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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
Monday, 10 January 2011
World reacts to Gabrielle Giffords shooting
Topic: gabrielle giffords, bbc news

 

by Biodun Iginla, BBC News, The Economist Intelligence Unit, France24, and MediaBistro 


Foreign press views Arizona shooting as product of deep divisions and heated rhetoric.
News Desk
Gabrielle Giffords shooting
The U.S. flag flies at half-mast above the White House on Jan. 9, 2011 in Washington. U.S. President Barack Obama ordered flags to be flown at half-mast to honor the victims of the shooting in Tucson, Ariz. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, who was shot in the head during the incident, remains in critical condition but is showing positive signs. (Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images) Click to enlarge photo

Global reaction to theshooting of U.S. Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords focused primarily on the deep divisions inside the United States and the heated rhetoric that dominates its political discussions.

Many commenters in the foreign press around the world said they were little surprised given America's lax gun laws and recent history of mass shootings. Still other media outlets ignored the American tragedy entirely. 

GlobalPost correspondents have been closely following the story from Europe, to Africa, India and beyond. Here's a wrap of how the shooting is being deciphered and how it might affect America's reputation abroad:

View from Europe

America is not a terribly foreign country to most people in Britain. Response to the shooting of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords mirrored that of the American public: shock, but not surprise. There has been no official response from British political leaders but press comment on the tragedy broke down along the same party lines.

The Daily Telegraph, a right-wing broadsheet newspaper popularly called The Daily Torygraph, was one of the first papers to weigh in. The Telegraph has long played a role in right-wing American politics and was an active participant in keeping some of the scandals surrounding the Clinton administration, like Whitewater, alive.

A blog post from its Washington Bureau Chief, Toby Harnden, went up on Sunday. Harnden took American liberal blogs to task for their haste in blaming the vitriolic language of right-wing politicians and commentators for the Tucson shootings. He pointed out that Jared Loughner doesn't seem to be a Tea party member.

"This is highly inconvenient for certain people on the Left so they ignore it. They would much prefer the shooter to have been a white male in his 50s," Harnden wrote.

A Telegraph editorial today linked the weekend shooting of Giffords with last week's assassination of Salman Taseer in Pakistan, noting that "occasionally, politicians risk their lives."

The Guardian has a substantial American readership among its 35 million plus monthly unique visitors. It's American-based columnist, Gary Younge, noted today that, "America is more polarized under Obama than it has been in four decades: the week he was elected gun sales leapt 50 percent year on year."

He added, "Where the right is concerned the marginal and the mainstream have rapidly become blurred."

The Times editorial called for U.S. politicians to use more "generous language." The paper is owned by Rupert Murdoch, whose Fox News is not known for the comity of expression used by its reporter/commentators.

The ultra-right tabloid Daily Mail found an angle for its celebrity-obsessed readers: "An American congresswoman who was shot in the head at point blank range in an apparent assassination attempt is a cousin of actress Gwyneth Paltrow, it was revealed today."

Probably the most interesting piece of analysis came, ironically, from the Telegraph's man in Washington during the Clinton years, Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, who noted that American economic recovery has stalled despite Wall Street's return to boom.

He writes, "Ben Bernanke’s 'trickle down’ strategy risks corroding America’s ethic of solidarity long before it does much to help America’s poor ... . It is no surprise that America’s armed dissident movement has resurfaced."

In other parts of Europe, the story has received slightly less attention. The French press is consumed by the murder of two Frenchmen murdered in Niger by an African subsidiary of Al Qaeda. The German press has major flooding along the Rhine to contend with.

But the lack of prominence given to the story could be down to this: For many in Europe, violence of the sort that occurred in Tucson on Saturday is almost expected in America.

By Michael Goldfarb in London

View from Asia

“American shocker!” screamed Thailand’s largest newspaper, Thai Rath, in its report on the Arizona attacks. Other Bangkok newspapers detailed the gunman’s obsession with currency and touched on his mental problems. But by and large, Asia’s pundits did not draw any deep insights about America from the shooting spree.

The past few years have proven that killing sprees are hardly an American phenomenon — even in nations with extremely restrictive gun laws.

Knives, hammers and hatchets were weapons of choice for attackers in the bizarre rash of school attacks in 2010, in which five different unrelated men killed primary school students between March and August. 

In Japan, where handguns are forbidden and associations with “aggressive” political groups disqualifies any gun ownership, a disturbed man’s 2008 stabbing rampage left officials wondering what more they could do to prevent killing sprees.

The Arizona shooter’s politically tinged (but largely nonsensical) Internet ramblings have led U.S. analysts to reflect on America’s long history of politically motivated killings. But few nations can match the Philippines for political danger. Since 2001, the human rights group Karapatan has counted 1,200 victims of extra-judicial murder.

