."

Consumers wishing to weigh in on the consultation can find more details on Ofcoms website.



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Sex movie worm spreads worldwide

A booby-trapped e-mail that promises free sex movies is racking up victims around the world, warn security firms.

Some variants of the Windows worm contain a link to PDF that a recipient has been told to expect.

Those clicking on the link get neither movies nor documents but give the malware access to their entire Outlook address book.

When installed, the worm sends copies of itself to every e-mail address it can find.

The malicious e-mail messages have a subject line saying "Here you have" and contain a weblink that looks like it connects to a PDF document. Instead it actually links to a website hosting the malware.

Once it is installed, the worm tries to delete security software so it remains undetected.

As well as spreading via e-mail, the worm also tries to find victims by looking for open net links from infected PCs and exploiting the Windows Autorun feature on USB drives and other attached media.

Although not widespread, reports suggest that some corporations were hit hard by it. Nasa, AIG, Disney, Procter & Gamble and Wells Fargo were all reported as struggling to contain an outbreak of the worm.

At these firms, e-mail inboxes were flooded with hundreds of copies of the e-mail messages bearing the malicious link.

Efforts to contain the virus were aided late on 9 September when the website hosting the worm was shut down. However, security firms expect new variants of the worm to turn up.

Security firm Kaspersky said the worm had some similarities to viruses such as the ILoveYou bug by exploiting Outlook address books.

"The difference with those earlier attacks is that the e-mails typically carried the malicious file itself and didnt rely on a link to a downloading site," wrote Dennis Fisher in an analysis on the Kaspersky Threat Post blog.

"But the technique used to entice users to click on the attachment or malicious link is the same: offer the user something he wants to see," he wrote.



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