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South Korea says North summit possible if talks go well

Reuters, SEOUL: South Korean President Lee Myung-bak on Tuesday held
out the possibility of a leaders' summit with rival North Korea if
planned inter-Korean dialogue goes well, saying he had high hopes for
their first talks in months.

The two Koreas have agreed to discuss November's attack by the North
on a southern island and an attack in March on a South Korean naval
vessel which Seoul has blamed on the North, helping to ease tension on
the peninsula and opening the way for the possible resumption of
six-party aid-for-disarmament talks.

The two attacks killed 50 people.

Seoul has suggested preliminary military talks take place at the
Panmunjom truce village on February 11. The talks are meant to set the
agenda for a more senior meeting, possibly at ministerial level.

The South has also proposed separate political talks to gauge
Pyongyangy's sincerity about denuclearization, the key component of
stalled aid-for-disarmament talks which the North walked out of two
years ago.

The North has yet to respond to the proposal for bilateral nuclear talks.

"I don't deny it," Lee said when asked during a live television
interview if progress at upcoming talks could possibly lead to a
summit between the rival Koreas' leaders. "We can have a summit if
needed."

Lee cut off a decade of unconditional aid to the North when he took
office in 2008, angering Pyongyang, and demanded the isolated neighbor
end its nuclear programs if it wanted Seoul to get back to commercial
exchange and giving aid.

Lee said he has high expectations that the North will abandon the path
it had taken in the past of staging hostile acts to raise tensions,
then seeking dialogue with the South to win concessions.

Russian police arrest dozens at anti-government rallies

Reuters, MOSCOW: Russian police detained several dozen people at
anti-Kremlin rallies in Moscow and St Petersburg on Monday as they
tried to protest against limits to freedom of assembly.

A crowd of about 600 chanted "Freedom, Freedom!" in sub-zero
temperatures on Moscow's Triumph Square, heavily outnumbered by riot
police, who dragged more than a dozen activists off to waiting buses
after detaining them at a metro exit as they headed to the rally.

"This is our democracy. Look at what happens in Russia!" yelled one
youth as black-helmeted OMON riot police arrested him.

Rights activists and Kremlin opponents have staged demonstrations on
the square on the last day of each month with 31 days, in a symbolic
reference to the right to free assembly enshrined under Article 31 of
Russia's constitution.

President Dmitry Medvedev has promised to allow more public criticism
of the authorities since he was steered to power by his close ally
Vladimir Putin, now prime minister, in 2008. But most opposition
groups say little has changed and their activities are still
restricted.

In St Petersburg, police said they had detained about 60 people at a
rally in the heart of city where protestors cried: "We demand freedom
of speech, freedom of assembly and an end to censorship."

Opposition leader Boris Nemtsov, who spent 15 days in jail after a New
Year's eve protest, rallied the Moscow crowd with calls for an end to
Putin's grip on power since he became president in 2000 and later
prime minister.

"The rubbish tip of history awaits Putin just like all dictators," he
told Reuters, raising chants of "Putin resign" and "Russia without
Putin."

Moscow authorities gave permission for 1,000 people to gather, but in
the past police have beaten or detained demonstrators they accused of
infractions at such rallies.

Before the anti-Kremlin protests police detained 11 members of an
opposition group in a weekend raid on their office and apartments,
activists said.

Police linked the searches and arrests to an investigation into
nationalist riots in December near Red Square, law enforcement sources
cited by Kommersant newspaper said.

But members of the opposition Other Russia group said the arrests were
intended to block their participation in the demonstrations on Triumph
Square.

"It was clearly meant to pressure activist so that they don't
participate in today's protests," Other Russia activist Alexander
Averin said, adding that three activists' homes were searched.

Activists were detained and questioned overnight but had all been
released by Monday morning, except for Belarusian citizen Igor
Berezyuk, who was accused of involvement in violent racist rallies on
December 11.

After last month's riots by soccer fans and neo-nationalists who
targeted non-Slavic minorities for attacks, a top Kremlin adviser
blamed liberal freedom-of-assembly demonstrations he said served as an
example to radical groups to take to streets.

In Myanmar's gleaming new capital, uncertain promise

Reuters, NAYPYITAW, Myanmar: Its name translates as "Abode of Kings,"
but it is far from clear whether Myanmar's new capital and its
gleaming new parliamentary complex can return the reclusive state to
its former glory.

Bestowed with manicured, heavily watered lawns and forbidding stone
walls, Myanmar's five-year-old capital, Naypyitaw, bears no
resemblance to the rest of the country, one of Asia's poorest, or to
nearby villages of mostly thatched wooden huts.

But as an elected parliament convened in Myanmar this week for the
first time in half a century, the capital and its newly minted
lawmakers are considered by some a tentative step toward opening a
country that just 50 years ago was one of Southeast Asia's most
promising and wealthiest.

Once the world's biggest rice exporter and a major energy producer,
the former British colony is known now as a pariah state with a
dysfunctional economy and an estimated 2,200 political activists or
opposition politicians behind bars.

Whether it will ever shake that image is a matter of intense
diplomatic debate, but a walk around the streets of the new capital
suggests its rulers are thinking big.

The sprawling city with its two new "Hluttaws," or legislative
chambers, was built from scratch just five years ago, allowing the
reclusive military rulers of the former Burma to isolate themselves
some 320 km (200 miles) from the largest city and former capital,
Yangon.

Naypyitaw is a maze of ministry buildings, government mansions, civil
servants' quarters and presidential palaces complete with grand
Roman-style pillars -- all rising from dusty, arid scrubland. At its
heart is the parliamentary complex's 31 buildings, with pagoda-style
roofs.

PUZZLINGLY WIDE ROADS

Attractions include five golf courses, seven resort-style hotels,
drinkable tap water, a Western-style shopping mall, a large zoo, a
sprawling "water fountain garden," lavish mansions and 24-hour
electricity in a nation beset by power outages.

Restaurant and shop owners told Reuters business had improved as more
laborers arrived in the city for its myriad construction projects.

Much of the work has been carried out by workers toiling in searing
heat without modern equipment.

A year ago, as construction of parliament was at full steam, Reuters
journalists witnessed women hauling stacks of bricks balanced upon
their head at one construction site, while men cleared land with
wooden-handled scythes at another.

Ox-drawn carts transported wood.

The government declines to disclose Naypyitaw's cost but analysts and
diplomatic sources say it must have cost billions of dollars, drawing
criticism from aid groups over the priorities of a country facing
chronic poverty and crumbling infrastructure.

Its rise reflects the strengthening diplomatic and financial muscle of
Myanmar's rulers as Southeast Asia and China tap its rich natural
resources, from timber and natural gas to precious Burmese gems,
despite Western sanctions imposed in response to rights abuses.

Despite its array of amenities, there's no lively city center thronged
with people, even five years after the government moved nearly all its
workers there. Officials put its population at about 1 million, but
that includes surrounding townships.

Its roads are puzzlingly wide, including one 20-lane boulevard, but
they are largely empty. Civilian cars are rare. The city center, a
roundabout where five roads meet, is populated mostly by palm trees
and potted flowers.

One person the authorities are surely happy to leave in Yangon is
opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi, a Nobel laureate freed from
detention following Myanmar's first election in two decades in
November.

Suu Kyi has yet to visit Naypyitaw and it is unclear when she will. On
Friday a special appeals court rejected her attempt to reinstate her
political party after it was dissolved for boycotting last year's
election.

Australia evacuates coastal cities in path of cyclone

Reuters, CANBERRA: Australia evacuated northeast coastal cities on
Tuesday as a cyclone rivalling the strength of Hurricane Katrina bore
down on tourism, sugar and coal mining areas and threatened areas
already devastated by floods far inland.

Cyclone Yasi is expected to generate winds of up to 280 kph (175 mph)
when it hits the Queensland state coast early on Thursday (2pm
Wednesday, GMT), matching the strength of Katrina, which devastated
New Orleans in 2005.

With a strong monsoon feeding Yasi's 650 km-wide front, the storm was
also expected to maintain its intensity long after crossing the coast
and could sweep inland as far as the outback mining city of Mt Isa.

"This storm is huge and life threatening," Queensland Premier Anna
Bligh told reporters, warning the storm was intensifying and picking
up speed on its path from the Coral Sea, and destructive gales would
begin from Wednesday morning.

Queensland, which accounts for about a fifth of Australia's economy
and 90 percent of steelmaking coal exports worth about $20.4 billion,
has had a cruel summer, with floods having swept the eastern seaboard
over the past month, killing 35 people.

"There's no time for complacency," said Mike Brunker, mayor of the
Whitsunday area which is known for its islands resorts close to the
Great Barrier Reef.

"People in low-lying areas are evacuating to friends and family or, if
they have to, leave town," he told local media.

The popular tourist state, home also to the country's main sugar
industry, bore the brunt of the floods and now risks being battered by
Yasi, which authorities said could be the most powerful tropical storm
to ever strike the area.

The cyclone could threaten around a third of the state's sugar cane
crop, an industry official said on Tuesday.

Island resorts in the Whitsundays and parts of the tourism hub of
Cairns and military town of Townsville were being evacuated along with
other areas in the danger zone, between Cooktown in the north and near
Mackay, a port, further south.

Military C-130 transport aircraft also evacuated the main hospital in
Cairns. Extra commercial flights were scheduled to cope with an
expected exodus of holidaymakers and residents.

Police were also empowered to forcibly move people from danger zones
in an area that is home to around 250,000 people.

"This is not a system that's going to cross the coast and rapidly
weaken out," Bureau of Meteorology senior forecaster Gordon Banks
said, warning winds could reach up to 280 kph and the storm could
reach Mt Isa, 900 km inland.

"We could see this system pushing well in across northern Queensland
as a significant tropical cyclone with damaging winds and very heavy
rainfall," Banks said.

COAL INDUSTRY ON ALERT -- AGAIN

Queensland's coal industry, only just recovering from recent record
floods, went back on alert on Tuesday, with at least one major mine
closing down temporarily and rail operations suspended as the industry
braced for the cyclone.

