Sunday, March 16, 2008

Overwintering - Birds stop migration patterns due to Global Warming and Seasonal Confusion


Swallows fly huge distances to spend the winter soaking up the sun in Africa, returning to Britain in spring to nest and breed
But in a sign of the blurring of the seasons brought on by climate change, one of the birds has this year shunned migration to Africa and instead spent all winter in Britain....
Michael Moore Today

http://www.michaelmoore.com/

Winter Soldier - Iraq & Afghanistan

http://ivaw.org/


Cpl. Jon M. Turner, 3/8 Kilo Company, 1st Platoon,
U.S. Marine Corps (Fallujah, Iraq)
"He was innocent, I called him the fat man. He was walking back to his house and I killed him in front of his father and friend. My first shot made him scream and look into my eyes, so I looked at my friend and said, 'Well, I can't let that happen', and shot him again."

March 15th, 2008 6:22 pm
Rules of Engagement "Thrown Out the Window"
By Dahr Jamail /
IPS
SILVER SPRING, Maryland, Mar 15 - Garret Reppenhagen received integral training about the Geneva Conventions and the Rules of Engagement during his deployment in Kosovo. But in Iraq, "Much of this was thrown out the window," he says.
"The men I served with are professionals," Reppenhagen told the audience at a panel of U.S. veterans speaking of their experiences in Iraq and Afghanistan, "They went to Iraq to defend the U.S. But we found rapidly we were killing Iraqis in horrible ways. But we had to in order to remain safe ourselves. The war is the atrocity."
The event, which has drawn international media attention, was organised by Iraq Veterans Against the War. It aims to show that their stories of wrongdoing in both countries were not isolated incidents limited to a few "bad apples", as the Pentagon claims, but were everyday occurrences.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=11101


Video and photographic evidence in link
Saturday, March 15th, 2008
Winter Soldier LiveBlogging: Rules of Engagement II; Jon Turner
By Justin Cliburn /
Iraq Veterans Against the War
Jon Turner, a former Marine, begins his testimony by ripping off his combat medals and proclaiming "I don't work for you anymore!"
In the first video that Jon shows, his XO proclaims, "I think I just killed half the population of Ramadi; f**k the red tape!"
In the second, after the engagement was already over, the XO has called in a 500 pound bomb to destroy the area to send a message.
Jon once fired into a car he believed to be a suicide bomber . . . it was a man and his seven daughters.
Turner's unit also carried "drop weapons" in case they accidentally killed an innocent civilian.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/mustread/index.php?id=982


...until Sunday March 16th:

Winter Soldier: Iraq & Afghanistan
Winter Soldier: Iraq and Afghanistan will feature testimony from U.S. veterans who served in those occupations, giving an accurate account of what is really happening day in and day out, on the ground.
The four-day event will bring together veterans from across the country to testify about their experiences in Iraq and Afghanistan - and present video and photographic evidence. In addition, there will be panels of scholars, veterans, journalists, and other specialists to give context to the testimony. These panels will cover everything from the history of the GI resistance movement to the fight for veterans' health benefits and support.

http://ivaw.org/wintersoldier


Find a viewing event near you on the map

http://ivaw.org/wintersoldier/viewinglocations


Submitting Winter Soldier Events
Thank you for holding an event to support Winter Soldier! Please choose the type of event from the list below.

http://ivaw.org/wintersoldier/viewinglocations/submit


How to watch and listen to Winter Soldier

http://ivaw.org/wintersoldier/howtowatch


How to support Winter Soldier

http://ivaw.org/wintersoldier/support


"Just what do you think the purchase price is for that damage?"

Winter Soldier: Iraq and Afghanistan
please email
wintersoldierally@ivaw.org.

http://ivaw.org/wintersoldier/video


March 15th, 2008 7:55 pm
War Stories Echo an Earlier Winter
By Steve Vogel /
Washington Post
Grim-faced and sorrowful, former soldiers and Marines sat before an audience of several hundred yesterday in Silver Spring and shared their recollections of their service in Iraq.
The stories spilled out, sometimes haltingly, sometimes in a rush: soldiers firing indiscriminately on Iraqi vehicles, an apartment building filled with Iraqi families devastated by an American gunship. Some descriptions were agonized, some vague; others offered specific dates and locations. All were recorded and streamed live to the Web.
The four-day event, "Winter Soldier: Iraq & Afghanistan -- Eyewitness Accounts of the Occupations," is sponsored by Iraq Veterans Against the War and is expected to draw more than 200 veterans of the two wars through tomorrow. Timed for the eve of the fifth anniversary of the war's start next week, organizers hope the soldiers' accounts will galvanize public opposition.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=11102


Iraq War Veterans: Commanders Encourage War Crimes

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cwYvdyn3oRc


'I Love the Army But I Can't Be Quiet Anymore'

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZoWAkTOZGpQ



March 16th, 2008 3:54 am
Veterans recall horrors of war in live broadcast
By Anna Badkhen /
Boston Globe
CAMBRIDGE, MA - Liz Jackson's eyes were fixed on a screen showing a live broadcast of anguished testimonies by Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans describing what they had seen and done during their combat tours.
Jeffery Smith recalled how his Army unit beat and humiliated Iraqi prisoners. Former Marine Bryan Casler recounted how fellow Marines urinated and defecated into food and gave it to Iraqi children. Former Marine Matthew Childers talked about how he used to humiliate Iraqi civilians during predawn raids on their homes. When he described turning away an Iraqi father who was asking American troops to help the badly burned baby he carried in his arms, Jackson began to weep silently.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=11103


Saturday, March 15th, 2008
IVAW vs. DOD
Iraq Veterans Against the War
Response to Department of Defense Statement on Veterans’ Accounts of Military Occupations
Washington Post 3/15/2008:
A Defense Department spokesman said he had not seen the allegations raised yesterday, but added that such incidents are not representative of U.S. conduct.
"When isolated allegations of misconduct have been reported, commanders have conducted comprehensive investigations to determine the facts and held individuals accountable when appropriate," Lt. Col. Mark Ballesteros said.
War stories echo an earlier winter. Former soldiers, Marines share their experiences in Iraq and Afghanistan
Steve Vogel. Washington Post. 3/15/2008

http://www.michaelmoore.com/mustread/index.php?id=983


March 14th, 2008 7:34 pm
Military combs Island for Spring Break recruits
By James Osborne /
McAllen Monitor
Twenty-five push-ups will earn you a U.S. Army beach chair and a high-five from the recruiter in the tent across from a hotel bar.
Down the beach, U.S. Marine Corps recruiters cheer on young men in swim trunks trying to beat the day's chin-up record - 28 as of 2 p.m. Wednesday.
As college students descended on South Padre Island for Spring Break this week, so too did military recruiters, who like any good marketers never pass up the chance to reach out to their desired audience.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=11099


March 13th, 2008 7:19 pm
Bush says if younger, he would work in Afghanistan
By Tabassum Zakaria /
Reuters
WASHINGTON - U.S. President George W. Bush got an earful on Thursday about problems and progress in Afghanistan where a war has dragged on for more than six years but been largely eclipsed by Iraq.
In a videoconference, Bush heard from U.S. military and civilian personnel about the challenges ranging from fighting local government and police corruption to persuading farmers to abandon a lucrative poppy drug trade for other crops.
Bush heard tales of all-night tea drinking sessions to coax local residents into cooperating, and of tribesmen crossing mountains to attend government meetings seen as building blocks for the country's democracy-in-the-making.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=11090


March 13th, 2008 8:00 pm
War Protesters Briefly Shut Down Senate
(
The Politico) A handful of war protesters briefly shut down the Senate chamber this afternoon, yelling "stop the war" as they were forcibly removed from the Senate.
Ten protesters, who covered their faces in white gauze and chanted "I am the ghost of the Iraq war" managed to stand up one after another and disrupt the chamber's proceedings for about one minute. It took about 35 Capitol police officers to detain the protesters, who left the chamber with little resistance.
The protesters, who say they are from the National Campaign for Non-violent Resistance were processed and photographed in a hallway adjoining the Senate and shipped to the Capitol Police headquarters for booking. Reporters who tried to witness the scene were forced to leave the hallway where the protesters were arrested.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=11091



College Students, Veterans, Old Folks Shut Down Capitol Hill (VIDEOS)
Submitted by davidswanson on Wed, 2008-03-12 23:21.
Nonviolent Resistance
By David Swanson
Today was the day for
Stop-Loss Congress. We notified every Congress Member and Senator over the past two days that they were being stop-lossed and denied permission to leave until they end the occupation of Iraq. Today we took action. A group of activists dressed as Ghosts of War stood and spoke in the Senate and closed the place down - 10 arrests, I'm told.
Then groups of dozens of people, primarily college students, split up and blocked intersections and garage exits around the Hill. I went with a group of 40 or so to the intersection of Independence Ave. and 1st Street, which we blocked for a long time, with people and coffins and banners and megaphones. Dozens were arrested, most of them college students, some Vets for Peace and other old folks too. I shot video of the whole thing.

