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Full Version: Just International News Week of January 16th, 2005
Common Ground Common Sense > National & International News > Daily National and International News > International News Archive
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Snuffysmith
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Abbas Sworn In Amid Persistent Strife
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New Palestinian leader reaches out to Israel at low-key inauguration as electoral officials resign in protest and violence flares in the Gaza Strip.

By Laura King
Times Staff Writer

January 16 2005

RAMALLAH, West Bank — His right hand resting on the Koran, a solemn Mahmoud Abbas took the oath of office Saturday as Palestinian Authority president and declared in his inaugural address that "our hand is extended toward an Israeli partner for making peace."

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...,0,327972.story
Snuffysmith
China and Taiwan Agree to Nonstop Holiday Flights
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The charter service for Chinese New Year is the first direct air link from the mainland since 1949.

By Ching-Ching Ni
Times Staff Writer

January 16 2005

BEIJING — Longtime rivals China and Taiwan agreed Saturday to allow nonstop charter flights between them over the upcoming Chinese New Year holiday.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...0,2694248.story
Snuffysmith
Orphaned Sri Lanka Dogs Seen as Danger
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Many canines were left to fend for themselves after the tsunami. Fears of deadly rabies trigger a government plan to exterminate them.

By John M. Glionna
Times Staff Writer

January 16 2005

ULLE, Sri Lanka — They are perhaps the most overlooked victims of last month's devastating tsunami, increasingly desperate creatures existing without shelter and little food or even clean water. And under a new government program, their days are numbered.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...0,1677781.story
Snuffysmith
Covertly Running for Office in Iraq
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Many female candidates feel so threatened by violence that they won't acknowledge being in the race for the new national assembly.

By Robin Fields
Times Staff Writer

January 16 2005

BAGHDAD — It is a measure of how unsafe it has become for women seeking office in Iraq that one, in a moment of grim humor, joked recently that she was afraid her husband would find out she was a candidate.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...headlines-world
Snuffysmith
Navy Studies Casualty Care on Fallouja's Brutal Battleground
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Coordination among corpsmen, surgeons and triage personnel during offensive is reviewed.

By Tony Perry
Times Staff Writer

January 16 2005

FALLOUJA, Iraq — Navy medical officials have launched a study to determine how well their system for treating battlefield casualties functioned during the November assault by Marines and Navy SEALs on this formerly rebel-held city, the most intense urban combat for American troops since the Vietnam War.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...headlines-world
Snuffysmith
Indonesia: No Troop Deadline
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From Times Wire Services

January 16 2005

BANDA ACEH, Indonesia — As a top U.S. military official toured the area of Indonesia hardest hit by last month's tsunami, the government said today that there was no three-month deadline for foreign troops to pull out of the country.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...headlines-world
Snuffysmith
Slate Uses Cleric's Image, but Its Own Suffers
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Rival candidates protest United Iraqi Alliance's prominent display of its ties to Sistani, citing electoral rules that bar religious symbols.

By Ashraf Khalil
Times Staff Writer

January 16 2005

BAGHDAD — The symbolism couldn't have been less subtle.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...headlines-world
Snuffysmith
Damage to Babylon Assessed
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From Times Wire Services

January 16 2005

LONDON — U.S. and Polish forces who used Iraq's ancient city of Babylon as a military base caused "substantial damage" to the area, a British Museum report said.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...headlines-world
Snuffysmith
Tymoshenko Says She Expects to Be Premier
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From Times Wire Reports

January 16 2005

Ukrainian opposition leader Yulia Tymoshenko, who roused vast crowds during protests against election fraud, said she believed she would be named prime minister once President-elect Viktor Yushchenko was inaugurated.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...headlines-world
Snuffysmith
Marine Killed; Iraqi Driver's Body Found
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From Times Wire Services

January 16 2005

BAGHDAD — A U.S. Marine was killed in action south of Baghdad on Saturday and an Iraqi driver for the International Committee of the Red Cross was found dead a day earlier, officials said.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...headlines-world
Snuffysmith
Iran's Nobel Winner Says No to Court
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From Associated Press

January 16 2005

TEHRAN — Nobel Peace laureate Shirin Ebadi has told Iran's hard-line Revolutionary Court on Saturday that she will not obey a summons to appear, even if it means her arrest.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...headlines-world
Snuffysmith
4 Russian Commandos Die in Raids
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From Reuters

January 16 2005

MOSCOW — Four Russian commandos were killed Saturday while storming two houses used by suspected Islamic militants in the southern republic of Dagestan, Russian media reported.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...headlines-world
Snuffysmith
Graner Handed 10-Year Term
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The guard who abused detainees at Abu Ghraib says his actions were criminal but he has no regrets. He will receive a dishonorable discharge.

