Saturday, March 26, 2011

Bangladeshis fleeing Libya facing assaults, looting

Migrant workers escaping to Tunisia from Libya through the Ras Jdir border describe the ordeal of their perilous journey from the chaotic North African country.
Nearly 500 Bangladeshis and a thousand African nationals entered Tunisia in the last 24 hours. Many of them said they were intercepted, frisked, beaten up and robbed of their belongings on the way to the border.
“Groups of armed men were prowling the road to Ras Jdir. They robbed us of all our possessions -- money, cell phones and whatever they thought valuable,” said 40-year-old Kashem Mia from Mymensingh on his arrival at Ras Jdir on Thursday afternoon after a twelve-hour journey from Bani Walid in Libya.
“I along with four other Bangladeshis and a dozen nationals of other countries spent the last two weeks inside dormitories with gunshots ringing out all around us,” said Azfar, who was travelling in a group of five.
The 20-year-old youth said they spent all their money to migrate to Libya ten months ago.
"We waited and hoped the situation would improve. But we soon realised it would not be possible for us to survive there,” he said.
They contacted a Libyan microbus driver, who agreed to take them to the Tunisian border for an exorbitant 180 Libyan dinars each.
Armed men intercepted them at an intersection on the main road, asked the workers to hand them their cell phones and frisked them thoroughly.
“I hid 500 dinars in my shoes. I was scared to death when an armed man pointed his gun at me and asked me to take off my shoes. He looked inside them but could not find the money,” said Mamun.
On arrival at Choucha camp yesterday, Bangladeshi migrant Moslem said, “We do not know whether they were supporters of Gaddafi or rebels.”
"They were only looking for money and any valuables -- i-pod, sunglasses, electronic goods or even a pair of trousers,” he said.
Another migrant worker Sabuj from Mymensingh said, “We kept our mobile sets and money with the driver. When we reached a barricade on the road, he handed over everything to the armed men.”
Bangladeshi migrants at Choucha camp said they saw bodies lying by the road while fleeing to the border area.
Tunisian officials said they had information that a few fleeing migrants had been shot at.
An immigration official at Ras Jdir border said they could not confirm any of the incidents, as nobody dared to enter Libya since the fighting broke out in late February.
As migrant workers, including Bangladeshis, crossed the Tunisian border check post, they were overwhelmed by the hospitality of the Tunisians. A group of elderly Tunisians opened a small reception centre there and served them fresh milk, dates and bottled water.
Tunisian volunteers from several aid organisations led the Bangladeshi migrants to a luxury bus to Choucha camp, some five kilometres off the place.
IOM officials at Choucha camp yesterday read out the names of 288 Bangladeshis to be flown home by a Jordanian chartered aircraft in the evening.
With more Bangladeshis escaping from Libya and fewer flights to bring them home, it appears the repatriation of stranded Bangladeshis might take a longer time than expected.

Obama to address nation on Libya Monday


To a nation and a Congress seeking answers, President Barack Obama on Monday will offer his most expansive explanation of the US role in the Libyan war, delivering a speech that is expected to cover the path ahead and his rationale about the appropriate use of force.

