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* stephen hawking's univers
* tiger woods * jim fur
Barack Obama, China, Hu Jintao,
Melinda Hackett, manhattan
Moshe Katsav, bbc news
new zealand miners, louise heal
Vikram Pandit, bbc news, ft
Wilma Mankiller,
9/11, september 11, emily strato
Abdel Kareem Nabil Soliman, bbc
afghanistan, bbc news, the econo
Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani, bbc news
Ai Weiwei, bbc news
aids virus, aids, * hiv
Airbus A330, suzanne gould, bbc
airline security, bbc news
airport security, bbc news, biod
al-qaeda, natalie duval, yemen,
al-qaeda, new york city, suzanne
algeria, bbc news
amanda knox, bbc news, italy mur
american airlines, natalie de va
ancient rome, bbc news
arab spring, bbc news
arizona immigration law, bbc new
arms control, bbc news
arms flow to terrorists, bbc new
Arnold Schwarzenegger, bbc news
aung song suu kyi, myanmar, bbc
australia floods, bbc news
australia, cookbooks
australian shipwreck, bbc news
baltimore shooting, bbc news
ban aid, bob geldof, bbc world s
bangladesh clashes, bbc news
bat global markets, bbc news
bbc 2, biodun iginla
bbc news
bbc news, biodun iginla, david c
bbc news, biodun iginla, south k
bbc news, biodun iginla, the eco
bbc news, google
bbc strike, biodun iginla
bbc world service, biodun iginla
bcva, bbc news
belarus, bbc news, maria ogryzlo
Ben Bernanke, federal reserve
Benazir Bhutto, sunita kureishi,
benin, tokun lawal, bbc
Benjamin Netanyahu, bbc news
berlusconi, bbc news, italy
bill clinton ,emanuel, bbc news
bill clinton, Earth day, biodun
black friday, bbc news
black-listed nations, bbc news
blackwater, Gary Jackson, suzann
blogging in china, bbc news
bradley manning, bbc news
brazil floods, bbc news
brazil, biodun iginla, bbc news,
british elections, bbc news, bio
broadband, bbc news, the economi
Bruce Beresford-Redman. Monica
BSkyB bid, bbc news
budget deficit, bbc news,
bulgaria, natalie de vallieres,
business travel, bbc news
camilla parker-bowles, bbc news
canada, bbc news, biodun iginla
carleton college, bbc news, biod
casey anthony, bbc news
catholic church sex scandal, suz
cdc, e coli, suzanne gould, bbc
charlie rangel, bbc news
chicago mayorial race, bbc news,
chile miners, bbc news
chile prison fire, bbc news
chile, enrique krause, bbc news,
china, judith stein, bbc news, u
china, xian wan, bbc news, biodu
chinese dipolomat, houston polic
chinese media, bbc news
chirac, france, bbc news
cholera in haiti, biodun iginla
christina green, bbc news
Christine Lagarde, bbc news
Christine O'Donnell, tea party
chronical of higher education, b
citibank, bbc news
climate change, un, bbc news, bi
coal mines, west virginia, bbc n
common dreams
common dreams, bbc news, biodun
commonwealth games, bbc news
condi rice, obama
condoms, suzanne gould
congo, bbc news
congress, taxes, bbc news
contagion, islam, bbc news
continental airlines, bbc news
Continental Express flight, suza
corrupt nations, bbc news
Countrywide Financial Corporatio
cross-dressing, bbc news, emily
ctheory, bbc news, annalee newit
cuba, enrique krause, bbc news,
Cuba, Raúl Castro, Michael Voss
dealbook, bbc news, nytimes
digital life, bbc news
dorit cypis, bbc news, community
dow jones, judith stein, bbc new
egypt, nasra ismail, bbc news, M
elizabeth edwards, bbc news
elizabeth smart, bbc news
embassy bombs in rome, bbc news
emily's list, bbc news
entertainment, movies, biodun ig
equador, biodun iginla, bbc news
eu summit, bbc news, russia
eu, arab democracy, bbc news
europe travel delays, bbc news
europe travel, biodun iginla, bb
europe travel, france24, bbc new
eurozone crisis, bbc news
eurozone, ireland, bbc news
fair, media, bbc news
fake deaths, bbc news
FASHION - PARIS - PHOTOGRAPHY
fbi, bbc news
fcc, neutral internel, liz rose,
Federal Reserve, interest rates,
federal workers pay freeze, bbc
fedex, racism, bbc news
feedblitz, bbc news, biodun igin
ferraro, bbc news
fifa, soccer, bbc news
financial times, bbc news
firedoglake, jane hamsher, biodu
flashing, sex crimes, bbc news
fox, cable, new york, bbc
france, labor, biodun iginla
france24, bbc news, biodun iginl
french hostages, bbc news
french muslims, natalie de valli
FT briefing, bbc news, biodun ig
g20, obama, bbc news
gabrielle giffords, bbc news
gambia, iran, bbcnews
gay-lesbian issues, emily strato
george bush, blair, bbc news
germans held in Nigeria, tokun l
germany, natalie de vallieres, b
global economy, bbc news
goldman sachs, judith stein, bbc
google news, bbc news, biodun ig
google, gianni maestro, bbc news
google, groupon, bbc news
gop, bbc news
Gov. Jan Brewer, bbc news, immig
greece bailout, bbc news, biodun
guantanamo, bbc news
gulf oil spill, suzanne gould, b
Hackers, MasterCard, Security, W
haiti aid, enrique krause, bbc n
haiti, michelle obama, bbc news
heart disease, bbc news
Heather Locklear, suzanne gould,
Henry Kissinger, emily straton,
Henry Okah, nigeria, tokun lawal
hillary clinton, bbc news
hillary clinton, cuba, enrique k
hugo chavez, bbc news
hungary, maria ogryzlo
hurricane katrina, bbc news
Ibrahim Babangida, nigeria, toku
india, susan kumar
indonesia, bbc news, obama admin
inside edition, bbc news, biodun
insider weekly, bbc news
insider-trading, bbc news
International Space Station , na
iran, latin america, bbc news
iran, lebanon, Ahmadinejad ,
iran, nuclear weapons, bbc news
iran, wikileaks, bbc news
iraq, al-qaeda, sunita kureishi,
iraq, nasras ismail, bbc news, b
ireland, bbc news, eu
islam, bbc news, biodun iginla
israeli-palestinian conflict, na
italy, eurozone crisis
ivory coast, bbc news
James MacArthur, hawaii five-O
Jamie Paulin-Ramirez, biodun igi
jane hansher, biodun iginla
japan, bbc news, the economist
jerry brown, bbc news
Jerry Brown, suzanne gould, bbc
jill clayburgh, bbc news
Jody Weis, chicago police, bbc n
John Paul Stevens, scotus,
juan williams, npr, biodun iginl
judith stein, bbc news
Justice John Paul Stevens, patri
K.P. Bath, bbc news, suzanne gou
keith olbermann, msnbc, bbc news
kelly clarkson, indonesia, smoki
