Monday, September 20, 2010

France steps up pledge to combat world poverty (AP)

UNITED NATIONS � The 10-year-old promise to lift the world's poorest is unfulfilled and with world economies clawing back from the worst recession since World War II, the French president and others implored leaders on Monday not to return to their "old bad habits" of ignoring global poverty.

Nicolas Sarkozy, the French leader, was the first to accept U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon's challenge for nations to deliver more resources to combat global poverty, ignorance and misery. He pledged to boost France's annual $10 billion contribution to the world's poorest people by 20 percent over the next three years. He urged other leaders to join him.

"We have no right to do less than what we have decided to do," Sarkozy told more than 140 presidents, premiers, princes and a king at the opening of the three-day U.N. Millennium Development Goals summit. "Let us not fall back into our old bad habits."

Sarkozy spoke as U.N. member states began their accounting of progress in the decade since promising to end global poverty. Developed nations have fallen well short in keeping pace with a final goal set for 2015. The U.N. acknowledges that even if the main target of reducing extreme poverty by half is achieved in the next five years, nearly 1 billion people still will be living on less than $1.25 a day.

Sarkozy proposed that the world body create a small international tax on financial transactions to fund development aimed at ending poverty and meeting other millennium goals. He said developed nations had a moral obligation to poorer ones.

"The financial crisis is severe in the rich countries, it creates deficits," he said. "But its consequences are far worse for the poor countries." Developed countries must make a special effort in Africa, he said. Too many people there still die of preventable illnesses such as malaria.

"Malaria kills 1 million children in Africa every year," he said. "To be clear, before the end of my speech, 30 children in Africa will have died of malaria. We have no right to hide behind the economic crisis to do less."

Recent reports show that the world's poorest countries, especially in sub-Saharan Africa, have made little progress in eradicating poverty since the U.N. goals were set forth a decade ago. Africa, Asia and Latin America have made little headway in reducing mother and child deaths, providing clean water and sanitation, and promoting women's equality.

The commitment of developing countries "is essential during times of global economic crisis," said Jordan's King Abdullah, "not only to raise the world's poorest people but to support and sustain those who are implementing good policies until their progress can be stabilized."

Diplomats from the 192 U.N. member states have already agreed on a document to be adopted this week by the leaders, spelling out specific actions to accelerate implementation of each of the eight Millennium Development Goals, known as the MDGs, over the next five years.

"We are convinced that the Millennium Development Goals can be achieved, including in the poorest countries, with renewed commitment, effective implementation, and intensified collective action by all member states," it says.

The mostly dark-suited delegates sat in rows facing the green marble dais, white plastic ear pieces in place to handle translation of the U.N's six official languages: English, Spanish, French, Chinese, Russian and Arabic. A few delegates in the green-carpeted hall wore traditional clothing � a woman in buttery yellow robe and headdress, Arabic men with flowing white cloth headdresses held in place with a black band.

New York City Police blocked all traffic on First Street along the front of U.N. headquarters, a towering rectangular building of glass and stone overlooking the East River. Teams of firefighters and paramedics were stationed outside, and Secret Service agents, including at least one with a bomb sniffing dog roamed the complex.

U.N. members resolved a decade ago to reduce extreme poverty by half, to ensure that every child finishes primary school and to halt the HIV/AIDS pandemic. They also vowed to reduce the number of women dying during pregnancy and childbirth by three-quarters, the number of children who die before their 5th birthday by two-thirds, and to halve the number of people without access to clean water and basic sanitation � all by 2015.

They also set goals to promote equality for women, protect the environment, increase development aid, and open the global trading and financial system.

Peace will also be a critical element in achieving the development goals, Israeli President Shimon Peres said. "Without peace, poverty will remain. Without food, peace will not prevail."

"Still, lawless terrorists spread violence caused by ideological differences, social gaps and sheer fanaticism," he said. "The new millennium must liberate the world from bloodshed, from discrimination, from hunger, from ignorance, from maladies."

Across town at Times Square, a digital billboard began counting the death of one woman every minute during childbirth around the world to highlight the costs of global poverty. Amnesty International's "Maternal Death Clock" will tally the nearly 3,700 deaths estimated to have occurred during childbirth during the three-day anti-poverty summit.

Amnesty International says about 70 percent of those living in poverty are women, but efforts in many countries fail to address the widespread discrimination women face in obtaining food, water, sanitation and housing � especially in slums.

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AP writers Summer Moore, Edith M. Lederer, Maria Sanminiatelli contributed to this report.



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Afghan officials say too early to judge election (AP)

KABUL, Afghanistan � Afghan authorities said it was too early to judge the validity of the country's parliamentary ballot despite observers' reports of widespread fraud in the vote that was to help consolidate its shaky democracy.

Also Monday, Britain's military handed the U.S. responsibility for a dangerous district in southern Afghanistan that has been the scene of some of the bloodiest fighting involving British troops for the past four years.

Despite Taliban rocket strikes and bombings, Afghans voted on Saturday for a new parliament, the first election since a fraud-tainted presidential ballot last year that cast doubt on the legitimacy of the embattled government.

The independent Free and Fair Elections Foundation of Afghanistan, the observer group that deployed about 7,000 observers to monitor the elections, voiced "serious concerns" about the quality of the elections.

It said in its preliminary report published Monday that the parliamentary vote was marred by ballot-stuffing, proxy voting, underage voting, the use of fake voter identification cards and repeated voting.

The group urged President Hamid Karzai's government to allow an independent investigation into reports of widespread electoral fraud, including intimidation of voters and interference by powerful warlords.

The state electoral commission, however, criticized observer groups and the media for being "quick to imply the electoral process is unsuccessful based on allegations of fraud and misconduct."

"Cases of fraud and misconduct are inevitable in the current security climate," the commission said in a statement. But it pledged full commitment "to working with the Electoral Complaints Commission to eliminate the effect from the final results as far as possible."

Afghan officials have started gathering and tallying election results in a process that could last weeks if not months.

The country's international backers praised those who voted Saturday and hoped for a democratic result. A repeat of the pervasive fraud at the presidential election a year ago would further erode the standing of Karzai's administration � both at home and abroad � as it struggles against a Taliban insurgency.

Officials said militant attacks on election day killed at least 21 civilians and nine police officers.

The Washington-based National Democratic Institute said in a statement Monday that although violence marred the electoral process, "millions of Afghans turned out to vote ... showing courage and resolve to move their nation toward a more democratic future."

But the group also pointed out that many problems still have not been addressed. These include "a defective voter registration process, barriers to women's participation, and the need to secure the independence from the executive of Afghanistan's two election bodies."

"We did succeed in having an election in almost all over Afghanistan, but that does not mean that we did not have difficulties in terms of arrangements for the elections," Karzai's spokesman Waheed Omar said, adding that it was too early to discuss the quality of the elections.

Nader Nadery, the head of the Afghan observer group, said that those responsible for election irregularities should be prosecuted and that this could not be done without the support of top officials.

"Investigating these irregularities would increase the political credibility of the government," Nadery told The Associated Press. "It would be good for their own reputation."

The group said one of its major concerns was more than 300 instances of intimidation and coercion of voters by local warlords and powerbrokers � some with close ties to Karzai's government � who are seeking to remain in power by having their own candidates run in the elections.

"We had more than 280 cases of direct attacks by the insurgents and we also had 157 cases of warlords committing violence," Nadery said. "Both are dangerous for the future of democracy in this country."

Candidates can submit complaints to the elections fraud watchdog, the Electoral Complaints Commission. This panel of five people is the final arbiter on fraud allegations, and it was the body that invalidated nearly a third of Karzai's votes last year. The panel is significantly weaker than in the presidential election, when it was dominated by U.N. appointees.

This year, the majority of the panel is Afghan and the entire group has been appointed by the government, making the group potentially more susceptible to pressure from the administration.

Also on Monday, Britain's military handed the U.S. responsibility for northern Sangin district in Helmand province.

British forces arrived in the district in 2006 and have lost more than 100 troops there in fierce fighting with Taliban insurgents_ nearly a third of the 337 fatalities it has suffered in Afghanistan since 2001.

NATO said the 40 Commando Royal Marines were being reassigned throughout the center of Helmand, which remains a volatile battleground even though tens of thousands of NATO and Afghan troops moved into the area in February.

"British forces have served in Sangin over the last four years and should be very proud of the achievements they have made in one of the most challenging areas of Afghanistan," said Liam Fox, the British defense secretary.

Under the new NATO deployment plan, which was announced in July, the U.S. will operate mainly in the north and south of Helmand, with British, Danish and Estonian troops working in the heavily populated central areas.