Obama's 7:30pm EDT speech, to be given from the National Defense University in Washington, comes as leading Republican lawmakers and some from his own party have pressed him for clarity about the goals and exit strategy of the United States. Obama and top US security officials spent about an hour talking to lawmakers on Friday, with the president answering direct questions from critics.
For a president who was on a Latin American outreach trip when the UN-sanctioned military assault on the Libyan regime began, the speech offers him his best chance to explain the purpose and scope of the mission to a nation already weary of war. Obama has spoken about the matter since authorising the use of force, but not in a setting as prominent as an evening speech, as he seeks to take command of the story.
Obama is expected to explain how the US-led campaign is shifting to Nato control, and how the multinational approach with Arab support puts the United States in the strongest position to achieve the goals of protecting Libyan civilians, a White House official said.
The president will also put the Libyan campaign into a broader context of his decisions about the use of force, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the president's thinking. US-led forces began launching missile strikes last Saturday against embattled Libyan strongman Muammar Gaddafi's defenses to establish a no-fly zone and prevent him from attacking his own people.
With the Obama administration eager to take a back seat, it remained unclear when Nato would assume command of the no-fly patrols. Also unclear was when — and even if — the US military's Africa Command would hand off to Nato the lead role in attacking Libyan ground targets.
The US commander in charge of the overall international mission, Army Gen Carter Ham, told The Associated Press, "We could easily destroy all the regime forces that are in Ajdabiya," but the city itself would be destroyed in the process. "We'd be killing the very people that we're charged with protecting."
Instead, the focus is on disrupting the communications and supply lines that allow Gaddafi's forces to keep fighting in Ajdabiya and other urban areas like Misrata, Ham said in a telephone interview from his US Africa Command headquarters in Stuttgart, Germany.
The White House announcement of Monday's speech came after Obama's teleconference Friday with a bipartisan group of key members of Congress. The call came amid complaints on Capitol Hill that Obama was not adequately consulting about the intervention in Libya with Capitol Hill.
During the call, Obama and other US officials emphasized to lawmakers that the United States' military role would be decreasing going forward, according to an official who listened to the conversation and spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the closed meeting.
Obama reiterated the US position that Gaddafi should leave power. But he said, as he has publicly, that the United States planned to follow the mission of the UN Security Council resolution — which centers on the protection of Libyan civilians. The campaign is not aimed at killing Gaddafi, the official said.
House Speaker John Boehner asked a series of questions and got direct answers from both the president and Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Adm. Mike Mullen, the official said. The president also took questions from the Senate's top Republican, Mitch McConnell, and from other lawmakers.
After the call, a spokesman for Boehner said the speaker wants the Obama administration to do more to explain how the mission in Libya "is consistent with US policy goals."
And Sen John McCain of Arizona, who also participated in the call, remained concerned that the current military action might not be enough force Gaddafi out of power, spokeswoman Brooke Buchanan said.
Buchanan said McCain, the top Republican on the Senate Armed Services Committee, supports the military intervention in Libya but fears it could lead to a stalemate that leaves Gaddafi's regime in place.
Obama also faced political pressure from his own party, with one prominent Democrat expressing reservations about the wisdom of continuing the military mission.
"I know the president carefully weighed all the options before taking this emergency action but now that our military has prevented an immediate disaster, I have very serious concerns about what this intervention means for our country in the coming weeks," Sen Jay Rockefeller, D-WVa, said.
Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Carl Levin, D-Mich., gave Obama a strong endorsement after speaking with the president and his advisers.
"The president gave a very clear, very strong presentation," Levin said. "I continue to believe there will be strong bipartisan support in Congress. He clearly answered the questions about the mission and planned schedule for the handoff of the principal responsibility for population protection to Nato and Arab countries."
Meanwhile, a Pentagon official said Friday that even as other nations begin taking a larger role in the international air assault mission in Libya, the Pentagon was considering adding Air Force gunships and other attack aircraft that are better suited for tangling with Libyan ground forces in contested urban areas like Misrata.
Navy Vice Adm William Gortney told a Pentagon news conference that for the second consecutive day, all air missions to enforce a no-fly zone over Libya were flown by non-US aircraft, and US planes conducted about half the missions attacking Libyan air defenses, missile sites and ground forces. Qatar became the first Arab nation to join the effort, flying F-16s in support of the no-fly zone.
"The division of labour between the US and our partners has largely evened out," Gortney said.
In his interview with the Associated Press, Ham said the US expects Nato will take command of the no-fly zone mission on Sunday, with a Canadian three-star general, Charles Bouchard, in charge. Bouchard would report to an American admiral, Samuel Locklear, in Locklear's role as commander of Nato's Allied Joint Force Command Naples, Ham said.
If Nato also decides to take on a wider mission broadly defined by the United Nations Security Council as protecting Libyan civilians from their own government — a mission that is currently carried out under US command — then Bouchard might command that effort, too, Ham said.
In announcing on Thursday that Nato had agreed to take on the no-fly zone mission, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said the campaign was evolving in line with Obama's plan to limit US involvement.
"We're already seeing a significant reduction in the number of US planes involved in operations as the number of planes from other countries increases in numbers," she said.
Gortney, however, said there has been no reduction in the number of American planes participating. In fact, he said the Pentagon was considering bringing in side-firing AC-130 gunships, helicopters and armed drone aircraft that could challenge Libyan ground forces that threaten civilians in cities like Misrata. The US has avoided attacking in cities thus far out of fear that civilians could be killed or injured. AC-130 gunships, which operate at night at low altitude, can attack with unusual precision.
Gortney is staff director for the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
Nato's governing body, the North Atlantic Council, is expected to meet again on Sunday to revisit whether the alliance will take command of the rest of the Libya operation, including the protection of civilians.

England 63/2 after 19 overs

England scored 63 losing two wickets in 19 overs against Sri Lanka in the final quarterfinal match of the ICC Cricket World Cup at R Premadasa Stadium in Colombo, Sri Lanka on Saturday.
Earlier, England’s captain Andrew Strauss elected to bat first after winning the toss.
It is obviously the Sri Lanka game that got everyone excited. But captain Kumar Sangakkara believed that expectation on England will be as much as it will be on the home side for the final quarterfinal.

Sri Lanka: WU Tharanga, TM Dilshan, KC Sangakkara, DPMD Jayawardene, TT Samaraweera, LPC Silva, AD Mathews, SL Malinga, HMRKB Herath, BAW Mendis and M Muralitharan.
England: AJ Strauss, IR Bell, IJL Trott, RS Bopara, EJG Morgan, MJ Prior, LJ Wright, TT Bresnan, GP Swann, JC Tredwell and CT Tremlett.

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Thursday, March 24, 2011

Mothers at Sendai school receive the dead bodies of their children


It is two weeks since the Japanese tsunami struck but only now is Ookawa Elementary School giving up most of its dead.
Of its 108 pupils, 77 were buried, along with 10 teachers, when water surged over the top of their two-storey building and dumped tonnes of earth on the playground.
That was where the entire group was standing, having followed their well practised response to an earthquake, filing outside and waiting for the danger to pass.
There was a hill 50 yards away, where they would have been safe from a tsunami, but the teachers didn't think a wave could reach two miles inland.
So instead, for 45 minutes, they stood patiently as a 30ft wall of water was rushing up the nearby Kitakamigawa river, and across the rice paddies towards them.

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Edith Piaf's love letters released in full



she called Toto and "my blue love" and for whom she promised to give up drink forever.
She pWritten in 1951 and 1952, the passionate letters shed light on Piaf's little-known relationship with Gérardin, whom enned them two years after the death of boxer Marcel Cerdan, widely thought of as "the true love of Piaf's life". When he died in a plane crash, she sung Hymn to Love, thought to be her way of saying she would never get over him.
But in one of the first letters to Gérardin, dated January 1952, she writes: "My blue love, our first separation ... darling, I think I can say that never has a man taken me as much, and I believe I'm making love for the first time."
"I was running towards catastrophe; you fished me out just in time," writes the singer of "Non, je ne regrette rien".
The 13-time French speed racing champion once said that: "Forty-eight hours with Piaf are more tiring than a lap in the Tour de France". 

