Wednesday, June 22, 2005


The Rooster

"Crowing"

"Okeydoke" Posted by Hello

Morning Papers

Michael Moore Today

http://www.michaelmoore.com/

If You Build It,They Will Come

June 22nd, 2005 12:51 pm
Iraq May Be Prime Place for Training of Militants, C.I.A. Report Concludes
By Douglas Jehl / New York Times
WASHINGTON, June 21 - A new classified assessment by the Central Intelligence Agency says Iraq may prove to be an even more effective training ground for Islamic extremists than Afghanistan was in Al Qaeda's early days, because it is serving as a real-world laboratory for urban combat.
The assessment, completed last month and circulated among government agencies, was described in recent days by several Congressional and intelligence officials. The officials said it made clear that the war was likely to produce a dangerous legacy by dispersing to other countries Iraqi and foreign combatants more adept and better organized than they were before the conflict.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/index.php?id=3087

Skills Refined In the Field

June 22nd, 2005 1:03 pm
Iraqi Rebels Refine Bomb Skills, Pushing Toll of G.I.'s Higher
By David S. Cloud / New York Times
WASHINGTON, June 21 - American casualties from bomb attacks in Iraq have reached new heights in the last two months as insurgents have begun to deploy devices that leave armored vehicles increasingly vulnerable, according to military records.
Last month there were about 700 attacks against American forces using so-called improvised explosive devices, or I.E.D.'s, the highest number since the invasion of Iraq in 2003, according to the American military command in Iraq and a senior Pentagon military official. Attacks on Iraqis also reached unprecedented levels, Lt. Gen. John Vines, a senior American ground commander in Iraq, told reporters on Tuesday.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/index.php?id=3088

World Tribunal on Iraq

http://www.worldtribunal.org/main/?

June 23 - 27, 2005. Istanbul, Turkey.



Minneapolis Star Tribune.

Storm turns day to night across state
Staff Reports
June 21, 2005 STORM0621
A one-two punch of strong wind and heavy rain socked much of the Twin Cities and central Minnesota Monday -- downing trees, flooding roads, flipping boats and cutting power to thousands of residents from Fergus Falls to the metro area.
Packing winds of up to 70 miles per hour, the system raced across the state starting late Monday morning and weakened several hours later after blowing through the Twin Cities.
At about 2 p.m., the sky was so dark and the winds so strong that takeoffs and landings at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport were halted for nearly a half hour.
Wind damage also was reported in south Minneapolis, and several boats were overturned on Lake Calhoun.
No injuries were reported.
By midafternoon, the National Weather Service issued flash-flood warnings in the seven-county metro area as rain fell in some places at an estimated rate of 2 inches per hour.

http://www.startribune.com/stories/127/5466393.html

Locks reopen for recreational boaters
Associated Press
June 21, 2005 LOCKS0621
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has reopened its Minneapolis locks and dams to recreational boaters.
The locks and dams were closed on June 14 due to high flows. The flows dropped below the threshold for boating this morning.
Officials warn boaters that the flows are still high and that debris remains in the water.
The locks affected included the upper and lower Saint Anthony Falls locks and dams and Lock and Dam 1, across from the Ford Plant on the Minneapolis side of the river.

http://www.startribune.com/stories/462/5466342.html

St. Louis Park grads: Time for quick quiz
Allie Shah, Star Tribune
June 21, 2005 DEADBEAT0621
?
?
Hey, you, with the nice job and the college diploma!
Yeah, you, the one who graduated from St. Louis Park High in the 1960s, '70s, '80s or early '90s.
Remember that money you borrowed from the school to pay for college and never paid back?
Well, the school wants it back and is looking for you.
Don't worry. You're not the only deadbeat out there. Hundreds of graduates since 1962 received small loans at no interest through a special program created by the late Herb Lefler, a St. Louis Park attorney and former mayor with a soft spot for Park High students.
But with very few of you paying back your loans ranging from $150 to $4,000, the money is all but gone. Today, you all owe a combined $50,000. Whoa!