Lt. Gen. David Rodriguez, the No. 2 American general in Afghanistan and the operational chief for the allied forces, said in July the British move was part of his effort to consolidate and better organize forces in Helmand.

Britain, the second largest contributor of international troops after the United States, has 9,500 troops in Afghanistan. About 1,200 have already been moved from Sangin into central Helmand province.

The coalition also reported that an international service member died Monday following an insurgent attack in southern Afghanistan. The service member's nationality was not released.

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Associated Press Writer Deb Riechmann contributed to this report.



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Peres resists Gul's call for an apology on raid (AP)

UNITED NATIONS � A planned meeting between Israeli President Shimon Peres and his Turkish counterpart was scrapped because of the Israeli leader's refusal to apologize for the deadly commando raid on a Turkish-led flotilla that tried to breach Israel's blockade of the Gaza Strip, Israeli officials said Monday.

In the latest bid to repair Israel's relations with its only Muslim ally in the region, Peres told reporters he had agreed to join Turkish President Abdullah Gul at the Clinton Global Initiative in New York, then accepted Gul's invitation to meet on the sidelines. But Israeli officials said Gul then set unacceptable conditions for the meeting.

Gul on Monday denied that any such meeting had ever been planned. "That is not true," the Turkish president told The Associated Press. "There was never a meeting scheduled between us."

A report by Turkey's state-run Anatolia news agency quoted Gul as telling reporters in New York on Sunday that he would not meet with Peres because of a scheduling problem. Some reports had suggested that the two men would meet in a sign of a thaw in strained relations between the two formerly close allies.

Relations between the two countries have been deteriorating and hit a low point after the May raid in which nine people, including eight Turks and a Turkish-American, were killed when Israeli commandos boarded a Turkish ferry that was part of the aid flotilla heading to Gaza. Turkey has demanded that an Israeli apology for the raid and compensation for the victims' families.

Peres told reporters that he found Turkey's conditions for a meeting with Gul to be unacceptable.

"I got some conditions which made this meeting in my judgment not a positive one," Peres told reporters as the U.N. General Assembly's Millennium Development Goals summit was getting under way.

"Now we didn't change our attitude to Turkey. We were friends, we remain friends. Maybe Turkey changed her mind, and that's for the Turks to decide," Peres said. "We don't intend to worsen the situation. Neither can we submit to preconditions which are totally unacceptable."

Peres did not elaborate on the preconditions. But senior Israeli officials confirmed that Gul wanted Israel to publicly apologize for the flotilla raid.

"The Turks came with the demands that could not be met ...," said Israel's U.N. Ambassador Meron Reuben. The demands included "that we apologize for the flotilla incident," he said.

Investigators from a U.N. human rights inquiry on the May 31 flotilla attack have been interviewing witnesses, including an Israeli Knesset member. Israel refused to cooperate with that probe and accused the U.N. Human Rights Council of bias.

But it is cooperating with a separate U.N. panel ordered by Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. That panel, led by New Zealand's ex-Prime Minister Geoffrey Palmer and Colombia's ex-President Alvaro Uribe, is looking into legal issues surrounding the incident.

Israeli commandos said they opened fire in self-defense after meeting what they called unexpected resistance when boarded the ferry carrying aid supplies to Gaza.

An international outcry resulted, forcing Israel to ease its blockade of Hamas-ruled Gaza. Israel and Egypt imposed the blockade in June 2007 after Hamas militants took control of the area.

Israel's military completed its own investigation, which found that its intelligence failed to predict the violent response but its troops reacted properly.

Later Monday, Peres met privately with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. In a brief appearance before reporters, neither leader would discuss particulars about the recently renewed Mideast peace talks. The key issue of whether Israel will extend a partial ban on settlement building in the West Bank, territory the Palestinians want for a future state, was not addressed by either man publicly.

On Tuesday, Peres will appear at a roundtable discussion presented by the Clinton Global Initiative with Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad and Bahrain's crown prince, Sheik Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa. Bahrain and Israel have no formal relations. Former President Bill Clinton will moderate.



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NKorea to hold key party convention next week (AP)

SEOUL, South Korea � North Korea will hold its much-anticipated Workers' Party convention � the secretive nation's biggest political meeting in 30 years � next week, state media said Tuesday.

The gathering in Pyongyang is being watched closely for signs that aging North Korean leader Kim Jong Il has anointed a son to succeed him and will formally reveal the plan by appointing his heir to top party posts.

Workers' Party delegates will meet Sept. 28 to elect new party leaders, the official Korean Central News Agency said in a dispatch from Pyongyang. The report did not explain why the meeting, initially set for "early September," had been postponed.

Delegates across the country were appointed "against the background of a high-pitched drive for effecting a new great revolutionary surge now under way on all fronts for building a thriving nation with the historic conference," KCNA said.

The conference is the first major Workers' Party gathering since the landmark 1980 congress where a young Kim Jong Il, then 31, made his political debut, an appearance seen as confirmation that he would eventually succeed his father, North Korea founder Kim Il Sung.

Kim Jong Il took over in 1994 when his father died of heart failure in what was communism's first hereditary transfer of power.

Now 68, and reportedly in poor health two years after suffering a stroke, Kim is believed to be setting in motion a plan to tap a son to take the Kim dynasty into a third generation.

Little is known about the son widely believed to be his father's favorite. Kim Jong Un, said to be in his late 20s, has never been mentioned in state media, and there are no reliable photos of him as an adult.

South Korean intelligence officers believe Pyongyang has launched a propaganda campaign promoting the son, including songs and poems praising the junior Kim. North Korean soldiers and workers reportedly pledged allegiance to the son on his birthday in January.

North Korea's state propaganda machine has been churning out commentaries calling for loyalty to the Kim family, an apparent effort to set to the stage for a smooth power transition.

"Kim Jong Il directed primary efforts into turning our party into an ideologically pure entity based on the President's revolutionary idea in the whole course of leading the party work," the main Rodong Sinmun newspaper said in an editorial carried by the official Korean Central News Agency.

It's not known what party position Kim Jong Un might be granted during the conference in what would be his first publicly known official job. Delegates are expected to elect new party leaders to fill spots left vacant for years.

The announcement of the date comes weeks after North Korea had been expected to hold the conference but was struggling to cope with devastating flooding and a deadly typhoon.



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Mexico makes veiled criticism of border newspaper (AP)

CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico � Mexico's government said Monday that no sector of society should negotiate with criminals, making an indirect criticism of a Ciudad Juarez newspaper.

The comments came a day after El Diario de Juarez published a front-page editorial seeking a truce with cartels in this violent border city after the second killing of one its journalists in less than two years.

"In no way should anyone promote a truce or negotiate with criminals who are precisely the ones causing anxiety for the public, kidnapping, extorting and killing," said Alejandro Poire, security spokesman for President Felipe Calderon. "All sectors of society should fight them and bring them down in a definitive way."

The editorial Sunday asked drug cartels warring for control of the city across from El Paso, Texas, to say what they want from the newspaper � "what we should try to publish or not publish, so we know what to expect."

El Diario said it addressed its plea to the drug gangs because they are now the city's de facto authorities. It also criticized the government for failing to protect journalists.

Poire said the federal government strongly condemns any attack on journalists.

But he added there is only one legitimate authority in Juarez to fight organized crime, the one "constituted by law and the electoral process with the original responsibility to combat crime and safeguard the public."

Also Monday, an official of the Chihuahua state attorney general's office said the El Diario photographer gunned down last week was possibly a victim of mistaken identity rather than killed for his work as a journalist.

Luis Carlos Santiago, 21, was ambushed Thursday while driving a car linked to a Chihuahua state human rights commission member who had received several threats, Assistant Prosecutor Alejandro Pariente Nunez said.

"That is one of our lines of investigation that we can't discount," he said. "It could be that the intended victim wasn't in the car, which they borrowed to go get food."

Attackers killed Santiago as he went to lunch with an intern at the newspaper, Carlos Manuel Sanchez, who was seriously wounded.

The car Santiago was driving belongs to the son of human rights commissioner Gustavo de la Rosa Hickerson, who also works for El Diario. De la Rosa has said soldiers assigned to patrol Ciudad Juarez committed human rights violations and other crimes.

"On countless occasions I've been threatened because of the torture cases I've investigated involving presumed assassins," de la Rosa said Monday. "I don't doubt that the death of Luis Carlos, who I also loved as a son, could have been a case of confusion."

State Attorney General Patricia Gonzalez said it was one of three lines of investigation, but would not provide more details.

In 2008, a crime reporter for El Diario was slain outside his home as he left to take his daughters to school.

