Bomb kills 64 in Pakistan’s Quetta






QUETTA, Pakistan (Reuters) – Sixty-four people including school children died on Saturday in a bomb attack carried out by extremists from Pakistan’s Sunni Muslim majority, police said.


A spokesman for Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, a Sunni group, claimed responsibility for the bomb in Quetta, which caused casualties in the town’s main bazaar, a school and a computer center. Police said most of the victims were Shi’ites.






Burned school bags and books were strewn around.


“The explosion was caused by an improvised explosive device fitted to a motorcycle,” said Wazir Khan Nasir, deputy inspector general of police in Quetta.


“This is a continuation of terrorism against Shi’ites.”


“I saw many bodies of women and children,” said an eyewitness at a hospital. “At least a dozen people were burned to death by the blast.”


Most Western intelligence agencies have regarded the Pakistani Taliban and al Qaeda as the gravest threat to nuclear-armed Pakistan, a strategic U.S. ally.


But Pakistani law enforcement officials say Lashkar-e-Jhangvi has become a formidable force.


TENSIONS


Last month the group said it carried out a bombing in Quetta that killed nearly 100 people, one of Pakistan’s worst sectarian attacks. Thousands of Shi’ites protested in several cities after that attack.


Pakistani intelligence officials say extremist groups, led by Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, have escalated their bombings and shootings of Shi’ites to trigger violence that would pave the way for a Sunni theocracy in U.S.-allied Pakistan.


More than 400 Shi’ites were killed in Pakistan last year, many by hitmen or bombs, and the perpetrators are almost never caught. Some hardline Shi’ite groups have hit back by killing Sunni clerics.


The growing sectarian violence has hurt the credibility of the government, which has already faced criticism ahead of elections due in May for its inability to tackle corruption and economic stagnation.


The schism between Sunnis and Shi’ites developed after the Prophet Muhammad died in 632 when his followers could not agree on a successor.


Emotions over the issue are highly potent even today, pushing some countries, including Iraq five years ago, to the brink of civil war.


Pakistan is nowhere near that stage but officials worry that Sunni extremist groups have succeeded in dramatically ratcheting up tensions and provoking revenge attacks in their bid to destabilize the country.


(Reporting by Jibran Ahmed; Writing by Michael Georgy; Editing by Stephen Powell)


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Kate Upton says body shut down after Antarctic bikini shoot






(Reuters) – Swimsuit model Kate Upton said on Tuesday her body shut down after she posed in a skimpy bikini in Antarctica for Sports Illustrated magazine.


Upton, wearing only a white bikini bottom and an unzipped white parka, was picked as the cover girl for the annual Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue, unveiled on Monday, for the second consecutive year.






“It was freezing,” Upton, 20, told NBC’s morning TV show “Today” on Tuesday. “I’m from Florida, so it wasn’t easy for me.


“When I came back, I was losing my hearing and eyesight. My body was shutting down because it was working so hard to keep me warm.”


Upton joins celebrity models including Elle Macpherson, Christie Brinkley and Tyra Banks to appear more than once on the swimsuit issue‘s cover.


M.J. Day, a senior editor for Sports Illustrated, told Reuters that Upton braved temperatures as low as 24 degrees Fahrenheit (-4 Celsius) and wind chills as low as -20 Fahrenheit (-29 Celsius).


“We should name a passageway after her down there,” said Day, who accompanied Upton on the frigid shoot. “She braved six days in a bikini while we were head-to-toe in jackets … No one will ever accuse her of being a whiny model, ever.”


This year’s 17 models were part of photo shoots that stretched across all seven continents.


(Reporting by Eric Kelsey in Los Angeles; Editing by Jill Serjeant and Mohammad Zargham)


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Pistorius, girlfriend were planning future – uncle






JOHANNESBURG, Feb 16 (Reuters) – South African athlete Oscar Pistorius was planning a future with his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp, who he is accused of murdering, his uncle said on Saturday.


“They had plans together and Oscar was happier in his private life than he had been for a long time,” his uncle Anthony Pistorius said in a statement.






Pistorius has been charged with the premeditated murder of Steenkamp on Thursday. He denies it.


(Reporting by Ed Cropley; Editing by Angus MacSwan)


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Wireless Spectrum is Invisible River of Gold








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Feb. 15 (Bloomberg) — Spectrum is one of the most important parts of your digital life that you probably know very little about. So, what is it? And why are wireless carriers so obsessed with it? Bloomberg Businessweek’s Sam Grobart explains.










Businessweek.com — Top News





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Havana restores monument to victims of USS Maine






HAVANA (AP) — It was a little before 10 p.m. that February night in 1898 when a fiery explosion roiled the normally calm waters of Havana Harbor, blowing out windows in the city and sinking the USS Maine to the bottom of the bay, just the mast and some twisted metal wreckage left to poke above the waves.


Havana‘s monument to the 266 U.S. sailors who died that night was dedicated 27 years later as a tribute to lasting Cuban-American friendship, a thank-you for Washington‘s help in shedding the yoke of Spanish colonial rule, which was known for its cruelty.






The years since have been unkind to the twin-columned monument, and to U.S.-Cuba ties. But while relations between Washington and Havana remain in deep freeze, the monument, at least, is now getting a facelift.


The restoration project is fraught with symbolism, with the monument’s scars telling the story of more than a century of shifts in the complex relationship and changing interpretations of the marble structure.


“Of the monuments in Havana, that’s one that really is struggling to contain all of these different historical episodes,” said Timothy Hyde, a historian of Cuban architecture at Harvard University’s Graduate School of Design. “It doesn’t just symbolize any longer this single moment of the sinking of the Maine. It symbolizes all these periodic moments of antipathy and hostility and challenges between the two nation-states.”


Soon after the USS Maine’s suddenly sank off the coast of this Caribbean capital 115 years ago Friday, the United States accused Spanish colonial authorities of responsibility in the blast.


“Remember the Maine!” became a rallying cry in the States, and after the U.S. victory in the three-month Spanish-American war, Spain ceded control over Cuba, Puerto Rico, the Philippines and Guam.


The Maine monument was inaugurated in 1925 and bears the names of all 266 sailors. Two statues standing shoulder-to-shoulder at the base represent a maternal America guiding the maiden Cuba into independence.


Words etched into the marble quote an 1898 U.S. congressional resolution recognizing a free Cuba, and the massive bronze eagle that long capped the monument faced due north to symbolize Washington’s promise to return home after helping the island break from Spain.


“To me it signifies a legacy of loyalty … friendship between two peoples,” said Julio Dominguez Santos, the monument’s night watchman for 17 years.


But things didn’t work out as that earlier Congress had hoped.


Many Cubans resented the 1901 Platt Amendment, which said Washington retained the right to intervene militarily as a condition of ending the postwar U.S. occupation.


The U.S. did in fact intervene several times, and American business and mafia gangs came to dominate many aspects of the island in the run-up to the 1959 revolution — leading many Cubans to feel like the eagle had never flown back north.


Soon after Fidel Castro’s rebels marched victoriously into Havana, the tense marriage rapidly careened toward divorce and diplomatic ties were severed in 1961. Following the doomed, U.S.-backed Bay of Pigs invasion months later, the more than 3-ton eagle was ripped from the monument during an anti-American protest and splintered into pieces.


“The eagle was torn down after the triumph of the revolution because it’s the symbol of imperialism, the United States, and the revolution ended all that,” said Ernesto Moreno, a 77-year-old Havana resident who remembers waking up one day to see the statue gone. “I found it to be a very good thing, and I think most Cubans agreed at the time.”


