Casino

Get ready to receive the ultimate treatment and win big at the United Kingdom's premiere online casino.

Seoul and Washington have also held talks about staging a joint military exercise in the Yellow Sea in September, the spokesman said.

61 Seoul and Washington have also held talks about staging a joint military exercise in the Yellow Sea in September, the spokesman said.

GENEVA (Reuters) – Israel must lift its military blockade of the Gaza Strip and invite an independent, fact-finding mission to investigate its raid on a Gaza-bound aid flotilla, a United Nations rights body said on Friday.

The U.N. Human Rights Committee also told Israel to ensure that Palestinians in the occupied territories can enjoy the fundamental civil and political freedoms that Israel had pledged to uphold in the main international human rights treaty.

Israel maintains that the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights does not apply to the occupied West Bank and Gaza, although it says that the treaty does apply to Jewish settlers there, committee member Christine Chanet said.

There are no Israeli settlers in Gaza itself.

“In Israel’s written responses to the committee, one could see a total discrimination in the sense that settlers benefited from the pact,” she told a news briefing.

“We have maintained our position on the applicability of the covenant. We are stronger because the International Court of Justice has said we were right on this position,” she added, referring to the World Court’s 2004 advisory opinion.

Chanet, a former French judge and international human rights expert, said: “It is very difficult to have a real dialogue (with Israel).”

AID FLOTILLA

The committee’s non-binding recommendations add to pressure on Israel to explain what happened in its attack on May 31 on an aid flotilla in which nine Turkish pro-Palestinian activists were killed, damaging relations between Israel and Turkey.

Israel admitted errors in planning the raid but justified the use of lethal force saying its marines came under attack from activists wielding knives and clubs. Activists deny this.

There was no immediate reaction from Israel on the eve of the Jewish Sabbath but the government has repeatedly condemned the U.N. human rights bodies in Geneva as biased.

The recommendations are the latest in a series of reports and sessions in which Israel has been on the defensive at the United Nations over its policies in Gaza and the West Bank.

On July 23, another U.N. rights forum, the Human Rights Council, appointed a team of international experts to investigate the raid on the flotilla and called on all parties to cooperate.

The committee is a body of 18 independent experts, mainly prominent in international and human rights law, that monitors the implementation of the Covenant by the 166 countries including Israel that have signed up to it.

The recommendations on Israel’s regular report to the committee on its compliance included calls for investigations into human rights abuses including killings in Israel’s military offensive in Gaza between December 27, 2008, and January 18, 2009.

Israel should also refrain from holding criminal proceedings against children in military courts, the committee said.

“There are hundreds of children (being held),” Chanet said.

The committee also told Israel to end extra-judicial executions of terrorist suspects, make torture illegal, end construction of settlements in the occupied territories, stop building a wall cutting off some of the territories from other regions, and stop destroying homes as a collective punishment.

It asked Israel to say in its next report due by July 2013 what action it had taken on these and other recommendations.


N.Korea holds more talks with US military on ship sinking

51 N.Korea holds more talks with US military on ship sinking

SEOUL (AFP) – Military officers from North Korea and the US-led United Nations Command held their third round of talks Friday on the deadly sinking of a South Korean warship that was blamed on the North.

Colonels from the two sides met at the border truce village of Panmunjom for two hours to try to arrange a higher-level meeting on the issue. They agreed to meet again on August 9, a UN Command spokesman said, without elaborating.

Cross-border tensions have risen sharply since South Korea and the United States accused the North in late May of torpedoing the ship near the disputed inter-Korean border with the loss of 46 lives.

US and South Korean forces Wednesday wrapped up a four-day naval and air exercise — the first in a series — which they said was intended to warn the North against further attacks.

South Korea’s military will hold its own anti-submarine exercise in the Yellow Sea next week. The August 5-9 drill will involve the army, navy, air force and marines, said a spokesman for the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

Seoul and Washington have also held talks about staging a joint military exercise in the Yellow Sea in September, the spokesman said.

The UN Command has been based in the South since the end of the 1950-53 war to enforce the armistice which ended the conflict.

