Monday, September 13, 2010

Clinton in Egypt for new round of Mideast talks (AP)

SHARM EL-SHEIK, Egypt � U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton has arrived in Egypt to start a second round of Mideast peace talks.

Clinton is joined by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (neh-ten-YAH'-hoo) and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas (mahk-MOOD' ah-BAHS') for meetings hosted by Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak (HAHS'-nee moo-BAH'-rahk) in the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheik (sharm ehl shayk).

Clinton told reporters flying with her from Washington that she believes "the time is ripe" for Israel and the Palestinians to make a permanent peace.

First, however, they will have to find a way around a disagreement over a looming end to an Israeli curb on Jewish settlements on land the Palestinians want for their own state.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Japan leadership battle Tuesday could bring new PM (AP)

TOKYO � Japan's prime minister faces off against a powerful political veteran in a ruling party vote Tuesday that could give the country its third premier in a year.

Ichiro Ozawa, an old-school power-broker who has been in parliament for 40 years, is seeking to oust Prime Minister Naoto Kan as head of the Democratic Party. Because of the party's majority in the lower house of parliament, its leader automatically becomes prime minister.

Media reports say the outcome was too close to predict, with as many as 30 party members still undecided ahead of Tuesday afternoon's vote. The party's 411 members of parliament will cast ballots that will largely decide the race. Rank-and-file party members finished voting Saturday, but their ballots count for only a third of the total.

If Ozawa wins, it would be a stunning comeback for the party kingpin after having resigned as the party's No. 2 in June amid a funding scandal that still hangs over his head. Ozawa could be indicted as early as next month over those allegations � although he claims no wrongdoing.

Kan, a plainspoken fiscal disciplinarian who has been in office just three months, is far more popular among the public. Public opinion polls show voters prefer him by a 4-to-1 margin.

But Ozawa has strong support from his parliamentary faction, including many who feel obligated to him for his role in starting their political careers. A master strategist, he's credited with orchestrating the Democrats' historic victory last August that toppled the long-ruling conservative Liberal Democratic Party � the party he started out in before breaking away in 1993.

Kan, who also has a loyal core behind him, has faced criticism for the party's loss in July's upper house elections � particularly his ill-timed proposal before the vote to raise Japan's 5 percent sales tax to as high as 10 percent.

The leadership dispute has distracted Japan at a critical time, with the yen's spike to a 15-year high hurting its car and electronics exporters and its economy � recently passed up by China's � stagnating.

Also, Tokyo has gotten embroiled in a diplomatic spat with China after a Chinese fishing trawler last week collided with Japanese patrol boats near some disputed islands off Taiwan. China has harshly criticized Japan for arresting the captain and keeping him in custody, saying the incident could damage ties between the two Asian giants.

While campaigning around the country over the past week, both Kan and Ozawa have stressed the need to revive Japan's economy.

Ozawa has proposed stimulus spending as much as 2 trillion yen ($23.8 billion) in public works and other projects, and intervening in the currency market to stem the yen's surge. He's criticized Kan for lacking leadership and falling prey to pressure from Finance Ministry bureaucrats to raise the sales tax.

A former finance minister, Kan has called for job creation but has warned that Japan needs to keep its fiscal house in order and says he will cut wasteful spending.

He's also said he wants to break free from "the old politics of money" � a veiled attack on Ozawa � and make government more transparent.

An enigmatic figure, Ozawa has championed reforms, such as deregulation, giving more authority to regional governments and reining in Japan's powerful bureaucrats. His 1993 book, "Blueprint for a New Japan," argued that Japan needed to reform its political system and take a more active role in international affairs � garnering significant attention in Washington.

But he's also seen by the public as a backroom dealer and is known as "the destroyer" for his power to break up political parties. A bit of a loose cannon, Ozawa recently called Americans "simple-minded," and late last year said Christianity is an "exclusive" religion that is weighing down Western society.

Both men have said if they lose, they will work to support the other, but some analysts have speculated that the leadership battle could split the party. Some say that if Ozawa loses he could break away with his faction and perhaps even join forces with the LDP.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Medical flight arrives in Antarctica for sick man (AP)

WELLINGTON, New Zealand � A medical evacuation flight from New Zealand landed in Antarctica on Tuesday to evacuate an American worker in a serious medical condition, after blizzard conditions eased.

A New Zealand air force Orion airplane with three medical staff aboard landed at the U.S. McMurdo Station science base on the north Antarctic coast shortly after midday Tuesday (midnight GMT Tuesday) to pick up the sick man.

Air force spokesman Squadron Leader Kavae Tamariki said the weather over McMurdo's ice runway had cleared and the airplane would spend about an hour and a half on the ground to pick up the patient, refuel and return to New Zealand.

The airplane was expected back at the southern city of Christchurch about 8 p.m. Tuesday (0800 GMT) where the man would be admitted for hospital treatment.

Officials would not identify the man or give details on his medical condition.

"The medical advice is to get him out of there as soon as possible for hospital care," U.S. company Raytheon Polar Services New Zealand operations manager, Kerry Chuck, told The Associated Press. Raytheon provides support services for the U.S. National Science Foundation at McMurdo.

He said that the man remained in a serious, though stable, condition at the base.

The flight between Christchurch and McMurdo's ice runway takes about seven hours.

An Orion left for Antarctica at 6 a.m. Sunday (1800 GMT Saturday), but was forced to turn back a few hours later after receiving reports of blizzards at McMurdo Station.

Antarctica New Zealand chief executive Lou Sanson said Antarctica was still in the grip of winter with temperatures of about minus 32 degrees Fahrenheit (-35 Celsius). The aircraft has to arrive in the middle of the day to take best advantage of the short daily period of sunlight, he said.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Plane carrying 51 crashes in Venezuela; 36 survive (AP)

CARACAS, Venezuela � A plane carrying 51 people crashed Monday in a steel mill yard in eastern Venezuela, killing 15 people on board, officials said.

Workers at the state-run Sidor steel foundry pulled people from the smoking wreckage of the plane owned by Venezuelan state airline Conviasa, and officials said 36 passengers and crew survived.

Foundry worker Frank Oliveros, 44, said he saw a huge billow of smoke after the crash, then saw the wreckage through the smoke and joined dozens of fellow employees and firefighters who rushed to the scene.

"I don't remember names ... faces," Oliveros told The Associated Press by telephone. "Our only interest was getting all the people out of there alive."

The partially scorched fuselage of French-built ATR 42 rested among barrels and shipping containers.

At least 15 people were killed after the crash about six miles (10 kilometers) from the eastern city of Puerto Ordaz, Bolivar state Gov. Francisco Rangel Gomez told reporters. Forensic experts have yet to identify six of the bodies, he said.

"A miracle occurred today," said Rangel Gomez, referring to the number of survivors.

The bodies of all the victims have been located, but authorities have not yet identified them all, Rangel Gomez said.

It was unclear what caused the crash.

The plane, a twin-engine turboprop, was carrying 47 passengers and four crew members, Rangel Gomez said. Only one of the crew members survived, he said.

He said that Conviasa Flight 2350 had taken off from Margarita Island � a Caribbean island that is one of Venezuela's top tourist destinations � and crashed shortly before reaching its destination, the airport of Puerto Ordaz.

The state airline, Consorcio Venezolano de Industrias Aeronauticas y Servicios Aeros SA, began operations in 2004. It says it serves destinations in Venezuela, the Caribbean, Argentina, Iran and Syria.

Transportation Minister Francisco Garces told state television that President Hugo Chavez has been closely monitoring the situation.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Japan foreign minister apologizes to US POWs (AP)

TOKYO � Japan's foreign minister apologized for the suffering of a group of former World War II prisoners of war visiting from the United States and said they were treated inhumanely.

The six POWs, their relatives and the daughters of two men who died are the first group of U.S. POWs to visit Japan with government sponsorship, though groups from other countries have been invited previously.

"I offer my deep, heartfelt apology for the inhuman treatment you suffered," Foreign Minister Katsuya Okada told the group Monday.

