2011年4月29日星期五

Nations United fails to agree on the Suppression of manifestations of Syria - Aljazeera.net

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Russia said it was concerned about violence on both sides of the unrest which has killed hundreds [AFP/SANA] Syrian

The UN Security Council has failed to agree on a statement condemning Syria's deadly crackdown on peaceful protesters.

Envoys attending a special open meeting on Syria in New York on Wednesday said Russia, China and Lebanon opposed the wording of a draft resolution distributed by European nations.

France called for "strong measures" if Bashar al-Assad, the Syrian president, rejects appeals to end violence which has killed hundreds.

The US said Assad must "change race now and heed the calls of his own people" for change.

"A real threat to regional security could come from outside interference." "such approaches lead to a never ending circle of violence"

Alexander Pankin, Russian deputy an envoy

Russia, after blocking a Security Council statement condemning the violence, however insisted that the Syrian crackdown did not amount to a threat to international peace and security, grounds that would justify international action.

"A real threat to regional security could come from outside interference," Alexander Pankin, the Russian deputy an ambassador, told the council.

"such approaches lead to a never ending circle of violence" and could set off civil war.

Bashar Ja 'Ja'afari, the Syrian ambassador to the UN, welcomed the Security Council's inaction, saying his government was carrying out an investigation into the violence and that there was no need for a A commission.

Al Jazeera's Kristin Saloomey reporting from the A said any hope for Security Council action is dead for the moment.
"The council was not able to agree on even the most basic form of the statement calling for calm and calling for an investigation."

Our one match said Russia offered the strongest opposition to the move saying they were concerned about violence in Syria, purpose on both sides.

"In the end there were isolated statements of concern from various countries, but no unified action by the council."

China and India called for political dialogue and peaceful resolution of the crisis, with no mention of condemnation.

Nawaf Salam, the Lebanese envoy, said his country shared a special relationship with Syria, and that "the hearts and minds" of the Lebanese people are with the Syrians, and are supporting Assad's lifting of the state of emergency and reforms.

UNSC Division

The Syrian violence has sparked global criticism in recent days.

France, Britain, Germany and Portugal circulated a draft media statement on Monday calling for the 15-member Security Council to reckless the violence.

Purpose during consultations on Wednesday afternoon, several members opposed the move.?The UN Security Council then moved into open the session to hear a briefing from the A political chief and statements from council members.

B. Lynn Pascoe, the under-secretary general for political affairs, told envoys that protesters who began with demands for greater freedom "are now increasingly calling for the downfall of the regime, echoing slogans that have been heard elsewhere in the region".

He told envoys that "a review of the reports of media, international human rights groups, UN agencies and diplomatic missions confirm that the overwhelming majority of protests have been peaceful and unarmed".

"However, there have been credible reports of a very few instances where protesters have used force, resulting in the deaths of members of the security forces."

Highlighted the "increasingly violent repression" and "siege-like conditions" in Deraa and other cities, Pascoe estimated the number of deaths to be between 350 and 400 people since mid-March.

Rights groups say at least 450 people have been killed.

European pressure

International pressure on Assad began to mount on Wednesday, with European governments urging Syria to end the violence.

"If nothing positive happens, France, with others, will study a series of options aiming to increase pressure on the Syrian regime so that it stops the repression and incurred on the path to reform," Gerard Araud, the French ambassador to the UNsaid.

France, Britain, Germany, Italy and Spain told Syrian ambassadors in a co-ordinated effort that they condemned the recent crackdown and that Assad must change his ways, according to France's foreign ministry.

The ministry said France expressed its "firm condemnation of the escalation of the repression by Syrian authorities against the people" and called on Syria to respect its international obligations on human rights.

European Union governments will discuss the possibility of imposing sanctions against Syria on Friday, with various measures being explored, a spokesman for the EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said.

"All options are on the table," he said.

The US is separately considering targeted sanctions, the country's ambassador has told the UN.

In a related development, the UN's main human-rights body, the Human Rights Council in Geneva, has agreed to hold a special session on Syria on Friday.