By Richard A. Serrano
Times Staff Writer

January 16 2005

FT. HOOD, Texas — A military jury sentenced Spc. Charles A. Graner Jr. to 10 years in prison Saturday and ordered him discharged from the Army, dismissing his defense that he was following orders from his superiors to torture and humiliate detainees inside Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/na...0,1125970.story
Snuffysmith
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=stor..._india_aviation

US Announces 'Open Skies' With India
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http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=stor...ap/mideast_hajj

Saudis Mobilize Forces to Prepare for Hajj
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Thousands Protest Cuts in Welfare Benefits
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From Times Wire Reports

January 16 2005

A thousand retirees tried to block the road to a Moscow airport and 10,000 others jammed St. Petersburg's streets to protest the loss of some key welfare benefits. It was the largest show of discontent since President Vladimir V. Putin took power five years ago.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...headlines-world
Snuffysmith
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/16/internat...html?oref=login

New US Commander Sees Shift in Military Role in Iraq
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http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/a...dy_050116191402

Iraq is George Bush's Vietnam: US Senator Kennedy
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http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/a...ts_050116200924

Saudi militants, former Iraq fighters, believed behind Kuwait attacks
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http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/a...o_pr_wh/bush_12

Bush: US Not Rushing to Leave Iraq
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http://www.cnn.com/2005/ALLPOLITICS/01/16/...iraq/index.html

Bush hit for linking Iraq to vote
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http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/a...lawi_s_future_4

Allawi in Battle to Keep Iraq Leadership
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http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=stor...el_palestinians

Sharon Orders Army Crackdown on Militants
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http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=stor...n_re_mi_ea/iraq

US Arrests Dozens Ahead of Iraq Vote
brendan
U.S. Tech Exports Slide, but Trash Sales Are Up
http://nytimes.com/2005/01/14/business/14norris.html
brendan
Three all-white juries sentenced him to death for the killing in 1961, 1964 and 1970. All three convictions were overturned by appeals courts for government misconduct. The last conviction was thrown out in 2000 when a federal appeals court ruled that the exclusion of blacks from the grand jury that indicted Mr. Rideau was unconstitutional.

http://nytimes.com/2005/01/17/national/17rideau.html
Snuffysmith
Israel to Increase Pressure on Palestinian Militants

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=B001DB:2F72C9D

Order directed mainly at Gaza Strip where militants have intensified
attacks against Israeli targets in recent weeks

File photoIsraeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has ordered the military
to step up operations against Palestinian militants.

Mr. Sharon's directive ordered the military to step up its operations,
without restrictions, in order to prevent Palestinian militant
attacks.

The order is directed mainly at the Gaza Strip where militants have
intensified their attacks against Israeli targets in recent weeks.
Late Thursday, they launched a well coordinated assault on a major
commercial crossing point between Gaza and Israel proper, killing six
Israelis.

Israel sealed off the Gaza Strip on Friday and cut off all contact
with the Palestinian Authority.

On Saturday and Sunday militants fired mortars and rockets into
Israeli settlements in Gaza and into the Israeli town of Sderot.

Israeli force attacked militants Saturday in central and southern
Gaza, killing at least six people.

The violence escalated as newly elected Palestinian President Mahmoud
Abbas was sworn in. Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon insists there
will be no contact until Mr. Abbas cracks down on the militants.

"Israel will not return to a situation where it is negotiating while
its civilians are being killed. That is untenable," say Mr. Sharon's
senior advisor, Dori Gold, who spoke with VOA.

Mr. Abbas has said he is pursuing negotiations with the militants, but
will not use force to rein them in.

Chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erakat says the Israeli action
unfairly targets Mr. Abbas before he has an opportunity to try to
address the situation.

"They decided to suspend talks with him, what kind of logic is this?
The man did not even resume [sic] his office yet; don't you give him a
chance?," he said.

