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Archive for June 3rd, 2008

Ahmadinejad, Mugabe blame West for food crisis

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ROME, Italy (CNN) — Two controversial world leaders known for their anti-western rhetoric took advantage of a U.N. summit to point the finger of blame for the current food crisis at western nations.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Zimbabwe’s Robert Mugabe used the platform of a food summit in Rome to condemn western policies on the issue.

Ahmadinejad suggested the formation of a global organization to regulate the food market and listed the major factors that he believes are behind the current high food prices.

The devaluation of the dollar and the global inflation, and some others consider environmental changes and droughts, the increase in consumption, the inappropriateness of agricultural methods and the low level of production efficiency, and the witness of farmers, he said.

As a solution, the Iranian president suggested the formation of an independent and powerful body, obeyed by all countries, to justly regulate the food market and organize all its related issues from production to consumption.

The Zimbabwean leader was more pointed in his attack, however, singling out Britain as the cause of the economic woes back in his homeland.

Zimbabwe has suffered a dramatic drop in food production and agricultural exports in recent years: The country once known as southern Africa’s breadbasket is now among a list of 22 countries identified by the U.N. as particularly at risk of food shortages.

Many critics blame Mugabe’s policies for the turnaround, especially his controversial land reform programs, which redistributed large farms that had been held by about 4,000 white landowners to formerly landless families.

Mugabe was unrepentant, however, telling the U.N. summit that Zimbabweans had welcomed the land reform program.

He said that in retaliation for the land reforms, Britain had persuaded other Western powers to impose policies against Zimbabwe that cripple his country’s economy and thereby effect illegal regime change.

The Zimbabwean leader, whose presence at the three-day U.N. food summit is causing outrage among some leaders, said Britain mobilized allies in Europe, North America and elsewhere to impose illegal economic sanctions against Zimbabwe and to cut off all developmental assistance.

Earlier at the Rome summit, U.N. chief Ban Ki-Moon called for a drastic increase in food production to meet the demands of a rising population and stave off a crisis brought about by oil prices, climate change and the impact of the biofuel market.

Ban, speaking at the opening of the event, said production must take urgent measures to feed 862 million hungry people worldwide and ensure security for the global population.

Hundreds of millions of the world’s people expect no less, Ban said.

Nothing is more degrading than hunger, especially when it is man-made. It breeds anger, social disintegration, ill health and economic decline. In the name of the development goals we all set at the millennium, the right to food and our common humanity, I urge all of you to act together now.

Ban said countries must also expand microcredit to small farmers, minimize trade barriers and tariffs, and boost investment in agriculture.

Countries must reach a consensus on the production of biofuels — one of the many causes of rising food prices — and reduce subsidies to those that produce it, Ban said.

With the world’s population expected to grow to 7.2 billion by 2016, Ban said, the food problem will only grow if the world doesn’t act now.

The head of the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization, which is hosting the conference, appealed to world leaders for $30 billion a year to relaunch agriculture and avert future threats to conflicts over food.

The solution, FAO Director-General Jacques Diouf said, is increasing production and productivity in the low-income, food-deficit countries.

He said the world food crisis has had tragic political and social consequences in some countries and could further endanger world security.

Important today is to realize that the time for talking is long past, Diouf said. Now is the time for action.

Diouf noted that nearly a decade ago, more than 100 countries attending the World Food Summit pledged to halve world hunger by 2015. But despite that 1996 pledge, Diouf said, resources to finance agricultural programs in developing countries have not only failed to grow but have decreased significantly.

Leaders at the summit will be discussing how to sustain emergency deliveries of food when the cost of agricultural products — and the fuel necessary to produce and distribute them — is skyrocketing.

Saudi Arabia is giving about $500 million to the World Food Program to deal with the emergency in the short term, but experts say longer-term solutions, like investing in agricultural development, are just as critical.

The United States has committed $5 billion over the next two years, much of it to help find long-term solutions.

U.S. President Bush condemned Mugabe’s presence at the event in a statement released Tuesday.

While Robert Mugabe makes political statements in Rome, his people continue to face empty markets at home, Bush said in the statement. The United States currently feeds more than 1 million Zimbabweans and spent more than $170 million on food assistance in Zimbabwe last year. We will continue these efforts to prevent government-induced starvation in Zimbabwe.

Britain’s international development secretary, Douglas Alexander, said in Rome that Mugabe has neither the credibility or the authority to speak about food prices or food production.

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Mosley wins confidence vote to secure position

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LONDON, England (CNN) — Max Mosley kept his position as the head of world motor sport Tuesday after winning a vote of confidence called over allegations about his sex life.

Mosley won a secret ballot 103-55 — with seven abstentions and four invalid votes — at the specially convened assembly in Paris.

Votes were cast by 140 clubs from 96 countries. They represented a total of 177 votes (including 19 proxies).

Each delegate was called invidividually in front of the assembly and asked to put a sealed envelope containing their vote into the ballot box.

The votes were counted in private by the FIA’s legal department in the presence of four scrutinizers.

The German, American, Japanese, French, Australian and Spanish auto federations all voted against Mosley.

ADAC — the German federation and Europe’s largest automobile organization –said in a statement that it had frozen its activities with the FIA.

An ADAC spokesman also told the British Press Association that it viewed the vote result with regret and incredulity.

Robert Darbelnet, the head of the American Automobile Association (AAA), said the result was a disappointing day for the FIA.

We don’t think his behavior is appropriate for an organization which represents hundreds of millions of motorists. This is not the type of behavior that any organization I know of should be condoning, he told PA.

