Sunday, July 15, 2007

Iraqi prime minister says US troops can leave 'anytime they want'

Al Maliki during a press conference in Baghdad on Saturday.

Iraqis 'ready to keep security if US quits'

 

Baghdad: Amid US doubt that Iraq's military is making progress, Prime Minister Nouri Al Maliki on Saturday said Iraqi forces are capable and that US troops can leave "anytime they want".

Al Maliki said his government needs "time and effort" to enact the political reforms that the United States seeks.

"We say in full confidence that we are able … to take the responsibility completely in running the security file if international forces withdraw at anytime they want," he said.

One of his top aides also accused the United States of embarrassing the Iraqi government by violating human rights and treating his country like an "experiment in a US lab."



On Thursday, the US Senate passed a measure calling for the withdrawal of US troops by April, which came after a US report on the mixed progress of the Iraqi government.

Al Maliki shrugged off the progress report, saying that difficulty in enacting the reforms was "natural" given Iraq's turmoil.

Meanwhile, Shiite lawmaker Hassan Al Suneid lashed at the US military for building a wall around Baghdad’s Azamiyah neighbourhood and launching raids in Sadr City.

He also criticised US overtures to Sunni groups in Anbar and Diyala, where troops have urged former rebels to join the fight against Al Qaida in Iraq. "These are gangs of killers," he said.

Thursday, July 12, 2007

Beckham's US test

The sight of David Beckham on the front cover of Sports Illustrated is the clearest indication yet that this most insular of sporting nations is taking an interest in his arrival.

David Beckham on the front cover of Sports Illustrated

Beckham has already made something of an impact in America

After all, this is a place usually reserved for American icons such as Michael Jordan and Tiger Woods.

However, the streets of Los Angeles have not been swamped by Beckham-mania just yet.

His official presentation on Friday evening will be a typical Hollywood event, with several hundered media crammed into a corner of the Home Depot Center to watch the ultimate combination of sport and showbusiness.

But, in such a sprawling city where the Lakers and the Dodgers dominate the media attention, Beckham may have his work cut out to keep up a consistently high profile.

Many of the cabbies I spoke to waiting on Sunset Strip were more familiar with Posh Spice's body of work than her husbands.

But for the majority of American journalists attending Chelsea's pre-season workouts and news conferences here in Hollywood, Beckham is the main thing on their agenda.

Although the line of questioning from an "entertainment correspondent" to Chelsea's Arjen Robben on how he thought Beckham would settle to life in Beverly Hills suggested that analysis of his performances on the pitch may not be as rigorous as he was used to in Europe.

Beckham may find LA a refreshing change once the hype and novelty wears off

Comparisons have been made with Pele's arrival at the New York Cosmos in the mid-1970s, but Giorgio Chinaglia, the former Italian international who played alongside the Brazilian legend, thinks they are wide of the mark.

"The hype has been great for American soccer, but I am concerned about what people will say when they see Beckham play," Chinaglia told BBC Sport.

"He is different to Pele and Maradona and in America they like players who dribble and score goals. David's a great player, but he doesn't do that so it might not be easy for him.

"On top of that, the team is not very good at the moment, they are struggling. I don't think Beckham alone can promote Major League Soccer - he needs other big European names to follow him to produce sustained success.

"In a market like this, we need around 50 players of his calibre."

But, for a personality used to living life in a goldfish bowl, Beckham may find LA a refreshing change once the hype and novelty wears off.

According to one of basketball's biggest stars, Los Angeles-born Paul Pierce of the Boston Celtics, this is the ideal city to enjoy a quiet life.

"He'll understand that LA is a place where stars are everywhere," said Pierce. "People get used to seeing them, so it's not a big deal compared to what happens in places like Boston and New York.

"People love entertainment and Beckham is an entertainer, so he should fit in fine."

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

'Most expensive' US home on sale

A Beverly Hills mansion has been advertised for sale at $165m (£81.4m), making it the most expensive residential property listing in the US.

