2012年12月29日星期六

said Pakistani intelligence officials

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PESHAWAR, Pakistan - Pakistani officials pressured tribal elders Friday to help rescue 23 policemen believed to have been kidnapped by the Taliban during attacks on their posts in the country's troubled northwest tribal region.

Also Friday, missiles fired from unmanned U.S. aircraft killed four suspected militants at a training centre elsewhere in the remote frontier area, the main sanctuary for al-Qaida and Taliban fighters in the country, Pakistani intelligence officials said.

The 23 tribal policemen went missing before dawn Thursday when militants armed with rocket-propelled grenades and automatic weapons attacked two posts in the Darra Adam Khel tribal region. Two policemen were also killed in the attacks.

Senior political officials held a meeting in the main northwest city of Peshawar on Friday with tribal elders from both the villages where the attacks took place, said government administrator Naveed Akbar Khan. Tribal law stipulates that the elders could be punished for attacks that occurred in their areas.

Officials gave the elders until Monday to rescue the missing policemen and arrest the culprits, said Khan. If they fail to do so, authorities may take punitive action, such as cutting off monthly allowances they receive from the government. The elders said they would do everything they could to help, said Khan.

Security forces have also launched an operation to try to recover the missing policemen.

The U.S. missile strike Friday occurred in Gorbuz village in the North Waziristan tribal area, said Pakistani intelligence officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media. Three missiles hit a suspected militant training centre in the village, they said.

The U.S. rarely speaks publicly about the covert CIA drone program in Pakistan, but officials have said privately that the strikes have killed many senior Taliban and al-Qaida commanders.

____

Associated Press writer Rasool Dawar contributed to this report from Peshawar.

WASHINGTON

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Senate on Friday rejected a Republican amendment to cut the immediate cost of a $60.4 billion Superstorm Sandy reconstruction bill by more than half to $23.8 billion.

The 54-41 vote cleared the way for final Senate action on the disaster recovery bill.

(Reporting By Doug Palmer; editing by Todd Eastham)

Elsewhere in Yemen

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SANAA, Yemen (AP) — An airstrike killed two suspected al-Qaida militants in Yemen on Friday while tribesmen with links to the group were believed to be behind an attack on an oil pipeline elsewhere in the country, Yemeni security officials said.

Officials and residents suspect that the strike in the southeastern province of Hadramawt was carried out by a U.S. drone. Washington considers al-Qaida in Yemen the group's most dangerous branch and has carried out drone strikes that have killed militants there before.

Yemeni security officials said the two men were killed while riding a motorcycle. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

The attack around the town of Shehr comes just days after another suspected drone strike in the same area killed five al-Qaida militants. The Interior Ministry said among those killed in that attack was Abdullah Bawazir, the chief architect behind a mass prison break last year that freed dozens of fighters who then took arms against the government and helped administer al-Qaida rule in the south.

The group overran entire towns and villages in southern Yemen last year by taking advantage of a security lapse during nationwide protests that eventually ousted the country's longtime ruler. Backed by the U.S. military, Yemen's army was able to regain control of the region but al-Qaida militants continue to launch deadly attacks against Yemeni security forces that have killed hundreds.

On Monday, another suspected U.S. drone strike killed two militants in the southern town of Radda in Bayda province, which was also briefly overrun by al-Qaida militants earlier this year.

Elsewhere in Yemen, al-Qaida linked tribesmen were believed to be behind an attack on an oil pipeline in the northeastern province of Marib, just hours after the line was fixed on Friday. Tribesmen from Marib have also attacked power stations in the past.

The government has carried out deadly strikes against the tribesmen in recent weeks, but has failed to stop the acts of sabotage.

The more than 430 kilometer-long (260 miles) oil pipeline carries around 100,000 barrels of oil per day. The government said the acts of sabotage this month alone have amounted to $310 million in losses to the impoverished Arab nation.

Some tribal chiefs are also suspected of being allied with former longtime President Ali Abdullah Saleh. The attacks appeared to be aimed at undermining the new government.

go back

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SRINAGAR, India - Indian forces on Friday killed two suspected rebels in a gunbattle and wounded seven civilians later during anti-India protests in southern Kashmir, police said.

Two army officers and one policeman were injured in the fighting in Chandigam, a village 45 kilometres (30 miles) south of Srinagar, the main city in the Indian portion of Kashmir, said a police officer who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to reporters.

A police statement said those killed were Kashmiri cadres of Lashkar-e-Taiba, a Pakistan-based rebel group that New Delhi accuses of staging a string of deadly attacks on India's financial capital of Mumbai in 2008. There was no independent account of the fighting and no rebel group has claimed involvement so far.

After the gunbattle, hundreds of villagers took to the streets chanting "We want freedom" and "Go India, go back," protesting government forces besieging them.

The police statement said officers shot and wounded seven civilians in the crowd after protesters threw rocks at police. Those injured were hospitalized but their conditions were not available.

The protest spread to neighbouring Pulwama town, which was put under curfew.

Later Friday, the government ordered an inquiry into troops firing on the protesters with findings to be submitted within two weeks, said Shafat Noor, a state administrator.

The Himalayan region of Kashmir is divided between India and Pakistan, and both countries claim it in its entirety.

Indian troops have largely suppressed an armed uprising launched in 1989, but public opposition to Indian rule still runs deep in Kashmir and is now mostly expressed in street protests where rock-throwing protesters and troops frequently face off.

More than 68,000 people have been killed in an armed rebellion against Indian rule and in an ensuing Indian crackdown.

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HOUSTON - Former U.S. President George H.W. Bush, who has been hospitalized for more than a month, is getting excellent medical treatment and would advise people to "put the harps back in the closet," his longtime Texas chief of staff said. There was no update on his condition Friday.

Jean Becker pointed out in her statement Thursday evening that the 88-year-old Bush likely will be in the hospital for a while after a "terrible case of bronchitis which then triggered a series of complications."

Bush, the oldest living former U.S. president, has been in intensive care since Sunday. He was admitted to a Texas hospital on Nov. 23 for treatment of what his spokesman Jim McGrath described as a "stubborn" cough. He spent about a week there earlier in November for treatment of the same condition.

McGrath and a hospital spokesman did not provide any new information on Bush's health Friday morning. McGrath said previously that only changes in Bush's condition would prompt updates.

Becker said "most of the civilized world" contacted her Wednesday after disclosures Bush had been placed in the intensive care unit after physicians were having difficulty bringing a fever under control.

"Someday President George H.W. Bush might realize how beloved he is, but of course one of the reasons why he is so beloved is because he has no idea," Becker said in the at-times lighthearted statement that made multiple references to the former president's sense of humour.

She said updates about Bush's condition have been limited "out of respect for President Bush and the Bush family who, like most of us, prefer to deal with health issues in privacy." She said another factor was "because he is so beloved we knew everyone would overreact."

"I hope you all know how much your love, concern and support are appreciated," Becker said.

While the president's treatment was "unequaled anywhere," she said prayers also were needed and welcomed.

It had been hoped Bush would be well enough to spend Christmas this week at home. But while his cough improved, he developed a persistent fever and his condition was downgraded to "guarded."

The former president has had visits from family and friends, including longtime friend James Baker III, his

Bush, the 41st president, had served two terms as Ronald Reagan's vice-president when he was elected in 1988 to succeed Reagan. Four years later, after a term highlighted by the success of the 1991 Gulf War in Kuwait, he lost to Democrat Bill Clinton amid voters' concerns about the economy.

Bush skydived on at least three of his birthdays since leaving the White House, most recently when he turned 85.

Bush now has a form of Parkinson's disease that forced him in recent years to use a motorized scooter or wheelchair for mobility.

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NEW YORK (AP) — A mumbling woman pushed a man to his death in front of a subway train on Thursday night, the second time this month someone has been killed in such nightmarish fashion, police said.

The man was standing on the elevated platform of a 7 train in Queens at about 8 p.m. when he was shoved by the woman, who witnesses said had been following him closely and mumbling to herself, New York Police Department chief spokesman Paul Browne said. When the train pulled into the tracks, the woman got up from a nearby bench and shoved the man down, he said. The man had been standing with his back to her.

It didn't appear the man noticed her before he was shoved onto the tracks, police said. The condition of the man's body was making it difficult to identify him, police said.

The woman fled, and police were searching for her. She was described as Hispanic, in her 20s, heavyset and about 5-foot-5, wearing a blue, white and gray ski jacket and Nike sneakers with gray on top and red on the bottom.

It was unclear if the man and the woman knew each other or if anyone tried to help the man up before he was struck by the train and killed. There was no video of the incident at the station on Queens Boulevard in the Sunnyside neighborhood. Detectives canvassed the neighborhood for useable video.

On Dec. 3, 58-year-old Ki-Suck Han was shoved in front of a train in Times Square. A photograph of him on the tracks a split second before he was killed was published on the front of the New York Post the next day, causing an uproar and debate over whether the photographer, who had been waiting for a train, should have tried to help him and whether the newspaper should have run the image. Apparently no one else tried to help up Han, either.

A homeless man, 30-year-old Naeem Davis, was charged with murder in Han's death and was ordered held without bail. He has pleaded not guilty and has said that Han was the aggressor and had attacked him first. The two men hadn't met before.

Service was suspended Thursday night on the 7 train line, which connects Manhattan and Queens, and the Metropolitan Transportation Authority was using buses to shuttle riders while police investigated.

Being pushed onto the train tracks is a silent fear for many of the commuters who ride the city's subway a total of more than 5.2 million times on an average weekday, but deaths are rare. Among the more high-profile cases was the January 1999 death of aspiring screenwriter Kendra Webdale, who was shoved by a former mental patient. After that, the state Legislature passed Kendra's Law, which lets mental health authorities supervise patients who live outside institutions to make sure they are taking their medications and aren't threats to safety.

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BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) — Energy companies behind the oil boom on the Northern Plains are increasingly turning to an industrial-age workhorse — the locomotive — to move their crude to refineries across the U.S., as plans for new pipelines stall and existing lines can't keep up with demand.

Delivering oil thousands of miles by rail from the heartland to refineries on the East, West and Gulf coasts costs more, but it can mean increased profits — up to $10 or more a barrel — because of higher oil prices on the coasts. That works out to about $700,000 per train.

The parade of mile-long trains carrying hazardous material out of North Dakota and Montana and across the country has experts and federal regulators concerned. Rail transport is less safe than pipelines, they say, and the proliferation of oil trains raises the risk of a major derailment and spill.

Since 2009, the number of train cars carrying crude hauled by major railroads has jumped from about 10,000 a year to a projected 200,000 in 2012. Much of that has been in the Northern Plains' Bakken crude patch, but companies say oil trains are rolling or will be soon from Texas, Colorado and western Canada.