Violence between two warring cartels in the past two years has killed nearly 5,000 people in Ciudad Juarez, making the city of 1.3 million people one of the world's most dangerous places.

At least 22 Mexican journalists have been killed over the past four years in Mexico, at least eight of them targeted because of their reports on crime and corruption, says the Committee to Protect Journalists, a U.S.-based media watchdog group that plans to present its report to Calderon on Wednesday. At least seven other journalists have gone missing and more have fled the country, the report says.

"We don't want to continue to be used as cannon fodder in this war because we're tired," Diario's editor, Pedro Torres, told The Associated Press on Sunday.

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Associated Press Writer Katherine Corcoran in Mexico City contributed to this report.



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Igor kicks up dangerous surf along US East Coast (AP)

HAMILTON, Bermuda � Hurricane Igor kicked up dangerous surf along the eastern U.S. seaboard Monday after brushing past Bermuda and knocking out power to half the population.

The storm, already blamed for sweeping three people to their deaths, clung to hurricane status with winds of 75 mph (120 kph) as it sped away from the United States on a path projected to take it close by Newfoundland, Canada, on Tuesday.

In this tiny British Atlantic territory, the storm toppled trees and utility poles as its center passed 40 miles (65 kilometers) to the west overnight. Several boats ran aground, including the ferry Bermudian used to carry cruise ship passengers to shore. No major damage or injuries were reported.

By Monday night, the hurricane's center was about 650 miles (1,045 kilometers) southwest of Newfoundland and moving to the northeast at 29 mph (46 kph), the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami reported.

A tropical storm warning was issued for the coast of Newfoundland, where people were urged to prepare for possible flooding and power outages.

The Canadian company Husky Energy began evacuating workers from two semi-submersible drill rigs working the White Rose offshore oilfield, spokeswoman Colleen McConnell said.

Igor was not a direct threat to the United States, but forecasters said it would cause high surf and dangerous rip currents.

A 21-year-old man died while surfing in the storm-churned waves off Surf City, N.C, where he was pulled from the water on Sunday afternoon. Last week, the high surf kicked up by Igor swept two people out to sea in the Caribbean � one in Puerto Rico and another in the U.S. Virgin Islands.

The National Weather Service in New York City said Igor was likely to churn up breaking waves of 6 to 10 feet (2 to 3 meters) Monday while passing about 600 miles (1,000 kilometers) from the eastern tip of Long Island. A high surf advisory was issued for the city through Tuesday morning.

Bermuda's power utility reported that roughly 28,700 customers lost electricity on the British territory of 68,000 inhabitants. It said approximately half the island was without power.

In Mangrove Bay at the island's western end, two sailboats were driven onto the shore, their masts leading against trees. A fishing vessel also ran aground nearby with a large hole in its side. The cruise ship ferry ran aground near the town of St. George.

But islanders said the impact did not compare with Hurricane Fabian, which killed four people when it hit Bermuda as a Category 3 hurricane in 2003.

"This was a powder puff compared to Fabian," Claude Wright, 67, said as he surveyed the damage.

Richard Simons, who rents out cottages near Elbow Beach, said he found only downed branches on his property Monday morning.

"It will just take some sweeping and raking to clean up," he said.

Officials said schools would be closed Monday and Tuesday, and a local newspaper canceled its Monday edition.

In Mexico, authorities said Monday that at least 16 people were killed in flooding and mudslides as Hurricane Karl hit the southern part of the country Friday. Looting was reported in parts of the Gulf coast state of Veracruz, with people carrying bags of food out of stores in waist-deep water.

Also in the Atlantic, Tropical Storm Julia was beginning to fizzle as it swirled about 1,100 (1,770 kilometers) west of the Azores with maximum sustained winds near 45 mph (75 kph).

___

Associated Press writers Elizabeth Roberts in Hamilton, Bermuda, Rob Gillies in Toronto and Mike Melia in San Juan, Puerto Rico, contributed to this report.



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Obama backs economic effort, asks for voters' help (AP)

WASHINGTON � President Barack Obama reached out fervently Monday to skeptical voters who are still hurting long after the declared end of the recession, imploring them to stick with him in elections that could inflict catastrophic losses on Democrats in just six weeks.

Recognizing the economy is the campaign's Issue No. 1 � and a peril for his party � Obama vigorously defended his recovery efforts and challenged tea party activists as well as the Republicans who are clamoring to take over Congress to spell just how they would do better.

Republicans said that's just what they intended to do, on Thursday. House Republicans said they would roll out a roughly 20-point agenda � on jobs, spending, health care, national security and reforming Congress � at a hardware store in suburban Virginia.

Unimpressed in advance, the president said, "We have tried what they're offering." Addressing the GOP and tea party candidates, he said, "It's not enough just to say, 'Get control of government.'"

Campaign style, Obama finished his town hall-like event on the economy and then headed to Pennsylvania to raise money and rally dispirited Democrats for Joe Sestak in a tough Senate race against Republican Pat Toomey.

The president has just a month and a half to make the case for keeping Democrats in charge in Washington to voters itching for change. He cast Democrats as fighters for the middle class and Republicans as protectors of millionaires, billionaires and special interests.

The GOP, in turn, lambasted the president.

"Once again, President Obama trotted out the same old worn-out reassurances on the economy, but Americans are still waiting for the promised recovery that never arrived," said Republican Party Chairman Michael Steele. And Toomey linked Sestak to Obama, faulting both for an agenda "that's keeping unemployment high" and policies "that have prevented us from having the kind of economic recovery that we could and should be having."

At the Washington event, Obama repeatedly expressed sympathy for people still out of work and struggling despite economists' assertions that the Great Recession of 2007-2009 had ended. In fact, the National Bureau of Economic Research said earlier Monday that the downturn ended in June of last year.

For the millions of people who are jobless and struggling, "it's still very real for them," the president said. He added that people are frustrated because progress has been "slow and steady" instead of "the kind of quick fixes that I think a lot of people would like to see."

Obama acknowledged that his policy accomplishments may not be playing well politically and that the difficult economic conditions � including a nearly 10 percent unemployment rate � are hindering his ability to convince people that a revival is under way.

His economic focus could be risky. Republicans are trying to cast the elections as a national referendum on the president and the sluggish recovery, while Democrats seek to localize races to focus on the choices voters have between individual candidates. But Obama has little choice but to talk jobs; doing otherwise would make him look out of touch to a public that overwhelmingly rates unemployment and the recovery as top issues.

"I can describe what's happening to the economy overall, but if you're out of work right now, the only thing that you're going to be hearing is, when do I get a job? If you're about to lose your home, all you're thinking about is, when can I get my home?"

His audience at the event sponsored by CNBC included large and small business owners, teachers, students and unemployed people. They seemed friendly � he was applauded repeatedly � though several people peppered him with questions that indicated their frustration, if not disillusionment, with his tenure.

"I voted for a man who said he was going to change things in a meaningful way for the middle class. I am one of those people. And I'm waiting, Sir. ... I don't feel it yet," said Velma Hart, the chief financial officer of AMVETS in Washington, describing how the recession has taken a toll on her family. "Is this my new reality?

"I understand your frustration," Obama responded. "My goal is not to convince you that everything is where it ought to be. It's not." Still, he added: "We're moving in the right direction."

"There aren't jobs out there right now," countered Ted Brassfield, 30, a recent law school graduate. He praised Obama for inspiring his generation during 2008 but said that inspiration is dying away. He asked, "Is the American dream dead for me?"

"Absolutely not," Obama responded. "What we can't do, though is go back to the same old things that we were doing because we've been putting off these problems for decades."

Walter Rowen, the owner of Susquehanna Glass in Columbia, Pa., urged the president to explain his economic policies because the public "doesn't get" them. "You're losing the war of sound bites. You're losing the media cycles."

Answered Obama: "The politicizing of so many decisions that are out there has to be toned down. We've got to get back to working together."

And Anthony Scaramucci, a hedge fund manager and a Harvard Law School classmate of Obama, spoke on behalf of Wall Street, saying: "We have felt like a pinata. Maybe you don't feel like you're whacking us with a stick, but we certainly feel like we've been whacked with a stick."

To that, Obama retorted: "I think most folks on Main Street feel like they got beat up on."



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Fish or frankenfish? FDA weighs altered salmon (AP)

WASHINGTON � Genetically engineered salmon that grows twice as fast as the conventional fish appears to be safe, an advisory committee told the Food and Drug Administration Monday. But they argued that more testing may be needed before it is served on the nation's dinner tables.

