Farmer jailed in Hong Kong for burning flag

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S Korea suspends savings banks citing weak finances

South Korea has suspended seven local savings banks citing the weak state of their finances.

Japan urges mass evacuation ahead of Typhoon Roke

More than a million people in central and western Japan have been urged to leave their homes as a powerful typhoon approaches.

Burma begins swap scheme for cars over 40 years old

Owners of some of Burma's most antiquated cars have been queuing in Rangoon to exchange their old vehicles for permits to import newer models.

Polio strain spreads to China from Pakistan

Polio has spread to China for the first time since 1999 after being imported from Pakistan, the World Health Organization (WHO) has confirmed.

Showing posts with label American. Show all posts
Showing posts with label American. Show all posts

Saturday, October 15, 2011

Irish Tenor Lends Voice to American Military

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The Irish don't keep all the luck to themselves, which is exactly why tenor Anthony Kearns, of the famous Irish Tenors, is teaming up with fellow Irishman Bono's ONE organization to raise money for the USO and the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund on October 20 at the Embassy of New Zealand in D.C.

Kearns first lent his perfectly-pitched voice to the American military last year when he sang for the USO's wounded Warrior Program at the New Zealand Embassy. [Read column by Michelle Obama about putting veterans back to work.]

"I'm honored to participate once again in this fantastic event hosted by Ambassador Moore and the ONE Campaign. Last year's event was truly inspirational – and I appreciate what New Zealand did to make it happen. I take pleasure singing at events where my music can help soothe wounds and be an inspiration and uniting force for peace throughout the world," he said.

In next week's invitation-only event, he is likely to also join with actor Robert DeNiro, a spokesman for for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund. [Check out U.S. News Weekly, now available as an iPad app.]

Kearns, who fancies himself a historian, says he feels indebted to the U.S. military for keeping peace in the world. Over the past year, he performed at the National Memorial Day parade during the Moment of Remembrance, at events to raise money for educational scholarships for military families and at the Kennedy Center's choral tribute to military families. [See photos of U.S. troops in Afghanistan. ]

He's even thrown himself into American politics, flying from Dublinto sing the famous ballad, "Danny Boy," for Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell's inauguration party.

The USO is known for hosting great entertainers and Jan Scruggs, the founder and president of Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund, says Kearns fits the bill for his joint fundraiser.

"Events during Vietnam brought us Ann Margret, Sammy Davis Jr., Nancy Sinatra and the greatest wartime entertainer of all, Bob Hope. Anthony Kearns fits that tradition well—and we're honored that he's performing," says Scruggs.

Kearns isn't the first Irishman to help an American soldier out. There is a long history of the Irish lending their clover mojo to Americans in combat, dating back to the Civil war when Abraham Lincoln credited the 69th Irish brigade with helping to win the war for the Union, And today there are Irish soldiers deployed in Iraq patrolling the "Irish Route" — one of the most dangerous roads in Baghdad.



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Friday, October 14, 2011

U.S. met Cubans over jailed American, official says

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WASHINGTON | Fri Oct 14, 2011 1:42pm EDT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. officials met Cuban officials recently to discuss the case of Alan Gross, an American aid contractor imprisoned on the communist-ruled island, U.S. Undersecretary of State Wendy Sherman said on Friday.

But she declined to comment on a U.S. media report which said Washington offered to let a convicted Cuban spy freed last week from a U.S. jail, Rene Gonzalez, return home immediately in exchange for Havana's release of Gross.

The Associated Press report, citing unnamed U.S. officials, said Cuba rebuffed the American offer to lift parole restrictions requiring Gonzalez to remain in the United States for three years. Havana asked that Washington also pardon at least some of the four other Cuban spies who were jailed along with Gonzalez in 2001, according to the report.

"I can confirm that a meeting between U.S. officials and the Cubans did take place as part of our efforts to get Alan Gross home," Sherman told the House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee, adding the meeting was "quite recent."

"I cannot comment on what was said in that meeting," she said.

Gross was sentenced in Cuba this year to 15 years in prison for crimes against the Cuban state. When arrested in 2009, the contractor was working for a U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) pro-democracy program and was accused by Havana of illegally distributing Internet and satellite communications equipment on the island.