Mr. Abbas is expected to visit Gaza this week to push for an immediate
ceasefire with the militants.

Meanwhile, Mr. Abbas also faces a wave of political challenges
stemming from last Sunday's election. Forty-six election officials
have resigned their posts to protest alleged irregularities in the
voting.

The officials say they were forced, some at gunpoint, to keep the
polls open an extra two hours, giving Mr. Abbass supporters more time
to vote. International monitors say the last-minute changes increased
voter turnout, but did not undermine the elections legitimacy.
Snuffysmith
US General: Coalition Forces to Play Minor Security Role in Iraq
Elections

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=B001DA:2F72C9D

General Carter Ham says there are enough Iraqi security forces to
secure polling stations and surrounding areas A U.S. general in Iraq
says coalition forces will play only a minor security role during
Iraq's January 30 election.

U.S. Brigadier General Carter Ham, head of multinational forces in
northwestern Iraq, told reporters that although the size of Iraq's
security forces has diminished, there are sufficient numbers to secure
polling stations and surrounding areas. He said coalition forces will
be nearby and will be able to respond quickly if asked for help.

General Ham's comments Saturday came as Iraqi officials unveiled
security measures for the election.

Officials say voters in the violence-ridden provinces of al-Anbar and
Ninevah will be allowed to register and vote on the same day.
Officials also announced plans to restrict travel and ban traffic
around polling stations to prevent car bombings.
Snuffysmith
Iraq Invasion Was 'Worth It' Bush Says

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=B001D8:2F72C9D

In interview with ABC television, President Bush says he was right to
topple Saddam Hussein

George W. BushPresident Bush says he was right to topple Saddam
Hussein even though there were no weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.
That was the president's biggest justification for invading Iraq. Mr.
Bush says he is looking forward to a second term where he will
continue the fight against terrorism and will try to be more careful
about what he says.

President Bush says he is excited about the opportunities ahead,
hopeful for peace, and appreciative of the chance to serve a second
term as he prepares to take the Oath of Office again next week.

In an interview with ABC television, Mr. Bush said it was worth it to
invade Iraq even though U.S. inspectors have concluded there were no
chemical or biological weapons as the president warned.

"I felt like we would find weapons of mass destruction," he said. "
Like many here in the United States and around the world, like the
United Nations thought there would be weapons. We need to find out
what went wrong. Saddam Hussein had the desire to reconstitute a
weapons program, and the world is safer without him in power."

Mr. Bush says he is encouraged about the prospects for this month's
elections in Iraq, despite continuing violence ahead of the vote.
After the election, the president says he will work with the new
government to accelerate the training of Iraqi security forces so
American troops can come home.

"We have a strategy to help the newly formed government defeat
terrorists," he said. "But I readily concede that the only way to
defeat the terrorists is to have the Iraqis defeat them."

Barbara WaltersThe president told ABC News reporter Barbara Walters
that fighting terrorism will remain a priority in his second term, but
he will be more careful about the language he chooses as part of that
fight.

"I said some things in the first term that were probably a little
blunt. 'Bring it on' was a little blunt.," the president admitted.

Mr. Bush used the phrase "bring it on" in July of 2003, telling U.S.
troops that the military would not be frightened off by insurgent
attacks in Iraq.

Some families of soldiers serving there felt the remark was
insensitive. During the campaign, Democratic Party challenger John
Kerry mocked the president, saying that if he wanted to make the
election about national security, he should "bring it on".

In a second term, Mr. Bush says he will be more disciplined in how he
says things.

"I have to be cautious about conveying thoughts in a way that doesn't
send wrong impressions about our country," he said.

President Bush says U.S. public diplomacy is not very good compared to
those who want to harm the country. In the U.S. response to the Indian
Ocean tsunami, he says people in the region are getting the chance to
see the compassion of American troops.
Snuffysmith
US Frees More Than 80 Afghan Prisoners

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=B001DD:2F72C9D

Unusually large prisoner release comes just days before the Muslim
holiday of Eid al-Adha

Afghan prisoner Amanullah waves from a Supreme Court bus after leaving
the U.S. Bagram prison in Kabul The U.S. military has freed 81
detainees held in Afghanistan for alleged insurgent and terrorist
acts.

The detainees were taken to Afghanistan's Supreme Court building
Sunday and told they could return home, many after months in
detention.