The meeting was requested by the US and endorsed by 16 member states including Britain, France, and Japan.

No Arab countries were among those requesting the session, which requires endorsement by one-third of the forum's membership to convene.

Emergency sessions in recent months have launched investigations into alleged human rights violations in Libya and Ivory Coast.

Ban Ki-moon, the secretary-general, has called for an independent inquiry into the deaths of people he described as peaceful demonstrators.

Syrian response

Syria's an ambassador has said the country is perfectly capable of conducting its own transparent inquiry into the deaths.

Bashar Jaafari said on Tuesday, Assad had instructed the government "to establish a national commission of inquiry and investigation about all the casualties among civilians" and the envoy pledged "full transparency".

"we have nothing to hide," he said.

"We regret what's going on, but you should also acknowledge the fact that this unrest and riots in some of their aspects, have hidden agendas," he said.

Jaafari accused some foreign governments of trying to destabilise Syria.

His comments came as Syrian opposition figures warned that their "massive grassroots revolution" would break the regime unless Assad leads a transition to democracy.

The statement on Wednesday from an umbrella group of opposition activists in Syria and abroad, called the National Initiative for Change, said a democratic transition will "safeguard the nation from falling into a period of violence, chaos and civil war".

"If the Syrian president does not wish to be recorded in history as a leader of this transition period, there is no alternative left for Syrians except to move forward along the same path as did the Tunisians, Egyptians and Libyans before them""," the statement said.

The opposition in Syria is getting more organised as anti-government protests gain strength, but it is still fragmented.


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Strip subsidies for nuclear power, Financial Times

FT.com / comment / letters - strip grants of the nuclear .arrow-color {(background-image_:_url(https://www.ft.com/FTCOM/Images/nidDefaultArrow.gif);} .primary-text-color {color: # ffffff;} .secondary-text-color {color: # ffffff;} .tertiary-text-color {color: # 003399;} .nav-highlight-color {(couleur:_#_990000!_important;background-image:url(https://www.ft.com/FTCOM/Images/arrow_right_red_sml.gif)! important;} .primary-bg-color {background-color}{: # 666666;} .Secondary-bg-color {background-color: # 999691;} .tertiary-bg-color {background-color: # f6f2ee;} .nav-border-color {border color: # d4ccc0! important;} .nav-briefing-text-color {color: # 003399;}Skip to main content, accesskey "to Homepage, accesskey ' 1 ' Financial Times FT.com search FT.com
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Publication: Date 28 April 2011 03: 04. Last updated: April 28, 2011 03: 04.

Dr. Yousaf Mahmood Butt.

Mr President, that you defend revive nuclear power in the shadow of the radioactive disaster of Fukushima at the Japan ("time to revive, not kill, the nuclear age, editorial, April 25"). I would, perhaps, support your point of view if the nuclear industry could revive itself without massive government subsidies.

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Yemeni block the port protest against Saleh deal - Reuters

Anti-government protesters shout slogans during a demonstration demanding the ouster of Yemen's President Ali Abdullah Saleh in the southern city of Taiz April 27, 2011. The banner reads, ''Leave!'' REUTERS/Khaled Abdullah

Anti-government demonstrators shout slogans during a demonstration demanding the eviction of President Ali Abdullah Saleh of the Yemen in the South of Taiz city on April 27, 2011. The banner reads, "exit"!

Credit: Reuters/Khaled Mohammed Ghobari AbdullahBy

SANAA. Wed, April 27, 2011 9 pm EDT

SANAA (Reuters) - tens of thousands of Yemenis intensified protests Wednesday by blocking access to a key port as mediators of the Gulf appeared close to sealing an agreement for President Ali Abdullah Saleh to relinquish power.

The demonstrators distrust plan of the Council of the Gulf Cooperation, supported by the Government and the opposition group main, because it gives Saleh, a window of long months to resign and grants him and his family immunity from prosecution.