If the FDA approves the sale of the salmon, it will be the first time the government allows such modified animals to be marketed for human consumption. The panel was convened by the agency to look at the science of the fish and make recommendations on its safety and environmental impact.

Ron Stotish, chief executive of the Massachusetts company that created the salmon, AquaBounty, said at Monday's hearing that his company's fish product is safe and environmentally sustainable.

FDA officials have largely agreed with him, saying that the salmon, which grows twice as fast as its conventional "sisters," is as safe to eat as the traditional variety. But they have not yet decided whether to approve the request.

Critics call the modified salmon a "frankenfish" that could cause allergies in humans and the eventual decimation of the wild salmon population. Representatives from consumer, environmental and food safety groups asked the agency to decline the company's application to market the fish, saying it is untested.

The advisory committee agreed with the FDA that the company has presented compelling evidence that the fish is safe. But members raised several concerns about the data, saying many of the sample sizes were too small and how healthy the fish will be after many years of breeding.

It is still unclear whether the public will have an appetite for the fish if it is approved. Genetic engineering is already widely used for crops, but the government until now has not considered allowing the consumption of modified animals. Although the potential benefits � and profits � are huge, many people have qualms about manipulating the genetic code of other living creatures.

Part of the hearing focuses on labeling of the fish. It is possible that if the modified salmon is approved, consumers would not even know they were eating it. Current FDA regulations require modified foods to be labeled as such only if the food is substantially different from the conventional version, and the agency has said that the modified salmon is essentially the same as the Atlantic salmon.

If approved, the fish could be in grocery stores in two years, the company estimates.

Approval would open the door for a variety of other genetically engineered animals, including a pig that is being developed in Canada or cattle that are resistant to mad cow disease. Each would have to be individually approved by the FDA.

"For future applications out there the sky's the limit," said David Edwards of the Biotechnology Industry Association. "If you can imagine it, scientists can try to do it."

AquaBounty says it would be the first in the world to market genetically engineered fish. The company submitted its first application for FDA approval in 1995, but the agency did not decide until two years ago to consider applications for genetically engineered animals � a move seen as a breakthrough by the biotechnology industry.

Genetically engineered � or GE � animals are not clones, which the FDA has already said are safe to eat. Clones are copies of an animal. In GE animals, the DNA has been altered to produce a desirable characteristic.

In the case of the salmon, AquaBounty has added a growth hormone from a Chinook salmon that allows the fish to produce growth hormone all year long. The engineers were able to keep the hormone active by using another gene from an eel-like fish called an ocean pout that acts like an on switch for the hormone, according to the company. Conventional salmon produce the growth hormone only some of the time.

In documents released ahead of the hearing, the FDA said there were no biologically relevant differences between the engineered salmon and conventional salmon, and there is a reasonable certainty of no harm from its consumption. FDA scientists said Monday there are very few differences between the modified and conventional fish.

Critics have two main concerns: The safety of the food to humans and the salmon's effect on the environment.

Because the altered fish has never been eaten before, they say, it could include dangerous allergens, especially because seafood is highly allergenic. They also worry that the fish will escape and intermingle with the wild salmon population, which is already endangered.They would grow fast and consume more food to the detriment of the conventional wild salmon, the critics fear.

The FDA tried to allay both of those concerns Monday, saying the fish shouldn't cause any allergies not already found in conventional salmon and that there is little chance they could escape.

Critics speaking at the meeting said they were concerned about the unintended consequences of approval, arguing the FDA is relying on too little data.

Wenonah Hauter, director of the advocacy group Food & Water Watch, said the FDA process is inadequate because it allows the company to keep some proprietary information private. Modified foods are regulated under the same process used for animal drugs.

"With all due respect, we don't believe a veterinary advisory committee is the appropriate place to discuss these food safety issues," Hauter told the panel.

European nations have been much more cautious in embracing engineered foods. Ruediger Rosenthal, a spokesman for Bund-Friends of the Earth Germany, said it is unlikely the modified fish would make it across the Atlantic for sale as many Europeans are very skeptical of genetically modified foods.

AquaBounty CEO Stotish countered his product has come under more scrutiny than most food.

"This is perhaps the most studied fish in history," he said. "Environmentally this is a very sustainable technology."

The company has several safeguards in place to quell concerns. The fish would be bred female and sterile, though a small percentage might be able to breed. They would be bred in confined pools where the potential for escape would be low.

In its environmental analysis of the fish released earlier this month, the FDA agreed with the company that there are enough safeguards in place.

Stotish says the fish would be bred in better conditions than many of the world's farmed salmon and could be located closer to towns and cities to help feed more people. The company has also said the increase in engineered salmon production could help relieve endangered wild salmon populations.

The company is also arguing that the fish do not need to be labeled as genetically engineered. Stotish said, "The label could even be misleading because it implies a difference that doesn't exist."

___

Associated Press writer David Rising in Berlin contributed to this report.

___

Online:

Background on FDA meeting: http://tinyurl.com/ylp5ccv



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Surprise Del. primary winner seeks GOP support (AP)

DOVER, Del. � Some members of a GOP establishment that once shunned tea party favorite Christine O'Donnell are getting behind her now that she has won the Republican Senate primary, offering help in the form of cash and experienced staffers.

A young spokeswoman who has been thinking of going back to college is no longer handling media calls. Instead, reporters are referred to a public relations firm run by longtime GOP operative Craig Shirley, who has done communications work for the Republican National Committee and a political action committee that spent $14 million to help re-elect Ronald Reagan.

O'Donnell is also getting help from Tom Sullivan, a health care industry executive who worked for the Republican Congressional Campaign Committee in 1990 and later as a political consultant, with clients such as former Republican congressman Dick Armey.

What she doesn't have is an endorsement from her vanquished rival, longtime moderate GOP Rep. Mike Castle nor from Delaware Republican Party Chairman Tom Ross. Ross, who said during the primary campaign that she couldn't be elected dogcatcher, has since pledged the party's support for all of its candidates, but has not recommended O'Donnell to voters by name.

But some experienced hands with Washington ties are pitching in, and contributors have poured in close to $2 million to fund her November contest against Democratic county executive Chris Coons. Sullivan said Monday that the campaign recently brought some big guns on board to help with fundraising, though he declined to identify them.

"We will be adding organization, but will stay lean and mean to avoid overstaffing," said Sullivan, who was introduced to O'Donnell by Michael Schwartz, chief of staff for Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., and has enlisted Texas attorney Victor Smith to go to Delaware and help with her campaign.

O'Donnell was running a shoestring operation � much as she did in two previous losing Senate bids � before an injection of tea party support and cash propelled her to a Sept. 14 primary upset over Castle.

Now Russ Murphy, whose 9-12 Delaware Patriots played a role in O'Donnell's primary win, expects opponents to waste little time accusing her of being a sellout as she tries to enlist outside help.

But he believes O'Donnell's supporters are pragmatic and he noted with approval her cancellation of two national Sunday talk show appearances in favor of spending time with them in Delaware.

"I think that said a lot to the people," Murphy said.

Extra help can't come soon enough for campaign manager Matt Moran, who sounded weary Sunday as O'Donnell worked the crowd at a Sussex County GOP picnic.

"It's myself, Christine, and a handful of people who have never been political before," said Moran, who worked in 2009 for Conservative Party candidate Doug Hoffman, who lost a closely watched race for New York's 23rd Congressional district. He said he got involved with O'Donnell because he believes in what she is doing.

"I hate politics; I swear to God," he said. "I only get involved when I know I can make a difference. This thing's a lot bigger than all of us."

Moran hopes for a deputy campaign manager to ease his workload, which includes trying to respond to incessant questions from the media, which skyrocketed after her primary victory. The campaign, which now has about 10 paid staffers, also is looking to hire a media buyer, a full-time communications director, and a field director, who Moran said will have "all sorts of deputies."

"It's all evolving into a top-tier Senate campaign," he said. "We're interviewing a lot of people. It's a very rapid ramp-up."

The campaign could use the help. It has not put out an official schedule for the candidate since the Friday before the primary, and it raised eyebrows with the last-minute weekend talk show cancellations, which were blamed on scheduling conflicts. O'Donnell has been using her rented town house as both a home and her campaign headquarters, and her road crew typically has consisted of Moran, one of her sisters and the college-age spokeswoman.

___

Online:

http://ping.fm/iOUqX

http://ping.fm/bWrH5



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US presses China on Iran, NKorea sanctions (AP)

NEW YORK � The Obama administration is pushing China to implement international sanctions against Iran and North Korea as it seeks Chinese advice on how to engage the two countries over their nuclear programs.