They had been among hundreds of Afghans held at the U.S. military base
in Bagram, Afghanistan, and other smaller detention centers.

U.S. forces have released small numbers of prisoners in the past,
usually transferring the detainees to local police custody.

But this latest release, coming just days before the Muslim holiday of
Eid al-Adha, is among the largest ever.

The prisoners had been detained on charges of helping carry out
attacks against Afghan and U.S. targets on behalf of the former
hardline Taleban regime and their al-Qaida terrorist allies.

Mohammed Yussef Idid, a middle aged man missing one of his feet, was
among those freed Sunday. He says he was held at Bagram for about 10
months, despite his protests that he had never been involved in the
Taleban-led insurgency.

He notes that his foot was amputated well before 2001, when the
Taleban began their insurgency after being ousted from power by a
U.S.-led coalition. Because of this, he says, it would have been
impossible for him to have fought as an insurgent.

The U.S. military in Afghanistan came under criticism last year over
alleged beatings and other abuse of prisoners, and later conducted a
full review of its detention facilities.

Mr. Yussef says he and his fellow prisoners, however, were not
mistreated.

He says they were adequately fed and given time to pray and to take
showers. The U.S. military had no immediate comment on Sunday's
prisoner release.
Snuffysmith
Jury Sentences US Army Soldier to 10 Years for Abusing Detainees in
Iraq

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=B001E3:2F72C9D

Specialist Charles Graner will also be reduced in rank, dishonorably
discharged

Army Spc. Charles Graner Jr., center, is taken into custody in
shackles after he was sentenced to 10 years in his court-martial at
Fort Hood, TexasAt Fort Hood, in Texas, a military court has sentenced
U.S Army Specialist Charles Graner to ten years in prison for abuse of
Iraqi detainees at the infamous Abu Ghraib prison.

In addition to the ten-year prison sentence, Specialist Graner will be
reduced in rank to private and will be dishonorably discharged from
the army. The maximum prison sentence he could have received was 15
years. The jury in the military court martial found him guilty of nine
out of ten counts on Friday. Among the charges for which he was
convicted were conspiracy, battery and indecent acts.

The 36-year-old reservist was described by pool reporters in the
courtroom as standing at attention and expressing no emotion as the
sentence was read.

Before the sentencing took place, Specialist Graner testified before
the jury, saying that he had only followed orders given to him by
superior officers. He admitted that some of the things he had done
were criminal and that he had not been trained by the army to carry
out such acts. He said some acts, which he characterized as weird had
been suggested by civilian contractors working with intelligence
officers.

Graner's attorney, Houston-based civilian Guy Womack, had argued in
the weeklong trial that the soldier was being made a scapegoat in
order to protect higher-ranking officers. Mr. Womack said intelligence
officers had ordered guards at Abu Ghraib to rough up prisoners in
preparation for interrogation.

But prosecutors rejected that idea and presented evidence from
witnesses and from some of Specialist Graner's own email messages,
indicating that he had carried out much of the abuse for his own
amusement. They portrayed him as the ringleader of the guards
committing abuses at the prison.

The abuses at Abu Ghraib became known early last year when
photographs, many of them taken by Specialist Graner, were broadcast
and printed by the news media. The images of naked prisoners being
abused drew a reaction of shock and anger from throughout the world.

Specialist Graner was the first guard from Abu Ghraib to face military
court martial, but two others and a female clerk, Private First Class
Lynndie England, are awaiting trial. Private England gave birth last
year to a child prosecutors say was fathered by Specialist Graner.
Three other guards from the prison pleaded guilty and were given
lighter sentences in exchange for their testimony against Specialist
Graner.
Snuffysmith
Indonesia: No Deadline for Foreign Troops Helping Tsunami Victims to
Leave

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=B001E1:2F72C9D

Indonesia's Defense Minister Juwono Sudarsono met with US Deputy
Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz Sunday

US Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz, front right, walks with
Indonesian Defense Minister Juwono Sudarsono after their meeting in
JakartaIndonesia's defense minister says there is no hard deadline for
foreign troops helping tsunami victims to leave the country. Juwono
Sudarsono says Indonesia only suggested March 26 as a target date.

This past week, senior Indonesian officials said they would like all
foreign troops out of the northern province of Aceh by March 26,
sparking concern and allegations that the government was putting
politics ahead of getting aid to tsunami victims.