The POW group's leader, 90-year-old Lester Tenney, who survived the Bataan Death March in 1942, said he welcomed the government's apology but still seeks recognition from the private companies that "used and abused" prisoners in their mines and factories, often under brutal conditions.

"At no time have we gotten from these private companies just a letter," Tenney said. "These private companies have kept quiet for 65 years. It is an insult, because by their keeping quiet they are hoping we will die off."

Japan surrendered in 1945 after the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Japanese leaders have apologized for the country's militarist past many times, but the government contends that all reparations issues were settled by treaties after the war.

Japanese courts have also ruled that reparations issues must be dealt with on a country-to-country basis, but cases challenging that are pending in several courts.

After a short time in Tokyo, each POW will travel to a city of his choice. Some will visit the factories, docks or mines where they worked.

Tenney was involved for decades in trying to arrange the visit and has lobbied for redress from the companies that used POWs after their capture. The companies have had no comment on the visit.

Tenney was taken prisoner in 1942 by the Japanese military and forced along with 78,000 prisoners of war � 12,000 Americans and 66,000 Filipinos � to walk from the Bataan peninsula on the Philippine island of Luzon to a prison camp. As many as 11,000 died during what became known as the Bataan Death March.

He was then brought to Japan and forced to work for Mitsui Mining Co. � now Nippon Coke and Engineering Co. The company has ignored his requests to meet, and he said he does not plan to visit the site of his forced labor.

Tenney and his wife, Betty, will instead visit the grave of a Japanese man in Matsuyama who stayed with them as an exchange student in San Diego, California, in 1968 and became a close friend. The Tenneys went to Japan for the man's wedding in 1988 and joined the newlyweds on their honeymoon.

Tenney taught accounting and finance at San Diego State and Arizona State universities after the war. He now resides in San Diego.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Senate Republicans say they'll block tax increase (AP)

WASHINGTON � President Barack Obama's plan to raise taxes on wealthier people while preserving cuts for everyone else appears increasingly likely to founder before Election Day.

Senate GOP leaders declared on Monday that Republicans are, to a person, opposed to legislation that would extend only middle-class tax relief � which Obama has repeatedly promised to deliver � if Democrats follow through on plans to let tax rates rise for the wealthiest Americans. The GOP senators forcefully made their case one day after House Republican leader John Boehner suggested he might vote for Obama's plan if that ends up the only option.

Both Republicans and Democrats are using the looming expiration of Bush-era tax cuts as a defining battle in elections to determine control of Congress.

It would take numerous Democratic defectors to pass the Republicans' version � extending all the Bush tax cuts � or the issue could be left for a postelection congressional session if Republicans block the measure with a filibuster. Obama last week declined to say whether he would veto a bill that preserved the tax breaks for the wealthy.

On Sunday, Boehner said he would support renewing tax cuts for the middle class but not the wealthy if that was his only choice. Though Boehner was clear that he supports extending the full range of tax cuts, the White House jumped on his remarks as a possible change of heart.

But Sen. Jon Kyl of Arizona, the GOP whip, said Monday his party won't give ground.

"Just before the recess we had a meeting and we discussed this, and every Republican was absolutely supportive of the idea that there shouldn't be any increases in taxes," Kyl said.

Renewing the tax cuts for everyone would cost the government almost $4 trillion over the next decade, according to congressional analysts, who also assume that Congress won't allow the alternative minimum tax to hit millions of middle class taxpayers with eye-popping tax hikes.

With polls showing broad public anger over spiraling federal deficits, Obama wants to exclude individuals earning over $200,000 and couples making over $250,000 � who account for $700 billion of that $4 trillion total. They represent about 3 percent of taxpayers, according to the Tax Policy Center, a Washington think tank.

"Only in Washington could someone propose a tax hike as an antidote to a recession," GOP leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky said.

McConnell has said a bill extending the tax cuts for only low- and middle-income earners cannot pass the Senate, but he declined to reiterate that threat on Monday. Republicans control 41 seats, the minimum needed for a successful bill-killing filibuster, though McConnell spokesman Don Stewart declined to say whether all 41 Republicans would support a filibuster.

To amplify his point, McConnell on Monday introduced a bill to extend to Bush tax cuts indefinitely for all income ranges.

Some Democrats, like Sens. Kent Conrad of North Dakota, Evan Bayh of Indiana and Ben Nelson of Nebraska, are siding with Republicans against raising taxes on anyone during a fragile economic recovery.

"I don't think it makes sense to raise any federal taxes during the uncertain economy we are struggling through," Sen. Joe Lieberman, a Connecticut independent who aligns with Democrats, said Monday. "The more money we leave in private hands, the quicker our economic recovery will be. And that means I will do everything I can to make sure Congress extends the so-called Bush tax cuts for another year."

But Lieberman said he would not vote to hold up extension of the middle-class cuts to win leverage to extend those for wealthier people as well.

At issue is a year-end deadline to renew a variety of tax cuts enacted in 2001 � when the federal government was running a surplus. They include lower rates, a $1,000 per-child tax credit, relief for married couples, and lower taxes on investments and large estates.

On Sunday, House GOP leader John Boehner said he would support renewing tax cuts for the middle class but not the wealthy if that was his only choice. Though Boehner was clear that he supports extending the full range of tax cuts, the White House jumped on his remarks as a possible change of heart.

Boehner has proposed a two-year extension of the Bush-era tax cuts, which would push the question into the 2012 presidential election. Obama has declined to say that he'd veto such a plan.

Democrats are worried that November elections could hand the GOP control of the House and perhaps the Senate. The White House and its Democratic allies hope to use the tax-cut fight to cast themselves as defenders of the middle class and Republicans as a party eager to revive the days of a still-unpopular former president, George W. Bush.

"We're going to take the next 50-some days to convince the public that's exactly what the Republicans would do � back to the Bush policies," said White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said on NBC's "Today" show.

"We could get (tax cuts) done this week, but we're still in this wrestling match with John Boehner and Mitch McConnell about the last 2 to 3 percent" of upper-income taxpayers, Obama said Monday during a backyard town hall in a Northern Virginia suburb.

Gibbs said the middle class should not be used as a political football by Republicans maneuvering to give tax cuts to wealthy taxpayers, who he said don't need the reductions. Republicans say paring taxes for the wealthy would encourage them and the businesses they operate to create jobs.

Republicans, for their part, say that it's not just the rich who would be hit by Obama's tax hike on upper-income people. Many small businesses � that earn about half of all small business income � would also face the tax hike.

"No American should face a tax increase in January ... not one," said Indiana Rep. Mike Pence, the No. 3 House Republican. "We will not compromise our economy to accommodate the class warfare rhetoric of this administration."

___

Associated Press writer Laurie Kellman contributed to this report.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Setback in Chile rescue, but Hope comes Tuesday (AP)

SANTIAGO, Chile � When the drilling stops, the 33 miners who have been trapped underground for weeks in northern Chile notice. And they are not pleased about the progress above.

On Monday only one of three drilling efforts was operational � the so-called Plan A drill, reaching down to 750 feet (230 meters). But it too must stop at 820 feet (250 meters), for maintenance work. Plan B, a higher-velocity drill that will carve out a narrower escape tunnel, has been silenced since last week, when it struck an iron support beam for the mine and its drill bit shattered into small pieces. A third drill, Plan C, is still days away from starting its work.

Rescuers have already tried three times to use magnets to remove pieces of the shattered second drill and iron beam from the hole. If a fourth effort also fails, Mining Minister Laurence Golborne said Monday, then the second drill will have to be moved and start digging an entirely new hole.

The setback has caused anxiety among the men trapped by a mine collapse, who had been cheered by the sound of the constant hammering of the second drill as it bored through solid rock.

In talks with their families over a fiber-optic line rescuers dropped through one of the narrow bore-holes, they demanded explanations from authorities, who have struggled to strike a balance between can-do optimism and the reality that the miners may remain stuck a half-mile below ground for months.

"We told them that we're thinking about staging a protest or some other pressure tactic if they don't show us more progress," said Maria Segovia, whose brother is trapped down below.