Australia's largest coal freight company, QR National, temporarily
closed two rail networks: the major Goonyella network, feeding into
the export terminals of Dalrymple Bay and Hay Point, and its smaller
Newlands line taking coal to Abbot Point, a company spokesman said

Global miner Rio Tinto shut its Hail Creek coal mine with the approach
of the cyclone.

Queensland's coal mines are mostly inland and are still struggling to
pump water out of their pits after flooding.

The Queensland Resources Council, an industry body, estimated coal
miners would take until March to return to normal, even without the
impact of cyclones.

Bligh said Yasi could be the worst tropical storm the state had seen,
with potential to cause powerful and deadly flash flooding in coastal
areas. Most of the state's major coal ports were temporarily closed to
shipping.

But she said the storm track had shifted slightly north, meaning flood
devastated and coal mining areas of central Queensland may escape the
worst of cyclonic rains.

"If there is any silver lining here, the movement of the cyclone
slightly north has meant that when it travels west and moves inland,
it is less likely to drop all of that massive rainfall into the
central Queensland catchment areas that have already experienced
flooding," Bligh said.

Last month's floods swamped around 30,000 homes, destroyed roads and
rail lines and crippled Queensland's coal industry, with up to 15
million tonnes of exports estimated to have been delayed into the
second half of this year.

Cyclone Yasi is expected to classified a "category 4" by the time it
reaches the coast, which would be the strongest to hit Australia since
Cyclone Larry hit the town of Innisfail in 2006, leveling sugar crops
and causing A$1.5 billion worth of damage.

Egyptians seek million-strong march to oust Mubarak

Reuters, CAIRO: Egypt's anti-government protesters, scenting victory
after President Hosni Mubarak agreed to discuss sweeping political
reforms, rallied support for what they hope can be a million-strong
march for democracy on Tuesday.

Mubarak's newly appointed vice-president began talks with opposition
figures and the army declared the protesters demands "legitimate" and
said it would hold its fire.

But protesters in Cairo's Tahrir Square, where thousands kept vigil
through the night in defiance of a curfew, vowed to continue their
campaign until the 82-year-old Mubarak quit.

"The only thing we will accept from him is that he gets on a plane and
leaves," said 45-year-old lawyer Ahmed Helmi.

The United States and other Western powers which have backed Mubarak
throughout his 30 years of rule, have demanded he submit to free
elections. Even if he holds out against the calls for his resignation,
it seems unlikely he could win a vote.

At least 140 people have died since demonstrations began last Tuesday,
inspired in part by Tunisians' overthrow of their aging strongman
after similar protests focusing on economic hardships and frustration
with political oppression.

The army's pledge to hold its fire was seen as tipping the scales
against Mubarak. "Mubarak has become a liability for the institution
of the army," Fawaz Gerges of the London School of Economics said.
"And so it is becoming more difficult by the day for Mubarak to remain
in office."

For the military establishment, which has run Egypt since its officers
ousted British-backed King Farouk in 1952, the aim may be to provide
reforms that preserve military influence.

For Washington and Mubarak's allies in Europe, as well as Israel,
attention will focus on how far Islamist groups, notably the hitherto
banned Muslim Brotherhood, can gain power in any new Egyptian
political system.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, used to calm on his
southern border since a 1979 peace treaty with Cairo, said Egypt could
turn into the kind of militant theocracy installed in Iran that same
year.

BROTHERHOOD SAYS ALL MUBARAK MEN MUST GO

The Brotherhood, which says it wants a pluralist democracy, has taken
a cautious approach to joining in protests led by the young and the
urban professional classes.

But it said on Monday it was calling on people to continue protests
until the whole establishment departed -- "including the president,
his party, his ministers and his parliament."

In the second city, Alexandria, thousands of people gathered near the
main railway station, many with food and blankets, saying they would
join Tuesday's "march of a million."

Officials said rail services would be disrupted on Tuesday by curfew
orders, which may keep some people away from protests.

Newly-appointed Vice President Omar Suleiman appeared on state
television on Monday to say Mubarak had asked him to begin talks with
all political forces on constitutional and other reforms. The channel
later said talks had begun.

Suleiman, an intelligence chief named on Saturday, also said a new
government sworn in by Mubarak on Monday would fight unemployment,
inflation and corruption.

The United States said Mubarak must also revoke the emergency law
under which he has ruled since 1981. Washington has sent a special
envoy, former ambassador to Cairo Frank Wisner, to meet Egyptian
leaders.

"The way Egypt looks and operates must change," said Robert Gibbs,
spokesman for President Barack Obama.

Western powers have been caught off guard by the speed with which
Mubarak's police state has been pushed back by furious but unarmed
citizens. Some analysts believe the army is now seeking a face-saving
way to have Mubarak leave.

A presidential election due in September might give Mubarak the
opportunity simply to say he will not run again. But such a tactic may
underestimate the desire on the street to see him go. "It won't work.
These are stalling tactics. I don't think Mubarak quite realizes the
gravity of the situation," said Faysal Itani of Exclusive Analysis.
"If this deadlock goes on much longer there could be a further
breakdown of order."

At Cairo University, politics professor Hassan Nafaa said: "This all
aims to gain time, calm the mood on the street, drive the protesters
away and diminish the revolution ... The president must end his rule
and leave, there is no alternative."

Foreign governments, meanwhile, scrambled to ensure the safety of
their nationals trapped by the unrest in Egypt.

Companies, from gas drillers to supermarkets, also pulled out staff as
confrontation brought economic life to a halt. Financial markets and
banks were closed for a second day.

Internationally, Europe's benchmark Brent crude oil hit $101 a barrel
on fears the unrest could spread to oil producing states like Saudi
Arabia. Smaller Arab countries such as Yemen, Sudan, Syria and Jordan
were all mentioned by analysts as candidates for popular expressions
of discontent.

Moody's downgraded Egypt's credit rating to Ba2 with a negative
outlook from Ba1, saying the government might damage its weak finances
by increasing social spending.

As foreigners flee, Cairo airport a scene of chaos

AP, CAIRO: Amid scenes of chaos at Cairo's international airport,
thousands of foreigners fled the unrest in Egypt, boarding special
flights home or to nearby Mediterranean airports.

As countries around the world scrambled to send in planes to fly their
citizens out on Monday, nerves and shouting and shoving matches
erupted as passengers crammed into Cairo airport's new Terminal 3
seeking a flight home.

"It's an absolute zoo, what a mess," said Justine Khanzadian, 23, a
graduate student from the American University of Cairo. "I decided to
leave because of the protests, the government here is just not stable
enough to stay."

Making matters worse, check-in counters were poorly staffed because
many EgyptAir employees had been unable to get to work due to a 3
p.m.-to-8 a.m. curfew and traffic breakdowns across the Egyptian
capital.

The U.S. State Department said it has evacuated more than 1,200
Americans aboard government-chartered planes and expects to fly out
roughly 1,400 more in the coming days.

State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said that by the end of Monday
six planes will have flown nine flights ferrying U.S. citizens from
Cairo to Larnaca, Cyprus; Athens, Greece; and Istanbul, Turkey.

New York-based Pamela Huyser, who had traveled to Egypt for a
conference, arrived in Larnaca, late Monday. She described the violent
scene she witnessed from her ninth-floor hotel balcony in Cairo.

"You cannot even believe what we saw," she said. "We saw people
looting, we saw gunfire, people shooting other people. A lot of people
working in our hotel, they came out with sticks and knives and bats
and they protected us from getting looted."

Earlier, a U.S. military plane landed in Lanarca with 42 people —
mostly staff at U.S. embassies in Africa and elsewhere who had also
traveled to Egypt for a conference.

Additional flights were also being arranged in Turkey and neighbor
Greece, where authorities announced plans to increase coast guard
patrols to deter immigrants from troubled north African countries from
reaching the European Union member.

Greek oil worker Markos Loukogiannakis, who arrived in Athens on a
flight carrying 181 passengers including 65 U.S. citizens, said
confusion reigned at Cairo airport and travelers had to negotiate a
string of checkpoints just to get there.

"In a 22-kilometer (14-mile) route from our suburb to the airport we
had to get through 19 checkpoints, including nine manned by
civilians," he said. "There were lots of people gathering at the
airport and it was very difficult to get in."

He said security had deteriorated sharply over the past three days in
Cairo after police withdrew from the streets.

In Germany, a special Lufthansa plane arrived in Frankfurt late Monday
night with evacuees from Cairo.

Among the passengers was Guenther Kremer from Troisdorf in western
Germany. He told reporters that the situation in Cairo was "chaotic."

"The big problem was, that one didn't have any information, one didn't
know what is going to happen the next day — am I getting out or not,"
he said.

"We had to wait for three days to fly out — Egypt Air had canceled, so
we were quite happy when Lufthansa showed up today and got us out."

In a geopolitical shift, even Iraq decided it would evacuate its
citizens, sending three planes to Egypt — including the prime
minister's plane — to bring home for free those who wish to return.
Thousands of Iraqis had once fled to Egypt to escape the violence in
their own country.

About 800 Iraqis had left Cairo by Monday afternoon, said Capt.
Mohammed al-Moussawi, a crew member for the prime minister's plane. He
said the flights would continue until all those who wished to return
had done so.

Nearly 320 Indian nationals arrived in Mumbai on a special Air India
flight and another 275 were expected later. An Azerbaijan flight
carrying 103 people and the body of an Azeri Embassy accountant killed
in the unrest arrived in Baku, and Turkey sent five planes to Cairo
and Alexandria, evacuating 1,548 Turkish nationals.

Air Canada said a flight chartered by the Canadian government landed
in Frankfurt, Germany, on Monday, carrying 174 Canadians plus 36 other
foreigners, mostly Americans and Australians. A second
Canadian-chartered flight was due to depart from Cairo on Tuesday.

Tristin Hutton, a bush pilot from Fort Francis, Ontario, who had been
visiting his sister at the Canadian Embassy in Cairo, described a
chaotic scene at the Cairo airport.