North Korea vehemently denies any role in sinking the Cheonan corvette in March. It fiercely denounced this week’s war games and threatened military retaliation.

At a previous meeting at Panmunjom the North demanded to send a high-level team to the South to inspect evidence dredged from the seabed, including what Seoul says is a part of a North Korean torpedo.

South Korea has rejected its neighbour’s demand to send investigators, saying the UN Command should handle the case as a serious breach of the armistice.

When the talks were last held on July 23, the two sides discussed forming a joint group to assess the circumstances of and evidence on the sinking.


China says it disapproves of EU sanctions against Iran

410 China says it disapproves of EU sanctions against Iran

BEIJING (AFP) – China said Friday it opposed tough new sanctions imposed by the European Union on Iran over its contested nuclear programme, again calling for more talks to resolve the standoff.

“China disapproves of the unilateral sanctions put in place by the EU against Iran,” foreign ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu said in a statement.

“We hope the relevant parties will adhere to diplomatic means on the issue, and properly resolve the issue through talks and negotiation,” she said.

The spokeswoman welcomed Iran’s announcement that it was ready for immediate talks with the United States, Russia and France over an exchange of nuclear fuel, saying she hoped talks would begin “as soon as possible”.

European foreign ministers on Monday formally adopted measures targeting Iran’s oil and gas industries, going beyond a fourth set of UN sanctions imposed last month over its refusal to freeze uranium enrichment.

Canada then followed suit.

The EU measures include a ban on the sale of equipment, technology and services to Iran’s energy sector, hitting activities in refining, liquefied natural gas, exploration and production, diplomats said.

New investments in the energy sector are also banned.

The moves, which follow similar sanctions imposed by the United States, are aimed at reviving moribund talks between Iran and six world powers — Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the United States.

The United States hailed the EU sanctions, saying the steps “underscore the international community’s deepening concerns about Iran’s nuclear programme” — which the West and Israel say is a covert weapons programme.

But Iran’s foreign ministry said the sanctions were not “an effective tool” and would only serve to “complicate” its showdown with the West.

Russia’s foreign ministry on Tuesday called the new EU sanctions “unacceptable”.

“We have already said many times that we consider unacceptable the practice of unilateral or collective sanctions measures against Iran that go beyond the Security Council sanctions regime in action in the country,” it said.

China has emerged as Iran’s closest trading partner and has major energy interests in the Islamic republic.

But it did back the new UN measures, which expand an arms embargo and bar Iran from sensitive activities such as uranium mining.

The United States said Thursday that it would dispatch two top envoys to China in August to lobby for Beijing’s support for tougher sanctions against Iran.


Five Taliban taken off UN sanctions list: Austria

310 Five Taliban taken off UN sanctions list: Austria

UNITED NATIONS (AFP) – Five Taliban members, including a former Afghan ambassador to the United Nations, have been taken off a UN sanctions terrorism list, Austria’s UN mission said Friday.

The five were Abdul Satar Paktin; Abdul Hakim Mujahid Muhammad Awrang, a former Afghan envoy to the UN; Abdul Salam Zaeef, author of “My life with the Taliban;” and two officials who are now deceased.

Austria chairs the UN Security Council panel that maintains a blacklist of individuals and entities linked to al-Qaeda and the Taliban.

The panel is to complete its review of the blacklist, which until now included 137 Afghan nationals, Saturday and will unveil its full results on Monday.

Individuals on the list are subject to asset freezes, a travel ban and an arms embargo.

As part of his efforts to promote national reconciliation, Afghan President Hamid Karzai had asked the Security Council to remove the names of some Taliban members who were not linked to Al-Qaeda from the terror blacklist.

The Karzai government has set conditions for peace talks with Taliban insurgents, demanding militants renounce violence, accept the Afghan constitution and rescind ties with Al-Qaeda.

The Afghan reportedly sought the removal of up to 50 former Taliban officials from the blacklist, which contains nearly 500 names, including those of a number of persons now deceased.

Last January, the sanctions panel had already removed five top Taliban officials from its list.