http://www.startribune.com/stories/462/5467402.html

A warm bienvenido to new consulate
Tom Horgen, Star Tribune
June 21, 2005 CONSUL0621
?
?
The doors didn't open until 8 a.m., but Tania Fernando wanted to make sure she wasn't left out in the rain when Minnesota's long-awaited Mexican consulate began business Monday on St. Paul's East Side.
Expecting a packed house, Fernando, 18, and her father arrived at 5 a.m.
Before Monday, Mexican immigrants living in Minnesota often drove to Chicago if they needed consular services. At the consulate there, they could request such documents as passports and official IDs.
Fernando and her father, Ramiro, of Burnsville, made that trip earlier this year.

http://www.startribune.com/stories/462/5467411.html

Editorial: Durbin's message/U.S. must end prisoner abuse
June 21, 2005 ED0621
Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., set off a firestorm last week when he compared U.S. treatment of prisoners at Guantanamo to practices employed by Nazis, Soviets, Pol Pot and their ilk. His remarks were condemned by the White House, the Pentagon, the Christian Coalition, the Veterans of Foreign Wars, Newt Gingrich (who called for his censure by the Senate) and by the entire right side of the talk radio/television/blog world. The heat got so bad that, late in the week, Durbin apologized if his remarks had been "misunderstood." They weren't, and Durbin should not have apologized.
Instead, the senator should have hit back hard, just as the Amnesty International did when its comparison of Guantanamo to the Soviet gulag was attacked. By caving in, Durbin did just what the orchestrated right-wing smear effort required to succeed: It made him the story rather than focusing further attention on the outrageous violations of international law and human rights being perpetrated in Guantanamo and elsewhere in the name of the American people.

http://www.startribune.com/stories/1519/5467045.html

Dick Durbin: Question is one of treatment, not location
June 21, 2005 DURBIN0621
From the loud denunciations he provoked, you’d think that Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., had called President Bush a Nazi. The assistant minority leader’s speech last week was indeed a strong challenge to the Bush administration, but the context was quickly lost in the uproar over one paragraph. For readers who might like to see what the fuss is about, here’s a substantial portion of Durbin’s text.
Mr. President, there has been a lot of discussion in recent days about whether to close the detention center at Guantanamo Bay. This debate misses the point. It is not a question of whether detainees are held at Guantanamo Bay or some other location. The question is how we should treat those who have been detained there. Whether we treat them according to the law or not does not depend on their address. It depends on our policy as a nation.

http://www.startribune.com/stories/1519/5467069.html

Journalist's reports of atomic aftermath emerge, 60 years later
Louise Story, New York Times
June 20, 2005 NAGA0620
Initial American reports of the devastation caused by the use of an atomic bomb against Nagasaki, Japan, have finally been published, almost 60 years after they were written.
In September 1945, a few weeks after the war ended, George Weller, a correspondent for the Chicago Daily News (now defunct), sneaked into Nagasaki, an industrial city more than 600 miles southwest of Tokyo, ahead of American ground forces. He wrote dozens of articles detailing the effects of the atomic bomb dropped there on Aug. 9.
Although he skirted U.S. authorities to get into Nagasaki, Weller submitted his reports -- the first dated Sept. 6 -- to U.S. military censors, as required. The stories infuriated Gen. Douglas MacArthur, who ordered them quashed. For much of his stay in Nagasaki, Weller didnt know the articles were never published.

http://www.startribune.com/stories/484/5465435.html

continued . . .

June 21, 2005. Bradenton, Florida. It never ceases to amaze me how much citizens of this country and around the world are able to pick up on a regular basis. But. When the sky goes dark I guess it's a natural reaction to look upward.
 Posted by Hello

June 21, 2005. Brandenton, Florida.  Posted by Hello

June 20, 2005. Ottertail, Minnesota. This is the original photo. Photographer states: This was taken at about 10 in the morning. About a half hour earlier..it was sunny and warm out.. This was the start of a lot of damage.
 Posted by Hello

June 20, 2005. Ottertail, Minnesota. Posted by Hello

June 20, 2005. Ottertail, Minnesota. Posted by Hello

June 20, 2005. Ottertail. Minnesota. This photo just astounded me. The storm took the sunlight away. It must have been terrifying. Posted by Hello

June 20, 2005. Ottertail, Minnesota at 10 AM when the storm arrived. ENHANCED PHOTO.
 Posted by Hello

June 20, 2005. Ottertail, Minnesota. Imagine the shock of walking out the back door into a new pond. Photographer states: About seven inches of water was standing in the backyard when the storm finished.