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton met Monday with Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi to stress the importance of the sanctions in bringing Iran and North Korea back to separate, stalled nuclear negotiations. At the same time, she sought China's opinion on other ways to coax them into talks, State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said.

They discussed "Chinese ideas on how to successfully engage both countries" and how to implement sanctions, he said.

China maintains strong ties with both Iran and North Korea and has been resistant to sanctions on either.

Earlier this month the Chinese postponed a planned visit to Beijing by a senior American official, Robert Einhorn, to discuss sanctions implementation. Crowley said Einhorn's trip has now been rescheduled for next week.

Clinton's meeting came ahead of talks this week between President Barack Obama and Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly. Obama and Chinese President Hu Jintao are expected to meet at the G-20 summit in South Korea in November and preparations are now under way for Hu to visit the United States in the coming months.



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Recession pain still real, despite end, Obama says (AP)

WASHINGTON � President Barack Obama said Monday he doesn't care that the Great Recession has been declared over by a group of economists. For the millions of people who are out of work or otherwise struggling, he said, "it's still very real for them."

Obama denied that he was anti-business or anti-Wall Street in his economic proposals, commenting under close questioning during a town hall-style meeting broadcast live on CNBC.

He offered a mixed verdict on the growing tea party, calling its skepticism of government "healthy...That's in our DNA, right?"

But, he added, "The challenge for the tea party movement is to identify specifically 'What would you do?'" to help turn around the economy and produce jobs.

"It's not enough just to say, 'Get control of government.' I think it's important for you to say, 'You know, I'm willing to cut veterans' benefits or Social Security benefits or I'm willing to see these taxes go up.'"

The government can't simply cut taxes on the nation's wealthiest people "and magically think things are going to work out," he said.

Focusing on the poor economic conditions that existed when he took office, Obama said, "The hole was so deep that a lot of people out there are still hurting."

He spoke shortly after the National Bureau of Economic Research, a private panel of economists that dates the beginnings and ends of recessions, said the downturn that began in December 2007 ended in June 2009. At 18 months, that makes it the longest recession since World War II.

"Something that took ten years to create is going to take a little more time to solve," Obama said.

"Even though economists may say that the recession officially ended last year, obviously for the millions of people who are still out of work, people who have seen their home values decline, people who are struggling to pay the bills day to day, it's still very real for them," Obama said.

He participated in the hour-long session before heading to Pennsylvania to raise money for Democratic Senate candidate Joe Sestak, who is locked in a tight race for a seat considered a must-win for the president's party. The seat is currently in Democratic hands, but polls show it to be a tight race.

The group assembled for the session included large and small business owners, teachers, students and unemployed people.

A woman who said she was the chief financial officer for a veterans' service organization told Obama, "I'm exhausted of defending you, defending your administration, defending the mantle of change that I voted for, and deeply disappointed with where we are right now."

"Is this my new reality?" she asked.

Obama told her, "My goal is not to convince you that everything is where it ought to be. It's not." Still, Obama said that things were "moving in the right direction" under policies he has put in place.

Republican Party chief Michael Steele panned Obama's TV performance. "Once again, President Obama trotted out the same old worn-out reassurances on the economy, but Americans are still waiting for the promised recovery that never arrived," Steele said.

A 30-year old law school graduate who said he couldn't find a job and couldn't even make interest payments on his student loans told Obama he was inspired by Obama's 2008 campaign but "that inspiration is dying away."

"The most important thing we can do right now is grow our economy," Obama said. "What we can't do is go back to the same old things we were doing."

CNBC's John Harwood, the moderator, asked Obama if he had any plans to replace his two top economic advisers � Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and chief economic adviser Lawrence Summers. House Republican leader John Boehner has called for Obama to fire both of them, contending their economic advice to him has not been helpful.

Obama sidestepped a direct answer but said, "This is tough work that they do."

"We're constantly asking, 'Is what we're doing working as well as it could?'"

Harwood at one point asked Obama how serious he was about deficit reduction. Polls show that Americans are deeply concerned about the government's rising deficit, and Republicans have repeatedly tried to make it a campaign issue, calling for more government belt tightening.

"I can't give tax cuts to the top 2 percent of Americans ... and lower the deficit at the same time," Obama said. "At some point, the numbers just don't work."

"The first thing you do in a hole is not dig it deeper."

Obama pressed his effort to cast Democrats as fighters for the middle class and Republicans as protectors of "millionaires and billionaires" and special interests.

He has called on Congress to allow Bush-era tax cuts to expire on schedule at the end of this year for those with household incomes above $250,000 � but to extend them for everybody else.

Obama says it would cost $700 billion over ten years to extend the cuts for those in the upper income range, a group that makes up roughly 2 percent of taxpayers. What Obama wants to do would cost about $3 trillion over ten years.

A combination of the Bush tax cuts, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, a reduction in tax revenues because of the recession and stimulus and bailout spending by both the Bush and Obama administrations has resulted in an estimated $1.5 trillion deficit for the budget year that ends at the end of September.

Obama was asked by Harwood whether we was willing to debate Boehner, who would probably become House speaker if Republicans take back the House of Representatives in November.

He indicated such a debate was unlikely. "It's premature to say that John Boehner is going to be speaker of the House," Obama said.

A member of the audience who said he was a hedge fund manager and a Harvard Law School classmate of Obama said many on Wall Street feel as if he's treating them like a pinata. "We certainly feel like we've been whacked by a stick."

"If you're making a billion dollars a year after a very bad financial crisis where 8 million people lost their jobs and small businesses can't get loans, then I think that you shouldn't be feeling put upon," Obama said.

"Most folks on Main Street feel like they've been beat upon," he said, and "there's a big chunk of the country that feels I have been too soft on Wall Street. What I've tried to do is just be practical."

He said his policies have not been "extremist" or "anti-business."



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Thousands of Yemenis flee battle with al-Qaida (AP)

SAN'A, Yemen � Thousands of people have fled a village in southern Yemen where security forces are laying siege to al-Qaida militants, a security official said Monday, signaling an escalation in the government's U.S.-backed campaign to uproot the terror network's local offshoot.

Government forces have moved into the village of Hawta with tanks and armored vehicles and 90 percent of its residents have fled, said Abdullah Baouda, police chief for the surrounding district.

One family fleeing Hawta said forces have shelled the village indiscriminately for the past two days to flush out the militants. Troops also fired on vehicles of residents fleeing the village and another nearby trouble spot, the city of Lawder, killing two civilians and wounding three others, according local government and medical officials.

Hawta is in Yemen's mountainous Shabwa province, one the areas where al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula has taken root over the past year and a half beyond the reach of a weak central government that has little control beyond the capital.

The United States is deeply concerned about the threat from Yemen's al-Qaida branch. The group claimed responsibility for the December attempt to blow up a Detroit-bound airliner, linking the plot to Yemen's cooperation with the U.S. military in strikes on al-Qaida targets.

The U.S. has shared intelligence and provided financial aid and training to Yemeni forces, generating backlash among Yemenis who feel their government is too closely allied with America.

Around 120 al-Qaida militants are believed to be taking refuge in Hawta, the police chief said. Three militants were killed and four were wounded in the fighting, said the provincial governor, Ali Hassan al-Ahmadi. One anti-terrorism officer was injured, he said.

"The siege will remain until those elements hand themselves in and we manage to uproot terrorist groups from the region," al-Ahmadi said.

For months, al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula has hammered Yemen's security forces in attacks on checkpoints and other security outposts.

The group said in an Internet statement Monday that it abducted a senior security official and demanded the release of two of its imprisoned members within 48 hours. Brig. Ali Hossam disappeared Aug. 26. The group did not say what it would do if its demand was not met.

Yemen's government has had trouble gaining control of areas in the south that are under the control of powerful tribes, some sympathetic to al-Qaida and other Islamic militants roaming the area.

Yemen is the poorest nation in the Arab world and is beset by other major internal security threats � an on-and-off rebellion on the north and a separate secessionist movement in the south.

In the capital, four al-Qaida suspects, including a Yemeni-German teenager, were brought to trial Monday on charges of plotting attacks on tourists, international institutions and security forces.

A court official said the 16-year-old dual national, Rami Hans Harman, denied the charges and told the court that authorities extracted a false confession from him while he was blindfolded.

The four men are also charged with setting up training camps and forming terrorist cells in southern Marib province.

The court official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the press.

The U.S. has pledged $150 million in military assistance to Yemen this year for helicopters, planes and other equipment to battle al-Qaida. Recently, U.S. officials have said they are looking at using armed Predator drones to hunt down and kill al-Qaida leaders operating out of safe havens in Yemen's ungoverned regions, if the country's leaders agree.

