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Saturday, April 20, 2013

  • Venezuela will audit 100% of election results



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    Fraud still haunting Venezuela election


    Venezuela's top election official said Thursday that authorities will complete a 100% audit of votes cast in Sunday's presidential election.
    Tibisay Lucena, president of Venezuela's National Electoral Council, said officials decided on the audit after a lengthy debate.
    Officials had already audited 54% of ballot boxes, and now will audit the remaining 46%, she said.
    READ MORE: Why Venezuela is so divided
    The decision comes after opposition candidate Henrique Capriles Radonski filed complaints with election officials about thousands of alleged violations during Sunday's vote."The electoral power is making this decision in order to preserve a climate of harmony between Venezuelans, but also to isolate violent sectors that are irresponsibly trying to harm democracy," Lucena said.
    Capriles said he accepted the council's decision Thursday because he believes that the problems his campaign spotted would be detected in the audit of the remaining 46%.
    "I want to congratulate our people, because this was your fight," Capriles said late Thursday.
    Earlier this week, Lucena certified the election results and declared Nicolas Maduro president-elect, despite Capriles' calls for a vote-by-vote recount.
    Maduro secured 50.8% of votes in Sunday's election, while Capriles won 49%, election officials said earlier this week.
    Maduro is scheduled to be sworn in at a ceremony in Caracas on Friday. It was unclear late Thursday whether the audit would impact plans for his inauguration.
    The audit will take about 30 days and will involve comparing results from voting machines with printed reports and registries containing voters' signatures, Venezuelan constitutional lawyer Jose Vicente Haro told CNN en EspaƱol.
    At the time of the electoral council's announcement, the president-elect was in Lima, Peru, where South American presidents were in an emergency meeting to discuss Venezuela's elections.
    The narrow vote margin has sparked mounting tensions in Venezuela after the closely watched election to pick Hugo Chavez's successor to the presidency.
    Venezuela's state-run AVN news agency said at least eight people have been killed in postelection violence across the country. The government news agency tied the deaths to opposition protests and said the victims were all followers of Maduro. CNN could not independently confirm the government reports of violence, and it was unknown whether there were any opposition injuries or fatalities.
    On nights since the hotly contested vote, supporters of Capriles have banged pots and pans to protest the government's refusal to recount the votes, while supporters of Maduro have set off fireworks to celebrate his victory and drown out the noise.
    Before he departed for Lima Thursday, Maduro sharply criticized the opposition in Venezuela and accused them of staging a coup against him.
    "In Venezuela we do not have an opposition. ... We have a conspiracy," he said.
    Despite protests, he said he would be inaugurated on Friday with a large ceremony and a military parade "because our only commitment is to the people and to the memory of Hugo Chavez.""
    A smiling Capriles urged his supporters Thursday not to be discouraged by Friday's ceremony, and to stay home listening to salsa music.
    "This fight has not finished. ... I am sure that sooner rather than later the truth will come out," he said.
    Source:Cnn


  • Tuesday, April 16, 2013

  • World latest News: FBI probes Boston 'terror' blasts

    World latest News: FBI probes Boston 'terror' blasts: The moment of the first explosion Continue reading the main story An investigation is under way after two explosions near the ...

  • FBI probes Boston 'terror' blasts


    The moment of the first explosion
    An investigation is under way after two explosions near the finishing line of the Boston Marathon left three people dead and at least 140 injured.
    The FBI has taken over co-ordination of what it described as a "potential terrorist inquiry".
    Boston police say officers are working around the clock and all leave has been cancelled.
    At least 17 people are critically wounded, officials say, and the injuries include several amputations.
    One of the dead was an eight-year-old boy, US media said.
    In a televised address, President Barack Obama vowed to bring those behind the attack to justice.
    "We will find out who did this. We'll find out why they did this," he said.
    "Any responsible individuals, any responsible groups, will feel the full weight of justice."