 Posted by Hello

June 20. 2005. Ottertail, Minnesota. The driveway is now mud and slippery leaves. This home got hit really bad.  Posted by Hello

June 20, 2005. Ottertail, Minnesota. This is a Grand AM that ain't so grand anymore. It has a tree on top of it causing a 'sprung' passenger door. It's not a good sign.  Posted by Hello

June 20, 2005. Ottertail, Minnesota. The heaviest part of the tree is right on the bumper and levered back on the roof. The only things worth saving looks like the tires and rims. Global Warming is expensive. Posted by Hello

June 20, 2005. Ottertail, Minnesota. The Jeep is creased in half by the tree blown over in the storm. This was a wicked storm. I am amazed no one died. Posted by Hello

June 20, 2005. The Storm (The red spot.). Posted by Hello

June 20, 2005. Calgary, Canada. The flooding continues from the already flooded towns of yesterday. Posted by Hello

June 20, 2005. Calgary, Canada. Posted by Hello

June 20. 2005. Calgary, Canada. Posted by Hello

June 20. 2005. Calgary, Canada. A flooded yard. Look at the power that water is flowing to cause waves. This flooding we are experiencing is very dangerous. That water in that yard would pull the strongest man under. Stay out of these waters, their undertow and velocity are unknown. There are no lifeguards. Only enter when all other prospects are exhausted and be prepared to swim. Global Warming and Climate Change is very dangerous. Posted by Hello

JUne 20, 2005. Calgary, Canada. A fenced yard. Posted by Hello

June 20, 2005. Calgary, Canada. Posted by Hello

Morning Papers - concluding

The Cheney Observer

He didn't fool himself. He LIED to us !!

How Cheney Fooled Himself


By E. J. Dionne Jr.

Tuesday, June 21, 2005; Page A21

President Bush planted the seeds of the destruction of his Iraq policy before the war started. Salvaging the venture will require an unprecedented degree of candor and realism from a White House that was never willing to admit -- even to itself -- how large an undertaking it was asking the American people to buy into.

The notion that the president led the country into war through indirection or dishonesty is not the most damaging criticism of the administration. The worst possibility is that the president and his advisers believed their own propaganda. They did not prepare the American people for an arduous struggle because they honestly didn't expect one.

How else to explain the fact that the president and his lieutenants consistently played down the costs of the endeavor, the number of troops required, the difficulties of overcoming tensions among the Sunnis, the Shiites and the Kurds? Were they lying? The more logical explanation is that they didn't know what they were talking about.

Because the White House failed to prepare Americans for what was to come, the administration now faces a backlash. Over the weekend Bush said that the terrorists in Iraq were seeking to "weaken our nation's resolve." But the rising impatience about which Bush complains is a direct result of the administration's blithe dismissal of those who warned just how tough the going could get.

The assertion of the "Downing Street Memo" that "the intelligence and facts were being fixed around the policy" of invasion has understandably become a rallying point for the war's opponents. But in some ways more devastating are other recently disclosed documents in which British officials warned that "there was little discussion in Washington of the aftermath after military action." The British worried at the time that "U.S. military plans are virtually silent" on the fact that "a postwar occupation of Iraq could lead to a protracted and costly nation-building exercise."

The most damaging document supporting this claim is not secret, and remains one of the most important artifacts of the prewar debate. It is the transcript of "Meet the Press" from March 16, 2003, in which Vice President Cheney gave voice to the administration's optimistic assumptions that have now been laid low by reality.