Castro’s government added a new inscription to the base of the broken monument alleging the Maine victims had been “sacrificed by imperialist greed in its zeal to seize the island of Cuba,” a reference to speculation that the U.S. deliberately blew up the Maine to justify a war against Spain.


Historians say the explosion was probably an accidental ignition of the Maine’s own munitions, but the conspiracy theory still commonly circulates in Cuba.


The Communist Party newspaper Granma, for example, has written in the past that the Maine victims were “immolated to serve as a pretext for American intervention that in 1898 prevented the island from gaining true independence” — ignoring the fact that Cuban rebels had failed to oust the Spanish on their own for decades.


A Granma article published on Friday’s anniversary was less certain, but still said American self-sabotage “cannot be ruled out, given the interest among the more aggressive imperialist circles in instigating war.”


The Maine eagle’s head was mysteriously delivered to Swiss diplomats, who had agreed to act as protectors of U.S. property in Cuba. Today it hangs in a conference room at the U.S. Interests Section, which Washington maintains in Havana instead of an embassy.


After relations were partially re-established in 1977, longtime foreign service officer Wayne Smith, who had been in Havana in 1961, returned and arranged to see the body, wings and tail, which are currently out of sight in a musty storage room of the Havana City History Museum.


“I have been the faithful custodian of the body,” City Historian Eusebio Leal, told The Associated Press. “Smith told me that until the body and the head are reunited, there won’t be good relations between Cuba and the United States.”


U.S. diplomats also possess the monument’s original eagle, toppled by a hurricane in 1926. Since 1954 that earlier bird has presided over the immaculate gardens of the Interests Section chief’s official residence.


A plaque at the base calls the eagle “a symbol of the enduring friendship” between Cuba and the U.S.


“I’m just happy we have it. I don’t know how it got here. Somebody got ahold of it, saw it and gave it to us,” said John Caulfield, the Interests Section chief since 2011.


Coincidentally, the U.S. State Department recently sent two specialists down to repair the first eagle, which was cracked and tarnished green.


Like many structures in Havana, the monument on the seafront Malecon boulevard had become seedy from decades of neglect. Marble lion heads were damaged or looted, and the fountains were used as trash receptacles by passers-by.


The repair seems to be part of a general restoration of hundreds of monuments by Leal’s office, unrelated to any change in U.S.-Cuban ties.


Workers in blue jumpers recently removed scaffolding that shrouded the columns for months, revealing gleaming-white marble scrubbed clean of grime. Gone are the rusty stains beneath the two 10-inch guns that were salvaged from the Maine. The statues are a lustrous bronze again after corrosive salt air turned them bright green.


Leal said his office intends to finish remaining tasks such as getting the fountains working and re-landscaping two adjacent plazas in the coming months.


But amid the ongoing renovation, a return to the monument’s original spirit of friendship seems unlikely — at least for now.


“Certainly we have as much wish for that to be true today as we did at the time,” Caulfield said of the inscription declaring that Cuba has the right to be free. “I hope that we and the Cubans will see a new relationship with the United States that allows those words to be true.”


Leal said he also hopes for warmer ties, but first Washington must end the 51-year economic embargo and abolish “anti-Cuban” laws.


Can he envision a bronze eagle resuming its perch someday atop the monument?


“On the occasion of a friendly visit by a U.S. president,” Leal said. “I wish President Obama would be the one to do that.”


___


Associated Press writer Anne-Marie Garcia in Havana contributed to this report.


___


Peter Orsi on Twitter: www.twitter.com/Peter_Orsi


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Oscar’s oldest nominee, Emmanuelle Riva, on “Amour”: it’s a gift in the last stage of my life






LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) – The life of an artist is full of surprises, and none has been bigger for French actress Emanuelle Riva than the one that has come late in life. The response has been overwhelming to her performance in this year’s meditative “Amour,” which brought her the first Oscar nomination of her career – and makes her the oldest Best Actress nominee ever, at 85.


Riva was best known previously for her role in the 1959 French New Wave classic, “Hiroshima Mon Amour,” directed by Alain Resnais. In Michael Haneke‘s “Amour,” she plays a wife declining inexorably toward death, losing her physical and intellectual grasp.






The loving husband who cares for her is played by Jean-Louis Trintignant, whose breakout role was playing Brigitte Bardot’s young suitor in the original version of “And God Created Woman.”


After a lifetime of steady roles in France, Riva has spent the better part of the past year responding to global interview requests and accepting accolades, including a New York Film Critics Circle award in January that led to her first trip ever to New York. The Oscars will be her first trip to Los Angeles. It will also take place on her 86th birthday.


TheWrap spoke by phone to Riva from her family home in Les Vosges, a region in eastern France.


Thank you for making the time to speak to us.


Well, I am horribly tired. I don’t have a moment to rest. They don’t leave me in peace. But, my word, I said I’d do it.


Have you been surprised by the response to “Amour”?


It surprises us, this much success. I didn’t expect so much interest. But it’s not only to me, it’s to the film, those who worked in the film. We are very happy for this huge public response.


How did Michael Haneke approach you about doing the role?


It’s not me who decided. It’s Haneke who decided. When a director like him chooses someone, he is so precise. He knew me from “Hiroshima Mon Amour.” I was 30 years old. He hadn’t seen me since that time. And he wanted to meet me. It was done very classically. A director looks for an actor, he has a vision, we met.


And then what happened?


We did a rehearsal with the scene in the kitchen – when she begins to depart, to go elsewhere. the regard that’s no longer there. The absence. It’s terrible. He looked at it closely. He wanted to see me on the screen. He said I touched him deeply in this scene.


What did you think of the role when you read it?


When I read the script I found it so extraordinary.


I had the profound certitude that I could do it. I felt that at that moment in my life as an actress, I was immediately capable of doing it. If he didn’t give me the role, I would have been so sad.


Were you afraid of confronting this theme of mortality?


Afraid? No, not at all. Why would I be afraid? This role presents the subject of the film that touches each of us, every human on the planet. As an actress, it’s so exciting to be engaged in a role like this. I would never have felt fear for this. If an actress is afraid, she should head for the door right away.


I was so happy in the work. Every day, every day. Two months of work. It was such happiness-a feeling of complete fullness. Of life, of death, of love. I never lost the excitement of the work. I was so infinitely happy during this shoot. So serious, but it wasn’t sad at all.


What was it like creating that intimacy with Jean-Louis Trintignant?


I’d met him in Rome many years ago when we were young, but I don’t know him well. This is the heart of our work. We meet other people we don’t know, and immediately we are in complete intimacy. I didn’t do anything. I just was there, and him also.


We started with the kitchen scene after the concert at the Champs Elysee Theatre. I seem to recall that scene. We were facing each other at the table as if we’d been for years. I just lived it. This is what’s so marvelous. When I don’t know someone, I’d say I have more freedom as an actress. Sometimes we surprise ourselves, but one can surprise the director with how deep you can go. Haneke – he is fantastic – he was the music of the film.


What direction did Haneke give you?


There was one direction, not 36. From there we had a lot of freedom. He’s not tyrannical. His direction was very simple, very rigorous. We were doing a scene and he said, “It’s very nice – very sweet, very tender – but it’s too tender. No sentimentality. From here on in, no sentimentality.” This was the key that opened the horizon of the film. Once I heard that, it became much more clear. I said, “I get it.” This husband and wife each have very strong personalities. But it is not expressed in sentimentality.


How did you react to the Oscar nomination?


I found out in New York, I was there for the critics circle award. The 10th of January, early morning. My neighbors who help me when I travel shouted for joy. I was barely awake. They were screaming, “You’re nominated!” I stayed very calm. I got up and said, “I’m not nominated.” Of course I was very happy.