Aceh has been the scene of a separatist conflict for some 30 years and
has been under martial law and off limits to outsiders for years. That
is until the Tsunami hit three weeks ago.

But Indonesia's Minister of Defense, Juwono Sudarsono, Sunday
addressed the issue, saying Jakarta has no intention of asking foreign
troops to leave prematurely.

"We would like to emphasize that March 26 is not a deadline for
involvement of foreign military personnel in the relief effort. It is
a benchmark for the Indonesian government to improve and accelerate
its relief efforts so that by March 26 the large part of the burden of
the relief effort will be carried by the Indonesian government," he
said.

He says he expects foreign troops to play a part in the operation for
some time, albeit in a reduced role.

Mr. Sudarsono made the remarks Sunday in Jakarta, shortly after
meeting U.S. Deputy Secretary of Defense, Paul Wolfowitz, who is on a
tour through the affected region.

On Saturday, Mr. Wolfowitz visited the Thai Air Force Base (Utapao),
where the United States is coordinating tsunami relief operations, its
largest military mobilization in Asia on more than 30 years.

"Ultimately the key here is to make sure the people who are suffering,
the people who need to recover, have the assistance they need," said
Mr. Wolfowitz.

Here in Indonesia, the country hardest hit by the disaster, the
American aircraft carrier, the U.S.S. Abraham Lincoln, is stationed
off the coast of Sumatra island. It is providing much needed
helicopters to lift supplies into, and injured victims out of, parts
of the disaster zone that are beyond the reach of more conventional
transport.

Mr. Wolfowitz praised the sailors and airmen for their role in the
rescue efforts, saying they had been expecting to go home when the
disaster hit, but had sailed for Aceh without complaint to lend
assistance to the victims of the catastrophe.

Given the extent of the damage to roads, bridges and ports, tens of
thousands of Acehnese victims are likely to need the source of help
being provided by the men and women on the Abraham Lincoln for a while
yet.
Snuffysmith
Aid Reaching Tsunami Survivors in Indonesia 3 Weeks After Disaster,
Bodies Still Being Found

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=B001D9:2F72C9D

More than 100,000 killed in devastating earthquake and tsunami that
hit Indian Ocean

(VOA photo - S. Bobb)It has been three weeks since the devastating
earthquake and tsunami in the Indian Ocean killed more than 100,000
people in Indonesia's Aceh Province. Recovery efforts are progressing.
But in the Uhle Lheu neighborhood of Banda Aceh, relief workers are
just beginning to clear debris, and they are still retrieving hundreds
of bodies each day.

It is mid morning in the Uhle Lheu suburb of Banda Aceh, a spit of
land that stretches west from the city center out along the coast. The
mostly residential neighborhood was flattened last month by the
earthquake and tsunami, which cut a swath of destruction several
kilometers deep through the area. A few solitary houses still stand
but there are no trees. Mostly, only the foundations remain of a once
thriving suburb.

Crane lifts truck damaged in Tsunami (VOA photo - S. Bobb)The debris -
wooden boards, bits of furniture, soggy mattresses and pillows - rises
two meters high in some places. It spreads like a vast trash dump as
far as the eye can see.

The main road into the area was only recently cleared. Workers using
heavy equipment are now removing crashed cars and trucks from the
along the strip.

(VOA photo - S. Bobb)An industrial crane carefully lifts a smashed
dump truck out of the mud and swings it onto a wrecker.

Amnul, a 40 year-old foreman with a private construction company, is
supervising the operation. He says in the past five days, his crew has
removed 50 such vehicles from the mud.

Amnul with relief workers (VOA photo - S. Bobb)Amnul says he cannot
find words to express how sad he feels about this work. He says it
will take months to clear the area.

Up the road, a group of about 40 volunteers from a youth group in
central Aceh Province is searching for bodies in the ruins of what
once was a small shopping center. Their leader, a wiry man named
Suhardi, says his crew this morning has already retrieved 200 bodies.

Mr. Suhardo says he feels deeply for the people here. They need help,
he says, and we have to help each other. It is God's will.

A bit further, several young men are loading battered hospital
equipment onto a truck under the supervision of a portly older man.