With frustration growing, so is pressure for alternative solutions. But the rescue team on Monday quickly rejected a "plan D" proposed by Miguel Fort, the mining engineer who led the rescue effort immediately after the Aug. 5 mine collapse.

Fort sent an e-mail to Golborne Sunday night asking for authorization to descend to the point where the main shaft collapsed and analyze its stability. If the conditions are right, he suggested, dynamite might be used to blast a passage open.

"As a rescuer, I have to look for quicker options," Fort said.

But his idea was rejected in part because large areas of the mine are thought to be so unstable that they could collapse again at any moment.

Engineer Rene Aguilar, who is now coordinating the effort, called it an unworkable option because the rock falls were so extensive that there no longer is any way to reach the area that would have to be blasted.

"The mine rescue alternative is not viable," Aguilar said. "There is an enormous block of 700,000 tons which is very unstable, so ... entering the mine (through the main entrance) implies a danger for the lives of the people who want to carry out that operation."

About 25 families are still holding vigil in a tent camp outside the mine in the Atacama desert, and many more are anxiously following every development in the rescue effort. By Tuesday, one more will join this community � and her name will be Esperanza, Spanish for Hope.

The first child of miner Ariel Tiscona and his wife Elizabeth Segovia is expected to be born by cesarean section on Tuesday. Tiscona had hoped to assist the birth of the girl, whom they initially planned to name Carolina. He asked his wife to name her Esperanza instead � and to have someone videotape it for him.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Plane carrying 51 crashes in Venezuela; 36 survive (AP)

CARACAS, Venezuela � A plane carrying 51 people crashed Monday in a steel mill yard in eastern Venezuela, killing 15 people on board, officials said.

Workers at the state-run Sidor steel foundry pulled people from the smoking wreckage of the plane owned by Venezuelan state airline Conviasa, and officials said 36 passengers and crew survived.

Foundry worker Frank Oliveros, 44, said he saw a huge billow of smoke after the crash, then saw the wreckage through the smoke and joined dozens of fellow employees and firefighters who rushed to the scene.

"I don't remember names ... faces," Oliveros told The Associated Press by telephone. "Our only interest was getting all the people out of there alive."

The partially scorched fuselage of French-built ATR 42 rested among barrels and shipping containers.

At least 15 people were killed after the crash about six miles (10 kilometers) from the eastern city of Puerto Ordaz, Bolivar state Gov. Francisco Rangel Gomez told reporters. Forensic experts have yet to identify six of the bodies, he said.

"A miracle occurred today," said Rangel Gomez, referring to the number of survivors.

The bodies of all the victims have been located, but authorities have not yet identified them all, Rangel Gomez said.

It was unclear what caused the crash.

The plane, a twin-engine turboprop, was carrying 47 passengers and four crew members, Rangel Gomez said. Only one of the crew members survived, he said.

He said that Conviasa Flight 2350 had taken off from Margarita Island � a Caribbean island that is one of Venezuela's top tourist destinations � and crashed shortly before reaching its destination, the airport of Puerto Ordaz.

The state airline, Consorcio Venezolano de Industrias Aeronauticas y Servicios Aeros SA, began operations in 2004. It says it serves destinations in Venezuela, the Caribbean, Argentina, Iran and Syria.

Transportation Minister Francisco Garces told state television that President Hugo Chavez has been closely monitoring the situation.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Aging gas pipe at risk of explosion nationwide (AP)

SAN BRUNO, Calif. � An ominous theme has emerged from the wreckage of a deadly pipeline explosion in California: There are thousands of pipes just like it nationwide.

Utilities have been under pressure for years to better inspect and replace aging gas pipes � many of them laid years before the suburbs expanded over them and now are at risk of leaking or erupting.

But the effort has fallen short. Critics say the regulatory system is ripe for problems because the government leaves it up to the companies to do inspections, and utilities are reluctant to spend the money necessary to properly fix and replace decrepit pipelines.

"If this was the FAA and air travel we were talking about, I wouldn't get on a plane," said Rick Kessler, a former congressional staffer specializing in pipeline safety issues who now works for the Pipeline Safety Trust, an advocacy group based in Bellingham, Wash.

Investigators are still trying to figure out how the pipeline in San Bruno ruptured and ignited a gigantic fireball that torched one home after another in the neighborhood, killing at least four people. Pacific Gas and Electric Co., the pipeline's owner, said Monday it has set aside up to $100 million to help residents recover.

Experts say the California disaster epitomizes the risks that communities face with old gas lines. The pipe was more than 50 years old � right around the life expectancy for steel pipes. It was part of a transmission line that had an "unacceptably high" risk of failure. And it was in a densely populated area.

The blast was the latest warning sign in a series of deadly infrastructure failures in recent years, including a bridge collapse in Minneapolis, a steam pipe explosion that tore open a Manhattan street in 2007. The steam pipe that ruptured was more than 80 years old.

The section of pipeline that ruptured was built in 1956, back when the neighborhood contained only a handful of homes. It is a scenario that National Transportation Safety Board vice chairman Christopher Hart has seen play out throughout the nation, as suburbs have expanded.

"That's an issue we're going to have to look on a bigger scale � situations in which pipes of some age were put in before the dense population arrived and now the dense population is right over the pipe," he said.

Thousands of pipelines nationwide fit the same bill, and they frequently experience mishaps. Federal officials have recorded 2,840 significant gas pipeline accidents since 1990, more than a third causing deaths and significant injuries.

"In reality, there is a major pipeline incident every other day in this country," said Carl Weimer, Pipeline Safety Trust's executive director. "Luckily, most of them don't happen in populated areas, but you still see too many failures to think something like this wasn't going to happen sooner or later."

Congress passed a law in 2002 that required utilities for the first time to inspect pipelines that run through heavily-populated areas. In the first five years, more than 3,000 problems were identified � a figure Weimer said underscores the precarious pipeline system.

Even when inspections are done and problems found, Kessler said, there is no requirement for companies to say if or what kind of repairs were made. And Weimer added industry lobbyists have since pushed to relax that provision of the law so inspections could occur once a decade or once every 15 years.

Other critics complain that the pipeline plans are drafted in secret with little opportunity for the public to provide speak out about the process.

The Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration is the federal regulatory arm that enforces rules for the safe operation of the nation's pipeline system. State public utility agencies have adopted the federal rules and carry out inspections and enforcement.

But the system often relies on the pipeline operators like Pacific Gas and Electric to survey their own gas lines and to decide which pipelines are high-risk.

The American Gas Association disputes the notion that it cuts any corners and says the industry is subjected to stringent state and federal regulations.

"Safety is unequivocally the No. 1 priority for the natural gas transmission and distribution industry and always will be," spokesman Chris Hogan said. "The industry spends billions each year to ensure the safety and reliability of the natural gas infrastructure.

The challenge of ensuring pipeline safety is compounded by the sheer enormity of the nation's natural gas network. The Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration says the U.S. has more than 2 million miles of pipelines � enough to circle the earth about 100 times.

The agency has only about 100 federal inspectors nationwide to ensure compliance, meaning there is no guarantee violators will be caught. "When you look at two-and-a-half million miles of pipeline with 100 inspectors, it's not reassuring," Weimer said. "To a grand degree the industry inspects and polices themselves."

Potential safety threats have grown as the pipeline network has expanded and age takes its toll on existing infrastructure. More than 60 percent of the nation's gas transmission lines are 40 years old or older.

Most of them are made of steel, with older varieties prone to corrosion. The more problematic pipes are made of cast-iron. A few places in Pennsylvania still had wooden gas pipes as of last year, according to officials there.

Pipelines in heavily populated locations like San Bruno fall into a category the industry refers to as "high consequence areas."

Those areas contain about 7 percent of the 300,000 miles of gas transmission lines in the country, or roughly 21,000 miles of pipeline. The category has nothing to do with the safety of pipelines, and was created to put the greatest emphasis on the most populous regions.

Industry watchdogs have criticized utilities for not being willing to spend the money necessary to avoid explosions like the one in California. The cost to replace lengthy stretches of pipelines can exceed $30 million.