This figure includes a number of office holders and government employees, including the 2009 massacre of a deputy mayor and his entourage that left 57 dead. Among the gunmen: a rival gubernatorial candidate who flagrantly showed up to personally oversee the killing.

By Patrick Winn in Bangkok

View from Africa

In South Africa, while the referendum in southern Sudan remained the biggest international story, news of the shooting prompted self-reflection in a country that has one of the highest murder rates in the world, sparking online debates about gun control and violence in society.

“The killer was described as a deranged individual. The American people are up in arms and express their disgust for these killings. Sadly, in South Africa it has become a daily occurrence and lesser and lesser is said. We have a deranged nation,” wrote one commenter on News24, a major South African news website.

A Johannesburg Times poll asked: “Does the Arizona shooting show that we need to tone down the violence in our political speech?” Only a few hours after the poll had been posted, 85 percent of the 200 people who had voted had answered “yes” to the question.

South Africa’s Sunday Independent newspaper had no mention of the shooting but instead carried a front-page story about a homegrown political tragedy. The paper reported arrests in the murder of a politician in Mpumalanga province, district chief whip Johan Ndlovu, whose body was found dumped in bushes last week in what is said to have been an assassination. It was only the latest in a string of suspicious politician deaths in Mpumalanga.

Other South African media headlines focused on the shock of the attack for Americans.

“Shooting spree shakes divided U.S.,” said a headline in the Johannesburg Star’s print edition.

“US shocked by shooting,” said News24.

By Erin Conway-Smith in Johannesburg

View from India

The Indian government did not issue a statement about the shooting of U.S. Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords, and unlike recent university shooting sprees and several murders of Indian students, the event did not generate much media interest.

The shooting made the front page of only one of India's major English newspapers on Monday. Few Indian news outlets have correspondents based in America, and most print publications relied on copy from the New York Times or Washington Post for their coverage of the event.

The primary reason might be that despite India's interest in immigration issues, neither ordinary citizens nor commentators have seen a connection between the virulent battle over border-crossers in the American Southwest and the outsourcing sector's concern over changes to U.S. visa policy for skilled workers.

Meanwhile, dramatic domestic and regional events — such as politically motivated killings in West Bengal, where at least eight people have been slain in pre-poll skirmishes between party workers, and the assassination of Pakistani governor Salman Taseer — overshadowed the U.S. tragedy.

Papers that went beyond the basic reporting of the event took the same line favored by the foreign press, generally, linking the violence to the increasingly heated rhetoric of U.S. talking-head politics. 

By Jason Overdorf in New Delhi

View from Latin America

In Latin America, coverage of the Arizona shooting that went beyond the wire reports has emphasized aspects of the story where Latin Americans might see reflections of themselves.

Lima’s El Comercio, Peru’s biggest newspaper, published a profile of Daniel Hernandez, the young Gifford staffer who held a bandage over the Congresswoman’s wounds before paramedics arrived on the scene. The “Hispanic angel,” El Commercio wrote, “saved the life of congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords.”

Argentina’s biggest daily, Clarin, published a 500-word piece by their Washington correspondent, Ana Baron, who focused heavily on Arizona’s tough stance on Latino immigration and what she described as the “growth of hatred and intolerance in U.S. politics.”

Perhaps tellingly, the story’s first quote was Pima County Sherrif Clarence W. Dupnik’s widely-recounted remark that his home state of Arizona has become a “Mecca for prejudice and bigotry.”

But South America’s press to a large degree treated news of the shooting like any other foreign news story, largely echoing U.S. coverage and relying heavily on wire copy.

For example, Brazil’s most-respected daily, Folha de Sao Paulo, put the story on the front page but simply re-hashed the reporting of U.S. news outlets. And so far, there has been little or no official comment here.


Posted by biginla at 7:03 PM GMT
Financial Times--Comment, presented by the BBC's Biodun Iginla
Topic: financial times, bbc news
Financial Times
 
Comment & Analysis
Monday January 10 2011

Financial Times - Comment
 
 
Obama tries a Clintonian swerve
In the immediate aftermath of the shootings in Arizona, US political divisions seem capable of becoming even angrier than before. Clive Crook warns of possible complications to the president’s plans for his party
http://link.ft.com/r/J0VG55/IYVU6A/CZNU2/HD05QE/S3MLL7/36/h?a1=2011&a2=1&a3=10
 
The world should not fear a growing China
China, large as it is, does not run away from its responsibilities and will fulfil them consistent with its status, writes Li Keqiang
http://link.ft.com/r/J0VG55/IYVU6A/CZNU2/HD05QE/8AN55A/36/h?a1=2011&a2=1&a3=10
 
