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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
Tuesday, 11 January 2011
Tucson Suspect's Troubles Didn't Keep Him From Gun
Topic: gabrielle giffords, bbc news

4_Congresswoman_Shooting.sff.jpg
EnlargeAssociated Press

The home of Jared Loughner, at 7741 N Soledad Ave., Sunday, Jan. 9, 2011 in Tucson, Az. Loughner is accused of attempting to assassinate Rep. Gabrielle Giffords and killing six other people Saturday, Jan. 8, 2011 during a "Congress on your Corner" event at a mall in Tucson, Az.

3_APTOPIX_Congresswoman_Shot.sff.jpg
EnlargeAssociated Press

In this artist rendering, Jared Lee Loughner makes his first court appearance at the Sandra Day O'Connor United States Courthouse in Phoenix, Ariz., Monday, Jan. 10, 2011. Loughner appeared in federal court on charges he tried to assassinate Rep. Gabrielle Giffords in a shooting rampage that left six people dead.

1_APTOPIX_Congresswoman_Shot.sff.jpg
EnlargeAssociated Press

This Saturday, Jan. 8, 2011 photo released by the Pima County Sheriff's Office shows shooting suspect Jared Loughner.

2_Congresswoman_Shot.sff.jpg
EnlargeAssociated Press

This undated photo obtained from MySpace shows Jarad L. Loughner. At an event roughly three years ago, Rep. Gabrielle Giffords took a question from Jared Loughner, the man accused of trying to assassinate her and killing six other people. According to two of his high school friends the question was essentially this: "What is government if words have no meaning?" Loughner was angry about her response _ she read the question and didn't have much to say. On Sunday, Loughner was charged in the shootings a day earlier at a political event outside a Tucson supermarket. Aside from the six killed, 14 people were injured., including Giffords.

text size A A A
TUCSON, Ariz. January 11, 2011, 04:53 pm ET

Jared Loughner had trouble with the law, was rejected by the Army after flunking a drug test and was considered so mentally unstable that he was banned from his college campus, where officials considered him a threat to other students and faculty.

But the 22-year-old had no trouble buying the Glock semiautomatic pistol that authorities say he used in the Tucson rampage Saturday that left six dead and 14 injured, including Rep. Gabrielle Giffords.

Loughner's personal history did not disqualify him under federal rules, and Arizona doesn't regulate gun sales. His criminal charges were ultimately dismissed, the Army information was private and Pima Community College isn't saying whether it shared its concerns about Loughner with anyone besides his parents.

Loughner cleared a federal background check and bought the pistol at a big-box sports store near his home on Nov. 30 — two months after he was suspended by the college. He customized the weapon with an extended ammunition clip that would have been illegal six years earlier.

Gun-control advocates say the shooting shows that Arizona, home of some of the nation's most permissive gun laws, must review its laws to make sure firearms are not falling into the wrong hands. Gun-rights proponents disagree and say more regulation would not have stopped the tragedy.

Arizona eased gun restrictions last year when it passed a law allowing residents 21 and older to conceal and carry a weapon without a permit, which allowed Loughner to furtively — and legally — carry his pistol to the mall where he is accused of opening fire.

No permits or licenses are required at the state level. Legal gun owners can bring concealed weapons into Arizona bars and restaurants, and state legislators are considering allowing students and teachers to have weapons in schools.

After the shooting, Pima County Sheriff Clarence Dupnik berated Republican lawmakers who have sought to further ease state gun laws.

"I think we're the Tombstone of the United States of America," the Democrat said, referring to the Wild West town populated by gunslingers. "I have never been a proponent of letting everybody in this state carry weapons under any circumstances that they want, and that's almost where we are."

Charles Heller, co-founder and secretary of an Arizona group that promotes gun rights, said more regulation is not a solution.

"Why don't we ban murder? ... Murders are illegal and people do it anyway," he said. "There is no way to weed people out."

Outside Sportsman's Warehouse, the cavernous store where Loughner purchased his Glock, gun owner Jason Moats said that "the bad guys can get the guns either way." He suggested that the shootings could have been less tragic had there been one more weapon out there, rather than one less.

If someone at the mall was armed and had shot Loughner, ending the attack, "the guy would be a hero," said Moats, a 25-year-old route manager for a waste hauling company.

Eyewitnesses say Loughner was subdued after he tried to insert a second magazine into his pistol.