The five then delisted were Abdul Wakil Mutawakil, who was foreign minister under the now ousted Taliban regime; Faiz Mohammad Faizan, a former deputy commerce minister; Shams-US-Safa, a former foreign ministry official; Mohammad Musa, a deputy planning minister; and Abdul Hakim, a former deputy frontier affairs minister.

The UN blacklist was established under UN Security Council Resolution 1267, adopted in October 1999 for the purpose of overseeing implementation of sanctions imposed on Taliban-controlled Afghanistan for its support of Osama bin Laden’s extremist network.

Under the resolution, UN member states are required to impose travel bans, an asset freeze and an arms embargo on any individual or entity associated with Al-Qaeda, bin Laden and/or the Taliban.

Removal from the list requires unanimous approval from all 15 members of the Security Council’s sanctions panel.

The UN blacklist list with all its entries is available on the Internet at: http://www.un.org/sc/committees/1267/index.shtml.


Berlusconi ousts ally, says government stable

28 Berlusconi ousts ally, says government stable

ROME – Silvio Berlusconi has split with his oldest political ally and co-founder of his party, a spectacular falling-out expected to make it harder for the premier to push disputed legislation through parliament.

Berlusconi’s split with Gianfranco Fini does not put the Italian leader’s two-year-old government at immediate risk of collapse, analysts and officials said Friday. But it leaves the government with a slimmer parliamentary majority, especially in one house.

“We’re going toward a situation of war. I see great difficulties for this government and this legislature,” Stefano Folli, one of Italy’s leading analysts, told The Associated Press.

Berlusconi has a history of trying to push through parliament bills that are criticized as tailor-made to protect his interest or that of his associates. He maintains he acts for the good of the country.

For example, a bill seeking to restrict both the scope and publication of wiretaps — currently before parliament — has been fiercely opposed of lawmakers close to Fini, pushing further debate on it till after the summer recess.

“On the issue of Berlusconi’s judicial interests it will be like hitting against a wall,” Folli says. “There can be surprises there.”

Fini and Berlusconi, while often bickering, had been together since Berlusconi’s first foray into politics in 1994. Fini is a former Neo-Fascist leader whose alliance with Berlusconi has helped him move solidly toward mainstream conservatism.

Berlusconi’s current government took office in May 2008 with a five-year mandate.

Fini and Berlusconi have been at odds on a number of issues but most notably Fini has expressed unease about bills that were perceived as protecting Berlusconi or his associates from legal woes.

On Thursday night, Berlusconi effectively ousted Fini from the People of Freedom party, accusing him of creating a “party within a party” and having an “attitude of permanent opposition to the government.” Berlusconi said Fini had carried out “a systematic attack” against him.

But Berlusconi said he would have no problem keeping in the government one minister and some undersecretaries who are part of Fini’s faction.

Lawmakers loyal to Fini formed their own separate parliamentary group on Friday, meaning they would have free hands and not be mandated to vote as demanded by the Freedom of People party.

It was not clear how many people would follow Fini.

Berlusconi will have no problem securing a majority in the Senate. In the lower house of parliament, where Fini serves as speaker, the Freedom of People might be reduced to a very thin majority, or might even need to turn to its other government ally, the Northern League, to have one.

Fini said Friday his lawmakers will support the government when it sticks to its program. Folli said he expected Fini to remain loyal to the government on major issues such as Italy’s mission in Afghanistan and foreign or economic policies — austerity measures were passed by parliament just hours before the split was announced.

But Fini also said that they “will not hesitate to oppose choices that are seen as unjust or harmful of the general interest” — a possible reference to some of the controversial proposals pushed forward by Berlusconi .

Confidence in Berlusconi’s government has been slipping, coming in at 33 percent in July from 49 percent at the beginning of the government and a peak of 54 percent in September 2008. The poll by IPR marketing has a margin of error of plus or minus 4 percentage points.


Paris police: Tear gas in letter for US Embassy

110 Paris police: Tear gas in letter for US Embassy

PARIS – Two men who work for the U.S. Embassy in Paris underwent medical tests after handling a suspicious letter Friday, the embassy said, and Paris police said it appeared they had been exposed to tear gas fumes.

Both men were cleared and released after being examined at the Paris hospital Hotel Dieu, Embassy spokesman Paul Patin said. The mailroom employees identified a suspicious letter and the embassy alerted French authorities, he told The Associated Press.