"This is all occurring very rapidly, and history teaches that when those things happen, unfortunately, the next thing that is going to occur would be some sort of disaster," said Jim Hall, a transportation consultant and former chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board.

Rail companies said the industry places a priority on safety and has invested heavily in track upgrades, provided emergency training and taken other measures to guard against accidents. There have been no major oil train derailments from the Bakken, according to federal regulators.

Union Pacific Railroad CEO Jack Koraleski said hauling oil out of places like North Dakota will be a long-term business for railroads because trains are faster than pipelines, reliable and offer a variety of destinations.

"The railroads are looking at this as a unique opportunity, a game-changing opportunity for their business," said Jeffery Elliot, a rail expert with the New York-based consulting firm Oliver Wyman.

BNSF Railway Co., the prime player in the Bakken, has bolstered its oil train capacity to a million barrels a day and expects that figure to increase further. To accommodate the growth, in part, the railroad is sinking $197 million into track upgrades and other improvements in Montana and North Dakota.

BNSF is also increasing train sizes, from 100 oil cars per train to as many as 118.

Larger trains are harder to control, and that increases the chances of something going wrong, safety experts said. State and local emergency officials worry about a derailment in a population center or an environmentally sensitive area such as a river crossing.

Rail accidents occur 34 times more frequently than pipeline ones for every ton of crude or other hazardous material shipped comparable distances, according to a recent study by the Manhattan Institute, a conservative think tank. The Association of American Railroads contends the study was flawed but acknowledges the likelihood of a rail accident is double or triple the chance of a pipeline problem.

The environmental fears carry an ironic twist: Oil trains are gaining popularity in part because of a shortage of pipeline capacity — a problem that has been worsened by environmental opposition to such projects as TransCanada's stalled Keystone XL pipeline. That project would carry Bakken and Canadian crude to the Gulf of Mexico.

Wayde Schafer, a North Dakota spokesman for the Sierra Club, described rail as "the greater of two evils" because trains pass through cities, over waterways and through wetlands that pipelines can be built to avoid.

"It's an accident waiting to happen. It's going to be a mess and we don't know where that mess is going to be," Schafer said.

For oil companies, the embrace of rail is a matter of expediency. Oil-loading rail terminals can be built in a matter of months, versus three to five years for pipelines to clear regulatory hurdles and be put into service, said Justin Kringstad of the North Dakota Pipeline Authority. Although more pipelines are in the works, Kringstad said moving oil by rail will continue.

The surge comes at the right time for railroads: Coal shipments — a mainstay of the rail industry — have suffered because of competition from cheap natural gas.

In the eastern U.S., CSX and Norfolk Southern railroads haven't seen as much growth because oil from the Marcellus Shale area of Pennsylvania, Ohio and New York is close enough to refineries that trucks haul the crude.

Yet BNSF is beginning to haul Bakken crude east to Chicago, where it hands off the tank cars to CSX or Norfolk Southern for delivery to Eastern refineries. It has also sent oil to the West Coast, a trend that could increase if Alaska crude production falters, as some industry observers are predicting.

The growth will require significant upgrades to already congested rail lines, industry analysts said.

Overall, crude oil shipments still represent less than 1 percent of all carloads. And there are far more dangerous materials aboard the nation's trains, including explosives, poisonous gases and other industrial chemicals.

But emergency officials are increasingly wary of major accidents involving oil trains, which carry far more cargo than some other hazardous-material trains.

While oil is not as volatile as some other products, a rupture of just one car can spill 20,000 to 30,000 gallons, said Sheldon Lustig, a rail expert who consults with local governments on accidents and hazardous materials.

Recognizing the risks, Houston-based Musket Corp., an operator of oil train terminals in North Dakota, Wyoming, Colorado, Utah and Oklahoma, has donated spill equipment and provided training to fire officials.

"You want to be a good steward in that community," said Musket managing director JP Fjeld-Hansen.

Federal Railroad Administration officials said they have coordinated hazardous-material training seminars and sought more law enforcement patrols for rail crossings to increase safety.

Federal law requires railroads to select hazardous-material routes after analyzing the potential for accidents in heavily populated areas and environmentally sensitive spots. Those analyses are confidential for security reasons.

Lustig said the railroads have considerable sway over the process.

"Under federal guidelines, the railroad makes the analysis, the railroad decides what they want to do, and the railroad does it," he said. "There is no public accountability."

__

Funk reported from Omaha, Neb. Associated Press writer James MacPherson in Bismarck, N.D., contributed to this report.

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    Five-year-old Brandon Giles must have been excited to receive a Nintendo 3DS for Christmas — at least, he was until he turned it on. According to 9News, Giles’ father bought a refurbished 3DS from GameStop (GME) in Colorado for his son. However, when his son turned  it on and started poking around, he found nine pornographic images of two people in a bed and asked his brother to help him erase them. That’s when the father gave GameStop a call. GameStop’s response was that the images were most likely left over from its previous owner and an employee failed to properly wipe out the data on the 3DS before re-stocking it. “We have a rigorous quality control process in place to ensure that existing content is removed from all devices before they are re-sold,” GameStop said in a statement issued from its corporate office. “Out of millions of transactions each year, ones like this happen very rarely. Our number one priority is to make this right for our customer.”

    [More from BGR: Samsung could face $15 billion fine for trying to ban iPhone, other Apple devices]

    The bigger question many people are asking is, why would anyone take pornographic photos with the 3DS’s terrible low-res cameras? We may never know the answer.

    This article was originally published by BGR

    アウトレット モンクレール 245

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    Small farm plot in Xi'an area,&hellip,モンクレール キッズ;

    Because China's grain imports more than doubled from January to September, according to ChinaDaily, China needs to better manage its imports of grains. The same report explained China met its millennium goal of reducing poverty in the country from 250 million people to 26.88 million. One difficulty, a FarmSite report explains, is environmental problems in China due to:

    * High temperatures leading to smaller kernel size

    * Low temperatures with high humidity leading to diseases like fusarium

    * Unusual spread of aphids, spiders, and armyworm according to ChinaDaily,アウトレット モンクレール, increasingly treated with pesticides

    * Limited water resources in the northern grain belt according to USDA.gov and Water-Technology.net.

    Other ways China is seeking to control its requirements for grains includes:

    To Boost Farm Productivity China Seeks to Form 110 Mega Firms

    According to ChinaDaily, China will use fiscal and tax policies to encourage acquisitions and mergers of the many smaller farm corporations until they form 100 MegaFirms with annual sales of $1.59 billion dollars or more.

    Protection of Grasslands Announced

    In November, China announced stiffer penalties for crimes that damage its sensitive grasslands including illegal grazing or farming. It has also added a subsidy program for herders, that will seek to move herds into enclosed areas, according to Xinhua.

    The South to North Water Project

    China is working on a major water plan called the South to North Water Project. When the project is complete,ダウン コート メンズ, water from several rivers will be diverted northward along tunnels, pumping stations, canals, and includes additions to current reservoirs, according to USDA.gov and Water-Technology.net .

    Insurance for Small Farmers

    China has started a fledgling agricultural insurance program to protect small farmers from crop failures and help ensure that they remain in business, according to Global Times.

    Chinese AgriBusinesses are Purchasing Agricultural Property Worldwide

    Like many Global AgriBusinesses, China wants to ensure a supply of crops, investing in croplands around the world including:

    * According to IIAS, China has acquired one 110,000-hectare plot and one 2,000-hectare plot in Tajikistan.

    * According to the Vancouver Sun, Beidahuang, one of China's agribusiness, has purchased 60,000 hectares in Western Australia, including the Port of Albany; 300,000 hectares in the Rio Negra Province of Patagonia in Argentina; and a 99-year lease on 1 million hectares in Kazakstan.

    * According to Consultancy Africa, China has purchased less than 50,000 hectares of land in Africa, not the more than 3 million claimed by some. China creates joint ventures with the African government, while allowing Chinese immigrants to teach locals Chinese farming techniques, growing food primarily for the local market.

    Corn Production Hybrids

    According to Reuters, China is working with a variety of seed firms, including Monsanto, DuPont and Syngenta AG, to develop corn hybrids with tougher stalks more suited to mechanized harvest, and species that are drought-, weed- and pest-resistant, leading to much higher yields.

    China is Diversifying Grain Imports Relations

    China is diversifying its grain purchases:

    * China cancelled purchases of U.S. soybeans totaling about 600,000 metric tons, according to CattleNetwork.com, lowering prices.

    * As of mid-November, Canada is building agricultural relations with China, according to Agriculture and Agri-Food of Canada.

    * China will expect to buy increasing amounts of many agricultural products from the Australian market, according to Xinhua.

    * The Ukraine expects to begin exporting 500,000 to 700,000 tons of grain to China, according to ChinaDaily.

    * According to a Reuters report, India is looking to export more rice and wheat to China and or Iran.

  • 2012年12月26日星期三

    The Most Popular Scientific American Stories of 2012

    The Most Popular Scientific American Stories of 2012

    The top 10 most popular stories published in 2012:

    1. Men and Women Can't Be "Just Friends"

    2. The World’s Last Worm: A Dreaded Disease Nears Eradication

    3. NASA Crushes 2012 Mayan Apocalypse Claims 

    4. How Hollywood Is Encouraging Online Piracy

    5. Scientists Discover Children’s Cells Livingin Mothers’ Brains

    6. Psychiatry's "Bible" Gets an Overhaul

    7. “Once in a Civilization” Comet to Zip Past Earth Next Year

    8. The Power of Introverts: A Manifesto for Quiet Brilliance

    9. Obama and Romney Tackle 14 Top Science Questions

    10. North Carolina Considers Making Sea Level Rise Illegal

    Honorable mentions: old stories that surfaced with a vengeance this year.

    Why Do Cats Purr? April 3, 2006

    Why does lactic acid buildup in muscles? And why does I tcause soreness? January 23, 2006

    How Long Can a Person Survive without Food? November 8, 2004

    Follow Scientific American on Twitter @SciAm and @SciamBlogs.

    Visit ScientificAmerican.com for the latest in science, health and technology news.

    © 2012 ScientificAmerican.com. All rights reserved.

    Two drone strikes kill five in Yemen: officials

    Two drone strikes kill five in Yemen: officials

    SANAA/ADEN (Reuters) - At least five people were killed in two drone strikes in south Yemen on Monday in what security and local officials said were attacks on suspected al Qaeda-linked insurgents.

    Improving stability and security in Yemen is a priority for the United States and its Gulf Arab allies because of its strategic position next to the world's top oil exporter, Saudi Arabia, and shipping lanes, and because it is home to one of the most active wings of al Qaeda.