http://www.afterdowningstreet.org/stoplossvideos



Taking it to CAPITOL HILL
Ghosts of the Iraq War
Antiwar activists will gather on Capitol Hill on March 12, 2008, while Congress is still in session. Participants will be wearing "We Will Not Be Silent" tee shirts and other clothing to simulate being a ghost. These Ghosts of War will eventually announce, on an individual basis, "I am a ghost from the Iraq War. While I died needlessly, I am here to demand an end to the funding of the war so that others do not have to die."

http://www.iraqpledge.org/


Stop-Loss Congress
http://www.youtube.com/stoplosscongress


DISSENT: Voices of Conscience
GOVERNMENT INSIDERS SPEAK OUT AGAINST THE WAR IN IRAQ

http://www.voicesofconscience.com/


McCain Begins His Golden State Charge
Arizona Senator John McCain is making good on his promise to play in big blue California. He's heading this month to the Bay Area for some high-end fundraising.
McCain will star at a high ticket fundraising lunch on Wednesday, March 26 at the famed Inn at Spanish Bay in Pebble Beach, where it's clear the deep-pocketed donors are being courted bigtime.
To get on his ''California Advisory Team,'' according to the invite, a supporter will agree to raise $46,000 for Big John. That price gets them seating at his head table, and four tickets to a ''private reception with photo opportunity.''
Honorary co-chairs of this event include former California Secretary of State Bill Jones and State Sen. Abel Maldonado.

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/blogs/sfgate/detail?blogid=14&entry_id=24858


Tucked between Del Monte Forest and the Pacific shore among groves of tall Monterey pines, The Inn at Spanish Bay offers a luxurious enclave of 269 guest rooms and suites for golf enthusiasts and relaxation seekers alike.

http://www.pebblebeach.com/page.asp?id=1383


The Ritz Carlton San Francisco

http://www.ritzcarlton.com/en/Properties/SanFrancisco/Default.htm


"Which congressional district am I in?"
http://www.michaelmoore.com/sicko/what-can-i-do/boxscore/index.php?action=print


ACTION PAGE:
Tell Congress To Pass H.R. 676 Now
43,408 Submissions so far
Under H.R. 676
[Text of Bill], Medicare would be extended and improved so that all individuals residing in the United States would receive high quality and affordable health care services. They would receive all medically necessary services by the physicians of their choice, with no restrictions on what providers they could visit. If implemented, the United States National Health Insurance Act would cover primary care, dental, mental health, prescription drugs, and long term care.
The one click form below will send your personal message to all your government representatives selected below, with the subject "Pass H.R. 676." At the same time you can send your personal comments only as a letter to the editor of your nearest local daily newspaper if you like.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/sicko/what-can-i-do/petitions/pnum649.php


"Healthcare NOT Warfare"
http://pdamerica.org/articles/misc/2008-02-29-14-19-42-misc.php


GO SEE SiCKO by MC ARTIFICIAL -- ABBREVIATED VERSION

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LZSPSRcX3Qw


Be It Resolved: You Can Impeach the President
Official State Impeachment Text
Impeachment Text for Cities & Towns
Impeachment Text for County Democratic Committees
Impeachment Text for State Assemblies and/or Legislatures
Jefferson's Manual, Section LIII, 603
You Can Impeach the President

http://www.michaelmoore.com/mustread/index.php?id=622


Find Your Congressional District Impeachment Committee
http://www.democrats.com/cdic-find


Ten Reasons to Impeach George Bush and Dick Cheney
http://www.democrats.com/peoplesemailnetwork/88?ad=d1


The Impeachment Project
http://www.freewayblogger.com/impeachment_project2.htm

continued...

Line of anti-war marchers along Washington Blvd on February 8, 2003.
Photo by Scott Hess.

Iraq, March 16, 2003

President Bush: Monday "Moment of Truth" for World on Iraq
Press Availability with President Bush, Prime Minister Blair, President Aznar, and Prime Minister Barroso - the Azores, Portugal
5:30 P.M. (Local)
PRIME MINISTER BARROSO: Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. I am very pleased to welcome here in the Azores the leaders of three friends and allied countries, the United States, Spain and United Kingdom. President Bush, Prime Minister Aznar, and Prime Minister Tony Blair.
This meeting in the Azores also shows the importance of transatlantic relations, and also shows the solidarity among our countries. Actually, these agreements have approved two statements, one statement on transatlantic relations, and a declarative statement on Iraq.

http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2003/03/20030316-3.html



MR. TIM RUSSERT: Our issues this Sunday: the president leaves this morning for a final summit meeting on Iraq. What does he hope to achieve? How close are we to war? We know things are very serious when we hear from this man. In a rare Sunday morning interview—with us for the full hour, the vice president of the United States, Dick Cheney.
Mr. Vice President, welcome to MEET THE PRESS.
VICE PRES. DICK CHENEY: Good morning, Tim.
MR. RUSSERT: How close are we to war?

http://www.mtholyoke.edu/acad/intrel/bush/cheneymeetthepress.htm



THREATS AND RESPONSES: THE BIOTERROR THREAT; Health Data Monitored for Bioterror Warning
By WILLIAM J. BROAD AND JUDITH MILLER
Published: January 27, 2003
...Experts say the prospect of war with Iraq, and the chance that Baghdad might retaliate with germ weapons, are accelerating the effort to expand and integrate scores of rudimentary disease surveillance systems being developed by cities, states and the federal government. But public health experts argue that even if the United States never suffers another bioterror attack like the anthrax strikes of late 2001, the emerging network can still help doctors better track, treat and prevent natural disease outbreaks….

http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=990CE2DD1239F934A15752C0A9659C8B63&scp=138&sq=iraq+judith+miller+2003&st=nyt


THREATS AND RESPONSES: DISSENT; Tens of Thousands March Against Iraq War
By ERIC LICHTBLAU
Published: March 16, 2003
In what many saw as a last chance to head off military action, tens of thousands of antiwar protesters marched in several demonstrations around the country today in opposition to the Bush administration's policy on Iraq.
In Washington, just hours after President Bush said in his weekly radio address that he saw little chance that Iraq would disarm without the use of force, throngs of protesters armed with banners and bullhorns implored Mr. Bush to abandon a possible war.
''The people can stop the war," Congressman John Conyers Jr., Democrat of Michigan, told thousands of cheering supporters near the Washington Monument on a mild, sunny but breezy afternoon. He urged people to continue to protest ''until this madness is ended.''
Marching on streets that pass within a block or two of the White House, which they were not allowed to approach more closely, the protesters flooded nearly a dozen blocks of city streets in a sea of colorful and often angry antiwar banners and chanted slogans.
Although police gave no official crowd count, a park police supervisor working the scene estimated that the protesters totaled 50,000 people. It was hard to be sure if there were that many, as some came and went, while others milled around in clusters on side streets. Protesters gathered to listen to speeches, then marched around the White House.

http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9A0DE6DE1631F935A25750C0A9659C8B63&scp=8&sq=march+16+2003+iraq+united+nations&st=nyt


THREATS AND RESPONSES: THE ARMED FORCES; U.S. Plan Sees G.I.'s Invading As More Arrive
By MICHAEL R. GORDON WITH ERIC SCHMITT
Published: March 16, 2003
The American-led coalition that is preparing to topple Saddam Hussein's government is planning for a complex invasion of Iraq to begin even as allied troops are still arriving in the region, senior commanders say.
With three dozen ships carrying heavy tanks and equipment for the Army's Fourth Infantry Division waiting off the coast of Turkey because of a political standoff, the military is scrambling to put together a backup plan for the northern front of a war with Iraq.
In Kuwait, only a portion of the 101st Airborne Division's forces -- equipped with Apache gunships and Black Hawk troop carriers -- is ready to be sent into combat. If the invasion begins next week, the 101st would take part, but the division's major combat punch would come soon after.

http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9900E5DD1631F935A25750C0A9659C8B63&scp=1&sq=march+16+2003+iraq&st=nyt



CITY IS PLANNING EXPANDED SECURITY IN EVENT OF WAR
By JAMES BARRON AND WILLIAM K. RASHBAUM
Published: March 16, 2003
To protect New York City if and when an American-led attack on Iraq begins, police officials have prepared a sweeping security plan that calls for expanding the patrols on the streets and asking the Defense Department to fly combat aircraft overhead, a senior police official said yesterday.
The patrols on the streets -- at government buildings, hotels and houses of worship as well as at newly strengthened checkpoints at bridges and tunnels -- would address a concern of police officials, that attackers acting alone present a greater risk than a larger, carefully orchestrated assault on the city.

http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9A00E3DC1631F935A25750C0A9659C8B63&scp=2&sq=march+16+2003+iraq&st=nyt