The central laboratory of the Paris police identified the irritant as tear gas, according to a police official who was not authorized to speak to the media. However, Patin said he could not immediately confirm that report.

“Whatever the smell was, it was not deemed harmful. It’s not toxic …,” said State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley. “As a precaution, the two employees were sent to the hospital and have experienced no ill effects from whatever was detected in these letters.”

An embassy employee received a manila envelope sent as registered mail that had no mail inside, but it began emitting fumes after the employee opened it, the French police official said.

The official said the throats and eyes of the employee and two others were irritated. There was no immediate explanation for the discrepancy in the number of exployees reported affected.

The embassy spokesman said that only two people were involved and “they were cleared and released.”

Two months ago, Paris police were asked to investigate a similar case involving a letter to the U.S. ambassador, the Paris police official said.

The embassy did not provide further information about where the letter came from or the nationalities of the employees. The mailroom is in the main building of the U.S. embassy, located just off the Champs-Elysees not far from the French presidential palace.

The embassy, which is always surrounded by layers of security, remained open after the incident.

Suspicious mail has gotten particular attention since 2001, when five people in the United States were killed and 17 fell ill after opening letters containing anthrax. Postal facilities nationwide were shut for inspection after the letters containing anthrax spores were sent to lawmakers and news organizations after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

The FBI concluded that an army scientist, Bruce Ivins, was responsible for those attacks. Ivins, who killed himself in 2008, denied involvement in the anthrax letters and his family and some friends have continued to insist that he was innocent.


U.N. tells Darfur peace force to focus on security

50 U.N. tells Darfur peace force to focus on security

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) – The U.N. Security Council extended the stay of peacekeepers in Sudan’s western Darfur region by another year on Friday, telling the force to focus primarily on protecting civilians and aid deliveries.

The 15-nation council unanimously approved the extension in a resolution that also condemned a recent upsurge of violence in Darfur and called on Khartoum to stop hindering the work of the joint African Union/U.N. peacekeeping force, or UNAMID.

The force, which currently stands at some 21,700 troops and police, has been struggling for three years with the Darfur crisis, which erupted when mostly non-Arab rebels took up arms in early 2003, accusing Khartoum of neglect.

The government responded by mobilizing mostly Arab militias accused of a campaign of rape, murder and looting which created one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises. U.N. officials say up to 300,000 have died, while Khartoum says 10,000.

Extending UNAMID’s mandate until July 31, 2011, the Security Council called on it to give priority to protection of civilians and ensuring “safe, timely and unhindered humanitarian access” to an estimated 2 million refugees.

It instructed U.N. officials in Sudan to develop a “comprehensive strategy” to achieve those targets.

Western diplomats said the force should put those goals ahead of reconstruction projects or a direct role in attempts to negotiate a political settlement, which they said UNAMID had been straying into and which Sudan’s government favored.

Peace talks between Khartoum and Darfur rebels are going on in Qatar, but have made little progress in the absence of the two main rebel groups.

PERMANENT CEASEFIRE SOUGHT

The renewal of UNAMID’s mandate came as violence has risen in Darfur, a region the size of France. Eight people were reported killed and dozens injured this week at fighting in refugee camps between supporters and opponents of peace talks.

UNAMID reported earlier this month that 221 people had died in tribal fighting and other violence in Darfur in June after nearly 600 deaths in May. UNAMID itself has lost 27 troops and police since it first deployed.

The Security Council called on all parties to the conflict in Darfur to immediately end the violence and commit themselves to a “sustained and permanent ceasefire.”

The council was to discuss the violence in closed-door consultations later on Friday, diplomats said.

The council also urged all parties to let UNAMID do its work and called on Khartoum to carry out promises to the United Nations on flight and equipment clearances and remove all obstacles to the use of the force’s aircraft.

In a report this month, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon accused both Khartoum and rebel groups of restricting access to areas where there had been fighting. Sudan’s U.N. Ambassador Abdalmahmoud Abdalhaleem said his government had placed “no restrictions whatsoever” on UNAMID.