U.S. President Barack Obama's administration, which has eased restrictions on U.S. travel and remittances to the Caribbean island, has said Gross must be released before any further moves to improve U.S.-Cuba ties can go ahead.

The release a week ago of Gonzalez, a Cuban intelligence agent jailed for spying on Cuban exiles, raised some speculation that he could be exchanged for Gross. Gonzalez had served 13 years of his 15-year sentence in the United States.

"We have always said we would use all diplomatic channels to try to get Alan Gross home. We continue to call on the Cuban government to release Mr. Gross on humanitarian grounds, and to allow him to return to his family and bring to an end the long ordeal that began well over a year and a half ago," Sherman told lawmakers.

Gonzalez, 55, was the first to be freed of the so-called "Cuban Five" espionage agents arrested in 1998.

Gonzalez left the jail in Florida but his original sentence included the condition that he spend three years of supervised release in the United States.

Cuba's government and Gonzalez' family and supporters are demanding he be allowed to immediately leave the United States, saying he is at risk from possible reprisals by the Cuban exiles on whom he was convicted of spying.

Representative David Rivera, a Republican from Miami, which has a large Cuban-American population, told Sherman he was angered by the Associated Press report that U.S. officials as well as a former U.S. state governor, Bill Richardson, had discussed with the Cubans a possible swap of Gonzalez for Gross.

It was "outrageous," Rivera said, "that we would be negotiating with a terrorist regime to release an American hostage." Cuba is on the official U.S. list of state sponsors of terrorism.

(Reporting by Susan Cornwell; Editing by Vicki Allen)



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In Pictures: Mexico set for Pan American Games

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14 October 2011 Last updated at 10:31 GMT

Photos from around the world this week

Photos from around the world, 14 October

Worst floods in decades near the capital Bangkok

A replacement for the traditional pylon

Bhutan's King weds a commoner

Photos from around the world, 13 October

Your pictures of robots and rubbish

News photos from 12 October

Brazil marks the 80th anniversary of statue

Photos from around the world, 11 October



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Thursday, October 13, 2011

The 'New' American Dilemma: STEM and Minorities

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Irving Pressley McPhail is president and chief executive officer of the National Action Council for Minorities in Engineering Inc. (NACME), which supports expanding the participation of underrepresented minorities studying science, technology, engineering, and mathematics in P-20 education.  

In the 1940s, Gunnar Myrdal, a Swedish economist, developed a study called "An American Dilemma," which illustrated not only the obstacles faced by African-Americans in American society, but also the future of race relations in a democratic system. After 60 years of innovation, we are now faced with "The 'New' American Dilemma" that is, the relative absence of African-Americans, American Indians, and Latinos in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) education and careers needed to drive a diverse and globally competitive workforce through a flat world. 

With major demographic changes in the United States, the disparity of underrepresented minorities, including women, is becoming an increasing problem for the STEM disciplines. A study by the National Action Council for Minorities in Engineering, Inc. on U.S. engineering degrees found that African-Americans, American Indians, and Latinos account for 34 percent of the total U.S. population (ages 18 to 24), but earn only 12 percent of all undergraduate degrees in engineering. In fact, the share of engineering degrees earned by these three groups declines at higher educational levels: 12 percent bachelor's, 7 percent master's, and 3 percent doctorates. Meanwhile, women account for nearly half—46 percent—of the U.S. labor force but account for just 10.8 percent of U.S. engineers. In order to remain competitive in the global marketplace, our education system must progress alongside our nation's evolving demographic. 

For the United States to continue to prosper and compete in the flattening world, we must do more to recruit Latinos, the fastest growing demographic in the country, as well as other underrepresented minorities into the science, technology, engineering and math fields. Diversity drives innovation, and its absence imperils our designs, our products, and our creativity. Therefore, the United States must recognize this hidden talent pool in our country and begin utilizing private-sector funds to dissolve America's new dilemma. 

As the government continues to tighten its belt on budgets, and our education system remains stretched thin, the government has turned to corporations and nonprofits to form innovative public-private partnerships, or PPPs. These PPPs are driving initiatives across the country to recruit and train teachers, spur STEM education programs, and increase the number of students studying STEM from grade school to graduate school. They are also granting minority and economically disadvantaged students renewed access to STEM education. Corporations are providing a network of resources, mentors, and internship opportunities to help develop a workforce that not only reflects our nation's evolving demographic, but maintains our global competitiveness. 