Host Tim Russert asked whether "we would have to have several hundred thousand troops there" in Iraq "for several years in order to maintain stability." Cheney replied: "I disagree." He wouldn't say how many troops were needed, but he added that "to suggest that we need several hundred thousand troops there after military operations cease, after the conflict ends, I don't think is accurate. I think that's an overstatement."

Russert asked: "If your analysis is not correct, and we're not treated as liberators but as conquerors, and the Iraqis begin to resist, particularly in Baghdad, do you think the American people are prepared for a long, costly, and bloody battle with significant American casualties?"
Cheney would have none of it. "Well, I don't think it's likely to unfold that way, Tim, because I really do believe that we will be greeted as liberators. I've talked with a lot of Iraqis in the last several months myself, had them to the White House. . . . The read we get on the people of Iraq is there is no question but what they want [is to] get rid of Saddam Hussein and they will welcome as liberators the United States when we come to do that."

Russert: "And you are convinced the Kurds, the Sunnis, the Shiites will come together in a democracy?"

Cheney: "They have so far." And the vice president concluded: "I think the prospects of being able to achieve this kind of success, if you will, from a political standpoint, are probably better than they would be for virtually any other country and under similar circumstances in that part of the world."

Was Cheney disguising the war's costs for political purposes? It's more likely that he believed every word he said. That suggests that the administration was not misleading the American people nearly so much as it was misleading itself.

Republican Sen. Chuck Hagel of Nebraska says in the current issue of U.S. News & World Report that "the White House is completely disconnected from reality" and that "it's like they're just making it up as they go along." Unfortunately, the evidence of the past suggests that Hagel's acerbic formulation may be exactly right. Those who still see the invasion of Iraq as a noble mission don't need to protect the policy from the war's critics. They need to rescue it from its architects.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/20/AR2005062001177.html

It's a darn shame Bush still hasn't learned how to get along with and play well with others. Maybe he was one of those ADHD kids in the faith based Pre-School that always got kicked out leaving him with self esteem issues. You suppose?

Bush Pushes Anew for Bolton Confirmation
Monday June 20, 2005 9:46 PM
AP Photo WHRE103
By DOUGLASS K. DANIEL
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Republicans struggled to overcome Democratic delays and push U.N. nominee John R. Bolton to a Senate vote on Monday, while the White House left open the possibility that President Bush would install Bolton temporarily on his own.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldlatest/story/0,1280,-5087077,00.html

THOMAS OLIPHANT
Patience running short on Iraq
By Thomas Oliphant, Globe Columnist June 21, 2005
WASHINGTON
THERE IS A reason why President Bush's aides are scrambling to come up with fresh justifications for the violence in Iraq, which mocks the latest protestations from the top that all is well.
Bush has not just had a run of lousy polling results on his presidency, leadership, credibility, and his handling of the war. The political byproducts of three years of propaganda contradicted by the hard news of ceaseless insurgency are now coming as well from a Republican Congress that is beginning to stir.

http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2005/06/21/patience_running_short_on_iraq/

Neil Cavuto is an idiot. If one is paying $1.59 a few months ago and is now paying $.50 more without a pay increase at the same rate at the same time, then YOU MORON, it's INFLATIONARY regardless of how you idiots work it out on Wall Street !! There is so little link between society and it's poor economy and Wall Street these days it's seems surreal. Neil Cavuto is FOX right? That figures. The live in the Aussie Dimension where all reality ends with, "Good day, mate. FOSTERS !!" It seems so Bush.

Wall Street Isn't Worrying About High Gas Prices, So You Shouldn't Either
In Bush-world, deficits don't matter, the insurgency in Iraq is in its "last throes," there is no global warming and the price of oil ain't no biggie. As Neil Cavuto is fond of saying (over and over again), oil would have to hit $80.00 a barrel in order to be "adjusted for inflation" and to cost as much as it did in the l970's. So relax already, right?

http://www.newshounds.us/2005/06/20/wall_street_isnt_worrying_about_high_gas_prices_so_you_shouldnt_either.php