kenya, bbc news, police
Khodorkovsky, bbc news
Kyrgyz, maria ogryzlo, bbc news,
le monde, bbc nerws
le monde, bbc news, biodun iginl
lebanon, nasra ismail, biodun ig
Lech Kaczynski
libya, gaddafi, bbc news,
london ftse, bbc news
los alamos fire, bbc news
los angeles, bbc news, suzanne g
los angeles, suzanne gould, bbc
LulzSec, tech news, bbc news
madoff, bbc news, suicide
marijuana, weed, bbc news, suzan
Martin Dempsey, bbc news
maryland, bbc news
media, FAIR, bbc news
media, free press, fcc, net neut
media, media matters for america
media, mediabistro, bbc news
melissa gruz, bbc news, obama ad
mexican drug cartels, enrique kr
mexican gas explosion, bbc news
mexican's execution, bbc news
Michael Skakel, emily straton, b
Michelle Obama, bbc news
michigan militia, suzanne gould,
middle-class jobs, bbc news
midwest snowstorm, bbc news
Mikhail Khodorkovsky, bbc news
minnesota public radio
moveon, bbc news, biodun iginla
msnbc, david shuster, bbc news
mumbai attacks, bbc news
myanmar, burma, bbc news
nancy pelosi, us congress, bbc n
nasra ismail, israeli-palestinia
Natalia Lavrova, olympic games,
Nathaniel Fons, child abandonmen
nato, afghanistan, bbc news
nato, pakistan, sunita kureishi,
nelson mandela, bbc news
nestor kirchner, bbc news
net neutrality, bbc news
new life-forms, bbc news
new year, 2011, bbc news
new york city, homelessness, chi
new york snowstorm, bbc news
new zealand miners, bbc news
News Corporation, bbc news
news of the world, bbc news
nick clegg, uk politics, tories
nicolas sarkozy, islam, natalie
nigeria, Goodluck Jonathan, toku
nobel peace prize
nobel peace prize, bbc news, bio
noreiga, panama, biodun iginla,
north korea, bbc news, nuclear p
npr, bbc news, gop
npr, media, bbc news
ntenyahu, obama, bbc news
nuclear proliferation, melissa g
Nuri al-Maliki, iraq, biodun igi
nytimes dealbook, bbc news
obama, bill clinton, bbc news
obama, biodun iginla, bbc news
oil spills, bbc news, the econom
olbermann, msnbc, bbc news
Omar Khadr, bbc news
Online Media, bbc news, the econ
pakistan, sunita kureishi, bbc n
paris airport, bbc news
Pedro Espada, suzanne gould, bbc
phone-hack scandal, bbc news
poland, maria ogryzlo, lech Kac
police brutality, john mckenna,
police fatalities, bbc news
Pope Benedict XVI, natalie de va
pope benedict, natalie de vallie
popular culture, us politics
portugal, bbc news
Potash Corporation, bbc news
prince charles, bbc news
prince william, katemiddleton, b
pulitzer prizes, bbc news, biodu
qantas, airline security, bbc ne
racism, religious profiling, isl
randy quaid, asylum, canada
Ratko Mladic, bbc news
Rebekah Brooks, bbc news, the ec
republicans, bbc news
richard holbrooke, bbc news
Rick Santorum , biodun iginla, b
robert gates, lapd, suzanne goul
rod Blagojevich, suzanne gould,
roger clemens, bbc news
russia, imf, bbc news, the econo
russia, maria ogrylo, Lech Kaczy
san francisco crime lab, Deborah
sandra bullock, jess james, holl
SARAH EL DEEB, bbc news, biodun
sarah palin, biodun iginla, bbc
sarkosy, bbc news
saudi arabia, indonesian maid, b
saudi arabia, nasra ismail, bbc
Schwarzenegger, bbc news, biodun
science and technology, bbc news
scott brown, tufts university, e
scotus, gays in the military
scotus, iraq war, bbc news, biod
sec, judith stein, us banks, bbc
Senate Democrats, bbc news, biod
senegal, chad, bbc news
seward deli, biodun iginla
shanghai fire, bbc news
Sidney Thomas, melissa gruz, bbc
silvio berlusconi, bbc news
single currency, bbc news, the e
snowstorm, bbc news
social security, bbc news, biodu
somali pirates, bbc news
somalia, al-shabab, biodun iginl
south korea, north korea, bbc ne
south sudan, bbc news
spain air strikes, bbc news
spain, standard and poor, bbc ne
state of the union, bbc news
steve jobs, bbc news
steven ratner, andrew cuomo, bbc
Strauss-Kahn, bbc news, biodun i
sudan, nasra ismail, bbc news, b
suicide websites, bbc news
supreme court, obama, melissa gr
sweden bomb attack, bbc news
syria, bbc news
taliban, bbc news, biodun iginla
Taoufik Ben Brik, bbc news, biod
tariq aziz, natalie de vallieres
tariq azziz, jalal talbani, bbc
tea party, us politics
tech news, bbc, biodun iginla
technology, internet, economics
thailand, xian wan, bbc news, bi
the economist, biodun iginla, bb
the economsit, bbc news, biodun
the insider, bbc news
tiger woods. augusta
timothy dolan, bbc news
Timothy Geithner, greece, eu, bi
tornadoes, mississippi, suzanne
travel, bbc news
tsa (travel security administrat
tsumami in Indonesia, bbc news,
tunisia, bbc news, biodun iginla
turkey, israel, gaza strip. biod
Turkey, the eu, natalie de valli
twincities daily planet, bbc new
twincities.com, twin cities dail
twitter, media, death threats, b
Tyler Clementi, hate crimes, bio
uk elections, gordon brown, raci
uk phone-hack, Milly Dowler
uk tuition increase, bbc news
un wire, un, bbc news, biodun ig
un, united nations, biodun iginl
unwed mothers, blacks, bbc news
upi, bbc news, iginla
us billionaires, bbc news
us economic downturn, melissa gr
us economy, us senate, us congre
us empire, bbc news, biodun igin
us housing market, bbc news
us jobs, labor, bbc news
us media, bbc news, biodun iginl
us media, media matters for amer
us midterm elections, bbc news
us midterm elections, melissa gr
us military, gay/lesbian issues
us politics, bbc news, the econo
us recession, judith stein, bbc
us stimulus, bbc news
us taxes, bbc news, the economis
us, third-world, bbc news
vatican, natalie de vallieres
venezuela, bbc news
verizon, biodun iginla, bbc news
volcanic ash, iceland, natalie d
volcanis ash, bbc news, biodun i
wal-mat, sexism, bbc news
wall street reform, obama, chris
wall street regulations, banking
warren buffett, us economic down
weather in minneapolis, bbc news
white supremacist, Richard Barre
wikileaks, bbc news, biodun igin
wvirginia coal mine, biodun igin
wvirginia mines, biodun iginal,
xian wan, china , nobel prize
xian wan, japan
yahoo News, biodun iginla, bbc n
yahoo, online media, new media,
yemen, al-qaeda, nasra ismail, b
zimbabwe, mugabe, biodun iginla