"People holding tickets had difficulties getting on the plane, because
the airport in Cairo is pure chaos," the 44-year-old said.

"The terminals are full of panicking people. The ground staff is
disappearing and at the gate, just before entering, we all together
had to collect $2,000 for a policeman at the door," he said. "He would
not let us pass without paying."

Indonesia was sending a plane to Cairo to start evacuating some 6,150
Indonesians — mostly students and workers — and SAS Denmark was flying
home some 60 Danes.

China sent four planes to help pick up an estimated 500 Chinese
stranded in Cairo and warned citizens not travel to Egypt.

That echoed earlier warnings from Britain, Sweden, Finland, Norway,
Denmark and the Czech Republic, which all advised against all
nonessential travel to Egypt. Many European tour companies canceled
trips to Egypt until Feb. 23, while others left the cancellations open
until further notice.

One big question was what to do with the tens of thousands of tourists
in other parts of Egypt. Tour operators say they will fly home all
their customers this week when their holidays end, or on extra
flights, stressing there has not been any unrest in Red Sea resort
cities like Hurghada or Sharm el-Sheik. Still, food shortages were
starting to be felt at some Egyptian resorts and some restaurants were
refusing to serve foreigners.

All major German tour operators — among them TUI AG and Thomas Cook's
German subsidiary — canceled day trips to Cairo and Luxor.

Britain estimated there were 30,000 U.K. tourists and long-term
residents in Egypt but said it had no plans to evacuate them. Foreign
Secretary William Hague warned people against all but essential travel
to Cairo, Alexandria, Luxor and Suez.

The Danish company shipping company A.P. Moller-Maersk A/S chartered a
plane to pick up relatives of its Danish employees in Egypt. The
company said there were no terminal operations in Egypt on Monday and
the Maersk Line, Safmarine and Damco offices were closed.

Air France canceled its daily flight from Paris to Cairo on Monday and
planned to increase its capacity Tuesday by an extra 200 seats.

Portugal sent a C-130 military transport plane to evacuate its
citizens. Greece was sending three C-130 military transport planes to
Alexandria on Tuesday and the Polish airline LOT was flying to Cairo.

Cyclone roars toward Australia's flooded north

AP, SYDNEY: A strong tropical cyclone roaring toward Australia's
flood-ravaged northeast will likely cause powerful and deadly
flash-flooding, officials warned Tuesday, as residents braced for
what's predicted to be one of the fiercest storms the region has ever
seen.

Cyclone Yasi was barreling toward the Queensland state coast as a
strong Category 3 storm on Tuesday with winds up to 137 mph (220 kph).
It was expected to hit the coast Wednesday as a violent Category 4
storm with wind gusts up to 155 mph (250 kph), dumping up to three
feet (one meter) of rain on communities already saturated from months
of flooding.

"This storm is huge and it is life-threatening," Queensland Premier
Anna Bligh said. "I know many of us will feel that Queensland has
already borne about as much as we can bear when it comes to disasters
and storms, but more is being asked of us — and I am confident that we
are able to rise to this next challenge."

Yasi would be the second storm to batter Queensland in a week. Cyclone
Anthony weakened quickly after hitting land Monday morning, and damage
was limited to uprooted trees and downed power lines.

Queensland has already suffered flooding since heavy rains started in
November. The floodwaters killed 35 people, damaged or destroyed
30,000 homes and businesses and left Brisbane, Australia's
third-largest city, under water for days.

Yasi is expected to strike farther north and spare Brisbane and towns
that have suffered the worst of the recent flooding. Still, Bligh said
the storm's path could change and residents up and down the coast
needed to be prepared.

"We could see very powerful flash flooding that will be dangerous and
potentially deadly," said Bligh, who described the storm as one of the
largest and most significant cyclones the state has ever seen.

Hamilton Island, a popular tourist destination off Queensland, began
evacuating some visitors on Monday, and other islands were considering
doing the same, Bligh said. Some nursing homes along the coast were
evacuating, and residents of low-lying areas were urged to consider
leaving their homes until the storm has passed.

"We're telling anyone in the low-lying areas they need to be moving
today and find another place to go to," said Val Schier, mayor of the
northern Queensland city of Cairns.

Deputy Police Commissioner Ian Stewart said residents should be
prepared with flashlights, food and water.

"Please make no mistake: this storm is a deadly event," Stewart said.
"Now is the time to act. Prepare yourself. Relocate out of the
high-risk zones."

Haiti: Aristide can have passport, hasn't applied

AP, PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti: Former Haitian President Jean-Bertrand
Aristide is eligible for a passport but has not applied for one,
Haitian officials said Monday.

That followed a letter from the ousted leader's U.S. lawyer, Ira
Kurzban, telling officials at Haiti's foreign affairs and interior
ministries that he understood they had agreed to issue Aristide a
diplomatic passport.

"I kindly request that his diplomatic passport be issued immediately
and that plans for his return commence immediately," he said. The
letter was forwarded to reporters.

But Interior Minister Paul-Antoine Bien-Aime said in an official
letter, sent later Monday, that no passport had been requested. "It
appears that to date, neither ministry had received a request for
issuance or renewal of passports from the former President
Jean-Bertrand Aristide," he wrote.

Aristide is a former priest and liberation theologist who rose to
become Haiti's first democratically elected president. He was
overthrown in a coup, restored to power, then ousted again in 2004.
His return was forced by the threat of a U.S. military invasion;
debate has raged for years over what role the U.S. played in his
departures.

His lack of a valid passport has long been given as a principal
technical reason impeding his return. Haitian officials say that he
would not need a passport to re-enter Haiti, but could need one to
pass through other countries on his way back from his exile in South
Africa.

Bien-Aime's letter was sent to media in two versions, one French and
the other Haitian Creole. The French version says: "The Government of
the Republic gives its assurance that as soon as it is made, such a
request will be honored promptly."

The Creole differs slightly: "The government gives a guarantee that if
President Aristide requests a passport, it will respond to him
quickly."

Fritz Longchamp, Preval's chief of staff, said: "The French version is
more accurate than the Creole."

He said government ministers decided last Tuesday to announce that
Aristide could get a passport if he applied. Longchamp said this has
been a long-standing position of the government, reiterated to "lay to
rest all the speculation" that the Haitian government was preventing
his return.

Speculation that Aristide might come back to Haiti soared after
ex-dictator Jean-Claude "Baby Doc" Duvalier stepped off an Air France
jet in January in a shocking return from nearly 25 years of exile.

If Aristide followed, he would arrive in the midst of a potentially
destabilizing political crisis in which President Rene Preval's chosen
candidate is deadlocked with a rival for the remaining spot in a
delayed electoral runoff.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton came to Haiti on Sunday
to meet with Preval and the candidates. Final results from the Nov. 28
first round are expected Wednesday with the vote rescheduled for March
20.

Preval, who was once Aristide's close ally but now regarded as a
traitor by his partisans, faces the constitutional end of his term on
Feb. 7, though a law passed last year could allow him to stay longer.

Aristide could not participate in the election as a candidate, and has
said he does not want to.

But his return would be a bombshell that could change the course of
the race by setting off unrest or reawakening dormant political
allegiances. He remains popular in many circles but his Fanmi Lavalas
party was not permitted to participate in this or other recent
elections.

Last week a full-page ad ran in the Miami Herald calling for a new
passport and for Aristide's immediate return. It carried 190
signatures including social organizations, political figures such as
Jesse Jackson and deputy U.N. Special Envoy to Haiti Paul Farmer,
entertainers Harry Belafonte and actor Danny Glover, and names
associated with controversy such as the Rev. Jeremiah Wright and
imprisoned radio journalist Mumia Abu-Jamal.

U.S. State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley posted on Twitter last
week: "We do not doubt President Aristide's desire to help the people
of Haiti. But today Haiti needs to focus on its future, not its past."

Clinton told Radio Metropole on Sunday: "I don't know what, if any,
plans President Aristide has."

Over the weekend, Internet rumors spread citing a Venezuelan news
report that Aristide had traveled to the nearby island of Cuba.
Kurzban said the rumors are untrue and the ex-president was in South
Africa on Monday.

Egypt's army promises no force against protesters

AP, CAIRO: Egypt's military pledged not to fire on protesters in a
sign that army support for President Hosni Mubarak may be unraveling
on the eve of a major escalation — a push for a million people to take
to the streets Tuesday to demand the authoritarian leader's ouster.

More than 10,000 people beat drums, played music and chanted slogans
in Tahrir Square, which has become the epicenter of a week of protests
demanding an end to Mubarak's three decades in power.

With the organizers' calling for a "march of a million people," the
vibe in the sprawling plaza — whose name in Arabic means "Liberation"
— was of an intensifying feeling that the uprising was nearing a
decisive point.

"He only needs a push!" was one of the most frequent chants, and a
leaflet circulated by some protesters said it was time for the
military to choose between Mubarak and the people.

The latest gesture by Mubarak aimed at defusing the crisis fell flat.
His top ally, the United States, roundly rejected his announcement of
a new government Monday that dropped his highly unpopular interior
minister, who heads police forces and has been widely denounced by the
protesters.

The crowds in the streets were equally unimpressed.

"It's almost the same government, as if we are not here, as if we are
sheep," sneered one protester, Khaled Bassyouny, a 30-year-old
Internet entrepreneur. He said it was time to escalate the marches.
"It has to burn. It has to become ugly. We have to take it to the
presidential palace."

Another concession came late Monday, when Vice President Omar Suleiman
— appointed by Mubarak only two days earlier — went on state TV to
announce the offer of a dialogue with "political forces" for
constitutional and legislative reforms.

Click image to see photos of anti-government protests in Egypt


Reuters/Yannis Behrakis

Suleiman did not say what the changes would entail or which groups the
government would speak with. Opposition forces have long demanded the
lifting of restrictions on who is eligible to run for president to
allow a real challenge to the ruling party, as well as measures to
ensure elections are fair. A presidential election is scheduled for
September .

