Armstrong will be OK for Tour says Bruyneel

Armstrong remains on course to compete for an eighth Tour de France title despite breaking his collarbone.
Lance Armstrong’s Tour de France hopes have not been affected by the fractured collarbone he sustained in the Vuelta Castilla y Leon on Monday, according to Astana team manager Johan Bruyneel.

Armstrong, 37, fell heavily on day one of the five-day race in Spain and will fly to the United States to undergo surgery. The American could miss the Giro d’Italia, which takes place from May 9-31, but he will be fit in time for July’s Tour de France, a race he won seven times before retiring in 2005. Bruyneel has played down the gravity of Armstrong’s injury and insists it will have no bearing on his Tour ambitions. “Honestly, if I could choose one bone to break, it would be the collarbone,” the Belgian, a former cyclist and Tour de France stage winner in 1995, told L’Equipe newspaper. “It happened to me twice as a rider. You come back from it fine. It isn’t the end of the world or the end of his career, as the rumor has gone in Spain and France. “He will not give up. Worse things have happened to him. A broken collarbone in March changes nothing for the Tour de France in July.”

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However, Bruyneel admitted Armstrong’s chances of featuring in the Giro are now in doubt, although Astana are not yet ready to modify his racing program until there is an update on his condition.

Armstrong fell as he tried to avoid an accident about 20 miles from the finish in Baltanas but Bruyneel insists the American is still comfortable in the saddle, despite his three-and-a-half-year break from the sport. “He isn’t more fearful than any other rider. He is just trying to avoid danger. But it’s true that the fear factor increases as a rider gets older,” added Bruyneel.

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Suspected U.S. missile strike kills 7 in Pakistan

Linda Robertson is helped by Thai police after her husband was allegedly murdered by pirates.
A suspected U.S. missile strike killed seven people Wednesday in Pakistan’s turbulent tribal region, a political official and an intelligence source told CNN.

Thai police believe pirates slit 64-year-old Malcolm Robertson’s throat and tied up his wife Linda, 57, when they raided their yacht near Koh Dong, an island about 73km (45 miles) off southern Thailand’s Andaman sea coast, the British Press Association reported. Mrs Robertson’s brother, John Clee, told PA that she had feared for her life while tied up in the yacht’s cabin for more than 10 hours. However, she managed to free herself and call for help when the attackers fled — apparently after they saw Thai national park employees passing in another boat. Clee said his sister was now being interviewed by Thai authorities. “They haven’t found a body yet. That is our greatest fear — that they do not find his body. We have our fingers crossed,” he told PA.

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Police Captain Suparak Pongkarnjana told PA the pirates fled on a raft but they were arrested soon after and had confessed. Mr Robertson owned a chain of coffee shops in and around his home town of Hastings, East Sussex, but his children now run the business and he was semi-retired, PA reported. The couple, who had been married for 25 years, each had two children from previous relationships, and had seven grandchildren between them. The children had flown to Thailand to support Mrs Robertson, PA reported.

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Men held after British skipper murdered on yacht

Linda Robertson is helped by Thai police after her husband was allegedly murdered by pirates.
Thai police have arrested three migrant Burmese workers after a British yacht skipper was allegedly murdered by having his throat slit and being thrown overboard, according to media reports.

Thai police believe pirates slit 64-year-old Malcolm Robertson’s throat and tied up his wife Linda, 57, when they raided their yacht near Koh Dong, an island about 73km (45 miles) off southern Thailand’s Andaman sea coast, the British Press Association reported. Mrs Robertson’s brother, John Clee, told PA that she had feared for her life while tied up in the yacht’s cabin for more than 10 hours. However, she managed to free herself and call for help when the attackers fled — apparently after they saw Thai national park employees passing in another boat. Clee said his sister was now being interviewed by Thai authorities. “They haven’t found a body yet. That is our greatest fear — that they do not find his body. We have our fingers crossed,” he told PA.

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Police Captain Suparak Pongkarnjana told PA the pirates fled on a raft but they were arrested soon after and had confessed. Mr Robertson owned a chain of coffee shops in and around his home town of Hastings, East Sussex, but his children now run the business and he was semi-retired, PA reported. The couple, who had been married for 25 years, each had two children from previous relationships, and had seven grandchildren between them. The children had flown to Thailand to support Mrs Robertson, PA reported.