Biodun@bbcnews.com
Thursday, 2 December 2010
BREAKING NEWS ALERT: Cables Describe Scale of Afghan Corruption as Overwhelming
Topic: afghanistan, bbc news, the econo


Thu, December 02, 2010 -- 4:33 PM ET

 by Biodun Iginla, BBC News

Corruption in Afghanistan, leaked cables say, is pervasive
and dispiriting for American officials trying to build
support for the Afghan government.


Posted by biginla at 11:01 PM GMT
Fury Mounts as WikiLeaks Reveals More Secrets
Topic: wikileaks, bbc news, biodun igin

by Biodun Iginla, BBC News


People watch Wikileaks memos at an electronic shop in Karachi, Pakistan, 02 Dec 2010
Photo: AP

People watch Wikileaks memos at an electronic shop in Karachi, Pakistan, 02 Dec 2010

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Fury is mounting around the world as WikiLeaks releases secret diplomatic cables for the fourth day, revealing blunt and unflattering U.S. views of world leaders' private and public lives.

A German governing party, the Free Democrats, has fired a top official exposed in the leaked U.S. diplomatic cables. The official had given secret information on government coalition talks to the U.S. embassy in Berlin.

The latest cables reveal that British diplomats left their own parliament in the dark and made an exception to an international treaty in allowing the U.S. to "temporarily" store cluster bombs on British territory.  A foreign ministry spokesman denies the claims, saying the ministry did not mislead parliament.

A secret memo that apparently originated from the U.S. embassy in Moscow says Russia is so corrupt it is a virtual "mafia state." The cable refers to Moscow as a "kleptocracy" with the Kremlin and Prime Minister Vladimir Putin at the center. Responding to the leaked cables, Mr. Putin told CNN in an interview that the United States should not interfere in Russia's internal affairs.