THREATS AND RESPONSES: TERROR NETWORK; Anger on Iraq Seen as New Qaeda Recruiting Tool
By DON VAN NATTA JR. AND DESMOND BUTLER
Published: March 16, 2003
On three continents, Al Qaeda and other terror organizations have intensified their efforts to recruit young Muslim men, tapping into rising anger about the American campaign for war in Iraq, according to intelligence and law enforcement officials.
In recent weeks, officials in the United States, Europe and Africa say they had seen evidence that militants within Muslim communities are seeking to identify and groom a new generation of terrorist operatives. An invasion of Iraq, the officials worry, is almost certain to produce a groundswell of recruitment for groups committed to attacks in the United States, Europe and Israel.

http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9E0DE7DF1631F935A25750C0A9659C8B63&scp=3&sq=march+16+2003+iraq&st=nyt


Arafat May Soon Approve a Premier, Meeting U.S. Demand
By JAMES BENNET
Published: March 16, 2003
Palestinian officials said today that Yasir Arafat, the Palestinian leader, might formally appoint a new prime minister as soon as Monday, in their view complying with President Bush's condition for moving ahead with a ''road map'' to peace and a Palestinian state.
Mr. Bush said on Friday that he would present the plan, which was drafted in December, as soon as the Palestinians confirmed a prime minister with ''real authority.'' Israeli officials cautioned that it might take some time to determine how much authority the new prime minister would have.

http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9406E5D61F3EF935A25750C0A9659C8B63&scp=7&sq=march+16+2003+iraq&st=nyt



THREATS AND RESPONSES: THE EXILES; A Figure From Iraq's Past Steps Out to Mold Its Future
By JANE PERLEZ
Published: March 16, 2003
A former Iraqi foreign minister, Adnan Pachachi, who quit when Saddam Hussein came to power and who has been in talks with Washington, said in an interview here today that he was willing to take a leadership role in post-invasion Iraq.
Mr. Pachachi presents himself as a patrician figure of independent and secular views that transcend the ethnic and religious factions that many fear could tear Iraq apart in the aftermath of war.
His father and father-in-law were prime ministers under the monarchy after Iraq's independence from Britain. Mr. Pachachi, who was educated at a private academy in Alexandria, Egypt, and whose three daughters attended an exclusive Manhattan girls school, proudly talks of being born to ''power and privilege.''

http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9803E2D61F3EF935A25750C0A9659C8B63&scp=10&sq=march+16+2003+iraq&st=nyt


DataBank; What a Difference a One-Day Rally Makes
By JEFF SOMMER
Published: March 16, 2003
After two weeks of declines, all three major stock market gauges rose last week, largely on the strength of a sharp rally on Thursday.
The market fell on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. But on Thursday, stocks rose to their sharpest one-day gains since October after President Bush said he was ''willing to go the extra mile for diplomacy'' and delay a United Nations vote on a resolution to disarm Iraq.
On Friday, most stocks, on average, held on to their gains, though the Nasdaq composite index, which had climbed 5 percent on Thursday, dropped slightly, less than 0.1 percent, for the day.

http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D01E0DE1F3EF935A25750C0A9659C8B63&scp=10&sq=march+16+2003+iraq+united+nations&st=nyt
continued...

Post 2003 Iraq - USA Neocon Republicans included Deregulation of any and all Iraq's Fail-Safe Systems

...16. There are new factors to consider in the post-2003 Iraq, which are related to
the small quantities issue. The first factor relates to the probable increase in the
number and scope of legitimate research and development activities involving small
quantities of dual-use chemicals, including their procurement from abroad. In the
past, Iraq was largely isolated from the international scientific community and
therefore the number and scope of such activities remained restricted. An additional
factor relates to the change of ownership of industry in Iraq. All institutions,
including joint ventures and private companies in Iraq previously declared by Iraq
as engaged in activities with dual-use chemicals or equipment on any scale had been
either State-controlled or closely supervised by the State authorities and monitored
by United Nations inspectors. This included the food, petrochemical, fertilizer,
pesticide and explosives industries. Governmental control over non-State-owned
establishments similar to that under the previous regime may no longer be in place.
Therefore, it may be difficult for Iraq’s authorities to collect a complete set of data
on activities in the chemical area in the country without appropriate national
regulations and/or requirements on its facilities and other entities. Additional
sources of information regarding export/import activities on, for example,
equipment and material as well as other information would be needed by the
national authorities....

When will it be over?

When it's "W"rong, it's very "W"rong !!!

..."Four years, optimistically," before the Pentagon can begin a significant troop withdrawal from Iraq, predicted Eric Rosenbach, executive director of the Center for International Affairs at Harvard's Kennedy School, "and more like seven or eight years" until Iraqi forces can handle the bulk of their own security....


Iraq, March 16, 2008
US Military Deaths in Iraq at 3,988
By The Associated Press – 14 hours ago
As of Saturday, March 15, 2008, at least 3,988 members of the U.S. military have died since the beginning of the Iraq war in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count. The figure includes eight military civilians. At least 3,241 died as a result of hostile action, according to the military's numbers.
The AP count is 10 more than the Defense Department's tally, last updated Friday at 10 a.m. EDT.
The British military has reported 175 deaths; Italy, 33; Ukraine, 18; Poland, 21; Bulgaria, 13; Spain, 11; Denmark, seven; El Salvador, five; Slovakia, four; Latvia, three; Estonia, Netherlands, Thailand, Romania, two each; and Australia, Hungary, Kazakhstan, South Korea, one death each.

http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5gqgQCcv26kB1dkgZRZNHmbn_1J8gD8VE6DI00



Campaigners mark 5 years of war in Iraq
By Staff Reporter 15.MAR.08
Campaigners in London and Glasgow are holding protests today to mark the fifth anniversary of the Iraq war.
Worldwide protests are also taking place today.
Earlier this week, a ceremony in the US remembered the dead servicemen and women with a minute's silence.
Military intelligence sergeant and member of the Iraq Veterans Against the War association, Selena Coppa, explained why she believes the war is unlawful:
"I would stand up again and again to defend my country whenever and wherever and however it was required. The occupation in Iraq is not defending my country, it is not supporting the oath that I swore," she said.
The Scottish demonstration will hear calls for troop withdrawal from Iraq and Afghanistan, as well being in opposition to possible action against Iran.

http://www.famagusta-gazette.com/default.asp?sourceid=&smenu=106&twindow=Default&mad=No&sdetail=2120&wpage=&skeyword=&sidate=&ccat=&ccatm=&restate=&restatus=&reoption=&retype=&repmin=&repmax=&rebed=&rebath=&subname=&pform=&sc=2350&hn=famagusta-gazette&he=.com



Iraq: McCain visits Baghdad as Iraq commemorates Kurdish massacre anniversary

The Associated Press
Published: March 16, 2008
BAGHDAD: Sen. John McCain arrived in Baghdad on Sunday for an unexpected visit with Iraqi and U.S. diplomatic and military officials, a U.S. government official said.
The visit by one of the foremost supporters of the 2003 invasion and soon-to-be Republican presidential nominee came as Kurds in northern Iraq commemorated the 20th anniversary on Sunday of a horrific chemical weapons attack that killed an estimated 5,600 people.
Saddam Hussein ordered the attack in Halabja as part of a scorched-earth campaign to crush a Kurdish rebellion in the north, which was seen as aiding Iran in the final months of its war with Iraq.
The U.S. military said that the Iraqi government has not yet asked them to turn over for execution the man most deeply associated with that crime — Hussein's henchman and cousin Ali Hassan al-Majid, known as "Chemical Ali." His hanging is expected within the month.

http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2008/03/16/africa/ME-GEN-Iraq.php


Anti-war Protests Held in Los Angeles, Other US Cities
By Mike O'Sullivan
Los Angeles
16 March 2008
Protesters in several US cities held anti-war rallies Saturday to mark the fifth anniversary of the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, March 20th. More rallies are planned in coming days in other U.S. cities. Mike O'Sullivan reports, several thousand joined an anti-war protest in Los Angeles.
Anti-war protesters in Los Angeles, 14 Mar 2008
Marchers chanted and some carried flag-draped coffins as speakers demanded that U.S. troops come home.
Sharaf Mowjood of the Council on American-Islamic Relations says the continued presence of American troops is worsening conditions in Iraq, and diverting attention from domestic U.S. problems, including rebuilding New Orleans. The city was devastated by Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

http://www.voanews.com/english/2008-03-16-voa3.cfm


US Vice President Cheney Heads to Middle East

By VOA News
16 March 2008
U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney is heading Sunday to the Middle East for visits to Oman, Saudia Arabia, Israel, the West Bank, and Turkey.
U.S officials say Mr. Cheney's talks will cover Iraq, the situations in Lebanon and Syria, Iran's rising influnce in the region, violence in Gaza, and soaring gasoline prices in the United States.
He is expected to encourage Saudi Arabia to step up diplomatic ties with Iraq.
Cheney also is expected to encourage Israel and the Palestinians to move forward with a peace deal.
In Turkey, the U.S. vice president is expected to discuss Turkey's recent incursion against Iraq-based rebels of the Kurdistan Workers Party.