No happy new year for the eurozone
Pause and consider the momentous shift that has taken place, writes Wolfgang Münchau. Western Europe is now seen as a higher risk than central and east Europe
http://link.ft.com/r/J0VG55/IYVU6A/CZNU2/HD05QE/3O9227/36/h?a1=2011&a2=1&a3=10
 
To fix our banks we must go back to the 70s
Bank interest rate ceilings were supposedly consigned to history, along with the regulation of trucks and airlines, swept away by money market funds and deregulation, writes Amar Bhidé
http://link.ft.com/r/J0VG55/IYVU6A/CZNU2/HD05QE/72FMMJ/36/h?a1=2011&a2=1&a3=10
 
Clegg is wrong to give up control on terrorism
The Liberal Democrats should nudge control orders – restrictions on terrorist suspects – in a more liberal direction, limiting the more flagrant infringements, writes Jamie Bartlett
http://link.ft.com/r/J0VG55/IYVU6A/CZNU2/HD05QE/HDGQQG/36/h?a1=2011&a2=1&a3=10
 
 
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Posted by biginla at 6:48 PM GMT
News covering the UN and the world by Biodun Iginla, BBC News
Topic: un wire, un, bbc news, biodun ig

January 10, 2011 |Sign up  |  E-Mail this  |  Donate

Southern Sudan referendum voting begins

Southern Sudanese voters began lining up hours before polls opened Sunday for a referendum widely expected to result in independence from Khartoum. Celebrations erupted in the southern Sudanese capital Juba as polls opened. Voting will continue for a week, and electoral officials predict it will take a week to count votes. The New York Times (free registration)(1/10) The Toronto Star (1/9)



By doing this, Israel has destroyed all the U.S. efforts and ended any possibility of a return to negotiations."

Spokesman for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, Nabil Abu Rudeina. Click herefor full story.



"In 2011, we will finally see Haiti on the road to recovery. While pretty much everyone agrees that aid to Haiti could have been done a lot more effectively, it is also true that you don't repair damage as massive as Haiti's in 12 months."

UN Dispatch


United Nation
  • Rights groups ask UN to publish Darfur reports
    Thousands have fled their homes in light of renewed fighting in the Darfur region of Sudan, prompting human rights groups to call upon the United Nations to publish reports on abuses. "The UN should at the very least provide regular, thorough and independent public reports on the humanitarian and human rights situation," says a statement by the 17 groups. Reuters (1/8) LinkedInFacebookTwitterEmail this Story
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Posted by biginla at 6:40 PM GMT
Israel condemns video clip calling for the death of a senior Israeli justice official.
Topic: israeli-palestinian conflict, na

 

by Nasra Ismail, BBC News Middle East Desk, for the BBC's Biodun Iginla

JERUSALEM, Jan. 10

-- Police in Israel told me at the BBC that they were trying to determine who sent a video clip calling for the death of a senior Israeli justice official.

The clip, dispatched on the Internet, is an incitement to kill Deputy Attorney General Shai Nitzan and used the e-mail address of Justice Minister Yaakov Neeman, Israel Radio said Monday.

The Justice Ministry then issued a statement condemning the video clip.

"We are confident that a thorough investigation will be conducted in the matter until those responsible are uncovered," a statement said.

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu expressed hope that police would find whoever released the clip.

"Criticism is legitimate but incitement, and calls of murder against the legal system, hurts the democratic values of the state of Israel and must be cut off at its root," Netanyahu said in a statement reported by Ynetnews.

The clip accuses Nitzan of "persecuting and hassling Jews, defending Arabs and cooperating with them," the Israel Radio report said.

It also accuses the deputy attorney general of failing to investigate incidents concerning incitement by Arabs against Jews, saying he prefers to focus on Jewish incitement only, Haaretz said.

The clip refers to a recent investigation ordered by Nitzan into a Facebook group called "Death to all Arabs," the newspaper said. The clip says, "Shai Nitzan is now ordered to investigate those who call for his murder as well."




Posted by biginla at 5:20 PM GMT
MediaBistro News Feed by Biodun Iginla, BBC News and MediaBistro
Topic: media, mediabistro, bbc news

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Monday, January 10, 2011

 

