News Update Place

September 19, 2007

Bush wants permanent powers of spying

Filed under: All Other, American, Top Stories — News Update @ 10:34 pm

The US president has pressed congress to expand the government’s domestic spying powers permanently to prevent attacks by “enemies”.

But critics say George Bush is riding rough-shod over civil liberties. Already, a Muslim group in California is suing the FBI to find out under what criteria their members are being spied on.

Bush wants permanent powers of spying

The Democratic-led congress in August temporarily expanded the Bush administration’s authority to monitor phone calls, emails and other electronic communications between individuals in the US and overseas terror suspects without obtaining a traditional court’s approval.
(more…)

July 2, 2007

Putin offers Bush new missile plan

Filed under: American, Top Stories — News Update @ 5:10 pm

Vladimir Putin, the Russian president, has offered George Bush, his US counterpart, a new proposal for expanded co-operation on missile defence.

After two days of talks at the Bush family home at Walker’s Point in Kennebunkport, Maine, Bush called Putin’s offer “innovative”.

The talks aimed at trying to ease tensions that have taken the US-Russia relationship to a post-Cold War low.

The two leaders turned from fishing trips and lobster meals to serious diplomacy as they confronted the main disputes that divide Washington and Moscow.

New bonhomie

“Do I trust him?” Bush said of Putin, standing alongside the Russian leader on the craggy Atlantic shoreline. “Yes, I trust him.”

“There are times when we’ve agreed on issues and there are times when we haven’t agreed on issues.”

“The relationship of our two countries would be raised to an entirely new level,” Putin said.

The Russian president renewed his opposition to the US missile defence plan.

He said he was not convinced by US insistence that the shield, with components based in Poland and the Czech Republic, was meant to defend against “rogue states” like Iran.

Putin issued a new proposal, expanding on his offer last month for joint use of Russian radar in Azerbaijan as an alternative.

“We support the idea of consultations on missile defence and believe that the number of participants should be expanded to include the European states,” Putin said.

“This should be done within Russia-Nato council,” he added. He suggested information-sharing centres in Moscow and possibly Brussels as a way to strengthen the Washington-Moscow national security relationship.

Bush called the Russian leader’s latest missile defence idea “very sincere” and “very innovative”.

Sticking points

Other key areas of disagreement between the two countries include the future of Kosovo and the state of democracy in Russia.

Bush, pushing for tougher sanctions against Iran, said Putin shared US concerns about Iran’s nuclear programme.

“I’ve been counting on the Russians’ support to send a strong message to the Iranians,” Bush said.

Bush would not say whether or not the US and Russia have agreed on tougher sanctions against Iran, saying only that the two countries stand together.

“When Russia and the United States speak along the same lines, it tends to have an effect and therefore I appreciate the Russians’ attitude in the United Nations,” Bush said. “We’re close on recognising that we got to work together to send a common message.”

Putin predicted that “we will continue to be successful” as they work through the UN Security Council.

Both sides had advised against expecting breakthroughs at the end of the two-day informal summit.

Instead, they portrayed the meeting as a chance for Bush and Putin to revive their relationship.

US criticised over Afghan deaths

Filed under: American, Asia — News Update @ 8:23 am

Recent air raids by the US-led coalition and Nato have killed more civilians than Taliban fighters, an Afghan human rights group has said.

The claim by the Afghanistan’s Independent Human Rights Commission came after at least 45 civilians reportedly died in an attack at the weekend in southern Helmand province.

An Afghan rights group urged US-led and Nato forces to deploy more foot soldiers against the Taliban

An Afghan rights group urged US-led and Nato forces to deploy more foot soldiers against the Taliban

The Nato-led International Security Assistance Force (Isaf) acknowledged that there were some civilian casualties but said the death toll was much lower.

The rights group said on Monday that the US and Isaf should deploy more foot soldiers against suspected Taliban rather than using air raids.

“Air operations have killed more civilians than Taliban,” Nader Nadery, a commissioner with the human rights group, told Reuters news agency.

“Certainly, reduction of air operations decreases civilian deaths for it is difficult to distinguish between military and non-military people.”

Human shields

Spokesmen from Nato and the US-led coalition have argued that many of the deaths are a result of the Taliban using civilians as human shields.

US killing afghan child's
US forces said the latest air raid was launched after an attack on a US-Afghan patrol

Civilian deaths have sparked protests demanding the expulsion of foreign troops from Afghanistan and the resignation of Hamid Karzai, the president.