http://www.voanews.com/english/2008-03-16-voa1.cfm


Hundreds rally for Iraq troop withdrawal

March 17, 2008
ABOUT 200 people rallied in central Sydney yesterday calling for the withdrawal of all foreign troops from Iraq.
Speakers at the rally in Belmore Park, to mark the coming fifth anniversary of the invasion, said the pledge by the Prime Minister, Kevin Rudd, to withdraw 500 combat troops from Iraq did not go far enough.
A spokesman for the Stop the War Coalition, Alex Bainbridge, said 1 million people had been killed since the war began, and all troops needed to be withdrawn. "This war is a crime, and we need to end it," he told the rally. Mr Rudd also needed to end his support for the war in Afghanistan.
A peace campaigner, Donna Mulhearn, who travelled to Iraq to be a human shield before the war started, said Australia needed to apologise to the Iraqi people. She also questioned whether Australian athletes should compete at the Beijing Olympics after China's crackdown in Tibet.
The Greens senator Kerry Nettle said the Iraq war had a human and financial cost estimated by one US economist at $3 trillion.
Another peace rally was held in Parramatta.
AAP

http://www.smh.com.au/news/national/hundreds-rally-for-iraq-troop-withdrawal/2008/03/16/1205602195104.html



U.N. envoy urges Iraq to seize moment
The drop in violence in the last year is an opportunity for reconciliation, he says as the U.N. releases a human rights report.
By Ned Parker, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
March 16, 2008
BAGHDAD -- The U.N. envoy to Iraq urged the Iraqi government Saturday to seize upon the drop in violence in the country over the last year to move forward on reconciliation and improving public services because its window of opportunity won't last forever.
"In spite of the spike of horrific spectacular acts, there is still a lot of improvement compared to the past, which should be interpreted by all of us and by the Iraqi political leaders as an opportunity," Staffan de Mistura told reporters. "The opportunity doesn't last long."

http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/asection/la-fg-violence16mar16,1,6985118.story



U.N. fears violence will rise as U.S. troops leave
REPORT SAYS IT'S TOO EARLY TO TELL IF 'SURGE' EFFECT WAS SUSTAINABLE
By Ryan Lenz
Associated Press
Article Launched: 03/16/2008 01:43:26 AM PDT
BAGHDAD - The influx of thousands of U.S. forces has driven down insurgent attacks in Baghdad, but violence elsewhere in Iraq raises questions about whether killings will continue to drop as American forces begin to leave, the United Nations said Saturday.
As security improved in Baghdad, violent attacks spread last year to other parts of the country, including Diyala province and Mosul, Al-Qaida's last urban stronghold, according to the report from the United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq. The report examined the last six months of 2007.
"This is a window of opportunity for Iraq," Staffan de Mistura, the U.N. chief in Iraq, said at a news conference in Baghdad.
The U.S. military has said a 60 percent reduction in attacks followed the influx of more than 20,000 additional troops, known as the surge. The military did not respond to requests for comment.

http://www.mercurynews.com/nationworld/ci_8592123


Protesters rally across Canada to speak out against wars in Afghanistan, Iraq
20 hours ago
TORONTO — Thousands of protesters filled streets across the country on Saturday to speak out against Canada's military mission in Afghanistan and to mark the upcoming five-year anniversary of the start of the war in Iraq.
Rallies were organized in 20 communities nationwide in a joint call for the federal government to recall its troops from Afghanistan and instead adopt a peacekeeping role, which protesters said is Canada's true calling.
"The majority of Canadians want the troops to come home now - shame on Parliament," said Diane Alexopoulos at a rally on the front lawn of the Ontario legislature in Toronto.
More than 1,000 demonstrators then marched a couple kilometres through busy stretches of the city, bewildering motorists, locals and tourists along the way.
Within the diverse crowd of different ethnicities and ages was father and son Kevin Barrett and six-year-old Caleb, who had to be convinced that nothing was wrong, even though a phalanx of police officers stood by ominously looking like they were ready to pounce.
"He was afraid they were going to shoot him," said Barrett, who stood on the sidelines for the march but was part of the protest.

http://canadianpress.google.com/article/ALeqM5j8fOijD0zIoCQuzh1ydgob47CilA


Iraq war off most Americans' radar, those who served say
In San Diego: Hundreds march to mark the fifth anniversary of the U.S. invasion of Iraq. B3
By Steve Liewer
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER
March 16, 2008
Twenty minutes into the invasion of Iraq, Marine Sgt. Nathaniel Donnelly huddled with his men in the windowless rear of an armored vehicle as it rumbled across the Iraq-Kuwait border.
The roar of artillery pounded in their ears. Anxious officers chattered over the radio.
“We could hear everything, but we couldn't see anything. We had no control,” Donnelly said of the events of March 20, 2003. “It's probably the scariest moment of my life.”
Baghdad fell to U.S. forces after about six weeks of fighting. A few months later, Donnelly returned with his unit to Camp Pendleton and left the Marine Corps, thinking the war was won.
But the conflict is far from over. As the Iraq war nears its fifth anniversary, nearly as many military boots are on the ground in Iraq – 158,000 U.S. troops – as were there during the invasion.

http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/military/20080316-9999-1n16iraq.html



500 protest Iraq war in Hollywood: police
03-15-2008, 22h27
LOS ANGELES (AFP)
More than 500 protestors marched against the Iraq war in Los Angeles Saturday, holding up coffins draped with the US flag and led by veterans from various conflicts.
Police said at least 500 people, most of them young, marched down Hollywood Boulevard in the tourist district of the US city, carrying banners denouncing President George W. Bush and calling for an end to the conflict.

http://www.turkishpress.com/news.asp?id=220293&s=&i=&t=500_protest_Iraq_war_in_Hollywood:_police



Suicide bomber hits Kurdish party office in N Iraq, 11 wounded

www.chinaview.cn
2008-03-16 21:02:31
MOSUL, Iraq, March 16 (Xinhua) -- Eleven people were wounded in a suicide bomb attack and a following roadside bomb explosion outside the office of a Kurdish party in the city of Mosul on Sunday, a provincial police source said.
"A suicide bomber wearing an explosive vest blew himself up at about 10:30 a.m. (0730 GMT) in front of the office of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) in the al-Nabi Younis neighborhood in northeastern Mosul," the source told Xinhua on condition of anonymity.
The attack resulted in the wounding of nine people, including one of the office guards, the source said.
Afterwards, a roadside bomber went off near a police patrol while heading to the site of the first bombing, destroying a police vehicle and wounding two policemen aboard, the source added.
The KDP is headed by Massoud Barzani, president of Kurdish regional government in northern Iraq.
Since the U.S.-led invasion in 2003, there have been some demands from Kurdish parties that Nineveh province, including its capital Mosul, should be included in the Kurdish regional government.
Since then, Kurdish fighters have been moving into the city causing some tensions with majority Sunni Arab population.

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-03/16/content_7801949.htm



Iraq's Baiji refinery hit by power outage

Sunday March 16 2008
BAIJI, Iraq, March 16 (Reuters) - A power cut shut down operations at Iraq's largest oil refinery on Sunday, officials at the plant said, adding it was unclear when work would resume.
The plant in Baiji, 180 km (112 miles) north of Baghdad, refines around 275,000 barrels of crude oil per day into gasoline, diesel and other products for the domestic market. Officials said exports were not affected by the incident.
"This morning at 8:15 work at the refinery was stopped completely because of the shutdown of electricity," said a senior official at the refinery.
An engineer at the plant said it was unclear when operations would resume.
A power cut halted production at the Baiji refinery in January, closing it for two days.
(Reporting by Sabah al-Dazi and Ahmed Rasheed, writing by Randy Fabi, editing by Jacqueline Wong)

http://www.guardian.co.uk/feedarticle?id=7388918


Iraqi feel-good stories prove elusive
By Garrett Therolf, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
March 16, 2008
BAGHDAD -- Afew days after arriving in Iraq early this year, I followed Army Gen. David H. Petraeus on a walk through a marketplace on the capital's east side.
The commander of U.S. forces in Iraq didn't wear a helmet, and he gently scolded his security detail for encircling him. "I want to get close to people. They need to feel comfortable coming up to me," he told them.