Karen Seaman, chief marketing officer for Sportsman's Warehouse, said Loughner passed a federal background check required to buy a gun.

Background checks are designed in part to weed out prospective gun buyers who have felony criminal records, have a history of domestic violence or are in the country illegally. None of that applied to Loughner, although the background check form asks about drug use and friends say he frequently used marijuana in high school.

In October 2007, Loughner was cited in Pima County for possession of drug paraphernalia, which was dismissed after he completed a diversion program, according to online records.

Loughner was arrested in October 2008 on a vandalism charge near Tucson after admitting that he vandalized a road sign with a magic marker, scrawling the letters "C" and "X" in what he said was a reference to Christianity. The police report said Loughner admitted other acts of vandalism in the area. The case was ultimately dismissed after he completed a diversion program.

A military official in Washington said the Army rejected Loughner in 2008 because he failed a drug test. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because privacy laws prevent the military from disclosing such information about an individual's application.

Last year, Pima Community College police were called in five times to deal with Loughner's classroom and library disruptions. He was suspended from the college in September after campus police discovered a YouTube video in which Loughner claimed the college was illegal according to the U.S. Constitution. School officials told Loughner and his parents that to return to classes he would need to undergo a mental health exam to show he was not a danger.

A college spokesman did not respond to an e-mail asking if the college had referred any information on Loughner to local police.

On Nov. 30, the same day he bought the Glock, Loughner posted a YouTube video that raged against the college and police.

"If the police remove you from the educational facility for talking then removing you from the educational facility for talking is unconstitutional," he wrote on the video. "The situation is fraud because the police are unconstitutional. ... Every Pima Community College class is always a scam!"

Federal law bars gun ownership for people who've been judged dangerously mentally ill by a court and those who have been committed to a mental institution, thresholds that didn't disqualify Loughner.

"It's not easy to draw that line" of when a person's mental illness should disqualify them from owning a weapon, said Michael J. Fitzpatrick, executive director of the National Alliance on Mental Illness, an advocacy group.

"The reality is most people with mental illness are not violent," he said. "The issue, frankly, is getting people into treatment. It's not about guns."

Daniel Vice, a senior attorney with the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence, said something should have prevented Loughner from buying a gun so easily.

"Here is a guy who couldn't enlist in the military and was kicked out of school. Anyone would tell you don't give this guy a gun," Vice said. He added that Loughner's problems might have been detected in other states that require more restrictive state permits, including New Jersey, Massachusetts, Hawaii and Illinois.

For example, Indiana can deny guns to anyone with documented evidence of violent or emotionally unstable conduct, a stricter standard than used federally. Vice said in Massachusetts, permits are issued not through store clerks but through police, who could bring greater scrutiny to who buys a gun.

Todd Rathner, a national board member for the National Rifle Association, chastised those clamoring for legislative changes with Arizona in mourning.

"It's unfortunate that some people are using this as an opportunity to talk about their political views," Rathner said. "There are people who haven't even had funerals yet, we have a well-liked congresswoman who is clinging to life."

Guns are entwined with Arizona's frontier heritage. Giffords is a gun owner, as was at least one of the six people killed, federal Judge John Roll.

Heller's group, the Arizona Citizens Defense League, is working on a bill that would provide firearms training for legislators and staff, and would even assign employees firearms confiscated in crimes for protection. "The criminal will always have a gun," Heller said.

Critics have faulted Arizona for the availability of guns. A report released in September by Mayors Against Illegal Guns, an association of more than 500 mayors, found that nearly half of the guns that crossed state lines and were used in crimes in 2009 were sold in just 10 states, including Arizona.

Loughner was able to buy an extended magazine that between 1994 and 2004 was prohibited under federal law, although many were in circulation prior to that time and remained legal. Sen. Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J., said in a statement Monday he will introduce a bill to ban high-capacity gun magazines.

"The only reason to have 33 bullets loaded in a handgun is to kill a lot of people very quickly," Lautenberg said in a statement.

Rep. Peter King, a New York Republican, is taking a different approach. He said he plans to introduce a bill that would make it illegal to knowingly carry a gun within a thousand feet of "certain high-profile" government officials.

 

Posted by biginla at 10:51 PM GMT
Voices of September 11--by the BBC's Biodun Iginla
Topic: 9/11, september 11, emily strato

 

 (I lost Carrie Progen, 25, on 9/11. She was killed by 19 Muslim extremists, who shamed their religion. May Carrie's soul rest in peace. She was too young to die like that.)