Karzai has repeatedly urged foreign forces to better coordinate operations with his government and warned that such mistakes could harm his government.

He has also launched an investigation into the air raids at the weekend, in which local officials say 62 suspected Taliban fighters were also killed.

The US military said that the raids were a response to an attack on a joint American-Afghan patrol and any civilian casualties were the result of Taliban fighters hiding among civilians.

Justice system

Meanwhile, Karzai was in Italy on Monday for a two-day conference aimed at strengthening Afghanistan’s justice system amid the violence.

Experts say the challenges to establishing the rule of law after more than 25 years of violence are enormous, ranging from rebuilding courts and offices to training magistrates.

The conference will also try to provide concrete steps to improve co-ordination among law-enforcement officials and tackle corruption.

“We need to have a plan for the next five years, perhaps not necessarily a comprehensive, full-blown strategy, but we need to have some sort of a plan that talks about where we’re going to be in five years,” Geralyn Busnardo, an official with the Rome-based International Development Law Organisation said.

“That was something that was not well done for the past five years.”

The International Development Law Organisation is working to establish the use of private attorneys to represent individuals in criminal or civil cases - something there is no history of in the country. There are now about 200 such lawyers.

The Rome conference includes regional powers such as Pakistan, along with foreign ministers from European countries, Nato and EU representatives, and delegations from the US, the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank.

June 30, 2007

Bush losing special trade powers

Filed under: American, Top Stories — News Update @ 8:41 am

The US Congress will take back its full trade authority from President George Bush, the majority Democratic leadership said while dismissing White House pleas to let him keep his special power.

The expiration of the Trade Promotion Authority [TPA], which lets Bush negotiate trade agreements that cannot be amended by Congress, could deal a major blow to the nearly collapsed Doha Round of World Trade Organization [WTO] talks.

The TPA, also known as “fast-track,” was extended for two years in 2005 and expires at midnight on Saturday.

“Our legislative priorities do not include the renewal of fast-track authority,” Nancy Pelosi, the House of Representatives Speaker, and other leading Democrats said on Friday in a statement.

The House Democrats said they had a plan to improve US trade policy, while at the same time addressing increased economic insecurity felt by American families.

Among the steps considered is the introduction soon of legislation to address the growing US trade imbalance with China and strengthen overall enforcement of US trade agreements and US trade laws.

“Before that debate can even begin, we must expand the benefits of globalization to all Americans, including taking the actions outlined above. We hope that the administration will join us in these efforts,” they said.

Senator Max Baucus, chairman of the Finance Committee that has jurisdiction over trade policy, said his panel would turn to the TPA “at an appropriate time in the future,” after it has been reshaped in “a more powerful job-creating tool for American workers and businesses.”

Meanwhile, the Bush administration made a last-ditch pitch to save the TPA.

“It’s regrettable that Congress is letting this authority expire this weekend,” said Tony Fratto, the Bush spokesman.

“It will be damaging to our economy and our national security if Congress abandons America’s leadership role in trade and the global marketplace,” he added.

May compromise

Condoleezza Rice called on Congress to
renew TPA “immediately” [EPA]
Susan Schwab, the US Trade Representative, pointed to a May compromise reached between the Republican administration and Congress on several bilateral trade pacts negotiated under the TPA.

“I am hopeful this spirit of cooperation will guide our efforts to renew TPA,” she said in a statement.

Condoleezza Rice, the Secretary of State, called on Congress to renew

TPA “immediately.”

“If Congress does not renew that authority, America will lose an important diplomatic tool that has proven essential to bringing foreign leaders to the negotiating table and advancing our nation’s broader foreign policy interests,” Rice said.

The White House appeal came as Congress headed into a week-long recess for the July 4 Independence Day holiday. The House of Representatives adjourned on Thursday and the Senate on Friday.

Agreements

Meanwhile, the Bush administration was planning to wrap up a week of bilateral free-trade agreements negotiated under TPA with the signing of a pact with South Korea on Saturday.

The United States sealed FTAs with Peru on Monday and Colombia and Panama on Thursday. However,House Speaker Pelosi and other Democratic leaders in the lower chamber said they would not support approval of the pacts with South Korea or Colombia at this time.

The US-South Korea deal lacks adequate market access for the United States, particularly in the automobile sector, she said.

“The agreement does not address in an effective manner the persistent problem of non-tariff barriers, particularly those blocking access of US manufactured products in South Korea’s market,” they said.

“That is particularly the case in the automotive sector where, last year, South Korea exported more than 700,000 cars into the US, while the United States exported fewer than 5,000.”