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French interior minister apologises for likening Libya intervention to a crusade

Claude Guéant, France's new interior minister, has been forced into expressing regret for having likened his country's diplomatic drive for international military intervention in Libya to a "crusade".

Claude Guéant, France's new interior minister, has been forced into expressing regret for having likened his country's diplomatic drive for international military intervention in Libya to a crusade Nicknamed 'The Cardinal' during his time as the Elysee's secretary general, Mr Gueant was admired for his diplomatic skills

On Monday, Mr Guéant had praised Nicolas Sarkozy, the French president, for having "headed the crusade to mobilise the United Nations Security Council, and then the Arab League and the African Union."
"Looking back I could have used another word," he admitted in a radio interview on yesterday.
The term "crusade" was seen as unfortunate given the historical connotations of the Christian crusades in the Middle East in the Middle Ages.
In spite of raising hackles in the Middle East and Russia, Mr Guéant had earlier been unrepentant, telling fellow right-wingers that the modern usage of the term "crusade" did not necessarily have religious overtones.
Mr Guéant, until last month Mr Sarkozy's chief Elysée adviser, is the latest embarrassment to cause the government embarrassment

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William Hague: Gaddafi is still attacking Libyans

Britain will maintain "robust action" against Colonel Muammar Gaddafi's regime as "appalling violence" continues against Libyan civilians, William Hague has insisted.

 

The Foreign Secretary said the case for continuing military strikes remains "utterly compelling", and he dismissed the regime's claims it had ordered a ceasefire as an "utter sham".
Mr Hague told MPs air strikes are relieving pressure on civilians in Misrata although the hospital is "swamped" with casualties. Ajdabiya continues to be under attack, with reports that civilians are being killed by tank shelling.
"This underlines the appalling danger its inhabitants would be in without coalition action, as do continued threats by Gaddafi forces to 'massacre' residents in areas under bombardment," he said.


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Libya: Gaddafi regime claims 100 civilians have been killed by coalition air strikes


The Libyan government on Thursday night claimed close to 100 civilians had died in air strikes since last Saturday, the first estimate of the number of casualties since the first day of bombing.

The Libyan government on Thursday night claimed close to 100 civilians had died in air strikes since last Saturday, the first estimate of the number of casualties since the first day of bombing.                                           Libyan mourners at the martyrs' cemetery in Tripoli attend the funerals of victims of air strikes by coalition forces

State media in the country have repeatedly stressed the civilian casualties of the air strikes, which they say include many children.
But officials have been unable to give definitive figures, and have provided no firm evidence of the breakdown of civilian and military casualties.
In a reversal of practices in similar situations where governments have been keen to show off civilian losses, police and militia on Thursday detained seven journalists for an hour at a checkpoint near Tajoura Hospital in the east of the city, where casualties were to be undergoing treatment.
They were eventually escorted back to their hotel after being refused access.
A mass funeral was held at the nearby Martyrs' Cemetery for 18 people said to have been killed in raids on Wednesday night. A government official claimed they were civilian, though Mussa Ibrahim, the official spokesman, admitted that students at military academies were counted as civilians

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Gruesome slaughter in Ajdabiya as rebels and government forces dig in

Five days after coalition air strikes helped rebels push back Colonel Muammar Gaddafi's forces from the outskirts of Benghazi, their advance has stalled at gates of the eastern Libyan town of Ajdabiya.

 
Libyan rebels on the road between Ajdabiya and Benghazi

Both sides seem to be digging in for the long haul, understanding that this battle could decide their fortunes.
Little news has emerged from the town, where thousands of civilians are thought to be trapped.
They are the lucky ones.
Murad Ali was trying to collect the ash-like shadows in the back of a brunt-out pick up, the unrecognisable remains of what was once an entire family trapped in the crossfire, when anti-aircraft guns homed in on his little aid convoy.
"I fell to the sand and dragged myself on my elbows to my car," he said on Thursday, at the Jellah Hospital in Benghazi, with his head swaddled in bandages.

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workers injured at Japanese nuclear plant

Two workers at reactor number three at Japan's Fukushima Daiichi plant have been taken to hospital after being exposed to radiation. As fears rise over water and food safety, several countries have banned Japanese imports.
The two employees were working in a building where reactor number three's turbine is located and were exposed to radiation ranging from 170 to 180 milli-sieverts, Japan’s nuclear safety agency says. An exposure of 100 milli-sieverts per year is considered the lowest level at which any increase in cancer risk is evident.
On Wednesday, a plume of black smoke was seen rising from reactor number three, forcing technicians to suspend their work. However, they resumed their work soon afterwards, in a bid to restore the reactor’s cooling system.
Reconnecting the reactor control rooms was seen as a key step as workers hope to restart the original cooling systems.
The Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant was badly damaged in a quake and tsunami that cut electricity to the plant and caused the cooling systems to fail.
The number of people dead or missing has reached 25,000 and hundreds remain huddled in evacuation shelters.
As fears grow over the safety of Japan’s water supply, stocks of bottled water have slumped in the capital Tokyo. Many in Japan’s north-east are still without access to drinking water.
Russia on Wednesday banned food imports from four Japanese provinces and a Japanese ship was found to have radioactivity levels three times higher than the norm at the far-eastern port of Vanino.
Australia, Canada and Singapore have joined the list of countries shunning Japanese food imports. The United States and Hong Kong have already restricted Japanese food imports, and France wants the EU to do the same.