Increased private investment is the key to America's new dilemma. It is essential to provide all ranks of students greater access to a quality higher education in the United States By training our nation's underserved talent, we are ensuring that we have the intellectual capital essential to enhance our position as the world's strongest economy, passing American greatness to the next generation.



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American Jobs Act Heading Towards Vote

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WASHINGTON — The Senate faced a critical "moment of truth," President Barack Obama declared Tuesday as lawmakers neared a vote on his $447 billion jobs bill. Despite his exhortations, defeat was likely at the hands of Republican senators opposed to stimulus spending and a tax surcharge on millionaires.

"This is gut check time," Obama told a union crowd in Pittsburgh not long before Congress' first vote on the plan. "Right now, our economy needs a jolt. Right now. And today, the Senate of the United States has a chance to do something, right now, by voting for the American Jobs Act."

At the same time, acknowledging reality, Obama said that if Congress didn't pass the entire package he was prepared to break it into pieces and try to pass job-creation legislation that way.

[Read more about the deficit and national debt.]

The plan combines Social Security payroll tax cuts for workers and businesses with $175 billion in spending on roads, school repairs and other infrastructure, as well as unemployment assistance and help to local governments to avoid layoffs of teachers, firefighters and police.

Republicans say the proposal is just another failed economic stimulus attempt.

"It's not a jobs bill. In our view, it's another stimulus bill," Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., told Fox News last week. "I don't think it'll pass and I don't think it should." GOP leaders in the House say they won't bring the measure to the floor on that side of the Capitol.

Despite Republican opposition to new spending, Obama singled out public works projects in the plan as efforts that should move quickly.

"Having relevant businesses get behind an effort to move this infrastructure agenda forward is a priority," Obama told his jobs council of corporate and labor leaders Tuesday before his union speech.

"We're going to need a push, I think, from the business community in particular in order to get this across the finish line," he said.

The White House remains hopeful that infrastructure spending is an area it can get Republican votes.

After meeting with his jobs council and giving the speech in Pittsburgh, Obama was to appear late Tuesday in Orlando, Fla., with a group of unemployed construction workers who the White House said would benefit from passage of the jobs plan. Both states also are crucial to the presidential race next year.

The key elements of the jobs package reprise parts of Obama's $800 billion-plus 2009 stimulus measure and a Social Security payroll tax cut enacted last year. Unlike the deficit-financed stimulus bill, the jobs measure would be paid for by a 5.6 percent surcharge on income exceeding $1 million that would be expected to raise more than $450 billion over a decade.

[See a collection of political cartoons on the budget and deficit.]

In making the case for the bill, the White House cites economists such as Mark Zandi of Moody's Analytics, who predicts that the measure would add 2 percentage points of growth to the economy and add 1.9 million jobs. But Republicans point to optimistic predictions about the 2009 measure that didn't come to pass; unemployment hovers just above 9 percent nationwide.

The president has been struggling in opinion polls, and passage of the measure has always been a long shot given that Republicans control the House and can filibuster in the Senate.

Obama's comments Tuesday were his most direct acknowledgement that the White House would have to regroup and look for a different approach if Congress rejects the proposal.

Obama also said that he was instructing his staff to move forward on job-creating initiatives without congressional approval where possible. The White House announced steps to speed environmental and other regulatory approvals for 14 public works projects across the country.

"We're not going to wait for Congress," Obama said.

While Republicans backed the payroll tax cut for individuals last year and support elements such as continued tax breaks for investments in business equipment, they're adamantly opposed to further spending and say the tax surcharge would strike at small businesses, which, in total, employ more than 300,000 people.



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Sunday, October 2, 2011

The American Taliban, 10 years

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29 September 2011 Last updated at 02:51 GMT By Steve Swann and Gordon Corera BBC News John Lindh's father wants presidential clemency for his son

The television images of the bedraggled and bewildered young American detained in Afghanistan months after 9/11 were beamed across the world. They were seared into the consciousness of the country which quickly came to know him as the "American Taliban".

On a quiet suburban street in Mill Valley, a prosperous town a few miles north of San Francisco, the Islamic Centre is slowly emptying after holding Friday prayers.