 

Voices of September 11th 2011 Survey to Assess the Needs of the 9/11 Community leading up to the Tenth Anniversary 

Voices of September 11th is conducting this brief survey to assess the needs of 9/11 families, rescue and recovery workers, witnesses and survivors leading up to and during the 10th Anniversary events. The survey will take less than five minutes to complete. We would appreciate your responding to this survey at your earliest convenience before 1/28/11 As always, your input is important to help guide our staff as we further develop support services that promote resiliency and address the long-term needs of the 9/11 community. Your feedback will also assist us in planning for VOICES’ Annual “Day of Remembrance” events on September 10th and September 11th. Each of your responses will be confidential, but will help in planning programs and accommodations for the Tenth Anniversary commemorative events. 

This year we will continue to provide information, support services, and assist families in the process of creating the 9/11 Living Memorial Project that honors those we lost and documents firsthand accounts. We will host our Tenth Annual Day of Remembrance Information Forum in New York City and expand our 9/11 Living Memorial workshops in New JerseyMassachusetts, Pennsylvania, Washington, D.C. and other communities around the United States and abroad. 

The 10th Anniversary will be a significant milestone for our families, our country and the world. I am confident that by assessing the needs of the 9/11 community we will be able to plan meaningful events that promote resiliency.

Feel free to forward this survey to other members of the 9/11 community who may be participating in the Tenth Anniversary events. Thank you in advance for your support and continued guidance. 

CLICK HERE to take the survey 


Warm Regards 
Signature
Mary Fetchet & The VOICES Team

 

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Posted by biginla at 10:44 PM GMT
News covering the UN and the world by Biodun Iginla, bbc news
Topic: un wire, un, bbc news, biodun ig

January 11, 2011 | Sign up  |  E-Mail this  |  Donate

UN's Ban calls for restraint, dialogue amid Tunisia unrest

A spokesman for UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has urged restraint in light of growing unrest in Tunisia, calling upon the government and protesters to seek resolution through dialogue. The Tunisian government, which has detained bloggers, journalists and lawyers, has ordered the indefinite closure of all schools and universities. Deutsche Welle (Germany) (1/11) BBC (1/10)



ETA continues to pretend that the end of the violence has a price."

Spanish Interior Minister Alfredo Perez Rubalcaba. Click herefor the full story.



"Mauritania -- where the rights group SOS Esclaves claims that one-fifth of the population, or about 600,000 people remain as slaves -- shows no signs of ever prosecuting citizens for owning slaves under a 2007 law. Instead, Mauritania is jailing anti-slavery activists."

UN Dispatch


United Nation
  • Security Council warns media in Cote d'Ivoire
    The United Nations Security Council has called for an end to the use of media to broadcast misleading information in Cote d'Ivoire, warning that such activities have contributed to postelection violence. UN officials say more than 200 people have died since incumbent President Laurent Gbagbo refused to acknowledge results of the country's Nov. 28 elections. Reuters (1/11) LinkedInFacebookTwitterEmail this Story
  • U.S. support is lacking for UN resolution on Israel settlements
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  • Iran sentences rights lawyer
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  • Interview with missing Chinese lawyer is published
    Chinese human rights lawyer Gao Zhisheng detailed abuse and mistreatment in detention eight months ago during a rare interview with The Associated Press, telling interviewers his story should not be published unless he was able to secure asylum outside China or if he disappeared again. Zhisheng, who has been missing for almost two years in total, has not been seen since giving the interview. Yahoo!/The Associated Press (1/10) The Guardian (London) (1/10) LinkedInFacebookTwitterEmail this Story
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  • Spain rejects Basque cease-fire offer
    Spanish officials say a unilateral cease-fire called by the Basque separatist group ETA on Monday is not sufficient to ensure an end to decades of conflict. ETA called for political negotiations on Basque independence and international verification of the cease-fire. Spanish authorities say the government will continue to demand an unconditional surrender. The New York Times (free registration) (1/10) LinkedInFacebookTwitterEmail this Story
  • Turkish monument meant to heal divisions sows them anew
    Construction has been stopped on a highly symbolic monument in Turkey because political leaders say it is being built on the site of a 16th century military emplacement and is too close to an 11th century Islamic shrine. The 35-meter-tall work of a divided human figure represents the pain of separation and hope of reconciliation between Turks and Armenians. The Toronto Star/The Associated Press (1/10) LinkedInFacebookTwitterEmail this Story
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Posted by biginla at 7:59 PM GMT
French-American Chamber of Commerce
Topic: france, labor, biodun iginla
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Dear Biodun,


On behalf of the Board of Directors and the President of the French American Chamber of Commerce, I want to say THANK YOU for your support and participation in 2010 and wish you:
Bonne Année 2011!