    The first explosion came at about 14:50 local time (18:50 GMT) on the north side of Boylston Street, about two hours after the winners crossed the line.
    There was initial confusion and panic. Some runners fell to the floor while police and bystanders ran to help those caught in the blast.
    Then seconds later, another explosion ripped into the crowd further away from the finishing line, between 50 and 100 metres (yards) from the first blast.
    TV footage showed bloodied runners and spectators being treated at the scene and the road strewn with debris. Rescuers tore down temporary fencing to reach the casualties.
    Medical officials speak of at least 140 injured, with injuries including severed limbs, shrapnel wounds, cuts and bruises,
    At an initial news conference, Boston Police Commissioner Edward Davis said authorities had received "no specific intelligence that anything was going to happen".
    He urged people to stay indoors and not congregate in large groups.
    Map: Explosions on route of the Boston marathon
    At a second news conference he said the death toll now stood at three. He said that no suspects were in custody.
    A search thought to be related to the inquiry was under way at a flat in a Boston suburb, Boston media reported.
    Police said a search warrant was issued on Monday in the Revere district but provided no further details.
    The White House and security experts are being cautious as to whether domestic terrorist groups or jihadists were behind the attacks, says the BBC's security correspondent, Gordon Correra, in Washington.
    The device itself is thought to be fairly crude and there is a very clear focus on finding the evidence rather than speculating, he adds.
    Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick said Boston would be "open" on Tuesday but that there would be "a heightened law enforcement presence".
    "There will be random checks of backpacks and other parcels. We are also asking that everyone be on a state of heightened vigilance," he said.
    FBI Special Agent Richard DesLauriers also appeared, saying that the inquiry involved city, state and federal officials, but refusing to give any details of the investigation.
    Details of the victims have also not been revealed, however an eight-year-old boy is said to be among the dead. Quoting a family friend, Associated Press said the boy's mother and sister were also injured as they waited for his father to finish the race.
    Officers have already begun poring over video and photographs from the marathon.
    Unconfirmed reports said two other unexploded devices were found near the end of the race but were safely defused.
    State police officer Roupen Bastajian had just finished the race when he heard the blasts.
    "I started running toward the blast and there were people all over the floor," he said.
    "We started grabbing tourniquets and started tying legs. At least 25 to 30 people have at least one leg missing, or an ankle missing, or two legs missing."
    A doctor at Massachusetts General Hospital said "several amputations" had been performed there.
    As a massive security operation swung into operation, the Federal Aviation Administration barred low-flying aircraft from within 3.5 miles (5.6km) of the site.
    Key sites in Washington DC and New York have also seen security tightened.
    President Obama: "We will find out who did this and hold them accountable"
    Shortly after the blasts, a fire broke out at Boston's John F Kennedy Library a few miles away from the explosions.
    Police said the blaze might have been caused by an incendiary device but it did not appear to be related to the explosions.
    The annual Boston Marathon this year had a field of about 23,000 runners and was watched by hundreds of thousands of spectators.
    It is held on Patriots Day, a Massachusetts state holiday which commemorates the first battles of the American Revolution in 1775.
    Source:BBC news

  • Monday, April 15, 2013

  • Venezuela poll: Maduro opponent Capriles demands recount



    Will Grant in Caracas: ''It's a questionable victory from the opposition's point of view''
    Defeated Venezuelan presidential candidate Henrique Capriles has demanded a recount of votes, rejecting the election of Hugo Chavez's successor as "illegitimate".
    Mr Capriles, who lost by a very narrow margin, said there were more than 300,000 incidents from Sunday's poll that needed to be examined.
    Socialist Nicolas Maduro has called for the results to be respected.
    The election was called after Mr Chavez's death from cancer on 5 March.
    Mr Maduro, a former bus driver whom Mr Chavez had named as his preferred heir, won 50.7% of the vote against 49.1% for Mr Capriles.
    The National Electoral Council said the results, which it announced on Sunday night, were "irreversible".
    Russian President Vladimir Putin and Cuban leader Raul Castro were among the first heads of state to congratulate Mr Maduro on his win.
    'Work together'
    As the news of Mr Maduro's victory emerged, celebrations erupteThousands of jubilant supporters took to the streets, dancing, singing and blasting car horns, while fireworks lit up the night sky. Opposition voters banged pots and pans in protest.
    Speaking outside the presidential palace, Mr Maduro told crowds that the result was "just, legal and constitutional".
    He said his election showed Hugo Chavez "continues to be invincible, that he continues to win battles''.
    Mr Maduro, who was wearing a tracksuit top in the colours of the Venezuelan flag, said he had spoken to Mr Capriles on the phone, and that he would allow an audit of the election result.
    He called for those who had not voted for him to "work together" for the country.
    But Mr Maduro's margin of victory was far narrower than that achieved by Chavez at elections last October, when he beat Mr Capriles by more than 10%.
    Almost immediately one member of the National Electoral Council who does not have government sympathies called on the authorities to carry out a recount by hand, a call later echoed by Mr Capriles himself.
    At Mr Capriles' campaign headquarters the mood was sombre, as his supporters watched the results on television. Some cried, while others hung their heads in dismay,
    Shortly afterwards, Mr Capriles emerged, angry and defiant.
    "It is the government that has been defeated," he said. Then, addressing Mr Maduro directly, he said: "The biggest loser today is you. The people don't love you.
    "Mr Maduro, if you were illegitimate before, now you are more so."
    The new president faces an extremely complex task in office, says the BBC's Central America correspondent, Will Grant.
    Venezuela has one of the highest rates of inflation in the region and crime rates have soared in recent years, particularly in Caracas. Food shortages and electricity blackouts are also common.
    But perhaps Mr Maduro's biggest challenge will be trying to govern a country which is so deeply divided and polarised, and where the opposition say they have an increasingly legitimate stake in the decision-making process, our correspondent says.
    The closeness of the race has also caused introspection inside Mr Maduro's own United Socialist Party (PSUV).
    The man considered to be Mr Maduro's main rival, National Assembly President Diosdado Cabello, tweeted that the results "oblige us to make a profound self-criticism".
    Divisive legacy
    Mr Maduro had been serving as acting president since Mr Chavez died.
    Henrique Capriles (14/04/13)Mr Capriles has refused to accept the results
    He is due to be sworn in on 19 April and serve until January 2019 to complete the six-year term that Mr Chavez would have begun in January.
    Mr Chavez was a divisive leader. To his supporters he was the reforming president whose idiosyncratic brand of socialism defeated the political elite and gave hope to the poorest Venezuelans.
    He effectively used his country's vast oil reserves to boost Venezuela's international clout, and his strident criticism of the US won him many political allies in Latin America.
    However, his political opponents accused him of being an autocrat, intent on building a one-party state.