William Randolph Hearst paid $120,000 for the H-shaped mansion in 1947

The former home of US newspaper tycoon William Randolph Hearst has 29 bedrooms, three swimming pools, tennis courts, its own cinema and a nightclub.

Lawyer and investor Leonard Ross, who bought it in 1976, wants a "lifestyle change", his estate agent said.

Mr Hearst bought the H-shaped mansion in 1947 for about $120,000.

Crowded market

The 1920s-era pink stucco estate, which is set across 6.5 acres (2.6ha) north of Sunset Boulevard, featured in the film The Godfather.

But the estate is not the only US property awaiting a buyer who can afford a nine-figure price tag.

A 10-bedroom property in Montana's Big Sky country is on offer for $155m.

And former Saudi ambassador to the US, Prince Bandar bin Sultan, is still seeking a buyer for his Hala Ranch compound in Aspen, Colorado, a year after it was first listed for sale for $135m.

These prices far surpass the record set by former media mogul Gary Winnick in 2001, who spent just $94m for his home, the Los Angeles Times reported.

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

US senator admits 'serious sin'

David Vitter (file image)

Mr Vitter did not specify the exact nature of his 'sin'

A Republican senator has apologised for "a very serious sin in my past" after his phone number was linked to an alleged Washington prostitution ring.

David Vitter, a Louisiana senator, said he had asked for and received forgiveness from God and his wife.

Deborah Palfrey, dubbed the "DC Madam", faces charges of running a lucrative city prostitution ring for 13 years.

Ms Palfrey, who says she provided a legal escort service, has said she will call prominent clients to testify.

Mr Vitter's statement, confirmed to the Associated Press by his spokesman, said his telephone number was included on the phone records published on her website on Monday.

The records date from before Mr Vitter ran for the Senate in 2004.

High-profile clients

In the statement, he did not provide details about the exact nature of his "sin", saying he wanted it to remain private out of respect for his family.

"This was a very serious sin in my past for which I am, of course, completely responsible," Mr Vitter said.

"Several years ago, I asked for and received forgiveness from God and my wife in confession and marriage counselling."

He added that he offered his "deep and sincere apologies" to all he had disappointed.

Ms Palfrey has named other high-profile clients, including former deputy Secretary of State Randall Tobias, who resigned shortly after confirming he had been a client.

Monday, July 9, 2007

White House 'debating Iraq pullout'

Much depends on what stand John McCain would
take on returning from Iraq

Senior US officials have begun debating whether George Bush, the US president, should announce his intention to withdraw US troops from Iraq.

The New York Times reported that Bush had originally been mulling over a September 15 deadline to announce a pullout, when a progress report on Iraq is due to be released.

But the US president's aides have advised him that he may need to make an announcement sooner ahead of a senate debate on the defence authorisation bill, the report said.

Many Republican senators have recently announced they can no longer support Bush's Iraq strategy and have demanded change.

As a result, the paper reported some aides are now telling Bush that if he wants to forestall more defections, it would be wiser to announce plans for a far more narrowly defined mission for US troops that would allow for a staged pullback.

The president had originally rejected this strategy in December when it was proposed by the bipartisan Iraq Study Group.

"When you count up the votes that we've lost and the votes we're likely to lose over the next few weeks, it looks pretty grim," the New York Times quotes one senior official as saying.

In a sign of growing concern in the administration, Robert Gates, the US defence secretary, cancelled his Latin American tour on Sunday to attend meetings on Iraq.

Last week, Stephen Hadley, US national security advisor, was called in from a brief holiday to join discussions on Iraq, which included Karl Rove, a US political strategist and Joshua Bolten, the White House chief of staff, according to the report.

Deep concern

Officials describe Hadley as deeply concerned that the loss of Republicans could accelerate this week, a fear shared by Rove, the report said.

But they also said that Rove had warned that if Bush went too far in announcing a redeployment, the result could include a further cascade of defections - and the passage of legislation that would force a withdrawal by a specific date, the paper said.