This will be an exciting year as we officially launch the Year of France in Minnesota. Look for our coming events with our partner organizations (Alliance Francaise, Minnesota International Center and Tours Minneapolis Sister Cities) at FACCMN.COM.

More than ever, the French American Chamber of Commerce is here to help you with your business. Feel free to contact us at info@faccmn.com or by phone at 612.208.7612 for more information.


We would also like to thank our President's Circle Sponsor for 2011:

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I look forward to working with you in the new year!


Sebastien Tavenas
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This email was sent to biginla@yahoo.com by faccmn@gmail.com  
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Posted by biginla at 7:56 PM GMT
MediaBistro News Feed by Biodun Iginla, BBC News and MediaBistro New York City : NY : USA | Jan 10,
Topic: media, mediabistro, bbc news

Morning Media Newsfeed

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

 

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JaredLeeLoughner100x100.jpgTV News Chiefs Say Don't Blame Media For Tucson(B&C) 
As the wake of the Jan. 8 shootings in Arizona focused attention towards how the media may or may not contribute to the political vitriol in America, several major TV news division chiefs said Monday that it is a stretch to blame the media for the tragedy.Global Grind: Fox News president Roger Ailes told Global Grind founder Russell Simmons, "I told all of our guys, 'Shut up, tone it down, make your argument intellectually. You don't have to do it with bombast.' I hope the other side does that." Mediaite: Jon Stewart took a meaningful, measured, and earnest approach to the current political finger pointing over the incident, which he called "as predictable as it is dispiriting." While Stewart didn't blame toxic discourse, he did seek a distinction "between ramblings of crazy people and the way we talk to each other on TV." TheWrap.com: Almost from the moment Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-Ariz.) was shot through the brain by a political extremist Saturday, the media has been wringing its hands over the toxic power of partisan news talk. But despite the remorse, the economics of cable news and talk radio suggest that nothing is going to stop the hyper-partisan approach that has fuelled the rise of Fox News, MSNBC, and the career of Glenn Beck.

Time Inc. Merges Print and Digital Corporate Sales (AdAge) 
In one more step for the integration of print and digital media, Time Inc. combined the operations that had handled its largest advertisers in each medium.

ABC News Chief Ben Sherwood: No More Layoffs, But Change Needs To Come To The Broadcast News Division (TVNewser) 
New ABC News president Ben Sherwood kicked off ABC's day of presentations at the Television Critics Association winter press tour in Pasadena by telling the assembled critics there were no more layoffs in store at the news division, which saw hundreds of employees leave the company through buyouts and layoffs last year. Sherwood also said he and Disney-ABC TV chief Anne Sweeney were interested in finding some sort of partner for ABC News, be it a cable network like Bloomberg TV or a digital partner like Facebook.

 

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Steve Jobs To Join Murdoch On Stage To Unveil iPad Paper (Yahoo! News/ The Cutline) 
Rupert Murdoch will unveil The Daily, News Corp.'s much-anticipated iPad newspaper, onstage this month with Apple chief executive Steve Jobs, The Cutline has learned. The two media moguls will appear together at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, according to a source familiar with preparations for the event. The launch date is expected to be Jan. 19, but that may change.

 

A 'Sign' Of Bad Things To Come For CNN's Parker (NY Post) 
CNN yanked Parker Spitzer off the network's enormous Sixth Avenue billboard Monday just hours after reports hit that the co-hosts were headed for a breakup. Eliot Spitzer's co-host, Kathleen Parker, may soon share the billboard's fate.

SmartMoney Reboots For New Economic Realities (minOnline) 
Now powered solely by The Wall Street Journal, a redesigned and retooledSmartMoney magazine premieres Tuesday. The personal-finance title says its new look and content reflect changes in the economic reality of uncertain markets and global change.

 

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Bloomberg To Rank The Rich (WSJ) 
Bloomberg LP is preparing to launch a ranking of the world's billionaires, capitalizing on the swelling numbers of wealthy individuals around the world and taking direct aim at the core franchise of Forbes magazine.