"They will prioritize and put off work to maintain their level of earnings," said Bill Marcus, an attorney whose firm consults nationally with consumer protection agencies and nonprofits on gas rate cases. "To some extent that's not bad, but it is concerning when those decisions endanger public health or the environment."

PG&E said it has spent more than $100 million to improve its gas system in recent years, and routinely surveys its 5,724 miles of transmission and 42,142 miles of distribution lines for leaks. The utility speeded up surveys of its distribution lines in 2008 and expects to have completed checks in December, it said.

PG&E President Chris Johns said the pipe that ruptured was inspected twice in the past year � once for corrosion and once for leaks � and the checks turned up no problems.

A section of pipe connected to the line that exploded was built in 1948, and flagged as a problem by the PG&E in a memo. PG&E submitted paperwork to regulators that said the section was within "the top 100 highest risk line sections" in the utility's service territory, the documents show.

The fact that it's in a heavily populated area that didn't exist when the pipe was built is emblematic of a bigger problem nationwide, experts say.

"People have been waiting for a while for this type of disaster to happen because of expanded construction near pipeline right of ways without adequate prevention," said Paul Blackburn, a public interest lawyer in Vermillion, S.D.

___

Associated Press writer Matthew Brown in Billings, Mont., contributed to this report.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Imam says NYC mosque site is not 'hallowed ground' (AP)

NEW YORK � It is two blocks from ground zero, but the site of a proposed mosque and Islamic center shouldn't be seen as "hallowed ground" in a neighborhood that also contains a strip club and a betting parlor, the cleric leading the effort said Monday.

Making an ardent case for the compatibility of Islam and American values, Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf reiterated that he is searching for a solution to the furor the project has created. But he left unanswered exactly what he had in mind.

If anything, Rauf only deepened the questions around the project's future, telling an audience at the Council on Foreign Relations think tank that he was "exploring all options" � but declining to specify them � while also arguing that a high-profile site is necessary to get across his message of moderate Islam.

While opponents of the project see it as insulting the memories of the thousands killed by Muslim extremists in the 2001 terrorist attacks, Rauf said he doesn't see the spot as sacred memorial space.

"It's absolutely disingenuous, as many have said, that that block is hallowed ground," Rauf said, noting the nearby exotic dance and betting businesses. "So let's clarify that misperception."

Some Sept. 11 victims' families and others view the proposed mosque site � in a building damaged in the attacks � as very much part of the terrain of death and sorrow surrounding the trade center.

"I just think he's being very insensitive to say it's not hallowed ground because of who's occupying the buildings," said Jim Riches, a former New York City deputy fire chief whose son, Jimmy, was killed at the trade center. "The strip club didn't murder my son."

The project has become a flashpoint for worldwide debate about Islam's place in America nine years after the Sept. 11 attacks. The controversy has colored the fall campaign season and cast a shadow on this past weekend's commemoration of the attacks, with supporters and opponents of the mosque project holding rallies nearby.

Rauf said a project meant to foster understanding has become unduly mired in conflict and what he described as misconceptions of a fundamental clash between Islamic and American values.

The Kuwait-born Rauf said his own faith had been shaped by the sense of choosing one's identity that American society provided, compared with the Muslim milieu from which he emigrated in 1965.

"I'm a devout Muslim ... and I'm also a proud American citizen," said Rauf, noting that he was naturalized in 1979 and has a niece serving in the U.S. Army. "I vote in elections. I pay taxes. I pledge allegiance to the flag. And I'm a Giants fan."

He said the Islamic center's organizers were surprised and saddened by the uproar and might not have pursued the project had they known what was coming. But he declined to detail any strategy for quieting the clamor � or say whether that might include moving the project.

"We are exploring all options as we speak right now, and we are working through what will be a solution, God willing, that will resolve this crisis," Rauf said during a question-and-answer session following his speech. "Everything is on the table."

After months of growing tensions over the plan, some observers say it is time to move past deliberation to a decision.

Public receptiveness toward Rauf's idea of creating a hub of moderate Islam "is being undermined by his inability to take a quick decision," said Muqtedar Khan, a University of Delaware political scientist and author of "American Muslims, Bridging Faith and Freedom." "It's time for him to be very specific: Is it staying, or is it moving?"

While not answering that, Rauf suggested the locale's high profile served an important purpose for the proposed $100 million Islamic center, which will feature prayer space as well as a swimming pool, culinary school, art studios and other features.

"We need to create a platform where the voice of moderate Muslims would be amplified," Rauf said.

A spokesman for the mosque's developer did not immediately respond to a telephone message.

A lawyer for another figure in the plan � Hisham Elzanaty, a major investor in the real estate partnership that controls the site � said he didn't know what possibilities Rauf was considering.

Meanwhile, Donald Trump discussed his rebuffed offer last week to buy out Elzanaty's stake for 25 percent more than he paid. Trump said Monday on "Live! With Regis and Kelly" that he made the offer "to get rid of the controversy."

Elzanaty's lawyer, Wolodymyr Starosolsky, said by telephone that Elzanaty had previously received a much higher offer for the project and didn't appreciate that Trump had trumpeted his bid to the media, rather than approaching him privately.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Cuba to lay off 500,000 government workers (AP)

HAVANA � Cuba announced Monday it will cast off at least half a million state employees by mid-2011 and reduce restrictions on private enterprise to help them find new jobs � the most dramatic step yet in President Raul Castro's push to radically remake employment on the communist-run island.

Castro suggested during a nationally televised address on Easter Sunday that as many 1 million Cuban workers � about one in five � may be redundant. But the government had not previously laid out specific plans to reduce the work force.

The layoffs will start immediately and continue through the first half of next year, according to the nearly 3 million-strong Cuban Workers Confederation � the only labor union allowed by the government.

To soften the blow, it said the government would increase private-sector job opportunities, including allowing more Cubans to become self-employed, forming cooperatives run by employees rather than government administrators and increasing private control of state land, businesses and infrastructure through long-term leases.

The statement, which was published in state-controlled newspapers and read on government-run radio and television, said because of the sheer number of workers involved, the layoffs would come slowly, but that they would affect all government sectors.

It did not say which parts of the economy would be retooled to allow for more private enterprise. The union said that the state would only continue to employee people in "indispensable" areas where the labor force is historically insufficient, such as in farming, construction, industry, law enforcement and education.

In August, Castro warned that layoffs would be coming and said Cuba would expand private enterprise on a small scale, increasing the number of jobs where Cubans could go into business for themselves.

Still, Monday's announcement shows his government is moving to pair back state payrolls far faster than expected.

"Our state cannot and should not continue supporting businesses, production entities and services with inflated payrolls," the union said, "and losses that hurt our economy are ultimately counterproductive, creating bad habits and distorting worker conduct."

It added that Cuba would overhaul its labor structure and salary systems since it will "no longer be possible to apply a formula of protecting and subsidizing salaries on an unlimited basis to workers."

Instead, Cubans will soon be "paid according to results," it said, though few details were provided. Castro has said repeatedly he sought to reform the pay system to hold workers accountable for their production, but the changes have been slow in coming.

Currently, the state employs 95 percent of the official work force. Unemployment last year was 1.7 percent and hasn't risen above 3 percent in eight years � but that ignores thousands of Cubans who aren't looking for jobs that pay monthly salaries worth only $20 a month on average.

In exchange for the low salaries, the state provides free education and health care and heavily subsidizes housing, transportation and basic food.

Castro's government has moved to embrace some small free-market reforms. Earlier this year, it handed some barbershops over to employees, allowing them to set their own prices but making them pay rent and buy their own supplies. Authorities have also approved more licenses for private taxis while getting tough on unlicensed ones.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Cuba to lay off 500,000 government workers (AP)

HAVANA � Cuba announced Monday it will cast off at least half a million state employees by mid-2011 and reduce restrictions on private enterprise to help them find new jobs � the most dramatic step yet in President Raul Castro's push to radically remake employment on the communist-run island.

Castro suggested during a nationally televised address on Easter Sunday that as many 1 million Cuban workers � about one in five � may be redundant. But the government had not previously laid out specific plans to reduce the work force.