    Source:BBC news

  • Saturday, April 13, 2013

  • Kerry hails Chinese North Korea pledge


    US Secretary of State John Kerry and Chinese chief diplomat Yang Jiechi in Beijing (13 April 2013)John Kerry spoke held talks with Chinese chief diplomat Yang Jiechi and other top officials
    US Secretary of State John Kerry says China is "very serious" about a pledge to help resolve tensions over North Korea's nuclear programme.
    The US and China earlier said they were committed to the "denuclearisation" of the Korean peninsula.
    Mr Kerry said the two sides would hold further meetings "to bear down very quickly" on how to achieve that goal.
    North Korea has recently threatened attacks against South Korea and the US, amid a flurry of bellicose statements.
    Speculation has also built that the North was preparing a missile launch, following reports that it had moved at least two Musudan ballistic missiles to its east coast.
    Mr Kerry has said any such launch would be a "huge mistake".
    After a day of meetings in Beijing with President Xi Jinping and other top Chinese officials on Saturday, he said both governments called on North Korea "to refrain from any provocative steps and that obviously refers to any future missile shoot".
    Mr Kerry, who is on a four-day tour of Asia, continues to Japan on Sunday.
    'Not just rhetoric'
    Following Mr Kerry's meetings, China's top diplomat Yang Jiechi said his country's position was "clear cut".


    "China is firmly committed to upholding peace and stability and advancing the denuclearisation process on the Korean peninsula," he said, adding that the issue should be resolved "peacefully through dialogue".
    No specifics were given, though Mr Kerry said the two sides would hold "further discussions to bear down very quickly with great specificity on exactly how we will accomplish this goal".
    He later told reporters that the US Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Martin Dempsey, would visit Beijing later this month accompanied by intelligence officials.
    He said he wanted to ensure that the pledges made on Saturday were "not just rhetoric", adding: "There is no question in my mind that China is very serious - very serious - about denuclearising."
    China is North Korea's only ally and major trading partner, but has grown increasingly frustrated with its growing belligerence.
    Even so, the BBC's Damian Grammaticas reports from Beijing that persuading China to increase the pressure on North Korea will not be easy.
    China is still the North's lifeline, and Beijing is unlikely to cut vital supplies of food and fuel since it feels that may make the North even more desperate and unpredictable, our correspondent adds.
    'Forward-leaning posture'
    On Saturday Mr Kerry raised the prospect that if North Korea stopped its nuclear programme - "if the threat disappears" - then the US would no longer have "the same imperative... to have that kind of robust, forward-leaning posture".
    Since the UN imposed fresh sanctions on North Korea in February in response the North's third nuclear test, Pyongyang has promised to restart a mothballed nuclear reactor and threatened a nuclear strike against the US mainland.
    The North says it has also been angered by joint US-South Korean military exercises.
    On Saturday, a commentary piece on Chinese state news agency Xinhua said Washington had itself "been fanning the flames" by sending military reinforcements to the region.
    But during his trip, Mr Kerry has stressed that the US has tried to tone down its own statements, and cancelled some military exercises in an effort to defuse tension.
    Though North Korea's rhetoric has been more bellicose than usual, analysts say it fits a long-standing pattern, and may be intended to boost the popularity of Kim Jong-un, who came to power last year.
    Some estimates suggest that the missiles North Korea has moved to its east coast could travel 4,000km (2,500 miles), although it is not believed that the Musudan has been tested before.
    That would put US bases on the Pacific island of Guam within range.
    But US officials including Mr Kerry have been playing down a leaked Pentagon report which warned that Pyongyang could have developed the technology to mount a nuclear warhead on a missile.
    Source:BBC news