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Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Xavi set for 100th cap

Barce-lona star Xavi Hernandez is set to win his 100th cap for Spain when the world champions resume their 2012 European Championship qualifying campaign on Friday looking to stay perfect.
Xavi, widely regarded as one of the world’s best midfielders, will become only the second Spanish outfield player to reach a century of appearances, after striker Raul Gonzalez.
With a winner’s medal from Euro 2008 in his cabinet alongside one from last year’s World Cup, and having won every major honor in the club game with a star-studded Barcelona team, the 31-year-old Xavi has had an incredible career that is showing no sign of slowing up.
‘During the World Cup, I realized I was close (to 100) and, if the coach wanted, it would happen,’ Xavi said. ‘I didn’t ever consider playing 100 games (for Spain) until very recently. And it is very exciting.’
Spain is one of four countries, along with Germany, Norway and the Netherlands, to have a 100 percent record so far in qualifying and next faces a home match against the Czech Republic in Granada in Group I.
Heavy defeats in friendlies to Portugal and Argentina toward the end of 2010 suggested the glory years for Spain might be on the wane, but a 1-0 victory over Colombia put the team back on track.
And Xavi is still the heartbeat and passing maestro of a side filled with players from his club and whose style mirrors that exhibited by the Catalan giants. But how long can he go on?
‘I don’t know, 100 more and I stop?’ he told El Pais newspaper. ‘Seriously, while they want me they can count on me. For the moment, I am thinking about the Euros, but maybe I will make it to Brazil (for the World Cup in 2014). That wouldn’t be bad, would it?’
Xavi’s Spain teammates are just happy to be on the same pitch as him.
‘An incredible player, among the best Spanish players of all time,’ striker Fernando Llorente said. ‘He is achieving everything in the world of football—for Barcelona and the national team, he is winning everything and it is amazing to see him play all these years at this level.’

England are underdogs against SL, says Prior

Matt Prior admitted England have not played their best cricket in the World Cup and will be underdogs in their quarter-final against Sri Lanka on Saturday.
England, who have never won the tournament, endured a rocky ride in the first round, losing to Ireland and Bangladesh but beating South Africa and battling to a tie against India.
They now face the 1996 champions Sri Lanka, and Prior admitted England have yet to hit top gear.
‘We haven’t played our best cricket by a long way, but we are still in the quarters,’ he said.
‘We have not even got anywhere near what we can do so there will be no pressure and we go into the match as underdogs against a very strong Sri Lanka team.’
But Prior believes that if England do well in all three departments, they will be tough to beat.
‘If we do come out and play as a team and get all our three disciplines right, we are going to be very hard to beat. As a team we are in a fantastic place,’ said Prior.
The wicket-keeper added that the win over the West Indies at Chennai last week, which saved them from elimination, was a morale-booster.
‘That win gave us a huge amount of belief and a huge amount of confidence,’ said Prior of the narrow 18-run victory.
‘It showed that we will not be beaten easily. We have a huge amount of resilience, and a huge amount of fire in this group.’
Prior said adding the World Cup to their Ashes triumph in Australia would cap a triumphant season for England.
‘We came to win the World Cup, and if you leave this World Cup having not won it, you will be disappointed. You haven’t achieved your goal. The thing I would say is that we fought very, very hard as a unit.
‘Every one knows that we haven’t played well, but we are in a quarter-final, and anything can happen. We have got three games to win and we’ll be world champions.  ‘To win the Ashes and the World Cup in a winter is something quite phenomenal.’
Prior said he was enjoying opening the innings with skipper Andrew Strauss, a role he was handed when Kevin Pietersen was forced out of the tournament through injury.
‘I am absolutely bewildered by it. When I was told I would be opening when KP went down, it wasn’t a done decision for the whole tournament,’ said Prior who has just 56 runs in five innings so far.
‘I think as a batter, as a unit, one of our major strengths is that we adapt very well to different teams, different conditions. I don’t think any batsman in the top six or seven has a particular argument about where they’ll bat.’

England spinner Titmus dies at 78

Former England and Middlesex spinner Fred Titmus died on Wednesday after a long illness. He was 78.
Titmus made 53 Test appearances for England and took 153 wickets during a first-class career that which became renowned for its longevity, spanning a remarkable 33 seasons between 1949 and 1982.
Titmus made his debut for Middlesex as a 16-year-old in 1949, before bowing out in 1982 at the age of 50 years and 276 days.
‘Middlesex County Cricket Club are deeply saddened to report the death of Middlesex and England legend Fred Titmus, who died this morning after a long illness,’ a statement on Middlesex’s website read.