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-goodnews16mar16,0,7326562.story


Second production unit opens in Iraq's Najaf refinery
The Associated Press
Published: March 15, 2008
BAGHDAD: Iraq's oil minister opened an expansion to a refinery in Najaf on Saturday that increases capacity by roughly 10,000 barrels of oil per day.
The refinery, about 160 kilometers (100 miles) south of Baghdad, was constructed in October 2006 to help meet increasing needs in central Iraq for petroleum products, including kerosene. It currently produced about 20,000 barrels per day.
Hussein al-Shahristani, Iraq's oil minister, also pledged further expansions across the country, including new refineries in Nasiriyah, about 320 kilometers (200 miles) southeast of Baghdad, and Karbala, about 80 kilometers (50 miles) south of Baghdad.
Iraq has the world's third-largest known crude oil reserves, with an estimated 115 billion barrels. Together the new refineries will be able to refine more than 450,000 barrels daily.
The inauguration comes as Iraq's government works to shore up lagging production caused by infrastructure that has been damaged or destroyed since the war began in 2003.

http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2008/03/15/africa/ME-GEN-Iraq-Oil-Refinery.php


Iraq refugee crisis 'deepening,' US experts say

4 days ago
WASHINGTON (AFP) — Squalid and dangerous conditions, lack of shelter and scarcity of food are threatening to worsen the living situation for those displaced by the war in Iraq, refugee experts said Tuesday.
Five years after the US-led invasion of Iraq, experts told a House of Representatives subcommittee hearing that serious problems persist for the 2.5 million people displaced inside Iraq and the two million who have fled to neighboring countries, according to UN figures.
Even though the number of new refugees has leveled off since the early years of the conflict, Ambassador Lawrence Foley said a prime concern is worsening poverty among those who sought shelter inside Iraq as well as in Syria, Jordan, Lebanon, Egypt and Turkey.
"The most critical problem is increasing impoverishment," said Foley, senior coordinator for Iraqi refugee issues at the State Department.
Iraqis who live in foreign countries but do not possess residency permits are often forbidden to work, and so the longer they stay, the more likely they are to spend and deplete any remaining family resources, he said.

http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5hvUCPK-LOVyUlElUcc6552wRY4IA



Fleeing doctors threaten Iraq's health
'I came to the most comfortable, helpful, nicest people on this Earth. Oh my God, my patients, the nurses, the people . . . amazing'
DR. MOHAMMAD BARBOUTI about his welcome in Grand Bank, Nfld.
Like South Africa in the '70s, the best, and most needed, keep departing
Mar 16, 2008 04:30 AM
Andrew Chung
Staff Reporter
It was a cool spring day in Baghdad. Dr. Rafid al-Nassar and his wife, Dr. Rasha al-Manahi, were venturing out of their house to buy groceries, when gunmen in dark balaclavas drove up in a jet-black Daewoo.
In an instant, they had him on his knees and tied his hands; then they were dragging al-Manahi to the car. Both doctors were screaming, knowing she was about to be kidnapped. Luckily he'd been able to put down their 1 1/2-year-old son in the melee.
As they were pushing her into the car, a neighbour

http://www.thestar.com/News/article/346545


Red Crescent warns of a new wave of Iraqi refugees
By Salem Areef
Azzaman, March 15, 2008
The Iraqi Red Crescent Society is warning of a massive exodus if U.S. and Iraqi troops go ahead with plans to attack Mosul, the country’s second largest city with nearly 3.8 million people.

The northern city which is the capital of the Province of Nineveh has turned into a major stronghold for forces resisting U.S. occupation and elements of the al-Qadeda organization.

Tensions are high and violence has gripped the city in the past few months with at least one hundred houses destroyed and hundreds of people killed or injured.

Certain quarters are so violent that neither U.S. troops nor Iraqi forces are capable of entering.

But the society said it feared a joint attack in which units of Kurdish militias are to take part will lead to one of the largest waves of internally displace people the country has seen since the 2003 U.S. invasion.

Hard pressed ethnic and religious minorities in the city have been leaving either to the Kurdish north or neighboring Syria.

Mosul is a predominantly Sunni Arab city and residents are apparently unhappy with the role U.S. occupation troops have given to Kurdish militia fighters.

The Arabs see Kurdish involvement in areas which have traditionally not been part of Iraqi Kurdistan with suspicious eyes.

Kurdish militias are now present in most villages and towns which are administratively part of Mosul as the center of Nineveh Province.

Some of these areas hold huge oil reserves like Ain Zala.

There are already about three million Iraqi refugees in neighboring states and more than two million others are displaced as a result of ongoing U.S. military operations and sectarian strife.

http://www.azzaman.com/english/index.asp?fname=news%5C2008-03-15%5Ckurd.htm



A look at presidential candidates' views on Iraq war as fifth anniversary nears
The nature of the war in Iraq past the fifth anniversary will vary greatly whether a Democrat or Republican wins the presidency. Arizona Sen. John McCain has called for more American forces in Iraq, while Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama plan to start withdrawing troops soon after entering office.

http://www.heraldnews.com/news/x1993300575


The costs of the Iraq war: A fall in U.S. power, prestige and influence
By Warren P. Strobel

McClatchy Newspapers
WASHINGTON — It was a decision that only President Bush had the power to make: About 9 a.m. on March 19, 2003, in the Situation Room in the basement of the West Wing of the White House, he gave the “execute order” to begin Operation Iraqi Freedom, the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq.
Now, five years later, the consequences of that act will soon be beyond Bush’s grasp. In 10 months, they’ll land on the desk of his successor.
Thanks in part to the Iraq war, the next U.S. president — Republican or Democrat, black or white, man or woman — will take office with America’s power, prestige and popularity in decline, according to bipartisan reports, polls and foreign observers.
“The winner of the 2008 elections will command U.S. forces still at war in Iraq, Afghanistan and against elusive terrorists with a deadly reach. The U.S. economy will remain burdened. ... America’s moral leadership and decision-making competence will continue to be questioned,” begins a study of foreign-policy choices for the next president, which a Georgetown University task force released last month.
“Restored respect will come only with fresh demonstrations of competence,” the study said.

http://www.lacrossetribune.com/articles/2008/03/16/news/04war16.txt

continued...

But will George Walker Bush do anything other than use audiences with the Pope as a Political Propaganda Tool?


Kidnapped archbishop found dead in Iraq (click here)

3/14/2008 11:54:00 AM.
Paulos Faraj Rahho, the Chaldean Catholic archbishop in Iraq who was kidnapped last month, has been found dead.
"Archbishop Rahho is dead. We found his lifeless body near Mosul. The kidnappers had buried him," Bishop Shlemon Warduni of Baghdad was quoted as telling SIR, the news agency of the Italian Bishops Conference.Rahho was seized on March 29 after gunmen attacked his car in eastern Mosul, 390 kilometres north of Baghdad, killing his driver and two guards.The news of Rahho's death will shock and sadden Australia's Catholic clergy, World Youth Day media spokesman Jim Hanna told AAP.Earlier, before Rahho's death was reported, Australian Cardinal George Pell expressed the solidarity of Australian Catholics with the church in Iraq.The Catholic Bishops of New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory had released a statement deploring Rahho's abduction and calling for his immediate release.Speaking on behalf of the bishops, Cardinal Pell said the abduction of anyone was a horrible crime, but the kidnapping of a respected and significant community leader such as Rahho was particularly deplorable.The Bishops had called for prayers for Rahho."The Catholic Bishops of NSW and ACT ask Catholic parishes throughout Australia to pray for the release of Archbishop Rahho, especially during Holy Week, which commences this Sunday," Cardinal Pell said in the bishop's statement."We also ask christians everywhere to pray for the Iraqi christian community in Australia at this time, and to continue to pray for peace in Iraq."


Letters seek remorse for war, urge pope to confront Bush (click here)
Catholic activists ask pope to tell Bush to end Iraq War while in U.S.
By PATRICIA ZAPOR
Catholic News Service
Washington
More than 3,000 people, many involved in the Catholic Worker Movement and peace activism, have signed a letter to Pope Benedict asking him to call for an immediate end to the Iraq War during his U.S. visit in April.
Another statement circulating among faith leaders marks the fifth anniversary of the start of the war in Iraq March 19 with a call to repentance for "the sin of this war."
The letter to the pope asks him to reconsider his plans and refuse to meet with President George W. Bush until the Iraq War, which the pope has opposed, is ended....

Morning Papers - continued...

Sydney Morning Herald

Rats in ranks of rare species
Lisa Carty, State Political Reporter
March 16, 2008
AERIAL rat-poison bombing of Lord Howe Island could endanger humans and kill a rare woodhen, the NSW Opposition says.
The poison will be dropped by helicopter to kill the rodents in preparation for the release of a stick insect once thought to be extinct - the Lord Howe Island phasmid, or land lobster.
Three of the 15-centimetre bugs were found on the tourist island's highest point in 2001 and have been bred in captivity on the mainland.
The Lord Howe Island Board and the National Parks and Wildlife Service have started briefing residents on the aerial baiting proposal.

http://www.smh.com.au/news/conservation/rats-in-ranks-of-rare-species/2008/03/15/1205472157890.html


Five killed, 200 injured in munitions
An Albanian army ammunition has blown up in a series of massive explosions causing hundreds of casualties.
Advertisement
Albanian officials say at least five people have been killed and 200 injured in a series of blasts at an Albanian army munitions depot outside Tirana.
Government spokeswoman Juela Mecani says 110 people were at the depot at the time of the first explosion.
She says witnesses have reported a 10-minute break between the first and second blasts.
A US company contracted by NATO is helping Albanian troops dispose of surplus or obsolete munitions at the depot.
Defence Minister Fatmire Mediu says about 100-thousand tonnes of antiquated munitions from the communist era remain in the country.
Their destruction is one of the conditions Albania has to fulfil to gain membership to NATO.
AAP

http://www.smh.com.au/news/world/five-killed-200-injured-in-munitions-blasts/2008/03/16/1205602157359.html