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Netanyahu reaches out to Palestinians

Ehud Barak, left, will remain Israeli defense minister in Benjamin Netanyahu's new government.
Incoming Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Wednesday his government will be a "partner for peace" with the Palestinians.

Speaking to an economic forum, Netanyahu said, “Palestinians should understand that they have in our government a partner for peace, for security and for rapid economic development of (the) Palestinian economy; I believe that this could be done.” This comes a day after the central committee of the left of center Labor Party voted to join a coalition government headed by Netanyahu, the leader of the right of center Likud party. Under the agreement, Labor leader Ehud Barak would remain Israeli defense minister, and Netanyahu would achieve his goal of broadening a coalition made up mainly of right-wing parties. Despite these words, his past statements have sparked persistent skepticism about the political will Netanyahu would have to make the moves necessary for an Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement. Just before the Israeli elections, Netanyahu had been visiting the West Bank settlement of Beit Arieh when he was asked why he was visiting a community considered illegal by much of the world community. He said leaving the spot would hurt Israel’s security and accused his rival Kadima party of contemplating a pullout from the area, a policy of “retreat and weakness.” “Behind us is the Israeli national airport, Ben Gurion International Airport, behind us is Tel Aviv and the coastal plain in which most of Israel’s population lives. “The Kadima platform would have us vacate this place in the belief that it would purchase peace. It won’t. It will simply implant another Hamas base, terror base here, backed by Iran with Iranian missiles that would be fired on Tel Aviv and Ben Gurion national airport. And this is something we cannot accept. “We want a policy of security — we know that we will achieve peace only if Israel is strong, only if it can fight terror, only if it can defend itself. This is our policy, the policy of Likud.”

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Behind Obama’s Speech to the Muslim World

Behind Obamas Speech to the Muslim World

When President Obama visits Turkey early next month, some observers are expecting he will use the occasion to deliver on his promise to deliver a major foreign policy speech from a Muslim nation in his first 100 days. But indications are that he will not give the speech in Turkey. The White House and State Department have not yet decided on the location for the speech, which is meant to undo some of the damage done to America’s image in the Muslim world during the George W. Bush Administration.

The President has no other trips to Muslim nations planned, but a surprise visit isn’t out of the question. Here are the pros and cons of some locations believed to be under consideration:

Jakarta, Indonesia

“It’s the most logical choice,” says Ibrahim Hooper, spokesman for the Council on American-Islamic Relations. Not only is Jakarta the capital of the world’s most populous Muslim nation, it is also part of the Obama narrative: he lived in the city for a few years as a child. Hooper says the President “will get an incredibly warm welcome there” — which will help with the symbolism of the moment.

Trouble is, Indonesia is not exactly in the crosscurrents of the Islamic world. Despite its size, it has little impact on Muslim affairs. It is also somewhat removed from the big issues Obama will most likely address in his speech — extremism, terrorism, democracy, Palestine, Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan. “Indonesia’s a nice place, but it is outside the mainstream of Muslim opinion,” says an Arab diplomat who asked not to be identified. “A Muslim watching in Egypt, or in Syria, or in Iraq — they will wonder, ‘Why is he speaking to us from so far away’ ”

Rabat, Morocco

“Any place in the Arabic-speaking world sends a message of outreach and dialogue,” says Hooper. The North African kingdom has been a steady U.S. ally in the war on terrorism, a fact that led then President George W. Bush to designate Morocco a major non-NATO ally. King Mohammed VI is generally pro-West and viewed as a reformer. A speech in Rabat would resonate especially with North African nations like Algeria and Tunisia, where fundamentalism and terrorism are on the rise. But Morocco does not carry much clout in Islamic affairs. If Jakarta is too far east from the Muslim mainstream, then Rabat is too far west.

Amman, Jordan

Jordan has a U.S.-educated King and depends substantially on U.S. handouts. It is also, as Hooper points out, “in the heart of the Arabic-speaking world” — literally and symbolically. It has direct links with the Middle East’s most problematic places: the West Bank , Israel, Iraq and Syria. It has also struggled with terrorism; Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, founder of al-Qaeda in Iraq, was Jordanian.

Like Morocco, though, Jordan has relatively little influence in the Muslim world. “Addressing Muslims from Amman may be a bit like reaching out to Europeans from … Switzerland,” says the Arab diplomat.