India sweat on Sehwag

India face a nervous wait to find out if opening batsman Virender Sehwag will be fit to face Australia in today’s World Cup quarter-final at the Sardar Patel Stadium.
Sehwag missed India’s final group match, an 80-run win over the West Indies in Chennai last week after suffering an allergic reaction to a painkilling injection in his right knee.
India captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni said Wednesday the dynamic run-scorer’s fitness was still an issue. ‘We are taking a call on Viru in the evening or maybe tomorrow morning before the start of the game,’ Dhoni said. ‘Apart from that, all the others are fit.’
Sehwag has scored 7,707 runs including 14 hundreds in 233 one-day internationals at an average of 35.35.
But a strike rate of over 104 is arguably the most telling statistic, as it is evidence of his consistent ability to get the innings off to a blistering start that leaves the opposition on the defensive.
‘It’s really good to have Sehwag opening the innings, because if the deliveries are short and to the body or somewhere else, he’s the kind of batsman who can make the most of that kind of bowling,’ Dhoni explained.
Dhoni, himself a hard-hitting middle-order batsman, added: ‘He can play an aggressive game, change the course of a match in the first five overs and give your team the kind of momentum that is needed.’ However, Sehwag has never made an ODI hundred in 27 matches against Australia and he averages a modest 22.65 against the world champions.
If Sehwag is ruled out, India are set to retain Suresh Raina, brought in against the West Indies, and keep Test opener Gautam Gambhir at the top of the order to partner Sachin Tendulkar.

Bahrain suspends Lebanon flights as tension rises

Bahrain has suspended its flights to and from Lebanon a day after it warned its nationals not to travel there following declarations of support by Iranian-backed Shia  group Hezbollah for protests by Bahrain’s Shia .
The decision highlights growing tensions in the world’s largest oil-exporting region between Sunni-ruled Arab countries and non-Arab Shia  power Iran, just across Gulf waters.
Bahrain’s state-run Gulf Air also said in a statement on its website that all flights to Iran and Iraq had been suspended until March 31, without giving a reason.
Iran, which supports Shia  groups in Lebanon and Iraq, has strongly criticised the intervention in Bahrain by its neighbouring Sunni-led Arab states.
Street protests against the intervention have also been held in Iraq and Lebanon, which along with Bahrain, are of the few Arab states where Shia s outnumber Sunnis.
‘This decision was taken after the irresponsible comments and stances from Lebanon against Bahrain, its people and leaders,’ state-owned Bahrain news agency cited a statement from the Civil Aviation Affairs department as saying.
Flights by Gulf Air and Bahrain Air to and from Lebanon have been suspended indefinitely, it added.
On Tuesday, Bahrain’s foreign ministry warned Bahrainis not to travel to Lebanon for their own safety and said the ban was due to threats and interference.
The ferocity of Bahrain’s crackdown on demonstrators, which banned protests, imposed martial law and called in forces from the island’s fellow Sunni-ruled neighbours, has stunned its majority Shias.

Saudi to hold municipal polls in April
Saudi Arabia is to hold municipal elections from April 23 at a time of pro-democracy uprisings across the Arab world, the official SPA news agency announced.
‘A committee has been formed... to oversee next month’s municipal council elections,’ it said in an official announcement late on Tuesday, adding that polling by regions would kick off on April 23.
The oil-rich absolute monarchy held landmark first men-only municipal polls in 2005, when Saudis elected half the members of 178 municipal councils across the Gulf state.

Europe’s foreign policy in line of fire over Libya

As the international campaign against Moamer Gaddafi gathers strength, one target emerging in the line of fire is Europe’s much-vaunted and long-awaited common foreign policy.
Barely a year after launching an EU diplomatic service almost a decade in the making, leaders of the 27-nation bloc head for a two-day summit Thursday after ‘not a good week for EU unity’, as British conservative Euro MP Charles Tannock put it.
In a historic move, Germany broke ranks with its European Union partners by abstaining on last week’s Libya resolution at the UN Security Council, while Italy and others have shown growing irritation with coalition leaders Britain and France.
Split over the Libya campaign, not to mention future policy towards the bloc’s Arab neighbours, much flak for the lack of a single European voice is being directed at the Brussels chief of the fledgling EU diplomatic corps, Catherine Ashton.
At hearings of the European parliament’s foreign affairs committee Tuesday, Ashton came in for a barrage of fire from MEPs. She heard everything from ‘We would like to see from you a more proactive approach’ to ‘your job is superfluous, it’s money thrown out the window’.
Analysts concede that Ashton has disappointed by taking a low-profile stand as EU mouthpiece rather than taking the initiative — all this in times of economic recession when many governments are cutting back on embassy staff, but paying for the EU corps.
‘It is not too late to set out a determined new plan for Euro-Arab cooperation,’ said Giles Merritt of the Friends of Europe think tank. ‘But that will not happen if Baroness Ashton remains a low-profile operator.’
But EU member states themselves are divided, said Andre Deletroz of the International Crisis Group. ‘So it’s difficult to ask Brussels to act alone or put up a common position.’
Tensions between member states were ‘less dramatic’ and ‘less impassioned’ however than in 2003 over Iraq, when France refused to join military action, he said.
‘The problem,’ Ashton herself said, ‘is the reality of 27 member states who are sovereign, who believe passionately in their own right to determine what they do, particularly in the area of defence, who will take different views.’
But many leading European politicians remain concerned over the bloc’s lack of unity in responding to events unfolding in its own backyard.