Blair urges leadership by top polluters on binding cuts
March 16, 2008
Tony Blair has urged the world's heaviest polluters including the United States and China to agree to binding emissions cuts, saying failure to act on global warming would be "unforgivably irresponsible."
The former British prime minister is heading a new team of experts tasked with bridging the gaps in slow-moving negotiations to draft a successor to the Kyoto Protocol by the end of next year.
"We have reached the critical moment for the decision on climate change," Blair today told a meeting of senior officials from the world's top 20 greenhouse gas emitters in suburban Tokyo.
"Even on the mildest application of the precautionary principles, failure to act on climate change now would be deeply and unforgivably irresponsible," he said.

http://www.smh.com.au/news/world/blair-urges-leadership-by-top-polluters-on-binding-cuts/2008/03/15/1205472171815.html


Soldiers gather for 40th My Lai anniversary
March 16, 2008
To the villagers who survived the My Lai massacre and many of the Americans who fought in the Vietnam War, all the anniversaries of the atrocity are important.
But commemorations tomorrow, 40 years after the event, seem especially urgent to many of the Americans who have travelled to Vietnam to attend.
Some see parallels between what happened here on March 16, 1968, and events in Iraq, the site of another controversial war that has drawn US troops to a faraway corner of the globe.
"We're supposed to learn from the mistakes of history, but we keep making the same mistakes," said Lawrence Colburn, whose helicopter landed in My Lai in the midst of the massacre.
"That's what makes My Lai more important today than ever before."

http://www.smh.com.au/news/world/soldiers-gather-for-40th-my-lai-anniversary/2008/03/15/1205472171798.html


Miner Key
March 16, 2008
Pit closures and factory losses threaten the future of the brass bands in northern England, but young musicians are pitching in to keep the tradition alive, writes Martin Wainwright.
Advertisement
They look as cool as any streetwise teenager with their low-slung jeans and wary expressions. The only clue to their intentions is in those slender, gleaming tubes of brass.
Fears that brass bands are fast becoming the stuff of nostalgia - brave but doomed mining communities, memorably brought to the screen in Brassed Off - have been checked in Hebden Bridge, in Yorkshire in the north of England.
Walking, or to be more accurate, climbing, the steep terraces of the old Yorkshire centre of fustian weaving, the gentle cadence of a tuba or the piping of a cornet is the only giveaway. In houses with Victorian biblical names but 21st-century Ikea furniture, players practise their scales.
They and their friends in the Hebden Bridge junior band evoke the spirit of Mark Herman's nostalgic film, in which the Yorkshire mining town of Grimley is threatened with being shut down and the only hope for the town's men is to enter their colliery brass band into a national competition.

http://www.smh.com.au/news/world/brass-bands-in-northern-england-under-threat/2008/03/15/1205472159619.html


Couples hit by gold spike
Caroline Marcus
March 16, 2008
SOPHIE and Craig D'Hyon spent the equivalent of a house deposit on their dream wedding yesterday: they wanted everything to be perfect, including the bling.
But the couple were shocked to discover they would have to fork out an extra 20per cent for Mr D'Hyon's ring because of soaring gold prices.
They were quoted $1800 for the simple white-gold wedding band, from their jeweller, Cerrone, when they first looked at it in November.
When they returned to the store last month, they were told the ring would cost $2200 - because of the gold price rise.
For the first time, gold traded above $US1000 an ounce on Thursday, up 15per cent since the beginning of the year and more than 50per cent since the end of 2006.
Mrs D'Hyon, a 27-year-old human resources adviser, said she thought the $400 price increase was "enormous".

http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2008/03/15/1205472165568.html


Jodie Foster stalker arrested after bomb threats
March 12, 2008 - 1:57PM
A man who sent Oscar-winning actress Jodie Foster threatening letters for several years was arrested on Tuesday on charges of mailing a bomb threat to a Los Angeles airport.
Michael Smegal, 42, of Holliston, Massachusetts, was charged in U.S. District Court in Massachusetts with mailing a threatening letter to Van Nuys Airport in early December.
The letter was one of more than 100 nearly identical letters with references to Foster mailed to celebrities, business executives, airports and other locations around Los Angeles from September 2007 to January 2008, an affidavit said.
Foster, a two-time Oscar winner who won her first Academy Award playing a rape victim in 1988's The Accused, received anonymous letters from Massachusetts beginning in 2004. In 2005, Smegal admitted to police he had sent the letters and promised to stop, the affidavit said.
If convicted, Smegal faces up to 10 years in prison followed by three years of supervised release and a $250,000 fine.

http://www.smh.com.au/news/people/jodie-foster-stalker-arrested-after-bomb-threats/2008/03/12/1205125992144.html


Hitler's big plans for Berlin
2008-03-16 11:05:23
Adolf Hitler's meglomaniac plans to pack Berlin with giant buildings has been revealed in a new exhibition.(01:38)


Massive blast caught on camera
2008-03-16 11:03:01
An Albanian army ammunition has blown up in a series of massive explosions causing hundreds of casualties.(01:28)

http://media.smh.com.au/?category=Breaking%20News&rid=36344



Bear Stearns bailout hits Wall St.
March 15, 2008
US stocks plunged for the third day this week after Bear Stearns Cos. required a bailout from the Federal Reserve and JPMorgan Chase & Co. to avoid collapse.
Bear Stearns, the second-largest underwriter of US mortgage bonds, tumbled the most ever after the brokerage said it ran short of cash. The announcement overshadowed economic reports showing inflation remained stable while consumer confidence beat forecasts. Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., Citigroup Inc. and Bank of America Corp. also led declines as all 10 industry groups in the Standard & Poor's 500 Index fell.
The S&P 500 retreated 27.34, or 2.1%, to 1,288.14 and slid 0.4% in the week. The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 194.65, or 1.6%, to 11,951.09. The Nasdaq Composite Index decreased 51.12, or 2.3%, to 2,212.49. Nine stocks fell for every one that rose on the New York Stock Exchange.

http://business.smh.com.au/bear-stearns-bailout-hits-wall-st/20080315-1zll.html


Lehman next to be squeezed?
March 15, 2008
Wall Street is all about trust, and Lehman Brothers appears to still have it -- for now, anyway.
Fear that the company could suffer the same fate as Bear Stearns Cos hit its stock hard on Friday.
But a half-dozen hedge funds that Reuters spoke to were not unwinding their trades with Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc, and said they had no trouble trading with it. Two dealers said they were conducting business as usual with Lehman.
Bear, heavily exposed to the faltering US mortgage market, burned through cash and lost access to funding this week as clients pulled out assets and unwound trades.
Lehman, the fourth-largest US investment bank, is more diversified than Bear, the fifth-largest. It has more than $US195 billion ($208 billion) of assets at its ready disposal and says it can fund its operations for 12 months without outside financing.

http://business.smh.com.au/lehman-next-to-be-squeezed/20080315-1zme.html


Qantas tips $1bn rise in fuel costs
Mathew Murphy
March 15, 2008
QANTAS chief executive Geoff Dixon has warned staff that the airline's fuel bill could skyrocket by more than $1 billion a year.
In a private email to senior management, obtained by BusinessDay, Mr Dixon also issued a hiring freeze across the Qantas group, unless authorised by himself or chief financial officer Peter Gregg.
While Qantas' fuel costs are fully hedged for this financial year, the airline has only 25% hedged from July, at $US83 a barrel ($A88).
"Consequently, our operating costs will increase significantly," Mr Dixon said in the email. "At current market prices, our fuel bill for next financial year will be more than $1 billion higher than for this current year."
Oil's climb shows no sign of easing, the spot price yesterday finishing at $US110.33 a barrel in New York.
It puts Qantas at a competitive disadvantage with rival Virgin Blue, which has 70% of its fuel bill hedged for next financial year at $US76 a barrel.

http://business.smh.com.au/qantas-tips-1bn-rise-in-fuel-costs/20080314-1zhz.html


Oil hovers near record $111
March 15, 2008
Oil prices held near all-time highs today, capping a tumultuous week of surging prices attributed to a sliding dollar and choppy world stock markets.
New York's main oil contract, light sweet crude for delivery in April, shed 12 cents to close at $US110.21 ($117) per barrel a day after hitting a fresh intraday record of $US111.
In London, Brent North Sea crude for April held unchanged at its record close of $US107.54, slipping off record highs earlier in the day of $US108.02.
''The dollar sentiment remains negative,'' said Sucden analyst Andrey Kryuchenkov.
''Dollar-denominated commodities are still well-supported by the weaker greenback, making them relatively cheaper for foreign investors.''
Alaron Trading analyst Phil Flynn highlighted the impact of the credit crisis.