    Monday's strikes were the first in almost two months by pilotless aircraft against suspected al Qaeda men in Yemen, an impoverished country of mountains and desert on the southwestern corner of the Arabian Peninsula.

    The United States has escalated its use of drones against al Qaeda in Yemen, where the group exploited mass anti-government unrest last year to seize swathes of territory in the south before being driven out by a military offensive in June.

    The officials said the first drone strike hit a vehicle in a town in al-Bayda province, killing at least two suspected al Qaeda militants. One of those killed in the attack was a Jordanian citizen, a local official and a resident said.

    Family members of the other man, a Yemeni called Abdul Raouf Naseeb, confirmed he was one of those killed.

    A Yemeni al Qaeda militant of that name narrowly escaped a U.S. drone strike in November 2002 that killed several al Qaeda operatives including Qaed Salim Sinan al Harithi, an alleged plotter behind the bombing of the USS Cole off Yemen in October 2000 in which 17 U.S. sailors were killed.

    In the second drone strike on Monday, at least three people riding two motorcycles and carrying pistols were killed by a missile in Hadramout province, a security official said, adding that they were suspected members of al Qaeda.

    Residents said the Hadramout attack happened on the outskirts of the coastal town of al-Sheher. The residents said a fourth person was wounded in the strike.

    The U.S.-backed military offensive drove the militants out of areas they seized in the south but has not prevented them from launching attacks that have dealt damaging blows to the army and security apparatus.

    Naseeb had fled to al-Bayda from Lawdar province during a U.S.-backed military offensive in Lawdar earlier in 2012.

    (Reporting by Mohammed Ghobari and Mohammed Mukhashaf; Writing by Rania El Gamal and Mahmoud Habboush; Editing by William Maclean and Mark Heinrich)

    居直ったNRA、年明けの銃規制論議は混沌へ向かう可能性も from911/USAレポート/冷泉彰彦

    居直ったNRA、年明けの銃規制論議は混沌へ向かう可能性も from911/USAレポート/冷泉彰彦
    コネチカット州ニュータウン町で起きた、小学校での児童虐殺事件から一週間が経った21日の金曜日、事件が発生した午前9時半には全国で一斉に黙祷が捧げられました。ケーブルニュースTVの各局は、これを大きく取り上げ改めて悲痛なムードでの報道となりました。この一週間、最初は事件の詳細に関する報道が続き、やがて亡くなった児童や教師の葬儀が大きく取り上げられる中で、明らかにアメリカは喪に服していました。長い一週間でした。

     銃規制論議ですが、就任以来、この問題に関しては「封印」していた印象のあるオバマ政権も、さすがに今回という今回は動き出しました。オバマ大統領は慎重な言い方ではありますが、銃規制に関する法律の制定を目指すという意志を明らかにし、20日の木曜日には、正式にバイデン副大統領を責任者として、来年1月をメドに具体的な法案策定を行うことになっています。議会でも、民主党のダイアン・ファインスタイン上院議員(カリフォルニア選出)が自動小銃と多弾マガジンの販売禁止を提案しています。

     また、今回は自殺した狙撃犯がある種の発達障害であったという可能性があるということから、広義の精神疾患や障害に関して「もっと簡単に治療やカウンセリングが受けられるように」という方向での制度見直しが模索されるべき、そのような声も上がっています。

     それはともかく、では今回という今回は懸案であった銃規制が実現するのでしょうか?

     全米の関心は、銃保有者の圧力団体である「NRA(全米ライフル協会)」の動向に注がれました。事件直後から、NRAのSNSアカウントは銃規制推進派によって「炎上」状態になっていましたが、NRAは沈黙を守り続けました。そんな中、オバマ大統領が「先に動く」形となり、全米での世論調査では60%近い人が何らかの規制強化に賛成というデータも出るなど、規制へ向けての「空気」が醸成されたように思われたのです。

     こうしたムードを受けて、NRAは18日の火曜日に短い声明を出し「子どもたちの安全を守るためには、あらゆる協力を惜しまない」と述べ、詳しくは金曜日に会長が会見するという予告をしたのです。これと前後して、共和党系の政治家などから「今回は銃規制に賛成する」というコメントが出たりしていました。例えば、マサチューセッツ州の上院議員で、先月の総選挙で敗北したスコット・ブラウン議員(共和)は、ジョン・ケリー議員が国務長官に転出した場合の補選出馬に意欲を見せていますが、自分は「自動小銃規制に賛成」という立場を明らかにしています。そうした「空気」が全米に広がったこともあって、多くのメディアからは「NRAもソフト路線になって、アサルトライフル(自動小銃)規制などには乗ってくるのでは」という観測も出ていました。

     ですが、その21日の会見は、そうした希望を打ち砕くものでした。私自身も、自分の見方が甘かったことを痛感させられましたし、オバマ大統領がこの4年近くの間、銃規制に慎重だったのは「何故か」ということも痛いほど納得させられたのです。

     もっと以前の、例えば93年から94年にかけて、当時のクリントン政権が自動小銃規制を成立させましたが、その政治的プロセスも難航を極めたことなど、アメリカが改めて「銃社会」であること、その中核にあるNRAは「銃保有の権利死守」のために存在していることを改めて思い知らされたのです。

     とにかく、NRAはソフト路線に転じるどころか、居直ってきたのです。私はCNNの中継を見ていましたが、当初は10時45分からの会見が11時スタートに延びたこと、そして最初に挨拶に立ったデビット・キーン会長はほとんど何も言わず、具体的な内容に関するスピーチは上級副会長のウェイン・ラピエールという人にバトンタッチがされたところで、「どうもおかしい」という感じがしたのです。

     その内容は、想像を絶するものでした。NRAは銃規制に同調するどころか、今回の惨事を契機として居直りとしか言いようのない提案を出してきたのです。それは、「子供の安全が最優先」だという理由で「全国のあらゆる学校に武装した警備員を配置する」というものでした。

     ラピエール氏の発言は、最初から最後まで極めて強硬かつ挑発的でした。以下、特徴的な部分を紹介するとこんな感じです。

    「悪人による銃の乱用を防止する唯一の解決策は、善人が銃で武装することだ」

    「模倣犯の候補が全米にあふれている。子供を守るためには直ちに学校を守るべきだ」

    「アメリカには悪人と異常な人物があふれている危険な社会だ」

    「大統領は武装SPで守られている。アメリカという国は武装した軍隊が守っている。大切な子供たちの通う学校が武装して守られていないのはおかしい」

    「教育現場をガン・フリー・ゾーン(銃のない空間)にした政治的誤りのために子供たちは死んだ」

    「何かが起きても武装警官が何マイルも先にいて、駆けつけるのに何分もかかるのでは子供たちを守ることはできない」

     こうした論理に加えて、「精神病歴のある人間に関しては、全国的なデーベースで管理すべき」であるとか「問題は銃ではなく暴力的なビデオゲームなどにある」などという主張を繰り返していたのです。

     会見は「一切の質問には答えない」という条件で行われ、とにかくNRAサイドが一方的な主張を繰り返しただけでした。尚、途中に二回ほど「反対派」が大きな横断幕を掲げて抗議をする局面がありましたが、CNNの画面ではその横断幕(「子供を殺したのはNRA」というようなもの)をしっかり写して放映していましたし、反対派のシュプレヒコール(「NRAよ恥を知れ」とか「自動小銃の即時規制を」)といったものも、しっかり放映していました。

     ですが、NRAサイドは「能面のように」こうした反対行動は無視して、一切のコメントはしなかったのです。ラピエール氏のスピーチの中で特に私が驚いた箇所が二箇所あります。一つは、この「ビデオゲームが悪い」という部分で、実際にネットに出回っている簡単なゲームを紹介した部分です。実際に記者会見場にはモニターが用意されており、ネットからダウンロードされたゲームの画面が紹介されたのです。

     そのゲームは「幼稚園児をぶっ殺せ」というタイトルのもので、学校の校舎から顔を出している幼児を一人一人射殺するという内容で、命中の瞬間には血が飛び散るような作りでした。とにかく、コネチカットの惨劇から一週間、追悼のために全国で黙祷がされた90分後にこのような映像を平気で紹介できる神経が分かりません。

     もう一つは、そのコネチカットの事件を紹介した部分です。今回の犠牲者は26人で20人が児童、6人が教師ということはアメリカでは誰でも知っている事実と思っていたのですが、このラピエール氏は「子供26人」という言い方をしていました。要するに、この事件の悲惨さを真剣に考えながらニュースを見て来なかったということを白状したようなものです。

     もっとも、スピーチの中では「武装していない教師が犠牲になったのは犬死」というニュアンスにも取れる発言をしていましたから、亡くなった先生への同情も薄いのでしょう。「リベラルのイデオロギーの毒された教員が、学校に銃を入れないことが間違い」という主張もしていました。

     さて、この会見へのリアクションですが、前の共和党全国委員長のマイケル・スチール氏がMSNBCで「これは極端に過ぎる」とコメント、リベラルな主張が基本の同局とCNNでは批判的なコメントが流れていました。ですが、少し経つとCNNのサイトでは扱いが小さくなっています。また保守系のFOXニュースでは論評を避けてサッサと別の話題に逃げていました。

     NRAはやはり「本性を現した」のです。それは、同時に今後の銃規制論議が苦しい国論分裂というプロセスを避けては通れないということも示していると思います。この金曜日には、「財政の崖」をめぐる論議が暗礁に乗り上げたこともあって、何とも重苦しい暗い雰囲気が全米を覆いました。とりあえず、アメリカはクリスマス休暇に入りますが、新しい年は前途多難なスタートになりそうです。

    【JMM】from 911/USAレポート / 冷泉 彰彦【関連記事】 児童を巻き込んだ小学校での乱射事件で、アメリカは銃規制に目覚めるのか?:冷泉 彰彦 日本ではどうして「財政規律」の論議が少ないのか?:冷泉 彰彦 拝啓 大谷翔平投手殿:冷泉 彰彦 日本の衆院選はどの国の政権選択に似ているのか?:冷泉 彰彦 CIA長官スキャンダル、深まる一方の謎:冷泉 彰彦

    Eleven children killed in latest Chinese bus crash

    Eleven children killed in latest Chinese bus crash

    BEIJING (Reuters) - At least 11 Chinese kindergarten children died when their minivan plunged into a pond on Monday, the official Xinhua news agency reported.

    Police detained the driver of the van, which was carrying 15 children in a rural part of the southern province of Jiangxi.

    The deaths of 18 nursery school children in a bus crash in November last year caused a wave of public anger and prompted Premier Wen Jiabao to pledge more money for school bus services.

    Despite the pledge, there have been a string of similar accidents. Transport is notoriously dangerous in rural China, where buses and trucks are old and badly maintained.