The secret documents elaborate on the close relationship between Italian President Silvio Berlusconi and Mr. Putin, with some saying Mr. Berlusconi may be "profiting personally" from an energy contract with the Russian prime minister. The website published papers earlier this week that referred to the Italian prime minister as the "mouthpiece" of Mr. Putin.

The reports also allege that Putin knew about the operation to murder Russian dissident Alexander Litvinenko in London in 2006.

Other documents published Thursday refer to Turkmenistan's President Gurbanguli Berdymukhamedov as "a vain, vindicative liar" and "not very bright." The cables also disclose information about the married leader's Russian mistress and their 14-year-old daughter.  The assessment was made by an unnamed U.S. diplomat.

Other diplomatic papers say Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa is responsible for an alleged 2009  massacre of Tamils, already the subject of an U.N. war crimes inquiry. 

Australia is bracing for the publication of about 1,500 WikiLeaks documents. Prime Minister Julia Gillard already condemned the release of the U.S. diplomatic cables, calling it "grossly irresponsible" and "illegal."

WikiLeaks has been publishing thousands of classified documents this week, roiling the diplomatic world. Working hard to repair the damage, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has said the leak of State Department documents "will not in any way" interfere with American diplomacy.

But Undersecretary of State William Burns said in Washington the release of the classified papers byWikiLeaks  has "substantially hurt" U.S. diplomatic efforts. Burns told a U.S. congressional committee the disclosures are a "despicable breach of trust."

Comments (12)


Posted by biginla at 10:28 PM GMT
House passes bill to extend tax-breaks for middle-class folks...
Topic: congress, taxes, bbc news

by Melissa Gruz, BBC News US Desk, for the BBC's Biodun Iginla 

 

WASHINGTON – The House has passed a bill to extend middle-class tax cuts while letting those for the wealthy expire, even as talks continue on extending the cuts for everyone.

The bill is a political maneuver to satisfy Democratic supporters who oppose extending tax cuts for the wealthy. Even if the bill passes the House, it has no chance in the Senate, where Democrats need Republican support to pass a tax bill.

Sweeping tax cuts enacted under former President George W. Bush expire at the end of the year. A small bipartisan group of lawmakers and Obama administration officials continued negotiating Thursday on a deal that could extend all the tax cuts, at least temporarily.

The House passed the Democratic bill by a vote of 234 to 188.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

WASHINGTON (AP) — Negotiators worked on a deal Thursday that would extend expiring tax cuts for everyone even as House Democrats moved toward a vote to show their commitment to letting taxes on the wealthy go up.

The House bill is a political maneuver to satisfy Democratic supporters who oppose extending tax cuts for the wealthy. The bill narrowly survived a procedural vote Thursday morning, 213-203, with 33 Democrats joining all GOP lawmakers in voting against it. Even if the bill passes the House, it has no chance in the Senate, where Democrats need Republican support to pass a tax bill.

House Republican Leader John Boehner of Ohio used barnyard language to describe the House vote to reporters during a news conference.

"I'm trying to catch my breath so I don't refer to this maneuver going on today as chicken crap, all right? said Boehner, who is in line to become House speaker in January. "But this is nonsense, all right? The election was one month ago. We are 23 months from the next election, and the political games have already started trying to set up the next election."

Sweeping income tax cuts enacted under former President George W. Bush are set to expire at the end of the year. If Congress does not act, taxpayers at every income level would be hit with a significant tax increase.

President Barack Obama and Democratic leaders in Congress want to extend the tax cuts only for individuals making less than $200,000 and married couples making less than $250,000. The bill being voted on in the House would do that.

Republicans and some rank-and-file Democrats want to extend the tax cuts for everyone, and the White House has left open the door for a compromise that would extend all the tax cuts for up to three years, including those for the wealthy.

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky has indicated he is open to a temporary extension of all the tax cuts, opening the way for a compromise.

Obama said Thursday he's optimistic Democrats and Republicans can reach agreements on critical issues in the coming weeks, including what to do about tax cuts set to expire at the end of the year.

Speaking to more than 20 newly elected governors, Obama said making sure tax cuts don't increase for the middle class is his top priority, though he offered no guidance for how congressional negotiators from both parties should keep that from happening.

"I believe it will get resolved," Obama said. "That doesn't mean there might not be some posturing over the next several days. But I'm confident in the end people are going to recognize that it's important for families who are still struggling to have some relief and it's important for our economy to make sure that money is still out there circulating."

Republican Sen. Jim DeMint of South Carolina said Thursday he believes Obama is ready to embrace the notion of keeping Bush-era tax rates in place for everyone, at least temporarily.

DeMint told CBS's "The Early Show" that he believes Obama "has come around to the idea that taxes can't be raised in a recession."

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and White House Budget Director Jacob Lew began holding closed-door meetings Wednesday with a group of four lawmakers from both parties to negotiate a deal on tax cuts. Those talks continue Thursday, even as the House votes on the Democratic plan.

Reps. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., and Dave Camp, R-Mich., two of the lawmakers involved in the tax negotiations, gave no indication Thursday that they were making any progress on a deal.

"We've just begun the discussion," said Camp. "But I think it's so important that we prevent a tax hike, so we can get the economy moving again and get job creation going again."