Buyout leaves future up in air
Sarah Rabil
Staff Writer
Tuesday, June 21, 2005
A Farm Service Agency official estimates that 99.9 percent of Rockingham County tobacco growers and quota owners signed up to receive their cut of a federal tobacco buyout.
And the quota buyout has left the future of tobacco growing in the area uncertain.

http://www.reidsvillereview.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=RVR/MGArticle/RVR_BasicArticle&c=MGArticle&cid=1031783406445&path=!frontpage

Reidsville police probe break-ins
Michael Pucci
Staff Writer
Tuesday, June 21, 2005
Reidsville police investigated two break-ins to the Smith Stokes dealership on Barnes Street last Monday, according to reports.
At 7:30 a.m., the Chrysler-Dodge-Jeep half of the dealership reported that some employees came into work and found a white Jeep with the driver's side window broken and the radio stolen.

http://www.reidsvillereview.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=RVR%2FMGArticle%2FRVR_BasicArticle&c=MGArticle&cid=1031783406600&path=!frontpage

Younts takes fifth at Forest Oaks
Steve Cannuli
Sports Editor
Sunday, June 19, 2005

GREENSBORO – Drew Younts of Stokesdale could not make one last run at the top of the leaderboard Friday at the American Junior Golf Association Invitational held at Forest Oaks Country Club.
Younts, who entered the final round one stroke behind leader Roberto Galletti, Jr. of Clayton, Calif., fired a closing round 74. He finished with a tournament total of 281 (-7).
Galletti, Jr. could not hang on either, as Daniel Woltman of Beaver Dam, Wis., won his first American Junior Golf Association Invitational in a sudden-death playoff over the Clayton, Calif.-native. Woltman and Galletti, Jr. finished the FootJoy Boys Invitational with scores of 10-under-par 278.

http://www.reidsvillereview.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=RVR%2FMGArticle%2FRVR_BasicArticle&c=MGArticle&cid=1031783376846&path=!frontpage

Americans Are Finally Waking Up to the Failure of U.S. Policy in Iraq
June 20, 2005
Ivan Eland
Although the American people slept through the facile national debate about whether the Bush administration should invade Iraq and the post-invasion unraveling of justifications for doing so, the public is finally waking up to the nightmare of U.S. policy in Iraq. And their representatives in Congress, many of whom were previously hiding in the bushes, are now beginning to get the courage to finally speak out.
A recent New York Times poll shows how low support for the Bush administration’s adventure in Iraq has sunk. Sixty percent of the American public thinks that the U.S. effort to bring stability to Iraq is going badly, fifty-nine percent disapprove of the way President Bush is handling the situation, and 51 percent now believe that the United States should have stayed out of Iraq in the first place. All of these measures of support for the war effort have gradually deteriorated over time and can be expected to decline further as the carnage continues.

http://independent.org/newsroom/article.asp?id=1524

Strike a success: Petroleum dealers
Monday, 20 June , 2005, 18:58
Shimla: All petrol pumps in the state remained closed today to press for the increase in commission on sale of petrol and diesel, a spokesman for the Federation of All India Petroleum Traders (FAIPT) said.

http://sify.com/finance/fullstory.php?id=13877132

'
This Day (Lagos)
INTERVIEW
June 19, 2005
Posted to the web June 20, 2005
Cletus Akwaya
Lagos
Halliburton, the US multi-national company has been in Nigeria since 1959 offering essentially oil exploration services and in the later 1990s got involved in the construction of the NLNG at Bonny under the TSKJ consortium. In the last few years, however, the company has been in the news for all negatives purposes.
It has some problems on tax with the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), some of which have been subject of litigation in the law courts.

http://allafrica.com/stories/200506201368.html

French and U.S. probe Halliburton:-
UK backs oil firm despite bribery inquiry
Halliburton arm gets $10m DTI loan guarantee
David Leigh
Tuesday June 21, 2005
The Guardian
The controversial oil firm Halliburton has been awarded new British government backing, despite being at the centre of a bribery investigation, the Guardian can disclose.
Halliburton's British arm, Kellogg, Brown & Root (KBR), is being supported in an oilfield deal in Kazakhstan with a $10m (£5.5m) loan guarantee from the Department of Trade and Industry.
This is despite the fact that KBR recently received British government loan guarantees for a large gas plant deal in Nigeria now alleged to have been corrupt. In that case, evidence came to light that $180m in back-door payments was going to Nigerian officials.