    With more schools abandoning villages for towns, children increasingly have to travel long distances to school, or board away from their families.

    (Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Kevin Liffey)

    米国のシェールガス革命に対抗するロシア

    米国のシェールガス革命に対抗するロシア
    石油や天然ガスは有限であり、また最近の中東情勢の不安定さ、さらに原子力発電を巡る議論が世界中で熱を帯びている中、エネルギー源の多角化という課題が世界各国にとって急務となっている。中でも近年注目を浴びているのが「シェールガス」だ。

     米国のシェールガス革命はロシアの天然ガス事業に大きな打撃となり、米ロ間の新たな緊張材料ともなっている。また、米国以外の、特にロシアの天然ガスの重要な「顧客」であった欧州諸国もシェールガスの開発に積極的に乗り出すにあたり、ロシアはその妨害を試みてきた。

     結論から言えば、ロシアはシェールガス革命の影響を危惧しながらも、環境問題等でシェールの開発が世界中で頓挫することを望んでいる。まだ過渡期で、ロシア政府がポジティブにシェール開発に携わろうとしている状況ではないとみていた。

     しかし、そんなロシアでも非在来型エネルギーに注目する企業が出てきたという。しかも、米国の採掘技術を導入するという動きもあるのだ。プーチン大統領も、世界的にシェールガス開発が進まぬよう環境擁護に熱心になる一方で、「ロシアのエネルギー企業はシェールガスの挑戦に対して準備することが必要だ」とも述べている。

     シェールガスをめぐる米ロ、欧州各国の動き、そして日本への影響をみていく。

    ■シェールガスとは?

     シェールガスとは、頁岩(シェール)層から採取される天然ガスのことをいう。天然ガスの貯留層が従来の砂岩ではないことから、「非在来型天然ガス資源」と呼ばれている。

     米国では1990年代から新しい天然ガス資源として重要視されるようになり、「水圧破砕法」と呼ばれる採掘法を導入して開発が進められている。「水圧破砕法」とは、インド等で生育しているでんぷん質の穀物・グアーの粉末からつくったゼリー状の液体を採掘井に高圧で注入し、地層内に亀裂を入れるという方法である。現状では、この方法がどのような爆弾よりも効率的かつ安価だとされている。

    ■米国のシェールガス革命の情報がロシアに広まることを警戒するプーチン

     世界各地でシェールガスの開発が試みられてきたが、商業生産が確立しているのは現在のところ米国だけである。シェールガスの原始埋蔵量(推定)はかなり大きいといわれており、米国で数百~千、世界では数千(tcf)に及ぶともいわれている。

     この、いわゆる米国の「シェールガス革命」のおかげで天然ガスの供給量が飛躍的に増え、価格が下がった。さらに、米国が国内でシェールガスを消費するようになったことで、石炭の余剰が出るようになり、その石炭は安価で欧州に輸出されることになった。それにより、欧州の天然ガス需要が減っただけでなく、近年、欧州はカタールからの天然ガス輸出への依存度を高めており、結果、ロシアの天然ガスの欧州向け輸出量が低下するという流れができてしまった。

     ロシアの天然ガス販売収入に影響が出るだけでなく、世界のガス価格が下落すれば、その損失分の補填のため、国内販売分の値上げもせねばならない。こうした現状から、国民がロシア経済の悪化を危惧して不満を高め、国内が混乱するのではと、プーチン大統領が危惧し、米国のシェールガス革命の情報がロシアに広まることを警戒していると言われている。

    ■冷戦的構図?シェールガスを巡るロシアとアメリカの攻防

     このように、シェールガスによる天然ガス価格の下落は、在来型の天然ガスの主要な産地であったロシアと中東に大きな打撃を与えると考えられた。米国がロシアの優良顧客である欧州に液化天然ガス(LNG)加工をするなどして安い天然ガスを輸出できるだけでなく、欧州諸国の中にもシェールガスを保有する国が少なくなく、欧州の天然ガス自給率が高まる可能性があったからだ。

     そのため、プーチン氏はシェール革命が欧州やロシアに及ぶことを嫌悪しているが、一方でロシアがそれに負けない対策を施すと意気込み始めたようにも見える。

     プーチン大統領は、当時首相だった昨年末に「欧州のシェールガス開発がロシアの国営ガス石油会社・ガスプロムにどれほど脅威になり得るか」という質問を受けたところ、急に不機嫌になったという。そして、ノートを乱暴にたぐり寄せて、「水圧破砕法」の手法を図に描いて示し、その図をペンでつつきながら、「欧州各国の人々が、地下水汚染の可能性というその環境リスクを理解すれば、破砕法の使用は禁止されるだろう」と警告したという(Financial Times  10 July 2012)。

     そして、今年4月11日に大統領に再登板する前の首相としての最後の演説では、「米国のシェールガス生産は世界の化石燃料市場の需給関係を再編することになる。ロシアのエネルギー企業はシェールガスの挑戦に対して準備することが必要だ」と述べ、「ロシアは技術開発による新しい波と外からのショックに対し準備する必要がある」と強調したという(山本隆三「エネルギーが変える世界」http://www.iza.ne.jp/event/energy/002.html)。

     他方、米国では、シェールガス革命でロシアに対して決定的に有利な立場に立てるという議論も出てきた他、冷戦的な構図を示す研究者も出てきた。たとえば、テキサス大学エネルギー研究所のタッカー氏は、シェールガスを巡り、世界が米ロの二極に分かれるかのような議論をしている。彼は「米国につくのがウクライナ、ポーランド、バルト諸国、恐らくイギリス。そして、米国が喪失するのが、ブルガリアとチェコであり、フランスは米国のやり方に反発する。ドイツは米ロを両天秤にかけ、ルーマニアを巡っては厳しい対立が起きるだろう」というのだ(http://www.novinite.com/view_news.php?id=141257)。

    ■ロシア天然ガスの「顧客」もシェールガス開発へ

     シェールガス開発に乗り出しているのはアメリカだけではない。欧州諸国も開発に乗り出しており、特に、ポーランド、フランス、ウクライナの埋蔵量の多さは特出していて、将来の有望なガス輸出国とも見られている。ここでロシアにとって懸念されるのは、ロシアの天然ガスの「顧客」がシェールガス開発をしてしまうことだ。

     フランスは原発依存が高いということもあり、ロシアがシェールガス開発を恐れる対象国の筆頭にあげられるのはポーランドとウクライナだろう。

     ポーランドは年間ガス消費量約150億立法メートルの半分以上をロシアから輸入しており、ロシアと歴史的に外交関係が緊張している同国としては、シェールガスにより、ロシアへの依存度を大きく下げたいところだ。ポーランドのシェールガスは需要300年分ともいわれている。国営ガス会社PGNiGは、2012年11月28日に国家の「非伝統的資源の開発促進策」の一環として、2013年に少なくとも10本、最大15本のシェールガス井を掘削する計画を明らかにした。

     ロシアにとって重要な顧客であるウクライナも欧州第4位のシェールガス埋蔵量があるといわれており、ロシアからの依存脱却のために、開発に乗り気であった。2012年5月11日には、西部のオレスク鉱区と東部のユゾフスカ鉱区のシェールガス探査・開発パートナーとして、英国・オランダのロイヤル・ダッチ・シェルと米国シェブロンの2社を選定したが、 ウクライナでのプロジェクトはあまりうまくいっていないという報道もあり、今後の進展が待たれるところだろう。その他、リトアニアなど、多くのロシアの「顧客」がシェールガスに熱い視線を注いでいる。

    ■環境問題でロシアの危惧ほど進まないシェールガス開発にプーチンも安堵?

     だが、実際のところ、ロシアが危惧したほど、シェールガス革命は広がっていない。何故か?

     「水圧破砕法」が環境に及ぼす悪影響が世界で問題視されているからだ。地下水の汚染などが問題にされると共に、地盤への影響も大きいことから大地震を誘引しうる危険性が問われている。そのため、フランスでは「水圧破砕法」を禁止し、他の多くの国が一時停止措置などをとっている。

     ロシアとしては、欧州諸国が皆、環境問題の立場から、シェールガス開発を禁止することを望んでいるのだろう。そのため、最近はプーチン氏も環境擁護に熱心らしい。

    ■ロシアもシェールガス開発に乗り出す

     このように、ロシアが危惧したシェール革命が欧州に広がらない現実はロシアにとっては喜ばしいことだ。だが、その一方で、ロシア自身もシェールガス開発に乗り出したという。

     実はロシアも非在来型エネルギーの保有国であり、長年シェールガスやシェールオイル開発を密かに試みてきた。たとえば、失敗に終わったが、ソ連石油省はシェール地層の核爆発実験を何度も行っていた。

     それでも、ロシアは、もっと安価に採掘できる石油・天然ガスを持っていたため、非在来型エネルギーの開発は棚上げにしていたが、最近、再び積極的になっているという。

     まず、今年の6月24日には、英国とロシアの合弁会社TNK-BPが、ウクライナでのシェールガスなどの天然ガス開発プロジェクトに向こう6~7年間に18億ドルの投資を行う方針を明らかにした。

     また、最近、ロンドンとシベリアにオフィスを持つルスペトロ(Ruspetro)社の最高財務責任者(CFO)、トム・リード氏はシベリアでの非在来型エネルギー開発を本格化すると発言した。

     これまで、ロシアは独自の手法で非在来型エネルギーを開発するとして、米国と技術競争を繰り広げてきたが、今後は、米国の採掘技術を導入するというのだ。米国の技術の踏襲は、大国としての威厳の喪失につながる一方、合理的、経済的には確実な選択である。ただ、ロシアの場合は、シェールガスよりむしろ、シェールオイルの採掘が主たる事業となる。

     実際、米国のエクソンモービルがロシアのロスネフチとの間で、シベリアのシェールオイル田で試掘井を掘削する共同事業契約を締結している。さらに12月6日、ロスネフチとエクソンモービルの両社長は西シベリアでのタイトオイル開発(地質学調査、最新の破砕技術を用いた水平・垂直井の掘削を含む広範な分野にわたる開発)のためのパイロット協定を締結した。これは、2011年8月に締結していた長期的戦略的協力協定の実施に向けた新たな一歩である。

     ロスネフチ51%とエクソンモービル49%の株式持分による合弁企業であり、ロスネフチが所有する1万平方キロメートル以上を占める23ブロックでプロジェクト実施する予定。ロスネフチと子会社は、スタッフと既存のインフラストラクチャを提供し、エクソンモービルは3億ドル以上の資金、地質学の専門家、最先端の技術など、商業生産を可能にするための生産管理の手法を提供する。北米で培った経験をロシアに提供するという、大きな動きである。掘削は2013年に開始予定だ。