"People want a beginning, not an initiative," the demonstrators shouted outside Red Sea port of Hodeida, where ongoing marine operations not affected.

Clashes flared in South Yemen between security forces and demonstrators hostile to the Government which has blocked roads with burning tires. A protester and a soldier were killed, said hospital and local officials. Earlier reports put the toll at two soldiers.

The agreement to end political crisis of the Yemen was to be signed in Riyadh Sunday, three months after that Yemenis first took to the streets to demand the overthrow of the Saleh, inspired by the revolts that toppled leaders in Egypt and Tunisia.

The balance of power has tipped against Saleh, who was an ally key to West against al-Qaida, after weeks of violence, military defections and political reversals.

Hodeida, organizer of the demonstration Abdul Hafez Muajeb said the coast guard welcomed protesters and had raised a banner saying they would not use weapons against the people.

"We close the port because its revenues are used to finance the thugs," said manifesting Muaz Abdullah, referring to the civil security men that often use daggers and bats to disperse demonstrations.

The participation rate large demonstrations show capacity of mainly young demonstrators, including students, tribes, and activists, to act as deal with potential spoilers of the Gulf. They have promised to stay in the streets until their demands are met.

It is not clear that parties of the opposition, composed of the Islamists, Arab nationalists and leftists who have been in recent years, in and out of Government could halt the protests even if necessary for the transition agreement.

Washington and neighbors oil giant Saudi Arabia want the impasse resolved. They fear that a descent more bloodshed in the State of the Arabian peninsula would offer more room for a wing based at the al-Qaeda Yemen to operate.

VIOLENCE FLARES

The agreement of the Gulf provides Saleh to appoint a Prime Minister of the opposition, which would then form a Government of transition before the presidential election two months after his resignation. But the window of a month for Saleh to resign sparked fears that may offer potential sabotage times.

Mohammed Basindwa, a senior leader of the opposition considered top candidate, the head of a transitional Government said he only expected an agreement to be signed without further negotiations, and said Saleh was not expected to attend the meeting in Riyadh.

Saleh, who ruled for 32 years, would sign the agreement in Sanaa, while the opposition would sign in Riyadh in the presence of a delegation from the Government, said Basindwa.

Requested A will it was confident Saleh would resign after the 30-day window, Basindwa said: "the United States and the European Union and the Gulf States ensure that all parties will paste to implement the agreement."

Other clashes broke out in the main town in the South of Aden, the closure of young demonstrators tried to enforce a general strike that paralyzed the city of port that most businesses and schools, said a local government official.

Strikes are also underway in Taiz, which saw some great anti-Saleh events, and Ibb, South of Sanaa.

Elsewhere in the South, armed men killed more than two dead soldiers and injured five in an attack on a military control post which was attributed to al-Qaida loyalist, said a local official.

About 130 protesters were killed as unrest swept to the Yemen, where about 40 percent of its 23 million people live on $ 2 a day or less and a third face chronic hunger.

(Reported by Mohammed Ghobari.) (Written by Cynthia Johnston)


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Japan revised target of sidewalk power to avoid blackouts summer - Reuters

TOKYO, April 28. Wed, April 27, 2011 8: 45 pm (EDT)

The Department of commerce earlier this month announced targets of reducing power project Tokyo, and North of the Japan which would require big users to reduce the consumption of advanced by 25 percent, much to small users of 20 per cent and households of 15-20%.

But the Tokyo Electric has revised since until its estimate for the supply of power for the summer after the installation of the production capacity of over. (Reported by Osumu Tsukimori;) (Editing by Edmund Klamann)


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Libya United Nations investigators to probe violations of the rights - Reuters

By Guy Desmond

TRIPOLI. Wed, April 27, 2011 9 pm EDT

TRIPOLI (Reuters) - a team of investigators from the United Nations, the answers sought Wednesday to Libyan officials on allegations of forces loyal to Muammar al-Gaddafi had committed violations of human rights.

The three members of the inquiry commission has met with Libyan officials and said it would be an urgent need for access to prisons, hospitals and regions of the country where it suspects violations of rights are underway.

