Monday, October 31, 2011

NBC News 'Rock Center': Sneaking into Syria

By Richard Engel
NBC News Chief Foreign Correspondent

The Turkish smugglers didn?t know quite what to make of us. Normally they traffic cigarettes across the Turkish-Syrian border. Cigarettes are cheaper in Syria than in Turkey. So are cows. The smugglers told us they had moved plenty of cows from Syria to Turkey across the cornfields and melon patches that cover both sides of the border. It?s easy to traffic a cow, one of the smugglers explained. Just dress like a farmer and, if stopped by a border guard, claim the cow went wandering and you chased after it.?

"Sorry officer. Won?t happen again."

The smuggler said bringing our team into Syria ? without visas, without permission ? would be much more difficult.

And I had more bad news for him. We also wanted to film the crossing, and stay inside Syria for several days to conduct television interviews with members of the political opposition being hunted by the Syrian security forces.

The Syrian revolution has been one of the bloodiest of the Arab Spring. The government and security forces of President Bashar al-Asad have killed more than 3,000 people since protests erupted last March, according to the United Nations. The protesters have been demanding more political freedom. Thousands of demonstrators have been arrested or disappeared.? But facts are difficult to verify because few journalists are allowed into Syria. Government officials closely monitor reporters it allows in. Our repeated requests for visas were denied. No reason was given.?

The smugglers didn?t like the plan and told us in language that was only somewhat less polite than the grimaces on their faces.

Foreigners?

With cameras?

For days?

The risk was too high.

I agreed with one of the smugglers. Yes, it would be easier if we were cows. But this wasn?t adventure travel. Syria?s uprising is important and, to understand it, we would need to go inside.


That?s when we called in Mehmet. Mehmet is man who can get things done. Mehmet is also a pseudonym, his name changed to protect his identity. Mehmet knows Turkey and how to talk to people. If you need an interview with a government official at any time of day or night, Mehmet can set it up. If you need a mobile television studio that can fit on an 18-wheeler, Mehmet can have it built. If you lose your keys in Turkey, Mehmet probably has them. I don?t speak Turkish, but I enjoyed watching Mehmet talk to the smugglers. Mehmet has a weathered face, a devilish smile and bright eyes. He laughs easily and often. We were in a restaurant in southern Turkey not far from the Syrian border.? Within minutes, Mehmet and one of the smugglers were laughing. They drank tea.? They smoked cigarettes. They ate grilled chicken. They drank more tea and, after about an hour, the smugglers agreed not only to take us into Syria, but also to stay with us and find a safe house where we could hide.

We met the smugglers the next day to start the journey. Our team was Mehmet, John Kooistra, one of NBC?s most experienced combat cameramen, and myself. Our producer Karen Russo remained in Turkey in case things went wrong.

The next day, we were met by a new group of smugglers.? They were apparently immune to Mehmet?s charms. They seemed deeply suspicious of us. They clearly didn?t like the mission they?d been given.

We climbed into the back seat of the smugglers? car near a public park in a Turkish town near the border. The smugglers didn?t talk to us. The man sitting shotgun didn?t turn around to introduce himself or make eye contact. The driver drove a few blocks and then ordered us out.? Another car picked us up a few minutes later. The second car drove us out of town and then doubled back into town. We switched cars again. The shell game continued for several hours.? I assumed they were trying to shake anyone following us, and also to watch how we reacted to the sudden changes. It was a kind of loyalty test.

Eventually, the smugglers took us to a farmhouse. We were told to wait there and not go outside. They didn?t want us to be seen by Turkish authorities.? They thought a group of foreigners hanging out near the Syrian border in a poor farming town may look suspicious. They were probably right. We stayed inside the farmhouse for three days. The wait seemed endless. The smugglers barely talked, so we all watched Turkish Music variety shows on a small television. We stared at the television like people watching the numbers in an elevator, trying to avoid uncomfortable eye contact. Although I could not understand the lyrics, the singing ? much of it done by children -- was awful. The dancing was worse. I think I drank 30 cups of tea.

We were told we?d be crossing into Syria at night. I wore a black scarf, a black fleece jacket and dark blue jeans. Mehmet wore the same. John always wears black anyway. He lives in New York City.

After the long wait, and jittery from the tea, things developed quickly. There was activity in the farmhouse. They turned off the variety shows. The smugglers worked with a network of spotters and informants. The spotters watched the border. They tracked the guards, shift changes and patrols. The spotters had found an opening. The smugglers loaded us into a car, but remained typically tight-lipped. I assumed we were being taken to yet another safe house. I was wrong. The car stopped by the side of the road next to a field of tall grass.

"Get out," we were told. "This is it."

The field of grass was where we?d begin our journey across.

NBC News cameraman John Kooistra, pictured. Photo by Richard Engel.

But weren?t we supposed to go at night?

It was three in the afternoon ? broad daylight.

We were carrying backpacks.

We were dressed in black.

Our plan felt like it was unraveling. But at least now we were on our way.

A smuggler carved a trail through the grass, which reached well above our heads. The grass was so thick in patches we had to push it down, and climb over it. Crushing and moving the dry grass was noisy, but it provided excellent cover. There was no way we could have been seen except from an airplane.

But then the grass ended, and we were given another surprising nugget from our smuggler-guide. We?d now have to leave the dense grass, cross an open field, climb a barbed wire fence and then cross another field. The first field was still in Turkey. The barbed wire fence was the actual border. The last field was in Syria. Guard towers dotted the terrain. There were periodic armed patrols.

"What?" I remember asking, although I may have added another short word for emphasis.

The smuggler laid it out again.

Out of the grass.
Across a field.
Over a fence.
Across another field.
The distance was two miles from end to end.

Oh yeah, and we?d have to run.

"You didn?t say anything about running," John joked. His dry humor was deeply appreciated.

I could see a Syrian guard tower about 200 yards away. The smuggler thought it was empty.

If we were caught in Syria, as Americans, carrying cameras, dressed like ninjas, we would likely be accused of spying.

Needless to say we ran as fast as we could through the grass, across the Turkish field and over the barbed wire fence. Once inside Syria, we threw ourselves into a ditch in the field. Panting from the sprint and nerves, we tried to stay as flat as possible. We caught our breath in the ditch as the smuggler made a call. His contacts were supposed to meet us on a dirt road at the edge of the farmland in Syria. There was still about a mile-and-a-half to go. We moved foward, running and then diving into other ditches. Finally, we reached the lonely and empty dirt road.

The car wasn?t there.

The smuggler?s contacts were late.

We stood aimlessly by the side of the road as if we?d been stood up by our dates.

I remember thinking that these smugglers were not reliable people.

We waited by that dirt road for an hour, three foreigners with backpacks standing by a Syrian country road. Finally, the car showed up.? We climbed in the back. Two new smugglers were up front. The car?s radio was blaring Syrian pop songs. They were singing along with the tunes. I think they were a little drunk. They didn?t seem the slightest bit worried as they sang and smoked (with the windows rolled up) and drove to a small Syrian city.

In the back of the car, John pushed his handheld camera against the window to film as we entered the city. The glass was tinted.? But if someone took a good look, he could see inside. John put his camera down as we passed Syrian police and undercover agents called ?Shabiha.? The Shabiha are relatively easy to pick out. They are usually young men, often carrying sticks, lingering on street corners. They look like bullies waiting for a fight after school.