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GabrielleGiffords.jpgNPR Editor Calls Reporting of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords' Death 'A Serious And Grave Error' (TVNewser) 
In the first hour following the gunfire in a Tucson parking lot, there was much misinformation about the condition of those wounded. Fox News Channel, CNN, and MSNBC had all reported that Rep. Gabrielle Giffords had died. The TV networks got these first reports from -- and, therefore, sourced -- NPR. Sunday morning, NPR News executive editor Dick Meyer apologized for the "serious and grave error."TVNewser: Brian Williams anchored a special edition of Dateline from Tucson at 8 p.m. ET Sunday on NBC. On cable, CNN had John King anchoring a live hour starting at 9 p.m., with Jessica Yellin co-anchoring from Tucson. On Fox News, Shepard Smith went live at 7 p.m., with Bret Baier and Geraldo Rivera delivering the latest news at 9 p.m. and 10 p.m., respectively. Silicon Alley Insider: Alleged Arizona gunman Jared Lee Loughner left a disturbing trail on the Internet, including a Myspace page that the company removed after he was identified. Myspace vice president of marketing Sean Percival tweeted that it is company policy to place the page in a state of "purgatory" so it could be preserved for law enforcement. To preserve this page as evidence, Myspace could make a backup of the page, time-stamp it, and put it on a hard drive or computer with no Internet connection. Instead, Myspace took the page off the Internet entirely.WebNewser: In conjunction with Facebook, ABC News produced a Sunday special on the tragedy in Tucson. The 15-minute report streamed live on ABCNews.com at 11 a.m. and was anchored by Christiane Amanpour and Dan Harris in Tucson. Another special streamed at 7 p.m. anchored by David Muir, following World News.Mediaite: SarahPAC official Rebecca Mansour appeared on The Tammy Bruce Showto push back against suggestions that Sarah Palin's much-derided "crosshair" map is somehow connected to the tragedy. Regardless of the graphic's relevance to Saturday's shooting, Mansour's claim was belied by a November tweet from Palin.

NewsBeast Adds Key Staff, Sets April Launch (NY Post) 
Tina Brown plans to turn to two former Time magazine veterans to run Newsweekon an interim basis while she puts the finishing touches on a sweeping redesign that is not expected to be unveiled until April. Steve Koepp, a former No. 2 editor at Time, and Arthur Hochstein, longtime art director of Time, will both join the staff of the Newsweek Daily Beast Co. Monday, according to people close to the situation.

CNN Mulls Show Shake-Up (WSJ) 
CNN is considering replacing Kathleen Parker, co-host of its new evening program,Parker Spitzer, according to people familiar with the matter, as the network struggles to reverse a steep slide in its evening audience. The conservative columnist could be replaced by a new co-host to serve alongside former New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer, as executives mull a shake-up of the show.


Myspace Plans To Lay Off 550-600 Employees Tuesday (AllThingsD) 
Myspace, which has been struggling to revitalize itself, is expected to lay off 550-600 of its staff of just over 1,000 Tuesday, according to several sources.

Disney, Yahoo! Look At Internet TV (WSJ) 
Disney is discussing making video from some of its television networks available on sets embedded with Yahoo!'s Internet-TV software, people familiar with the matter said. Such new offerings would propel Yahoo! into a broader battle to use the Internet to bring premium content to digital TVs, amping up the competition with traditional cable-TV and satellite operators.

WaPo Publisher: 'We Achieved Our Goals For Ad Revenue For The First Time In Several Years' (Poynter / Romenesko) 
The Washington Post publisher Katharine Weymouth tells her staff: "I committed to [Post Co. chairman] Don [Graham] and to the board that we would return to profitability by 2011. Excluding one-time costs, we returned to profitability in 2010…That is no small feat."

 

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TNR.com Appoints David Thomson To Lead New Movies Section (minOnline) 
The New Republic was born in 1914, at about the time D.W. Griffith advanced the young film technology into the realm of art and big business with his landmarkBirth of a Nation. And so, with nearly a century of reviews in its archive, the magazine of politics and opinion brings a massive new resource to the Web with the launch of its "At the Movies" section and appoints respected writer David Thomson as its regular critic.

At CES, Connected TVs, Tablets, Smart Phones Still Missing Key Content (AdAge)
While the gadget gods unfolded their latest wares for the Consumer Electronics Show's tech-obsessed masses, the underlying message of this year's event was something decidedly un-gadget-like: Media companies are back in the driver's seat. NYT: The blending of television and the Internet is inevitable. But will it happen in concert with the major cable and satellite distributors, or in spite of them? During CES, there was a point in every demonstration where fantasy collided with reality -- and it was usually when the cable and satellite distributors came up.

How Caroline Kennedy, Maria Shriver Helped Kill Kennedys Miniseries (THR) 
Pressure from the Kennedy family played a key role in History's decision to pull the plug on controversial miniseries The Kennedys.

 

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Groupon Makes Big Bid On Traditional TV, Buys Super Bowl Pregame (AdAge) 
Groupon may not need Google to grow. But it does need some good, old-fashioned advertising. In the coming weeks, expect to see the social e-commerce trailblazer make its foray onto TV, including pregame spots in the Feb. 6 broadcast of Super Bowl XLV.