Cairo, Egypt

Since Mecca and Medina are out of the question — non-Muslims are not allowed there, and in any case, the Saudis frown on political speeches in holy places — the most symbolically resonant Arab city is Egypt’s capital. “Let’s face it: the people Obama really wants to reach are the Arabs,” says the Arab diplomat, who is not Egyptian. “And there’s no better place to do that than Cairo.”

Home to the Al Azhar mosque and university, the great centers of Islamic scholarship, Cairo has long influenced the thinking of Muslims everywhere. It is also, in many ways, the birthplace of radical Islam and of the precepts that underpin terrorist groups like al-Qaeda.

But while President Hosni Mubarak has been a steadfast U.S. ally, his credibility among Muslims is pretty low: he’s seen by many as an American puppet who is no fan of democracy. Besides, anti-U.S. sentiment is very high among Egyptians. “I would not want to be the person in charge of security for [Obama] in Cairo,” the diplomat says, shaking his head.

Istanbul, Turkey

Ironically, the sweet spot for Obama’s speech may well be the country he visits next month, in his first trip as President to a Muslim nation. Turkey, says Hooper, is “the bridge between the Islamic world and the West, and it’s a good setting for bridge-building, for establishing increased dialogue.” In the past, many Muslims regarded Turkey with some suspicion because of Ankara’s strident secularism; Turkey was seen as a country ashamed of its religion. But with an Islamist party now in power, that perception is changing. Turkey has also emerged as a player in Middle Eastern affairs — brokering, for instance, a dialogue between Israel and Syria.

On the other hand, that whole bridge-between-East-and-West thing is a bit of a cliché; every Western leader who has ever given a speech in Istanbul has made that point. If Obama wants to be different, he may need another location. “Turkey is a safe choice, but not an inspired one,” says the Arab diplomat. “It’s like shooting terrorists from a Predator drone — you get the job done, but you don’t really engage with people on the ground.”

The Outliers

“If you really want to push the envelope, then how about Damascus or Tehran” asks Hooper. “Now that would make an impression.” Yes, but it would be seen as rewarding states that support terrorist groups, and there’s no indication the White House is considering either city. Baghdad Still too dangerous. Riyadh Obama would be seen as being in the pocket of the Saudi royal family. Oman, Bahrain … the list could go on.

In the end, though, Hooper believes that geography may be secondary to the content of Obama’s speech. “What will resonate is [Obama’s] words and policies,” he says. Muslims will respond not only to the location but also to “the fact that he’s trying to reach out — with rhetoric, and hopefully also with actions.”

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Obama’s Presser: Message Accomplished

Obamas Presser: Message Accomplished

The first rule of the political press conference: You don’t really
have to answer the question, or at least you don’t have to dwell on it. You
can simply say what you came to say. This is even more true when you are a
popular President of the United States. So at the end of an otherwise drab
and detailed jousting with the White House press corps Tuesday over policy
projections and financial problems, Barack Obama seized his opportunity.

The last question was an East Room evergreen: Did the President
have confidence in his ability to forge peace between Israel and the
Palestinians The answer was predictable too. Yes, said Obama, but it would
be hard, and recent elections in Israel had made it harder. But then he
continued on to where he had always intended to go. “If you are persistent, then
these problems can be dealt with,” Obama said. “That whole philosophy of
persistence, by the way, is one that I’m going to be emphasizing again and
again in the months and years to come as long as I’m in this office.”

And then he was off. He would be persistent, he said, about passing a budget
that addressed his concerns about energy, health care and education. He would
be persistent about finding a way to solve the credit crisis, persistent
about finding a way to take on lobbyists and pork spending, and persistent
about finding new ways of working with Iran. “We are going to stay with it
as long as I’m in office,” he promised the American people, reminding them yet again that he has only been in office just over 60 days and is wrestling with problems he “inherited.” “This is a big ocean liner. It’s not a speedboat.”

So the message was delivered — though it was, one must say, a big shift from the
last time Obama messed up the prime-time television schedule for a press
conference. Six weeks ago, he had a different message: The nation was facing
a financial abyss, he explained, and lots had to be done, and fast, to prevent a
prolonged economic catastrophe. Now he had returned to the same format to
say that that the ship was slowly turning and the problems would be solved.
Teachers and police officers were keeping their jobs, he said in his
introduction, reading from a large TV screen. Stimulus tax cuts were finding
their way into paychecks. Mortgage interest rates were at historic lows. A
credit-crunch solution was in the pipeline. “So let’s look towards the
future with a renewed sense of common purpose, a renewed determination, and
most importantly, a renewed confidence that a better day will come,” Obama said.