True to their word, the smugglers had arranged a safe house in Syria. We pulled up in front of an apartment building, waited for other cars to pass and then briskly ? but without running ? moved from the car to the apartment building. Once we opened the door, it was clear what the safe house really was. The kitchen was full of empty beer bottles. There was graffiti on walls. Mattresses covered the floors. A lone mirrored bed dominated one of the bedrooms. It was a brothel. Our hosts asked if we wanted any female companions. The smugglers were also pimps. Our confidence in our only lifeline in Syria was dwindling rapidly.

We declined their offer for company, and set out to find the opposition who were risking their lives to demand more political freedom.

It took us a full day to find anyone willing to talk. People were terrified of speaking out against the regime. They worried about the Shabiha and being arrested. They worried about disappearing. Eventually, we spoke to one pro-democracy activist by cell phone. He agreed to come to our safe house after dark for an interview.

I apologized to Gwan Yousif, a human rights lawyer, for the condition of our filthy dwelling when he arrived for the interview. He brushed it off. He told me he was living in a similar situation, on the run from Syrian authorities, moving from house to house. Many of his temporary shelters were equally squalid. Yousif was also moving with his wife. I asked his how she was holding up.

"I promised her this would only be for one year," he said with a laugh.? He said they?d mentally budgeted a year of living on the run until Bashar al-Asad was driven from power. Then, Yousif hoped, he?d go back to being a lawyer.

"There?s unbelievable abuse against the people who are protesting," Yousif said. "Torture has become the norm rather than the exception."

"They start hitting you on the way to the jail. There have been some cases where they cut your hands and cut your private areas and poke your eyes and cut your tongue," he said.

"The governments in Tunisia and Egypt didn?t use these kinds of unbelievably abusive methods against protesters. Here the government doesn?t even allow people to congregate."

Yousif said the brutality was only the most obvious form of repression. Even worse, he accused Bashar al-Asad of trying to trigger a civil war.

"They?re putting in people?s heads that if the government falls, there will be civil war," he said.

Syria does have a potentially explosive ethnic and religious mix. About 75 percent of the population is Sunni Arab. Yet Syria is ruled by Alawite Shiites who make up only 15 percent of the people. The rest of Syrians are predominantly Christians and ethnic Kurds.? The religious and ethnic divisions are important.? Syria is the flip side of Iraq. Iraq has a majority Shiite population who, under Saddam Hussein, were ruled by Sunnis, with Kurds and Christians making up the difference.

The opposition in Syria is strongest among Sunnis, especially in the cities of Homs and Hama. They opposed Bashar al-Asad and Alawite domination. Mosques are rallying points.? The Muslim Brotherhood, a pan-Islamic group based in Egypt, has traditional bases in Syria?s Sunni heartland. In Hama in 1982, Bashar al-Asad?s father Hafez carried out a notorious massacre, killing, according to some estimates, 20,000 people in a crackdown against the Muslim Brotherhood.
?
Bashar Al-Asad?s government claims ? in fact adamantly insists -- that the current protesters are not students and dissidents who want more freedom, but Sunni fanatics and terrorists determined to wipe out Alawites and Christians. Al-Asad, who runs a secular government, presents himself as a kind of Alawite and Christian savior.? He says his government, because it is intolerant of dissent, is the only thing preventing a civil war.? Syrians know the horrors of religious-ethnic war.? Iraq is just next door.? More than a million Iraqis sought refuge in Syria to escape the carnage in Baghdad, Falujah and Mosul. It is with a degree of tragic irony that many of those Iraqis are now escaping Syria and returning home.

Many Syrian Christians and Alawites share al-Asad?s fears about civil war. Their concerns are not completely unfounded. Reshuffling the ethnic balance of power in Syria ? even to bring a more just and democratic system ? does have the potential to tear the country apart. Replacing the Alawite-led regime with a Sunni one would also send shockwaves across the region.

Potential consequences could include:

Ethnic Reprisals/Civil War
There could be reprisal attacks against Alawites and Christians who backed al-Asad?s regime.? Many senior Syrian military officers are Alawites.? They will fight to defend their communities and have the tools and training to do it.? A civil war could break out.

Renewed fighting in Lebanon
Syria is a major sponsor of Hezbollah, the militant Shiite group that dominates neighboring Lebanon.? Syria is Hezbollah?s supply line, especially for weapons.? A Sunni-led regime in Syria would likely be less accommodating to Hezbollah.? Hezbollah could react to the loss of its supply line by becoming weaker and more pliable.? Or, perhaps even more likely, Hezbollah could become more aggressive as it rivals, especially Sunni groups in Lebanon, sense weakness and try to challenge it.

Weaker Iran
Syria has a strategic partnership with Iran.? Western diplomats say Iran is helping Syria crack down on the opposition.? Iran stopped its own democratic ?Green Revolution? by force.? American officials and defectors from the Syrian security forces claim Iran is teaching Syria the same tools of repression it used.? Syria does seem to be applying the Iranian model of mass arrests, restricting the Internet and using a violent plain-clothed militia.? The loss of Syria as a partner/client would weaken Iran.? The impact would be similar to Hezbollah.? Iran could either accept the loss and become more cautious, or grow more aggressive.

A boost for Arab revolutionaries
If Syria goes, so may another regime or two.? So far, the regimes to fall to the Arab Spring ? Tunisia, Egypt and Libya -- have all been in North Africa.? Yemen has also nearly collapsed.? But Yemen has long been considered a borderline failed state anyway -- isolated, poor and largely undeveloped on the tip of the Arabian Peninsula.? I have a personal fondness for Yemen and its people.? Perhaps it?s because of the country?s extraordinarily fine honey, its exquisite old medinas, the warmth of its people and the island of Socotra with its fantastic Dragonblood trees and? unrivaled biodiversity.? But few people in the Middle East have been surprised that Yemen is collapsing.? It was collapsing before the Arab Spring.? Syria is different.? Syria is a major Arab country in the heart of? the region. Just a few years ago, Damascus was touted as a new tourist hot spot.? If Syria?s regime falls, the Arab Spring movement will be given a new jolt of energy.? More regimes could go.? Fear of the ripple effect seems explain why many Arab regimes have thus far been cautious in their criticism of Syria?s crackdown.

Israeli Concerns
Al-Asad?s regime opposes Israel and backs Hezbollah (which is violently anti-Israel), but has chosen to avoid direct confrontation.? Syria lost the Golan Heights to Israel in the 1967 war.? Syria wants the Golan returned in exchange for a peace deal.? There have been attempts at negotiations, but all have failed.? Yet the Syrian border has remained mostly quiet.? After the fall of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and an ominous attack on the Israeli embassy in Cairo, Israel has become deeply concerned about its position in the region.? For Israelis, al-Asad may be the preferred devil they know.

President Al-Asad seems fully aware of the regional concerns and unknown consequences of regime change in Syria.? In an interview with the British Sunday Telegraph newspaper last week he said Western powers risked causing an ?earthquake? that would burn the Middle East if they intervened in Syria.

But geopolitics do not erase the piles of bodies rising in Syria or the thousands of demonstrators who continue to be arrested and tortured.

In our safe house, we were still having problems with the smugglers.? The one who crossed with us from Turkey through the grasses was solid.? He stayed with us.? He seemed reliable.? He spoke little, but he made the best of the situation, cleaning up the brothel.? He even managed to make tea by hooking up a leaky propane tank.