Aid group Oxfam agreed with the Security Council that UNAMID should focus on security and stay out of reconstruction. “Mixing the work of blue helmets (peacekeepers) with aid groups will confuse Darfuris,” El Fateh Osman, Oxfam’s country director in Sudan, said in a statement.

Separately, U.N. Under-Secretary-General Susana Malcorra told reporters that the United Nations was preparing to expand its presence in semi-autonomous South Sudan to help prepare for next year’s referendum on possible secession for the South.

She said U.N. personnel would also help with training of local security forces and monitoring for the referendum.


Bike riding in London is risky business

49 209x300 Bike riding in London is risky business

LONDON – Feel like living dangerously?

Riding a bike in London will soon be more convenient, though it’s unlikely to be any less scary. Riders already dodge the city’s famed black cabs and double-decker buses — to say nothing of other cyclists.

A bike rental program launched Friday by London’s Mayor Boris Johnson will add an additional 6,000 bikes to the capital’s congested streets. Under the initiative, cyclists will be able to rent bikes from 400 docking stations around town.

Johnson called it “a new dawn for the bicycle in the capital” — but veterans of the London cycling scene are bracing for a new era of transit mayhem.

Unlike Amsterdam, where bike paths are separated from the road by a curb, in London a white line is the only protection for cyclists.

Consider these experiences of two avid riders who cycle to work almost every day.

___

FIRST RULE, BE SAFE, WRITES SATTER

When the brakes on my bike started slipping, I figured I’d take care of the problem later. After I went flying over the hood of a black cab at the intersection of Gray’s Inn Road and Calthorpe Street, I wished I’d taken care of it sooner.

The London Cycling Campaign says the most common cause of accidents here is from drivers not seeing cyclists, so when in London, do as the Londoners do: Don day-glow jackets, fluorescent gloves or a bright yellow backpack.

Sure, you’ll look ridiculous, but at least motorists will look.

And, while accidents happen, serious ones are rare. According to the latest statistics kept by Transport for London, the number of fatalities has stayed virtually the same between 1987 and 2007 — about 15 per year — even as the number of cyclists plying the streets has doubled.

So while the papers often carry accounts of trucks hitting cyclists, you’re better off biking to work than sitting on the couch eating crisps, as the British call potato chips.

“The health benefits outweigh the risks by a factor of 20,” says Mike Cavenett of the London Cycling Campaign.

___

USE THE GREAT ESCAPE, ADVISES WAGNER

Tourists often don’t know this, but London has a great canal network that runs through the central and eastern parts of the city, and it can be a great escape for cyclists who find the capital’s maze-like streets and traffic circles too scary.

Long, narrow house boats traverse the canals, maneuvering through one lock after another. Alongside are footpaths that horses once used to pull narrow boats carrying supplies and produce.

These footpaths can be a boon for bike riders, but be warned: They aren’t easy to navigate.

For one thing, the paths are made of loosely laid concrete blocks that wobble and shake as a cyclist speeds over them — making it easy to lose control.

Tunnels along the canals are only wide enough for one bike — and so low that a cyclist has to duck his head to pass through.

In the middle of the day, when lots of bikes and pedestrians (and dog walkers) are using the footpaths, a ride involves constant negotiation.

Once, while coming out of a tunnel, I had a head-on collision with another biker who was entering from the other direction. Result? Bleeding knuckles.

But we both were thrilled we hadn’t fallen into the polluted canal waters.

___

RIDING ON THE “WRONG” SIDE OF THE ROAD CAN BE HAZARDOUS, WARNS WAGNER

Like many Americans living in the UK, I have friends and relatives who visit for the first time and need to be shown around London.

I always insist we cycle. On a bike, a tour that includes Buckingham Palace, 10 Downing Street, Parliament, Big Ben, Regent’s and Hyde parks and many sites along the River Thames can be done in just three hours.

In some ways, it’s like teaching a teenager how to drive. Even on a Sunday, when traffic is at its lowest, Americans find it tough to ride a bike on the left side of the road and to navigate traffic circles.

At the end of the ride, they are usually saying something like, “Wow, never again.”