In Washington, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs dismissed the naming
of the new government, saying the situation in Egypt calls for action,
not appointments.

Publicly, the Obama administration has declined to discuss the subject
of Mubarak's future. However, administration officials said Monday
that Washington prefers Mubarak not contest the upcoming vote. They
spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of
diplomacy.

The State Department said that a retired senior diplomat — former
ambassador to Egypt Frank Wisner — was now on the ground in Cairo and
will meet Egyptian officials to urge them to embrace broad economic
and political changes that can pave the way for free and fair
elections.

The army statement, aired on state TV, said the powerful military
recognizes "the legitimacy of the people's demands" — the strongest
sign yet that it is willing to let the protests continue and even grow
as long as they remain peaceful, even if that leads to the fall of
Mubarak.

If the 82-year-old president, a former air force commander, loses the
support of the military, it would likely be a fatal blow to his rule.

For days, army tanks and troops have surrounded Tahrir Square, keeping
the protests confined but doing nothing to stop people from joining.

Military spokesman Ismail Etman said the military "has not and will
not use force against the public" and underlined that "the freedom of
peaceful expression is guaranteed for everyone."

He added the caveats, however, that protesters should not commit "any
act that destabilizes security of the country" or damage property.

Looting that erupted over the weekend across the city of around 18
million eased — but Egyptians endured another day of the virtual halt
of normal life, raising fears of damage to the economy if the crisis
drags on. Trains stopped running Monday, possibly an attempt by
authorities to prevent residents of the provinces from joining
protests in the capital.

A curfew imposed for a fourth straight day — starting an hour earlier,
at 3 p.m. — was widely ignored. Banks, schools and the stock market in
Cairo were closed for the second working day, making cash tight. An
unprecedented complete shutdown of the Internet was also in its fourth
day. Long lines formed outside bakeries as people tried to replenish
their stores of bread.

Cairo's international airport was a scene of chaos as thousands of
foreigners sought to flee the unrest, and countries around the world
scrambled to send in planes to fly their citizens out.

Incidents of looting continued. In Cairo, soldiers detained about 50
men trying to break into the Egyptian National Museum in a fresh
attempt to steal the country's archaeological treasures, the military
said. An attempt to break into an antiquities storehouse at the famed
Pharaonic Karnak Temple in the ancient southern city of Luxor was also
foiled.

The official death toll from the crisis stood at 97, with thousands
injured, but reports from witnesses across the country indicated the
actual toll was far higher.

Mubarak appeared fatigued as he was shown on state TV swearing in the
members of his new Cabinet. The most significant change in the
shake-up was the replacement of the interior minister, Habib el-Adly,
who heads internal security forces and is widely despised by
protesters for the brutality some officers have shown. A retired
police general, Mahmoud Wagdi, will replace him.

Of the 29-member Cabinet, 14 were new faces, most of them not members
of the ruling National Democratic Party. Among those purged were
several of the prominent businessmen who held economic posts and have
engineered the country's economic liberalization policies the past
decades. Many Egyptians resented the influence of millionaire
politician-moguls, who were close allies of the president's son,
Gamal, long thought to be the heir apparent.

Mubarak retained his long-serving defense minister, Field Marshal
Hussein Tantawi, and Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit.

A major question throughout the unprecedented unrest has been whether
protests that began as a decentralized eruption of anger largely by
grass-roots activists can coalesce into a unified political leadership
to press demands and keep up momentum.

There were signs Monday of an attempt to do so, as around 30
representatives from various opposition groups met to work out a joint
stance.

The gathering issued the call for Tuesday's escalated protests but did
not reach a final agreement on a list of demands. They were to meet
again Tuesday to try to do so and decide whether to make prominent
reform advocate Mohamed ElBaradei spokesman for the protesters, said
Abu'l-Ela Madi, a spokesman of one of the participating groups,
al-Wasat, a moderate breakaway faction from the Muslim Brotherhood.

Unity is far from certain among the array of movements involved in the
protests, with sometimes conflicting agendas — including students,
online activists, grass-roots organizers, old-school opposition
politicians and the fundamentalist Muslim Brotherhood, along with
everyday citizens drawn by the exhilaration of marching against the
government.

The various protesters have little in common beyond the demand that
Mubarak go. Perhaps the most significant tensions among them is
between young secular activists and the Muslim Brotherhood, which
wants to form an Islamist state in the Arab world's largest nation.
The more secular are deeply suspicious the Brotherhood aims to co-opt
what they contend is a spontaneous, popular movement. American
officials have suggested they have similar fears.

ElBaradei, a pro-democracy advocate and former head of the U.N.
nuclear watchdog, invigorated anti-Mubarak feeling with his return to
Egypt last year, but the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood remains Egypt's
largest opposition movement.

In a nod to the suspicions, Brotherhood figures insist they are not
seeking a leadership role.

"We don't want to harm this revolution," Mohamed Mahdi Akef, a former
leader of the group.

Still, Brotherhood members appeared to be joining the protest in
greater numbers and more openly. During the first few days of
protests, the crowd in Tahrir Square was composed of mostly young men
in jeans and T-shirts.

On Monday, many of the volunteers handing out food and water to
protesters were men in long traditional dress with the trademark
Brotherhood appearance — a closely cropped haircut and bushy beards.

Japan volcano erupts with big blast of ash, rocks

AP, TOKYO: A revived Japanese volcano has erupted with its biggest
explosion yet, sending a huge plume of gas, rocks and ash into the sky
and breaking windows 5 miles (8 kilometers) away.

Officials widened the danger zone to keep residents away. The eruption
early Tuesday was the biggest since the Shinmoedake volcano burst to
life last week.

Wide areas were covered with ash and boulders landed on roads miles
(kilometers) away. The blast also knocked down trees and broke
hundreds of windows in local hotels and offices.

The volcano is in the remote Kirishima range on the southern island of
Kyushu. Public broadcaster NHK said a woman suffered cuts from
shattered glass in Tuesday's blast. No serious injuries have been
reported.

Pakistan woos the West with fashion week

AFP, Islamabad: Daring denims and micro miniskirts are not typical on
Pakistan catwalks, but at the capital's first ever fashion week,
designers have turned to risque Western styles to lure foreign buyers
back.
With the national economy hit by crippling debts and a torrid
political scene, fashion industry insiders hope the modern designs can
capitalise on the country's long-standing reputation as a global
textile capital.
Islambad's glitterati, a niche group of fashion-forward entrepreneurs
in the largely poor nation, held a four-day design showcase to
encourage international business — scared off by the threat of Taliban
bombs — to return.
'One reason for doing this is to bring the buying power of the world
back to Pakistan,' said organiser Tariq Amin, the country's best known
stylist.
'Because of the current situation and the political situation, it's
difficult for them (buyers) to want to come to Lahore and Karachi, so
Islamabad... the embassies are here, there's a lot more security.'
Security was indeed tight at Islamabad's luxury Serena Hotel, as
models picked from the streets of Pakistan's main cities sashayed down
the runway, showcasing the country's talent for colourful ornate and
sheer fabrics.
Edgy and bold off-the-shoulder cuts hit the runway alongside more
familiar long floating dresses, less likely to offend sensibilities in
the devout Muslim nation.
Designers hope that by slashing hemlines they can maximise foreign profits.
'You can't sell shalwar kameez in the West,' said Amin, referring to
the plain cotton tunic most commonly worn by men in Pakistan.
Pakistan's textile and clothing industry brings in 60 per cent of the
country's export revenues, according to official data, making it
critical to reviving economic fortunes, made worse by devastating
floods last year.
While other Pakistani cities such as Karachi are used to holding
fashion shows, Islamabad is new to the scene. A total of 32 designers
put on catwalk shows from Thursday to Sunday.
But the audience was largely Pakistani, with few foreign buyers seen
milling around outside the hotel's large conference hall where new and
more established designers staged their shows.
One buyer, Iranian Soheil Mazinani, of fashion house Asmaneh, said the
event's success would be judged by future business, not by its
popularity this time around.
Likening the show now to a 'baby', Mazinani said: 'I think after one
or two years it can grow and you will see a lot of buyers.'
But he admitted he would not be making any purchases on this trip, and
that the Western styles would be equally out of place on the streets
of Iran.
'We are just getting familiar with the different designers and
manufacturers,' he said, adding: 'Ladies can wear them for
celebrations, in parties or private events — underground.'
Fashion is a key engine for growth for countries such as Pakistan,
said Paco De Jaimes, founder of the not-for-profit World Fashion
Association, which aims to foster poor nations' participation in the
lucrative fashion business.
'(Fashion is) one of the main sectors (in Pakistan) and this helps
very much countries to recover their economies,' said De Jaimes.
'People don't realise how fashion industries contribute to the
eradication of poverty, to social integration, to empowerment of
women,' he said.
'Any kind of initiative that can promote that foreign step is always good.'
Zohra Khokhar, a 25-year-old designer who works with her mother for
their label Deeba & Zoe, said they came to Pakistan from Scotland six
years ago to capitalise on the availability of good materials.
'You can do everything here from start to finish, from the dyeing of
the material to the finishing of the beads and everything,' she said.
But breaking into the market is now harder than ever because of global
inflation pushing up manufacturing costs, she added.
'What people need to understand is that Pakistan's not as cheap as
they think. All over the world prices have gone up... so materials are
dearer, labour's dearer, you can't expect to get a massive profit out
of it.'