And how do you feel about coming to the Oscars?


I am very calm in the face of all of this. I am 85 years old. I am not going to flop about like a fish. What makes me nervous is these hours on the plane. Frankly, it seems like a hell of a journey to me. It’s so long. But I will do things to the end. I will fall in someone’s arms if I need to.


This adventure, this gift, in the last stage of my life – it’s not easy to measure up – but it’s the exact moment in my life when I could do it. Before would have been too early. Later might have been too late. But it’s a great treasure to participate in this film.


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Catholic bishops ask Congress for contraceptives reprieve






WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. Roman Catholic bishops stepped up their battle against President Obama‘s contraceptives policy on Friday by urging Congress to use its fiscal debate to free religious employers from a mandate requiring insurance coverage for birth control.


In a letter to all 535 members of Congress, Archbishop William Lori of Baltimore suggested two provisions to extend existing federal conscience protections to the contraceptives mandate and strengthen the ability of opponents to seek vindication in federal court.






“The federal government‘s respect for believers and people of conscience no longer measures up to the treatment Americans have a right to expect from their elected representatives,” wrote Lori, who chairs the Ad Hoc Committee on Religious Liberty of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.


“I urge you in the strongest terms possible to incorporate the provisions … in the upcoming legislative proposals to fund the federal government,” Lori added.


The conference also plans to send out an action alert via email and text message calling on supporters across the country to visit local congressional offices next week when lawmakers are home on break.


Obama’s 2010 Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act requires employers to provide health insurance coverage through group coverage plans for all contraceptives approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, including the so-called “morning after” pill.


The archbishop’s letter underscored a growing sense of urgency among church leaders over the birth control coverage rules that are due to take effect on August 1 for religiously affiliated employers including universities, hospitals and charities.


The bishops have tried several times to get Congress to act over the past year, amid numerous protests and more than 40 lawsuits by religious groups and employers. But Lori’s letter marks their first attempt to use the debates over deficit reduction, the debt limit and government funding.


“To many people, this looks like the main must-pass vehicle going through Congress this year,” said Richard Doerflinger, associate director of the conference’s Secretariat of Pro-Life Activities.


The new healthcare law contains an exemption for houses of worship but has come under attack from Catholic leaders, Protestant Evangelicals and other social conservatives who also want religious nonprofit organizations and religious business owners exempted.


The Catholic Church regards contraception as a sin and birth control products like the morning-after pill a form of abortion. In a development that could intensify the debate, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control reported this week that growing numbers of American women are using the morning-after pill.


The Obama administration offered its opponents a compromise on February 1 by proposing new regulations that would allow religious employers to avoid paying for birth control coverage for their workers. Instead, insurers would provide the benefits free through separate coverage plans.


The president of the bishops conference, Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York, rejected the plan as inadequate last week.


Doerflinger said church efforts to get favorable language on contraceptives included in funding legislation follows a congressional precedent for including conscience provisions in appropriations bills in the U.S. House of Representatives.


But he acknowledged that the bishops could face an uphill fight on Capitol Hill. “The pressure everywhere is for just trying to address the money issues,” he said. “That’s why we need to remind members of Congress that these issues of fundamental rights are also pending and won’t go away.”


(Reporting by David Morgan; Editing by Ros Krasny and Paul Simao)


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Q&A: Currency the latest threat to global economy






LONDON (AP) — The world economy faces a new threat. Instead of a banking collapse or too much debt, fears are growing that countries are using their currencies as an economic weapon.


History suggests that’s never a good thing.






If too many countries try to weaken their currencies for economic gain — sparking a “currency war” — that could stifle business confidence and investment, sow turmoil in financial markets and derail a fragile global economy.


As financial representatives from the world’s leading 20 industrial and developing nations gather for a meeting in Moscow this weekend, those concerns are being openly discussed.


“All the members of G20 need to deliver on a commitment to move towards a market-determined exchange rate and refrain from competitive devaluation,” U.S. Treasury Undersecretary Lael Brainard warned Friday.


Why is everyone talking about currencies?


— Since the start of the financial crisis, central banks around the world have been trying to stimulate their economies by keeping interest rates extremely low. The goal is to encourage consumers and businesses to borrow and spend more. One way central banks drive down rates is to use their power to print money to buy up large quantities of bonds. But by boosting the amount of currency in circulation, there is a side effect: it can drive down the value of that currency relative to others.


As a country’s currency falls, its exports become cheaper, while those of its neighbors become relatively more expensive.


Japan, the world’s third-largest economy, is currently under the harshest spotlight. To get its economy motoring again after a two-decade bout of stagnation, the government has said it would like to see inflation move higher. Markets have interpreted this as a signal that Japan’s central bank is prepared to take actions that would result in driving down the yen, to boost exports and also put upward pressure on prices. Earlier this week, the yen fell to a 21-month low against the dollar and a near three-year trough against the euro.


So is Japan actively trying to weaken the yen?


— Yes and no. Though it’s not directly intervening in the foreign exchange markets by selling yen and buying other currencies, strong comments from the new Japanese government have convinced markets that the Bank of Japan will create more money. Japan’s Finance Minister Taro Aso insists the government isn’t focused on exchange rates, but he has noted that the weakening yen has “brought huge benefits to the export sector” and that the world “has been awed” by the recent surge in share prices.


Why is that bad?


— A falling yen will help exporters, such as Sony and Toyota, and boost Japan’s economy. And it will it tend to push prices – and ultimately wages — higher. But if other countries respond to the falling yen by devaluing their currencies — to maintain the competitiveness of their own exports — Japan will be back to square one and the world economy could suffer.


Sharp fluctuations in the value of currencies can hurt business confidence and investment. Prices for imported raw materials and components would be volatile, profits will be hard to come by as prices fluctuate wildly and the value of any investment a company makes in another country could quickly be wiped out.


Who’s been feeling the effect of Japan’s actions so far?


— The euro, the single currency used by the 17-strong group of European Union countries, has seen the biggest move on the foreign exchange markets. As the region moved on from its crippling debt crisis last summer, the euro has slowly gained in value. But since the change of government in Japan, its value against leading currencies such as the yen and U.S. dollar has shot up — last December it was worth 113.19 yen and $ 1.29 and now it’s at 124.93 yen and $ 1.33.


A rise in the value of the euro will do little to help the eurozone’s businesses — and will hardly help getting it growing again. Figures Thursday showed that the economic output of the region shrank at an annualized rate of around 2.5 percent in the last quarter of 2012.


What’s been the reaction from other major economies?


— Politicians have voiced concerns about the euro’s rise versus other major currencies — most notably French President Francois Hollande, who indicated he was open to calls for a more managed exchange rate. European Central Bank President Mario Draghi said last week that the bank will monitor the economic impact of the euro’s rising value. Several analysts took that to mean the ECB could cut interest rates to bolster growth, which in theory could weaken the euro — an indirect tit-for-tat response to the yen’s fall, some say.


Earlier this week, the volatility in the currency markets prompted the Group of Seven leading industrial nations, which includes the U.S, Germany as well as Japan, to warn that volatile movements in exchange rates could adversely hit the global economy. The group reaffirmed its commitment to market-driven exchange rates.


Might other countries try to manipulate their currencies in response to Japan?


— There is no sign of that — so far. Speaking in Moscow, International Monetary Fund Director Christine Lagarde dismissed the possibility of an international currency conflict, saying that “the current talk of currency war is overblown.”


But a country fixing the value of its currency is not without precedent.