After 67 Years, Adam Young Inc. To Cease Operations (TVSpy) 
Adam Young Inc., the television-representation firm founded in 1944 and the cornerstone of what would become TV-ownership group Young Broadcasting, will cease operations at the end of the month.

WikiLeaks Volunteer Hires Lawyers In Twitter Fight (CNET / Privacy Inc.) 
An ex-WikiLeaks volunteer has hired American lawyers to oppose the U.S. government's efforts to obtain the contents of her Twitter account, CNET has learned. Birgitta Jónsdóttir, a member of the Icelandic parliament who helped with WikiLeaks' release of a classified U.S. military video, is being represented by the San Francisco-based Electronic Frontier Foundation. ReadWriteWeb: The official Twitter account for WikiLeaks posted a press release Monday evening drawing a comparison between the controversial rhetoric from public figures that some believe contributed to the attempted assassination Saturday of Arizona congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords and the even more explicit calls from public officials for violence against WikiLeaks spokesperson Julian Assange and others.FishbowlLA: Los Angeles Times blogger Andrew Malcolm does a weekly podcast with fellow blogger Melissa Clouthier at Liberty Pundits. Clouthier is the registrant of the domain name JulianAssangeMustDie.com.

 

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When YouTube Sensation Ted Williams Was Removed From YouTube (CNET) 
In its own story of how the video became a viral string-puller, The Columbus Dispatch explained that a poster called Ritchey uploaded it to YouTube with the message: "Throwing this video from The Columbus Dispatch out there, hoping we can find this talent a place to call home." Rather than celebrate that one of its stories was being promoted, the Dispatch had YouTube take the video down, citing copyright.

 

Let Go After 26 Years, WTNH Meteorologist Geoff Fox Takes Solace In 'Surreal' Level Of Viewer Support (TVSpy) 
Last week, veteran meteorologist Geoff Fox was surprised to learn that his employer of 26 years -- WTNH in Hartford, Conn. -- was not going to renew his contract. For Fox, the shock that he felt while learning this news has been dwarfed by what followed.

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Last week's Consumer Electronics Show highlighted a wide range of new Internet-connected TVs, Blu-ray players, and other devices, but more important than the devices themselves is the effect that Internet connectivity brings to the consumer experience of watching video.

 

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Google TV Jailbreak Opens The Doors To Developers, Hulu (ReadWriteWeb) 
At the end of November, Android developer Howard Harte announced that he would give $1,000 to the first person who could jailbreak the Google TV. Just over a month later, the $1,000 has been collected and Harte says he is now "having a lot of fun" coding on his hacked unit…and likely watching some free Hulu.

 

FT Tilt Tilts Coverage Toward Emerging Markets (WebNewser) 
Tilt is bad in pinball, but Financial Times hopes it's good when it comes to covering emerging markets, as the newspaper announced the debut of FT Tilt, a premium online financial news and analysis service covering that sector.

PBS SoCal Plans To Hire, May Open L.A. Office (LA Observed)
KOCE president and CEO Mel Rogers still can't quite believe that his little Orange County station that nearly went off the air a few years ago has suddenly become the public broadcasting powerhouse of Southern California.

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Posted by biginla at 3:03 PM GMT
Are words to blame?
Topic: gabrielle giffords, bbc news

by Biodun Iginla, BBC News and the Economist

Jan 9th 2011, 22:16 by The Economist online

The attempted assassination of Gabrielle Giffords, a congresswoman from Arizona, has sparked a fiery debate about the dangers of heated political rhetoric

THE motive for the bloodthirsty attack on Gabrielle Giffords, a Democrat embarking on her third term in Congress, remains opaque. The suspected gunman, Jared Lee Loughner, appears to be something of a paranoid, right-wing, anti-government conspiracy-theorist. But his politics are hardly coherent: he is interested, according to his MySpace page, in both the Communist Manifesto and Mein Kampf. But his rampage on Saturday outside a supermarket in Tucson, in which a judge, a nine-year-old child, a congressional aide and three senior citizens were killed, and 14 others, including Mrs Giffords, were injured, is already having a political impact.