Van Hollen argued it's also important to pass an extension of unemployment benefits for people who are about to run out.

"You have to pay for about $13 billion in emergency unemployment compensation for people out of work through no fault of their own," he said. "But (Republicans) want a permanent extension of tax cuts for the folks at the very top, which adds $700 billion."

Van Hollen added, "This is the kind of conversation we've been having up here."

Both men appeared on ABC's "Good Morning America."

The White House is stepping up its push for Congress to extend unemployment insurance for out-of-work Americans, linking the benefits to an extension of expiring Bush-era tax cuts.

Obama's Council of Economic Advisers on Thursday reported that if Congress does not extend the benefits, 2 million unemployed workers will lose coverage this month and 7 million would lose coverage by November 2011.

Democrats said the House vote wouldn't undermine bipartisan negotiations on the tax cuts.

"We are putting this bill on the floor today because we believe it is important to extend tax cuts for the middle class," said Rep. Chellie Pingree, D-Maine. She said tax cuts for the wealthy have done nothing to stimulate the economy.

"It's time that we let those end," Pingree said.

Camp said the House vote was futile.

"It would be comical if it weren't so irresponsible," Camp said. "Their position is so precarious they won't even allow Republicans to offer amendments or any alternative. Why? Because Democrats know the Republican bill to extend the current tax rates for all taxpayers would pass with broad bipartisan support."

___


Posted by biginla at 9:22 PM GMT
Inside Edition Newswire--presented by Biodun Iginla, BBC News
Topic: inside edition, bbc news, biodun

The Inside Scoop

Shocking Audio: Did Britney SpearsClaim Boyfriend Jason Trawick Beat Her?

INSIDE EDITION reports on shocking new audio, allegedly a phone call between Britney Spears and ex-husband Jason Alexander. Did Spears tell her ex that current boyfriend Jason Trawick beat her?

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"Honeymoon Killer" Faces Trial at Home

Sarah Palin Slammed by Former Advisor

Valuable Show Dogs Stolen Prior to Dog Show

Disfigured Boy Overcomes the Odds

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INSIDE EDITION is on the red carpet with the stars and director of the much-anticipatedBlack Swan.

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Posted by biginla at 8:13 PM GMT
Arsenic-loving bacteria may help in hunt for alien life
Topic: new life-forms, bbc news
The bacteria slowly incorporated arsenic into their innermost workings

Related stories

The first organism able to substitute one of the six chemical elements crucial to life has been found.

The bacterium, found in a California lake, uses the usually poisonous element arsenic in place of phosphorus.

The find, described in Science, gives weight to the long-standing idea that life on other planets may have a radically different chemical makeup.

It also has implications for the way life arose on Earth - and how many times it may have done so.

The "extremophile" bacteria were found in a briny lake in eastern California in the US.

While bacteria have been found in inhospitable environments and can consume what other life finds poisonous, this bacterial strain has actually taken arsenic on board in its cellular machinery.

Until now, the idea has been that life on Earth must be composed of at least the six elements carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, sulphur and phosphorus - no example had ever been found that violates this golden rule of biochemistry.

The bacteria were found as part of a hunt for life forms radically different from those we know.

"At the moment we have no idea if life is just a freak, bizarre accident which is confined to Earth or whether it is a natural part of a fundamentally biofriendly universe in which life pops up wherever there are Earth-like conditions," explained Paul Davies, the Arizona State University and Nasa Astrobiology Institute researcher who co-authored the research.

"Although it is fashionable to support the latter view, we have zero evidence in favour of it," he told BBC News.

"If that is the case then life should've started many times on Earth - so perhaps there's a 'shadow biosphere' all around us and we've overlooked it because it doesn't look terribly remarkable."

As unexpected

Proof of that idea could come in the form of organisms on Earth that break the "golden rules" of biochemistry - in effect, finding life that evolved separately from our own lineage.

Start Quote

The take-home message is: who knows what else is there? We've only scratched the surface of the microbial realm”

Professor Paul DaviesArizona State University

Study lead author Felisa Wolfe-Simon and her colleagues Professor Davies and Ariel Anbar of Arizona State University initially suggested in a paper an alternative scheme to life as we know it.

Their idea was that there might be life in which the normally poisonous element arsenic (in particular as chemical groups known as arsenates) could work in place of phosphorus and phosphates.

Putting it to the test, the three authors teamed up with a number of collaborators and began to study the bacteria that live in Mono Lake in California, home to arsenic-rich waters.

The researchers began to grow the bacteria in a laboratory on a diet of increasing levels of arsenic, finding to their surprise that the microbes eventually fully took up the element, even incorporating it into the phosphate groups that cling to the bacteria's DNA.

Notably, the research found that the bacteria thrived best in a phosphorus environment.

That probably means that the bacteria, while a striking first for science, are not a sign of a "second genesis" of life on Earth, adapted specifically to work best with arsenic in place of phosphorus.

'Weird branch'

However, Professor Davies said, the fact that an organism that breaks such a perceived cardinal rule of life makes it is a promising step forward.

"This is just a weird branch on the known tree of life," said Professor Davies. "We're interested ultimately in finding a different tree of life... that will be the thing that will have massive implications in the search for life in the Universe.

"The take-home message is: who knows what else is there? We've only scratched the surface of the microbial realm."