In Sept. 2011, Switzerland took action to arrest the rise of its currency, the Swiss franc. The rise was triggered by the debt crisis in the eurozone — investors were looking for somewhere safe to park their cash and the Swiss franc has traditionally fulfilled that role. The Swiss intervention was viewed as an attempt to protect the country’s exporters.


U.S. politicians have for years accused China of keeping its currency, the renminbi, artificially weak in order to industrialize fast. And many countries believe the U.S. long ago abandoned the “strong dollar” policy in a dash for growth.


How bad could a currency war get?


— Since World War II, one of the key objectives of international economic policymaking has been to avoid a repeat of the 1930s, when countries around the world engaged in a tit-for-tat battle with their exchange rates. That decimated global trade, accentuating the depression and providing another catalyst to war.


Assuming the world doesn’t descend into a similar abyss, a currency war can still harm the global economy. For example, central banks, particularly in the developing world, may resort to controlling the amount of capital that can be moved out of a country to affect exchange rates.


“Increasing impediments to the free flow of capital might be thought to lower the potential growth of the world economy,” said Stephen Lewis, chief economist at Monument Securities.


Can the world’s leaders and central bankers calm the situation?


— No doubt, a communique will emerge from this weekend’s G-20 meeting in Moscow that pours scorn at competitive devaluations. Most of the action, though, is likely to take place behind-the-scenes with pressure expected to be put on the Japanese finance minister and central bank governor not to allow the yen to fall much further.


“Expect smoke and mirrors,” said Simon Evenett, a professor of economics at the University of St. Gallen in Switzerland and a former World Bank official. “It’s not the G-20′s style to point fingers.”


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In Timbuktu, al-Qaida left behind a manifesto






TIMBUKTU, Mali (AP) — In their hurry to flee last month, al-Qaida fighters left behind a crucial document: Tucked under a pile of papers and trash is a confidential letter, spelling out the terror network’s strategy for conquering northern Mali and reflecting internal discord over how to rule the region.


The document is an unprecedented window into the terrorist operation, indicating that al-Qaida predicted the military intervention that would dislodge it in January and recognized its own vulnerability.






The letter also shows a sharp division within al-Qaida’s Africa chapter over how quickly and how strictly to apply Islamic law, with its senior commander expressing dismay over the whipping of women and the destruction of Timbuktu‘s ancient monuments. It moreover leaves no doubt that despite a temporary withdrawal into the desert, al-Qaida plans to operate in the region over the long haul, and is willing to make short-term concessions on ideology to gain the allies it acknowledges it needs.


The more than nine-page document, found by The Associated Press in a building occupied by the Islamic extremists for almost a year, is signed by Abu Musab Abdul Wadud, the nom de guerre of Abdelmalek Droukdel, the senior commander appointed by Osama bin Laden to run al-Qaida’s branch in Africa. The clear-headed, point-by-point assessment resembles a memo from a CEO to his top managers and lays out for his jihadists in Mali what they have done wrong in months past, and what they need to do to correct their behavior in the future.


Droukdel, the emir of al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb, perhaps surprisingly argues that his fighters moved too fast and too brutally in applying the Islamic law known as Shariah to northern Mali. Comparing the relationship of al-Qaida to Mali as that of an adult to an infant, he urges them to be more gentle, like a parent:


“The current baby is in its first days, crawling on its knees, and has not yet stood on its two legs,” he writes. “If we really want it to stand on its own two feet in this world full of enemies waiting to pounce, we must ease its burden, take it by the hand, help it and support it until its stands.”


He scolds his fighters for being too forceful and warns that if they don’t ease off, their entire project could be thrown into jeopardy: “Every mistake in this important stage of the life of the baby will be a heavy burden on his shoulders. The larger the mistake, the heavier the burden on his back, and we could end up suffocating him suddenly and causing his death.”


The letter is divided into six chapters, three of which the AP recovered, along with loose pages, on the floor of the Ministry of Finance’s Regional Audit Department. Residents say the building, one of several the Islamic extremists took over in this ancient city of sundried, mud-brick homes, was particularly well-guarded with two checkpoints, and a zigzag of barriers at the entrance.


Droukdel’s letter is one of only a few internal documents between commanders of al-Qaida’s African wing that have been found, and possibly the first to be made public, according to University of Toulouse Islamic scholar Mathieu Guidere. It is numbered 33/234, a system reserved for al-Qaida’s internal communications, said Guidere, who helps oversee a database of documents generated by extremists, including Droukdel.


“This is a document between the Islamists that has never been put before the public eye,” said Guidere, who authenticated the letter after being sent a two-page sample. “It confirms something very important, which is the divisions about the strategic conception of the organization. There was a debate on how to establish an Islamic state in North Mali and how to apply Shariah.”


While the pages recovered are not dated, a reference to a conflict in June establishes that the message was sent at most eight months ago.


The tone and timing of the letter suggest that al-Qaida is learning from its mistakes in places like Somalia and Algeria, where attempts to unilaterally impose its version of Islam backfired. They also reflect the influence of the Arab Spring, which showed the power of people to break regimes, and turned on its head al-Qaida’s long-held view that only violence could bring about wholesale change, Guidere said.


The letter suggests a change in the thinking, if not the rhetoric, of Droukdel, who is asking his men to behave with a restraint that he himself is not known for. Droukdel is believed to have overseen numerous suicide bombings, including one in 2007 where al-Qaida fighters bombed the United Nations building and a new government building in Algiers, killing 41 people. The same year, the U.S. designated him a global terrorist and banned Americans from doing business with him.


In a video disseminated on jihadist forums a few months ago, Droukdel dared the French to intervene in Mali and said his men will turn the region into a “graveyard” for foreign fighters, according to a transcript provided by Washington-based SITE Intelligence.


The fanaticism he exhibits in his public statements is in stark contrast to the advice he gives his men on the ground. In his private letter, he acknowledges that al-Qaida is vulnerable to a foreign intervention, and that international and regional pressure “exceeds our military and financial and structural capability for the time being.”


“It is very probable, perhaps certain, that a military intervention will occur … which in the end will either force us to retreat to our rear bases or will provoke the people against us,” writes Droukdel. “Taking into account this important factor, we must not go too far or take risks in our decisions or imagine that this project is a stable Islamic state.”


According to his own online biography, Droukdel was born 44 years ago into a religious family in the Algerian locality of Zayan. He says he enrolled into the technology department of a local university before turning to jihad, and his first job was making explosives for Algerian mujahedeen. In 2006, the group to which he belonged, known as the GSPC, became an arm of al-Qaida, after negotiations with Ayman al-Zawahri, bin Laden’s lieutenant.


As Droukdel rose through the ranks, he came into direct contact with bin Laden, Guidere said.


In the document found in Timbuktu, he cites a letter he received from bin Laden about the al-Hudaybiyah deal, a treaty signed circa 628 by the Prophet Muhammad and the Quraish tribe of Mecca, an agreement with non-Muslims that paved the way for Muslims to return to Mecca.


“The smart Muslim leader would do these kinds of concessions in order to achieve the word of God eventually and to support the religion,” he says.


Perhaps the biggest concession Droukdel urges is for his fighters to slow down in implementing Shariah.


When the Islamic extremists took over northern Mali 10 months ago, they restored order in a time of chaos, much as the Taliban did in Afghanistan, and even created a hotline number for people to report crimes. But whatever goodwill they had built up evaporated when they started to destroy the city’s historic monuments, whip women for not covering up and amputate the limbs of suspected thieves.