Indonesia jails pop star over Internet sex tape

Reuters, Jakarta, Monday, Jan 31, 2011:
An Indonesian pop star whose sex tapes with his celebrity girlfriends
spread wildly on the internet was jailed on Monday for three and a
half years, in a case that led to a wide crackdown on Internet porn in
the country.
The trial highlighted a divide between a youthful Indonesia set
against censorship on the internet and conservative pressure groups in
the world's most populous Muslim country who rallied outside the court
demanding a harsher penalty.
Nazril "Ariel" Irham, 30, was jailed under a controversial pornography
law, which was passed in 2008 to ban public displays of nudity and
behaviour that could incite lust.
"The defendant is legitimately and convincingly guilty of giving
chances for others to spread, make and provide pornography," said
judge Singgih Budi Prakoso in a west Javan court where 1,000 police
tried to control a rowdy crowd.
Police said earlier a friend of Irham's had taken the sex tape off his
computer and posted it on the Internet. Irham denied it was him on the
tape.
The crowd at the court included teenaged female fans of Irham's band,
Peterpan, wearing T-shirts with the word "freedom", and skullcap- and
headscarf-wearing members of Islamic groups.
Members of both groups were angered by the verdict. Irham was also
fined 250 million rupiah ($27,692).
Under the pornography law, anyone who produces, makes, copies,
circulates, broadcasts, offers, trades, loans or provides pornography
can be jailed for between six months and 12 years and can be fined up
to six billion rupiah ($665,900).
The law was seen by many as a step back in democratic and officially
secular Indonesia, where foreign investors are hoping for more
openness and pro-market reforms to increase its allure as an emerging
market investment destination.
After the Irham case blew up, Communications and Information Minister
Tifatul Sembiring, of the Islamic PKS party, called for tighter
internet controls, including requiring providers to stop access to
pornography or browsing services could be closed.
Research in Motion, makers of the popular Blackberry telephone and
messaging system, said two weeks ago it would comply with the
government's order to block access to pornographic sites via its
devices.
"What is an issue here is not Ariel, but rights supporters versus
morality enforcers. Tough choice: porn star or oppressors?" said
political commentator Wimar Witoelar on Twitter.

Pakistanis ruined by floods brace for more hardship

Reuters, RAMLI KHOSO, Pakistan: Six months after Pakistan's epic
floods demolished this farming village in the southern province of
Sindh, its residents still live in limbo on a roadside.

Let down by their unpopular government, and too poor to rebuild their
homes, villagers living in tents can only pray the next monsoon season
in July won't bring more upheaval.

"We are hardly getting any help," said Alimi Khoso, pointing to a
dirty plaster around her two-month-old granddaughter's leg, broken in
an accident in a tent camp.

"Where will we go if there are more floods. We don't even have enough
money to run away."

Monsoon floods began roaring through Pakistan in late July last year,
leaving about 11 million people homeless.

The government was slow to respond while the military, seen as a far
more efficient institution, took the lead in relief operations.
Pakistani leaders could face fresh criticism if dire conditions in
flood-affected areas worsen.

Many communities in Sindh are still surrounded by floodwaters and
hundreds of thousands of people still live in temporary shelters, even
though more than $1 billion in flood aid has been delivered to
Pakistan, a strategic U.S. ally.

In Ramli Khosa, about 1,5OO people reside in rows of bare, white tents
donated by Arab and Western aid groups.

They must travel about a kilometer to fetch water in tough conditions
felt in many flood-affected parts of Sindh province, which was hardest
hit by the disaster.

In interviews in several villages only a few people said they received
compensation from authorities -- 20,000 rupees ($233.9).

That doesn't go far. Prices remain unbearably high after floods
destroyed crops and cut food supplies.

Farmers say it could be years before they are able to plant again. To
survive, some toil as laborers, earning about a dollar a day.
Government help is unlikely to come soon.

Pakistan's government has been preoccupied by political crises and
already faces a host of other problems, from power cuts to a stubborn
Taliban insurgency.

Even if it decides to step up efforts to help millions of flood
victims who sank deeper into poverty after the catastrophe, generating
enough funds will be difficult.

Without implementing painful economic reforms, the government will
keep struggling to secure the sixth tranche of an $11 billion IMF loan
propping up the economy.

"The flood issue adds to the government's long list of woes. The state
is already stretched in many directions," said Kamran Bokhari, South
Asia director at STRATFOR global intelligence.

People like Qurban Ali have been largely forgotten both at home and abroad.

Ali stood over some bricks -- what's left of his flattened house --
glued together with a mixture of sand and cement to form a small
frame, a tiny step toward recovery.

"How can I plan to rebuild it without any help from the government,'
he asked, as mangy dogs lingered nearby.

A group of angry men held up a document which promised a local
official would deliver six sacks of staple foods. He delivered only
three and demanded a bribe, they alleged.

Ruling Pakistan People's Party spokeswoman Fauzia Wahab said the
government was doing its best to help flood victims.

"We are providing the farmers free-of-cost fertilizer and seeds. But
as you know we still have a problem with cash," she told Reuters.

MEDICINE IS TOO EXPENSIVE

Resentment is also growing elsewhere in Sindh, home province of
President Asif Ali Zardari.

In Murad Chandio village, Pakistan Red Crescent volunteers unload
sacks of flour from a truck as dozens of people who returned only a
month ago line up for help. It may temporarily ease suffering. People
there want long-term stability, and that can only come from the
government.

Families live beside wreckage, protected only by blankets hanging
above them. It's easy to see why many are terrified at the thought of
new raging waters.

"People's resilience has been really affected. Even any low level
flooding in future is going to be a problem. They may not be able to
cope," said Penny Sims, a Red Cross spokeswoman.

The ripple affects of the floods are felt most acutely in the
downtrodden parts of Sindh.

Economic devastation has left families unable to care for their
neediest loved ones. Ten-year-old Gulbahar Hidayatullah's bone
disease, rickets, is inflicting even more pain because relatives can't
afford to buy her enough medicine to treat it.

While some youngsters pass time playing beside the destruction left by
the floods, a relative has to hold her up.

Other children have been set back in different ways. In Ramli Khoso,
an 85-year-old toothless woman named Allahrakhi walked barefoot with a
tree branch she uses as a cane.

She barely had the energy to express her biggest worry -- her grandson
may be deprived of an education because floods have kept him out of
the classroom.

"I want him to have money so he can go to school, so he can get
married one day," she said, trembling. Others worry about just getting
their children through the next few weeks or months.

In Adam Khan village, located beside a canal with stinking, stagnant
water left by the floods, a woman lies in a tent. She gave birth there
a day earlier without medical attention because the cost of transport
to a clinic was too steep.

The infant yawns in the heat, flies swirling over her sweaty face.

Mexico's left wins western state in setback for PRI

Reuters, ACAPULCO, Mexico: Mexico's left appeared to hold onto a
governorship in the country's western hinterland on Sunday in a sign
the main opposition party still needs to show voters it has modernized
to win the presidency in 2012.

In the shadow of harrowing drug violence, voters in Guerrero gave the
leftist Party of Democratic Revolution, or PRD, victory over the
powerful Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, one of six state
elections ahead of next year's presidential race.

Both parties claimed victory on Sunday night and accused the other of
trying to rig the vote. But with 45 percent of the vote counted, the
PRD's candidate Angel Aguirre won 57 percent of the ballot, Guerrero
State Electoral Institute said on its website. That compared with 42
percent for the PRI's candidate Manuel Anorve. President Felipe
Calderon's National Action Party, or PAN, which failed to garner
support for its candidate and threw its backing behind the PRD, won
the remainder.

"We're tired of the PRI's corruption and the power the party holds
over the country's unions," said a waitress in Acapulco, Guerrero's
main city, who declined to give her name.

The PRI was kicked out by voters in 2000, putting an end to its
71-year rule in the oil exporting nation and top U.S. trade partner.
But the party is making a comeback, capitalizing on a divided left and
deep disappointment at a decade under the

PAN.

The center-left PRI won a majority in Congress in 2009 and has
maintained a strong presence at the state level, holding more than
half of Mexico's governorships.

The loss in Guerrero is not seen as a major setback, but the party is
looking for momentum to reach the presidency and it signals voters are
wary of the party's autocratic past, when party cronies ran the
country based on a system of patronage.

"LAB TEST"

The PRI still controls large blocs of voters from unions and farmer
groups and the Guerrero vote was marred by accusations that Anorve was
on the payroll of drug gangs, which he strongly denied.

"This vote is a first lab test for the election in the State of
Mexico," analyst Raymundo Riva Palacio told local radio, referring to
the populous state on the edge of Mexico City that could sway the
balance of power in Mexico.

Voters in Guerrero, one of Mexico's poorest states a few hours drive
from the Mexican capital, were spared the kind of cartel attacks that
have terrorized the region over the past few years, although rumors of
violence dissuaded some.

Almost 3,000 people have died in drug war violence in Guerrero over
the past four years as gangs fight over Acapulco's port, its links to
Mexico City and its marijuana and opium plantations hidden in lush
valleys.

Calderon is under pressure to contain surging drug violence across the
country after launching his army-backed crackdown in December 2006.
More than 34,000 people have died in drug killings since then, and
extortion, kidnapping and crime are rampant, worrying business
leaders.

South Korea rejects North's call for earlier military talks

Reuters, SEOUL: South Korea on Monday rejected a push by the North to
bring forward military talks by 10 days, saying it was not enough time
to prepare for their first dialogue since the North's deadly attack
against a border island last year.

Pyongyang sent a message to the South's defense ministry at the
weekend calling for the preliminary talks, which Seoul has suggested
take place at the Panmunjom truce village on February 11, to start on
Tuesday.

It was not immediately clear why the North wanted an earlier date.

Talks at the military and political level between the rival Koreas are
routinely set after proposals and counterproposals as the two sides
vie for higher bargaining positions and rarely break down over
scheduling conflicts.

Such trouble is not anticipated this time either, a defense ministry
official said.

North Korea has agreed to discuss the shelling of the South Korean
island of Yeonpyeong in November and the sinking of a South Korean
navy ship in March that Seoul blames on Pyongyang.

Pyongyang says the South provoked the island attack by test-firing
shells into its waters, and says it had nothing to do with the sinking
of Cheonan warship.

The working-level preliminary talks are meant to set the agenda for a
more senior meeting, possibly at the ministerial level.

Tensions have risen on the divided peninsula over the past 12 months,
with the two attacks on the South as well as the North's revelations
of big advances in its nuclear program.