http://business.smh.com.au/oil-hovers-near-record-111/20080315-1zm4.html


Be seated: turbulence ahead
March 15, 2008
Budget airlines cost us more than we bargain for, writes Clive Dorman.
Flying has never been cheaper, but that is coming at a cost. The arrival of Tiger Airways in Australia has accelerated the commodification of every part of the air travel experience, with a range of unexpected new charges. This has attracted the scrutiny of governments, with Victoria launching an inquiry into the practices of the low-cost airline industry, following passenger strandings by both Jetstar and Tiger.
Consumer Affairs Victoria says complaints against low-cost carriers now "significantly" outnumber those against full-service airlines such as Qantas, even though low-cost carriers carry only about half Australia's air travellers.
Following the launch of Tiger Airways last year, the number of complaints to the tribunal against low-cost carriers jumped from nine in December to 23 last month in Victoria - nearly one a day.

http://www.smh.com.au/news/news/more-than-you-bargained-for/2008/03/13/1205126084566.html


Ex-terrorist base to become honeymoon hotspot?
March 14, 2008 - 10:22AM
Once a lovers' getaway, Habaniya Tourist Village in western Iraq became a refugee camp during some of the fiercest fighting since the fall of Baghdad. Now Amr al-Dulaimi hopes to turn it into a romantic haven again.
Dulaimi runs the crumbling tourist resort, formerly a favourite wedding and honeymoon destination for Iraqis. After the 2003 U.S.-led invasion, it found itself next to an al Qaeda stronghold and centre of a bloody Sunni insurgency.
But as security slowly improves in Anbar, potential investors plan to visit Habaniya this month to decide whether the village almost every Iraqi remembers as a place of love, romance and fun family days out, can be resurrected.
"It was beautiful. My wife and I would walk by the lake. I'm so sad about what it's become," said mechanic Alaa Naji, who got married in the village in 1999.

http://www.smh.com.au/news/middle-east/exterrorist-base-to-become-honeymoon-hotspot/2008/03/14/1205126162029.html


Shaking the tree: flora and fauna v humans
Miranda Devine
March 16, 2008
ONE balmy Sunday evening last month, when the Queen Victoria and QE2 cruise ships came to Sydney Harbour, Neutral Bay mother Phionna Tomaszewski gathered with friends in a park at Cremorne Point to watch.
Her six-year-old daughter was climbing trees and swinging off branches with other children when an "irate, elderly woman" berated her for "damaging" a coral tree and threatened to call council rangers.
Tomaszewski found her daughter "bawling her eyes out ... My daughter (all 20-odd kilograms of her) ... was reduced to tears by a stranger when all she was doing was playing in a tree" she wrote in a letter last week to The Mosman Daily, where a lively feud has continued ever since.
But in another letter to the paper, Margaret Watson, a friend of the elderly woman, defended her interference by saying the children had been "swinging on the branches, breaking one off ... After another branch broke, my friend approached and requested that they cease".

http://www.smh.com.au/news/miranda-devine/shaking-the-tree-flora-and-fauna-v-humans/2008/03/15/1205472149592.html


Rio pushes Malaysian smelter as Coega stalls
Jamie Freed and Jake Saulwick
March 15, 2008
RIO TINTO has advanced its plans to build a $US2 billion ($2.2 billion) aluminium smelter in Malaysia, and a power crisis in South Africa is likely to delay its $US2.7 billion Coega project.
The Malaysian smelter, which could produce 550,000tonnes of aluminium a year starting at the end of 2010, will be fuelled by the Bakun hydroelectric dam being built in Sarawak province in Borneo.
Rio this week took analysts to its smelters in Quebec's Saguenay region, focusing in part on the great advantage of having a clean energy source for power-intensive aluminium operations as policy-makers start to place a price on emissions.
The Malaysian project, owned by Rio before its $US38.1 billion takeover of Canada's Alcan last year, yesterday received a manufacturing licence from the Malaysian Industrial Development Authority. Rio last month signed a heads of agreement with Sarawak Energy Berhad to start negotiations on the power supply for the smelter, which eventually may be expanded to 1.5 million tonnes of production a year.

http://business.smh.com.au/rio-pushes-malaysian-smelter-as-coega-stalls/20080314-1ziy.html


Staff fired for peek at Britney's records

March 16, 2008
A medical centre in the US will fire some employees and discipline others for snooping at the confidential medical records of Britney Spears, who was hospitalised in its psychiatric ward, a hospital official told The Associated Press.
Jeri Simpson, a director of human resources at UCLA Medical Center hospital, who was involved in the investigations of the confidentiality breach, confirmed the action but could not say how many employees were affected.
The hospital did not say when the snooping took place or which of Spears records were looked at.
The Los Angeles Times reported on its website today that the breaches stemmed from incidents before Spears' most recent hospitalisation, but did not elaborate.

http://www.smh.com.au/news/people/fired-for-peek-at-brits-records/2008/03/15/1205472171692.html


New Zealand Herald

MP: Government must take clear stance on Tibet (+photos)
12:23PM Sunday March 16, 2008
New Zealand cannot sign a free trade agreement with China while it continues to suppress Tibetan people, the Green Party said today.
Ten civilians are reported dead, although the Tibetan government-in-exile puts the figure at more than 100, following violent clashes between Chinese authorities and Tibetan independence protesters.
Tensions between the two have been escalating all week since the 49th anniversary of a failed upraising against China's rule.
Green MP Keith Locke says it's important the Prime Minister speaks up now, as the situation continues to deteriorate.
Mr Locke says the country must take a clear stance against oppression before signing a free trade agreement with China next month.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/1/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10498480



Fiordland rocked by 4.3 earthquake
7:38AM Sunday March 16, 2008
Are you - and the authorities - prepared for a disaster?
Parts of Fiordland were shaken by an earthquake early this morning, GNS Science reported today.
The quake, which struck just after 5am, was centred 40km west of Milford Sound at a depth of 5km and registered 4.3 on the Richter scale.
- NZPA

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/1/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10498465


Eleven year-old evades kidnap outside pet shop
11:47AM Sunday March 16, 2008
Havelock North police are appealing for witnesses to an attempted kidnapping outside a pet shop.
A man described as dark-skinned and of medium build, allegedly grabbed an 11-year-old boy yesterday afternoon and tried dragging him into his car.
He had been parked near the shop in a tan-coloured Ford vehicle. The man was last seen wearing a pink t-shirt with the words 'Porn Star' written in black.
- NEWSTALK ZB

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/1/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10498478


Houndman wasn't stupid, says alleged victim
5:00AM Sunday March 16, 2008
By Carolyne Meng-Yee
Online, he seemed the perfect gentleman.
At their first meeting, over a cheap Chinese meal, the man who called himself Houndman "seemed really nice".
"He was quite quiet, polite," the woman allegedly raped by Gregory Burnside, aka Houndman, told the Herald on Sunday this week.
"He wasn't stupid. He could hold a good conversation ... not so much romantic, but friendly."
On Monday, the man who seemed the perfect online catch appeared in Huntly District Court charged with the rape of two women he had met through the web. Burnside entered no plea, later telling the Herald on Sunday: "I never raped them."

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/1/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10498461


Deerstalkers call for hunter to be charged
10:51AM Sunday March 16, 2008
By
Alice Hudson and Anna Rushworth
Police could lay charges over hunting death. Photo / One News
The Deerstalkers's Association says the hunter who shot and killed 18-year-old Napier man Aaron Colin Timms should face a manslaughter charge.
Taupo Deerstalkers Association's Dave Comber last night told the Herald on Sunday there was almost never any excuse for mistaking someone for a deer.
"Aside from someone draping a deer skin around them, or displaying antlers and looking like a deer, there is very, very seldom, any mitigating factors, particularly when it's from within the same hunting party," Comberlast said.
The teenager died instantly from a single gunshot to the chest after the man - believed to be in his 50s - mistook him for a deer. The man, his 24-year-old son and the victim were on a hunting trip in the Tarawera region, northwest of Napier, when the tragedy happened around 7am.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/1/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10498456


Crane falls on New York building, at least two dead (+ photos)
10:17AM Sunday March 16, 2008
NEW YORK - A construction crane fell on a residential building in Manhattan on Saturday, killing at least two people and injuring several others, the New York City Fire Department said.
The giant crane reportedly separated from the side of a skyscraper under construction and smashed into a block of residential buildings.
A Reuters photographer on the scene said the crane had completely crushed a building of several stories and cars on the street were also under rubble. The crane also damaged some neighbouring buildings.
A Fire Department spokesman said two people were confirmed dead and a third was in critical condition in hospital. Others were injured and the rescue operation was ongoing.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10498472


From corner shop princess to billionaire wife
5:00AM Sunday March 16, 2008
By
Jared Savage
Her parents owned a corner dairy - now Claire Kelly is living the lifestyle of the rich and famous as the wife of a royal billionaire.
Nearly a decade ago, the Taranaki woman, now in her mid-30s, packed her bags for the bright lights of Paris and later married playboy Prince Jefri Bolkiah, a Brunei royal with a penchant for fast cars and flash houses.
The former model became his fifth wife - the 53-year-old has two others and has been divorced twice - and is happily married with two young children, living in a London mansion "the size of Eden Park".
But despite once being one of the wealthiest men in the world, Prince Jefri has told the Wall Street Journal he fears becoming homeless and forced into bankruptcy.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10498458


Sex hormone relieves schizophrenia - study
4:20PM Sunday March 16, 2008
SYDNEY - Hormone patches used to help older women through menopause can also radically improve the most debilitating symptoms of schizophrenia, a trial on Australian women has found.
A study to be presented at a major international women's mental health conference tomorrow in Melbourne has shown for the first time that the female sex hormone, oestrogen, dramatically reduces hallucinations, delusions and thought disorder in women with the severe mental illness.
"This is revolutionary because it shows without a doubt that it really works to help these women," said study leader Professor Jayashri Kulkarni, director of the Monash Alfred Psychiatry Research Centre in Melbourne.
"It's the strongest sign yet that we have a new mode of treatment for schizophrenia using reproductive hormones."
Oestrogen, a potent neurosteroid, is a key component in hormone replacement therapy (HRT), a controversial treatment found to relieve the hot flushes and mood swings suffered in menopause.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10498489



WELL, THIS IS A SWITCH. BUSH ACTUALLY FINDS CRITICISM OF 'CROOKED ELECTIONS' IN HIS FAVOR !!! THAT'S LIKE THE POT CALLING THE KETTLE BLACK, ISN'T IT?