“One of the wrong policies that we think you carried out is the extreme speed with which you applied Shariah, not taking into consideration the gradual evolution that should be applied in an environment that is ignorant of religion,” Droukdel writes. “Our previous experience proved that applying Shariah this way, without taking the environment into consideration, will lead to people rejecting the religion, and engender hatred toward the mujahedeen, and will consequently lead to the failure of our experiment.”


Droukdel goes on to cite two specific applications of Shariah that he found problematic. He criticizes the destruction of Timbuktu’s World Heritage-listed shrines, because, as he says, “on the internal front we are not strong.” He also tells the fighters he disapproves of their religious punishment for adulterers — stoning to death — and their lashing of people, “and the fact that you prevented women from going out, and prevented children from playing, and searched the houses of the population.”


“Your officials need to control themselves,” he writes.


Droukdel’s words reflect the division within one of al-Qaida’s most ruthless affiliates, and may explain why Timbuktu, under the thumb of al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb, experienced a slightly less brutal version of Shariah than Gao, one of the three other major cities controlled by the extremists. There was only one amputation in Timbuktu over their 10-month rule, compared to a dozen or more in Gao, a city governed by an al-Qaida offshoot, MUJAO, which does not report to Droukdel.


Droukdel’s warning of rejection from locals also turned out to be prescient, as Shariah ran its course in Timbuktu. The breaking point, residents say, was the day last June when the jihadists descended on the cemetery with pickaxes and shovels and smashed the tombs of their saints, decrying what they called the sin of idolatry.


Many in Timbuktu say that was the point of no return. “When they smashed our mausoleums, it hurt us deeply,” said Alpha Sanechirfi, the director of the Malian Office of Tourism in Timbuktu. “For us, it was game over.”


Droukdel’s letter also urges his followers to make concessions to win over other groups in the area, and in one case criticizes their failure to do so. For several months, the Islamic extremists controlling northern Mali coexisted with the secular National Movement for the Liberation of the Azawad, or NMLA, the name given to Mali by Tuareg rebels who want their own state. The black flag of the extremists fluttered alongside the multi-colored one of the secular rebels, each occupying different areas of the towns.


In late May, the two sides attempted to sign a deal, agreeing to create an independent Islamic state called Azawad. The agreement between the bon vivant Tuareg rebels and the Taliban-inspired extremists seemed doomed from the start. It fell apart days later. By June, the Islamic extremists had chased the secular rebels out of northern Mali’s main cities.


“The decision to go to war against the Azawad Liberation Movement, after becoming close and almost completing a deal with them, which we thought would be positive, is a major mistake in our assessment,” Droukdel admonishes. “This fighting will have a negative impact on our project. So we ask you to solve the issue and correct it by working toward a peace deal.”


In an aside in brackets, Droukdel betrays the frustration of a manager who has not been informed of important decisions taken by his employees: “(We have not until now received any clarification from you, despite how perilous the operation was!!)”


Droukdel also discusses the nuts and bolts of how territory and control might be shared by al-Qaida and the local radical Islamic group known as Ansar Dine, or Defenders of the Faith. For much of last year, Ansar Dine claimed to be the rulers of both Timbuktu and Kidal, although by the end, there was mounting evidence that al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb was calling the shots.


The reason for this is now clear in his letter: Droukdel asks his men to lower their profile, and allow local groups to take center stage.


“We should also take into consideration not to monopolize the political and military stage. We should not be at the forefront,” he says. “Better for you to be silent and pretend to be a ‘domestic’ movement that has its own causes and concerns. There is no reason for you to show that we have an expansionary, jihadi, al-Qaida or any other sort of project.”


The emir acknowledges that his fighters live on the fringes of society, and urges them to make alliances, including fixing their broken relationship with the NMLA. He vows that if they do what he says, they will have succeeded, even if an eventual military intervention forces them out of Mali.


“The aim of building these bridges is to make it so that our mujahedeen are no longer isolated in society,” he writes. “If we can achieve this positive thing in even a limited amount, then even if the project fails later, it will be just enough that we will have planted the first, good seed in this fertile soil and put pesticides and fertilizer on it, so that the tree will grow more quickly. We look forward to seeing this tree as it will be eventually: Stable and magnificent.”


___


Associated Press writer Baba Ahmed in Timbuktu, Mali, and the Associated Press News Research Center contributed to this report.


Africa News Headlines – Yahoo! News





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”Downton Abbey” star Maggie Smith never watches TV show






LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Maggie Smith‘s sarcastic dowager Countess may be the star of British period drama “Downton Abbey,” but the award-winning actress says she has never watched the TV series.


Smith, 78, who has won two Emmy Awards and a Golden Globe for her role as the acid-tongued Lady Grantham, tells CBS in an upcoming TV interview that she is amazed by the popularity of the show both in Britain and the United States.






Asked whether she is proud of “Downton Abbey”, Smith said, “I haven’t actually seen it. So I don’t, I don’t sit down and watch it,” she told CBS reporter Steve Kroft in the interview to be broadcast on Sunday.


“Never?” Kroft asked. “No, I haven’t watched it,” Smith replied, according to an advance excerpt released on Thursday.


Smith, known as a perfectionist, said that watching herself would make her worry about her performance. “It’s frustrating. I always see things that I would like to do differently and think, ‘Oh, why in the name of God did I do that?’”


“Downton Abbey,” a drama about the lives of aristocratic Britons and their servants in the early 20th century, attracted some 7.9 million viewers for its third season premiere in January on U.S. television.


Smith’s snobbish Lady Grantham and her withering remarks like “No-one wants to kiss a girl in black,” and “What is a weekend?”, have made her the show’s biggest star.


Smith also has two Oscars for her roles in 1969 film “The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie” and 1978 comedy “California Suite” but she said she had no interest in her recent fame. The actress is a rare face at Hollywood award ceremonies.


“I don’t feel any different to the way I felt before and I’m not quite sure what (being a star) means. I am familiar to people now, which is what I was not before,” she told Kroft. “That is entirely due to the television set.”


Smith also acknowledged her reputation as an actress who doesn’t suffer fools gladly.


“Old people are scary and I have to face it, I am old and I am scary and I am very sorry about it, but I don’t know what you do,” she quipped.


The full interview can be seen on “60 Minutes” on February 17 on CBS television.


(Reporting By Jill Serjeant; Editing by David Brunnstrom)


TV News Headlines – Yahoo! News





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Seasonal Flu on the Downswing in Oklahoma






The influenza season typically peaks in the months of January and February, according to statistics compiled by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention since the 1982-1983 flu season. The 2012-13 season began in earnest a few weeks earlier in this current season; perhaps Oklahoma‘s current decrease in newly reported cases in mid-February demonstrates that continued trend of the peak of the flu season occurring within so many days/weeks after the onset for that year.


Oklahoma Influenza Statistics for Feb. 3 through Feb. 9






The Oklahoma State Department of Health , OSDH, releases updated statistics about influenza in the state each Thursday during the flu season. The most recent data available is for the one-week period ending Feb. 9.


Since the 2012-13 flu season began Sept. 30, 862 people have been hospitalized in Oklahoma with influenza; 25 people have died. People age 65 and older have represented the largest single age group to be hospitalized with influenza at 442 of the 862 total hospitalizations. Those age 65 and older also represented the largest single age group to die from complications of the flu, representing 20 of the 25 total deaths. Two people died from flu complications in this latest reported week ,one each from Nowata and Washington counties.


An OSDH graph shows that patient visits for influenza-like illnesses to monitored clinicians have continued to decline since the third week of January. Another graph shows that the actual number of positive tests for influenza have declined in the last two weeks.