Fierce fighting between rebels and Gaddafi forces in Ajdabiya

International forces have launched new air strikes near Libya's rebel-held western city of Misrata, witnesses say.
Forces loyal to Col Muammar Gaddafi initially pulled back, but Misrata residents say snipers have continued to target people from rooftops.
Col Gaddafi's forces also resumed their pounding of Zintan, near the Tunisian border, according to reports.
The fighting comes as Western leaders debate who leads the intervention, with the US keen to hand over to Nato.
A Misrata resident told Reuters by telephone: "This morning, air strikes twice hit the airbase where Gaddafi's brigades are based.
"Two people were killed by snipers an hour ago in the centre of the town. Their bodies are now at the hospital, which I visited a while ago. Shooting is still going on there now."
A doctor in the city also told the BBC that snipers were continuing to shoot at civilians, and confirmed at least one person had been killed.
Witnesses said tanks pulled back from their positions, from where they have been spearheading a siege of the city for days.
There are also reports of fierce fighting between rebels and pro-Gaddafi forces in the strategic eastern town of Ajdabiya.
Residents fleeing the town described shelling, gunfire and houses on fire.
Earlier, Col Gaddafi made his first public appearance in a week and gave a short speech to a crowd of supporters in Tripoli.
He urged "all Islamic armies" to join him, saying: "We will be victorious."
Western warplanes have flown more than 300 sorties over Libya in recent days and more than 162 Tomahawk cruise missiles have been fired.
After sunset on Tuesday, witnesses reported more anti-aircraft fire and the distant sound of explosions in Tripoli.
Before dawn on Wednesday, a series of explosions were also heard in the Libyan capital.
The coalition has not confirmed any reports of air strikes overnight on Tuesday.
Naval blockade
Meanwhile, ships from Nato nations have started patrolling off the Libyan coast to enforce a UN arms embargo against Col Gaddafi's regime.
A spokesman for the Western military alliance, Canadian Brigadier General Pierre St Amand, said six vessels were taking part in the first day of patrols.
They aim to intercept and board ships suspected of ferrying arms to the Libyan government.

Damage cost up to $309bn


Japan yesterday said the cost of the March 11 earthquake and tsunami could hit $309 billion, double the Kobe quake and nearly four times more than Hurricane Katrina.
The total cost from collapse or damage to houses, factories and infrastructure such as roads and bridges was estimated at 16 to 25 trillion yen over the next three fiscal years, the Cabinet Office said.
Japan may need up to five years to rebuild from the disastrous earthquake.
It also estimates that 0.5 percentage points will be shaved from the country's economic growth this year.
The estimate does not account for wider issues such as how radiation from the stricken Fukushima nuclear plant crippled by the quake will affect food and water supply, amid a deepening food scare.

Japan Nuclear Crisis _Smoke hinders work

Smoke again disrupted efforts yesterday to regain control of a tsunami-stricken Japanese nuclear plant, where engineers were close to restoring a water pump at one of the reactors.
Workers were pulled back after a plume of dark smoke rose from the number three reactor unit.
"Smoke has risen from the number three reactor. As a precautionary measure, workers have been temporarily evacuated," said an official from plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co.
The source of the smoke was not immediately known but no flames were seen and there was no report of a rise in radiation levels.
Engineers have now linked up an external electricity supply to all six reactors and are testing system components and equipment in an effort to restart the cooling systems and measuring instruments.
Power has been partially restored to the control room of the number three unit, which is a particular concern as the core contains a mixture of uranium and volatile plutonium.
"If possible, we want to restore the pump tomorrow (Thursday)" an official from the nuclear safety agency said, speaking before the new smoke scare interrupted work.
There is also concern about the spent fuel pools of the reactors numbers one to four.
The nuclear emergency following the earthquake and tsunami in Japan has led 25 embassies to temporarily shut their doors in Tokyo  Foreign Minister Takeaki Matsumoto said yesterday.
The foreign ministry's press division said the following countries had closed their doors: Angola, Bahrain, Benin, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Croatia, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Finland, Germany, Ghana, Guatemala, Kenya, Kosovo, Lesotho, Liberia, Libya, Malawi, Mauritania, Mozambique, Namibia, Nepal, Nigeria, Panama and Switzerland.

Nato offer armada for Libya arms embargo

Nato nations yesterday offered an armada of ships and submarines to enforce an arms embargo against Libya, as Western allies sought to settle a row over the organisation's role in a no-fly zone.
Six nations agreed to contribute up to 16 vessels to prevent Muammar Gaddafi from bringing in weapons from the Mediterranean, with Turkey offering five warhips and a submarine despite its reservations about the military campaign.
The Nato mission will have the means to intercept and board suspicious ships, and the authority to fire a warning shot across the bow of vessels trying to slip away, a Nato official said on condition of anonymity.
But the 28-nation alliance was still undecided over its possible role in a no-fly zone.
France has resisted giving Nato command of the international campaign, saying operations led under the flag of the Western alliance could alienate Arab nations that it wants to bring into the action.
After days of sometimes heated debate, Nato ambassadors were holding new talks yesterday on the question. "Discussions are continuing at Nato in a positive spirit," Nato spokeswoman Oana Lungescu said.
Eager to hand over the lead for the mission, the United States said Tuesday that the United States, France and Britain all agreed Nato should play a "key role" in the future command structure.
An arrangement proposed by France would give a special committee of foreign ministers from the international coalition political control of the mission, with Arab participation.
A French diplomatic source said the no-fly mandate could be run out of Nato's naval base in Naples, Italy, now serving as the command base for the arms embargo.
"Those who are members of Nato want to see a role for Nato," US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said. "But we also want to integrate our other partners."
The Western coalition wants Arab nations to join the operation.
Kuwait and Jordan have agreed to provide a logistical contribution to the international coalition.
"The French are right to warn that the symbolic and political weight of Nato in political control of this campaign would be very badly seen in the Arab world," French security analyst Heisbourg said.
"Nato is the institutional incarnation of the West," Heisbourg said. "There's nothing more Western than Nato."