The layoffs will start immediately and continue through the first half of next year, according to the nearly 3 million-strong Cuban Workers Confederation � the only labor union allowed by the government.

To soften the blow, it said the government would increase private-sector job opportunities, including allowing more Cubans to become self-employed, forming cooperatives run by employees rather than government administrators and increasing private control of state land, businesses and infrastructure through long-term leases.

The statement, which was published in state-controlled newspapers and read on government-run radio and television, said because of the sheer number of workers involved, the layoffs would come slowly, but that they would affect all government sectors.

It did not say which parts of the economy would be retooled to allow for more private enterprise. The union said that the state would only continue to employee people in "indispensable" areas where the labor force is historically insufficient, such as in farming, construction, industry, law enforcement and education.

In August, Castro warned that layoffs would be coming and said Cuba would expand private enterprise on a small scale, increasing the number of jobs where Cubans could go into business for themselves.

Still, Monday's announcement shows his government is moving to pair back state payrolls far faster than expected.

"Our state cannot and should not continue supporting businesses, production entities and services with inflated payrolls," the union said, "and losses that hurt our economy are ultimately counterproductive, creating bad habits and distorting worker conduct."

It added that Cuba would overhaul its labor structure and salary systems since it will "no longer be possible to apply a formula of protecting and subsidizing salaries on an unlimited basis to workers."

Instead, Cubans will soon be "paid according to results," it said, though few details were provided. Castro has said repeatedly he sought to reform the pay system to hold workers accountable for their production, but the changes have been slow in coming.

Currently, the state employs 95 percent of the official work force. Unemployment last year was 1.7 percent and hasn't risen above 3 percent in eight years � but that ignores thousands of Cubans who aren't looking for jobs that pay monthly salaries worth only $20 a month on average.

In exchange for the low salaries, the state provides free education and health care and heavily subsidizes housing, transportation and basic food.

Castro's government has moved to embrace some small free-market reforms. Earlier this year, it handed some barbershops over to employees, allowing them to set their own prices but making them pay rent and buy their own supplies. Authorities have also approved more licenses for private taxis while getting tough on unlicensed ones.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Cuba to cut 500,000 gov't workers; reform salaries (AP)

HAVANA � Cuba says it will fire at least half a million state workers by mid-2011 and will free up private enterprise to help them find new work - radically remaking employment on the communist island.

The layoffs will start immediately and run through the first half of next year, according to an announcement Monday by the nearly 3 million-strong Cuban Workers Confederation - the only labor union the government tolerates.

To soften the blow, it said the government would authorize simultaneous increases in job opportunities in the non-state sector, allowing more Cubans to become self-employed, to form cooperatives run by employees rather than government bureaucrats and to increase private control of state land and infrastructure through long-term leases.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Sensitive touch for 'robot skin'

13 September 2010 Last updated at 06:06 ET By Jason Palmer Science and technology reporter, BBC News

"Artificial skin" that could bring a sensitive touch to robots and prosthetic limbs, has been shown off.

The materials, which can sense pressure as sensitively and quickly as human skin, have been outlined by two groups reporting in Nature Materials.

The skins are arrays of small pressure sensors that convert tiny changes in pressure into electrical signals.

The arrays are built into or under flexible rubber sheets that could be stretched into a variety of shapes.

The materials could be used to sheath artificial limbs or to create robots that can pick up and hold fragile objects. They could also be used to improve tools for minimally-invasive surgery.

Bounce back

In one approach, Ali Javey at the University of California, Berkeley, and his colleagues built up layers of criss-crossed nanometre-scale wires topped with a thin rubber sheet.

Together, the stack acts as what is known as a thin-film transistor, or TFT, with a pressure-sensitive layer on top.

The amount of electrical current running through the device is dependent upon how much pressure is exerted on the rubber sheet; more pressure allows more current to flow.

The team demonstrated the flexibility of their TFT stacks by bending them to a radius smaller than that of a pencil without changing the skin's performance.

"Javey's work is a nice demonstration of their capability in making a large array of nanowire TFTs," said Zhenan Bao of Stanford University, whose group demonstrated the second approach.

The heart of Professor Bao's devices is micro-structured rubber sheet in the middle of the TFT - effectively re-creating the functionality of the Berkeley group's skins with less layers.

"Instead of laminating a pressure-sensitive resistor array on top of a nanowire TFT array, we made our transistors to be pressure sensitive," Professor Bao explained to BBC News.

"Our microstructured rubber can bounce back to its original shape much faster and enable higher sensitivity," she added.

The overall flexibility of the Stanford group's skins appears to be lower, and Professor Bao concedes that to develop his group's approach further, better conductive rubber will be needed.

Nevertheless, both groups demonstrate that their skins can register a pressure in a tenth of a second, over a large range - from five grams per square centimetre to 40 times that high.

Those numbers rival the response of human skin, made with relatively inexpensive manufacturing techniques.

John Boland, a nanotechnologist from Trinity College Dublin, praised the two approaches in a critique for Nature Materials.

"Perhaps the most remarkable aspect of these studies is how they elegantly demonstrate that it is possible to exploit well-established processing technologies to engineer low-cost innovative solutions to important technical problems," he wrote.

However, he notes that there are still "significant opportunities for further innovation", such as reducing the distance between the sensors in the arrays to maximise the detail they could "feel", as well as improvements that could make large-area arrays possible and affordable.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Venezuelan official: plane crashed with 47 aboard (AP)

CARACAS, Venezuela � A plane carrying 47 people crashed shortly after takeoff Monday in eastern Venezuela, and it wasn't immediately clear how many were hurt or killed.

The plane from the state airline Conviasa crashed about 6 miles (10 kilometers) from the eastern city of Puerto Ordaz at about 10 a.m. (1430 GMT), Transportation Minister Francisco Garces told state television. He said the plane went down on the property of the state-run Sidor steel foundry.

Rescue workers were tending to injured victims, state emergency management director Jose Zamora told the Venezuelan television channel Globovision. He did not say how many had survived.

Forty-three passengers and four crew members were aboard, Garces said.

Garces said the plane was headed to Margarita Island when it crashed shortly after takeoff, for reasons that were unclear.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Nokia's mobile chief steps down

13 September 2010 Last updated at 05:37 ET

Mobile phone giant Nokia is to lose its second high-profile executive in less than a week.

Anssi Vanjoki, the head of Nokia's mobile business, resigned from a job that he began in July 2010.

His announcement follows Friday's appointment of Microsoft's Stephen Elop as the firm's new chief executive.

Mr Elop - the first non-Finn to head Nokia - will replace Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo, a lifelong employee who had been chief executive since 2006.

"I felt the time has come to seek new opportunities in my life," said Mr Vanjoki in a statement.

"At the same time, I am 100% committed to doing my best for Nokia until my very last working day."

Obsessive task

Mr Vanjoki took up his job as executive vice president and general manager of the firm's mobile solutions division in July this year.

On his second day in the job he wrote a blog post titled The fightback starts now, vowing to bolster Nokia's smartphone efforts.

"It's my aim to ensure Nokia stays as the market and intellectual leader in creating the digital world," he wrote. "I'm under no illusions; it's no small task."

Despite being the world's biggest smartphone seller, Nokia has been losing the publicity battle with Google's Android operating system and Apple's iPhone.

Both are increasing their market share.

"I am committed, perhaps even obsessed, with getting Nokia back to being number one in high-end devices," wrote Mr Vanjoki at the time.

His strategy was based around the Symbian operating system and MeeGo, a joint venture between Nokia and Intel.

"Achieving this will require performance and efforts over and above the norm. This is a role I've personally been preparing for over the last 20 years."

Mr Vanjoki will now serve a notice period of six months before departing.

Analysts at CCS Insight said it was an "end of an era" and could signal further management changes.

On 10 September, the firm announced that it had appointed Microsoft business manager Mr Elop as its new CEO.

Mr Elop said his job was to "take the organisation through a period of disruption".

He will take up his new position at Nokia on 21 September.

The announcements come ahead of Nokia World, the firm's annual conference, which begins on the 14 September in London.