The two Syrian smuggler/pimps who picked us up inside ? showing up late - were complete yahoos.? One had a dark scab across his nose and forehead.? He claimed he fell down when he was drunk.? I think he was in a fight and lost.? Either way, the scab said something altogether unimpressive about his character.

It was just after 2 a.m.? John, Mehmet and I were sleeping in the safe house when suddenly he heard loud bangs on the door.? Someone was knocking and pushing the doorbell repeatedly and urgently.? I was awake immediately.? Mehmet opened the door.? The smuggler with the scab pushed in past him.? Breathlessly, he told us the safe house was surrounded by police.

I swallowed hard.

"Stay here," he said.? I could smell the beer on his breath.? He wasn?t standing straight.? His head was cocked to the side, his shoulder crooked. The Syrian fixer spoke Arabic, which I also speak.? "I?ll go out and talk to the police. Stay here," he said, and stumbled back into the street.

An impossibly short time later, he returned.

"I fixed it. I sent them away," he said proudly.? Then he put out his hand for a reward.

Mehmet was less than impressed.? We didn?t want to be too rude or aggressive ? we were still dependent on the smugglers - but we also didn?t want to show weakness and stupidity.? Mehmet told him, firmly, to go to bed and sleep it off.? The smuggler left without any money.? He was dejected.? He was actually hanging his head as he left.? Drunks are not hard to read.? We later learned he?d been gambling that night and lost his money.? He wanted to get back into a card game.? He figured he would try to shake us down, get a few bucks with a petty hustle, and then return to the cards.

Luckily, the protesters we met were much more serious.? In fact, they were intellectuals.

A protester picked us up at the safe house and drove us to an apartment.? It was a modest but neat family home with clean towels and new soap in the bathroom.? We left our shoes by the door.? We were greeted like guests.

Inside, we met a journalism student, a law student and the apartment?s owner, a writer and poet.? The owner had two children with him.? The children were well behaved.? The younger boy played on pillows in the living room.? His older sister helped his mother bring us water, tea and strong sweet coffee.? These didn?t seem like the Islamic fanatics or terrorists the Syrian government claimed they were.? They were nice people with all the graces and hospitality that make Syrians wonderful.

The poet agreed with Yousif.? Al-Asad was playing on the Syrians' very real fear of a civil war.? The government would never relinquish power, he said, and was prepared to plunge the country into ethnic violence to hold on.

"If you ask for the right to eat and live, the government will give it to you.? But it will give you nothing if you ask for freedom," the poet said, his son sitting in his lap playing with a cell phone.

He said Alawites had become convinced that they?d be slaughtered without al-Asad.? I remember thinking that the threat of civil war is real, but by playing into that fear and exacerbating it, the government could trigger a wider conflict.

On our way to the apartment, we drove past a small demonstration.? It was ending as we arrived.? The security forces and Shabiha had broken it up with tear gas and by blocking off several streets.? There were no serious injuries.

The demonstrators had recorded the protest on cell phones.? In the apartment, we watched the journalism student upload the videos of the demonstration to the Internet.? He was a leading cyber-activist in the area.? With most foreign journalists denied access to Syria, cyber-activism has become critical to keep the revolution alive.

The student told me he worked with a media team of ten other activists.

The law student in the apartment was a young woman.? She told truly horrific stories of rape and abuse.? She had not witnessed the atrocities personally, but had seen video evidence online.? She told me about Hamza al-Khatib, a 13-year-old boy who had his penis cut off in Syrian custody and gunshots in his limbs.? A video of Al-Khatib?s disfigured body has been widely distributed on the Internet.? He has become one of the symbols ofSyria?s revolution.? She told us of about a singer, Ibrahim Qashoush, who had his voice box cut out for opposing the regime.? There is also video of Qashoush's severed throat.

This is the type of brutality that comes out in the religious-ethnic war or, more conspiratorially, it is the kind of savagery that can start a sectarian war.? I?d seen similar brutality in Iraq.? I?ll never forget it.

As we were leaving the apartment, the activists suggested I travel to interview one of Syria?s most prominent opposition politicians, Mishaal Timo. I?d heard of Timo before, but never met him.? Timo was well known internationally as an opponent of Al-Asad?s regime long before the current revolt.? We were told Timo wouldn?t mind showing his face on camera and would speak openly.? It was a great opportunity, but it also made me nervous.? Surely Timo?s house and office would be under surveillance.? I didn?t want to bring attention to him or attract attention to us.? I declined the invitation.

Mishaal Timo was gunned down in his home two days later.? Activists blamed the government for the attack.? Witnesses say Syrian security forces shot dead two mourners at Timo?s funeral.

Editor's note: Richard Engel's full broadcast report can be seen tonight at 10pm/9ct on NBC's "Rock Center with Brian Williams".

Source: http://rockcenter.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/10/31/8562167-inside-syria-dissidents-tell-stories-of-unbelievable-abuse-against-protesters

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Video: Matthews: What was Jack Kennedy like?

No. 4 Stanford has just enough Luck, tops USC in 3OT

Stepfan Taylor ran for the tying touchdown with 38 seconds left in regulation and the go-ahead score in the third overtime, and Stanford's defense preserved its 16-game winning streak by forcing Curtis McNeal's end-zone fumble to end the No. 4 Cardinal's 56-48 victory over No. 20 Southern California on Saturday night.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3036697/vp/45082902#45082902

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Sunday, October 30, 2011

Air France cancels flights as five-day strike hits (Reuters)

PARIS (Reuters) ? Air France canceled about one in five flights and warned of wider disruption as a five-day strike by flight attendants over employment terms began on Saturday, in the middle of a busy holiday weekend.

In a statement posted on its website, the carrier said that it had canceled 10 long-haul flights to destinations such as New York, Tokyo, Montreal, Abu Dhabi as well as cities in West Africa.

Discontent among travelers appeared to have been limited by advance warnings that reduced the number of people turning up to find themselves stranded at airports.

A spokeswoman for the airline said that it was, as planned, ensuring 80 percent of some 1,000 daily flights, short- and long-haul, at the two major Paris airports, Orly and Charles de Gaulle.

"We do not rule out other last-minute cancellations and delays," the website advisory on www.airfrance.fr said.

Several unions are urging cabin staff to strike until the end of Wednesday, raising the prospect of serious disruption during what is a busy travel period. One of their grievances is a plan to reduce staffing on long-haul trips.

Tuesday, November 1 is a public holiday in France and many people take Monday off to extend the weekend break. It also falls during the mid-term school holidays.

Transport Minister Thierry Mariani denounced the strikers, saying they were shooting themselves in the foot by disrupting air traffic in a peak period.

"Management has been very clear. There is no threat of job cuts," he told LCI television. "If the company has problems, it's not a five-day strike at a big exodus time that will improve its image and competitiveness."

Air France's Michel Emeyriat, executive president of ground operations, said the unions' grievances were pure "fantasy" and accused them of irresponsibly insinuating that the airline was running flights with fewer cabin staff than required under safety regulations.

"This strike has no reason to exist," he said on BFM TV, adding that there had been few last-minute flight cancellations but that the airline was delivering on a forecast to run an 80 percent service.

Air France issued a statement last Thursday saying it could not understand union demands and was in fact considering recruiting rather than shedding staff. But the unions are unhappy with reorganization of flight staffing and say the carrier is adopting the policies of low-cost operators.

Shares in Air France-KLM, which is due to publish financial results on November 9, took a hit this week when a media outlet said it was preparing to issue a profit warning. The carrier said last Tuesday, in response to that media report, that it would not publish any financial information before November 9.