Once the crowds have gone, Abdullah Nana recounts how over a decade ago a white teenager turned up, confused and looking for answers. "He was at a crossroads at that time. He was unsure of his direction in this world. It seemed that Islam and religion was a way for him to spiritually fulfil himself."

Mr Nana says he quickly became friends with the 16-year-old, who converted to Islam and soon set himself the daunting task of learning Arabic and memorising the Koran.

Continue reading the main story John Walker Lindh Currently serving 20-year sentenceBorn in 1981, he converted to Islam in 1997Went to Afghanistan in May 2001 to fight with TalibanArrested in November 2001; sentenced in October 2002That boy was John Lindh, also known as John Walker Lindh, who grew up in a middle-class Catholic family, and is now a prisoner in the "special communications unit" in Terre Haute, Indiana, halfway through a 20-year sentence.

His family argue that it is time to look again at the case of "Detainee 001", the first terror suspect picked up in the "war on terror" which President Bush declared 10 years ago.

According to his father Frank, he is housed in a special wing at the west end of the building which had originally been used as death row. It is here that Lindh, who is enrolled on a correspondence course with Indiana University, has completed the task of memorising the Koran.

Adventure

At the age of 17 he had got his parents' permission to travel to Yemen to study Arabic. He briefly returned to California but couldn't settle so he headed back to Yemen from where he wrote to ask his father if he could go to Pakistan to continue his studies. Frank Lindh replied: "I trust your judgment and hope you have a wonderful adventure."

Frank and John Lindh Father and son on family holiday in New York

Once there, Lindh enrolled at a religious school in the village of Bannu in the North West Frontier Province where it seems his views hardened. Without his parents knowing, in June 2001 he slipped over the Khyber Pass into Afghanistan.

Once there, with the assistance of a militant group, he received two months of military training at the al-Farouq training camp which was financed by Osama Bin Laden. Twice that summer he met the al-Qaeda leader but Frank Lindh denies his son had anything to do with terrorism, claiming he "was one of thousands of young Muslims who over the years volunteered their services in Afghanistan against the Russian-backed warlords" of the Northern Alliance.

But Michael Chertoff, who was assistant attorney general at the time, says Lindh "went to fight for a regime that was hostile to the United States and that supported the 9/11 attacks. So in my book, that's pretty serious. It's not quite treason but it's what I would call a kissing cousin to treason".

Pivotal moment

The original indictment against him shows that Lindh was approached by al-Qaeda to carry out an attack in the United States or Israel but he refused. By early September he was serving in a corps of 75 non-Afghan soldiers in the Takhar region of north-eastern Afghanistan. It was then that everything changed, according to Frank Lindh.

"There was a pivotal moment in history. 9/11 occurred and then the American government made a decision to change our policy very abruptly and invade Afghanistan and topple the Taliban government."

Shortly after the aerial bombardment of the country began, Lindh's unit was forced to retreat, walking through the desert to Kunduz where they surrendered to the Northern Alliance. They were transported to the Qala-i-Jangi fortress on the outskirts of Mazar-i-Sharif which was under the control of the warlord General Abdul Rashid Dostum.

When a battle erupted within the fortress, a CIA officer and 100 prisoners were killed. Lindh was shot in the leg. For the following week, he and other survivors huddled in a basement. He claims that Dostum's forces lobbed grenades down air ducts, killing more prisoners, and then pumped in freezing water to try to drown them.

With shrapnel wounds and hypothermia, Lindh managed to get above ground and on 1 December 2001 was handed over to US custody.

Anger

John Walker Lindh blindfolded Lindh, after his capture, photographed by a US soldier

It was then, after hearing nothing for seven months and growing increasingly frantic, that Lindh's parents discovered what had happened to him. They saw an online news article which contained a grainy photograph of what they immediately recognised was their son.

Frank Lindh is angry about what happened next. His son was flown to a marine base at Camp Rhino where he claims they "left him in an unheated metal shipping container completely naked for two days and two nights in the desert in Afghanistan" with his "wounds untreated".

There then began what Lindh's mother, Marilyn Walker, describes as an unstoppable "tidal wave" of negative media coverage. Attorney General John Ashcroft announced that Lindh was "an al-Qaeda-trained terrorist who conspired with the Taliban to kill his fellow citizens".