As is often the case with Obama, his macro message was buffeted by
hard-nosed political tactics just beneath the surface. He made the rather
remarkable claim, for instance, that his budget proposal was “inseparable
from this recovery,” apparently tying his own long-range policy goals on education,
energy and health care to the end of the current recession. He also took
some jabs at his Republican critics, who have mostly been marginalized in
recent weeks by a lack of substantive arguments. “The critics tend to
criticize, but they don’t offer an alternative budget,” he said, sounding
exasperated.

Though he spoke of the cooperation of the world’s nations in addressing the
credit crisis, Obama also applied some pointed pressure on major economic
powers, including nations in Europe and Asia, that have yet to commit to
sizable stimulus programs. “We don’t want a situation in which some
countries are making extraordinary efforts and other countries aren’t, with
the hope that somehow the countries that are making those steps lift
everybody up,” he said.

The President also showed his own ability to play a bit of hardball.
When a reporter raised the issue of Obama’s greatest public-relations
bungle to date — the delayed response to news of impending bonuses at the
insurance giant AIG — Obama made it clear he was not interested in discussing
the matter at length. “I like to know what I’m talking about before I
speak,” he said, explaining the delay in making the information public and expressing outrage. Then he moved on while the reporter, CNN’s Ed Henry, tried without success to get him to elaborate.

The rest of the event mostly covered matters that had already
been handled. He defended his budget in the face of the extraordinary
deficits it would produce under economic projections by the Congressional
Budget Office, projections the White House believes are overly pessimistic. He
described his decision to fund expanded stem-cell research as a difficult
ethical one. He said that aside from some of the understandable elation around his
Inauguration, he did not believe that his race had figured much in
his first 64 days in office.

But all these finer points will not matter in the end. Over the
past week, Obama has barnstormed the nation’s televisions, with repeated
town halls in California, a seat on Jay Leno’s couch, a big 60 Minutes splash on Sunday, and now a prime-time press conference. Even those who eschew politics have most likely seen a clip or two of their President in charge, projecting confidence, explaining
that things will get better. And for the White House, that is the message that matters.

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EU president: U.S. economic plan a ‘way to hell’

Czech prime minister Mirek Topolanek addresses deputies at the European Parliament.
The Czech prime minister, whose country holds the rotating European Union presidency, said Wednesday the U.S. economic recovery plan is "a way to hell."

The huge financial injections into the economy are a repetition of mistakes from the Depression era of the 1930s, Prime Minister Mirek Topolanek told the European Parliament in Strasbourg, France, the official Czech news agency reported. He said “panic” surged in the European Union because of some of the U.S. measures, the news agency reported. The U.S. plan, which U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner announced this week, has already come under criticism for its hefty price. The goal is to buy at least $500 billion of existing assets and loans, such as subprime mortgages that are now in danger of default. Topolanek said he was “quite alarmed” at Geithner’s plan. “He talks about a large stimulus campaign by Americans,” Topolanek said. “All of these steps, their combination and their permanency, is a way to hell.” The “biggest success” of the European Council so far this year is a refusal to follow the same path, he said. “We need to read the history books and read with it the lessons of history,” Topolanek said.

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The Czech prime minister’s criticism came the day after U.S. President Barack Obama delivered a prime time news conference in which he defended the plan. It also comes a week before Topolanek, Obama, and other leaders from around the world gather in London for the G-20 summit. Obama said Tuesday that the U.S. government was having to make “some tough budgetary choices.” And he brushed off skeptics of the scope of his investments, saying, “We haven’t seen an alternative budget out of them.” The remarks by Topolanek, who is the caretaker EU president after his own government collapsed in the Czech republic, also showed the disunity in the European Union. His remarks came just a day after British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, the host of the upcoming G-20 summit, told the same group the EU and the United States need to spend more to revitalize the world economy.

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Hindu seeks right to be cremated on pyre

Davender Ghai arrives at the High Court for his challenge to be allowed to be cremated on a funeral pyre.
A devout Hindu has told a British court that laws preventing him from being cremated on an open-air funeral pyre in "a sacrament of fire" are a breach of his human rights.