"Everyone's particularly worried about what happens when McCain [John, a Republican senator] gets back from Iraq," one official is quoted as saying.

McCain has been a strong supporter of the "surge" strategy, but is facing political troubles in the race for the Republican nomination for president.

McCain's poor performance in presidential nomination polls, attributed to his position on Iraq, has fuelled speculation that he may declare that the Iraqi government is incapable of reaching the kind of political accommodations that Washington considers necessary for overall success, the New York Times said.

Sunday, July 8, 2007

Woman jailed for 'neglected' lawn

Map

A 70-year-old US woman has been left bruised and bloody after an unexpected clash with police who came to arrest her because her lawn was dry and brown.

Trouble flared when Utah pensioner Betty Perry, 70, refused to give her name to an officer trying to caution her for not watering her lawn.

She says the officer hit her with handcuffs, cutting her nose, although police insist she slipped and fell.

Ms Perry said she was "distraught" after the incident.

She denied that she was resisting arrest, maintaining that she turned to go inside to call her son to fix the confusing dispute.

"I tried to sit down and get away from him," she told Utah newspaper the Daily Herald.

"I don't know what he's doing. I said: 'What are you doing?' And he hit me with those handcuffs in my face," she said.

"He's just trying to cover his tracks, as far as I'm concerned."

Set free

The officer had judged that Ms Perry's "sadly neglected and dying landscape" breached an Orem city guideline and was attempting to issue a formal caution when the 70-year-old was injured.

She was treated in a local hospital for the cut to her nose and for other bruises before being taken to jail.

But she was let go when police realised there were "other ways" of finding out her identity without taking her to jail, a police spokesman said.

The arresting officer has not been named but has been placed on administrative leave, he added.

Ms Perry, who says she has never had a run-in with police in the past, has been offered help by local church leaders to clean up her garden.

"I'm very distraught over all this," she said.

"I can't believe this happened. Do you ever just wish you could start your day over and it would all be different?"

Saturday, July 7, 2007

Triple-seven fever grips the US

Couples wait in line to purchase a marriage license

Couples are lining up in Las Vegas to get married on 07-07-07

For many people this is just another Saturday, but for the superstitious it is a very lucky day.

It is the seventh day of the seventh month of the seventh year of the millennium. Bookmakers are bracing themselves for an influx of bets.

Across the US, wedding venues and bridal suites are completely booked up.

Triple sevens mean big bucks on the jackpot - and thousands of couples are betting that it will bring good luck to their marriage too.

Never before has there been this much demand to get married on a certain date.

Some estimates suggest that as many as 70,000 couples will tie the knot.

Cake makers, florists and wedding planners have gone into overdrive, organising seven-tiered cakes and seven-course meals.

In Orange County, California, the register office is opening up additional venues, bringing in extra staff and offering couples time slots ending in the number seven.

The number seven has ancient religious and cultural significance. but its wrong belief dont belief it 

Thursday, July 5, 2007

'Beauty queen' honour for Holmes

Katie Holmes

Actress Katie Holmes' good looks have landed a place in a magazine's "most influential" list.

Katie Holmes married Tom Cruise in 2006, Tom Cruise's wife was praised for her "refreshing girl-next-door looks" and short new hairstyle by OK! magazine.

Nineteen famous faces were named in six categories, including Simon Cowell - a top entertainer - and newsmakers Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie.

Beyonce and Jennifer Lopez were also included in the "beauty queen" category alongside Holmes.

Trendsetters

The 10-month-old daughter of the late Anna Nicole Smith, Dannielynn Hope, was also mentioned as a "survivor", due to being at the centre of "Hollywood's most controversial tragedies".

The child was the subject of a paternity dispute between Howard K Stern and Larry Birkhead, who was eventually proved to be her father.

TR Knight, a star of US medical drama Grey's Anatomy, made the newsmaker list after he announced he was gay and co-star Isiah Washington made a homophobic remark about him.