Eric Cantor, the number two in the Republican hierarchy in the House of Representatives, said that the coming week’s legislative agenda, including the new Republican majority’s much-publicised effort to repeal Barack Obama’s health-care reforms, would be postponed so that Congress could take stock of the shooting. His boss, John Boehner, the new speaker of the House, tried to defuse any partisan tensions over the tragedy, issuing a statement arguing that an attack on any member of Congress constituted an attack on all of them. But several Democrats, including Dick Durbin, the party’s number two in the Senate, have argued that wayward souls might find justification for such appalling acts in the pugnacious rhetoric many politicians use on the campaign trail.

As evidence that the right has gone too far, left-wingers point to a campaign website run by Sarah Palin, the Republican vice-presidential candidate in 2008, which at the past election had marked congressional seats she hoped the Republicans could wrest from the Democrats with cross-hair symbols, as if in the sights of a gun. They also cite one of Mrs Palin’s gung-ho slogans: “Don’t retreat, reload”. Mrs Giffords herself said of Mrs Palin’s map last year, “When people do that, they’ve got to realise there’s consequences to that.” Mrs Giffords’s father, when asked if her daughter had had any enemies, replied “the whole Tea Party”, referring to the right-wing activists who helped to deliver the Republicans their resounding victory in November’s election, and only narrowly failed to unseat Mrs Giffords herself.

Needless to say, both tea-party activists and their inspiration, Mrs Palin, reject the idea that they somehow contributed to the shooting. Mr Loughner, tea-partiers in Tucson say, has no known ties to any local group. What is more, points out the leader of one national network of tea-party outfits, it is not really clear he agreed with their politics. Mrs Palin, meanwhile, issued a statement of sympathy to the victims; a spokeswoman condemned any attempt to tie her to the massacre as “repulsive”. In other words, the debate about whether partisan rancour had anything to do with the shooting is itself becoming rancourous. Left-wing bloggers talk of the atrocity as a wish come true for the tea-party; right-wing bloggers retort that the left is exploiting the death and injury of innocents for political gain.

It is hard to see any resolute action emerging from this shouting match. America’s protections for free speech—which Mrs Giffords herself helped remind the world of last week when she read out the first amendment to the constitution during the ceremonies surrounding the seating of the new Congress—preclude any legal limits on violent talk. It is testimony to the strength of America’s gun lobby (and another constitutional safeguard) that there has been little talk of any measures to curb gun ownership as a result of the incident. Mrs Palin and a few others may find themselves on the back foot for a few weeks, and may indeed tone down their rhetoric for a spell. But after a spate of hand-wringing, Congress is likely to do little more than strengthen its security arrangements. That will come a little late for Mrs Giffords, who was shot in the head at close range, and remains in critical condition.

(Photo credit: AFP)


Posted by biginla at 1:45 PM GMT
DailyMe World News by Biodun Iginla, BBC News and The Economist, London, UK
Topic: bbc news, biodun iginla, the eco
Frozen South: Could be days before thaw comes

Frozen South: Could be days before thaw comes

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Posted by biginla at 1:39 PM GMT
TODAY'S TOP HEADLINES from Dealbook by Biodun Iginla, BBC News
Topic: dealbook, bbc news, nytimes
TUESDAY, JANUARY 11, 2011

M & A Simon Withdraws $4.5 Billion Offer for Capital Shopping

INVESTMENT BANKING Goldman Sachs to Fine-Tune Its Practices

PRIVATE EQUITY Analysts Tap HMV as a Smart Buyout Bet

HEDGE FUNDS Top Harbinger Official Leaves to Start Own Firm

OFFERINGS CVC Said to Tap Bankers for Nine I.P.O.

LEGAL/REGULATORY S.E.C. Launches Informal Inquiry Into St. Joe

TOP STORY

Facebook's Google Effect To Roger McNamee, the frenzy for a piece of Facebook may portend a boom in private fund-raising that will end badly. 

It is driven by one thing, the Elevation Partners cofounder tells DealBook's Andrew Ross Sorkin: fear of missing out on the next Google initial public offering. 

"Almost every institutional investor screwed up Google's I.P.O by not buying aggressively," he says. "No one wants to repeat that mistake with Facebook." 

But are investors rushing into a bubble armed only with limited information?

For the latest updates, go to dealbook.nytimes.com »

Posted by biginla at 1:34 PM GMT
Australia floods: Brisbane residents urged to evacuate
Topic: australia floods, bbc news

Footage shot by David Jutsum in Toowoomba shows cars being swept away

Related stories

 

by Louise Healy for the BBC's Biodun Iginla

The authorities are urging people to leave parts of Australia's third largest city, Brisbane, which is facing its worst flooding in decades.