President Barack Obama's counterterrorism adviser, John Brennan, visited Yemen Monday for talks with President Ali Abdullah Saleh and other senior officials. He delivered a letter to the president from Obama, the U.S. Embassy said.

In it, Obama assured Saleh the United States was committed to supporting Yemen's people, who he said could do more than just "overcome the threats that they face � they can build a future of greater peace and opportunity for their children."



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Thousands of Yemenis flee battle with al-Qaida (AP)

SAN'A, Yemen � Thousands of people have fled a village in southern Yemen where security forces are laying siege to al-Qaida militants, a security official said Monday, signaling an escalation in the government's U.S.-backed campaign to uproot the terror network's local offshoot.

Government forces have moved into the village of Hawta with tanks and armored vehicles and 90 percent of its residents have fled, said Abdullah Baouda, police chief for the surrounding district.

One family fleeing Hawta said forces have shelled the village indiscriminately for the past two days to flush out the militants. Troops also fired on vehicles of residents fleeing the village and another nearby trouble spot, the city of Lawder, killing two civilians and wounding three others, according local government and medical officials.

Hawta is in Yemen's mountainous Shabwa province, one the areas where al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula has taken root over the past year and a half beyond the reach of a weak central government that has little control beyond the capital.

The United States is deeply concerned about the threat from Yemen's al-Qaida branch. The group claimed responsibility for the December attempt to blow up a Detroit-bound airliner, linking the plot to Yemen's cooperation with the U.S. military in strikes on al-Qaida targets.

The U.S. has shared intelligence and provided financial aid and training to Yemeni forces, generating backlash among Yemenis who feel their government is too closely allied with America.

Around 120 al-Qaida militants are believed to be taking refuge in Hawta, the police chief said. Three militants were killed and four were wounded in the fighting, said the provincial governor, Ali Hassan al-Ahmadi. One anti-terrorism officer was injured, he said.

"The siege will remain until those elements hand themselves in and we manage to uproot terrorist groups from the region," al-Ahmadi said.

For months, al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula has hammered Yemen's security forces in attacks on checkpoints and other security outposts.

The group said in an Internet statement Monday that it abducted a senior security official and demanded the release of two of its imprisoned members within 48 hours. Brig. Ali Hossam disappeared Aug. 26. The group did not say what it would do if its demand was not met.

Yemen's government has had trouble gaining control of areas in the south that are under the control of powerful tribes, some sympathetic to al-Qaida and other Islamic militants roaming the area.

Yemen is the poorest nation in the Arab world and is beset by other major internal security threats � an on-and-off rebellion on the north and a separate secessionist movement in the south.

In the capital, four al-Qaida suspects, including a Yemeni-German teenager, were brought to trial Monday on charges of plotting attacks on tourists, international institutions and security forces.

A court official said the 16-year-old dual national, Rami Hans Harman, denied the charges and told the court that authorities extracted a false confession from him while he was blindfolded.

The four men are also charged with setting up training camps and forming terrorist cells in southern Marib province.

The court official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the press.

The U.S. has pledged $150 million in military assistance to Yemen this year for helicopters, planes and other equipment to battle al-Qaida. Recently, U.S. officials have said they are looking at using armed Predator drones to hunt down and kill al-Qaida leaders operating out of safe havens in Yemen's ungoverned regions, if the country's leaders agree.

President Barack Obama's counterterrorism adviser, John Brennan, visited Yemen Monday for talks with President Ali Abdullah Saleh and other senior officials. He delivered a letter to the president from Obama, the U.S. Embassy said.

In it, Obama assured Saleh the United States was committed to supporting Yemen's people, who he said could do more than just "overcome the threats that they face � they can build a future of greater peace and opportunity for their children."



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Afghan warlords hedge bets, contest elections (AP)

JALALABAD, Afghanistan � Dozens of candidates in Afghanistan's parliamentary elections represent a party linked to Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, a former prime minister with ties to al-Qaida who is believed to be a mastermind of attacks on U.S. troops.

Hekmatyar, thought to be in Pakistan, is the most feared and notorious of various warlords who supported candidates in last Saturday's balloting. Observers allege they engaged in widespread intimidation and vote-buying.

While analysts say it's important to give such groups a way into the mainstream, they suspect warlords like Hekmatyar will use parliament seats to consolidate control over certain regions � setting the stage for more violence and possibly even civil war when international forces eventually depart.

A successful showing by warlord-backed candidates could also stymie attempts to root out corruption and find a consensus for talks with the armed opposition, both of which are necessary to pave the way for a U.S. withdrawal.

Nader Nadery, whose Free and Fair Election Foundation of Afghanistan sent thousands of Afghans throughout the country to monitor the vote, told The Associated Press "it is always good to have those who have been involved in violence enter into the political process."

But an impotent vetting process has let in candidates with blood on their hands and "who still have links to those armed groups," he said, including warlords allied to Hekmatyar and others who fought bitterly against him.

Their bloody four-year civil war killed an estimated 50,000 people, mostly civilians, according to the Red Cross, and destroyed giant swaths of Kabul. It ended in 1996 when the Taliban took power.

In Hekmatyar's battlefield history spanning nearly four decades, he has been an on-again, off-again ally of the United States. He was a key beneficiary of the U.S. in the 1980s during the fight against invading Russian soldiers. Osama bin Laden also came to prominence during that war, also with funding from Washington, funneled by Pakistan's intelligence service.

Hekmatyar fled to Iran for five years when the Taliban took power, but after the Taliban's defeat, he returned � some say to Pakistan � to wage a war to oust foreign troops from Afghanistan.

From their mountain hideouts, Hekmatyar's men lay bombs, plant improvised explosive devices and shoot at Afghan and NATO soldiers.

But Hekmatyar's men have also been fighting Taliban militants in recent months in eastern Nangarhar province, and Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar was said to despise him.

Earlier this year, representatives from Hezb-i-Islami held direct talks with President Hamid Karzai, who has been seeking ways to forge peace with his militant enemies as the Taliban-led insurgency enters its ninth year.

Full preliminary results of the elections, in which 2,500 candidates sought 249 seats, are not expected until next month, so it's too early to tell whether candidates from the Hekmatyar-linked Hezb-i-Islami party will be among the winners.

Hezb-i-Islami candidates, while renouncing violence, generally do not disavow their links to Hekmatyar. Most party members consider Hekmatyar their leader, if not officially, then in spirit.

Party candidate Fazil Mawla Laton said the only reason Hekmatyar isn't the head of their officially registered party is "because he is out of the country. But we would hope that one day he will come back and he will be the leader."

Abdul Ghafur, another Hezb-i-Islami candidate, said the party is headed by Hekmatyar's former deputy, Abdul Hadi Arghandiwal, the economic minister in Karzai's government. He is considered one of Hekmatyar's closest allies, although he too has publicly distanced himself from the Hezb-i-Islami founder.

Ghafur once fought alongside Hekmatyar, and this month four workers from his headquarters in the Nangarhar provincial capital of Jalalabad were arrested by U.S. special forces for alleged involvement in a roadside bombing. One is still in custody, according to provincial officials.

"There's always the question of how and whether the legal and insurgent wings have links, and then there is the Afghan assertion always that there is no such thing as an ex-Hezb-i-Islami � once in, you are ideologically changed for life," said Kate Clarke, Afghan-based senior analyst for the Afghanistan Analysts Network, an independent policy research organization.

"Hezb, in general, are everywhere, always," she said.

Christine Fair, a political scientist at Georgetown University's Center for Peace and Security Studies, called the parliamentary elections "an important chance" for groups like Hezb-e-Islami to exert political influence.

Juan Zarate, a senior counterterrorism official in the administration of President George W. Bush, said he didn't expect a political insurgency by Hekmatyar but that elections could provide a means of gaining local power.

"Those with connections to him � past or present � are likely trying to take advantage of opportunities they see for power locally," Zarate said.

Laton, who ran from Nangarhar province, said most of the dozens of Hezb-i-Islami candidates had waged "jihad" with Hekmatyar before the Taliban's collapse in 2001. Laton joined Hekmatyar after graduating from Kabul University, and has worked for the party's information wing.

The party's widespread involvement in the election campaign underscored a growing sense of dread among Afghans about what their country will look like when Western military commitment ends. Afghan security officials say privately that they worry that the creeping political influence of insurgent groups like Hekmatyar's will leave them vulnerable to retribution attacks.

"The leaders are not honest with the people. They just want power, and when the foreigners leave they will leave the parliament and start fighting each other," said Rahimullah, a 27-year-old mechanic in the Afghan capital.