Air France-KLM, Europe's largest airline when measured by revenue, was formed by the merger in 2004 of Air France and Dutch carrier KLM. The industrial action concerns only the French side of the operation.

Another major world airline, Australia's Qantas Airways, grounded its entire fleet on Saturday in a bitter labor dispute.

(Additional reporting by Elizabeth Pineau)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111029/wl_nm/us_france_airline_strike

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Saturday, October 29, 2011

Wegmans recalls pine nuts over salmonella concerns

(AP) ? Wegmans Food Markets has recalled 5,000 pounds (2,260 kilograms) of pine nuts sold in the bulk foods department of its stores in New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Virginia, and Maryland after salmonella sickened 42 people.

The upscale grocery store chain says the pine nuts, imported from Turkey by Sunrise Commodities of Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, were sold between July 1 and Oct. 18.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that 26 people were sickened in New York, eight in Pennsylvania, four in Virginia, two in New Jersey and one person each in Arizona and Maryland. People began getting sick Aug. 20 and two patients were hospitalized, according to the CDC.

No deaths have been linked to the outbreak.

Salmonella bacteria can cause diarrhea, fever, and abdominal cramps. In some cases, the diarrhea may be so severe that the patient needs to be hospitalized.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/bbd825583c8542898e6fa7d440b9febc/Article_2011-10-27-Recall-Pine%20Nuts/id-c13eb23f5c1f4ceb8dd67c2fca0df404

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Convict's dad didn't get help for son after abuse (AP)

NEW HAVEN, Conn. ? The father of a man facing a possible death sentence for killing a woman and her two daughters in a brutal Connecticut home invasion told jurors Wednesday he didn't get his son psychological counseling after the boy was sexually molested by a foster teen he had taken into his house.

Benedict Komisarjevsky testified in the sentencing phase of the trial of his son, Joshua Komisarjevsky, who faces life in prison or the death penalty for his Oct. 13 convictions on capital felony killing, kidnapping, arson and sexual assault charges.

Co-defendant Steven Hayes was sentenced to death last year after he was convicted of raping and strangling Jennifer Hawke-Petit and killing her daughters, 11-year-old Michaela and 17-year-old Hayley, in their Cheshire home in 2007.

The girls died of smoke inhalation after they were tied to their beds and doused with gasoline before the house was set on fire. Joshua Komisarjevsky's convictions include the sexual assault of the younger girl.

The sentencing phase began Tuesday with Komisarjevsky's attorneys saying his ultra-religious family failed to get him proper help.

Benedict Komisarjesky, 63, said the foster teen was mentally retarded and had been abused before he moved in with the family. He said the teen was removed from their home after his wife discovered Joshua had been abused.

Asked if he got his son professional help, he said, "We didn't come to that point."

The elder Komisarjevsky, who admitted he was rigid in his beliefs and described practices such as speaking in tongues, also testified that he learned Joshua later had some type of sexual contact with his sister.

"We didn't know what to do," he said. "I don't remember doing anything."

Komisarjevsky said that years later when his son was 15 and hospitalized after setting a gas station on fire, he was opposed to Joshua receiving medication.

"We felt as though he didn't need any more drugs in his life," Komisarjevsky said. "We just felt as though it's like a crutch, use of drugs is a good opportunity for somebody to become dependent on those drugs and not try to work it out."

He said the hospital did not recommend psychological treatment. "That would have been a good idea if they offered that," he said.

Komisarjevsky said he sent his son to a religious residential treatment program in New Hampshire for troubled teens, and informed the staff of his son had been sexually abused. He said he wanted to get him away from negative influences in Connecticut.

Komisarjevsky said he and his wife Jude didn't believe they could have children when they adopted Joshua when he was 2-weeks-old.

"It was a miracle to us we were able to get a child at that age," he said. "Joshua was always a miracle to us."

The defense showed several photos of Joshua Komisarjevsky as a baby and later painting a white picket fence while wearing his father's oversized T-shirt. Another photo showed the younger Komisarjevsky with his birthday cake at around age 4 and the foster teen next to him.

Prosecutors challenged the relevance of the photos, and Judge Jon Blue asked at one point if there would be a limit to them.

Joshua Komisarjevsky's attorney asked why the couple took in the teen and another girl with severe issues after adopting Joshua and having a daughter of their own.

"Nobody else loved them," the father said. "They needed love. We felt we could supply them the love that they needed."

The elder Komisarjevsky said he accepted Christ as a teenager and his faith has dominated his life since then. Asked about his marriage to a woman who shared his beliefs, he said, "We would be equally yoked, like two oxen."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111026/ap_on_re_us/us_home_invasion

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Friday, October 28, 2011

Peru reopens probe of forced sterilizations (AP)

LIMA, Peru ? Peru's chief prosecutor's office has ordered the reopening of an investigation into the forced sterilizations of thousands of women during the 1990-2000 government of Alberto Fujimori.

Peru's new government informed the InterAmerican Commission of Human Rights this week that it is reviving the case. A previous government had shelved it.

Human rights groups say they have proof 2,000 women were forcibly sterilized, but they believe the number is as high as 200,000. Most lived in rural areas and rights groups say the sterilizations were accomplished through deception.

Fujimori is serving a 25-year prison sentence for rights abuses and corruption.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111028/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_peru_sterilizations

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Thursday, October 27, 2011

GOP seeking waiver of environmental laws at border (AP)

WASHINGTON ? Federal agents trying to patrol the U.S.-Mexico border say they're hampered by laws that keep them from driving vehicles on huge swaths of land because it falls under U.S. environmental protection, leaving it to wildlife ? and illegal immigrants and smugglers who can walk through the territory undisturbed.

A growing number of lawmakers are saying such restrictions have turned wilderness areas into highways for criminals. In recent weeks, three congressional panels, including two in the GOP-controlled House and one in the Democratic-controlled Senate, have moved to give the Border Patrol unfettered access to all federally managed lands within 100 miles of the border with Mexico.

Two of the panels expanded the legislation's reach to include the border with Canada.

The votes signal a brewing battle in Congress that will determine whether border agents can disregard environmental protections as they do their job.

Dozens of environmental laws were waived for the building of the border fence, and activists say this is just another conservative attempt to find an excuse to do away with environmental protections.

But agents who have worked along the border say the laws crimp their power to secure the border.

Zach Taylor, a retired Border Patrol agent who lives about nine miles from the Arizona-Mexico border, said smugglers soon learn the areas that agents are least likely to frequent.

"The (smuggling) route stays on public lands from the border to Maricopa County," Taylor said, referring to the state's most populous county. "The smugglers have free rein. It has become a lawless area."

Environmental groups said lawmakers lining up to support the legislation have routinely opposed the Endangered Species Act, the Safe Drinking Water Act and dozens of other laws, and they accused the lawmakers of using illegal immigration as the latest excuse to gut protections.

"For every problem that's out there in society, there's some extremists in Congress who say the solution is, `Well, let's roll back the environmental laws, let's open up the public lands,'" said Paul Spitler, spokesman for the Wilderness Society. "It doesn't comport to reality, but it fits their mindset that it's simply the environmental regulations that are holding back America."

Nearly 40 percent of the land on the U.S.-Mexico border and about a quarter of the land on the U.S.-Canadian border is public land, including Big Bend National Park in Texas and Glacier National Park in Montana. Driving is prohibited on those parts of the land that are designated wilderness areas.