But the main allies of the two Koreas -- the United States and China
-- have nudged the neighbors back to the negotiating table to defuse
tensions in a region which is responsible for one-sixth of the world's
economy.

South Korea wants to take a two-track approach to dialogue with the
North -- one to discuss the two attacks, and the other to see how to
move forward on the stalled six-party aid-for-disarmament talks.

Pyongyang has yet to respond to the South's proposal for bilateral
nuclear talks.

The North also said it wants to return to six-party talks with
regional powers aimed at compensating it in return for a pledge to end
its nuclear ambitions in a move analysts see as an attempt to secure
aid to help its struggling economy.

Egypt protesters camp out, Mubarak turns to army

Reuters, CAIRO: Egyptian protesters were camped out in central Cairo
Monday and vowed to stay until they had toppled President Hosni
Mubarak, whose fate appeared to hang on the military as pressure
mounted from the street and abroad.

"The army has to choose between Egypt and Mubarak," read one banner in
Cairo's Tahrir Square, where demonstrators shared food with soldiers
sent to restore order after violent protests shook Mubarak's 30-year
rule to its core.

Six days of unrest has killed more than 100 people but the two sides
have reached a stalemate. Protesters refuse to go, while the army is
not moving them. The longer protesters stay unchallenged, the more
untenable Mubarak's position seems.

Protesters in Tahrir Square -- epicenter of the earthquake that has
sent shudders through the Middle East and among global investors --
have dismissed Mubarak's appointment of military men as his vice
president and prime minister.

His promises of economic reform to address public anger at rising
prices, unemployment and huge gap between rich and poor have failed to
halt their broader calls for a political sweep out of Mubarak and his
associates.

Protesters have called for a general strike Monday and what they bill
as a "protest of the millions" march Tuesday, to press their demands
for democracy which could spell the end for the military establishment
which has run post-colonial Egypt since the 1950s.

The United States, an ally which has poured billions of dollars of aid
into Egypt since Mubarak came to power, stopped just short of saying
openly that it wanted him out. Officials including President Barack
Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton spoke about "an orderly
transition."

A senior U.S. administration official, who declined to be identified,
said the feeling among Obama's national security aides was that
Mubarak's time had passed, but it was up to Egyptians to determine
what happens next.

Mubarak, a former air force chief, has turned to his military
commanders, meeting them Sunday. They seem to hold his future in their
hands. Egypt's defense minister spoke by phone to U.S. Defense
Secretary Robert Gates Sunday.

Admiral Mike Mullen, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and
highest-ranking U.S. military officer, praised the "professionalism"
of Egypt's armed forces as its troops refrained from a crackdown on
protesters. Egypt receives about $1.3 billion a year in U.S. military
aid.

INVESTORS NERVOUS

The crisis in Egypt follows a revolt that toppled the leader of
Tunisia two weeks ago, and a wave of popular anger sweeping other
countries in North Africa and the Middle East.

Financial markets around the globe opened Monday bracing for the
impact of the weekend's events in Egypt. Brent oil hit a 28-month
high, pennies below $100 a barrel. The dollar rose in Asian trade as
investors sought a safe haven.

Share prices fell in Asia, and U.S. S&P futures were lower Monday
after Wall Street closed down 1.8 percent Friday, suggesting a global
pullback from risk assets like equities had room to run.

"The greater fear is that the turmoil could spread to other Middle
East countries, including even Saudi Arabia. If that happens, then all
bets for oil prices are off," ANZ Bank economist Sharon Zollner said
in a note to clients.

Egypt's own financial markets will be closed for a second working day
in a row Monday and the turmoil could quickly run down its substantial
reserves if it continues.

"Mubarak's predictability has long been counted on by the West, and
with that on the verge of disappearing, investors and politicians
around the region are nervous," said Akram Annous, MENA strategist at
Al Mal Capital.

An Egyptian opposition coalition that includes the mass Islamist
movement the Muslim Brotherhood has turned to Mohamed ElBaradei,
former head of the U.N. nuclear watchdog, to form a national unity
government and make contact with the military.

ElBaradei has urged Obama to call time on Mubarak.

"It is better for President Obama not to appear that he is the last
one to say to President Mubarak, 'It's time for you to go," he told
CNN.

ElBaradei disappointed the opposition by spending much of his time
abroad since he first launched a campaign calling for political reform
in Egypt last year, but lends the weight of his international
reputation to a movement that lacks a leader.

'NO MORE PHARAOHS'

"I think he is a good guy. He wasn't prepared for what happened. All
we care about is that we don't get another pharaoh," said Rami Nabil,
39, a businessman camped in Tahrir.

"We need a system of government that is democratic and long term, not
more pharaohs."

A short distance from the protests, shooting echoed over Cairo.
Impromptu neighborhood watch groups set up checkpoints across the city
center, checking anyone passing by.

Some of the self-appointed guards said shooting in one area near
Cairo's supreme court was the result of looters in a chemical company
building.

Security, which disintegrated Saturday and Sunday when police withdrew
from the streets, has been slowly restored. Extra troops sent into
cities helped calm panicked residents and the official news agency
said police patrols had resumed.

While the army has sought to stop lawlessness, there is no sign it is
willing to drive the protesters off the street.

"In the next few days security and stability will return," said
Brigadier Atef Said in Suez, east of Cairo and the scene of some of
the worst of the violence between police and protesters.

"We will allow protests in the coming days. Everyone has the right to
voice their opinion. We're listening and trying to help and satisfy
all parties. We're not here to stop anyone. These are our people," he
said.

(Additional reporting by Dina Zayed, Marwa Awad, Shaimaa Fayed,
Sherine El Madany, Yasmine Saleh, Alison Williams and Samia Nakhoul in
Cairo, Alexander Dziadosz in Suez, Matt Spetalnick and Phil Stewart in
Washington and Peter Apps, Angus MacSwan and William Maclean in
London; Writing by Edmund Blair; Editing by Peter Graff)

Clinton meets with Haiti presidential candidates

AP, PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti: The United States has no plans to halt aid
to earthquake-ravaged Haiti in spite of a crisis over who will be the
nation's next leader but does insist that the president's chosen
successor be dropped from the race, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary
Rodham Clinton said Sunday.

Clinton arrived Sunday in the impoverished Caribbean nation for a
brief visit. She met with President Rene Preval and earlier met with
each of the three candidates jockeying to replace him.

Only two candidates can go on to the delayed second round, now
scheduled for March 20. The U.S. is backing an Organization of
American States recommendation that the candidate from Preval's party,
government construction official Jude Celestin, should be left out in
favor of populist rival Michel Martelly.

The top U.S. official at the United Nations, Susan Rice, said recently
that "sustained support" from the United States required the OAS
recommendations be implemented. Many Haitian officials, including
leaders of Preval's Unity party and Martelly, interpreted that to mean
the U.S. was threatening an embargo and cutting off aid.

Clinton flatly rebuffed that suggestion. "We're not talking about any
of that," she said Sunday.

"We have a deep commitment to the Haitian people," she told reporters.
"That goes to humanitarian aid, that goes to governance and democracy
programs, that will be going to a cholera treatment center."

Asked if there were any set of circumstances that would prompt
Washington to cut off aid, Clinton said, "At this point, no."

Still, she insisted that the United States would press the
recommendations by international monitors after a disorganized,
fraud-ridden first-round presidential vote in November. They
determined that Preval's preferred successor, Celestin, finished last
and should drop out. Celestin has yet to do so.

"We're focused on helping the Haitian people," Clinton said ahead of
the meetings. "One of the ways we want to help them is by making sure
that their political choices are respected."

Haiti is in a deepening and potentially destabilizing political
crisis. The announcement of preliminary results from the disputed
first round led to rioting in December. Final results are expected to
be announced Wednesday.

Just five days after, on Feb. 7, comes the constitutional end of
Preval's five-year term.

A law passed by an expiring Senate last May would allow him to remain
in power for an extra three months, but it is not clear if his
government would continue to be recognized by donor countries. But
Preval has said he does not want to hand power to an interim
government.

"That's one of the problems we have to talk about," Clinton said.
"There are issues of a continuing government, how that can be
structured. And that's what I'm going to be discussing."

Leaders of Preval's party said last week that they would agree with
Celestin stepping down, but the candidate has not commented since and
his lawyers continue to plead his case to the electoral council. It is
not clear what Preval himself thinks.

Sunday afternoon, each of the bickering presidential candidates
arrived by SUV at the black metal gates of the U.S. ambassador's
sprawling residence for individual meetings with Clinton.

Martelly came and went first. Mirlande Manigat, the former first lady
who led the polling, met with Clinton second. Celestin's meeting came
last.

Only Manigat stopped to talk to a small gaggle of mostly foreign
reporters waiting at the gate.

"You don't get the sense that the United States wants the election to
be canceled but you can feel that they would like there to be
stability," the law professor said. "(Clinton) asked me what
conditions I could find to make these elections more acceptable. I
said a climate of calm ... (and) that they would make some changes in
the electoral council."

Acknowledging the tight time frame for Haiti, Clinton said she wanted
to hear ideas on how Haiti's transition should be handled but then
make her own assessment on the best way forward.

The political crisis comes as the Western Hemisphere's poorest nation
tries to restart its economy after decades of stifling poverty and
unemployment, and the massive loss of life and infrastructure in last
year's earthquake.

Hundreds of thousands of people remain in homeless camps and major
rebuilding has not started. Underlying issues such as land-tenure
reform and the development and reconstruction of government
institutions have barely been addressed. Massive piles of rubble and
collapsed buildings remain throughout the capital.

Meanwhile, a cholera epidemic that started outside the quake zone and
has killed more than 4,000 people continues to rage. Clinton visited a
tented treatment center Sunday.

She said reconstruction has been steady "but not adequate to the task
that we are confronting."

"The problems are significant," Clinton told the pool of reporters
traveling with her. "Like what do you do with all the rubble? It's a
really big problem."