Gen. Abdul Manan Farahi, former anti-terrorism chief, warned that Afghanistan would descend into chaos and civil war if the U.S. and NATO move quickly to leave Afghanistan.

"We know if the foreign forces leave today, of course, there will be a civil war again," he said, arguing for another five years of international troop deployment to allow time for the Afghan National Army and police to develop into a capable fighting force.

Nangarhar Gov. Gul Agha Sherzai rejected reconciliation with either Hekmatyar or the Taliban. He said both are enemies of the country and blasted the notion of having former Taliban and Hezb-i-Islami members in parliament.

"They are there just to take benefit for themselves," he said in an interview Saturday with the AP.

Rahimullah, the mechanic, feared a return to Afghanistan's decades of warfare.

"I really feel that civil war will start when the foreigners leave Afghanistan," he said.



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Officials: US drones kill 6 militants in Pakistan (AP)

MIR ALI, Pakistan � Suspected U.S. drones fired missiles at militant targets in northwestern Pakistan on Monday, killing six people in the 15th such attack this month, the most intense barrage since the strikes began in 2004, said intelligence officials.

U.S. officials do not publicly acknowledge firing the missiles, much less comment on who they are targeting. It is unclear why the attacks have spiked.

They target Pakistan's border regions with Afghanistan � home to al-Qaida terrorists plotting attacks on the West, insurgents battling the Pakistani government as well as militants behind attacks on NATO troops in Afghanistan.

On Monday, three missiles struck a house and vehicle linked to militants in a village near Mir Ali, a town in the North Waziristan tribal area that is under effective militant control, said the officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

Noor Khan, a resident in the village, said he saw drones in the sky before the strike.

Pakistani intelligence officials have said most of this month's strikes have targeted forces led by Jalaluddin Haqqani, an Afghan commander whose forces are one of the greatest threats to foreign troops in Afghanistan.

The U.S. has pressured Pakistan to launch a military offensive against the network, but Pakistan has not done so.

Many analysts believe the Pakistan army tolerates militants fighting in Afghanistan because they want to have a proxy group to maintain influence there after U.S.-led foreign forces withdraw.

Drone strikes have killed more than 71 people since Sept. 2, according to an Associated Press tally based on accounts by intelligence officials.

Pakistani officials often criticize the strikes as a violation of the country's sovereignty, but the government is widely believed to help the U.S. carry out the attacks. Allegations of civilian casualties in the attacks are not publicly investigated.

Meanwhile, clashes during a two-day search operation on the outskirts of the northwestern city of Peshawar over the weekend killed 15 militants and two police officers and wounded two soldiers, an army statement and the city's police chief, Liaqat Ali Khan, said Monday.

___

Associated Press Writer Riaz Khan in Peshawar contributed to this report.



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Economic panel says recession ended in June 2009 (AP)

WASHINGTON � The longest recession the country has endured since World War II ended in June 2009, a group that dates the beginning and end of recessions declared Monday.

The National Bureau of Economic Research, a panel of academic economists based in Cambridge, Mass., said the recession lasted 18 months. It started in December 2007 and ended in June 2009. Previously the longest postwar downturns were those in 1973-1975 and in 1981-1982. Both of those lasted 16 months.

The decision makes official what many economists have believed for some time, that the recession ended in the summer of 2009. The economy started growing again in the July-to-September quarter of 2009, after a record four straight quarters of declines. Thus, the April-to-June quarter of 2009, marked the last quarter when the economy was shrinking. At that time, it contracted just 0.7 percent, after suffering through much deeper declines. That factored into the NBER's decision to pinpoint the end of the recession in June.

Any future downturn in the economy would now mark the start of a new recession, not the continuation of the December 2007 recession, NBER said. That's important because if the economy starts shrinking again, it could mark the onset of a "double-dip" recession. For many economists, the last time that happened was in 1981-82.

To make its determination, the NBER looks at figures that make up the nation's gross domestic product, which measures the total value of goods and services produced within the United States. It also reviews incomes, employment and industrial activity.

The economy lost 7.3 million jobs in the 2007-2009 recession, also the most in the post World War II period.

The NBER normally takes its time in declaring a recession has started or ended.

For instance, the NBER announced in December 2008 that the recession had actually started one year earlier, in December 2007.

Similarly, it declared in July 2003 that the 2001 recession was over. It actually ended 20 months earlier, in November 2001.

Its determination is of interest to economic historians � and political leaders. Recessions that occur on their watch pose political risks.

In President George W. Bush's eight years in office, the United States fell into two recessions. The first started in March 2001 and ended that November. The second one started in December 2007.

NBER's decision means little to ordinary Americans now muddling through a sluggish economic recovery and a weak jobs market. Unemployment is 9.6 percent and has been stuck at high levels since the recession ended.

Many will continue to struggle.

Unemployment usually keeps rising well after a recession ends. Four months after the 2007 downturn ended, unemployment spiked to 10.1 percent in October 2009, which was the highest in just over a quarter-century. Some economists believe that marked the high point in joblessness. But others think it could climb higher � perhaps hitting 10.3 percent by early next year.

After the 2001 recession, for instance, unemployment didn't peak until June 2003 � 19 months later.



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'Frankenfish'?: FDA considers approving modified salmon (AP)

WASHINGTON � A Massachusetts company is asking the Food and Drug Administration to approve the marketing of genetically engineered salmon, which would become the first such animal OK'd for human consumption.

The FDA has not yet decided whether to approve the product, but it is holding two days of hearings on the subject. Ron Stotish, CEO of AquaBounty, said at the meeting Monday that his company's modified fish are environmentally sustainable and safe to eat.

The agency has already said the salmon is as safe to eat as the traditional variety.

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

WASHINGTON (AP) � Tinker with the genetics of salmon and maybe you create a revolutionary new food source that could help the environment and feed the hungry.

Or maybe you're creating what some say is an untested "frankenfish" that could cause unknown allergic reactions and the eventual decimation of the wild salmon population.

The Food and Drug Administration hears both arguments Monday when it begins a two-day meeting on whether to approve the marketing of the genetically engineered fish, which would be the first such animal approved for human consumption. The agency has already said the salmon, which grows twice as fast as conventional salmon, is as safe to eat as the traditional variety.

Approval of the salmon would open the door for a variety of other genetically engineered animals, including an environmentally friendly pig that is being developed in Canada or cattle that are resistant to mad cow disease.

"For future applications out there the sky's the limit," said David Edwards of the Biotechnology Industry Association. "If you can imagine it, scientists can try to do it."

AquaBounty submitted its first application for FDA approval in 1995, but the agency decided not until two years ago to consider applications for genetically engineered animals � a move seen as a breakthrough by the biotechnology industry.

Genetic engineering is already widely used for crops, but the government until now has not considered allowing the consumption of modified animals. Although the potential benefits � and profits � are huge, many individuals have qualms about manipulating the genetic code of other living creatures.

Genetically engineered � or GE � animals are not clones, which the FDA has already said are safe to eat. Clones are copies of an animal. With GE animals, their DNA has been altered to produce a desirable characteristic.

In the case of the salmon, AquaBounty has added a growth hormone from a Chinook salmon that allows the fish to produce their growth hormone all year long. The engineers were able to keep the hormone active by using another gene from an eel-like fish called an ocean pout that acts like an on switch for the hormone, according to the company. Conventional salmon only produce the growth hormone some of the time.

In documents released ahead of the hearing, the FDA said there were no biologically relevant differences between the engineered salmon and conventional salmon, and there is a reasonable certainty of no harm from its consumption.

Critics have two main concerns: The safety of the food to humans and the salmon's effect on the environment.

Because the altered fish has never been eaten before, they say, it could include dangerous allergens, especially because seafood is highly allergenic. They also worry that the fish will escape and intermingle with the wild salmon population, which is already endangered.They would grow fast and consume more food to the detriment of the conventional wild salmon, the critics fear.

A wide range of environmental, food safety and consumer groups have argued that more public studies are needed and the current FDA process is inadequate because it allows the company to keep some proprietary information private. Modified foods are regulated under the same process used for animal drugs.

"It is outrageous to keep this vital information secret," said Wenonah Hauter, director of the advocacy group Food & Water Watch. "Consumers have a right to know what FDA is trying to allow into our food supply."

Dr. Michael Hansen, senior scientist at Consumers Union, the publisher of Consumer Reports, says the agency is relying on too little data, much of which is supplied by the company itself.

"FDA has set the bar very low," he said.

Ron Stotish, the chief executive of AquaBounty, countered that the company has more than addressed the concerns, and his product has come under much more scrutiny than most food.