Influenza Symptoms


Sometimes it can be difficult to know if you are sick with a cold or the flu, since both have respiratory signs and symptoms. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases offered these comparisons:


* Influenza : Sudden onset; usually a fever that lasts three to four days; headache; general aches and pains, often severe; exhaustion at the beginning of illness, followed by weakness and fatigue that can last three to four weeks; may sometimes have stuffy nose, sneezing and/or sore throat.


* Cold : Gradual onset; rarely a fever; slight general aches and pains; sometimes fatigue and weakness; never exhaustion; often stuffy nose and sore throat and may be sneezing.


The possible complications of these two viral illnesses differ in severity. Complications from having the common cold may be middle ear infection, sinus congestion and/or asthma. Complications from seasonal influenza may be bronchitis, pneumonia, worsening of already existing chronic conditions and can be life-threatening.


Contagious Period of Seasonal Flu


The CDC explained that a healthy person can spread the seasonal flu to other people for one day before flu symptoms are even noticed and up to five to seven days after symptoms have begun. Young children and people with compromised immune systems may remain contagious for a longer period of time.


Considering this timeline for the ability to infect others with the flu, if you become ill with the flu, avoid unnecessary contact with others until the contagious period has passed.


Diseases/Conditions News Headlines – Yahoo! News





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Big hedge funds fueled fourth-quarter dive in Apple shares






BOSTON (Reuters) – Some of the biggest hedge funds that helped make Apple Inc a stock market darling lost faith and dumped their stakes in the fourth quarter, fueling the massive drop in the iPhone maker’s share price.


Noted stock pickers including Leon Cooperman, Eric Mindich and Thomas Steyer unloaded billions of dollars of Apple shares between September 30 and December 31, according to disclosure documents filed on Thursday.






Shares of Apple rose to an all-time high of $ 705.07 on September 21 but ended 2012 down more than 24 percent from that peak as investors worried about increasing competition and declining profit margins.


The shares also may have dropped because their price rose too much, too fast.


“The stock just went up so much in early 2012 and then was coming back to earth,” said Justin Walters, co-founder of Wall Street research firm Bespoke Investment Group. “Three months from now, we’ll be seeing a lot of the people who sold starting to pick it up again.”


The fourth-quarter sellers avoided even deeper losses. Apple’s shares have lost 12 percent so far this year. The shares lost 42 cents, or 0.1 percent, to close at $ 466.59 on the Nasdaq on Thursday.


Cooperman’s Omega Advisors fund dumped its entire stake of more than 266,000 shares during the fourth quarter, according to its required quarterly disclosure form filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.


Mindich, named the youngest partner ever at Goldman Sachs before starting his Eton Park Capital Management fund in 2004, got out of Apple entirely in the fourth quarter after making big sales in the third quarter as well. Eton owned 600,000 shares at the beginning of 2012.


Farallon Capital, the hedge fund founded by Steyer, sold 137,000 shares. Steyer, who once worked on the Goldman Sachs risk arbitrage desk under Robert Rubin, stepped down at the end of the year from the firm, which he founded in 1986. Rubin served as U.S. Treasury secretary from 1995 to 1999.


Jana Partners, an activist fund run by Barry Rosenstein, also unloaded its entire Apple stake of more than 143,000 shares. Other notable sellers included Third Point LLC, which had owned 710,000 shares, Viking Global Investors, which dumped 1.1 million shares and Lone Pine Capital, which sold over 800,000 shares.


A much smaller line up of funds bought shares amid the stock’s crash. David Tepper’s Appaloosa Management nearly doubled its stake during the quarter to about 913,000 shares. George Soros more than doubled his stake to about 184,000 shares. And David Einhorn, who last week sued Apple in a bid for higher dividends, added 20 percent to his holdings to end the quarter with 1.3 million shares.


PROFITABLE TRADES


Despite the plunge in Apple’s stock price, most of the managers likely exited their positions with substantial profits because they bought years earlier.


Rosenstein and Cooperman, for example, both started gathering their stakes in the middle of 2010, when Apple shares traded below $ 300.


At the time, the company’s iPhone 4 was beset by alleged faulty reception, a problem that became known as “antennagate.” Apple’s then-chief executive, the late Steve Jobs, famously dismissed the issue, saying “we don’t think we have a problem.” But Apple offered customers a free bumper case that was supposed to minimize any issues.


Customers did not seem to care, snapping up millions of iPhones and sending Apple’s share price up almost 50 percent over the next year.


Apple came under further scrutiny last week from Greenlight’s Einhorn. Einhorn filed a lawsuit to block changes in Apple’s policy for issuing preferred stock. Instead, Apple should issue a new class of preferred stock to share more of its $ 137 billion cash hoard with shareholders, Einhorn said.


Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook dismissed the moves as a “silly sideshow” on Tuesday.


SOME TRIMMED


Not all well-known hedge fund fans of Apple cut ties in the fourth quarter. Some only trimmed their holdings.


Philippe Laffont, who worked under famed hedge fund manager Julian Robertson before striking out on his own at Coatue Management, sold about 18 percent of his Apple shares. Coatue ended the year with a still sizable 643,000 shares.


Chase Coleman, another manager who worked for Robertson, reduced the Apple stake at his Tiger Global Management fund by 19 percent to just over 1 million shares.


Robertson’s own Tiger Management LLC fund trimmed its Apple stake by 28 percent to about 42,000 shares.


Large hedge funds are required to disclose their U.S. stock holdings within 45 days after the end of each quarter.


But the filings may not give a complete picture of each fund’s moves, since only U.S.-listed shares and options must be revealed. Bonds, foreign shares and derivatives are not included, and short positions, or bets that a stock will fall in price, are not listed.


(Reporting by Aaron Pressman; Additional reporting by Katya Wachtel, Svea Herbst, Sam Forgione and Jennifer Ablan in New York; Editing by Steve Orlofsky and David Gregorio)


Business News Headlines – Yahoo! News





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Little change in Honduras prison where 362 died






JUTICALPA, Honduras (AP) — On the 14th day of each month, Jesus Garcia joins other relatives to hoist a cardboard coffin and carry it in a macabre procession down a road to the prison where two cousins died with 360 other inmates in the worst prison fire in at least a century.


It’s their way to demand justice in the deaths of Antonio and Franklin Garcia, who were among many left locked in their cells as fire raced through the wooden barracks, and the handful of guards on duty ran for their lives.






“We go to the jail, in a symbolic procession with a casket, to ask for justice, but we get no answers,” Garcia said. “We go to the minister of human rights and she passes it along to the president and he passes it along to the first lady, but then nothing gets done.”


A year after the fire in Comayagua, about 60 miles (100 kilometers) from Tegucigalpa, the investigation remains open and prosecutors have filed no charges. The burned cells and electrical system are still being repaired.


While the government created a new agency told to replace the police in the prisons with specially trained guards, social workers and doctors, the three-person commission that started working last week was given no budget and has no office, according to its director, Agusto Avila.


Even the inmate who was the hero of the fire, finding keys and freeing hundreds of men, was never pardoned as President Porfirio Lobo had promised. Honduran law forbids commuting a murder sentence, so Marco Antonio Bonilla is still serving his time, working in the prison infirmary, where he was awakened that night by the screams of inmates as they were devoured by flames.


“There was no mechanism to extinguish fires, no evacuation plan. The firefighters were not allowed to get there quickly and the guards, instead of acting appropriately, only fired shots in the air, supposedly because that is the established procedure in case of escapes,” said government human rights prosecutor German Enamorado, who led the investigation for the Attorney General’s Office.