The lawmakers also said they were concerned about rampant violence in Colombia and weakness in its legal system, and called for “concrete evidence of sustained results” there before any trade pact would find support.

May 16, 2007

Tribal Indians condemn pope

Filed under: American, Top Stories — News Update @ 12:59 pm

Indian leaders in Brazil have reacted angrily to comments by Pope Benedict that they had been purified by the Roman Catholic church since Columbus landed in the Americas in 1492.

In a speech to bishops at the end of a visit to Brazil on Sunday, Benedict said indigenous people of the Americas had welcomed European priests after conquest.

pope

“It’s arrogant and disrespectful to consider our cultural heritage secondary to theirs,” said Jecinaldo Satere Mawe, chief co-ordinator of Coiab, an Amazon Indian group.

The pope had said the peoples of the Americas had a “silent longing” for Christianity and welcomed European priests’ arrival.

He said the church had not imposed itself on the indigenous peoples of the Americas.

Colonisation

Since Colombus’s landing, millions of tribal Indians are believed to have died as a result of European colonisation backed by the Roman Catholic church through murder, disease or enslavement.

“To say the cultural decimation of our people represents a purification is offensive, and frankly, frightening”

Sandro Tuxa, leader of the movement of northeastern tribes
Many Indians today struggle for survival, stripped of their traditional ways of life and excluded from society.

Indian groups sent a letter to Benedict last week asking for support in defending their ancestral lands and culture.

The letter said the Indians had suffered a “process of genocide” since the first European colonisers had arrived.

Priests blessed conquistadors as they waged war on tribal Indians.

‘Poorly advised’

Other tribal leaders also voiced their criticism on Monday.

Dionito Jose de Souza, a leader of the Makuxi tribe in northern Roraima state, said: “The state used the church to do the dirty work in colonising the Indians but they already asked forgiveness for that … so is the pope taking back the church’s word?”

Pope John Paul II spoke in 1992 of mistakes in the evangelisation of native peoples of the Americas.

“We repudiate the [pope's] comments,” said Sandro Tuxa, leader of the movement of northeastern tribes.

“To say the cultural decimation of our people represents a purification is offensive, and frankly, frightening.

“I think [the pope] has been poorly advised.”

The Roman Catholic church’s own Indian advocacy group in Brazil also criticised Benedict’s speech.

Paulo Suess, the advocacy group’s adviser, said: “The pope doesn’t understand the reality of the Indians here, his statement was wrong and indefensible.”

May 7, 2007

Bush’s popularity hits new low

Filed under: All Other, American, Top Stories — News Update @ 7:04 am

The public approval rating for the US president has hit an all-time low of 28 per cent and nearly two-thirds of Americans think George Bush is “stubborn and unwilling to admit his mistakes”.

The Newsweek poll released on Saturday found Bush’s rating one percentage point lower than his father at the lowest point in his term in office.

Almost 62 per cent of Americans disapprove<br />
of Bush's execution of the Iraq war
Almost 62 per cent of Americans disapprove
of Bush’s execution of the Iraq war

Almost 62 per cent of Americans disapprove of Bush’s execution of the Iraq war, while 30 per cent think his actions show he is “willing to take political risks” to do what is right, Newsweek reported.

The last US leader to be as unpopular as Bush was Jimmy Carter who also scored 28 per cent in 1979 in the wake of the Iran hostage crisis.

Bush burden

Bush’s unpopularity may hurt Republican hopes of keeping the White House in 2008.

People Views

“The US has to withdraw completely from Iraq”

Munzir Baig, Muscat, Oman

The poll also suggested that Democratic frontrunners have a promising lead over potential Republican contenders across the board, with Barack Obama, the Illinois senator, recording the best performance so far.

Obama bested Rudolph Giuliani, the Republican frontrunner and former New York mayor, by 50 per cent to 43 per cent among registered voters who responded to the Newsweek poll.

He also topped John McCain, the Arizona senator, by 52 per cent to 39 per cent and defeated Mitt Romney, the former Massachusetts governor, by 58 per cent to 29 per cent, the poll indicated.

The other popular Democratic candidate, Hillary Clinton, who is New York senator, topped Giuliani by 49 per cent to 46 per cent, and beat McCain by 50 per cent to 44 per cent.

She led Romney by 57 per cent to 35 per cent, the poll found.

The poll, conducted by Princeton Survey Research Associates International on Wednesday and Thursday, interviewed 1,001 adults 18 and older.

It had a margin of error of plus or minus 4 percentage points.

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