___

NAVIGATING LONDON’S TWISTS AND TURNS, FROM WAGNER

Forget street signs or the grid system. London’s traffic network is an amazing mix of Roman roads, crooked Medieval alleys, 19th-century avenues and modern concrete traffic circles.

It’s also one of Europe’s largest, most densely populated cities, as a friend and I learned firsthand. On a bike trip from London to Brighton on the southern coast, we couldn’t believe it took 2 1/2 hours of pedaling just to get outside the city limits.

Trying to keep the city’s many famous place names straight can also be a challenge — Leicester Square, Covent Garden, Oxford Street, Regent Street, Bond Street, Mayfair, Soho, Trafalgar Square.

Some cyclists rely on landmarks to keep track of where they are. The River Thames, the London Eye Ferris Wheel to the west and the Gherkin skyscraper to the east are all great navigational tools.

And once you learn the maze, short cuts on bikes are everywhere. Not to mention the clock tower at St. Paul’s Cathedral, which is ideally positioned for cyclists wondering whether they’re late for work.

___

BIKING HAS ADVANTAGES, SAYS SATTER

Whether you’re living in London long-term or just here as a tourist, bouncing around on a bike makes good economic sense. Transport in London is brutally expensive. A single trip from Covent Garden to Hyde Park can set you back four pounds ($6.25). Even if you buy into the capital’s discount card system, a weekly pass costs 25.80 pounds (about $40).

At 5 pounds ($7.85) for a seven-day rental and 45 pounds (about $80) for an annual membership, London’s bike rental plan is a better deal by far. And you’re spared the creaky, sweaty subway system. Even in London’s frequent (but usually very light) rains, cyclists tend to stick to their handlebars rather than risk the overcrowded Tube.

Bikes are faster too.

In a race organized by a popular television show, “Top Gear,” a cyclist beat public transport, a motor boat and a Mercedes in a 17-mile (27-kilometer) race across London.

As the London Cycling Campaign’s Cavenett puts it: “What a great way to see the city.”


Sarkozy threatens immigrants who target police

48 Sarkozy threatens immigrants who target police

PARIS – President Nicolas Sarkozy said Friday that he wants to revoke the French citizenship of immigrants who put the lives of police officers in danger as part of a “national war” on delinquency.

In a speech in Grenoble, the site of recent urban unrest, Sarkozy said that the current list of causes for revoking French nationality would be reevaluated and “rights and benefits” accorded to illegal immigrants would be reviewed.

Meanwhile, a video posted on the Internet showing riot police roughly rousting African immigrant squatters, including one visibly pregnant woman, from an encampment at a housing project prompted shocked reactions around the country.

The video shot by a member of a housing-rights organization shows police wearing leg protection pulling women, some with babies on their backs, and in one case dragging a woman across the ground with her infant trailing behind in the dirt.

No one was injured in the July 21 operation in La Courneuve, a suburb northeast of Paris, local officials said, but human rights advocates denounced the “brutal evacuation” of some 200 people.

Family Planning, an international women’s health group, issued a statement saying it was “scandalized, shocked, outraged and even sickened by the conditions” of the mass evacuation of women and children.

MRAP, a leading human rights group, said people in the video had all been expelled from previous housing and provided with no long-term solutions.

The squatters physically resisted, “attaching themselves to each other, lying down, sometimes kicking and hitting police,” the government of the Seine-Saint-Denis region around La Corneuve said.

The evacuation was handled “according to legal procedures and rules in such circumstances,” and no one was injured, it said in a statement.

The French president, a former interior minister, has projected a law-and-order image, and named a former police official as prefect, the highest state authority, for the region around Grenoble after youths and police clashed this month at a housing project that is home to many immigrants.

Two days ago, Sarkozy ordered the expulsion of Gypsies living in France illegally, saying their camps should be “systematically evacuated.” That order came after police clashed this month with Gypsies, known as Roma, in the Loire Valley following the shooting death of a youth fleeing police.

The pronouncement caused special outrage because Sarkozy singled out a particular ethnic group in a country official that’s official blind to ethnic origins.

Sarkozy said he wants immigration laws changed to make it easier to expel people “for reasons of public order.”