http://politics.guardian.co.uk/economics/story/0,11268,1510898,00.html


PARIS June 20, 2005 7:11:18 PM IST

Justice officials from France and the United States are cooperating in a Halliburton inquiry regarding an oil project in Nigeria.
According to a Monday report in the French daily Le Figaro, French Judge Renaud Van Ruymbeke and other French officials had a lengthy meeting last week with representatives of the U.S. Justice Department's anti-corruption department.

http://news.webindia123.com/news/showdetails.asp?id=90051&cat=World

Soldiers' sustenance, teen's abstinence
BY NOEL HOLSTON
STAFF WRITER
June 21, 2005
First it was that silly rabbit Buster bounding up to Vermont and acting like it was no big deal for a gaggle of kids to have two mommies. Now here's "Frontline" nosing around in Iraq and suggesting that Halliburton and other private contractors are inflaming the Iraqi populace, not to mention keeping lousy books. And here's "P.O.V." lionizing a Texas teenager who doesn't see any inconsistency in her personal virginity and her belief that her high school can't afford to teach abstinence alone.
What's PBS trying to do, start an outbreak of open-mindedness? An epidemic of questioning? Let us hope and pray.
"Private Warriors" is the most extensive report to date by any network, broadcast or cable, about the private companies that are providing everything from bodyguards to catering in Iraq. And that includes, in some cases, bodyguards for caterers.
Talking with correspondent Martin Smith, retired Marine Col. Thomas X. Hammes criticizes the "misguided luxury" at bases such as Camp Anaconda that he believes puts private workers needlessly at risk, even as it fans resentment among Iraqis who'd be glad to have clean water.

http://www.newsday.com/entertainment/tv/ny-ettvtwo4312520jun21,0,4563553.story

Gov. Bush Changes Election Laws

http://www.am850.com/news/archives/001716.asp

FL Governor Jeb Bush Speaks at AR Republican Fundraiser
June 20, 2005 -- Posted at 6:26 pm CDT
LITTLE ROCK (AP) _ Florida Governor Jeb Bush is scheduled to speak tonight night at an Arkansas Republican Party fundraising event honoring Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee.

http://www.kait8.com/Global/story.asp?S=3498336&nav=0jshbFPI

White House defends Cheney - Iraq insurgency in "last throes"

WHITE HOUSE The White House is defending Vice President Cheney's assertion that the Iraq insurgency is in its "last throes."
And White House officials reject a top G-O-P senator's assertion that administration claims on Iraq are "completely disconnected from reality."
The senator -- Nebraska's Chuck Hagel -- says in a magazine interview the reality is that America is "losing in Iraq."
However, Press Secretary Scott McClellan says President Bush is optimistic -- and he gets his information direct from U-S commanders. He says Iraqi security forces are getting "better each week" at thwarting insurgent attacks.
Meantime, the spokesman says the administration stands by Cheney's assessment of Iraq in a recent T-V interview. McClellan says the terrorist and regime elements there are clearly desperate -- since they've got nothing to offer but chaos and death.

http://www.kasa.com/Global/story.asp?S=3499330

All Africa


Côte d'Ivoire: Mbeki Calls Another Summit to Try to Salvage Peace ProcessJune 20, 2005Posted to the web June 20, 2005DakarWith the peace process in Cote d'Ivoire running into fresh difficulties and the rebels once more resisting pressure to disarm, international mediator and South African president Thabo Mbeki has called the warring factions to a new summit."The president proposed the 25th and 26th (of June) as the dates but all the parties can't make it. Therefore arrangements are being made to find another suitable date," Mbeki's spokesman Bheki Khumalo was quoted as saying by Agence France Presse.