Dr. Marzuki (VOA photo - S. Bobb)Dr. Marzuki is salvaging what he can
from the shell of his hospital, the Permata Hati. He says he survived
because he was in Jakarta on business when the tsunami struck. But his
three daughters and son -- who were working that morning - were killed
along with 10 staff members and 17 patients.

Ten years to build the hospital, he says, and in one day, it is all
gone.

Dr. Marzuki says he will store what equipment he can salvage and then
look for some bank loans to reopen the hospital. Waving his hands
above his head, he tells everyone he will return to Uhle Lheu.

"Yeah, I'll come back here. I'll (be) working here again. I'm sure,"
he said.

Engineers estimate it will take up to three months to clear the rubble
of Uhle Lheu and recover all the bodies.

More than 70,000 bodies have been recovered so far. After three weeks
in the muck, they are unrecognizable. Most of them are being buried in
a mass graveyard on the airport road leading out of town.

Volunteers in Aceh (VOA photo - S. Bobb)Thousands of relief workers,
including troops from several foreign nations, are struggling to set
up a pipeline of food and emergency supplies to sustain the estimated
one million homeless. They expect they will need help for at least six
months, until they can find new homes and rebuild their lives.

The survivors from Uhle Lheu think of rebuilding also. But for them,
and the volunteers who are helping them, the future has been postponed
until they finish clearing what is left of the past.
Snuffysmith
Celebrities Raise Funds for Tsunami Victims

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=B001DE:2F72C9D

Madonna, Elton John, and Stevie Wonder among dozens of stars in
benefit concert

John Mayer performs in New York during a live broadcast of the
telethon "Tsunami Aid: A Concert of Hope" Madonna, Elton John, and
Stevie Wonder were among dozens of entertainers who helped raise funds
for tsunami relief in a U.S. benefit concert Saturday that was
broadcast around the United States. Some of the biggest names in music
and movies joined the effort to help the millions left homeless by the
disaster.

The two-hour program originated in Los Angeles, New York and London.
It featured news footage of the devastating tsunami and the stories of
some whose lives it shattered in Thailand, Sri Lanka, Indonesia and
other parts of Asia and Africa.

The actor Morgan Freeman was one of many who appeared, asking viewers
to call and offer donations. The funds will go to American Red Cross
International Response Fund. He said "170,000 people have died. In the
next few weeks, that number could double or triple. Right now, we
could all work toward one goal: How to bring help to these people in
their time of need," he said.

Former U.S presidents George Bush senior and Bill Clinton also
appeared on the program. President Bush has asked both to spearhead
the U.S fundraising efforts for the tsunami victims.

Actor Bruce Willis said the evening's musical performances from
artists like Norah Jones, Sheryl Crow, Tom Jones and Eric Clapton
showed the healing power of music. "And tonight is about healing. When
the world says please, let us help, extraordinary things begin to
happen," he said.

Actor Robert Downey Junior spoke of the needs of those in stricken
communities, initially for basics like cooking utensils, and later for
things like school supplies. We have a choice, said actor Clint
Eastwood. We can either look away or we can help.

The actor Robert De Niro spoke of the force and devastation of the
earthquake and tsunami that followed. But tonight we can participate
in a force more powerful than that, the power of giving, and help
change the lives of those most directly affected by this tragedy. And
in the process, we change our hearts because you can't give and remain
the same," he said.

Celebrities manned the phone banks to speak with those who called to
make their contributions. The effort was reminiscent of a televised
fundraiser in the aftermath of the 2001 terrorist attacks on New York
and Washington, which raised nearly $130 million for the families of
the victims.

Saturday's event was organized by the NBC Universal Television Group
and was aired its flagship NBC broadcast network and several
affiliated cable networks. NBC executives say they will release
fundraising totals later.
Snuffysmith
Scuba Diving Instructor Tells of Tsunami Horror on Thai Beach

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=B001DF:2F72C9D

American found some newfound skills put to good use The tsunami that
struck South and Southeast Asia spawned stories of horror. Even many
who lived through it say they could not comprehend what was happening.
VOA correspondent Gary Thomas talked to one American who was caught in
the tsunami on a beach in Thailand, and found some newfound skills put
to good use.

Paul Landgraver

Paul Landgraver loves the water. But, as he found out on December 26,
the feeling was not mutual. On that day, December 26, the 33-year-old
American scuba diving instructor found himself desperately struggling
to stay on the surface of rushing water rather swimming underneath it.