  • China bird flu: Beijing reports its first case


    A rooster struts along a Beijing street as a woman passes, 4 AprilMost H7N9 cases have come from poultry
    A girl of seven is being treated in hospital in Beijing, in the first case of H7N9 "bird flu" reported by Chinese officials in the capital.
    The child, whose parents are poultry traders, developed a fever, sore throat and headache on Thursday. Her condition is said to be stable.
    Two people in close contact with her were quarantined for observation but have shown no symptoms so far.
    The UN had recorded 28 cases and nine deaths in China as of Wednesday.
    There are no reported cases outside the country, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).
    China's national disease control centre confirmed on Saturday that the girl take ill in Beijing had the H7N9 virus.
    The first cases of the virus were reported in February, in eastern China.According to the WHO, there is no evidence that the H7N9 virus is being transmitted between people, and most cases come from poultry.
    International health experts have commended China on its transparency in reporting the spread of the virus, in sharp contrast to its handling of a Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (Sars) outbreak in 2003, when 8,096 people were infected worldwide and 744 died.

  • John Kerry visits China to press Beijing over N Korea



    China is North Korea's only ally, with significant economic leverage at its disposal
    US Secretary of State John Kerry is visiting China, in an attempt to urge Beijing to use its influence over North Korea to reduce regional tensions.
    Speaking to President Xi Jinping in Beijing, Mr Kerry said the world was facing a "critical time".
    Mr Kerry's four-day tour of Asia comes amid speculation that North Korea is preparing for a missile launch.
    The US says there is no evidence North Korea can fire a nuclear warhead as suggested by a leaked US report.
    North Korea has reportedly moved at least two Musudan ballistic missiles to its east coast.
    A flurry of warlike statements from Pyongyang has prompted speculation that it might launch a missile - possibly on 15 April, when the country marks the 101st birthday of the nation's founder and former leader, Kim Il-sung.

    Since the UN imposed fresh sanctions on North Korea in February, its leadership has promised to restart a mothballed nuclear reactor, has shut an emergency military hotline to South Korea, and has urged diplomatic staff to leave, saying it cannot guarantee their safety.
    The North says it has also been angered by joint US-South Korean military exercises.
    Though North Korean rhetoric has been more bellicose than usual, analysts say it fits a long-standing pattern, and may be intended to boost the popularity of Kim Jong-un, who came to power last year.
    'Defuse this tension'
    After arriving in Beijing on Saturday and holding talks with his counterpart, Wang Yi, Mr Kerry told Mr Xi the world was facing "a critical time with some very challenging issues".
    Among them were Korean tensions but also "the challenge of Iran and nuclear weapons, Syria and the Middle East, and economies around the world that are in need of a boost", he said.
    On Friday, during a visit to the South Korean capital, Seoul, Mr Kerry said the US would protect itself and its allies, and that his talks in Beijing would aim to "lay out a path that will defuse this tension".
    He said no country had a closer relationship with Pyongyang than China.
    Beijing, like Washington, wanted denuclearisation on the peninsula, he said, adding: "If that's your policy, you've got to put some teeth into it."
    He warned North Korean against any missile launch, saying it would be a "provocation and unwanted act" which would further isolate North Korea and its people who, he said "are desperate for food, not missile launches".
    China is North Korea's only ally and major trading partner, but has grown increasingly frustrated with its growing belligerence.
    The BBC's Celia Hatton in Beijing said Mr Kerry will be pressuring China to use its economic leverage to force its rebellious ally to tone down its threats.
    But in turn, China is pushing the US to do more to make North Korea feel secure, says our correspondent.
    In Seoul, Mr Kerry voiced his support for the vision of a reunified Korean peninsula - so far a development neither Chinese nor Korean leadership want to see, she adds.
    Russia has also expressed growing concern over North Korea and said on Friday that it had issued "an urgent appeal" to Pyongyang "to refrain from actions which could lead to further escalation of tension".
    Some estimates suggest that the missiles North Korea has moved to its east coast could travel 4,000km (2,500 miles), although it is not believed that the Musudan has been tested before.
    That reach would put US bases on the Pacific island of Guam within range.
    A declassified section of a report from the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) report had warned there was "moderate" confidence that Pyongyang had developed the technology to mount a nuclear warhead on a missile.
    But Mr Kerry played down the report, and White House spokesman Jay Carney said Pyongyang had "not demonstrated the capability to deploy a nuclear-armed missile".
    Source:BBC news

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