"We have a number of issues related to indiscriminate shelling of civilian areas, victims among civilians, torture and the use of other issues and mercenaries," said Cherif Bassiouni, an Egyptian legal expert and member of the commission.

"The commission of inquiry is here to inform and to find, with the Libyan Government, what is its position in several types of violations that...". "(we) discovered during our investigation on the ground", he told journalists after talks with Libyan officials.

Asked what the United Nations team access should be given by the Libyan authorities, Bassiouni, said: "we know still." We said everything in writing and verbally stated and we intend to push for it. ?

The Organization of the United Nations, Western Governments and some Arab States accuse Libyan leader Mu'ammar al-Gaddafi ordered its security forces of killing hundreds of civilians who raised in protest against its rule in four decades.

Libyan officials deny killing civilians, saying that security forces were forced to act against armed bands and al-Qaeda sympathizers who, say, trying to take control of the oil exporting country.

Bassiouni said that he would also use the delegation to Tripoli to raise the issue of foreign journalists held in Libya.

Libyan authorities hold two journalists from U.S., a Spanish, a South African and a Canadian, according to the Committee based on the United States for the protection of journalists in. Officials say that they contain only journalists if they are illegally in the country.

"I... have them (the Libyan Government) gave a list of all the foreign journalists who are in detention,"Bassiouni said."".

"We requested the opportunity to visit them and to ask why they are not be released.". I hope that this initiative will impact on journalists. ?

The commission of inquiry was set up in February by the UN Human Rights Council and is due to present his report on the violations of the rights in Libya in June.

Bassiouni, said the commission has already carried out investigations on the ground in Libya is controlled by the rebels, as well as on the borders of the Libya and was also planning to travel to Tripoli.

(Written by Christian Lowe.) (Editing by Sophie hares)


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Palestinian factions look for the Government of national unity, elections - Bloomberg Plan

Palestinian Factions Seek Unity Government, Plan Elections Palestinian Fatah's delegation Chief Azzam al-Ahmad, right, shakes hands with the Deputy leader of the Hamas Musa Abu Marzouk after a joint in the Cairo press conference. Photographer: Khaled Desouki/AFP/Getty Images

The rival Palestinian groups Hamas and Fatah reached a preliminary agreement almost to end their broken four years and form a Government of national unity.

The agreement calls for legislative and presidential elections in a year, Fatah official Azzam al-Ahmad, said in an interview yesterday after a press conference jointly with the Hamas negotiators.

The Egypt, who acted as a mediator during the secret negotiations, will host a meeting of Palestinian factions, for a formal signing ceremony, next week, said al-Ahmad.

"Today, we open a new page of unity and of the Convention, to tighten the ranks and who fight together," Hamas official Musa Abu Marzouk said. The formation of a Government of technocrats unit will begin next week after the signing of the agreement, said.

Israel said the deal would kill any chance for the talks of peace and the U.S. said that Hamas cannot play a "constructive role" and that it is not prepared to accept the Israel right to exist. Hamas--considered a terrorist organization by the United States, the European Union and Israel - rejects the peace negotiations and refused to recognize the Jewish State.

The Palestinian movement follows protests in March in which thousands of Palestinians, inspired by the popular uprisings in Egypt, the Tunisia and the Libya, rallied in support of reconciliation between Hamas, which controls the Gaza Strip, and Fatah Palestinian Authority, including the rules of the West Bank.

Gazans celebrated yesterday in the streets, Mkhaimar Abusada, political scientist at Al-Azhar University in Gaza, said in a telephone interview.

"This is a very important for the Palestinian people", Abusada said.

The announcement comes as officials of the Palestinian Authority to make pressure on Western countries to recognize a Palestinian State in September.

"If we think the Palestinian Authority being seriously to the Declaration of the State in September, it would have been absurd with both authorities," said Jonathan Spyer, political scientist at the Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya, outside Tel Aviv. "We will see how far they get."