Japan banks in $24.6b TEPCO finance plan

Japanese banks and trust groups will provide around 2 trillion yen ($24.6 billion) to troubled Tokyo Electric Power this month to help cover costs for repairing its power plants, reports said.
Three major banking groups -- Sumitomo Mitsui Financial, Mizuho Financial and Mitsubishi UFJ Financial -- as well as Sumitomo Trust & Banking and Chuo Mitsui Trust and Banking decided Wednesday to offer financing, Jiji Press said.
Sumitomo Mitsui Banking will provide about 600 billion yen and Mizuho Financial roughly 500 billion yen, with the three others each providing several hundred billion yen, Jiji said.
TEPCO needs cash to boost electricity supply and carry out repairs at plants hit by the biggest earthquake ever recorded in Japan, which triggered a crisis at the firm's Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant that has yet to be resolved.
The utility had traditionally procured funds mostly through issuing corporate bonds, but this time it has opted for bank loans after its credit rating was downgraded by both Moody's and Standard & Poor's.
TEPCO's financial health is expected to take a major hit due to the nuclear power plant crisis following the March 11 earthquake and tsunami that ravaged Japan's northeastern coast.

Tokyo water unsafe for all babies,farm food blocked


A woman cries over the body of a relative at a temporary cemetery in Higashimatsushima in Japan yesterday. The Japanese usually cremate remains but local governments say a lack of fuel, which is desperately needed by homeless survivors for heat and transport, make burial a more sensible option


Tokyo yesterday warned that radioactive iodine over twice the safe level for infants had been detected in its tap water due to the disaster at a quake-hit nuclear plant northeast of Japan's capital.
The revelation came after the United States barred imports of dairy and other produce from areas near the crippled Fukushima power station, and as the Chinese territory of Hong Kong became the first Asian economy to follow suit.
Japan also estimated the immense economic impact of the March 11 earthquake and tsunami, saying it could hit $309 billion-- double that of the 1995 Kobe quake and nearly four times more than Hurricane   Katrina.
The confirmed death toll from the earthquake and tsunami that battered Japan's northeast coast rose to 9,452, and Japan holds out little hope for 14,671 officially listed as missing.
Japan has already banned farm produce from areas near the crippled plant.
France urged the European Union to also control Japanese food imports due to the emergency at the Pacific coast plant, where engineers are battling to prevent a meltdown in overheating reactors.
In one Tokyo ward, a water sample contained 210 becquerels of iodine per kilogramme, a city official said. That is more than double Japan's legal limit. Tokyo's stock market dived 1.6 percent on the news.
The government advised residents throughout the city to avoid using tap water to make infant milk formula until further notice.
Prime Minister Naoto Kan stopped shipments of untreated milk and vegetables including broccoli, cabbage and parsley from areas near the plant, about 250 kilometres northeast of Tokyo.
The new inspection zone extends to Saitama and Chiba, part of the greater Tokyo urban sprawl that is home to more than 30 million people.
The health ministry said radioactivity drastically exceeding legal limits had been found in 11 kinds of vegetable grown in Fukushima.
Radioactive caesium at 82,000 becquerels -- 164 times the legal limit -- was detected in one type of leaf vegetable, it said.
The ministry said that if people eat 100 grams (four ounces) a day of the vegetable for about 10 days, they would ingest half the amount of radiation typically received from the natural environment in a year.
"Even if these foods are temporarily eaten, there is no health hazard," said top government spokesman Yukio Edano, following reports that some products may have already entered the market.
"But unfortunately, as the situation is expected to last for the long term, we are asking that shipments stop at an early stage, and it is desirable to avoid intake of the foods as much as possible."
The US Food and Drug Administration said it had placed an import alert on all milk, dairy products, fresh vegetables and fruits from four Japanese prefectures.
Hong Kong said yesterday it was slapping a ban on a variety of food imports from five prefectures after contamination as much as 10 times above safe levels was found in vegetables shipped from Japan.
South Korea said it was considering a similar ban.
In Japan, any further food shortages threaten to compound the misery for hundreds of thousands made homeless by the 9.0-magnitude quake and the jet-speed tsunami it spawned that erased entire communities.
As grieving survivors huddled in evacuation shelters amid the rubble of their former lives, their fate was overshadowed by the struggle to avert another massive catastrophe -- a full nuclear meltdown at Fukushima.
Engineers hope to restart the cooling systems of all six reactors that were knocked out by the 14-metre tsunami, and they have already reconnected the wider facility to the national power grid.

PAK vs WI in Mirpur,Dhaka_ICC Worldcup 2011


 scorecard of Pak vs WI
West Indies - Innings
Batsman's Name
Runs Balls Mins 4's 6's
DS Smith lbw Mohammad Hafeez 7 14 - 1 -
CH Gayle c Shahid Afridi b Umar Gul 8 9 - 2 -
RR Sarwan c Umar Akmal b Shahid Afridi 25 68 - 2 -
DM Bravo lbw Mohammad Hafeez 0 3 - - -
S Chanderpaul not out 44 106 - - 1
KA Pollard c Kamran Akmal b Shahid Afridi 1 7 - - -
DC Thomas (Wk) lbw Shahid Afridi 0 1 - - -
DJG Sammy (C) lbw Saeed Ajmal 1 3 - - -
D Bishoo b Saeed Ajmal 0 3 - - -
KAJ Roach c Younis Khan b Abdul Razzaq 16 43 - 2 -
R Rampaul b Shahid Afridi 0 5 - - -
Extras 2lb     7w     1nb     10