"I swam for it. I couldn't swim forward or backward because the water
was moving way too fast. I swam side to side to avoid buildings,
trees, cars that were floating by, things like that. And I ended up
more than a kilometer inland," he says.

Khao Lak, a small village north of the more popular resort of Phuket,
and its surrounding area were popular among international scuba
divers. A community of some 300 expatriate dive instructors - most of
them from Scandinavian countries - set up shops in the area to cater
to tourists.

Karin SudeliusMr. Landgraver, who had been in Thailand for about three
years, was one of the hundreds of Western scuba diving instructors who
had migrated to Thailand for its pristine diving conditions. He and
his girlfriend Karin Sudelius were relaxing the day after Christmas in
their bungalow only some 100 meters off the water's edge in Khao Lak
when he noticed a trickle of water edging in. In a matter of minutes,
the trickle was a flood, and the pair fled to the apparent safety of
the second floor.

"And we realized how bad things were, so we tried to throw a mattress
out the window. By the time we even got there, the water was coming
through our second floor and knocked down the wall of our second
floor. And we jumped. We jumped into the water. And at this point, the
water was at least [three meters] deep and still rising. We got
separated at that point," he says.

He lost everything, including the clothes on his back, but was
relatively unscathed except for some lacerations. But there were many
he saw that were far, far worse.

"I literally saw someone impaled on this debris, trying to wiggle and
get off, kind of like a moth. I saw someone decapitated by the debris.
Afterwards, when we were pulling people out of the water - out of the
still water when it was done, the pools and ponds that remained - I
probably saw 50 people in an hour who were trapped in the debris,
wrapped around trees, and all of them drowned and dead," he says.

Some 5,000 people are estimated to have perished from the tsunami in
the Khao Lak area. Mr. Landgraver says one of his Thai dive shop
employees subsequently committed suicide because he lost his mother,
father, wife, and five children.

Fortunately for some survivors, scuba diving instructors are required
to be certified in first aid. Mr. Landgraver had passed his medical
certification only one month before the tsunami, and found himself
putting his newfound skills to work. Most of the divers with just
basic first aid were dealing with drownings and massive traumas and
death. And these are all people who - we're just divers.

"We just love being in the water and doing what we do. And here we
are, stuck in a situation where there's nothing to do but try our
best," he says.

It was at one of the makeshift first aid stations set up in a dive
shop that Mr Landgraver found his girlfriend alive. She had survived
by clinging to a palm tree.

Cut off from the world, several of the divers elected to try to make
the 800-kilometer journey from Khao Lak to Bangkok by car to try to
get home. When they got to the Thai capital, the Scandinavian and
German citizens got food, clothes, and flights home. The U.S. Embassy,
he says, was not so welcoming.

"When I arrived at the American Embassy, I got a brand-new passport
and a paperback novel, but no assistance of any kind. And I had
absolutely nothing in the world. I had a pair of shorts and a T-shirt
I had borrowed," he says.

Mr. Landgraver says he went to the Bangkok airport and basically
begged and pleaded with airlines for help. Sympathetic employees of
Japanese Air Lines gave him a ticket home.

Since his return to Berkeley, California, Mr. Landgraver says he has
been trying to make some sense out of what happened to him.

"I'm not sure what to make of all this. To come out of it like I am,
even relatively sane and sound, is the hand of something much, much
bigger than me. To have just taken all the medical training I had that
was designed almost for a situation exactly like this one month before
was a miracle. It's just flabbergasting to think of it. There are no
coincidences in this," he says.

But one thing is certain, he says - he will get back to diving as soon
as he can. Paul Landgraver's one-sided love affair with the water is
undiminished.
Snuffysmith
China-Taiwan Agree on First-Ever Direct Flights

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=B001E0:2F72C9D

Move expected to ease cross-straits tensions China and Taiwan have
agreed to allow direct commercial flights for a limited time between
their territories for the first time in 55 years. The move is expected
to ease tensions in one of Asia's most contentious political disputes.

This Chinese Lunar New Year, residents of mainland China and Taiwan
will be able to complete a journey that has not been possible for the
past 55 years.

For a limited time surrounding the holiday, China and Taiwan will
allow landmark direct commercial flights between some cities on the
Communist Chinese mainland and the democratic island of Taiwan.