John Elliott, a Leeds Metropolitan University researcher who is a veteran of the UK's search for extraterestrial life, called the find a "major discovery".

Mono Lake, California (H Bortman)The bacteria were found in the salty Mono Lake

"It starts to show life can survive outside the traditional truths and universals that we thought you have to use... this is knocking one brick out of that wall," he said.

"The general consensus is that this really could still be an evolutionary adapatation rather than a second genesis. But it's early days, within about the first year of this project; it's certainly one to think on and keep looking for that second genesis, because you've almost immediately found an example of something that's new."

Simon Conway Morris of the University of Cambridge agreed that, whatever its implications for extraterrestrial life, the find was significant for what we understand about life on Earth.

"The bacteria is effectively painted by the investigators into an 'arsenic corner', so what it certainly shows is the astonishing and perhaps under-appreciated versatility of life," he told BBC News.

"It opens some really exciting prospects as to both un-appreciated metabolic versatility... and prompting the questions as to the possible element inventory of remote Earth-like planets".

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Posted by biginla at 7:43 PM GMT
Business this week from The Economist by Biodun Iginla, BBC News and The Economist
Topic: bbc news, biodun iginla, the eco
Dec 2nd 2010 
From The Economist print edition



The decision by finance ministers in the euro zone to create a European Stabilisation Mechanism as a permanent system for resolving future sovereign-debt difficulties did little to soothe markets, at least at first. The mechanism distinguishes a “solvency” crisis from a “liquidity” one, with bondholders in insolvent countries expected to take the brunt of losses, but does not come into force until 2013. However, markets were encouraged by a hint of more immediate help from the European Central BankJean-Claude Trichet, the ECB’s president, advised that people were “tending to underestimate the determination” in Europe to solve the debt crisis. See article


The Federal Reserve published details of the amounts that banks and companies obtained through the various emergency programmes it introduced during the financial crisis. A surprisingly large amount of assistance went to European banks. The Dodd-Frank financial reform act forced the Fed to disclose the information. Meanwhile, the CBO, a non-partisan agency, markedly reduced its estimate of the cost to the government of theTroubled Asset Relief Programme, which comes under the supervision of the Treasury, to $25 billion.

American International Group returned to the bond market for the first time since its bail-out, raising $2 billion.

The federal trial began in Manhattan of a former computer programmer at Goldman Sachs who is accused of stealing the source code for the investment bank’s high-frequency trading platform. Prosecutors have requested that part of Sergey Aleynikov’s trial be held in camera to protect Goldman’s trade secrets.

The Obama administration said it now would not allow offshore oil-drilling to expand into the eastern Gulf of Mexico and along the Atlantic coast. It thus overturned a decision it took in the spring, before the BP oil spill. Meanwhile, BP disposed of its stake in an Argentine oil company for $7.1 billion, which goes toward its target of raising $30 billion to help meet its financial obligations resulting from the spill.

Gazprom and Royal Dutch Shell signed an agreement “to pursue broader co-operation”, such as giving Russia’s ambitious state-backed gas company access to Shell’s upstream assets outsideRussia. The companies have worked together in recent years but fell out in 2006 in a dispute over the Sakhalin 2 liquefied-gas project in Russia’s far east.

Vladimir Putin said Russia might import wheat to keep the domestic price of the grain low. Prices have soared partly because of a severe drought in Russia, which was one of the world’s biggest exporters of wheat in 2009.


Following a nine-month preliminary inquiry the European Commission launched a formal investigation into Google to determine whether its search engine breaks antitrust law by discriminating against its rivals. The commission will also look at claims that Google restricts the ability of advertisers to do business with competing sites. See article

Airbus announced that from 2016 it would roll out new fuel-efficient engines for A320 jets, giving airlines an incentive to stick with the aircraft rather than switch to Boeing’s 737. The two choices of new engine could yield fuel savings of 15% (airlines consider anything above 2% to be meaningful), and will reducecarbon emissions and engine noise.

Fitch put its rating for Del Monte on negative watch after the company, which produces food for pets as well as humans, agreed to a $4 billion buy-out from an investor group led by Kohlberg Kravis Roberts. The ratings agency worries that the deal, one of the year’s biggest involving private equity, will increase Del Monte’s debt.

Wal-Mart offered 16.5 billion rand ($2.3 billion) for a 51% stake inMassmart, a South African retailing group, marking the first advance by a big multinational retailer into the sub-Saharan African market.

America’s National Retail Federation deemed the four-dayThanksgiving period a success; 212m shoppers bought goods in stores or online, an 8.7% increase on 2009, and sales topped $45 billion. The federation also noted more people shopping on Thanksgiving Thursday itself.


Fiji Water denounced the Fijian government for imposing a hefty tax increase on its operations. The bottled-water company, which is based in Los Angeles and is one of America’s biggest importers of the beverage, sources its product from a remote artesian aquifer in Fiji. After saying it would close its factory, Fiji Water reversed course and agreed to comply with the law.