Total all out, 43.3 overs 112



Fall of Wickets 1-14 (CH Gayle, 2.5 ov), 2-16 (DS Smith, 5.1 ov), 3-16 (DM Bravo, 5.4 ov), 4-58 (RR Sarwan, 24.1 ov), 5-69 (KA Pollard, 26.4 ov), 6-69 (DC Thomas, 26.5 ov), 7-71 (DJG Sammy, 27.2 ov), 8-71 (D Bishoo, 27.5 ov), 9-111 (KAJ Roach, 42.2 ov), 10-112 (R Rampaul, 43.3 ov)

Pakistan Bowling
Bowler's Name Overs Mdns Runs Wkts Wides No-Balls
Umar Gul 7 1 13 1 - -
Mohammad Hafeez 10 3 16 2 2 -
Wahab Riaz 6 0 29 0 2 1
Shahid Afridi 9.3 1 30 4 1 -
Saeed Ajmal 8 1 18 2 1 -
Abdul Razzaq 3 1 4 1 1 -

Pakistan - Innings
Batsman's Name
Runs Balls Mins 4's 6's
Kamran Akmal (Wk) not out 47 61 - 7 -
Mohammad Hafeez not out 61 64 - 10 -
Asad Shafiq





Younis Khan





Misbah-ul-Haq





Umar Akmal





Shahid Afridi (C)





Abdul Razzaq





Saeed Ajmal





Umar Gul





Wahab Riaz





Extras 4lb     1w     5



Total no wicket, 20.5 overs 113



Fall of Wickets

West Indies Bowling
Bowler's Name Overs Mdns Runs Wkts Wides No-Balls
KAJ Roach 5.5 0 39 0 - -
R Rampaul 5 1 28 0 1 -
D Bishoo 5 1 24 0 - -
DJG Sammy 5 1 18 0 - -

Mere spectators they were, but as boisterous as ever, appreciating the cricket. They did not have their own team to support, but left no space empty at the 25,000-seater Sher-e-Bangla National Cricket Stadium in Mirpur yesterday.
A good and competitive game would have been a real feast for the full-house crowd but the first quarterfinal of the ICC Cricket World Cup 2011 turned into a one-sided affair, which a clinical Pakistan won by a comfortable 10-wicket margin against the hapless West Indies, who have frustrated the cricket crazy fans of the country in many ways in this tournament.
Pacer Umar Gul set the tone in Pakistan's favour as early as the third over by removing dangerman Chris Gayle after West Indies skipper Darren Sammy decided to bat first in the day-night contest. The Caribbean side never recovered from the early hiccups as their poor batting continued to hit new lows in the tournament to produce what turned out to be a poor game of cricket indeed. The West Indies batsmen had no answer to the Pakistani slow bowlers led by captain Shahid Afridi -- the tournament's leading wicket-taker with 21 -- who claimed four wickets to destroy their opponents' middle-order.
Many might have singled out the poor batting of West Indies behind this meek surrender, but Pakistan coach Waqar Younis said that one should also give credit to his boys who maintained their impressive run in the tournament by making it to the semifinals for the first time in 12 years.
“One should give credit to Pakistan team for this convincing victory. The bowling has been outstanding throughout the tournament. Our bowling has not been an issue throughout and we have done a decent job also today. We had problems with the batting but we finished the game with command,” said Waqar, the great former Pakistan pace bowler, in a lively post-match conference.
The Pakistan coach also spoke highly of Mohammad Hafeez, who got the man-of-the-match award for his all-round show as the off-spinner bowled with the new ball and took two important wickets before playing a stroke-filled innings of 61.
“I am more than happy with the openers. It was pleasing to see Hafeez get the runs. He played superbly and bowled outstandingly. He is a very smart cricketer and has got the self-belief to perform well,” said Waqar.
“It was a pressure game with a lot of talk around the team but that actually gave us the boost. After we got Gayle out, it gave us confidence. I think the pressure got the best out of us,” he added.
The Pakistan victory signalled the prospect of a mouthwatering clash in the semifinal between the two bitter rivals of the sub-continent, and that was the reason why everyone was curious about whether the Pakistan team was anticipating the much-desired clash in Mohali.
“I am not really fussed about the opponents of the semifinals. We will watch the game tomorrow (between India and Australia) closely. We have 6-7 days and by then we will have a new strategy,” said Waqar, who was diplomatic in all his answers.
However, at one stage the former Pakistan skipper said: “But I would love an India-Pakistan match because there is a huge, huge interest about this match.”
The Pakistan coach also believed that their success brought massive enthusiasm among the cricket fans in their country.
“I am happy that there was no load-shedding in our country. I heard it today and I think it was great that everyone could see the game. They prayed for us definitely. We went through ups and downs. I think that gave us belief. It is hurting us that there's no cricket in Pakistan, but I think it will be great if we do even better now. And you know today is Pakistan Day,” said Waqar, who also thanked the crowd for supporting them in the match, something they will definitely miss when they play the semifinal in India.
On the other hand his West Indies counterpart Ottis Gibson was understandably disappointed with his boys' performance and he expressed his disappointment over the performance of the senior players.
“Yes, I am here because the captain was not up to the press conference. We came in good spirit with good young players but now we are looking to April 21 when we host Pakistan. We will have to take some tough decisions about players,” said Gibson.
“I'm not especially happy with the senior players. Our performance was based on the seniors but they didn't do well. But it is hard to say it is the last game for the seniors. We need them as it won't happen with only youngsters,” he opined about the senior players' performance in the tournament.
He made it clear that there was no scope to blame the wicket for the poor showing.
“The wicket didn't get anyone out. It was a combination of poor batting and a lack of confidence.”