     このような動きは企業レベルにとどまらない。ロシア政府は、年内に、オフショアやタイトオイルの石油資源を開発する企業には大幅な税控除を認める内容の法案を議会に提出する予定であるという。この税控除法案は、シェールオイルの商業レベルでの生産を可能にするために計画されているという。同法案が成立すれば、ロスネフチが享受できる利益は莫大となる。何故なら、同法によって、ロスネフチはシベリアのシェールオイル資源などの採掘が難しいタイトオイルを経済的に採掘可能のカテゴリーに変更することができるからだ。

    ■シェールガスと北方領土問題 日本に好機をもたらすという意見もあるが…

     アメリカのシェールガス革命はロシアにとってマイナス材料だといえる。だが、それによりロシアの天然ガスがだぶつくことで、ロシアはそれを日本に売りたがっているに違いないという理屈から、この現実を「北方領土交渉」における好機だとする報道もあった(たとえば、2012年1月4日『読売新聞』朝刊)。

     しかし、筆者はそのような議論はあまりに楽観的だと思い、同意できない。それでも、シェールガス革命やロシアのエネルギー事情などを、日本が外交政策を考える上で十分考慮していく必要があることは間違いない。

    著者:廣瀬陽子(慶應義塾大学総合政策学部准教授)【関連記事】 アメリカ産LNG輸出なるか シェールガスを待ちわびる日本 4時間30分超のプーチンワンマンショー 「対米批判、安倍政権への期待、引退時期」について語る 「夢」と呼ばれる日本の 「革新的エネルギー戦略」と 欧州・米国の現実路線 米国シェールガスも契機に、日本もガス革命を 米国発「シェールガス革命」 日本の期待と根強い輸出反対論

    Obama spending Christmas Day with family in Hawaii

    Obama spending Christmas Day with family in Hawaii

    KAILUA, Hawaii (AP) — President Barack Obama is spending Christmas Day with his family at a rented vacation home in his native Hawaii.

    White House officials have not released the details of all the first family's Christmas Day activities. On Tuesday morning, Obama traveled from the suburban Honolulu home to a Marine Corps base for a workout.

    The Obama family flew to Hawaii from Washington on Friday night. White House officials have not announced when the president is expected to go back to Washington but say he is likely to curtail his holiday vacation, perhaps returning as early as Wednesday.

    In the past, Obama has spent 10 to 14 days in Hawaii at Christmastime. Budget negotiations with lawmakers over the so-called fiscal cliff have complicated this year's trip.

    Partial list of taxes and fees in health overhaul

    Partial list of taxes and fees in health overhaul

    Starting in 2014, President Barack Obama's health care law will expand coverage to some 30 million uninsured people. At the same time, insurers no longer will be allowed to turn away those in poor health, and virtually every American will be required to have health insurance — through an employer or a government program or by buying it on their own.

    For the vast majority of people, the health care law won't mean sending more money to the Internal Revenue Service. But the wealthiest 2 percent of Americans will take the biggest hit, starting next year.

    And roughly 20 million people eventually will benefit from tax credits that start in 2014 to help them pay insurance premiums.

    A look at some of the major taxes and fees, estimated to raise nearly $700 billion over 10 years.

    — Upper-income households. Starting Jan. 1, individuals making more than $200,000 per year, and couples making more than $250,000, will face a 0.9 percent Medicare tax increase on wages above those threshold amounts. They'll also face an additional 3.8 percent tax on investment income. Together these are the biggest tax increase in the health care law.

    — Employer penalties. Starting in 2014, companies with 50 or more employees that do not offer coverage will face penalties if at least one of their employees receives government-subsidized coverage. The penalty is $2,000 per employee, but a company's first 30 workers don't count toward the total.

    — Health care industries. Insurers, drug companies and medical device manufacturers face new fees and taxes. Companies that make medical equipment sold chiefly through doctors and hospitals, such as pacemakers, artificial hips and coronary stents, will pay a 2.3 percent excise tax on their sales, expected to total $1.7 billion in its first year, 2013. They're trying to get it repealed.

    The insurance industry faces an annual fee that starts at $8 billion in its first year, 2014.

    Pharmaceutical companies that make or import brand-name drugs are already paying fees; they totaled $2.5 billion in 2011, the first year.

    — People who don't get health insurance. Nearly 6 million people who don't get health insurance will face tax penalties starting in 2014. The fines are estimated to raise $6.9 billion in 2016. Average penalty in that year: about $1,200.

    — Indoor tanning devotees. The 10 percent sales tax on indoor tanning sessions took effect in 2010. It's expected to raise $1.5 billion over 10 years.

    The 28 million people who visit tanning booths and beds each year — mostly women under 30, according to the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology — are already paying. Tanning salons were singled out because of strong medical evidence that exposure to ultraviolet lights increases the risk of skin cancer.

    Netflix says video streaming service hit by outage

    Netflix says video streaming service hit by outage

    2 actors we loved knowing, who seemed to know us

    2 actors we loved knowing, who seemed to know us
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    NEW YORK (AP) — What a couple of mugs, sporting less-than-perfect physiques in the bargain.

    But was there anything lovelier than Jack Klugman or Charles Durning doing what they did for an audience?

    Rumpled Klugman exploding at his prissy flat-mate Tony Randall in the long-running sitcom "The Odd Couple." Portly Durning hoofing, fleet of foot, and singing how "Ewwwww, I love to do a little sidestep" in the film "The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas." Each was a luminous display of the extraordinary possibilities of the ordinary.

    Klugman and Durning (both of whom died Monday, Klugman at 90 in Los Angeles, Durning at 89 in New York) spent storied careers building catalogues of roles that classed them indisputably as "character actors."

    Even with a certain "always-a-bridesmaid-never-a-bride" taint attached to it, the term "character actor" commands respect and affection among audiences, even audience members who may not quite realize their level of investment in such artistry.

    Traditional stardom — "leading man" status — is conferred on the actors who embody a fantasy, an ideal. They are famously out of reach of a ticket holder or a couch potato, other than through sitting back and watching from afar. Dreams are a powerful engine of Hollywood, and these actors — whether Clark Gable or Will Smith — are thrilling dream agents.

    But there's another breed of actor — the group in which Klugman and Durning reign supreme — who sustains us in more comfortable ways. If a star like Brad Pitt stirs the frisson of eternal longing in the audience (oh, to be with him, or be him!), a character actor serves another need: cinematic kinship.

    Klugman solving crimes as a lab geek on his series "Quincy, M.E.," or Durning as a stressed-out cop ("Dog Day Afternoon") or a romantic who's smitten with Dustin Hoffman in drag ("Tootsie") — these are actors we identify with, instantly and eagerly. Nothing seems to stand between us and what they do. They, with their just-coping-with-life heroics, show us who we are, or could be if we try a little harder (or warn us of the jam that might befall us if we don't). They are our proxies.

    They never go out of style. They never lose their appeal. They are never put away because their looks have faded or their waistline thickened. We stick with them, just as they stick with us. (Durning was working into his late 80s in a recurring role as the irascible father of Denis Leary's firefighter protagonist on the drama "Rescue Me"). In this way, too, they resemble everybody we truly love: We love them in every phase of their lives.

    Like most of us, the character actor seldom if ever gets the girl or saves the world. They aren't flashy. But with their own special magnetism, they remind us, in role after role, that everyday people are special, too.

    Sure, we love being dazzled by Hollywood glamour. We love stars who make us weak in the knees.

    But an actor like Klugman or Durning bears a message that applies far beyond the realm of Tinseltown, a message worth remembering with every performance: Beauty is, as beauty does.

    Now, with their passing, we don't feel the pain of loss as much as gratitude for all the happy hours shared with Durning and Klugman. We are so glad for knowing them. Never mind we never met.

    ___

    EDITOR'S NOTE — Frazier Moore is a national television columnist for The Associated Press. He can be reached at fmoore(at)ap.org and at http://www.twitter.com/tvfrazier

  • 2012年12月25日星期二

    Drone kills two Qaeda militants in south Yemen-officials

    Drone kills two Qaeda militants in south Yemen-officials

    SANAA (Reuters) - At least two militants were killed on Monday in what security and local officials said was a U.S. drone strike on a suspected position of al Qaeda-linked insurgents in southern Yemen.

    Washington has escalated its use of drones to kill suspected al Qaeda militants in Yemen, where the group exploited anti-government protests last year to seize swathes of territory in the south of the country before being driven out by a military offensive in June.

    The officials said the drone hit a vehicle in a town in southern al-Bayda province, killing at least two suspected militants. One of those killed in the attack was a Jordanian citizen, a local official and a resident said.

    Family members of one of the men, Abdul Raouf Naseeb, confirmed he was one of those killed. According to several security experts who monitor the group, Naseeb narrowly escaped a U.S. drone strike in November 2002 that killed several al Qaeda operatives.

    Yemen's stability is a priority for the United States and its Gulf Arab allies because of its strategic position next to top oil exporter Saudi Arabia and shipping lanes, and because it is home to one of the most active wings of al Qaeda.

    The U.S.-backed military offensive drove the militants out of areas they seized in the south but has not prevented them from launching attacks that have dealt damaging blows to the army and security apparatus.

    Naseeb had fled to al-Bayda from southern Lawdar province during a U.S.-backed military offensive in Lawdar earlier in 2012.

    (Reporting by Mohammed Ghobari; Writing by Rania El Gamal; Editing by William Maclean and Alison Williams)

    UN concerned at Muslim-Buddhist clashes in Myanmar

    UN concerned at Muslim-Buddhist clashes in Myanmar

    UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The U.N. General Assembly unanimously adopted a resolution late Monday welcoming positive changes in Myanmar but expressing serious concern at an upsurge of sectarian violence between Muslims and Buddhists in strife-torn Rakhine state.

    The resolution adopted by the 193-member world body urges government action to improve the situation of the Rohingya Muslim minority "and to protect all their human rights, including their right to a nationality."

    There is widespread resentment of the Rohingya community, whom many in Myanmar regard as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh out to steal their land. The worst communal violence in a generation in June, and again in late October, between Rakhine Buddhists and Rohingya Muslims killed about 200 people and left at least 110,000 displaced, the vast majority of them Muslims.

    The resolution noted substantial efforts by Myanmar's government towards political reform, democratization, national reconciliation and improvements in human rights. But it expressed concern about continuing violations of human rights and fundamental freedoms.

    It called on the government to continue the process of releasing political prisoners, to identify those who remain imprisoned, and to take the measures needed to end impunity.

    The General Assembly urged the government "to accelerate its efforts to address discrimination, human rights violations, violence, displacement and economic deprivation affecting various ethnic minorities," singling out the Rohingyas and Kachin.