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, said that a unity agreement would end any chance of peace talks, stalled since September, between Israel and the Palestinian Authority.

"The Palestinian Authority must choose between peace with Israel and peace with Hamas," Netanyahu said in comments sent by e-mail to diffusion. "The very idea of reconciliations shows the weakness of the Palestinian Authority."

Fearful United States

The Obama administration sounded a note is wary following the announcement. "As we said, the United States support Palestinian reconciliation to conditions that promote the cause of peace,", said the National Security Council spokesman Tommy Vietor.

"Hamas, however, is a terrorist organization which target civilians," he said in a statement by e-mail. "To play a constructive role in the achievement of peace, any Palestinian Government must accept the Quartet principles and renounce violence, abide by past agreements and recognize the right of Israel to exist."

Hamas and Fatah officials said that both parties would form a Committee to address the issue of security in a unity Government.

The separation between the President of the Palestinian Authority Mahmoud Abbas's Fatah faction and the Islamic Hamas movement dates to 2007, when Hamas ousted forces Abbas of the Gaza Strip, a year after winning the elections. That ended a Government coalition with Fatah and Abbas left in control of the West Bank.

March 16, Abbas said that he wished to visit Gaza in a bid to heal the divide which has forced delays in the plans to hold elections.

The Israeli army and the Egypt two sealed off its borders with Gaza after Hamas took over, cutting most civilian traffic and restrict trade with the territory. Israel has maintained a land and sea blockade on Gaza since then.

Leaders of the Palestinian Authority have said they will seek United Nations recognition of a State in September if negotiations with Israel are not repries.

The peace talks between Israel and the Palestinian Authority fell down several weeks after that they started in September 2010, when Netanyahu refused to extend a partial construction of 10-month freeze in the West Bank and Abbas said he wouldn't negotiate until all the construction was interrupted.

To contact the reporters on this story: Mariam Fam in Cairo to mfam1@bloomberg.net; Gwen Ackerman in Jerusalem at the gackerman@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Andrew j. Barden at barden@bloomberg.net


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Last royal wedding preparations - the Press Association

Final preparations for the royal (UKPA) wedding - 27 minutes ago

Last minute preparations are underway for the marriage of Prince William and Kate Middleton with the ceremony now one night.

A final repetition of private marriage was held for the couple in Westminster Abbey on Wednesday evening, with Prince Harry and the Middleton family.

They were welcomed by senior members of the clergy to run through what happens during the ceremony of tomorrow.

Later, the second line of the throne will enjoy his last night as a free man in the company of the Prince of Wales, Duchess of Cornwall and best man Harry at Clarence House, the official London home.

The event is likely to be a case quiet while car less than a minute, Kate Middleton will be with his family at the exclusive hotel of Goring to Belgravia.

Earlier Wednesday, the Prince was photographed playing football five-a-side in Battersea Park, South of London while the Middleton family arrived at the Goring.

The couple held before rehearsals, but not within the Abbey, and on Wednesday night they will have practiced all to ensure that the service works very well despite the possible nerves the day. Miss Middleton, 29, travelled the arm in the arms of nave with his father, Michael and crossed his vows with her fiancé of 28 years.

Any problem where the individuals should be maintained and the wording of the ceremony will be have been resolved by the calm of the clerks group. The Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr. Rowan Williams, who is marrying the couple, the Bishop of London, the Rt Rev Richard Chartres, which will provide the address, and the Dean of Westminster, the very Rev Dr John Hall, who runs the service, were all part of the repetition.

Hundreds of tourists flock to the Abbey to catch a glimpse of the royal couple. But the celebration of marriage swept into the precincts of the Abbey in a convoy of three carriers of persons in silver colour, with masked-out windows, escorted by police motorcycle and more in unmarked range Rovers and was out of sight for most. However, William and his fiancée, with Harry, were spotted leaving vehicles by some TV crews.

Irreducible Royalists have launched about 30 tents in a bid to claim the best place on the big day.

Copyright ? 2011 Press Association. All rights reserved.

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