http://allafrica.com/stories/200506201023.html

Burundi: Violence, Tension As Parliamentary Poll Campaigns Get Under WayBujumburaCampaigning for legislative elections in Burundi entered its third day on Monday, already marked by tension and violence following the killing of three people, among them two candidates, in the capital, Bujumbura.A woman and the two candidates, members of President Domitien Ndayizeye's FRODEBU party, died in a grenade blast on Saturday in a bar in Kamenge neighbourhood, in the northern part of the capital. They were from a political rally.

http://allafrica.com/stories/200506200478.html

Investment in Africa May Prove a Battle As U.S. Trust Runs LowJune 20, 2005Posted to the web June 20, 2005Jonathan KatzenellenbogenJohannesburgEARLIER this month in Cape Town the World Economic Forum summit gave a resounding endorsement of Commission for Africa proposals for debt relief, doubling of aid, and enlarged trade access for the continent.But that will not be the case this week at the biannual meeting of the US Corporate Council on Africa in Baltimore.

http://allafrica.com/stories/200506201346.html

AU Begins Peer ReviewPosted to the web June 20, 2005Josephine LohorAbujaConsiders Ghana, RwandaAfrican Union leaders yesterday in Abuja examined the report of the African Peer Review panel which specifically looked at progress in two of its member countries.

http://allafrica.com/stories/200506200129.html

Namibia Deserves Aid, Debt Relief, Despite 'Mid-Income' Status, Says President PohambaWashington, DCHifikepunye Pohamba, who three months ago became Namibia's second president since independence in 1990, was one of five African leaders who met with President George Bush at the White House on June 13. Pohamba succeeded the founding head of state, Sam Nujoma, who led a decades-long struggle against South African rule. Pohamba, a long time aide to Nujoma in Swapo, the ruling party, has emphasized continuity while also outlining a range of priorities for his administration. As minister of lands in the last Nujoma cabinet, he had responsibility for the complicated issue of addressing the expectations of the landless majority without alienating the wealthy, white populace and outside donors. "Land expropriation does not mean confiscation, but means selling land to the government at fair prices as provided in the constitution and the relevant laws," Pohamba said, just before he assumed office in March. While in Washington, DC this week, he reaffirmed to members of the Congressional Black Caucus that he is committed to a policy that redistributes land, follows legal procedures and is fair to all parties.In an interview with AllAfrica, Pohamba discussed a number of other issues he is facing as the new leader.

http://allafrica.com/stories/200506171069.html

Fish Industry Crisis Claims Veteran FirmThe Namibian (Windhoek)Werner MengesWindhoekA 58-year-old stock exchange-listed company this week became the latest victim of the deep financial malaise that has gripped Namibia's fishing industry.

http://allafrica.com/stories/200506170042.html

Tourism Says It With FlowersThe Namibian (Windhoek)Maggi BarnardWindhoekACCOMMODATION establishments in Namibia are often placed in beautiful, but also ecologically sensitive areas, posing a serious threat of permanent damage to the environment.

http://allafrica.com/stories/200506160011.html

Six Oil Workers KidnappedPaul Ibe And Onwuka NzeshiAbuja/WarriGroup demands $20m ransomThe Niger Delta yesterday relapsed into violence as six oil workers including two German employees of Bilfinger and Berger, an oil service firm working with the Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC), were kidnapped and held hostage by some armed youths. The hostages, THISDAY learnt, are currently being detained in a remote location in the creeks of Ekeremor, an Ijaw community in Bayelsa State.

http://allafrica.com/stories/200506160137.html

N-Delta: Kidnapped Oil Workers FreedVanguard (Lagos)June 19, 2005Posted to the web June 20, 2005Emma Amaize and Sam OyadonghaTHE six workers of Bilfinger Berger (B+B) Nigeria Limited: two German expatriates and four Nigerians, who were kidnapped, last Wednesday, by militant youths from Iduwuni kingdom in Ekeremor local government area of Bayelsa State, were released, yesterday afternoon, three days after they were taken hostage.

http://allafrica.com/stories/200506200251.html

Debt Write-Off Good, Free Trade Better - ActivistsThe Monitor (Kampala)June 20, 2005Posted to the web June 20, 2005Despite the recent debt cancellation by the G8 for the poorest countries, aid agencies fear the deal could shift focus from other major issues. Badru Mulumba looks at the depth of this fear.