Actress Sarah Jessica Parker, singer Justin Timberlake and model Kate Moss were named the most prominent trendsetters in fashion.

Microsoft facing $1bn Xbox bill

Man playing Xbox game

Some Xbox Live gamers have complained about fraud

Microsoft has said that it is facing a bill of more than $1bn to cover the cost of offering extended warranties, after failings with its Xbox 360.

The company admitted it had been forced to make "an unacceptable number of repairs" to the consoles after key hardware failed.

Customers who suffer the problems will now be given a free three-year warranty, the company said.

The failures are indicated by three red flashing lights on the console.

Microsoft, has not revealed how many of its machines have suffered the problem, but said the number was "bigger than we are comfortable with."

It added that the move - which will also see some people reimbursed for postage and repairs on consoles which were out of warranty - was aimed at keeping the loyalty of its customers.

"The majority of Xbox 360 owners are having a great experience with their console and have from day one," said Robbie Bach, president of Microsoft's Entertainment & Devices Division.

"But this problem has caused frustration for some of our customers and for that, we sincerely apologise."

It added its Xbox division was still expected to make a profit during the financial year beginning 1 July 2007.

Migration manoeuvre

Separately the company has announced an October launch of its advanced version of the Xbox - the Xbox 360 Elite - in Japan, where it lags behind Nintendo and Sony in the console market.

And the company has also unveiled plans to open a software development centre in Canada which it said was a way of hiring talented people from abroad who would struggle to obtain a US working visa.

The Vancouver location would "allow the company to continue to recruit and retain highly skilled people affected by the immigration issues in the US", Microsoft said

New York adjusts volume control

 

Traffic on 42nd St, New York. File pic

 

The City That Never Sleeps is giving those yearning for a bit of peace a helping hand - New Yorkers are adjusting to a new noise code.

Barking dogs, dustcarts, lawn mowers, pneumatic drills and noisy iPods are all targets of the crackdown.

Even Mr Softee the ice cream van can only play his jingles while moving.

Noise is the biggest cause of calls to the city's 311 Quality of Life hotline and under the new law, officers will be despatched to investigate complaints.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg pushed for the new laws to be approved in 2005. It is the first change in noise regulations in more than 30 years.

"People have a right to sleep and it's finding that balance - we will do that," the mayor said.

Experts say excessive noise can cause citizens a whole range of problems from hearing loss to sleep disorders or wider psychological problems.

In New York, it has had residents ringing the 311 hotline off the hook. Every year, the Quality of Life line receives about 275,000 noise complaints.

Some of the new regulations include:

  • Pneumatic drills must have noise jackets
  • Dustcarts have to keep 15m (50ft) away from residential buildings overnight
  • Restrictions on the hours of use of lawn mowers
  • Ice cream trucks cannot play jingles while stationary
  • Loud music will incur fines ranging from $50 for a portable stereo up to $24,000 for restaurants ignoring a first warning. Night clubs must reduce decibel levels
  • Cars can be towed away if their alarm goes off for more than three minutes at night
  • Fines for dog owners whose pets bark for more than 10 minutes continuously during the day or five at night

The last measure has brought howls of protests from dog owners who said people and cars were by far the bigger offenders.

Dog owner Marlene Hussey, who lives on the Upper West Side, told the Newsday newspaper: "Humans make a lot more noise than doggies do. How are you going to tell a dog you only have five minutes?"

But Ailen Bronzaft, who helped develop the code, defended the regulations, which came in on Sunday.

She told Agence France-Presse news agency: "New Yorkers are very tolerant and reasonable people: they take the subways, they take the streets, they go out, to the stadium, to parades. But when they close their doors at home, that is when they expect to be quiet."

Department of Environmental Protection officers will enforce the laws, although they will not be patrolling the streets.

Wednesday, July 4, 2007

Bush not ruling out Libby pardon

Libby was convicted of obstructing an investigation into the leaking of a CIA agent's identity [Reuters]

The US president has refused to rule out granting a full pardon to a former White House aide convicted of perjury.
George Bush had already invoked his presidential powers to ensure that Lewis "Scooter" Libby will not serve any of his 30-month prison sentence for obstructing an investigation into a CIA leak.