AP Interview: Islamist leader returns to Tunisia

AP, TUNIS, Tunisia: The leader of a long-outlawed Tunisian Islamist
party returned home Sunday after two decades in exile, telling The
Associated Press in his first interview on arrival that his views are
moderate and that his Westward-looking country has nothing to fear.

Rachid Ghanouchi and about 70 other exiled members of Ennahdha, or
Renaissance, flew home from Britain two weeks after autocratic
President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali was forced from power by violent
protests. At the airport, thousands of people welcomed him, cheering,
shouting "God is great!" and drowning out his attempt to address the
crowd with a megaphone.

Ghanouchi rejected any comparison to more radical figures, including
the hardline father of the Iranian Revolution.

"Some Western media portray me like (Ayatollah Ruhollah) Khomeini, but
that's not me," Rachid Ghanouchi told the AP.

During 23 years in power, Tunisia's ousted president cracked down on
opponents, including proponents of political Islam, jailing them and
sending many into exile. As Tunisians protests over corruption and
repression, Ben Ali fled to Saudi Arabia on Jan. 14.

With Ben Ali gone, Ennahdha has moved quickly to carve out a place in
the political scene, taking part in demonstrations and meeting with
the prime minister.

Some Tunisians fear that a revival of Islam could hurt their hard-won
gains and quality of life, or inspire an extremist movement like the
al-Qaida-linked network that has waged an insurgency in neighboring
Algeria.

But, while Ennahdha was branded an Islamic terrorist group by Ben Ali,
it is considered moderate by scholars. Experts say Ben Ali used a fear
of Islamists to seduce Western allies keen for a bulwark against
terrorism in a volatile region, and win their blessing despite
widespread repression.

Though the ban on Ghanouchi's party hasn't officially been lifted, the
new interim government has been more tolerant of it.

Ghanouchi said he wants his party to help Tunisia carry out democratic
reforms, though he is not interested in standing in elections expected
in upcoming months.

"I am not going to run for president of Tunisia, nor as a minister nor
as a parliamentarian," he said in an interview at his brother's home,
where family members celebrated with a festive meal of couscous.
Another long-exiled opponent — Moncef Marzouki, a secular leftist and
human rights activist — was there to welcome him.

Ghanouchi, 69, left the country as Ben Ali came to power in 1987. In
1991, he was convicted in absentia to life in prison, as were most of
the party's leaders. Ben Ali banned the party, accusing it of
conspiring to kill him and establish a Muslim fundamentalist state.
Ennahdha denied those accusations.

The new activism by Islamists — who want a role for Islam in their
country's politics — is feeding jitters that extremism may be on the
rise in Tunisia, long a nation proud of its modern identity: Women
enjoy widespread freedoms, Muslim headscarves are banned in public
buildings and abortions, a deep taboo in most Muslim societies, are
legal.

Ghanouchi said he seeks to reinforce women's rights set out by
Tunisia's Westward-looking modern-day founder, Habib Bourguiba. In
1956, Tunisia abolished polygamy and gave women the right to divorce
their husbands. Ghanouchi said his party still supports that historic
turning point, along with freedom of religion.

"So why are (certain) women afraid of me?" Ghanouchi said. In a
reference to Muslim headscarves, he also asked: "Why don't 'liberated'
women defend the right of other women to wear what they want?"

Asked about his view on abortion, he dodged the question, saying the
issue was complicated.

Ghanouchi compared his politics to those of Turkish Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Despite Erdogan's Islamist roots, he has been
widely viewed as a pragmatist largely loyal to the legacy of Turkey's
founding father Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, who sought to create a secular,
modern state.

"Why do people want to compare me to (Osama) Bin Laden or Khomeini,
when I am closer to Erdogan?" Ghanouchi said.

The unrest that toppled Ben Ali in Tunisia has spread to Egypt, where
protesters are calling for the departure of President Hosni Mubarak.

In Tunisia, meanwhile, the interim government has been trying to
stabilize the country after weeks of unrest — fueled by widespread
corruption and repression — that led to Ben Ali's flight.

Tunisia has issued an international arrest warrant for Ben Ali,
accusing him of taking money out of the country illegally.

Swiss prosecutors said Sunday they have launched a money laundering
investigation into accounts belonging to Ben Ali and his family. The
Federal Prosecutors Office said the accounts blocked two weeks ago
contain tens of millions of Swiss francs. Prosecutors in Paris are
also probing the family's assets in France.

SKorea: NKorea wants defense talks held earlier

AP, SEOUL, South Korea: South Korea says the North has pushed for rare
defense talks between the rivals to be held sooner than the South
proposes.

South Korea agreed last week to talks on easing hostility on the
Korean peninsula.

The Defense Ministry said in a statement Monday that North Korea wants
a preliminary meeting on Tuesday to prepare for higher-level defense
talks.

But the ministry repeated that the South wanted the preliminary talks
to take place Feb. 11.

The talks are aimed at easing tensions after North Korea's artillery
bombardment of a South Korean island in November and the sinking of
warship last March.

Candidates predict victory in Mexico gov's race

AP, ACAPULCO, Mexico: Both candidates for governor of the
cartel-plagued state of Guerrero said they were confident of victory
as early returns trickled in late Sunday from an election shadowed by
corruption scandals, political violence and the drug war.

The vote in Guerrero, home to the resort city of Acapulco and a
battleground for feuding drug gangs, was the culmination of an
acrimonious campaign between two former party allies and
second-cousins. The first of six gubernatorial elections this year in
Mexico, it sets the stage for the 2012 presidential election.

The first preliminary results gave an edge to Angel Aguirre of the
leftist Democratic Revolution Party, or PRD. With 55 percent of polls
reporting, Aguirre had about 57 percent of the vote, compared to some
42 percent for his rival, Manuel Anorve.

"All the trends favor us in an irreversible manner," Aguirre said earlier.

Anorve, of the Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, made similar remarks.

The preliminary count was to continue into the night, with a
definitive result not to be announced until Wednesday.

If the trend holds, the PRD would retain control of Guerrero state,
which it wrested from the PRI in 2005.

However the PRI is hoping that a win in Guerrero would give it
momentum as it seeks to regain the presidency, which it controlled for
71 years before losing it in 2000 to the National Action Party of
current President Felipe Calderon.

The Guerrero race has demonstrated the far-reaching influence of the
PRI, which ruled for decades as the single dominant party through
paternalism and strong-arm election tactics that many Mexicans
considered a quasi-dictatorship.

Even Aguirre comes from PRI roots; he recently split from that party
to run on the PRD ticket.

During the bitterly contested race, his campaign accused PRI activists
of badly beating one of his supporters, while the PRI claimed two of
its activists were the targets of political attacks.

The PRD demanded an investigation into Anorve's finances after the
newspaper Reforma published allegations from a protected witness who
said in court documents that the PRI candidate had received millions
in cash from drug gangs.

Anorve angrily denied those allegations. The federal Attorney
General's Office dismissed the significance of the documents, saying
in a statement that secret witness testimony has no value unless
backed by concrete evidence. The statement stressed that there is no
criminal investigation against Anorve.

The tough campaign turned off some voters.

"One of the most damaging elements in this election were the rumors of
drug trafficking financing one of the campaigns," said Manuel
Rodriguez Leyva, a 36-year-old civil engineer who nevertheless voted
for Aguirre.

Others were merely hoping for a clear winner to avoid postelection strife.

"This vote must have an overwhelming result for the winner, so that
there are no possible conflicts," said Arturo Delgado, a 46-year-old
lawyer.

George Grayson, a Mexico expert at the College of William and Mary in
Williamsburg, Virginia, predicted that if Aguirre wins, he would still
back Mexico state Gov. Enrique Pena Nieto, a favorite for the PRI
presidential nomination next year.

"In his race to succeed (President Felipe) Calderon, Pena Nieto faces
a win-win situation in Guerrero," Grayson wrote in an analysis.

Meanwhile, the Guerrero election has been another demonstration of the
PAN's failure to secure political dominance despite controlling the
presidency since Vicente Fox's 2000 victory.

The government of Calderon, elected in 2006, is grappling with
widespread frustration with Mexico's soaring drug-gang violence and an
economy just starting to recovering from a severe recession.

Trailing in the polls, PAN candidate Marcos Parra dropped out of the
Guerrero race at the last minute and threw his support behind Aguirre.

Such uncomfortable alliances between the conservative PAN and the
leftist PRD helped defeat the PRI in three gubernatorial races last
year.

Guerrero, a state of 3.3 million people, has been a hot spot of the
bloodletting that has marred Calderon's presidency.

Earlier this month, the bodies of 15 men, all but one of them
headless, were found on a street outside a shopping center in
Acapulco, a coveted drug trafficking zone and the site of turf battles
between the cartels.

There were 1,137 drug-related homicides in Guerrero in 2010,
surpassing the 879 in 2009.

Mexican military finds drugs on commercial plane

AP, MEXICO CITY: Mexican soldiers seized nearly 200 pounds (90
kilograms) of drugs from the cargo area of an Aeromexico commercial
plane scheduled to fly to the northern border city of Tijuana, the
military said Saturday.

Agents discovered the shipment Friday at the airport in Guadalajara,
Mexico's second-largest city, the Defense Department said in a
statement.

They confiscated about 100 pounds (50 kilograms) of crystal
methamphetamine, 60 pounds (30 kilograms) of heroin and 20 pounds (10
kilograms) of methylphenidate, which is often used to cut heroin,
according to the statement. There were no arrests.

The Defense Department did not say how the drugs were discovered or
give further details on the shipment.

Phone calls to Aeromexico representatives rang unanswered Saturday.

Tijuana, across the border from San Diego, is a major staging point
for funneling drugs into the United States.

Jordanians rally against corruption and poverty

Reuters, AMMAN: Jordanian activists rallied outside government offices
Saturday as they tried to step up their campaign to force Prime
Minister Samir Rifai to step down.

Inspired by unrest in Tunisia and elsewhere in the region, about 200
Jordanians gathered outside the prime minister's office shouting "Our
government is a bunch of thieves" and holding banners reading "No to
poverty or hunger."