http://allafrica.com/stories/200506201534.html

Confab: North Threatens Boycott Over 25 Percent DerivationJune 17, 2005Posted to the web June 17, 2005Emmanuel AzikenAbuja* South-South insists on 25 percent benchmarkPROCEEDINGS at the on-going National Political Reform Conference were stalled for the second day running yesterday as some Northern delegates threatened their own boycott should the conference redress the perceived procedural errors in the adoption of the report on resource control that forced the walk out of the South-South delegation.

http://allafrica.com/stories/200506170104.html

The New Zealand Herald

Unusual conditions bring both heatwave and intense storms in UKBy Michael McCarthyUnusual meteorological conditions in the UK led to the topsy-turvy weather at the weekend, which saw torrential storms in the North contrast with bright sunshine and near-record temperatures in the South.A mass of very warm air from south of the Azores moved up over Britain late last week, bringing with it intense heat and humidity unusual for the UK in June.

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Flash floods devastate North YorkshireLocal volunteers help clear the flood damage in Sutton-under-Whitestonecliffe near Thirsk in North YorkshireBy Ian HerbertThompsons the butchers have traded for three generations and over 100 years from a shop perched precariously close to the River Rye in Helmsley, North Yorkshire.But nothing could prepare the family for the night when "the roads turned to rivers" - as their local vicar described the village's flash floods yesterday.


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Wood not going back to Iraq says his familyMELBOURNE - Freed hostage Douglas Wood stunned his family, and others, when he declared on his return to Australia that he may return to Iraq.Today, one day later, the engineer's family appeared to have snuffed out any plan he had to return to the country where insurgents kidnapped and threatened to execute him.

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South Africa to charge ex-deputy president ZumaThe national prosecuting authority have decided to bring criminal charges against South Africa's former Deputy President Jacob By Alistair ThomsonPRETORIA - South Africa's popular former deputy president Jacob Zuma will face corruption charges in a case that triggered his dismissal last week after an aide was convicted of bribing him, state prosecutors said today.

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N to probe Zimbabwe's evictions of squatter townsUNITED NATIONS - The United Nations is sending a special envoy to Zimbabwe to investigate a government crackdown on squatter settlements that aid workers say has left 200,000 people homeless.President Robert Mugabe's government says the clean-up campaign, dubbed "Operation Restore Order," is meant to get rid of structures that have sprouted around urban centres in the last few years and are seen as a haven for illegal traders in foreign currency and scarce food items.

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SOUNDS LIKE 'BUSH'S AMERICA.'Religious 'vote-rigging' buoyed fundamentalist candidateBy Angus McDowallAs Iran faces a stark choice between a conservative cleric and a hardliner in the presidential runoff, details emerged of a campaign by fundamentalists that has put Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in contention for the top office.Although many Iranians still believe Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani will score an easy win in Friday's voting, the last minute surge in support for the Tehran Mayor has put the result in serious doubt.


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Japan loses bid for secret whale votesBy Angela GregoryJapan suffered a major setback on the first day of the International Whaling Commission meeting in South Korea after losing a vote to allow secret ballots.New Zealand Conservation Minister Chris Carter said from the meeting last night that member countries had narrowly voted against the proposal, 30-27, despite Japan’s confidence it would succeed

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Dutch doctor in UK organ scandal found guiltyLONDON - A Dutch doctor at the centre of a British hospital scandal was found guilty of serious professional misconduct on Monday for removing organs from the bodies of 850 dead children without their parents' consent.The General Medical Council (GMC) ordered Professor Dick van Velzen be struck off the UK medical register after his actions at the Alder Hey Hospital in Liverpool, northern England.


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concluding . . .

June 19, 2005. Giraffes. Boynton Beach, Florida.  Posted by Hello

June 14, 2005. Syrian Brown Bear. Jerusalem, Israel Posted by Hello

Brookfield Zoo Wind Chime Posted by Hello