Wildlife officials say vehicle use can be particularly hazardous in the desert. Water gathers in the tire tracks instead of in natural pools and evaporates more quickly, leading to less vegetation and less available food. Some areas, such as Big Bend and the desert farther west, are deadly to traverse in certain months and immigrants and smugglers avoid them.

The wilderness areas also have other restrictions on development. Border patrol agents, for example, must get permission from other federal agencies before maintaining roads and installing surveillance equipment. Federal auditors found it can take months to get that permission.

"What the Border Patrol says they really need down there is not necessarily more manpower or money," said Rep. Rob Bishop, R-Utah, whose bill easing the restrictions passed the House Natural Resources Committee along party lines. "They need more east-west access on those public lands."

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., sponsored an amendment that requires the Agriculture and Interior departments to give Border Patrol personnel immediate access to federal lands on the southern border for security activities, including for routine motorized patrols. The amendment passed a Senate committee with the support of five Democrats and eight Republicans.

McCain told colleagues that up to 100 people sit on mountaintops near the border serving as lookouts for smugglers, suggesting that improved law enforcement access on those mountains would deter the lookouts.

"What he says is absolutely true," said Democratic Sen. Mary Landrieu of Louisiana, who visited Arizona with McCain. "For the life of me, I can't understand the hesitancy on the part of Interior or Agriculture to provide access to border security guards."

Rep. Ben Quayle, R-Ariz., sponsored a similar amendment that extends the law to the Canadian border as well, and it passed by a voice vote, which is usually reserved for noncontroversial legislation.

During a House subcommittee hearing in April, Ron Vitiello, deputy chief of the U.S. Customs and Border Patrol, said he had "no complaints" about environmental laws.

But George McCubbin, president of the union that represents about 17,000 Border Patrol agents and support staff, likened current policy to telling city police officers they can't patrol a particular neighborhood.

"If they want to get serious about this problem on the border, they can't be restricting areas we go in," said McCubbin, who works in Casa Grande, Ariz. "Don't let us there and you have nothing but the bad element going through that area."

The Government Accountability Office, Congress' investigative arm, reported that supervisors at 17 of 26 Border Patrol stations along the Mexican border said access to federal lands had been limited because of environmental restrictions. Yet, the vast majority of the agents in charge also said that they were generally able to adjust their patrols without sacrificing effectiveness.

Democratic lawmakers and environmental groups cite the GAO's findings in arguing against giving the Border Patrol authority to operate as it sees fit on federal lands.

"The record is clear. The problem this bill claims to be solving does not exist," said Rep. Raul Grijalva, D-Ariz. "So, if this is not about border security, what is it about? It's about undermining fundamental environmental protections for millions of Americans."

Bishop said federal agents would be better stewards of sensitive lands than illegal immigrants and smugglers.

"What is so ironic is that the environmental degradation is not being done by the Border Patrol," Bishop said. "It's being done by the illegals who are coming across."

___

Associated Press writer Jacques Billeaud contributed to this report from Phoenix.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/mexico/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111027/ap_on_go_co/us_border_wilderness

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Third of News shareholders against Murdoch's sons

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? Shareholders registered their anger over News Corp.'s involvement in Britain's phone-hacking scandal, with more than a third of the ballots cast opposing the re-election of Rupert Murdoch's sons James and Lachlan to the company's board of directors.

The results released Monday from the company's annual meeting last week suggest that most shareholders not affiliated with the family are opposed to one of Murdoch's children taking control of the media conglomerate when its 80-year-old leader steps down.

"This is the autumn of the patriarch," British lawmaker Tom Watson, a Labour Party member of Parliament who attended the meeting in Los Angeles, said Monday. "The investors have chosen to send a signal that this company needs to be run on proper lines rather than like a family firm."

About 35 percent voted against James Murdoch, the chief executive of News Corp. International who approved payments to hacking victims, and 34 percent voted against Lachlan Murdoch. About 14 percent of shares were cast against CEO Rupert Murdoch, who founded the company with a single newspaper in Australia in 1952 and grew it into a media behemoth that owns The Wall Street Journal, Fox News and the 20th Century Fox movie studio.

The vote against the sons represents more than half of the cast ballots outside the control of either the Murdoch family trust, which has about 38 percent of the outstanding shares, or the family's key backer, Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, who has 7 percent.

Ballots representing about 17 percent of the company's voting shares were not cast.

News Corp. has come under fire following revelations of widespread phone hacking at its British tabloid, News of the World, including hacking the cellphone of missing 13-year-old girl Milly Dowler. A private investigator hired by the paper deleted Dowler's voicemails, giving the family and police false hope that she was alive, though she was later found murdered.

The company is also being investigated on allegations of police bribery and computer hacking.

The scandal has forced the resignation of two of London's top police officers, ousted top executives such as Dow Jones & Co. CEO Les Hinton, and claimed the job of Prime Minister David Cameron's former spokesman, Andy Coulson, an ex-News of the World editor.

Under the weight of criticism, News Corp. closed the tabloid and dropped its $12 billion bid for full control of British Sky Broadcasting.

Shareholders showed support for executives charged with cleaning up the mess. About 96 percent backed Joel Klein, a former U.S. assistant attorney general who became a company executive in July and who is directing the company's internal probe. Nearly 99 percent backed new board member James Breyer, a Silicon Valley venture capitalist who also serves on the boards of Facebook, Dell Inc. and Wal-Mart Stores Inc.

Many votes were cast against the incumbent directors including:

? 33 percent against Natalie Bancroft, an opera singer who joined the board at age 27 in 2007 as part of the Bancroft family's sale of Dow Jones & Co.;

? 32 percent against Andrew Knight, the chairman of the compensation committee and former head of the U.K. operations; and

? 30 percent against Arthur Siskind, a Murdoch adviser and the company's former general counsel.

Several corporate governance experts have criticized News Corp.'s two classes of shares ? voting and non-voting ? which allow the Murdoch family to control the company even though their voting shares account for less than 15 percent of the company's total $44 billion market value.

Still, the scandal has not severely damaged the share price, mostly thanks to a recent $5 billion share buyback plan that is about a third complete.

News Corp.'s shares rose 20 cents, or 1.1 percent, to close at $17.40 on Monday. That's still down about 3 percent since the phone hacking scandal broke in early July.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-10-24-News%20Corp-Shareholders/id-622812dfbd3d4b31873fbf5a46fa0ccf

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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

No. 2 Alabama rolls to 37-6 win over Vols, 37-6 (AP)

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. ? Alabama fans could finally move on from the big rival to the really big game.

Most of the 101,821 stuck around until the end of Saturday night's 37-6 rout of Tennessee, happily starting up the "LSU" chants with a couple of minutes left and roaring when the announcer mentioned the next game in two weeks.

Maybe the Crimson Tide (8-0, 5-0 Southeastern Conference) had LSU on their minds a little earlier than that.

AJ McCarron passed for 284 yards and a touchdown and ran for another score and led the Tide to a 31-0 second-half surge in a game that was tied at halftime.

"It was a little lackluster in the first half, which was a little concerning," Alabama coach Nick Saban said. "There was a concern going into the game, and something we tried to fight all week in terms of guys being focused on what's happening right now and not being concerned about the future.

"And challenging them to play and have respect for the team that they're playing."

The Volunteers (3-4, 0-4) earned that respect by playing the title contender even in the first half.