Garcia is in a position to know it can happen again. Besides being a relative of the dead, he is the warden of the Juticalpa prison northeast of the capital in rural Olancho state. A fire today in the Juticalpa facility of 500 inmates could cause similar devastation because it doesn’t have running water to fight a blaze, despite the fact it is one of the country’s modern facilities, built in 2007.


Human rights monitors have long criticized Honduras‘ prison system. Most of the 11,000 inmates in the country’s 24 prisons have not yet been found guilty. More than half of the 800 prisoners in Comayagua at the time of the fire were still awaiting trial, according to a Honduran government report sent to the United Nations a year ago.


The Office of Human Rights’ investigation into the disaster found “no evidence of criminality in the origin of the fire,” Enamorado said.


It began with “a flame in one of the cells that spread in a few minutes,” Enamorado said, referring to a report by the Office of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, whose agents investigated the cause. “But there was negligence on the part of authorities in charge of prison security, whose actions could have avoided a death toll of this magnitude.”


Despite that finding, the Attorney General’s Office is keeping the case open for lack of evidence, he said, awaiting details including autopsy results, the exact number of inmates in the facility that day, whether there was an evacuation plan and the material of the mattresses that burned.


Three of the 362 victims still have yet to be identified; one as never claimed by relatives and two were burned beyond recognition.


The Legal Forensics Department and the Attorney General’s Office didn’t respond to interview requests to explain the delay.


Relatives of those who died say the government is just trying to avoid blame. “There’s a policy on the part of the attorney general to conduct investigations in an obstructive manner in cases of human rights violations with an objective to keep the responsibility from falling on the state,” said Joaquin Mejia, attorney for the Committee of Relatives of the Victims of Comayagua.


And Honduras’ permanent state of fiscal, political and judicial crisis leaves few resources for improving prisons.


The national budget allocated around $ 15 million to the prison system for 2013. About 85 percent goes to pay salaries for prison officials and guards, according to the Security Department.


Honduran prisons receive the rest of their funding from taxes that inmates pay from the work they do inside. At Comayagua, prisoners grew corn and beans and raised fish and chicken on the 36 acres of farmland surrounding the facility.


Dani Rodriguez, a police inspector, was named director of Comayagua prison on Feb. 15, a day after the fire. He has not been able to change much.


“The state transferred 180,000 lempiras ($ 9,000), and by selling some of the scrap metal after the fire we got 32,000 lempiras ($ 1,500), and the TV show they did for our benefit left us with a huge plastic check which they used for the photo, but we haven’t received the money yet,” Rodriguez said.


As in all Honduran prisons, Rodriguez supplements scant government funds with the taxes he collects from inmates, who run their own businesses from inside. With his inmate population down by half after the fire, so is his budget, about $ 1,000 for food and maintenance.


Garcia knows the difficulties from running the Juticalpa prison.


“We receive water for a couple of hours a day thanks to a neighbor who lets us connect to his tank, but the water is not always clean. Sometimes a fire truck will supply some water as a donation from the mayor’s office,” said Gonzalo de Jesus, the prison administrator who works with Garcia.


Roberto Urquia, who works in the Juticalpa prison infirmary, brings his own water and boils it to make is safe.


“About 25 percent of the inmates have chronic gastrointestinal problems,” he said.


On January 16, Honduras’ Congress approved building a new prison at Comayagua with $ 60 million borrowed from a local bank.


“They had the ability to do such business while the inmates have no water or medication,” said Odalis Najera, commissioner for the National Office to Prevent Torture, an organization created by the U.N. to monitor Honduran prisons. “The situation that each and every one of them is living is equivalent to torture.”


Latin America News Headlines – Yahoo! News





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Who Pays the Highest Price When It Comes to Breast Cancer?






In this, the third in our month-long series on the disparities and inequities of cancer in the U.S. and beyond, we look at the group of American women hardest hit—by far—when it comes to breast cancer.


One in nine women will have breast cancer. The disease is the second-leading cause of death among women in the United States. But no group suffers more from breast cancer than African-American women.






According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC):


•   African-American women have the highest death rate from breast cancer of all races/ethnicities. They are 40 percent more likely to die of the disease than white women.


•   Forty-five percent of black women are found to have breast cancer that has spread beyond the breast (when it has reached a far deadlier stage) compared with 35 percent of white women.


•   After learning that their mammogram is not normal, 20 percent of black women wait or delay seeing a doctor for follow-up more than 60 days. That’s compared to 12 percent of white women. Waiting longer for follow-up care may allow cancer to spread.


Have Cancer but No Insurance? No Problem — You Can Pay With Your Life


•   Only 69 percent of black women start treatment within 30 days of their diagnosis of breast cancer, compared with 83 percent of white women.


•   Overall, breast cancer death rates among U.S. women fell 27 percent from 1990 to 2005, but not at equal rates. In white women, breast cancer mortality declined by 2.5 percent annually, but it declined just 1.4 percent each year for African-American women.


•   Fewer black women receive the surgery, radiation, and hormone treatments they need compared to white women.


Like other types of cancer disparities, the reasons that black women have worse survival rates are numerous. They include poverty, lack of access to care, lack of health insurance, literacy barriers, and unequal treatment by professionals in the healthcare system, according to a March 2002 Institute of Medicine report.


“A lot of the same reasons for disparities that we see in other types of cancers come into play here—less access to care; less access to screening technologies; not receiving the same kinds of treatments and follow-up care,” says Dr. David Wetter, a professor in the department of Health Disparities Research, Division of Cancer Prevention and Population Sciences, at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, in Houston.


But there are also differences in the types of breast cancer among various racial and ethnic groups. “African-American and Hispanic women seem to get a more aggressive form of cancer and at a younger age—the ‘triple negative’ breast cancer. It’s a more virulent form of cancer with worse outcomes,” Wetter says. A “triple negative” breast cancer means the cancer cells do not have receptors for the hormones estrogen or progesterone or high levels of the HER2/neu protein. These levels can tell an oncologist how quickly the breast cancer might grow.


One Group Dies From Cancer More Often Than Any Other. Do You Know Who It Is?


The good news is that black women get mammograms about as often as white women, according to the CDC.


Still, everyone—from government to public health departments to doctors to women themselves—need to take more steps to erase breast-cancer disparities affecting black women, experts say. The Affordable Care Act is a good start. Under the new law, women who have no ability to pay can still get a mammogram.


Even better, the National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program provides screenings and diagnostic services to low-income, uninsured, and underinsured women. Click on the “Find a Screening Provider” tab on the program’s site to arrange for your mammogram.


Black women should also get regular physical exams and discuss their risk of breast cancer with a health professional. The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality has a list of questions for women to use to improve communication with a doctor about tests like mammograms.


What more do you think should be done to lower breast cancer rates among African-American women?  


Related Stories on TakePart:


• So You Think Obamacare is Radical? Take a Look at China


• Breast Cancer Innovations


• Confused About Donating to Breast Cancer Causes? Here’s How to Pink Straight



Shari Roan is an award-winning health writer based in Southern California. She is the author of three books on health and science subjects.


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2 Nigeria journalists charged after polio killings






KANO, Nigeria (AP) — Police in northern Nigeria arrested and charged two radio journalists and a local cleric alleged to have sparked the killings of at least nine women gunned down while trying to administer polio vaccines, officials said Tuesday. Police claimed their on-air comments about a vaccination campaign in the area inflamed the region and caused the attacks.


The allegations against the journalists working for Wazobia FM show the continuing struggle over free speech in Nigeria, a nation that came out of military rule only in 1999 and where simply taking photographs on the street can get a person arrested. Though Nigeria has a rambunctious free press, threats and attacks against journalists remain common and unsolved killings of reporters still haunt the country.