Between January 29 and February 20, 24 round-trip flights will connect
the mainland cities of Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou with the
Taiwanese cities of Taipei and Kaohsiung.

All flights are required to pass through Hong Kong airspace but will
not have to land. At present, all flights between the two regions have
to stop-off at a third destination, adding hours to a short trip.

The deal came Saturday in the Chinese Special Administrative region of
Macau.

Michael Lo, Chairman of the Taipei Airlines Association, was one of
the principal negotiators for the agreement. He says opinions were
exchanged and an agreement was reached fairly quickly.

Taiwan has banned direct transport links since 1949, when the
Nationalist Kuomintang government fled to Taiwan after losing a civil
war to the Chinese Communist Party.

China regards the independently-ruled island of Taiwan as part of its
territory and insists Taiwan must not declared formal independence and
must eventually be reunited with the mainland, by force if necessary.

But business ties are flourishing despite the political rift.

The temporary deal to allow direct flights between China and Taiwan
could help to lift tension between the two sides, which has been
rising since independence-minded Taiwanese President Chen Shui-bian
was re-elected in March 2004.
Snuffysmith
Rebels Express Thanks for Aid to Indonesians
By IAN FISHER
Rebels in Indonesia's Aceh Province said that the group's
top leadership had issued orders not to harm any aid
workers.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/17/internat...7rebels.html?th
Snuffysmith
BACK CHANNELS
How Top Spies in Ukraine Changed the Nation's Path
By C. J. CHIVERS
As protests against a rigged election grew, Kiev seemed
headed for a Soviet-style crackdown. Then, inside Ukraine's
security apparatus, strange events began to unfold.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/17/internat...ukraine.html?th
Snuffysmith
Sharon Orders New Crackdown on Gaza Factions
By GREG MYRE
At the same time, the Palestine Liberation Organization's
executive committee issued a rare statement against
militant violence.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/17/internat...mideast.html?th
Snuffysmith
- QUOTATION OF THE DAY -

"Despite the change in the Palestinian leadership, we have yet to see them taking any action whatsoever to halt the terrorism."
- ARIEL SHARON, prime minister of Israel.


http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/17/internat...mideast.html?th
Snuffysmith
Chinese Leader Purged for Supporting Tiananmen Protesters
Dies at 85
By JIM YARDLEY
Zhao Ziyang, the former general secretary of China's
Communist Party, lived under house arrest for 15 years, not
far from the offices where he once led China.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/17/internat.../17zhao.html?th
Snuffysmith
81 Afghans Freed by U.S.; First Step in Broad Amnesty
By CARLOTTA GALL
The release was described as the first stage of a
reconciliation program under which many suspected Taliban
fighters might be freed.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/17/internat...7afghan.html?th
Snuffysmith
High-Ranking Officers May Face Prosecution in Iraqi
Prisoner Abuse, Military Officials Say
By KATE ZERNIKE
Evidence of the abuses at Abu Ghraib prison has led to
several Pentagon investigations that have found what one
called "personal responsibility at higher levels."

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/17/national/17abuse.html?th
Snuffysmith
Dispute Puts a Medical Journal Under Fire
By BARRY MEIER
A misleading article on "missing" Eli Lilly documents could
give the usually methodical world of medical journals a
black eye.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/17/business...journal.html?th
Snuffysmith
Measuring Literacy in a World Gone Digital
By TOM ZELLER Jr.
The Educational Testing Service has developed a new test
that it says can assess technology literacy.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/17/technology/17test.html?th
Snuffysmith
The Oil-for-Food Audits
Finding out who botched the oil-for-food program in Iraq is
essential to restoring confidence in the U.N.'s ability to
manage international programs.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/17/opinion/17mon1.html?th
Snuffysmith
The Need to Curb Indonesia's Army
Indonesia's president must not let the military's struggle
with guerrillas in the Aceh Province take precedence over
the relief effort.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/17/opinion/17mon3.html?th
Snuffysmith
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=stor...sa_newyorker_dc

US Conducting Secret Missions Inside Iran
Snuffysmith
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=stor...e=20&u=/ap/iraq

Gunmen Kill 8 Iraqi National Guardsmen
Snuffysmith
http://news.yahoo.com/

Gunman kidnap Catholic Archbishop in Iraq
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