Then the Tide scored on its first five possessions after halftime to set up a two-week bonanza of hype ahead of Alabama's showdown with No. 1 LSU, which routed Auburn 45-19 in a game that ended shortly before this one kicked off.

"We weren't aware of the score," insisted Tide guard Alfred McCullough. "It had no affect at all."

Now, both SEC powers head into an open date.

As for head-to-head comparisons, the game didn't settle much. LSU beat the Vols last week 38-7 for the same margin.

Saban went on to request everyone to "chill out" with the LSU buildup. That's probably wishful thinking.

Alabama had either first downs or touchdowns on its first 10 plays of the second half to bust open a 6-6 game and let the pre-LSU hype start anew.

The Tide outgained the Vols 280-41 in the second half and the nation's No. 1 defense didn't allow a first down.

"We had a ton of ball left and we lost our spunk," Tennessee coach Derek Dooley said. "That was disappointing to see. We did what we said we weren't going to do and that's get affected if something bad happens in the game, and we lost our fight.

"When you lose your fight against a great football team, what happened in the second half is what is going to happen."

Trent Richardson scored two touchdowns in the second half but finished with 77 yards, leaving him tied with Shaun Alexander for the school mark of six straight 100-yard rushing games.

This one was more about the Tide righting itself from early struggles and overpowering an opponent than boosting Richardson's Heisman credentials.

The offense that sputtered along in the first half exploded for 21 points in the third quarter. The defense that let Tennessee sustain a couple of drives of double-digit plays for field goals before the half put the clamps on emphatically.

The end result was a ninth straight win by at least 16 points and a fifth straight defeat of the Volunteers.

McCarron was 17-of-26 passing though a string of 152 passes without an interception ? third longest in school history ? ended on his second attempt.

It also halted Alabama's string of 50 possessions with no turnovers. Plus, the Tide failed to score on either of its first two possessions for the first time this season.

Those were just aesthetic matters given the final score.

Marquis Maze had five catches for 106 yards, including a 69-yarder.

Matt Simms completed 8 of 17 passes for 58 yards and an interception for Tennessee a week after facing LSU's defense. Tauren Poole managed 67 yards on 19 rushes.

"It's unfortunate the way the second half unfolded," Simms said. "It's just something we have to continue to learn from. We have to remember that the game's not over after halftime."

Whatever Saban told McCarron and the Tide at halftime, it clearly worked.

"He jumped our butts about it," wide receiver Darius Hanks said. "He said we had to come out and play better. I saw something different in all of us, the look in our eyes."

McCarron completed his first four passes of the second half for 73 yards, then covered the final 2 yards himself for the game's first touchdown.

Dooley then summoned one of his five fourth-down gambles, this one in Tennessee territory. Simms was stuffed inches shy on a sneak.

McCarron struck instantly, hitting Kenny Bell in the end zone for a 39-yard touchdown. There was little doubt after that.

Richardson got his 16th rushing touchdown by shrugging off a couple of attempted arm tackles for a 12-yard score. He added a 1-yarder with 9:27 left before heading to the bench.

The Vols cashed in on fourth-down gambles on each of their first-half field goal drives, including a fake punt that set up Michael Palardy's 52-yarder to tie it at 6-all. It was Tennessee's longest field goal since Jeff Hall's 53-yarder against Oklahoma State in 1995 and the first second quarter points the Tide had allowed all season.

It was the last big play for the Vols, offensively or defensively. Then, McCarron and the Tide defense took over.

"In the first half, they were trying to stop the run early," Richardson said, "and we just had to come back in the second half and punch them in the mouth."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111023/ap_on_sp_co_ga_su/fbc_t25_tennessee_alabama

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Rustling costs ranchers millions in poor economy (Providence Journal)

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Agriculture officials warn Glendale residents about citrus pest

An aphid-like citrus pest with a history in Glendale has prompted another warning to residents to report infestations to state agricultural officials.

The Asian citrus psyllid is not harmful to humans, but it can be devastating to citrus trees if it is carrying a fruit-destroying disease that has no cure. The so-called greening disease, which so far has been kept from spreading north of the Mexico border, destroys the taste of fruit and kills the tree within five years, said Beth Grafton-Cardwell, a UC Riverside research entomologist based in the Central Valley.

The citrus psyllid, which can be difficult to spot, acts as a carrier for the disease, and if the pest hitches a ride north on produce transports into California, the effect would be "pretty devastating," she added.

The insect was first discovered in Glendale and other Los Angeles County cities two years ago, and officials said they were ramping up education efforts in affected areas as a coalition of agri-business groups and government agencies re-energize eradication programs.

Even as researchers and scientists work "fast and furious" on a possible vaccine, Grafton-Cardwell said, there is little defense other than tracking and trying to eradicate the bug to minimize its potential reach.

A huge infestation in the Los Angeles area has been gradually spreading in all directions, Grafton-Cardwell said, adding that although agricultural officials are working to contain the pest, "it's bigger than what they can really handle."

Officials called on homeowners and gardeners to report infestations to the California Department of Food and Agriculture's exotic-pest hotline at (800) 491-1899. "We want to encourage homeowners to do their part before it's too late," said Ted Batkin, president of the Citrus Research Board.

Officials recommend inspecting citrus trees monthly, or when watering or pruning, particularly during active growth or flushing. Researchers have deployed so-called sticky strips throughout the state in an effort to snare the pests as they spread.

Two types of insecticide are typically used to treat infestations, one of which is ground-based and absorbed by tree roots, Grafton-Cardwell said.

More information on how to identify the Asian citrus psyllid is available at http://www.californiacitrusthreat.org.

jason.wells@latimes.com

Source: http://feeds.latimes.com/~r/latimes/news/science/~3/IGYAetxu2a8/la-me-glendale-pest-20111023,0,2908905.story

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Monday, October 24, 2011

President Obama Brings End to Long Iraq War, US Troops to be Home for the Holidays

America?s long and deeply unpopular war in Iraq will be over by year?s end and all U.S. troops ?will definitely be home for the holidays,? President Barack Obama declared Friday.

Stretching more than eight years, the war cost the United States heavily: More than 4,400 members of the military have been killed, and more than 32,000 have been wounded.

The final exit date was sealed after months of intensive talks between Washington and Baghdad failed to reach agreement on conditions for leaving several thousand U.S. troops in Iraq as a training force. The U.S. also had been interested in keeping a small force to help the Iraqis deal with possible Iranian meddling.

The task now is to speed the pullout of the remaining U.S. forces, nearly 40,000 in number.

Staying behind in Iraq, where bombings and other violence still occur, will be some 150-200 U.S. military troops as part of embassy security, the defense attache?s office and the office of security cooperation. That?s common practice but still a danger to American forces.

Obama, an opponent of the war since before he took office, nevertheless praised the efforts of U.S. troops in Iraq. He said American soldiers would leave ?with their heads held high, proud of their success.?

For Obama, Friday?s announcement capped a remarkable two days of national security successes, though there?s no indication how much they will matter to re-election voters more concerned with economic woes at home.

On Thursday, the president heralded the death of Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi and a day later the end to one of the most divisive conflicts in U.S. history.

The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have cost the U.S. more than $1.3 trillion.

Obama did not declare victory.

He did speak, though, about the string of wins on his watch ? none bigger than the killing of Osama bin Laden, the al-Qaida leader behind the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. The Afghanistan war still rages, but there, too, Obama has moved to end the combat mission by the end of 2014.

This was, in essence, the third time Obama had pronounced an end to the war, allowing him to remind the nation he had opposed it all along ? a stance that helped his White House bid in 2008.