    It called for measures to address the continuing armed conflict in Kachin State in northern Myanmar where ethnic Kachin insurgents seeking more autonomy from the government are fighting against the army.

    U.N. humanitarian chief Valerie Amos said earlier this month that for nearly six months, the U.N. has not been able to provide assistance to almost 40,000 people in Kachin because it is not permitted to go to areas controlled by the rebels.

    The European Union-sponsored resolution was adopted by consensus, with the assembly president banging his gavel.

    EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said earlier this month after the resolution's approval by the assembly's human rights committee that she was "particularly pleased by the constructive approach by the government of Myanmar in working closely on the text with the EU."

    Afghan policewoman kills US adviser in Kabul

    Afghan policewoman kills US adviser in Kabul
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    KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — An Afghan policewoman walked into a high-security compound in Kabul Monday and killed an American contractor with a single bullet to the chest, the first such shooting by a woman in a spate of insider attacks by Afghans against their foreign allies.

    Afghan officials who provided details identified the attacker as police Sgt. Nargas, a mother of four with a clean record. The shooting was outside the police headquarters in a walled compound which houses the governor's office, courts and a prison in the heart of the capital.

    A police official said she was able to enter the compound armed because she was licensed to carry a weapon as a police officer.

    The American, whose identity was not released, was a civilian adviser who worked with the NATO command. He was shot as he came out of a small shop, Kabul Governor Abdul Jabar Taqwa told The Associated Press. The woman refused to explain her motive for her attack, he said.

    The fact that a woman was behind the assault shocked some Afghans.

    "I was very shaken when I heard the news," said Nasrullah Sadeqizada, an independent member of Parliament. "This is the first female to carry out such an attack. It is very surprising and sad," he added, calling for more careful screening of all candidates, male and female, for the police force.

    According to NATO, some 1,400 women were serving in the Afghan police force mid-year with 350 in the army -- still a very small proportion of the 350,000 in both services. Such professions are still generally frowned upon in this conservative society but women have made significant gains in recent years, with most jobs and education opportunities open to them, at least by law if not always in practice.

    This is in stark contrast to the repression they suffered under the former Taliban regime, which forced women to be virtual prisoners in their homes, and severely punished them for even small infractions of the draconian codes.

    The NATO command said that while the investigation continued, there might be "some temporary, prudent measures put into place to reduce the exposure of our people." But a NATO spokesman, U.S. Air Force Lt. Col. Lester T. Carroll, said the vital mission of training the Afghan police "remained unchanged."

    There have been more than 60 insider attacks this year against foreign military and civilian personnel. They represent another looming security issue as President Barack Obama and Afghan President Hamid Karzai prepare to meet early next year to discuss the pullout of NATO troops from Afghanistan by 2014 and the size and nature of a residual force the United States will keep in the country.

    Insider attacks by Afghan soldiers or police have accelerated this year as NATO forces, due to mostly withdraw from the country by 2014, have speeded up efforts to train and advise Afghan security before the pullout.

    The surge in such attacks is throwing doubt on the capability of the Afghan security forces to take over from international troops and has further undermined public support for the war in NATO countries.

    It has also stoked suspicion among some NATO units of their Afghan counterparts, although others enjoy close working relations with Afghan military and police.

    As such attacks mounted this year, U.S. officials in Kabul and Washington insisted they were "isolated incidents" and withheld details.

    An AP investigation earlier this month showed that at least 63 coalition troops — mostly Americans — had been killed and more than 85 wounded in at least 46 insider attacks. That's an average of nearly one attack a week. In 2011, 21 insider attacks killed 35 coalition troops.

    There have also been incidents of Taliban and other militants dressing in Afghan army and police uniforms to infiltrate NATO installations and attack foreigners.

    In February, two U.S. soldiers died from an attack by an Afghan policeman at the Interior Ministry in Kabul. The incident forced NATO to temporarily pull out their advisers from a number of ministries and police units and revise procedures in dealing with Afghan counterparts.

    More than 50 Afghan members of the government's security forces also have died this year in attacks by their own colleagues. Taliban militants claim such attacks reflect a growing popular opposition to both foreign military presence and the Kabul government.

    In the latest attack, the governor said Nargas, who like many Afghans goes by one name, had asked bystanders where the governor's office was located before confronting the American.

    Interior Ministry spokesman Sediq Sediqi said she fired only one shot that struck the American in the chest. He died either on the way or just upon arrival at a hospital, the spokesman added, describing her act as a "huge crime." He said the woman attempted to run away, pistol still in hand, after the shooting. But she was subdued by police.

    She was taken into Afghan custody and Sediqi said she refused to answer questions after hours of interrogation aimed at determining her motives.

    Nargas had worked with a human rights department of the police for two years and had earlier been a refugee in Pakistan and Iran, Kabul Deputy Police Chief Mohammad Daoud Amin said.

    She could enter the compound armed because as a police officer, she was licensed to carry a pistol, Amin said. He said he did not know whether the killer and victim were acquainted.

    "Her background is very clean. We don't see that she had any connection with armed insurgent groups," Sediqi said. He added that she aroused no suspicion because she frequently went back and forth on business between the compound and the Interior Ministry where she worked.

    Canadian Brig. Gen. John C. Madower, another NATO command spokesman in Kabul, called the incident "a very sad occasion" and said his "prayers are with the loved ones of the deceased."

    The killing came just hours after an Afghan policeman shot five of his colleagues at a checkpoint in northern Afghanistan late Monday. The attacker then stole his colleague's weapons and fled to join the Taliban, said deputy provincial governor in Jawzjan province, Faqir Mohammad Jawzjani.

    Separately, U.S. military officials were investigating the apparent suicide of a Navy SEAL commander in Afghanistan. A U.S. military official in Washington said Cmdr. Job W. Price, 42, of Pottstown, Pa., died Saturday of a noncombat-related injury in Uruzgan province. The official said the death "appears to be the result of a suicide."

    The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the death is still being investigated.

    --

    Associated Press reporters Rahim Faiez and Amir Shah in Kabul contributed to this report.

  • Russia, India sign weapons deals worth billions

    Russia, India sign weapons deals worth billions
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    Russian President Vladimir Putin,…

    NEW DELHI (AP) — Russia and India signed weapons deals worth billions of dollars Monday as President Vladimir Putin sought to further boost ties with an old ally.

    Putin and Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh hailed cooperation between their countries as officials signed a $1.6 billion deal for 42 Sukhoi Su-30 fighter jets that will be license-built in India from Russian components and a $1.3 billion contract for the delivery of 71 Mil Mi-17 military helicopters.

    "We agreed to further strengthen the traditions of close cooperation in the military and technical areas," Putin said after the signing.

    Singh said the talks included discussions on the security situation in the region, including Afghanistan.

    "India and Russia share the objective of a stable, united, democratic and prosperous Afghanistan, free from extremism," Singh told reporters after the talks.

    Russia and India have shared close ties since the Cold War, when Moscow was a key ally and the principal arms supplier to New Delhi.

    The ties slackened after the collapse of the Soviet Union, but grew stronger again after Putin came to power in 2000, seeking to revive Moscow's global clout and restore ties with old allies.

    While the volume of Russian-Indian trade has risen sixfold since 2000 and is expected to reach $10 billion this year, the growth has slowed in recent years. And even though India remains the No. 1 customer for Russia's arms industries, Moscow has recently lost several multibillion-dollar contracts to Western weapons makers.

    Russia has maintained its strong positions in the Indian market with $30 billion worth of arms contracts with India signed in 2000-2010 that envisaged supplies of hundreds of fighter jets, missiles, tanks and other weapons, a large part of which were license-produced in India. The countries have cooperated on building an advanced fighter plane and a new transport aircraft, and have jointly developed a supersonic cruise missile for the Indian Navy.

    But the military cooperation has hit snags in recent years, as New Delhi shops increasingly for Western weapons. The Indians also haven't been always happy with the quality of Russian weapons and their rising prices.

    In one notable example, in 2004 Russia signed a $1 billion contract to refurbish a Soviet-built aircraft carrier for the Indian Navy. While the deal called for the ship to be commissioned in 2008, it is still in a Russian shipyard and the contract price has reportedly soared to $2.3 billion. The target date for the carrier's completion was moved back again this year after it suffered major engine problems in sea trials. Russian officials now promise to hand it over to India in the end of 2013.

    India has also demanded that Russia pay fines for failing to meet terms under a 2006 contract for building three frigates for its navy, the third of which is yet to be commissioned.

    Russia recently has suffered major defeats in competition with Western rivals in the Indian arms market.

    Last year, Russia lost a tender to supply the Indian Air Force with 126 new fighter jets worth nearly $11 billion to France's Dassault Rafale. And last month, Boeing won India's order for a batch of heavy-lift helicopters worth $1.4 billion.

    Russia has sought to downplay recent defeats of its arms traders, saying that other weapons deals with India are under preparation.

    As part of its cooperation with India, Russia also has built the first reactor at the Kudankulam nuclear power plant and is building a second unit there. The project has been delayed by protests by anti-nuclear groups and local residents.

    The head of the Russian nuclear corporation Rosatom, Sergei Kiriyenko, told reporters Monday that the reactors in Kudankulam are the safest in the world, adding that studies have shown that they would have withstood a disaster like an earthquake and tsunami that caused multiple meltdowns and radiation leaks at the Fukushima nuclear plant in Japan last year. Kiriyenko said Rosatom plans to build more reactors in India.

    Putin's visit was scheduled for late October, but was delayed as the Russian leader suspended foreign travel for about two months. The Kremlin acknowledged that he was suffering from a muscle pulled during judo training. Putin resumed active travel earlier this month, making several foreign trips.

  • Heroic actions bring change in tone on teachers

    Heroic actions bring change in tone on teachers

    Hung on a building in the Connecticut town where 20 children and six adults were killed at an elementary school is a spray-painted sign with four words: "Hug a teacher today."

    It's a testament to the teachers who sprang into action when a gunman broke into Sandy Hook Elementary School and opened fire. They hid students in closets and bathrooms, and even threw themselves in the line of fire. Some paid with their lives.

    Their sacrifice was selfless and heroic, and most teachers say they would do exactly the same if they ever came face to face with a gunman in the classroom. At schools last week, many teachers got extra thanks from parents and students who were reminded in the aftermath of the Newtown, Conn., massacre of just how much they give.

    "I really hope a lot of parents see teachers in a little bit of a different light about all that we do," said Hal Krantz, a teacher at Coral Springs Middle School, about 20 miles north of Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

    That gratitude for teachers is a respite from recent years in which politicians and the public have viewed them as anything but heroes. Instead, teachers have been the focus of increased scrutiny, criticized for what is perceived as having generous and unwarranted benefits and job security.