 

Twitter Shines A Spotlight On Secret FBI Subpoenas (NYT) 
The news that federal prosecutors have demanded that microblogging site Twitter provide the account details of people connected to the WikiLeaks case, including its founder, Julian Assange, isn't noteworthy because the government's request was unusual or intrusive. It is noteworthy because it became public. GigaOM: The fact that Twitter is being targeted by the government is another sign of how important the network has become as a real-time publishing platform, and also of how centralized the service is.

AMI Targets The Tablet (Mediaweek) 
Many publishers entered the iPad by creating enhanced versions of their magazines, but since then, magazine content has begun to take on more experimental forms. A recent example comes from National Enquirer and Starpublisher American Media Inc., which is launching single-topic, custom publications for the Apple tablet. paidContent / Guardian: The news industry embraced the launch of Apple's iPad in April 2010 with something that felt like true love. But less than one year on, there are already signs that the romance is fading, along with those first flushes of novelty. The latest figures from the Audit Bureau of Circulations in the United States show average monthly downloads slumping by the end of 2010.

 

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RollingStone.com Discovers Web Video (Mediaweek) 
Rolling Stone online editor Abbey Goodman has brought in artists from Wyclef Jean to Mumford & Sons to perform in the magazine's Midtown offices. But on a recent Wednesday, she was nervous. The musical guest, Rye Rye, a 20-year-old female rapper, wasn't going to put on the usual acoustic act.

 

Jack Griffin Makes His Mark On Time Inc. Magazines (NYT / Media Decoder) 
In case there was any doubt about who really runs the show at Time Inc., readers now have an answer. Jack Griffin, who took the reins as chief executive in September, has directed all Time publications to begin running mastheads -- the pages that list who does what, from editor-in-chief to technology support staff. And his name will be first.

Rick Sanchez Licks His Wounds (The Daily Beast)
In his first major interview since being fired for calling Jon Stewart a "bigot," ex-CNN anchor Rick Sanchez talks to Adam Hanft about his bruised feelings, what the media got wrong, and his future plans.

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Sarah Sudar was approached by the Pittsburgh Post-Gazetteto start their style blog after maintaining a fashion blog she started as a Mediabistro assignment. Congratulations, Sarah!read her story

 


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Posted by biginla at 5:04 PM GMT
After Death, Protecting Your 'Digital Afterlife'
Topic: digital life, bbc news

by Biodun Iginla and Tamara Kachelmeier, Tech Analysts for the BBC

Audio for this story from Fresh Air from WHYY will be available at approx. 5:00 p.m. ET

 
Your Digital Afterlife

 

Your Digital Afterlife: When Facebook, Flickr and Twitter Are Your Estate, What's Your Legacy?
By John Romano and Evan Carroll
Hardcover, 216 pages
New Riders Press
List price: $24.99
text size A A A
January 10, 2011

Chances are good that you have hundreds, maybe thousands of e-mails stored on remote servers or in your computer. You might have a Facebook page, or a Tumblr or Twitter account. And you might have countless photos in a Flickr album. All that data amounts to a digital profile of sorts, which raises an interesting question: What happens to that online material when we die?

That depends on how you prepare beforehand, says John Romano. Romano and a colleague, Evan Carroll, edit The Digital Beyond, a website that helps users plan what happens to their online content after their deaths. Romano and Carroll both join Dave Davies for a discussion about online digital legacies.

Romano and Carroll point to blogger Leslie Harpold, who died in 2006, memorably leaving behind a robust online presence. After her death, Leslie's family decided that her blogs should be permanently removed from the Internet. But Leslie had built up a large community of readers and fellow bloggers online, many of whom wanted her work to remain online.

"Many of them tried desperately to contact the family and say 'Hey, can we place an archive of this on our website?' or 'Hey, can we hold onto this content?' but unfortunately, they chose to keep it private," explains Carroll.

In their new book, Your Digital Afterlife, Romano and Carroll outline ways to protect your online legacy. One tip they offer: make sure you name a digital executor to handle all of your digital belongings.

"It's very possible that the person who's handling your estate may not be the person who has the technical understanding to take care of your digital things," Romano says. "And there needs to be an important distinction there."

Carroll and Romano also suggest that it might be helpful to create an inventory of online accounts, to ensure your digital executor knows exactly what's most important.

"It doesn't have to be 100 percent exhaustive," Romano says. " I think people might get bogged down or lost or think 'If I have to write down every online account, I'll be here until tomorrow.' But your inventory is just a list: the name of the object and ways to access that account and your wishes for it."

But be forewarned: some online terms of service may prevent you from transferring accounts to other people. So it may be good to also have an offline backup for things like photographs or blog entries. Even if you do back things up online, it's still helpful to store the passwords in your digital estate, to be passed on to someone you trust.