"This is perhaps the most studied fish in history," he said. "Environmentally this is a very sustainable technology."

The company has several safeguards in place to allay concerns. All the fish would be bred female and sterile, though a small percentage may be able to breed. They would be bred in confined pools where the potential for escape would be very low.

In its environmental analysis of the fish released earlier this month, the FDA agreed with the company that there are enough safeguards in place.

Stotish says the fish would be bred in better conditions than many of the world's farmed salmon, and could be located closer to population centers to help feed more people. The company has also said the increase in engineered salmon production could help relieve endangered wild salmon populations.

The company is also arguing that the fish do not need to be labeled as genetically engineered, so the common customer would not know if they were eating the modified product or the conventional product. The second day of the FDA meeting will focus on the labeling question.

"This fish is identical to the traditional food," maintained Stotish. "The label could even be misleading because it implies a difference that doesn't exist."

At the meeting Monday, the FDA, the company and critics will present their findings to an advisory committee, which will in turn advise the FDA. A decision will come after the meeting, though it is unclear how long that will take. If approved, the fish could be in grocery stores in two years, the company estimates.

The industry says their job will be to counter the common impression that the modified salmon are "frankenfish."

"In the story of Frankenstein it was the fear of the people driving it, it wasn't the monster that was evil," says Edwards of the Biotechnology Industry Association. "If you look at the science and the safety and you look at the benefits, they become very exciting products."

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Online:

Background on FDA meeting: http://tinyurl.com/ylp5ccv



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US to keep pressuring Iran over nuclear program (AP)

VIENNA � The United States will continue to pressure Iran to meet its international commitments and come clean about its nuclear program, a senior U.S. official said Monday as diplomats gathered for the U.N. nuclear agency's annual meeting.

Iran is under four sets of U.N. Security Council sanctions for refusing to stop its uranium enrichment and ignoring other U.N. demands meant to ease global concerns that it is seeking to make atomic weapons.

Last week, Yukiya Amano, the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, said he cannot confirm that all of Iran's nuclear activities are peaceful, as Tehran claims, because the country has only selectively cooperated with the U.N. watchdog and has rejected several nuclear inspectors.

"Iran must do what it has thus far failed to do � meet its obligations and ensure the rest of the world of the peaceful nature of its intentions," U.S. Energy Secretary Steven Chu told delegates in Vienna for the IAEA'S General Conference.

While Washington remains committed to pursuing a diplomatic solution, Chu said it was clear there was a "broad and growing international consensus that will hold Iran accountable if it continues its defiance.

"We will continue to pressure the Iranian government to fulfill its international commitments," Chu said.

Washington's strong words followed similar comments by the European Union.

Paul Magnette of Belgium, whose country currently holds the bloc's rotating presidency, said the EU has urged Iran to address the IAEA's concerns and to meet with members of the international community "with the ultimate goal of establishing a comprehensive relationship."

Meanwhile, the head of Iran's nuclear program, Ali Akbar Salehi, said the IAEA was suffering from a "moral authority and credibility crisis."

"Certainly, the uncivilized double-track approach of threat and dialogue ... cannot be conducive and fruitful," he added, calling the latest round of Security Council sanctions "unjustified and illegal."

IAEA chief Amano also said North Korea's nuclear program remains "a matter of serious concern" and efforts should be made to resume talks on it.

The autocratic Asian state has not permitted the Vienna-based watchdog to implement safeguards in the country since December 2002 and no inspectors have been allowed in since April, making it impossible for inspectors to report about its atomic activities, Amano said.

North Korea walked out of international talks on restarting negotiations on its nuclear disarmament last year to protest international criticism of a long-range rocket launch.

"I again call on all parties concerned to make concerted efforts for a resumption of the six-party talks," Amano said.

Amano also mentioned the failure of Iran and Syria to fully comply with his agency.

"My basic approach has been that all safeguards agreements between member states and the agency and other relevant obligations should be implemented fully," he said.

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Online:

IAEA: http://www.iaea.org



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Global spotlight on helping world's poor (AP)

UNITED NATIONS � Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon opened a summit Monday with a plea to the assembled presidents, prime ministers and kings to use their power to meet U.N. goals to help the world's poorest by 2015.

Ten years after world leaders set the most ambitious goals ever to tackle global poverty, they are gathered again to spur action to meet the deadline � which the U.N. says will be difficult, if not impossible, in some cases.

General Assembly President Joseph Deiss opened the summit saying: "We must achieve the Millennium Development Goals. We want to achieve them. And we can achieve them."

For centuries, the plight of the world's poor had been ignored but with the turn of the new millennium, leaders pledged to begin tackling poverty, disease, ignorance and inequality.

They vowed to reduce extreme poverty by half, ensure that every child has a primary school education, halt and reverse the HIV/AIDS pandemic, reduce maternal mortality by three-quarters and child mortality by two-thirds. Goals additionally called for cutting by half the number of people without access to clean water and basic sanitation � all by 2015. They also set goals to promote equality for women, protect the environment, increase development aid, and open the global trading and financial system.

"We brought new urgency to an age-old mission," the secretary-general told the assembled leaders. "And now, we have real results. New thinking and path-breaking public-private partnerships. Dramatic increases in school enrollment. Expanded access to clean water. Better control of disease. The spread of technology � from mobile to green."

But Ban call the advances "fragile" and declared "the clock is ticking, with much more to do."

He urged the leaders to deliver the needed resources "above all by exercising political leadership."

"Despite the obstacles, despite the skepticism, despite the fast-approaching deadline of 2015, the Millennium Development Goals are achievable," the secretary-general said.

More than 140 world leaders were expected at the summit and security was exceedingly tight, as even U.N. staff and permanent correspondents were subjected full screening to enter and move around the international complex. U.N. missions have often been the target of terrorist attacks worldwide. The international organization's operation in Baghdad was one of the first hit in a deadly bombing as the insurgency there gained strength in late 2003.

Many heavily armed U.S. Coast Guard and New York police craft patrolled the East River along side the U.N. complex. Frogmen were aboard interceptor boats mounted with .50 caliber machine guns.

The three-day summit on the goals, known as the MDGs, will be followed by the annual ministerial meeting of the General Assembly so leaders will be presenting positions not only on global anti-poverty plans but also on global issues.

In advance of this week's summit, diplomats from the 192 U.N. member states agreed on the document to be adopted by the leaders which spells out specific actions to accelerate implementation of each of the eight Millennium Development Goals, known as the MDGs, in the next five years.

"We are convinced that the Millennium Development Goals can be achieved, including in the poorest countries, with renewed commitment, effective implementation, and intensified collective action by all member states and other relevant stakeholders at both domestic and international levels," it says.

Many recent reports show that the world's poorest countries, especially in sub-Saharan Africa, have made little progress in eradicating poverty. And in Africa, Asia and Latin America there also has been a lack of progress in reducing mother and child deaths, providing clean water and sanitation, and promoting women's equality.

"Many countries are falling short, especially in Africa," Ban warned, and "inequities are growing within and among countries," a problem compounded by the global economic crisis.

"I know there are skepticism, but my role as secretary-general is to fight against this skepticism and make this action plan deliver," Ban said in an interview with The Associated Press. "There will be some hurdles. Nobody said it is an easy plan, but I think that it can be done."

Amnesty International, which says world leaders have failed more than a billion of the world's poorest people, will be unveiling a Maternal Death Clock in Times Square in the heart of New York on Monday to count maternal deaths around the globe while world leaders are meeting.

Maternal mortality remains unacceptably high and the clock will begin at 5,317,280, the number of women Amnesty says have died since the MDGs were adopted in September 2000. It predicted about 3,700 more will die during the summit, which ends Wednesday.

On the plus side, the Overseas Development Institute, a British think tank, said Ghana outperformed all other countries in reducing hunger by nearly three-quarters, from 34 percent in 1990 to 9 percent in 2004. Vietnam reduced the proportion of people living on less than $1 a day from nearly 66 percent to 20 percent in just 14 years. Ten African countries, including Ethiopia, Egypt, and post-conflict Angola, have halved their absolute poverty levels, Benin ranked in the top 10 in education improvements, and Angola and Niger significantly reduced child deaths.

On the minus side, Amnesty International said an estimated 70 percent of those living in poverty are women, but efforts in many countries fail to address the widespread discrimination women face in accessing food, water, sanitation and housing � especially in slums. It accused Kenya of ignoring the needs of women living in slums and Nigeria of evicting slum dwellers and driving them deeper into poverty.

Even if the main goal of reducing extreme poverty by half is achieved, the U.N. said nearly one billion people will still be living on less than $1.25 a day.



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