Sarkozy traveled to Grenoble Friday for the induction ceremony of a new prefect, Eric Le Douaron, and used the occasion to announce a new get-tough approach to delinquency that notably hits hard on immigrants who disobey the law.

“French nationality should be earned. One must know how to be worthy of it,” the president said. French nationality should be revoked “from any person of foreign origin who voluntarily threatens the life of a police officer” or other public authority, he said.

The violence outside Grenoble, in the southeast, was triggered by the police killing of a resident fleeing after an armed robbery at a casino. Officials said some youths fired on police in the ensuing unrest.

Tensions have simmered in heavily immigrant projects around France since nationwide riots in 2005.

Human rights organizations joined political rivals to denounce Sarkozy’s decision to target French of immigrant origin.

“The xenophobia of Nicolas Sarkozy threatens democracy,” the League of Human Rights said. For the conservative leader’s main rival, the Socialist Party, “There are rules that are valid for all French … You are French or you are not French.”

Many claimed that Sarkozy, plummeting in the polls, was using law-and-order and immigration issues to gain backing from deeply conservative swaths of the population and the minority far-right.


NY reps. bicker over 9/11 responder bill’s defeat

47 NY reps. bicker over 9/11 responder bills defeat

WASHINGTON – The House’s rejection of bill that would have provided up to $7.4 billion in aid to people sickened by World Trade Center dust has opened a sharp rift between two New York congressmen, Republican Peter King and Democrat Anthony Weiner.

The verbal jousting came on the House floor Thursday night as the vote neared. The results fell largely along party lines, with 12 Republicans joining Democrats supporting the measure, but it failed to win the needed two-thirds majority.

Video of the heated dustup between the two New Yorkers quickly became an Internet sensation and fodder for cable news networks Friday.

Arms flailing and his voice rising, Weiner took sharp aim at King, who represents part of Long Island.

“The gentleman is providing cover for his colleagues rather than doing the right thing,” bellowed Weiner, whose district includes parts of Brooklyn and Queens. “Republicans wrapping their arms around Republicans rather than doing the right thing on behalf of heroes. It’s a shame, a shame.”

King, a key backer of the bill, had moments earlier accused Democrats of staging a “charade.”

The rift developed over how the bill was put before the chamber.

Democratic leaders opted to consider it under a procedure that requires a two-thirds vote for approval rather than a simple majority. The move blocked potential GOP amendments to the measure.

King said Democrats were “petrified” about casting votes on the amendments, possibly including one that would ban aid from going to illegal immigrants sickened by trade center dust. King said the bill was more important than “a campaign talking point.”

King’s comments rankled New York Democrats. They blamed Republicans for not supporting the bill and accused King of not doing enough to win more GOP support for the measure.

The jabbering continued during a raucous joint appearance by the two congressmen Friday on Fox News Channel. With tempers still running high, the two men repeatedly interrupted one another.

Weiner asserted that despite all the “whining about the process,” the House had an up-or-down vote on a program to extend more aid to those made sick by the World Trade Center dust.

“Every day on the streets of New York I hear people say, ‘Why don’t you guys just have up-or-down votes?’ We had one last night,” Weiner said, jabbing a thumb toward King. “They voted it down.”

Weiner went on to mock King, noting just 12 Republicans voted for the bill while 243 Democrats supported it.

“Twelve, Peter?” Weiner said. “That’s all you can muster? Your influential position, that’s all you could get?”

King fumed.

“This is phony hypocrisy,” he shot back. “They could pass the bill right now if they wanted to.”

New York lawmakers have said they plan to keep pressing for the bill once Congress returns from its August recess.


Copyright © 1996-2010 Global Political News - sknlabourparty. All rights reserved.
iDream theme by Templates Next
Preview on Feedage: global-political-news-sknlabourparty Add to My Yahoo! Global Political News - sknlabourparty Add to Google! Global Political News - sknlabourparty Add to AOL! Global Political News - sknlabourparty Add to MSN Global Political News - sknlabourparty Subscribe in Pakeflakes Global Political News - sknlabourparty
Add to Feedage RSS Alerts Global Political News - sknlabourparty
| Powered by WordPress