"I felt the punishment was severe. So I made a decision to commute his sentence, but leave in place a serious fine and probation," Bush said after visiting wounded troops at the Walter Reed Army Medical Centre on Tuesday.
"As to the future I rule nothing in and nothing out."

Libby, a former aide to Dick Cheney, the vice-president, still has a felony conviction on his record, two years on probation and a $250,000 fine.

'Betrayal of trust'
Nancy Pelosi, the speaker of the House of Representatives, called Bush's decision on Monday a "betrayal of trust of the American people" while Harry Reid, the senate Democratic leader, called it "disgraceful".

Reid said that while the constitution gave Bush the power to commute sentences, "history will judge him harshly for using that power to benefit his own vice-president's chief of staff who was convicted of such a serious violation of law".

John Edwards, a Democratic presidential hopeful, said "George Bush and his cronies think they are above the law and the rest of us live with the consequences".
Tony Snow, White House spokesman, dismissed charges of cronyism, saying: "The president does not look upon this as granting a favour to anyone, and to do that is to misconstrue the nature of the deliberations."
Asked whether Cheney had pressed Bush to commute Libby's sentence, Snow said: "I don't have direct knowledge. But on the other hand, the president did consult with most senior officials, and I'm sure that everybody had an opportunity to share their views."

Conservative pressure
Bush's move came after intense pressure from conservatives who demanded he pardon Libby and saw him as the victim of an overly zealous special prosecutor.
"While for a long time I have urged a pardon for Scooter, I respect the president's decision. This will allow a good a man who has done a lot for his country to resume his life," Fred Thompson, a former Republican senator who helped raise money for Libby's defence, said.

Rudolph Giuliani, former New York mayor and Republican candidate for the 2008 presidential race, said Bush's decision was "reasonable" and "correct".

Monday's announcement came just hours after an appeals court rejected Libby's final request to remain free while he appealed his conviction.

Cheney's former chief of staff was sentenced to prison for lying and obstructing an investigation into who blew the cover of CIA officer Valarie Plame whose husband had criticised the Iraq war.

Q&A: The CIA leak case

 

Valerie Plame and her husband Joseph Wilson

 

US President George W Bush has intervened to prevent Lewis "Scooter" Libby, former chief of staff to Vice-President Dick Cheney, from serving a 30-month jail term.

Libby was convicted of lying about the disclosure of a CIA officer's identity. We look at key questions in the case.

What was Libby convicted of?

Libby was found guilty of two counts of perjury (lying to a grand jury), one count of making a false statement to the FBI and one of obstruction of justice. He was not charged with leaking the CIA officer's identity.

He was found not guilty on a separate count of making a false statement to the FBI.

Could he have got a longer sentence?

He could have got up to 25 years, but the prosecution asked for a maximum of three. Mr Libby himself asked the court for clemency, saying: "It is respectfully my hope that the court will consider, along with the jury verdict, my whole life."

US District Judge Reggie B Walton said: "People who occupy these types of positions, where they have the welfare and security of the nation in their hands, have a special obligation to not do anything that might create a problem."

Libby was also fined a quarter of a million dollars.

President Bush, however, described the 30-month prison sentence as "excessive".

The president's decision falls short of a full pardon - Libby will still have to pay the fine and faces a period of probation.

What did Libby do wrong?

Libby was convicted of lying to FBI investigators and the grand jury about how and when he learned that Valerie Plame was a CIA officer, and lying about disclosing classified information to reporters.

He told investigators that he had learned about Ms Plame from reporters - but he had already been told about her by other government officials, including Vice-President Cheney.

Libby's defence was that any untrue statements he had made were the results of his poor memory - that if he had known about Ms Plame earlier than he said he had, he had genuinely failed to remember that fact.