The city's mayor has warned that 6,500 homes and businesses are set to flood.

Flash floods have left nine dead and at least 70 missing nearby.

The waters are rising fast; one local official said he saw the river level go up by 1.5m (4ft 10in) in just an hour. Some 200,000 people have been affected across the state by the floods.

The flooding has caused billions of dollars worth of damage.

Start Quote

Today is very significant, tomorrow is bad, and Thursday is going to be devastating for the residents and businesses affected”

Campbell NewmanBrisbane mayor

The Brisbane River snakes its way through the centre of the Queensland state capital, and in places it has burst its banks already, says BBC Australia correspondent Nick Bryant.

Cars have been streaming out of the city and office workers have been fleeing the main business district, while lower lying suburbs have already been inundated by water.

Sandbags have been given out to residents in the city of two million people, as the flooding is expected to peak on Wednesday and Thursday.

Mayor Campbell Newman warned 6,500 homes, businesses and other properties were likely to be flooded by Thursday.

"Today is very significant, tomorrow is bad, and Thursday is going to be devastating for the residents and businesses affected," he said.

State Premier Anna Bligh urged people to prepare themselves: "For those who are living in some of the lower lying areas and the identified suburbs, now is the time to be making whatever preparations you can, and I would encourage you to be overly cautious.

Plane floats away in Toowoomba floodwaterA plane floats away in Toowoomba floodwaters

"It's better to be inconvenienced and find that your preparations were not necessary, than the alternative.

"I think the entire city of Brisbane, the Ipswich region and most of the south east, needs to prepare ourselves for enormous disruption."

One Brisbane resident told the BBC that supermarkets were already running out of food.

"I now live in Indooroopilly, a suburb in Brisbane and unfortunately now it has been listed as high-risk area," said Jiao Yu.

"I went to the supermarket just now and almost all the food has been taken - all people I saw on the streets seemed to be anxious, and shops and railways here have begun to stop running."

'Darkest hour'

Start Quote

I am in one of the areas being told to evacuate, but as I live on a hill, I am staying put. We are cut-off”

Jo GristBurpengary, north of Brisbane

In Toowoomba, just west of Brisbane, flash floods killed at least nine people with at least 70 missing.

A raging torrent of water hit Toowoomba on Monday without warning, following more than 36 hours of incessant rain.

A huge search-and-rescue operation was mounted, with helicopters winching people to safety, as many residents clinging to trees or railings for their lives, or trapped in cars or on the roofs of buildings.

At least two of the dead were children, and Prime Minister Julia Gillard has warned that the death toll is likely to rise.

Ms Bligh called the flash floods Queensland's "darkest hour" since the floods began at the end of November.

"This has been a night of extraordinary events," Ms Bligh told a news conference on Tuesday.

"We've seen acts of extreme bravery and courage from our emergency workers. We know they're out on the front line desperately trying to begin their search and rescue efforts, and we know we have people stranded and people lost," she said.

She called the event "a complete freak of nature", saying the flooding had come "out of nowhere".

Toowoomba resident Charlie Green told the BBC he was stranded by the floods.

Click to play

The BBC's Nick Bryant: "The authorities thought they were getting in control'

"It would be ironic if it wasn't so tragic," he said. "Toowoomba sits in the cradle of an extinct volcano about 2,000ft (610m) above sea level, and we have just endured 10 years of drought, unable even to wash our cars with town water for the last several years.

"We are going to sit tight until we're sure that it's safe to move around. The flooded creeks are within a mile of our house so we can't get anywhere.

"We can't even get down the hill. We'll be stocking up on supplies from local shops."

The flooding has been so widespread that while some communities are still bracing themselves for the worst, in others the clean-up is well under way.

The forecast is for more rain to come, and there are reports of flooding in neighbouring New South Wales.

Ms Gillard has warned that the recovery will take a long time.

Queensland floods map

Are you in Toowoomba or Brisbane? Have you been affected by the flooding in Queensland? You can send us your stories and experiences using the form below.

Send your pictures and videos to yourpics@bbc.co.uk or text them to61124 (UK) or +44 7725 100 100 (International). If you have a large file you can upload here.

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Posted by biginla at 1:15 PM GMT
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

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