"We've come from distant, rural areas to Amman to ask Rifai to leave,"
said Mohammed Sunaid, a prominent labor activist.

"We call for the overthrow of this government that has destroyed the
poor. This government should be for all Jordanians not just the rich."

Jordan is struggling with its worst economic downturn in decades. The
government has announced measures to cut prices of essentials, create
jobs and raise salaries of civil servants.

Protesters say the moves do not go far enough and have staged rallies
calling for the reversal of free-market reforms which many blame for a
widening gap between rich and poor.

Protesters say the sale of state assets to foreign investors over the
past decade has enriched the country's business and political elite
but has done little to help the poor.

"We want a special court that will put on trial all those who sold the
property of the Jordanian people ...," Sunaid said.

Others have called for constitutional reforms to curb the extensive
power of the king who appoints cabinets, approves legislation and can
dissolve parliament.

"We hope that citizens will be able to chose the government that
represents them ...," said Ali Dalain, an activist and former deputy
from the southern city of Karak.

Unlike Tunis or Egypt, the Jordanian state has long focused its
economic drive and budget money on developing rural areas.

But discontent has grown nonetheless as the economic downturn weakened
the state's ability to create jobs in the public sector which has
traditionally absorbed poor tribesmen in rural areas.

Suicide bomber kills Kandahar deputy governor

Reuters, KANDAHAR, Afghanistan: A motorcycle suicide bomber killed the
deputy governor of Afghanistan's Kandahar province on Saturday, a blow
to U.S.-led forces trying to bolster governance and fight a robust
insurgency in the Taliban's heartland.

Violence in Afghanistan is at its worst since U.S.-backed Afghan
forces overthrew the Taliban in late 2001 with casualties on all sides
at record levels and militant attacks increasing in number and
spreading to almost every part of the country.

Deputy Governor Abdul Latif Ashna was killed as he left his home to
travel to work in Kandahar city, capital of Kandahar province, the
governor's spokesman Zalmay Ayoubi said.

At least five other civilians who were wounded in the blast had been
taken to hospital. No further details were immediately available about
the attack or about the condition of the wounded.

U.S. Ambassador Karl Eikenberry who was visiting Kandahar on Saturday
condemned the attack but said it would not sap efforts to increase
security in the southern province.

"The loss of a great deputy governor like this is a setback. What
we've seen is consistently Afghan government leaders emerge and the
people continue to rally in an effort to establish security in this
province," he told journalists.

ASSASSINATION CAMPAIGN

Kandahar is the spiritual homeland of the Taliban and has been the
main focus of U.S. efforts over the past year to turn the tide of a
war now in its tenth year.

Tens of thousands of foreign and Afghan troops have run "clearing"
operations in some of the country's most volatile districts around
Kandahar city, while Afghan police, mentored by foreign trainers,
formed security perimeters inside the city.

But while the city has seen a drop in large-scale attacks over the
past year, militants have managed to step up a campaign of targeted
killings, particularly against government figures, which makes it hard
to recruit officials.

Between mid-June and mid-September, 21 people were reported to have
been assassinated each week across Afghanistan, up from seven a week
for the previous three months, the United Nations said. Most killings
took place in the south and east.

Alongside the military campaign, the United States has also ramped up
its civilian presence in Kandahar to try and strengthen local
governance and improve public services to encourage residents to
support their government and reject the insurgency.

But in May, Frank Ruggiero, then the U.S. State Department's top
official in southern Afghanistan and now acting top envoy to
Afghanistan and Pakistan, said it was increasingly hard for civilians
to work in Kandahar because of the assassinations.

Last year was the bloodiest for foreign troops in Afghanistan with 711
killed. But civilians bear the brunt of the war with 2,400 killed in
the first ten months of 2010, U.N. figures show.

A war review by U.S. President Barack Obama last month said "notable
operational gains" had been made and the Taliban's momentum arrested
in much of the country.

But many critics dispute those assessments, pointing out that
statistics show insurgent attacks are at their highest since the war
started and some say optimistic messages about security are simply
aimed at preparing for an eventual withdrawal.

Afghans are to begin taking over security in some provinces of the
country in March, ahead of a gradual withdrawal of U.S. troops -- now
numbering around 100,000 -- beginning in July.

This is part of a larger plan to have Afghan forces take the lead in
securing the entire country by the end of 2014.

Looters smash treasures and mummies in Egyptian Museum

Reuters, CAIRO: Looters broke into the Cairo museum housing the
world's greatest collection of Pharaonic treasures, smashing several
statues and damaging two mummies, while police battled anti-government
protesters on the streets.

Arabiya television showed soldiers, armed and in battle fatigues,
patrolling the museum that houses tens of thousands of objects in its
galleries and storerooms, including most of the King Tutankhamen
collection. Display cases were shattered and several broken statues
and porcelain figures lay on the floor.

A number of display cases appeared to have been emptied of some of
their contents during Friday night's break-in.

Egypt's top archaeologist, Zahi Hawass, told state television
Egyptians on the street had tried to protect the building, but that
the looters had entered from above. Two mummies on display had been
damaged.

"I felt deeply sorry...when I came this morning to the Egyptian Museum
and found that some had tried to raid the museum by force last night,"
Hawass, chairman of the Supreme Council of Antiquities, said.

The museum is adjacent to the headquarters of the ruling National
Democratic Party that protesters torched ad earlier set ablaze in
protests demanding the resignation of President Hosni Mubarak. Some
was still rising from the building on Saturday morning.

Source: Sheen 911 caller said actor 'intoxicated'

AP, LOS ANGELES: The production of Charlie Sheen's hit TV show is on
hold because of his return to rehab, which came after a 911 caller
said the actor was intoxicated and in pain.

One of Sheen's neighbors told an emergency operator Thursday that the
actor was "intoxicated" and complaining of abdominal and chest pains,
according to a person familiar with the call. The person was not
authorized to publicly discuss details and spoke Friday on condition
of anonymity.

Copies of the call probably won't be ready for release by the Los
Angeles Fire Department until Monday, a department spokesman said.

Sheen, 45, was taken to a Los Angeles area hospital and was there
until around midnight Thursday, said his publicist, Stan Rosenfield,
who cited the actor's history of hernia problems.

Rosenfield said Friday that Sheen was in rehab, but he did not say why.

"Charlie Sheen has voluntarily entered an undisclosed rehabilitation
center today," the spokesman said. "He is most grateful to all who
have expressed their concern."

The terse statement noted that no additional information will be
provided and asked that Sheen's privacy be respected.

CBS, production company Warner Bros. Television and executive producer
Chuck Lorre said in a joint statement that Sheen's rehab has prompted
a halt on production of "Two and a Half Men."

"We are profoundly concerned for his health and well-being, and
support his decision," the companies and Lorre said.

Sixteen of the show's 24-episode order have been taped, with 14 aired so far.

The latest fallout from Sheen's chaotic life came two weeks after CBS'
top entertainment executive said the actor's off-camera actions
haven't affected his work as the star of TV's most popular comedy, the
centerpiece of CBS' Monday comedy lineup.

Sheen's program has increased its audience by 2 percent over last
season, the Nielsen Co. said. He signed a new two-year contract at the
end of last season that makes him one of the highest-paid actors on
prime-time television.

Sheen's headline-making behavior has included a wild night that left a
New York hotel room in shambles and sent him to a hospital, and a
guilty plea last summer to assaulting his wife in Aspen, Colo. Sheen
filled gossip pages again this month by spending a weekend partying in
Las Vegas.

His latest hospitalization was his third in as many months. It came
after a 911 call made on Sheen's behalf by neighbor Dr. Paul Nassif.
The plastic and reconstructive surgeon, along with his wife, Adrienne
Maloof-Nassif, are in the reality show "The Real Housewives of Beverly
Hills."

"We are so glad that Charlie made the decision to seek the assistance
of a rehabilitation center today," Nassif and his wife said in a
statement. "This is something that his friends and family have pushed
for, and we wish him all the love and support he will need in the
coming days."

Last February, Sheen entered rehab for an unspecified problem, forcing
his sitcom to temporarily suspend production.

Earlier this month, CBS Entertainment President Nina Tassler was asked
about Sheen at a news conference with TV reporters.

"We have a high level of concern. How can we not?" she said, adding
the situation can't be viewed simplistically. The actor does his job
on "Two and a Half Men" reliably well, she said.

Palmyra trees may shelter our coastal people

IN AN article titled 'Lifebuoy for each home in coastal areas' that I wrote in December 2007 after cyclone Sidr had hit the coastal areas of Barisal and Khulna, I gave an idea about how Palmyra trees could work miracles in sheltering our coastal people. Amazingly, I received dozens of messages from the readers from various corners of the world appreciating my inventive idea, though I myself was not a disaster management expert in any way. But the idea perhaps fell on the deaf ears of our policy makers.

Read the full story on the daily New Age


Bourses keep regaining ground

Dhaka and Chittagong bourses continued with the rebound for the second day on Wednesday as share prices of most of the issues soared further following a two-week nosedive in share prices.

The benchmark general index of Dhaka Stock Exchange gained 458.93 points, or 6.72 per cent, to close the day at 7,280.01 points preceded by a 7.82 per cent rise on Tuesday as investors' confidence continued to consolidate, market operators said.

With this the DSE general index has gained 494.73 points since trading resumed on Tuesday after the government-imposed suspension of share trading on Sunday and Monday.

Read the full story on the daily New Age


Wildcat strike at DMCH burn unit hampers treatment

A wildcat strike by undocumented employees demanding their job regularisation disrupted treatment at the burn and plastic surgery unit of Dhaka Medical College Hospital for three hours on Wednesday.

The sudden work stoppage during peak hours by 47 temporary employees caused imminence sufferings for some 300 patients admitted at the ward and more than 150 outdoor patients who failed to get treatment, the hospital sources said.

Al Amin, a burn injured patient, who came to the hospital at 11:00am, said he had to wait until 2:30pm to receive treatment as hospital staff said there was a shortage of manpower on the day.

Read the full story on the daily New Age