    "I think a moment like this makes us appreciate and understand the degree to which we are dependent on our teachers to take care of our children in all kinds of ways, not just in what they learn in the classroom," said Paula Fass, a history professor at the University of California, Berkeley.

    Over the last four years, a wave of reforms, prompted largely by the U.S. Department of Education and its $4.35 billion Race to the Top competition, has led states to strip teachers of tenure and institute tougher evaluations based in considerable part on student scores on standardized tests. The heavier emphasis on testing has led to a narrowing of what is perceived as the teacher's role in the classroom.

    "Most of the talk about teachers lately has been, 'Should we judge teachers simply by children's performance on standardized tests?'" said Patricia Albjerg Graham, a professor of the history of education at Harvard University. "And while it's very important that teachers assist children in learning, it's also true that they help them get in the mood for learning and protect them and care for them while they're in school."

    Graham began teaching at a rural school in southern Virginia in 1955 and said even then teachers viewed protecting students as part of their job. During the Cold War, teachers led students through drills in the event of a nuclear bomb attack. Today, they lead them through the halls on fire drills and even have to take threats like shootings into account.

    "I'm certainly proud of those teachers that lost their lives or got injured," Krantz said. "It always makes you feel proud to be part of that whole society."

    While teachers in the United States have seen their responsibilities increase, their salaries have remained relatively flat — at about $55,000 after adjustment for inflation — over the last two decades, and salaries for starting teachers are usually lower. And while teachers in countries that outperform U.S. students on international tests tend to be held in the highest esteem, in the U.S., teaching is often derided as a job of last resort.

    President Obama addressed the need to elevate the status of teachers in his State of the Union address last year.

    "In South Korea, teachers are known as 'nation builders,'" he said. "Here in America, it's time we treated the people who educate our children with the same level of respect."

    His next line, however, suggested not all merited that status: "We want to reward good teachers and stop making excuses for bad ones."

    Parents may like their own child's teacher, but their overall confidence in U.S. schools appears to have reached a low point. A Gallup poll released earlier this year found that just 29 percent had a "great deal" or "quite a lot" of confidence in public schools — the lowest level in nearly four decades.

    "I think there has been a fairly concerted attack on teachers and teaching, specifically focusing on unionized teachers," said Jeffrey Mirel, an education professor at the University of Michigan.

    Indeed, much of the criticism about education in the United States has centered on teachers and firing or weakening their benefits as part of the solution. When a board of trustees needed to come up with ways to improve one of the state's worst-performing schools in 2010, it decided to fire all of the teachers there — a decision that Obama said was an example of why accountability is needed in the most troubled schools.

    The teachers were eventually allowed to keep their jobs, but in some ways the damage had already been done.

    Whether the courageous actions in Newtown, Conn., lead to anything more than a temporary shift in the tone of how the nation talks about teachers remains to be seen.

    But for the moment, teachers are grateful.

    "When situations like that occur, teachers basically have a disregard for their own safety and put their own bodies between whatever might be happening to keep their kids safe," Krantz said. "I think we're always conscious of the fact that something like that could really happen."

    ___

    Follow Christine Armario on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/cearmario

    Lawmakers worry 'fiscal cliff' deal elusive; some predict small-scale patch may be only option

    Lawmakers worry 'fiscal cliff' deal elusive; some predict small-scale patch may be only option

    WASHINGTON - With anxiety rising as the country lurches towards a "fiscal cliff," lawmakers are increasingly skeptical about a possible deal and some predict the best possibility would be a small-scale patch because time is running out before the yearend deadline.

    Sen. Joe Lieberman predicted Sunday: "We're going to spend New Year's Eve here, I believe."

    Even those who see the possibility of a deal don't expect a lot.

    Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas, said she expects "it is going to be a patch because in four days we can't solve everything."

    With the collapse Thursday of House Speaker John Boehner's plan to allow tax rates to rise on million-dollar-plus incomes, Lieberman said: "It's the first time that I feel it's more likely we'll go over the cliff than not," meaning that higher taxes for most Americans and painful federal agency budget cuts would be in line to go ahead.

    "If we allow that to happen it will be the most colossal consequential act of congressional irresponsibility in a long time, maybe ever in American history because of the impact it'll have on almost every American," said Lieberman, a Connecticut independent.

    Wyoming Sen. Jon Barrasso, a member of the GOP leadership, predicted the new year would come without an agreement, and he faulted the White House.

    "I believe the president is eager to go over the cliff for political purposes. He senses a victory at the bottom of the cliff," he said.

    Democratic Sen. Kent Conrad of North Dakota, chairman of the Senate Budget Committee, was incredulous at Barrasso's assertion that 'there is only one person that can provide the leadership" on such a matter vital to the nation's interests.

    "There are 535 of us that can provide leadership. There are 435 in the House, 100 in the Senate and there is the president, all of us have a responsibility here," he said. "And, you know what is happening? What is happening is the same old tired blame game. He said/she said. I think the American people are tired of it. What they want to hear is 'What is the solution?'"

    President Barack Obama and Congress are on a short holiday break. Congress is expected to be back at work Thursday and Obama will be back in the White House after a few days in Hawaii.

    "It is time to get back to the table," said Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., "And I hope if anyone sees these representatives from the House in line shopping or getting their Christmas turkey, they wish them a merry Christmas, they're civil, and then say 'go back to the table, not your own table, the table in Washington.'"

    Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., said he expects something will be passed, but nothing that will solve the nation's growing financial problems.

    "I think there's unfortunately only going to be a small deal," he said, but added "it's critical we get to the big deal."

    Obama already has scaled back his ambitions for a sweeping budget bargain. Before leaving the capital on Friday, he called for a limited measure that extends George W. Bush-era tax cuts for most people and stave off federal spending cuts. The president also urged Congress to extend jobless benefits for the long-term unemployed that would otherwise be cut off for 2 million people at the end of the year.

    The failure of Boehner's option in the House has shifted the focus.

    "The ball is now clearly with the Senate," said Lieberman.

    He said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada and GOP leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky "have the ability to put this together again and pass something. It won't be a big, grand bargain to take care of the total debt, but they can do some things that will avoid the worst consequences going over the fiscal cliff."

    It was only a week ago when news emerged that Obama and Boehner had significantly narrowed their differences. Both were offering a cut in taxes for most Americans, an increase for a relative few and cuts of roughly $1 trillion in spending over a year. Also included was a scaling back of future cost-of-living increases for Social Security recipients — a concession on the president's part as much as agreeing to higher tax rates was for the speaker.

    Lieberman was on CNN's "State of the Union," while Barrasso, Klobuchar and Conrad appeared on "Fox News Sunday." Hutchison and Warner were on CBS' "Face the Nation."

    Chevron buys Encana's stake in BC project

    Chevron buys Encana's stake in BC project

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Canadian natural gas producer Encana Corp. said Monday it will sell its stake in a British Columbia project to Chevron Corp.

    Chevron Canada will buy Encana's 30-percent stake in the Pacific Trail Pipelines project, and 32,500 acres of land in northeastern British Columbia. The Chevron unit will also take over Encana's processing commitments. The companies did not disclose terms.

    Chevron said it is also buying EOG Resources Canada's interest in the project. After the deals are complete, Chevron Canada and Apache Corp. will own a 50 percent stake in the project and in the pipeline.

    Shares of Encana lost 11 cents to $20.14 in morning trading, and Chevron stock lost $1.14 to $108.57.

    Russia, India sign weapons deals worth billions

    Russia, India sign weapons deals worth billions
    Related Content
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    Russian President Vladimir Putin,…

    NEW DELHI (AP) — Russia and India signed weapons deals worth billions of dollars Monday as President Vladimir Putin sought to further boost ties with an old ally.

    Putin and Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh hailed cooperation between their countries as officials signed a $1.6 billion deal for 42 Sukhoi Su-30 fighter jets that will be license-built in India from Russian components and a $1.3 billion contract for the delivery of 71 Mil Mi-17 military helicopters.

    "We agreed to further strengthen the traditions of close cooperation in the military and technical areas," Putin said after the signing.

    Singh said the talks included discussions on the security situation in the region, including Afghanistan.

    "India and Russia share the objective of a stable, united, democratic and prosperous Afghanistan, free from extremism," Singh told reporters after the talks.

    Russia and India have shared close ties since the Cold War, when Moscow was a key ally and the principal arms supplier to New Delhi.

    The ties slackened after the collapse of the Soviet Union, but grew stronger again after Putin came to power in 2000, seeking to revive Moscow's global clout and restore ties with old allies.

    While the volume of Russian-Indian trade has risen sixfold since 2000 and is expected to reach $10 billion this year, the growth has slowed in recent years. And even though India remains the No. 1 customer for Russia's arms industries, Moscow has recently lost several multibillion-dollar contracts to Western weapons makers.

    Russia has maintained its strong positions in the Indian market with $30 billion worth of arms contracts with India signed in 2000-2010 that envisaged supplies of hundreds of fighter jets, missiles, tanks and other weapons, a large part of which were license-produced in India. The countries have cooperated on building an advanced fighter plane and a new transport aircraft, and have jointly developed a supersonic cruise missile for the Indian Navy.

    But the military cooperation has hit snags in recent years, as New Delhi shops increasingly for Western weapons. The Indians also haven't been always happy with the quality of Russian weapons and their rising prices.

    In one notable example, in 2004 Russia signed a $1 billion contract to refurbish a Soviet-built aircraft carrier for the Indian Navy. While the deal called for the ship to be commissioned in 2008, it is still in a Russian shipyard and the contract price has reportedly soared to $2.3 billion. The target date for the carrier's completion was moved back again this year after it suffered major engine problems in sea trials. Russian officials now promise to hand it over to India in the end of 2013.

    India has also demanded that Russia pay fines for failing to meet terms under a 2006 contract for building three frigates for its navy, the third of which is yet to be commissioned.

    Russia recently has suffered major defeats in competition with Western rivals in the Indian arms market.

    Last year, Russia lost a tender to supply the Indian Air Force with 126 new fighter jets worth nearly $11 billion to France's Dassault Rafale. And last month, Boeing won India's order for a batch of heavy-lift helicopters worth $1.4 billion.

    Russia has sought to downplay recent defeats of its arms traders, saying that other weapons deals with India are under preparation.

    As part of its cooperation with India, Russia also has built the first reactor at the Kudankulam nuclear power plant and is building a second unit there. The project has been delayed by protests by anti-nuclear groups and local residents.

    The head of the Russian nuclear corporation Rosatom, Sergei Kiriyenko, told reporters Monday that the reactors in Kudankulam are the safest in the world, adding that studies have shown that they would have withstood a disaster like an earthquake and tsunami that caused multiple meltdowns and radiation leaks at the Fukushima nuclear plant in Japan last year. Kiriyenko said Rosatom plans to build more reactors in India.