Shortly after taking office, Obama declared in February 2009 that the combat mission in Iraq would end by Aug. 31, 2010. And when that milestone arrived, he said it was ?time to turn the page? on Iraq and put the focus back on building up the United States. On Friday, he said: ?After nearly nine years, America?s war in Iraq will be over.?

The U.S.-led invasion of Iraq was launched in March of 2003 after reports, later discredited, that the country was developing weapons of mass destruction. By early April, American Marines were helping Iraqis pull down a statue of Saddam Hussein in Baghdad. Saddam was captured in December of that year and executed in 2006, but the war dragged on.

The ending was set in motion before Obama took office. In 2008, President George W. Bush approved a deal calling for all U.S. forces to withdraw by Dec. 31, 2011.

At issue was whether that deal would be renegotiated to keep thousands of U.S. forces in Iraq. The Obama administration and Iraqi government spent months debating whether the United States would keep troops to maintain a training force, to provide added stability in a country where spectacular attacks still occur, and to serve as a hedge against Iran.

Throughout the talks, Iraqi leaders refused to give U.S. troops immunity from prosecution in Iraqi courts, and the Americans refused to stay without that guarantee.

Obama never mentioned that issue on Friday.

He said that after speaking with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, both were in agreement on how to move forward. Obama said the two nations will now deal with each other in the normal fashion of sovereign countries and will keep open the idea of how the United States might help train and equip Iraqi forces.

?Over the next two months, our troops in Iraq, tens of thousands of them, will pack up their gear and board convoys for the journey home,? Obama said. ?The last American soldier will cross the border out of Iraq with their heads held high, proud of their success, and knowing the American people stand united in our support for our troops.?

The Associated Press first reported last week that the United States would not keep troops in Iraq past the year-end withdrawal deadline, except for some soldiers attached to the U.S. Embassy.

?Both countries achieved their goals,? said Iraqi government spokesman, Ali al-Moussawi. ?Iraq wanted full sovereignty while the United States wanted its soldiers back home, and both goals are achieved.?

In addition to remaining military forces, Denis McDonough, White House deputy national security adviser, said the U.S. will have 4,000 to 5,000 contractors to provide security for American diplomats.

Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said the United States will now ?turn our full attention to pursuing a long-term strategic partnership with Iraq based on mutual interests and mutual respect.? He said the goal is to establish a relationship with Iraq similar to other countries in the region.

?Iraq is a sovereign nation that must determine how to secure its own future,? Panetta said.

Obama?s announcement was applauded by congressional Democrats, including Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, who called it ?the right decision at the right time.?

Republicans were more skeptical. Many praised the gains made in Iraq and gave Obama at least partial credit but expressed concern that getting troops out would bring that progress into question.

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said he feared that ?all we have worked for, fought for and sacrificed for is very much in jeopardy by today?s announcement. I hope I am wrong and the president is right, but I fear this decision has set in motion events that will come back to haunt our country.?

GOP presidential hopeful Mitt Romney accused Obama of an ?astonishing failure? to secure an orderly transition in Iraq, and said, ?The unavoidable question is whether this decision is the result of a naked political calculation or simply sheer ineptitude in negotiations with the Iraqi government.?

The U.S. said repeatedly this year it would entertain an offer from the Iraqis to have a small force stay behind, and the Iraqis said they would like American military help. But as the year wore on and the number of American troops that Washington was suggesting could stay behind dropped, it became increasingly clear that a U.S. troop presence was not a sure thing.

The issue of legal protection for the Americans was the deal-breaker.

But administration officials said they feel confident that Iraqi security forces are well prepared to take the lead in their country.

McDonough said that one assessment after another of the preparedness of Iraqi forces concluded that ?these guys are ready; these guys are capable; these guys are proven; importantly, they?re proven because they?ve been tested in a lot of the kinds of threats that they?re going to see going forward.?

The president used the war statement to once again turn attention back to the economy, the domestic concern that is expected to determine whether he wins re-election.

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Source: http://www.openenterprisenews.com/2011/10/president-obama-brings-end-to-long-iraq-war-us-troops-to-be-home-for-the-holidays.html

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Sunday, October 23, 2011

Japan exports rise for 2nd month in recovery sign

FILE - In this May 31, 2011 file photo, cars for export are parked at a Yokohama port, south of Tokyo. Japan's exports rose 2.4 percent in September compared with a year earlier, marking the second consecutive month of growth, the Finance Ministry announced Monday Oct. 24, 2011. (AP Photo/Shizuo Kambayashi, File)

FILE - In this May 31, 2011 file photo, cars for export are parked at a Yokohama port, south of Tokyo. Japan's exports rose 2.4 percent in September compared with a year earlier, marking the second consecutive month of growth, the Finance Ministry announced Monday Oct. 24, 2011. (AP Photo/Shizuo Kambayashi, File)

(AP) ? Japan's exports rose for a second straight month in September, showing a recovery is underway from the tsunami disaster even as manufacturers face a strong yen and weak global economy.

The Finance Ministry said Monday that exports rose 2.4 percent from a year earlier in September. Exports had declined for five months in the wake of the March 11 earthquake and tsunami that devastated industry in northeast Japan.

The ministry said the value of September exports totaled 5.98 trillion yen ($78.2 billion), while imports came to 5.68 trillion ($74 billion), up 12 percent. That gave Japan a trade surplus of 300 billion yen ($4 billion).

The improvement in trade data comes amid growing worries about the health of the global economy as Europe struggles to resolve its chronic debt crisis and U.S. unemployment remains high.

Japanese manufacturers such as Toyota Motor Corp. are also being threatened by the strong yen, which can make their products more expensive in overseas markets.

The dollar has been hovering between 76 yen and 77 yen recently ? near record lows.

Exports to China, Japan's biggest overseas market, rose by 2.7 percent to 1.11 trillion yen ($14.5 billion).

Exports to the United States were nearly flat at 924.8 billion yen ($12.1 billion), an increase of 0.4 percent, while imports from the U.S. grew 1.8 percent to 485.4 billion yen ($6.4 billion).

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-10-23-AS-Japan-Trade/id-79af13ffaba64d118c7632ddcde057f8

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Samsung Galaxy Tab 7.0 Plus WiFi hitting the US November 13th for $400, available in 16GB for now

Nearly a month after its initial announcement, Samsung's ready to deliver the Galaxy Tab 7.0 Plus to the good ol' US of A just in time for the winter gift-giving season. The WiFi-only device, which packs a 1.2GHz dual-core CPU with 1GB of RAM, Android 3.2, 3MP camera with 720p HD video capture and a 7-inch LCD with 1024 x 600 resolution, will be begging for your credit card as of November 13th at Best Buy, Amazon and other retailers. Are you an early adopter? No prob -- you'll have the opportunity to pre-order yours at "select retailers" this coming Sunday, though no specific outlets were called out by name. The 16GB is the only version arriving so far, but Sammy told us to expect the 32GB flavor later this year or early 2012 (likely for $499, if yesterday's brief appearance on Amazon is any indicator). No word on partnerships with carriers yet, but we'll keep you posted on any updates. View the press release in all its glory below.