"That image was sealed in the minds of people when they were emotionally distraught and in grief after 9/11," says Frank Lindh.

It was into this atmosphere in January 2002 that Lindh was flown back to the United States, but in a last-minute plea bargain the authorities dropped the terrorism and al-Qaeda charges in return for Lindh pleading guilty to supporting the Taliban and dropping his claims of mistreatment.

Appearing in court, John Lindh acknowledged: "I made a mistake by joining the Taliban… I want the American people to know that had I realised then what I know now about the Taliban, I would never have joined them."

Wrong place

The 20-year sentence was, according to his father, the best he could hope for since "the well was poisoned against my son in the United States".

Michael Chertoff defends the outcome. "He pleaded guilty, the judge imposed what seemed an appropriate sentence and I assume he'll serve it out." Reacting to the claim that Lindh was in the wrong place at the wrong time, Mr Chertoff says: "The prisons are full of people who say they were in the wrong place at the wrong time."

So the visits continue to Terre Haute where, separated by glass, Lindh speaks to his family over a telephone which is monitored.

Marilyn Walker, Lindh's mother Marilyn Walker, Lindh's mother

Lindh never shows a sign of self-pity, his father says, and never complains, but had once told him that this was a deliberate tactic. "He feels that complaining would yield something to the authorities who are imprisoning him," says Frank Lindh.

Lindh's parents try to chip away at what they see as a false public image of the "American Taliban".

Marilyn Walker says: "It's critical for John's life at whatever point he gets out of prison that he is able to live without having to look over his shoulder for someone that wants to do him harm".

Though his parents hope the president will one day grant clemency to allow an early release, they recognise the prospect is unlikely.



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Friday, September 9, 2011

American defence: operation Noble Eagle

By Rick Leventhal published September 07, 2011| FoxNews.com

The F-15 fighters rolling until the end of the runway at the Base of the Air National Guard of Barnes. With the permission of the control tower they quickly accelerate and in a few seconds are cruise gently just 20 feet above the road.

Then, with the authorization for an unlimited rise "fast", pilot Thom "Coq" Kelly point the nose of the Jet straight up and climbs to 15 000 feet in a matter of seconds before stabilizing, first head down, then slowly turn the glass cockpit to the sky.

Col. Kelly and his "Wing man" (they usually fly in pairs) are demonstrating the capabilities of the device in an exercise of interception operation Noble Eagle, an effort by the Government of the United States to protect our skies of airborne threats.

The program was reinforced after 9/11, with hundreds of pilots in 18 bases across the country dedicated to defending America. Many Airmen have the experience of combat in Iraq, the Afghanistan or Kosovo, and say that they are honoured to put their skills to use here at home.

Major Jeffery Blake, Commander of edge with the 104th wing of the Massachusetts Air National Guard, said: "it gives me a great amount of pride knowing that my country has asked me to sit on the point and to go over there... and find targets that could potentially be threats and make sure that they are not going to hurt someone.".

September 2, operation Noble Eagle is called to action when an unidentified airplane entered airspace restricted near Camp David, the presidential retreat in Maryland. F-15 was scrambled and minutes were escorting civilian Piper aircraft at an airstrip guaranteed in West Virginia.

The jets are armed with a Gatling gun with hundreds of rounds of ammunition and air - air missiles. Kelly, said if given the order, it will pull the trigger, as was done in the areas of war overseas.

"We are only minutes from New York and Boston in the Charivari, well within our fight for the Noble Eagle missions", he said. And weapons? "Weapons are more than enough to perform the task which would be at hand for the defence of the homeland."

Noble Eagle pilots intercepted an incalculable number of aircraft in the last ten years, but until now did not have to pull the trigger in American airspace. Colonel Robert Brooks, Commander of the 104, said it is a good thing.

"Well, it was not something like means 9/11 and that things work and this is what we want.". "We are like the type of your last line of defence, therefore if we do not do things, which means that the other components, intergovernmental organizations, are working together to prevent another 9/11-type scenario".

Operation Noble Eagle is on alert, 24 hours a day, 365 days a year in the sky above you.

Click here for complete coverage of the 10th anniversary of September 11.



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