"A this point, providing that access [to passwords and usernames] is so much better than the risk of not providing access at all and having that potentially go away all together," says Carroll. He recommends having a short talk with someone you trust, about your online legacy.

"It's a five minute conversation," he says. "Just say 'Listen, just so you know, I put my passwords here and this is how I store them and these are [my accounts], just make sure you take care of those. That's a two minute conversation you can have with someone that can make them aware of what to do after you're gone."


John Romano and Evan Carroll are the founders of The Digital Beyond, which explores death and the digital legacy.
Peachpit Press

John Romano and Evan Carroll are the founders ofThe Digital Beyond, a website which explores death and the digital legacy.

Interview Highlights

On financial information stored online:

Carroll: "It's our recommendation that you realize that anything of a financial matter should be executed according to your legal will as we like to call it — to provide a differentiation between your digital estate planning. That said, there are a lot of accounts that allow you to spend money and make money online that only exist online. I would recommend that you take steps and store those passwords so that your executor has access to them. Let's say for instance, you may run an online business and may need to provide your business partner or spouse with that information."

"Accounts like PayPal are really interesting because many of us have our PayPal accounts linked to our checking accounts and it's very easy to transfer money out of those accounts, so it's worth looking at it systematically, and thinking about 'If so-and-so has access to this, then they might also have access to this,' and really thinking about worst case scenario of what could happen and safeguarding yourself against that."

On why you should store your online account information separately from your will

Carroll: "A will becomes public record and if your password's in the will and no one's changed the password since it was put there, your password is suddenly exposed to a greater audience."

On when they realized digital legacies were important

Romero: "When my grandfather died, we went to his house and found all sorts of photographs and when my son was born, I realized that all of the photos and videos I was taking were digital. All of it was sitting on my computer."

Carroll: "One of my relatives, an aunt, had asked me to take care of her computer if she passed away, to make sure things that shouldn't be released are kind of put away and things that she might want to share with the family are shared."

On website policies regarding death

Carroll: "There's no one way that all of these service providers act. So Yahoo! has their policy, Facebook has their policy, Twitter has their policy and none of the policies are the same which makes it really confusing for the average person to figure all of this out."

On editing your online presence throughout life

Carroll: "It's worth considering that anything that's on the Internet and connected to your digital image does have potential to outlast you. For instance, services like Twitter [are] now being archived by the Library of Congress — presumably that information is going to have a long shelf life. It's worth considering what you put out there and what is put out there about you and making sure that is in line with the image you want to portray."

 

Posted by biginla at 4:30 PM GMT
BREAKING NEWS ALERT: Hillary Clinton: Arizona Shooter Was 'Extremist'
Topic: hillary clinton, bbc news

by Biodun Iginla, BBC News


Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called the shooter who attacked Arizona congresswoman Gabrielle Gifford an "extremist," and said people worldwide should reject radical ideologies.

Clinton, speaking on Monday in the United Arab Emirates, made the comment in response to a question about the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, carried out by al-Qaida.

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A student at a town hall-style meeting asked why U.S. opinion often blames the entire Arab world for 9/11. Clinton said this was due to misperceptions and the media impact of political violence.

"We have extremists in my country. A wonderful, incredibly brave young woman Congress member, Congresswoman Gifford, was just shot by an extremist in our country," she added.

"We have the same kinds of problems. So rather than standing off from each other, we should work to try to prevent the extremists anywhere from being able to commit violence."

The U.S. government has charged the 22-year-old suspected shooter with trying assassinate Giffords by shooting her in the head during a rampage that killed six people and wounded 14 in Tucson, Ariz.

The shooting has fueled debate about extreme political rhetoric in the United States after an acrimonious campaign for congressional elections in November.

Clinton, who said she hopes her current trip to the Gulf will help to strengthen U.S. and Arab mutual understanding, said both societies should work to offset the sometimes overly loud voices on the political fringes.

"The extremists and their voices, the crazy voices that sometimes get on the TV, that's not who we are, that's not who you are, and what we have to do is get through that and make it clear that that doesn't represent either American or Arab ideas or opinions," she said.


Posted by biginla at 4:13 PM GMT
Giffords's husband says to pray for his wife
Topic: gabrielle giffords, bbc news
 
 

by  Rochelle van Amber, BBC News, for the BBC's Biodun Iginla

 

In his first public statement since the weekend shooting rampage outside an Arizona supermarket, the husband of a wounded U.S. congresswoman thanked supporters and expressed condolences to families of other victims.

"Many of you have offered help. There is little that we can do but pray for those who are struggling," wrote astronaut Mark Kelly, husband of U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, D-Arizona. "If you are inspired to make a positive gesture, consider two organizations that Gabby has long valued and supported: Tucson's Community Food Bank and the American Red Cross."