    Putin's visit was scheduled for late October, but was delayed as the Russian leader suspended foreign travel for about two months. The Kremlin acknowledged that he was suffering from a muscle pulled during judo training. Putin resumed active travel earlier this month, making several foreign trips.

  • Convicted New Orleans police see opportunity in officials' errors

    Convicted New Orleans police see opportunity in officials' errors

    NEW ORLEANS (Reuters) - Federal prosecutors scored big victories over the past two years in a quest to pluck bad police officers from the streets of New Orleans. But legal issues and recent stumbles by the U.S. attorney raise questions about whether criminal convictions of officers will stick.

    Convicted former police officer David Warren won a new trial last week in the fatal shooting of Henry Glover, whose body turned up in a burned-out car behind a river levee days after Hurricane Katrina struck New Orleans in 2005.

    The 5th Circuit Court of Appeals said Warren, who fired the shot that killed Glover, should have been tried separately from others charged in the case. The court also granted another of the defendants a re-trial based on new evidence.

    The rulings will likely prompt appeals in other cases, including the 2011 convictions of five police officers in connection with a post-Katrina shooting on the city's Danziger Bridge that killed two unarmed civilians and wounded four others.

    "Defense lawyers can smell blood in the water," said law professor Dane Ciolino of Loyola University New Orleans. "I wouldn't be surprised to see the Danziger defendants make an argument of improper failure to sever (their cases from others) as their appeals move forward."

    Along with such legal issues, the city of New Orleans faces the possibility that more than a dozen post-Katrina convictions won by federal prosecutors and a big public corruption case still in the works may be endangered by revelations of possible misconduct in the U.S. attorney's office.

    U.S. Attorney Jim Letten resigned on December 6 in the throes of a scandal in which members of his inner circle admitted to posting online comments, under pseudonyms, on a public message board about cases the office was prosecuting. In addition to Letten, three members of his staff who were connected with the comments have left the office.

    The Danziger Bridge defendants are already seeking new trials based on negative comments about police that they say prosecutors posted on the message boards.

    In an unrelated case, a former high-ranking elected official from a suburban New Orleans jurisdiction who recently pleaded guilty to public corruption charges now is asking a federal judge to reconsider the plea in light of perceived prosecutorial misconduct.

    'PUBLIC OFFICIAL A'

    Among other cases that could be affected, federal prosecutors appear close to bringing charges against former New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin on suspicion he accepted bribes from business owners in exchange for funneling city contracts to the businesses.

    Several Nagin associates have signed plea deals with the government and submitted affidavits detailing the arrangements they had with a high-ranking city official identified in filings as "Public Official A."

    While Nagin is not named in the documents, attorneys for at least two of the businessmen have made it clear that Public Official A is Nagin.

    How serious the misconduct issue may become for the government is a question of evidence, said former U.S. Attorney Harry Rosenberg. The Justice Department's Office of Professional Responsibility is scrutinizing the matter and an independent investigation ordered by a judge was under way.

    "The results will tell defense counsel whether they have reasonable opportunities to pursue new trials or dismissals of indictments," Rosenberg said.

    He pointed to the success in the case of the late U.S. Senator Ted Stevens, whose lawyers contested his 2008 conviction for failing to report gifts from a well-connected business executive by showing that the government failed to disclose evidence. Ultimately, the U.S. attorney general asked that the charges against Stevens be dropped.

    Still, Rosenberg said proving that prosecutorial misconduct occurred in New Orleans was a long shot. Defense lawyers in some federal cases were "feeling energized," he said, but the Justice Department's convictions nearly always stick.

    "I suspect that the number of motions granted based upon prosecutorial misconduct are a fraction of a fraction of 1 percent," he said.

    Metropolitan Crime Commission President Rafael Goyeneche said it was important to local citizens that the police officer convictions won by federal prosecutors in recent years stick.

    "For too long the public has lost faith in the criminal justice system, and they're starting to see that faith restored," he said.

    Noting that the civil rights cases brought by the Justice Department generally are too complex and expensive to be handled by local authorities, he said action by federal prosecutors is crucial to building support for local law enforcement.

    "People need to see that if you betray the public trust, there will be a consequence," he said.

    (Editing by Corrie MacLaggan, Vicki Allen and Xavier Briand)

    Letters To God: Kenyans appeal for peaceful election

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    2012年12月24日星期一

    Pagan Roots? 5 Surprising Facts About Christmas

    Pagan Roots? 5 Surprising Facts About Christmas

    When you gather around the Christmas tree or stuff goodies into a stocking, you're taking part in traditions that stretch back thousands of years — long before Christianity entered the mix.

    Pagan, or non-Christian, traditions show up in this beloved winter holiday, a consequence of early church leaders melding Jesus' nativity celebration with pre-existing midwinter festivals. Since then, Christmas traditions have warped over time, arriving at their current state a little more than a century ago.

    Read on for some of the surprising origins of Christmas cheer, and find out why Christmas was once banned in New England.

    1. Early Christians had a soft spot for pagans

    It's a mistake to say that our modern Christmas traditions come directly from pre-Christian paganism, said Ronald Hutton, a historian at Bristol University in the United Kingdom. However, he said, you'd be equally wrong to believe that Christmas is a modern phenomenon. As Christians spread their religion into Europe in the first centuries A.D., they ran into people living by a variety of local and regional religious creeds.

    Christian missionaries lumped all of these people together under the umbrella term "pagan," said Philip Shaw, who researches early Germanic languages and Old English at Leicester University in the U.K. The term is related to the Latin word meaning "field," Shaw told LiveScience. The lingual link makes sense, he said, because early European Christianity was an urban phenomenon, while paganism persisted longer in rustic areas.

    Early Christians wanted to convert pagans, Shaw said, but they were also fascinated by their traditions.

    "Christians of that period are quite interested in paganism," he said. "It's obviously something they think is a bad thing, but it's also something they think is worth remembering. It's what their ancestors did." [In Photos: Early Christian Rome]

    Perhaps that's why pagan traditions remained even as Christianity took hold. The Christmas tree is a 17th-century German invention, University of Bristol's Hutton told LiveScience, but it clearly derives from the pagan practice of bringing greenery indoors to decorate in midwinter. The modern Santa Claus is a direct descendent of England's Father Christmas, who was not originally a gift-giver. However, Father Christmas and his other European variations are modern incarnations of old pagan ideas about spirits who traveled the sky in midwinter, Hutton said.

    2. We all want that warm Christmas glow

    But why this fixation on partying in midwinter, anyway? According to historians, it's a natural time for a feast. In an agricultural society, the harvest work is done for the year, and there's nothing left to be done in the fields.

    "It's a time when you have some time to devote to your religious life," said Shaw. "But also it's a period when, frankly, everyone needs cheering up."

    The dark days that culminate with the shortest day of the year ­— the winter solstice — could be lightened with feasts and decorations, Hutton said.

    "If you happen to live in a region in which midwinter brings striking darkness and cold and hunger, then the urge to have a celebration at the very heart of it to avoid going mad or falling into deep depression is very, very strong," he said.

    Stephen Nissenbaum, author of the Pulitzer Prize finalist "The Battle for Christmas" (Vintage, 1997), agreed.

    "Even now when solstice means not all that much because you can get rid of the darkness with the flick of an electric light switch, even now, it's a very powerful season," he told LIveScience.

    3. The Church was slow to embrace Christmas

    Despite the spread of Christianity, midwinter festivals did not become Christmas for hundreds of years. The Bible gives no reference to when Jesus was born, which wasn't a problem for early Christians, Nissenbaum said.

    "It never occurred to them that they needed to celebrate his birthday," he said.

    With no Biblical directive to do so and no mention in the Gospels of the correct date, it wasn't until the fourth century that church leaders in Rome embraced the holiday. At this time, Nissenbaum said, many people had turned to a belief the Church found heretical: That Jesus had never existed as a man, but as a sort of spiritual entity.

    "If you want to show that Jesus was a real human being just like every other human being, not just somebody who appeared like a hologram, then what better way to think of him being born in a normal, humble human way than to celebrate his birth?" Nissenbaum said. [Religious Mysteries: 8 Alleged Relics of Jesus]

    Midwinter festivals, with their pagan roots, were already widely celebrated, Nissenbaum said. And the date had a pleasing philosophical fit with festivals celebrating the lengthening days after the winter solstice (which fell on Dec. 21 this year). "O, how wonderfully acted Providence that on that day on which that Sun was born … Christ should be born," one Cyprian text read.

    4. The Puritans hated the holiday

    But if the Catholic Church gradually came to embrace Christmas, the Protestant Reformation gave the holiday a good knock on the chin. In the 16th century, Christmas became a casualty of this church schism, with reformist-minded Protestants considering it little better than paganism, Nissenbaum said. This likely had something to do with the "raucous, rowdy and sometimes bawdy fashion" in which Christmas was celebrated, he added.

    In England under Oliver Cromwell, Christmas and other saints' days were banned, and in New England it was illegal to celebrate Christmas for about 25 years in the 1600s, Nissenbaum said. Forget people saying, "Happy holidays" instead of "Merry Christmas," he said.

    "If you want to look at a real 'War on Christmas,' you've got to look at the Puritans," he said. "They banned it!"

    5. Gifts are a new (and surprisingly controversial) tradition

    While gift-giving may seem inextricably tied to Christmas, it used to be that people looked forward to opening presents on New Year's Day.

    "They were a blessing for people to make them feel good as the year ends," Hutton said. It wasn't until the Victorian era of the 1800s that gift-giving shifted to Christmas. According to the Royal Collection, Queen Victoria's children got Christmas Eve gifts in 1850, including a sword and armor. In 1841, Victoria gave her husband, Prince Albert, a miniature portrait of her as a 7-year-old; in 1859, she gave him a book of poetry by Alfred, Lord Tennyson.

    All of this gift-giving, along with the secular embrace of Christmas, now has some religious groups steamed, Nissenbaum said. The consumerism of Christmas shopping seems, to some, to contradict the religious goal of celebrating Jesus Christ's birth. In some ways, Nissenbaum said, excessive spending is the modern equivalent of the revelry and drunkenness that made the Puritans frown.

    "There's always been a push and pull, and it's taken different forms," he said. "It might have been alcohol then, and now it's these glittering toys."

    Follow Stephanie Pappas on Twitter @sipappas or LiveScience @livescience. We're also on Facebook & Google+.

    11 Health Benefits of Christmas Dinner Geeky Gifts: Holiday Guide for Science-Lovers 7 Holiday Stress Busters Copyright 2012 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.