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Posted by biginla at 6:57 PM GMT
Politics this week by Biodun Iginla, BBC News and The Economist
Dec 2nd 2010 
From The Economist print edition


 


WikiLeaks released the latest round of confidential material it has obtained illicitly, this time publishing the first of some 250,000 cables between American embassies and the State Department. The leak of sensitive diplomatic communications was criticised byHillary Clinton, America’s secretary of state, as “an attack on the international community”. The Justice Department is investigating whether criminal charges can be brought against Julian Assange, the public face of WikiLeaks. See article

Barack Obama had his first big meeting with congressional leaders since the mid-term elections, to consult on which pieces oflegislation would pass during the remainder of the “lame-duck” session. The most pressing item under discussion was a re-authorisation of Congress’s “continuing resolution” to fund the federal government and avoid a shutdown of services, and a possible extension of George Bush’s tax cuts. See article

A Somali-born American citizen was arrested in Oregon after trying to detonate what he thought was a car bomb at a ceremony to light the Christmas tree in Portland’s main square. The “bomb” was actually a dud planted by FBI agents following a six-month investigation.


European Union finance ministers agreed on the details of an €85 billion ($113 billion) bail-out for Ireland. The package includes €35 billion to help restructure the country’s beleaguered banks; the rest will be used for budget support. The ministers also agreed on a permanent replacement for the euro zone’s temporary rescue fund. See article

Ségolène Royal, the Socialist candidate who was trounced byNicolas Sarkozy in France’s 2007 presidential election, said she planned to run again in 2012. Some saw her move as a means of heading off a putative challenge from Dominique Strauss-Kahn, head of the IMF, who many believe offers the best chance of defeating Mr Sarkozy.

Dmitry MedvedevRussia’s president, delivered his annual “state of the nation” speech to the Duma. The speech was short of specifics, but raised the spectre of a new arms race if NATO andRussia failed to agree the terms of a joint missile-defence shield.

Convergence and Union, a conservative nationalist party, won a regional election in Spain’s Catalonia region, ousting a left-wing coalition led by the local branch of Spain’s ruling Socialists. It is a further setback for José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, Spain’s unpopular prime minister. See article


 


South Korea mustered a series of martial postures in the face ofNorth Korea’s recent shelling of a disputed island. The president, Lee Myung-bak, apologised for the country’s unreadiness, sacked the defence minister and announced a bigger budget for the army. America sent a carrier group to join South Korea’s navy for a series of war games in the Yellow Sea—though they refrained from using live artillery after Chinese grumbles. See article

Pakistan’s government was at pains to minimise the fallout from the array of disclosures passed between American diplomats and revealed by WikiLeaks. The diplomats are more worried about Pakistan’s nuclear weapons falling into the hands of terrorists than had been thought; they say the country is on the verge of an economic collapse; and that Pakistan approved drone strikes when it said it had not.

Taiwan held municipal elections that were seen as a test of the public’s support for the president and his policy of economic engagement with China. Ma Ying-jeou’s party won three of the five mayoral seats, proving at least that his overtures are acceptable. But the independence-minded opposition won a greater share of the popular tally. See article

Thailand’s highest court dismissed a case that would have dissolved the governing party of Abhisit Vejjajiva. The Democrat Party had been charged with using public money to fund its campaigns, but the case was dismissed on a technicality. The court’s ruling infuriated disaffected “red shirts”, but also prompted other critics to question its impartiality.


Despite widespread irregularities, including the trashing of somepolling stations, international observers gave a cautious endorsement to Haiti’s general election. A dozen opposition candidates cried fraud and called for the election to be invalidated, but the two presumed front-runners later changed their mind. See article

Thousands of police and troops backed by armoured vehicles occupied Complexo do Alemão, a group of favelas in Rio de Janeiro that has been dominated by drug-traffickers for decades.See article

Officials from 190 countries gathered in Cancún in Mexico for the start of UN-sponsored talks on climate change. Expectations of any agreement are low. Separately, Brazil reported that deforestation in the Amazon fell to its lowest recorded level in the year to July. Even so, 6,500 sq km of forest were lost.



The ruling National Democratic Party was set to win Egypt’sgeneral election by a landslide, amid reports of widespread hanky-panky. The Muslim Brotherhood, the main opposition, whose candidates ran as “independents” since religion-based parties were banned, did not win a single seat outright in the first round and says it will boycott the second. It previously had 88 in the 518-strong parliament. See article

An Iranian nuclear scientist was killed and another injured in Tehran. Both were attacked by men on motorbikes, who stuck bombs on their cars, in incidents similar to one in which an Iranian physicist died earlier this year.

Trouble was brewing in Côte d’Ivoire after the incumbent president, Laurent Gbagbo, backed by most southerners, refused to accept that his rival, Alassane Ouattara, a northerner, had beaten him in a run-off election. See article

WikiLeaks embarrassed several Arab leaders. King Abdullah ofSaudi Arabia was said to have encouraged the United States to attack Iran’s nuclear facilities and “cut off the snake’s head”.Lebanon’s prime minister, Saad Hariri, was visiting Iran when it was claimed that he too had urged America to attack it. Leading figures in Qatar and Bahrain, who are loth to denigrate Iran in public, expressed intense hostility in private. See article


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Posted by biginla at 6:47 PM GMT
From the Desk of the Economist's Ed-in-Chief--presented by the BBC's Biodun Iginla
Topic: bbc news, biodun iginla, the eco
The EconomistEditor's Highlights | December 2nd 2010

The dangers of a rising China

Two stories captured our attention this week, both huge, one faster-moving than the other. In Britain and Europe we put the euro crisis on the cover. Last week's bail-out package for Ireland failed to convince markets. Spreads increased for the countries on Europe's periphery. The notion that the euro might break up is no longer unthinkable, so we have taken a look at what it would involve. The costs, we conclude, would be enormous-greater, even, than taking the measures necessary to hold it together. In America and Asia, we put our special report on the rise of China on the cover. History suggests that the birth of a superpower creates dangers as the upstart jostles with the incumbent. But although America and China are bound to be rivals, careful management of the relationship can ensure that they do not become antagonists. 