The statement, released late Sunday night, did not provide details about Giffords' recovery. She remained in critical condition Monday after being shot through the left hemisphere of her brain with a 9mm pistol.

But doctors said earlier that the congresswoman was following simple commands, and a longtime adviser said Sunday he was confident she would survive her wound.

"The doctors are pretty clear that we just have to wait and see," Mike McNulty said. But he added, "I can only think that God has more important things planned for her in the future."

Doctors: Giffords able to communicate
Tucson shooting victims remembered
Arizona's contentious year
Mother, daughters survive shootings

Meanwhile, Pima County Sheriff Clarence Dupnik said Monday morning that the investigation was "winding down," and that authorities have evidence that he specifically targeted the congresswoman.

"He's a very troubled individual," he said.

Giffords, a three-term Democrat, was among the 20 people shot at a constituent open house in Tucson on Saturday. Six of them, including a federal judge, were killed, and federal authorities have leveled murder and attempted murder charges at a 22-year-old former community college student who posted online screeds about government mind control.

"Gabby was doing what she loved most -- hearing from her constituents -- when this tragedy occurred," Kelly's statement said. "Serving Southern Arizonans is her passion, and nothing makes her more proud than representing them in Congress."

Dr. Michael Lemole Jr., chief of neurosurgery at University Medical Center in Tuscon, said doctors were "very encouraged" by the fact that she was responding to commands.

Swelling of the brain is the biggest threat Giffords faces, Lemole said. Doctors removed part of her skull during surgery in order to keep the brain from pressing against it if it swells, but the bullet's front-to-back trajectory did not do as much damage as a shot that crosses from one hemisphere to the other would have, he said.

In addition to Giffords, nine other patients remained hospitalized, the medical center said -- three in serious condition and six in fair condition. The other wounded transported themselves to other hospitals.

President Barack Obama will lead the nation in a moment of silence Monday as flags across the country fly at half-staff to honor the victims.

While the Supreme Court rarely alters its public sessions, it, too, will observe the occasion by convening 10 minutes early to ensure that first arguments are completed before the 11 a.m. moment of silence.

Suspect Jared Lee Loughner faces two counts of murder, two counts of attempted murder and one count of attempting to kill a member of Congress -- all stemming from the shootings of federal employees at the scene. One member of Giffords' staff was killed and two more were wounded, while the gunfire also claimed the life of a federal district judge, John Roll.

The suspect had railed against government "mind control" and illiteracy in online missives and had "kind of a troubled past," Dupnik said. Loughner was not talking and had invoked his right against self-incrimination, he said.

Loughner is a former student at Pima Community College, and voluntarily withdrew from the school in October after being suspended, the college said in a statement. One of his instructors, Ben McGahee, said Loughner sometimes shook, blurted things out in class and appeared to be under the influence of drugs at times.

"I was scared of what he could do," McGahee said. "I wasn't scared of him physically, but I was scared of him bringing a weapon to class."

In addition to Roll, the dead included 30-year-old Gabe Zimmerman, a Giffords staffer who was engaged to be married; 76-year-old Dorwin Stoddard, who was fatally shot in the head while trying to shield his wife; 76-year-old Dorothy Morris; Phyllis Scheck, 79; and a 9-year-old girl, Christina Taylor Green, who was born on September 11, 2001.

Giffords won her third term in November in a closely contested race against a Tea Party-backed Republican candidate. She was one of three Democratic legislators who reported vandalism at their offices following the March passage of the Obama administration's sweeping health-care law, and Dupnik suggested Saturday night that "vitriolic rhetoric" in political debates could have deadly consequences.

"When you look at unbalanced people, how they respond to the vitriol that comes out of certain mouths about tearing down the government, the anger, the hatred, the bigotry that goes on in this county is getting to be outrageous. Unfortunately, Arizona, I think, has become sort of the capital," he said. "We have become the mecca for prejudice and bigotry."

The debate kicked off by Dupnik's remarks spilled over onto the talk-show circuit Sunday morning, where several lawmakers called for cooling the language of politics.

Democratic and Republican lawmakers also had a rare bipartisan conference call Sunday to discuss Giffords' condition and security concerns for members of Congress.

Rep. Robert Brady, D-Pennsylvania, said he will introduce legislation making it a federal crime for a person to use language or symbols that could be perceived as threatening or inciting violence against a member of Congress or a federal official.

Following the shootings, all legislation on the House schedule for the coming week was postponed, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor said. The decision was made by leaders of both parties and means the House will not vote this week on the repeal of health care reform.

Democratic Whip Steny H. Hoyer said lawmakers will consider at least one resolution on the House floor Wednesday honoring Giffords and those who were killed in Saturday's attack. 