Global Smartphone Sales

Company 2010 second quarter 2009 second quarter Growth rate

Source: Gartner; millions of units (market share %)

Symbian (Nokia)

25.4m (41%)

20.9m (51%)

22%

Research in Motion (Blackberry)

11.2m (18%)

7.8m (19%)

44%

Android (Google)

10.6m (17%)

0.8m (2%)

1,300%

iOS (Apple)

8.7m (14%)

5.3m (13%)

64%

Microsoft

3.1m (5%)

3.8m (9%)

-19%

Linux

1.5m (2%)

1.9m (5%)

-21%

Other

1.1m (2%)

0.5m (1%)

118%

Total market

61.6m (100%)

41.0m (100%)

50%



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Berlusconi to young women: Seek rich guys like me (AP)

ROME � Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi says young women should follow the money when looking for a partner, noting that women seem to like him and "I'm loaded."

Berlusconi, who was embroiled in a sex scandal last year and is known for his gaffes, also raised eyebrows with a joke about Hitler's followers urging him to return to power.

The billionaire businessman appeared at a convention Sunday of the youth wing of his People of Freedom party. When questioned by one of his Cabinet ministers � a woman � he joked about marriages of convenience, saying women were lining up for him because "I'm a nice guy" and "I'm loaded."

He also recalled a much-criticized TV interview he once gave, when "I said to a girl to look for a wealthy boyfriend. This suggestion is not unrealistic."

He also claimed women favor older men, thinking that "he's old. He dies and I inherit."

The 73-year-old Berlusconi was engulfed in a sex scandal last year centering on his purported dalliances with young women, including an escort. Berlusconi's wife Veronica Lario said last year she was seeking a divorce. They are now separated.

The media baron has said he is "no saint" but denied ever paying for sex.

In Italy, a divorce can only be sought after three years of separation. Media reports this summer suggested that Berlusconi's wife has rejected his early proposals for a financial settlement.

Berlusconi often gets criticized for his earthy sense of humor, and this time an opposition political demanded he apologize to Italy's Jewish community for his Hitler joke.

Before telling it, he said "I already know I am going to be criticized."

Berlusconi, who claims prosecutors have led corruption investigations against him because they are left-wing, also appeared to be poking fun at himself when commenting on the loss of his AC Milan soccer team on Saturday. He contended the referee robbed the team of three goals and that Milan often gets "leftist referees."



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Venezuelan official: plane crashed with 47 aboard (AP)

CARACAS, Venezuela � A plane carrying 47 people crashed shortly after takeoff Monday in eastern Venezuela, and it wasn't immediately clear how many were hurt or killed.

The plane from the state airline Conviasa crashed about 6 miles (10 kilometers) from the eastern city of Puerto Ordaz at about 10 a.m. (1430 GMT), Transportation Minister Francisco Garces told state television. He said the plane went down on the property of the state-run Sidor steel foundry.

Rescue workers were tending to injured victims, state emergency management director Jose Zamora told the Venezuelan television channel Globovision. He did not say how many had survived.

Forty-three passengers and four crew members were aboard, Garces said.

Garces said the plane was headed to Margarita Island when it crashed shortly after takeoff, for reasons that were unclear.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

YouTube tests live video streams

13 September 2010 Last updated at 06:14 ET

YouTube has started to experiment with its own-brand live video-streaming technology.

Over two days the site is planning a trial in which four partners will get the chance to air live programmes.

YouTube has done one-off live events in the past, but the trial marks a test of underlying technology that will be used when the service is launched.

The live programming system is likely to be only open to media partners rather than individual web users.

YouTube partners Howcast, Rocketboom, Next New Networks, and Young Hollywood will take part in the test that runs from 13-14 September.

Rocketboom said it would be showing an hour-long variety show that resembles the programmes seen on TV.

Dan Cryan, head of broadband at Screen Digest, said changing tastes meant YouTube was unlikely to become a broadcaster like existing TV channels.

"For much of traditional TV programming there's a move to consume it on-demand and consumers are increasingly beginning to expect that," he told BBC News.

"There are certain things that work better live, sports being the obvious example, but other forms of event TV work too," he added. YouTube was much more likely to set up a system that could handle such live TV events and deliver an audience to them.

Live streamed video seen on YouTube before now has included President Obama's first State of the Union address, Indian Premier League cricket matches and a U2 concert. Its political channel CitizenTube has also occasionally used live streaming.

However, all these have been isolated incidents and the technology being tested over the two day trial will help its partners stream a continuous service. It is reported to have said that it will not be archiving any live programmes.

The trial is billed as an "alpha" or early test of the technology YouTube is developing to underpin the live programming.

Before now, YouTube relied on other content delivery networks such as Akamai to get live video to viewers.

YouTube has given no official date for when development on its live-streaming technology will be finished or when the service will be offered to all its partners.

By moving into live streaming, YouTube will bump up against a whole series of new rivals including Ustream, Justin.tv and Livestream.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Zimbabwe court frees on bail US health workers (AP)

HARARE, Zimbabwe � A Zimbabwean court has freed on bail four Americans arrested and accused of treating AIDS patients without proper medical licenses.

A magistrate ordered the six health workers, who included a New Zealand national and a Zimbabwean, to pay a $200 bail and to reappear in court on Sept. 27. They could face a fine and deportation. The court ordered them to surrender their passports and live at their Mother of Peace Orphanage outside Harare until their trial.

The six are also accused of distributing AIDS medications without a pharmacist's supervision or license.

The California church that sponsors their work says the church has been working in Zimbabwe for more than a decade and that this is the first time licensing questions have been raised.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Clinton heads to Mideast for uncertain peace talks (AP)

WASHINGTON � Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's vague remarks on restricting new Israeli housing in the West Bank are the latest hurdle for Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton as she flies to Egypt and Israel for the next round of Mideast peace talks.

Clinton and former Sen. George Mitchell, President Barack Obama's special envoy to the region, plan to be in the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheik, Egypt, for talks Tuesday with Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. Clinton left Washington on Monday.

The leaders are scheduled to shift to Jerusalem for a second day of talks Wednesday. It's likely that President Barack Obama will resume negotiations with Abbas and Netanyahu in New York the following week on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly.

Obama has framed Clinton's task for this week's meetings as an effort to get Israeli and Palestinian leaders to focus on how they can help the other succeed rather than figuring out a way for the other to fail.

But the most immediate obstacle for negotiators is a Palestinian demand that Israel extend a curb on new housing construction in the West Bank, a constraint that Israel says will expire Sept. 26. The Palestinians have insisted that without an extension, the peace talks will go nowhere.

Raising the pressure, Obama said Friday that he has urged Netanyahu to extend the partial moratorium as long as talks are making progress.

On Sunday, Netanyahu seemed to reject a total freeze on construction, saying a Palestinian demand for no construction will not happen. He said Israel will not build thousands of planned homes, but without providing details or a timeline added, "We will not freeze the lives of the residents."

Obama also said he's told Abbas that if he shows he's serious about negotiating, it will give political maneuvering room to Netanyahu on the settlement issue. Abbas knows "the window for creating a Palestinian state is closing," Obama said.

Previewing the upcoming talks, Clinton said there is some momentum after an initial round in Washington on Sept. 2, which marked the first direct Israeli-Palestinian talks in nearly two years.

In an appearance last week at the Council on Foreign Relations, Clinton was asked why those who see little chance of reaching a settlement in the one-year deadline Obama has set are wrong.

"I think they're wrong because I think that both sides and both leaders recognize that there may not ever be another chance," she replied.

The "last chance" notion is based in part on the knowledge that Abbas is living on borrowed time, in a political sense. His electoral mandate expired in 2009 and he fears a Hamas takeover of the West Bank, which is supposed to make up the bulk of an independent Palestinian state.

Time is a motivating factor for the Israelis, too. Some Israelis believe the longer that Israel occupies the West Bank and its growing Arab population, the more Israel's future as a Jewish state is imperiled. Creating a sovereign Palestine would get Israel out of the occupation business.