On Friday in Kano, the largest city in Nigeria’s predominantly Muslim north, gunmen in three-wheel taxis attacked women preparing to give the oral-drop vaccines to children, killing at least nine, police said. Witnesses later said they saw at least 12 dead from the attack. No group has claimed responsibility for the attack, though suspicion immediately fell on the sect known as Boko Haram, which is waging a campaign of guerrilla shootings and bombings across northern Nigeria.


A few days before the killings, Wazobia FM aired a program in which presenters talked about how one of the station’s journalists had been attacked by local officials and had his equipment confiscated after coming upon a man who refused to allow his children to be vaccinated. The journalists and the cleric on the program apparently discussed the fears people have about the vaccine, which then spread through the city.


Kano state police commissioner Ibrahim Idris ordered the journalists and the cleric be arrested immediately after Friday’s attack.


Initially, Idris said the journalists would face charges of “culpable homicide” over the polio workers’ deaths. Those charges can carry the death penalty. However, at an arraignment hearing Tuesday afternoon, prosecutors brought lesser charges that included conspiracy, inciting a disturbance and obstruction of a public servant. Magistrate Ibrahim Bello ordered a follow-up hearing Thursday.


Onimisi Adaba, operation manager for Wazobia FM and its sister stations, later told The Associated Press that the radio group was “fully aware of the situation.”


“We are presently attending to the matter,” Adaba said. He declined to comment further.


There have long been suspicions about the polio vaccine in northern Nigeria, with people believing the drops would sterilize young girls.


In 2003, a Kano physician heading the Supreme Council for Shariah in Nigeria said the vaccines were “corrupted and tainted by evildoers from America and their Western allies.” That led to hundreds of new infections in children across the north, where beggars on locally made wooden skateboards drag their withered legs back and forth in traffic, begging for alms. The 2003 disease outbreak in Nigeria eventually spread throughout the world, even causing infections in Indonesia.


Today, Nigeria is one of only three countries where polio remains endemic, the others being Afghanistan and Pakistan.


Nigeria came out of a long period of military rule in 1999 and has an unbridled free press, but journalists are often harassed by police and the State Security Service, the nation’s secret police. Local journalists also have been attacked and killed in the oil-rich nation over their reporting. Eighteen journalists have been killed in Nigeria since 1992, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists


Newspapers and radio stations also often hold off paying journalists their salaries for months at a time. That forces reporters to make money from selling advertising to those they cover or through collecting so-called “brown envelope” bribes slipped into briefing materials at news conferences.


Mohamed Keita, an official with the Committee to Protect Journalists in New York, said his organization is investigating the circumstances surrounding the journalists’ prosecution.


“We are troubled by the detentions of journalists insofar as there appears to be no evidence linking their program to the murderous attacks on the polio clinics,” Keita said. “We call on Nigerian authorities to afford the journalists due process under the law.”


___


Associated Press writer Jon Gambrell in Johannesburg contributed to this report.


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CNN’s Sanjay Gupta adds fiction to his workload






LOS ANGELES (AP) — When doctors get called on the carpet by other doctors, it’s productive but not always pretty, as neurosurgeon Sanjay Gupta describes it.


Closed-door meetings in which physicians candidly dissect cases that went awry can verge on “dignified versions of street fights,” said CNN’s globe-trotting correspondent.






He drew on such sessions — commonplace for hospitals, if little publicly known — for his first novel, “Monday Mornings,” and is a writer-producer on a new TNT series based on the 2012 book.


The drama, from veteran producer David E. Kelley (“Boston Legal,” ”The Practice”) and with a heavyweight cast that includes Ving Rhames, Alfred Molina and Bill Irwin, debuts Monday (10 p.m. EST). That’s also the day the show’s fictional Chelsea General Hospital holds its weekly reviews.


In the real world, such meetings to scrutinize complications and mistakes in patient care can lead to new guidelines, Gupta said.


“They can be simple, like never sedate a patient until they’re strapped in on the table,” he said, the outcome of an unrestrained patient having taken a tumble. “Some changes are big, some are small, but they are always important. We are always redefining medicine.”


In the first episode of “Monday Mornings,” brash but dedicated neurosurgeon Dr. Tyler Wilson (Jamie Bamber, “Battlestar Galactica”) is grilled for failing to check a patient’s medical history. Gupta said he learned his own “searing” lesson, about carefully reviewing lab results, without any harm to the patient.


Do the forums ever become a stage for office politics?


“People do jockey for position in these situations,” Gupta replied. “If someone’s at the lectern (under scrutiny), anyone can ask questions, not just the chairperson of the department. So the nature and tone of it can change pretty quickly.”


The most disturbing inquiries involve an apparently reckless M.D. with “a disregard for the person on the operating table or in the hospital,” he said. “You can imagine your own mother or loved in the position of the patient, and those are the most indelible ones of all.”


The meetings make for gripping drama on “Monday Mornings.” But is a show that focuses on medicine’s failures as well as its triumphs potentially a hard sell for audiences?


“ER,” TV’s once-reigning hospital drama, aired a powerful first-season episode in which decisions by Dr. Mark Greene, the caring, steady lead character played by Anthony Edwards, cost a pregnant woman her life. The story line was a rarity on the show that routinely focused on medical heroics.


The key to making the TNT series work is the “likability” of its physicians, said Bill D’Elia, a producer on “Monday Mornings.”


It’s crucial to “understand their motivation, understand how good they are, how much they care. So it’s not black-and-white” when a character blows it, D’Elia said.


As is the case with non-TV doctors, Gupta said.


A mistake is made and “you think that’s a bad doctor. You may even think that’s a bad human being, and in some cases you might be right,” he said. “But a lot of times you’re not, and I think showing the rest of the story, how it may continue to get discussed” is illuminating.


Besides writing for “Monday Mornings,” Gupta, 43, makes sure it depicts surgery and the world of medicine accurately.


How Gupta fits the tasks into his already demanding schedule is a medical mystery. As D’Elia said, he never knows if he’s talking to the doctor in Atlanta, where Gupta lives with his family and practices, or in another city, sometimes far-flung, as part of his award-winning work for CNN (which, like TNT, is part of Time Warner subsidiary Turner).


“When I talk to him I have this (mental) picture of him in front of a green screen so he can input wherever he is,” D’Elia said. “He’s as likely to be in Pakistan as New York.”


Since joining CNN in 2001, Gupta has covered events including the quake and tsunami in Japan, Hurricane Katrina and the Gulf of Mexico oil disaster. In 2003, while embedded with a Navy medical unit, he reported from Iraq and Kuwait and acted as a doctor as well as a reporter, performing brain surgeries in a desert operating room.


That same year, he got a spot on People magazine’s list of the “sexiest men alive.”


He anchors the weekend medical affairs program, “Sanjay Gupta MD,” is on the staff and faculty at the Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta, and is an associate chief of neurosurgery at Grady Memorial Hospital.


In 2009, he was approached for the position of surgeon general in the new Obama administration, a post he says he declined because it would have halted his work as a neurosurgeon. He’s said he’s a supporter of the Affordable Care Act and wants to see it fully implemented to give more Americans coverage.


Gupta learned his work ethic from his parents, who moved from India in the 1960s to work at a Ford plant in Detroit, where he grew up, and is surprised when people ask how he does it all.


“There’s a lot of people who work a lot harder than I do and aren’t known,” he said.


___


Online:


http://www.tntdrama.com


___


Lynn Elber can be reached at lelber(at)ap.org and on Twitter (at)lynnelber.


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