Mosley had been fighting for his future since March 30, when the UK’s News of the World newspaper alleged he took part in an orgy with Nazi-style role play.

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Suicide bomber targets Danish embassy in Pakistan

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ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (CNN) — A massive blast targeting the Danish Embassy in Pakistan Monday killed at least six people and wounded as many as 18, authorities said.

The blast left a four-foot deep crater in the road.

Confusion lingered about the attack in the capital city of Islamabad and the number of casualties.

Police at the scene said a suicide car bomber pulled up next to the embassy at about 1 p.m. and detonated explosives. But Senior Superintendent of Police Ahmad Latif told CNN that authorities could not immediately label it a suicide attack.

Likewise, a medical worker told CNN the explosion killed eight people, including a young child and at least one foreign national.

But Latif put the number of fatalities at six and said none of the dead were foreigners. Among the wounded, he said, was a Brazilian citizen of Pakistani descent. Watch Pakistan’s foreign minister respond

Authorities differed on the number of wounded as well, with figures ranging from five to 18. No embassy official was seriously hurt, Latif said.

It is not uncommon for preliminary casualty figures to vary: police cautioned that the numbers could rise.

Danish Foreign Minister Per Stig Moeller condemned the act.

My immediate reaction is that you can only condemn this, said Stig Moeller. It is terrible that terrorists do this. The embassy is there to have a cooperation between the Pakistani population and Denmark, and that means they are destroying that. They’re destroying the Pakistanis’ ability to connect with Denmark. It is completely unacceptable. Watch the aftermath of the deadly attack

The blast, heard more than two miles away, sheared off the embassy’s front wall and kicked in its metal front gate. The impact blew out the building’s windows and also damaged the offices of a non-profit organization. The Danish and the EU flag, knocked off their staff, hung limply from a spot on the embassy balcony.

Pakistan Foreign Secretary Salman Bashir told reporters at the scene that police are beefing up security at embassies and foreign missions throughout the city.

I just want to assure everybody that the government will do everything to protect the diplomatic missions and also the security and safety of the citizens of Pakistan, he said.

The explosion was the first deadly attack in Islamabad since a bomb was hurled over a wall surrounding an Italian restaurant on March 15. That explosion killed a Turkish woman and wounded 12 people, including four U.S. FBI agents.

After Monday’s attack, dozens of cars — blanketed with dirt kicked up by the blast — littered the street, their windows knocked out.

Rescue workers carried away a bloodied person, covering his body with a blanket. Pieces of shoes and tattered clothing lay amid the rubble.

Police said the attack targeted the embassy.

Danish embassies in predominantly Muslim countries, such as Pakistan, have been the scene of protests since Danish newspapers reprinted cartoons that Muslims say insult their prophet.

In February, several newspapers in Denmark reprinted the controversial cartoons of Islam’s prophet, Muhammad, after Danish authorities arrested several people who allegedly were plotting a terror-related assassination of the cartoonist, Kurt Westergaard.

Westergaard’s cartoon depicted the prophet wearing a bomb as a turban with a lit fuse. He said he wanted his drawing to say that some people exploited the prophet to legitimize terror. However, many in the Muslim world interpreted the drawing as depicting their prophet as a terrorist.

Islam generally forbids any depiction of the prophet — even favorable ones — fearing that it may lead to idolatry.

Two years ago, demonstrations erupted across the world after some newspapers printed the same cartoons. Some protests turned deadly.

The protests prompted Danish officials to temporarily close the embassy in Islamabad.

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U.N. passes piracy pursuit powers

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United Nations (CNN) — The U.N. Security Council on Monday gave nations new powers to pursue pirates into the waters off Somalia, an effort to combat a new spate of hijackings off the Horn of Africa.

The unanimous resolution calls on U.N. members to use all necessary means to repress acts of piracy and armed robbery, and authorizes warships to chase pirates into Somali territorial waters if necessary.

This allows and calls on the member states to assist the authorities in Somalia to combat piracy off the coast of Somalia, said Zalmay Khalilzad, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations.

Somalia’s U.N.-backed transitional government has said it would welcome international assistance in battling the pirates. Watch action being taken to counter piracy

Monday’s resolution also encourages U.N. member states to provide technical assistance to the Somali government and cooperate in the prosecution of captured pirates.

A French-led squadron, which includes U.S. and German ships, is currently patrolling the Somali coast. Still, three European freighters were hijacked last week in the Gulf of Aden, which connects the Red Sea and the Arabian Sea off the Horn of Africa.

The Gulf of Aden in particular has become a treacherous stretch for shipping in recent months, with more than two dozen pirate attacks reported since the beginning of 2008, according to the International Maritime Bureau.

Nine of those have been successful hijackings, the bureau said.

Cyrus Mody of the bureau told CNN last week that Somali pirates appear to take ships purely for financial gain. In seven hijackings this year, most were resolved with a ransom payment, Mody said, adding that the pirates in Somalia typically treat the crews on the hijacked ships well.

It is difficult to tell whether a single group is responsible for the hijackings, given that there are at least four pirate groups in the country, he said.

Somalia’s U.N.-backed transitional government has said it would welcome international assistance in battling piracy, which the Security Council has now declared an aggravating factor in the situation there.

Somali leaders are struggling to restore order after about 15 years of near-anarchy, and are also battling an Islamic insurgency.

Meanwhile, the international flotilla first dispatched to prevent the spread of the al Qaeda terrorist movement has taken an increasingly prominent role in battling piracy.

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