Davender Ghai, who emigrated to England from Kenya in 1958, has a number of ailments including diabetes, asthma, anemia and a degenerative spinal disease but says he fears he will not be allowed to die with dignity. The 70-year-old spiritual healer said that when he does die, he would like his eldest son Sanjay, who lives in Canada, to light the pyre as his family watches what they believe is his soul being released from his body. However local officials in his home city of Newcastle, in northern England, rejected his request for a license for a pyre site. They ruled that cremations outside of crematoria were illegal under the 1902 Cremation Act. What do you think Ghai, a founder member of the Anglo-Asian Friendship Society (AAFS), subsequently took his legal challenge to the High Court on the grounds that this refusal violated his human rights. He described normal cremation facilities as “a mechanized humiliation of dignity — a waste disposal process devoid of spiritual significance.” “Confining bodies in coffins and concealing the cremation process” did not reflect his cultural values, Ghai added, according to the Press Association. If Ghai is successful when the court makes its expected ruling on Thursday, the test case could mean other Hindus and Sikhs are allowed similar last rites. Ghai and his supporters were in court Tuesday as his legal counsel Ramby de Mello said he was “yearning to die” according to the Hindu religion and to be cremated “with dignity.” In July 2006, Ghai and the AAFS escaped prosecution after cremating the body of Rajpal Mehat, an Indian-born Sikh, on an open pyre in a remote field hired from an apparently unwitting landowner, PA reported.

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Thai troops accused of crossing Cambodia border

Cambodian troops guard the Preah Vihear temple late last year amid heightened tensions with Thailand.
Nearly 100 Thai soldiers crossed into Cambodian territory Wednesday near a disputed border temple that was the site of clashes last year, Cambodian officials said.

The Thai army denied the claim. Thai soldiers crossed into the area of the 11th century Preah Vihear temple about 1:40 p.m., said Phay Siphan, secretary of the Cambodian Council of Ministers. The two sides did not fight and Cambodia has asked Thailand to pull back. Thai Army Col. Sansern Kaewkumnerd said the troop movement was part of a normal rotation and that Thai soldiers had not gone anywhere they were not permitted to be. For months last year, the two countries saber-rattled over the ancient temple. The nations differ on whether some territory around the temple forms part of Thailand or Cambodia. Both countries posted troops in the area after the United Nations in July approved Cambodia’s application to have the temple listed as a World Heritage Site — a place the United Nations says has outstanding universal value. The temple sits atop a cliff on Cambodian soil but has its most accessible entrance on the Thai side.

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The International Court of Justice awarded the temple to Cambodia in 1962. Thailand claims, however, that the 1.8 square mile (4.6 sq. km) area around it was never fully demarcated. Thailand says the dispute arose from the fact that the Cambodian government used a map drawn during the French occupation of Cambodia — a map that places the temple and surrounding area in Cambodian territory. The United Nations’ decision re-ignited tensions, with some in Thailand fearing it will make it difficult for their country to lay claim to disputed land around the temple. Last year’s flare-up began July 15, when Cambodian guards briefly detained three Thais who crossed into the area. Once they were let go, the three refused to leave the territory. Cambodia claimed Thailand sent troops to retrieve the trio and gradually built up their numbers. Thailand denied that, saying its troops are deployed in Thai territory.

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1,200 face redundancy at HSBC

HSBC says up to 1,200 employees could lose their jobs.
British banking giant HSBC announced Wednesday that up to 1,200 employees may lose their jobs as the troubled banking sector continued to falter.

The bank, which laid off 500 banking staff last December and 1,100 investment banking jobs in September, said operating conditions for banks in the UK were “extremely challenging” and were unlikely to improve for some time. “We deeply regret that these have led to the announcement of redundancies and, as you would expect, we will do everything we can to help and support those of our colleagues who are affected,” HSBC’s UK managing director, Paul Thurston, said in a statement. The bank, which currently employs about 58,000 people in the UK, said the redundancies would be spread across the country. HSBC, the biggest bank in Europe, has not received any government financial assistance the economic crisis, but recently approved an $18 billion rights issue to bolster its finances. Earlier this month the bank announced a 62 percent slide in annual pre-tax profits to $9.3 billion.

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