More broadly, the status quo is a drag on U.S. interests. The wars and grievances that flowed from Israel's 1948 founding as a Jewish state have divided the Middle East, and U.S. officials have argued that the conflict begets hatred and suspicion of the U.S. as Israel's principal ally.

Obama wants a deal within a year; Israelis are deeply skeptical after decades of failed efforts.

One concern of all the parties to the talks is Hamas, the militant Islamist movement that refuses to negotiate and opposes Israel's very existence. Hamas controls the Gaza Strip, which is supposed to be part of a negotiated Palestinian state along with most of the West Bank.

___

Online:

State Department: http://ping.fm/XqBhn

Clinton's Council on Foreign Relations speech: http://tinyurl.com/29yeusq



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Second Colo. fire erupts, destroys at least 1 home (AP)

LOVELAND, Colo. � A new wildfire tore through northern Colorado Sunday, forcing hundreds of residents to flee and destroying one home just as residents 35 miles away returned to scorched homes in Boulder after one of the worst fires in state history.

The wildfire near Loveland quickly grew from just a few acres Sunday morning to more than 600 acres � or about a square mile � by the evening and it was pulling some of the resources from the fire in the foothills of Boulder that burned 10 square miles and destroyed 166 homes.

The fire has also destroyed four outbuildings and an RV, but no injuries have been reported, said Merlin Green, the division chief for Loveland Fire and Rescue. Officials said the blaze was 10 percent contained Sunday night.

Fire officials said crews would remain on the job through the night amid word late Sunday night that the blaze was burning at a slightly slower rate.

"Tonight, even though fire growth has slowed, we'll be hitting it hard with engines and ground crews," the Larimer County Emergency Management said on its website.

Ron and Carol Christensen confirmed that the fire destroyed their home on Turkey Walk Trail, according to the Loveland Reporter-Herald. The Larimer Humane Society was able to rescue their sheltie.

Meanwhile, hundreds of Boulder residents evacuated by the wildfire that has burned in rugged terrain since Sept. 6 were returning to their scorched homes Sunday. They were surrounded by the dreary sight of burnt trees, melted mailboxes and uneven patches of blackened ground.

"We found grandma's sterling, melted together" said Frances Smith, who along with her husband, Mike, sifted through the ashes of their home for their belongings. They also wondered about their daughter, who was among those ordered to evacuate because of the Loveland fire.

Firefighters inched closer to fully containing the Boulder blaze that has burned 10 square miles and authorities investigated what caused it.

A senior law enforcement official familiar with the investigation told the Denver Post that authorities are looking into whether a resident's fire pit sparked the wildfire. The newspaper did not name the official.

The sheriff's office is aware of the Post article but won't comment on the cause or origin of the fire because it's under investigation, said Sarah Huntley, a spokeswoman for the fire response.

Like other Boulder residents, Nancy and Jim Edwards picked up a permit Sunday morning to re-enter their neighborhood, but they found out that the roads leading to their area were still closed. Jim Edwards said they might drive as far as they're allowed.

"We might take a ride, but it is really heartbreaking to see the stuff," he said.

Edwards said he spotted their house through a telescope from Flagstaff Mountain outside Boulder and saw that it was destroyed.

"It looked like a nuclear disaster," Nancy Edwards said. She said they plan to rebuild.

At one destroyed property, all that remained was a stone chimney surrounded by walls of brick about waist high. Saplings in the front yard were burnt and barely their trunks remained. A barbecue grill lay upside down, along with seven metal mailboxes nearby. The house's separate garage had been reduced to a heap of ashes.

Fire officials warned that much of the area is dangerous because of downed power lines and poles, damaged roads and exposed mine shafts.

Still, Boulder firefighting operations were being scaled back and some crews were being relieved six days after the wildfire erupted and quickly destroyed at least 166 homes. Officials said full containment was expected by Monday evening.

Fire spokesman Terry Krasko said Sunday firefighters have been overwhelmed by the community's gratitude and are especially touched by a wall of thank-you notes at their command camp.

"That's probably one of the hardest walls for all the firefighters to go up to," Krasko said. "They really have a tough time with that. The community support has been tremendous for them."

So far, the fire has cost more than $6.7 million to contain. The Boulder Sheriff's Office is leading the investigation into the cause and origin of the fire. The loss of homes surpassed that of the 2002 Hayman fire in southern Colorado, which destroyed 133 homes and 466 outbuildings over 138,000 acres, or more than 215 square miles.

Insurers had no immediate damage estimate for the Boulder fire. The Boulder Daily Camera reported the wildfire destroyed at least $76.9 million worth of property, based on a database of buildings confirmed burned and their valuations listed in Boulder County property records.

In Loveland, about 100 firefighters from 16 agencies are working the blaze, along with four helicopters and nine air tankers. Residents within a four-mile radius of the fire are under a mandatory evacuation order. The cause of the fire hasn't been determined.

Andy Hiller, a Loveland spokesman, said the city sent evacuation notifications to more than 1,700 phone numbers.

At a Loveland church were a shelter was set up, families watched television coverage of the fire on a big screen. Others were outside, looking as helicopters drop hundreds of gallons of water on the fire near their homes.

"I don't know if it's gone or not but it's sure hard to tell because I can't get up there," said Amanda Mitchell, 31, as she watched the air attack on the fire. She said she fears her home has been destroyed because she saw aerial footage of flames about 50 feet from the home she built with her father 10 years ago.

___

Associated Press writer Ivan Moreno contributed to this report from Denver. Peipert reported from Loveland.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

New UN drugs czar takes office (AP)

VIENNA � Russia's Yury Fedotov has taken office as United Nation's new drugs and crime czar.

Fedotov, a veteran diplomat who until recently was the Kremlin's top envoy to Britain, replaces Italy's Antonio Maria Costa as the head of the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime and will also oversee the U.N. office in the Austrian capital.

Fedotov said in a statement Monday that he wants to focus on public health and human rights. He also said that drug users need "humane and effective treatment," and not punishment.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said he picked Fedotov for the post because of his credentials, experience and expertise.

(This version CORRECTS typo in 3rd graf, adds detail. APNewsNow.)



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

India forces battle Kashmiri protesters; 13 killed (AP)

SRINAGAR, India � Indian forces killed 13 protesters and wounded scores of others Monday in confrontations across Kashmir fueled in part by a report that a Quran was desecrated in the United States, a police official said.

The violence, the worst since separatist protests erupted in June, came as Indian officials debated whether to relax harsh security regulations to try to ease tensions in the disputed territory.

Despite a rigid curfew clamped across the region, tens of thousands of protesters took to the streets, throwing rocks, torching government buildings and chanting, "Go India, go back. We want freedom."

Security forces shot live ammunition at some of the crowds, killing people in at least five different villages, said a police officer, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak with media.

The protests Monday were inflamed by reports on the Iranian state-run channel Press TV that the Quran was desecrated over the weekend in the United States.

U.S. Ambassador Timothy Roemer said the U.S. government was "dismayed" by reports of the rioting and appealed for calm.

He also condemned any Quran desecration as "disrespectful, intolerant, divisive and unrepresentative of American values. The deliberate destruction of any holy book is an abhorrent act."



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Iran bail decision on American stirs backlash (AP)

TEHRAN, Iran � Iran's internal battles over the handling of American detainee Sarah Shourd flared again Monday as the mouthpiece of the powerful Revolutionary Guard led the backlash against a decision to free her on $500,000 bail.

The criticism by Guard-linked Fars news agency and others � including one lawmaker calling it a "bonus for Quran burners" in the United States � show the judiciary's offer to release Shourd on health grounds had failed to quiet the political tempest among Iran's conservative factions.

The political sniping also shows the country's simmering political rivalries and the various groups vying for greater slices of power since last year's disputed re-election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

Ahmadinejad, who first tried to shepherd the release of Shourd last week, was rebuked by the courts who insisted that any release had to be on their terms.

Now Ahmadinejad's supporters, led by the Revolutionary Guard, are firing back against the judiciary's decision.

Also in the mix are some conservative lawmakers objecting to any plans at freeing Shourd, who was detained along the Iraqi border in July 2009 along with two American friends.