Here are some other pieces from this week's issue you might also be interested in. You can click straight through to each one and read it at
The Economist online using the links below.

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The damage they have done 
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Google 
The EU takes it on
Read more
The politics of austerity 
Cutting doesn't necessarily hurt governments
Read more
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Two cosmologists suggest there was time before time
Read more
Our books of the year 
The ones we pick and the ones we wrote
Read more
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Posted by biginla at 6:38 PM GMT
Wall Street owes its survival to the Fed
Topic: wall street reform, obama, chris
by Judith Stein and Biodun Iginla, BBC News and the Economist and Financial Times
 

For a brief, surreal moment, the prevailing narrative in Washington was that the 2008-09 bail-outs were not really so bad. In September, Treasury secretary Tim Geithnercalled the government’s troubled asset relief programme “one of the most effective emergency programmes in financial history”, claiming that the final cost to taxpayers would be less than $50bn.

Steven Rattner, the Wall Street banker who oversaw the Obama administration’s rescue of the auto sector, wrote in the Financial Times in October that “without exaggeration, this legislation [establishing Tarp] did more to keep America’s financial system – and therefore its economy – functioning than any passed since the 1930s”. 
http://link.ft.com/r/6NPSBB/QFMJMD/IXTG4/TPXP1M/S32FVN/HK/h?a1=2010&a2=12&a3=2 
 
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Posted by biginla at 4:34 PM GMT
French jet yesterday's technology, said King of Bahrain
Topic: wikileaks, bbc news, biodun igin
LATEST UPDATE: 01/12/2010 
BAHRAIN - DAVID PETRAEUS - FRANCE - RAFALE FIGHTER JET

by Natalie de  Vallieres, BBC News EU Desk, for the BBC's Biodun Iginla

French jet ‘yesterday’s technology’, said King of Bahrain
A document in the Wikileaks trove released recently said that the King of Bahrain disparaged France’s frontline jetfighter as “yesterday’s technology”. Bahrain disavowed the comments Wednesday.

 

According to one US embassy document in a trove leaked by the whistleblower website Wikileaks, King Hamad of Bahrain called France’s frontline fighter jet “yesterday’s technology”.

On Wednesday, Bahrain officially denied the comments. A foreign ministry spokesman called them "inaccurate and taken out of context," as reported by the Bahrain News Agency.

The relevant US diplomatic cable is classified “secret//noforn”, meaning that non-US nationals should not have access to it. It contains the minutes of a Nov 1, 2009 meeting between King Hamad and US General David Petraeus in Manama.

The last point in the document concerns the inaugural Bahrain Air Show in January 2010. It states, “King Hamad asked General Petraeus for his help in encouraging U.S. aircraft manufacturers to participate in the inaugural Bahrain Air Show, scheduled for January 2010. He said that France was pushing the Rafale and would be there in force, although he agreed with Petraeus that the French fighter was yesterday's technology.”

 

The Rafale fighter is a multi-role 4 + generation jet fighter manufactured by Dassault Aviation, and France's replacement for the Mirage 2000. France is in the process of replacing its fleet of combat aircraft - naval and air force - with variants of the Rafale, which has also seen combat operations in Afghanistan.

 

Peter Goon, co-founder of Air Power Australia, an independent defence think tank, told FRANCE 24, “The Rafale is quite a capable aircraft. It’s right up there with the Gripen [SAAB] and the Eurofighter [EADS].

No international sale

But France and Dassault Aviation have been unable to successfully sell the Rafale to foreign countries. It is one of several planes currently under competition in India in a 10-billion-dollar deal. It has also been offered to Switzerland, Brazil, the UAE, Oman, Kuwait and Morocco; but it has yet to see an international sale.

In September 2009, Brazil announced it was in negotiations with France to buy 36 Rafales. But Saab's Gripen and Boeing's Super Hornet are also in the running, and more than a year later there has yet to be an official confirmation of a deal.

In an interview conducted by this correspondent several months ago, Dassault Aviation’s vice president for international markets, Jean-Pierre Chabriol, said that one of the reasons they had not been able to sell the Rafale successfully was due to the greater diplomatic clout that the US had internationally.

According to Goon, that translates to the Rafale facing a harder sell in foreign countries.

“I think that the commentary that’s being leaked through Wikileaks is more about what people are being told, as compared to what they know and understand,” he said.

Dassault’s official statement to FRANCE 24 on the issue was “the Rafale is the only multi-role plane in the world – that is to say, [one that can] fulfil all types of missions during the same flight (ground attack, air-to-air attack, reconnaissance). It is normal that the Americans worry about us; we are their principal competitor.”

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Posted by biginla at 3:35 PM GMT
Updated: Thursday, 2 December 2010 3:40 PM GMT

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