Continue reading Samsung Galaxy Tab 7.0 Plus WiFi hitting the US November 13th for $400, available in 16GB for now

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Saturday, October 22, 2011

Jobs questioned authority all his life, book says

This book cover image released by Simon & Schuster shows "Steve Jobs," by Walter Isaacson. (AP Photo/Simon & Schuster)

This book cover image released by Simon & Schuster shows "Steve Jobs," by Walter Isaacson. (AP Photo/Simon & Schuster)

FILE - In this Sept. 5, 2007, file photo, Apple CEO Steve Jobs introduces the Apple Nano in San Francisco. Walter Isaacson's authorized biography of Steve Jobs comes out on Oct. 24. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma, File)

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ? A new biography portrays Steve Jobs as a skeptic all his life ? giving up religion because he was troubled by starving children, calling executives who took over Apple "corrupt" and delaying cancer surgery in favor of cleansings and herbal medicine.

"Steve Jobs" by Walter Isaacson, to be published Monday, also says Jobs came up with the company's name while he was on a diet of fruits and vegetables, and as a teenager perfected staring at people without blinking.

The Associated Press purchased a copy of the book Thursday.

The book delves into Jobs' decision to delay surgery for nine months after learning in October 2003 that he had a neuroendocrine tumor ? a relatively rare type of pancreatic cancer that normally grows more slowly and is therefore more treatable.

Instead, he tried a vegan diet, acupuncture, herbal remedies and other treatments he found online, and even consulted a psychic. He also was influenced by a doctor who ran a clinic that advised juice fasts, bowel cleansings and other unproven approaches, the book says, before finally having surgery in July 2004.

Isaacson, quoting Jobs, writes in the book: "'I really didn't want them to open up my body, so I tried to see if a few other things would work,' he told me years later with a hint of regret."

Jobs died Oct. 5, at age 56, after a battle with cancer.

The book also provides insight into the unraveling of Jobs' relationship with Eric Schmidt, the former CEO of Google and an Apple board member from 2006 to 2009. Schmidt had quit Apple's board as Google and Apple went head-to-head in smartphones, Apple with its iPhone and Google with its Android software.

Isaacson wrote that Jobs was livid in January 2010 when HTC introduced an Android phone that boasted many of the popular features of the iPhone. Apple sued, and Jobs told Isaacson in an expletive-laced rant that Google's actions amounted to "grand theft."

"I will spend my last dying breath if I need to, and I will spend every penny of Apple's $40 billion in the bank, to right this wrong," Jobs said. "I'm going to destroy Android, because it's a stolen product. I'm willing to go thermonuclear war on this."

Jobs used an expletive to describe Android and Google Docs, Google's Internet-based word processing program. In a subsequent meeting with Schmidt at a Palo Alto, California, cafe, Jobs told Schmidt that he wasn't interested in settling the lawsuit, the book says.

"I don't want your money. If you offer me $5 billion, I won't want it. I've got plenty of money. I want you to stop using our ideas in Android, that's all I want." The meeting, Isaacson wrote, resolved nothing.

The book is clearly designed to evoke the Apple style. Its cover features the title and author's name starkly printed in black and gray type against a white background, along with a black-and-white photo of Jobs, thumb and forefinger to his chin.

The biography, for which Jobs granted more than three dozen interviews, is also a look into the thoughts of a man who was famously secret, guarding details of his life as he did Apple's products, and generating plenty of psychoanalysis from a distance.

Jobs resigned as Apple's CEO on Aug. 24, six weeks before he died.

Doctors said Thursday that it was not clear whether the delayed treatment made a difference in Jobs' chances for survival.

"People live with these cancers for far longer than nine months before they're even diagnosed," so it's not known how quickly one can prove fatal, said Dr. Len Lichtenfeld, deputy chief medical officer of the American Cancer Society.

Dr. Michael Pishvaian, a pancreatic cancer expert at Georgetown University's Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center, said people often are in denial after a cancer diagnosis, and some take a long time to accept recommended treatments.

"We've had many patients who have had bad outcomes when they have delayed treatment. Nine months is certainly a significant period of time to delay," he said.

Fortune magazine reported in 2008 that Jobs tried alternative treatments because he was suspicious of mainstream medicine.

The book says Jobs gave up Christianity at age 13 when he saw starving children on the cover of Life magazine. He asked whether his Sunday school pastor knew what would happen to them.

Jobs never went back to church, though he did study Zen Buddhism later.

Jobs calls the crop of executives brought in to run Apple after his ouster in 1985 "corrupt people" with "corrupt values" who cared only about making money. Jobs himself is described as caring far more about product than profit.

He told Isaacson they cared only about making money "for themselves mainly, and also for Apple ? rather than making great products."

Jobs returned to the company in 1997. After that, he introduced the candy-colored iMac computer, the iPod, the iPhone and the iPad, and turned Apple into the most valuable company in America by market value for a time.

The book says that, while some Apple board members were happy that Hewlett-Packard gave up trying to compete with Apple's iPad, Jobs did not think it was cause for celebration.

"Hewlett and Packard built a great company, and they thought they had left it in good hands," Jobs told Isaacson. "But now it's being dismembered and destroyed."

"I hope I've left a stronger legacy so that will never happen at Apple," he added.

Advance sales of the book have topped best-seller lists. Much of the biography adds to what was already known, or speculated, about Jobs. While Isaacson is not the first to tell Jobs' story, he had unprecedented access. Their last interview was weeks before Jobs died.

Jobs reveals in the book that he didn't want to go to college, and the only school he applied to was Reed, a costly private college in Portland, Oregon. Once accepted, his parents tried to talk him out of attending Reed, but he told them he wouldn't go to college if they didn't let him go there. Jobs wound up attending but dropped out after less than a year and never went back.

Jobs told Isaacson that he tried various diets, including one of fruits and vegetables. On the naming of Apple, he said he was "on one of my fruitarian diets." He said he had just come back from an apple farm, and thought the name sounded "fun, spirited and not intimidating."

Jobs' eye for simple, clean design was evident early. The case of the Apple II computer had originally included a Plexiglas cover, metal straps and a roll-top door. Jobs, though, wanted something elegant that would make Apple stand out.

He told Isaacson he was struck by Cuisinart food processors while browsing at a department store and decided he wanted a case made of molded plastic.

He called Jonathan Ive, Apple's design chief, his "spiritual partner" at Apple. He told Isaacson that Ive had "more operation power" at Apple than anyone besides Jobs himself ? that there's no one at the company who can tell Ive what to do. That, says Jobs, is "the way I set it up."

Jobs was never a typical CEO. Apple's first president, Mike Scott, was hired mainly to manage Jobs, then 22. One of his first projects, according to the book, was getting Jobs to bathe more often. It didn't work.

Jobs' dabbling in LSD and other aspects of 1960s counterculture has been well documented. In the book, Jobs says LSD "reinforced my sense of what was important ? creating great things instead of making money, putting things back into the stream of history and of human consciousness as much as I could."

He also revealed that the Beatles were one of his favorite bands, and one of his wishes was to get the band on iTunes, Apple's revolutionary online music store, before he died. The Beatles' music went on sale on iTunes in late 2010.

The book was originally called "iSteve" and scheduled to come out in March. The release date was moved up to November, then, after Jobs' death, to Monday. It is published by Simon & Schuster and will sell for $35.

Isaacson will appear Sunday on "60 Minutes." CBS News, which airs the program, released excerpts of the book Thursday.

___

Ortutay reported from New York. AP Technology Writer Peter Svensson in New York and AP Chief Medical Writer Marilynn Marchione in Milwaukee also contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2011-10-20-Steve%20Jobs-Book/id-96cfbcfaef684aacb387becfcd87be46

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