US says Iran election results 'cooked'
4:25PM Saturday March 15, 2008
WASHINGTON - The United States, at loggerheads with Tehran over its nuclear programme, cast strong doubt on the fairness of Iran's parliamentary elections on Friday and said any outcome of the poll would be "cooked."
"In essence the results are cooked. They are cooked in the sense that the Iranian people were not able to vote for a full range of people," State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said of the poll.
Iranians voted on Friday in an election likely to keep parliament in the control of conservatives after unelected state bodies barred many reformist foes of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad from the race.
"They are given the choice of choosing between one supporter of the regime or another supporter of the regime," McCormack told reporters. "They were not given the opportunity ... to vote for somebody who might have had different ideas."
Ahmadinejad has shrugged off criticism about the election.
After the polls closed, McCormack released a statement saying Iran had "once again failed to meet international standards on the conduct of democratic elections."

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10498370


German police shoot US soldier dead
11:29AM Saturday March 15, 2008
BERLIN - A US soldier stationed in southern Germany was shot dead by police after threatening an ex-girlfriend and then going on the run armed with an assault rifle, authorities said on Friday.
The 30-year old, who was serving in the 2nd, "Dagger", brigade of the US 1st Infantry Division, broke into the woman's house late on Thursday, threatened her and tied her up, police in the Bavarian region of Unterfranken said.
She was able to free herself and alerted the police, who began a search using a commando unit and a helicopter equipped with thermal imaging equipment.
Officers found the soldier several hundred metres from the woman's house and tried to arrest him but he threatened them with the semi-automatic rifle and was shot, police said.
He died in hospital early on Friday, according to a statement from the "Dagger" Brigade Chain of Command.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10498361


Tibet burns as independence protesters shot dead (+ photos)
12:23PM Saturday March 15, 2008
BEIJING - Independence protesters burned shops and cars in the Tibetan capital Lhasa on Friday and Chinese police were reported to have shot dead at least two people, in the fiercest unrest in the region for two decades.
China accused supporters of Tibet's exiled spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, of "masterminding" the uprising, which shatters its carefully-cultivated image of national prosperity and harmony in the buildup to the Beijing Olympic Games.
The Dalai Lama appealed to China to stop using force and begin dialogue with Tibetans. Similar protests in the past have been crushed by security forces with gunfire and mass arrests.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10498363


Supreme Court to rule on right to carry guns
5:00AM Saturday March 15, 2008
By James Vicini
For the first time in 70 years, the US Supreme Court will take on the question of whether individual Americans have the right to keep and bear arms or whether it's a collective right for service in a state militia.
That question is at the heart of a long, impassioned debate about how much power the Government has to keep people from owning guns and it could soon be decided by the US Supreme Court in a case about one of the nation's strictest gun control laws.
Set for arguments next Tuesday and with a decision expected by late June, the nation's highest court could resolve once and for all the much-disputed meaning of the Second Amendment of the US constitution.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10498240


Death Star coming to Earth as apartment block in Dubai
5:00AM Saturday March 15, 2008
The 44-storey sphere building is proposed for a planned 'global city' on an artificial island off Dubai.
It looks like something from a galaxy far, far away. But it could become a reality right here on Earth.
Renowned Dutch architect Rem Koolhaas, of the Office of Metropolitan Architecture, has drawn up plans for a 44-storey sphere-shaped building as part of a "global city" on an artificial island off the coast of Dubai in the United Arab Emirates.
The unusual building will be the centrepiece of the city, which will be home to 1.5 million people and has been described by the New York Times as a "sprawling metropolis of repetitive buildings centred on an airport and inhabited by a tribe of global nomads with few local loyalties".
While Koolhaas says the building will be a self-contained urban neighbourhood, others, including Guardian art and architecture blogger Sean Dodson, think it looks like something "from George Lucas's drawing board" - the Death Star from Star Wars.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10498266


Australia zoo defends its koala rescue policy
4:22PM Friday March 14, 2008
BRISBANE - The Irwin family's Australia Zoo has defended its record of releasing rescued koalas in the wake of claims it broke environmental laws.
The zoo's Australian Wildlife Hospital is required to release treated and recuperated koalas within 5km of where they were found.
News Limited today quoted a spokesman for the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) as saying the hospital had failed to do so on at least eight occasions last year.
The spokesman said EPA officials had met the hospital to discuss the matter and was "monitoring compliance".
The EPA was being sought for further comment.
But Australian Wildlife Hospital director of veterinary services Jon Hanger said while the hospital did its best to release koalas into their natural habitats, increasing infrastructure and housing developments meant this was not always possible.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10498233


Dinosaur for sale in Paris (+video)
3:58PM Friday March 14, 2008
A 65 million-year-old dinosaur goes on sale in Paris next month.
A team of palaeontologists took eight hours to reconstruct the four-legged, three horned dinosaur whose bones had to be shipped in giant separate boxes.
The three-horned triceratops dates back to the end of the Cretaceous period between 67 million and 65 million years.
This skeleton was discovered in North Dakota in 2004. It weighs almost 2 tons.
And it doesn't come cheap - at 500,000 euros this skeleton should be one expensive conversation piece.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10498230


Iceland likely to start whaling again
1:11PM Friday March 14, 2008
Your Views
Is there a case for 'scientific' whaling?
STOCKHOLM - Iceland is likely to start whaling again this summer in a move certain to draw the ire of conservationists, the BBC said on its website yesterday.
Iceland ended its ban on commercial whaling in 2006, but in August last year its fisheries ministry said it would not issue new quotas until market demand increased and an export agreement with Japan - where whale meat is popular - was in place.
The BBC said that a government official had confirmed that quotas would probably be issued again soon with whaling starting in May.
"We are not expecting any big quotas, but we are likely to see in the relatively near future some quotas for minke whales," it quoted Stefan Asmundsson, a senior official in Iceland's fisheries ministry, as saying.
"The most important factor is to ensure the quotas are within sustainable limits."
Gunnar Bergmann Jonsson, the head of Iceland's minke whaling association said he hoped for a quota for 100 of the whales, which grow up to 9m and weigh around 10 tonnes.
In 2006, Iceland said it would allow up to 30 minke whales and 9 fin whales to be hunted, ending a ban in place since 1986.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10498211


2012 London Olympics to revamp Eastern suburbs
3:14PM Friday March 14, 2008
By Martyn Herman
LONDON - Commuters travelling into London from the eastern suburbs are treated daily to the sight of construction vehicles, yellow lights blinking in the winter gloom, snaking across huge mounds of earth.
At first glance it appears a bleak, unpromising landscape, but in four years' time this previously neglected part of the English capital will become the centre of the sporting world.
While the focus now is thousands of kilometres away in Beijing, where preparations for the 2008 Olympic Games are entering the home straight, London's organisers (LOCOG) are setting a steady pace and preparing to lengthen their stride.
A small delegation from the International Olympic Committee (IOC) visited LOCOG headquarters last week.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10498224


EU to set the pace in fighting climate change
3:03PM Friday March 14, 2008
By Ingrid Melander and Darren Ennis
BRUSSELS - EU leaders agreed on a timetable for action yesterday to tackle climate change that they hope will enable them to set the pace in global talks next year, but some voiced unease about the methods.
The European Union sees itself as a world leader in the fight against global warming after EU countries agreed last year to cut emissions by 2020 and increase the share of wind, solar, hydro and wave power in electricity output by the same date.
After chairing the first day of a two-day summit, Slovenian Prime Minister Janez Jansa told a news conference all 27 leaders agreed to adopt a liberalisation of the European energy market in June and a package of measures to fight global warming and promote green energy in December.
"We must reach agreement in the first months of 2009 at the latest," said Jansa.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10498221

continued...