Posted by biginla at 1:42 PM GMT
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Posted by biginla at 1:39 PM GMT
US mourns Arizona shooting victims
Topic: gabrielle giffords, bbc news
Mr Obama has asked the nation to come together in prayer

by Rochelle van Amber and Biodun Iginla, BBC News

 

The US is mourning the deaths of six people in a shooting in Arizona on Saturday which left a congresswoman seriously wounded.

Flags across the country will fly at half mast, and President Barack Obama will lead a minute's silence.

The man charged with the attack, Jared Loughner, is to appear in court later. He could face the death penalty.

The congresswoman, Gabrielle Giffords, was shot in the head and is critical but responding to simple commands.

She had been holding an open-invitation meeting with constituents outside a supermarket in Tucson when a man holding a gun approached and opened fire.

Ms Giffords, 40, was shot from close range by the gunman, who then began shooting into the crowd.

Among the dead were a nine-year-old girl and a federal judge. A total of 14 people were injured, in addition to the six who were killed.

The girl, Christina Taylor Green, was born on 9/11 and featured in a book Fifty Faces of Hope about some of the children born on that day.

Click to play

Eyewitness Patricia Maisch: "Somebody said get the gun"

'Come together'

A minute of silence will be held at 1100 Washington time (1600 GMT), led by President Obama from the South Lawn of the White House.

"It will be a time for us to come together as a nation in prayer or reflection, keeping the victims and their families closely at heart," he said in a statement on Sunday.

House of Representatives Speak John Boehner called on fellow legislators to "stand together" and "rally round our wounded colleague".

Suspect: Jared Loughner

  • Aged 22; lived with parents in Tucson
  • Described by former class-mates as "disruptive" drug user and a loner
  • Reportedly posted rambling web messages complaining of "mind control"
  • Attempted to enlist in US Army but was rejected

The House has postponed all legislative debates next week, including a controversial bill to repeal Mr Obama's healthcare reform.

But some commentators and politicians have blamed violent rhetoric and hatred conveyed in the media for the shooting.

"People think now if they want to make a statement, they can do that by bringing bodily harm to someone who doesn't agree with them," Democratic Representative Ed Pastor said on CNN.

Analysis

Almost as soon as the news of the shootings came out, some in Washington - and many on Twitter and on blogs - were pondering a link between the anger and polarisation apparent in today's American polity and the attempted assassination of a Democratic congresswoman in a state with highly charged politics.

But few in Tucson seem as sure.

After one of the many vigils that cropped up in the city after the shooting, lawyer Tom Aguilera, 49, stood in the sunshine of a colonnaded courtyard, dwarfed by the office blocks of downtown.

He said he did think of politics, and of the charged nature of American political life, immediately after he heard of the shootings. But he dismissed it.

Others at the vigil agree: they may be dismayed by the anger and virulence of political discourse in America, but they do not connect it with the shootings.

'Premeditated attack'

Mr Loughner will appear in court in Phoenix at 1400 local time (2100 GMT).

He has been charged with:

  • Attempting to assassinate Ms Giffords
  • Killing two government officials, federal judge John Roll and Gabe Zimmerman, an aide of Ms Giffords
  • Attempting to kill two more government officials

State authorities are expected to bring charges against him later for attacking non-government employees.

Investigators searching Mr Loughner's home said they had found evidence that the attack was premeditated.

They found an envelope with messages saying "I planned ahead", "my assassination", and the name Giffords.

Describing the attack, local Sheriff Clarence Dupnik said a potentially worse tragedy had been averted.

THE VICTIMS

  • Democratic congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords, 40, representing eighth district of Arizona - injured
  • John Roll, 63, judge at Arizona district court - killed
  • Christina Taylor Green, aged nine, born on 9/11 and featured in book Faces of Hope - killed
  • Retiree and church volunteer Dorwin Stoddard, 76 - killed
  • Ms Giffords' aide Gabe Zimmerman, 30 - killed
  • Dorothy Morris, 76 - killed
  • Phyllis Schneck, 79 - killed

A woman tackled the gunman as he tried to reload, snatching a magazine of bullets, he said.

He managed to reload with another magazine, but the gun malfunctioned and two men then restrained him.

Various former classmates have described Mr Loughner as "obviously disturbed".

One of them, Lynda Sorenson, feared he might become violent.

"We do have one student in the class who was disruptive today," she wrote in an e-mail quoted by the Washington Post.

"He scares me a bit... Hopefully he will be out of class very soon, and not come back with an automatic weapon."

He was said to be a loner who had posted a number of anti-government videos and messages on social-networking websites.

Shortly before the attack, he had posted: "Goodbye friends. Dear friends, don't be mad at me."

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