But juror Denis Collins said the jury found it "very unlikely" Libby could have forgotten such a key detail when it had been part of nine conversations he had had in the days before he said he learned it afresh.

What is the significance of the trial?

The trial exposed the inner workings of the White House in the summer of 2003, when questions were being raised about the invasion of Iraq.

President Bush had said before the war that Saddam Hussein had tried to buy ingredients for a nuclear bomb from a country in Africa.

But a man sent to investigate that claim - former US ambassador Joseph Wilson - said he had found no evidence of it, and wrote an opinion piece in the New York Times criticising the Bush administration's use of intelligence to justify the invasion.

Shortly after, a newspaper columnist, Robert Novak, revealed that Mr Wilson's wife, Valerie Plame, was a CIA agent tracking nuclear proliferation.

Deliberately revealing an agent's name is a serious offence in the US and the leak sparked a high-level criminal inquiry.

Mr Wilson and his wife accused leading White House figures of taking revenge on him by "outing" his wife.

No-one was ever charged with the original leak, but Libby was charged with perjury and the obstruction of justice.

In July 2006, the Wilsons filed a civil lawsuit against Vice-President Dick Cheney, Libby and presidential adviser Karl Rove, among others, accusing them of being behind the leak, maliciously exposing her identity and destroying her career.

So who was the source of the leak?

In September 2006, former state department official Richard Armitage admitted that he was responsible for the original leak.

Mr Armitage said his revelation to two journalists - Novak and Washington Post reporter Bob Woodward - had been "a terrible mistake", one which he had made inadvertently, not knowing Ms Plame's job was secret.

At the time, the Washington Post said in an editorial that "one of the most sensational charges levelled against the Bush White House - that it orchestrated the leak of Ms Plame's identity to ruin her career and thus punish Mr Wilson - is untrue".

Why did Mr Armitage keep quiet for so long?

He says he told Patrick Fitzgerald, the special prosecutor investigating the affair, in 2003 that he might have been the source for the Novak article. He says Mr Fitzgerald told him not to say anything.

Some people are now asking why Mr Fitzgerald pursued others in the case with such determination. Others reply that Mr Armitage's admission does not mean other administration figures were not involved in an attack on the Wilsons.

Oil spill adds to US flood misery

 

Flood water flows out of a refinery and over school buses in Coffeyville.

 

A major oil spill has added to a flooding crisis across Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas as evacuees wait for water to recede from their homes.

Some 42,000 gallons (160,000 litres) of crude oil have escaped from a refinery in Coffeyville, south-central Kansas, into the swollen Verdigris River.

Officials are now trying to prevent the slick floating downriver toward Oologah Lake, in Oklahoma.

Severe storms in the region have been blamed for 11 deaths in Texas alone.

President George W Bush has declared a major disaster in Kansas and ordered federal aid for recovery efforts.

Although the state was spared further rainfall on Monday, the poor weather showed no sign of abating over neighbouring Texas and eastern Oklahoma.

Pollution danger

The latest spill contaminated floodwaters and swept foul-smelling water into homes.

In Kansas, residents in Coffeyville, Independence and Osawatomie have been evacuated.

A map of Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas

Our whole system will be at risk for contamination

Jeff Morris
Coffeyville city manager

Up to 3,000 people were forced from their homes during the weekend because of flooding from the Caney River in north-east Oklahoma.

And hundreds of people in northern Texas were still unable to return home near the Wichita and Brazos rivers because of flooding, power failures or fears of contaminated water.

The oil spill from the Coffeyville Resources refinery occurred as staff attempted to shut down the plant during a flood evacuation.

A pump at the 108,000 barrel-per-day facility apparently continued to push oil into a main storage tank until it overflowed.

Environmental protection agency officials said they were optimistic the spill would dissipate before it reached Oklahoma's Oologah Lake, which provides drinking water.

But Coffeyville city manager Jeff Morris warned that if the flood did not recede soon and allow the town to start pumping water back into the river basin, "our whole system will be at risk for contamination".