Iranian authorities say they have issued indictments on spy-related charges. That could mean trials for the two American men and proceedings in absentia for Shourd if she is freed.

Her attorney, Masoud Shafiei, told The Associated Press that he had no update on Monday on the status of efforts to pay the bail.

He said he has been in contact with Shourd's family and the Swiss Embassy, which handles U.S. affairs in Iran because there are no diplomatic relations between Washington and Tehran. On Sunday, he said he hoped she could be freed in "two or three" days.

It's unclear whether any internal objections could complicate Shourd's expected release. But there was no criticism of the decision in Iranian newspapers, suggesting the court's move had the backing of the ruling theocracy including Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

The Revolutionary Guards, however, made their displeasure known through a rare commentary in Fars, which is close to the elite military group.

"If they were spies � as the Intelligence Ministry has said � why should they received clemency and escape Islamic justice?" said the dispatch.

The detainees' families say they were hiking in Iraq's scenic north when they were detained on July 31, 2009, and that if they crossed the border, they did so unwittingly.

The commentary went on to say that allowing Shourd to "jump out" of detention will have "no result except discrediting security and intelligence agencies as well as the judiciary."

It also denounced the timing. Fars said the decision came "when the worst insults to Islamic sanctities are flourishing in the U.S." � an apparent reference to anti-Muslim rallies and the canceled plans by a Florida pastor to burn copies of the Quran.

Fars even went to an outspoken critic of Ahmadinejad to further bash the decision.

Conservative lawmaker Ahmad Tavakkoli called the possible release a "bonus for Quran burners" and a reward for the United States after it pressed for tighter sanctions over Iran's nuclear program.

Another conservative website Tabnak also criticized the decision. The site is close to Mohsen Rezaei, a former Revolutionary Guard commander who ran against Ahmadinejad last year.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Futures surge on banking reform, Chinese growth (AP)

NEW YORK � Stock futures rose sharply Monday as investors gained confidence in the banking sector following the passage of new global regulations and China's economy continued its robust growth.

Global regulators agreed to reforms that could help avert another credit crisis that plagued financial markets worldwide in 2008. Banks will gradually have to increase their reserves to protect against potential losses. The new regulations have added to confidence in Europe's banks, which have been slower than their U.S. counterparts to bolster reserves. European markets rose sharply Monday.

Confidence in European banks was shaken early last week as investors questioned whether they could absorb potential losses on risky government debt.

Fresh signs of strong economic expansion in China also added to market strength Monday. New economic reports showed growth in the world's second-largest economy continues to accelerate at a time when economists were expecting it to slow. Strong growth in China is considered vital to a global recovery because if demand remains high there, it will offset sluggish growth in the U.S. where economic expansion is not as strong.

Ahead of the opening bell, Dow Jones industrial average futures rose 87, or 0.8 percent, to 10,480. Standard & Poor's 500 index futures rose 10.10, or 0.9 percent, to 1,115.00, while Nasdaq 100 index futures rose 14.00, or 0.7 percent, to 1,903.75.

Britain's FTSE 100 rose 1.1 percent, Germany's DAX index gained 1 percent, and France's CAC-40 rose 1.2 percent. Japan's Nikkei stock average climbed 0.9 percent.

U.S. stocks rallied over the past two weeks pausing only once during that stretch because of worries about European banks. Otherwise, traders have been encouraged by recent economic reports that have topped modest expectations. Recent data has relieved worries that the economy might slip back into recession, though it still indicates growth will be slow.

The Dow has climbed seven of the past eight days and is up 4.5 percent in September, which is typically one of the weakest months of the year for the market.

Trading volume is expected to pick up this week as traders return from summer vacations and recent holidays.

Treasury prices fell as investors worldwide moved into stocks. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note, which moves opposite its price, rose to 2.83 percent from 2.79 percent late Friday. Its yield is often used to help set interest rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.

Oil prices continued to rise as a leak in a pipeline that supplies oil to refineries in the Midwest remains closed. Benchmark crude rose 69 cents to $77.14 in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Belgian church seeks way out of abuse crisis (AP)

BRUSSELS � The Belgian Roman Catholic church is acknowledging widespread sexual abuse over years by its clergy and promising to help victims heal and punish the abusers.

On Friday, a report was published in which hundreds of sex abuse victims revealed harrowing accounts of molestation by Catholic clergy throughout the country over the past 50 years.

In response, Belgium's Archbishop Andre-Mutien Leonard said Monday "a feeling of anger and powerlessness" had taken hold of the church.

He said the crisis gripping the church is so deep it would be impossible to find an easy way out.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds

Markets welcome new global banking rules (AP)

BASEL, Switzerland � Bank stocks rose Monday on news that global regulators have agreed on new banking rules aimed at averting another financial collapse.

The new rules, which will gradually require banks to hold greater capital buffers to absorb potential losses, are likely to reshape the credit industry by imposing stricter discipline on credit cards, mortgages and other loans.

Fears that banks will have to raise large amounts of capital, hitting their profits and shareholder dividends, depressed some bank stocks including those of Deutsche Bank AG, which were down 0.3 percent in morning trading.

Market-wide, however, the reaction was positive, sending stocks in French banks BNP Paribas and Societe General up 1.3 percent and 2.7 percent respectively. In Switzerland, UBS AG, which was particularly hard hit during the subprime crisis, rose 0.8 percent. Rival Credit Suisse Group was up 1.7 percent.

Shares of Britain's biggest bank HSBC PLC rose 1.2 percent in morning trading while Unicredit of Italy saw its stock jump 2.5 percent.

Deutsche Bank's Chief Executive, Josef Ackermann, said at a press conference in Frankfurt on Monday that he thought the Basel III package was a good one.

"I think the decisions that were taken are the right decisions, they go in the right direction, and I also believe the fact that they gave the banking industry so much time for implementation clearly reduces the effects on the real economy, which is also very positive," he said.

"So it's a well rounded good package that we fully support."

Under the new rules endorsed Sunday, banks will have to significantly increase their capital reserves to strengthen their finances and rein in some of their risk-taking � a move that some banks had warned could dampen the recovery by forcing them to reduce the lending that fuels economic growth.

Requiring banks to keep more capital on hand will restrict the amount of loans they can make, but it will make them better able to withstand the blow if many of those loans go sour. The rules also are intended to boost confidence that the banking system won't repeat past mistakes.

Down the line consumers could see banks tighten their rules on loans and possibly impose higher banking charges as financial institutions spend the next few years building reserves to meet the new regulatory requirements.

Under current rules, banks must hold back at least 4 percent of their balance sheet to cover their risks. This mandatory reserve � known as Tier 1 capital � would rise to 4.5 percent by 2013 under the new rules and reach 6 percent in 2019.

In addition, banks would be required to keep an emergency reserve known as a "conservation buffer" of 2.5 percent. In total, the amount of rock-solid reserves each bank is expected to have by the end of the decade will be 8.5 percent of its balance sheet.

U.S. officials including Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke issued a joint statement Sunday calling the new standards a "significant step forward in reducing the incidence and severity of future financial crises."

European Central Bank president Jean-Claude Trichet, chairman of the committee of central bankers and bank supervisors that worked on the new rules, called the agreement "a fundamental strengthening of global capital standards" that will encourage both growth and stability.

Representatives of the Fed, the ECB and other major central banks agreed to the deal Sunday at a meeting in Basel, Switzerland. It still has to be presented to leaders of the Group of 20 forum of rich and developing countries at a meeting in November and ratified by national governments before it comes into force.

The agreement, known as Basel III, is seen as a cornerstone of the global financial reforms proposed by governments stung by the experience of having to bail out some ailing banks to avoid wider economic collapse.

Fred Cannon, a banking analyst at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, said the rules probably will reduce bank profit margins and lending from the heights they reached in 2007. But he added that before 2000 or so, many U.S. banks were already operating with enough capital reserves to meet the new minimums.

____

Associated Press writers Andrew Vanacore in New York, Martin Crutsinger in Washington, Frank Jordans in Geneva and David Rising in Berlin contributed to this report.



Powered by WizardRSS | Full Text RSS Feeds