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1 Biden says US may stay in Afghanistan after 2014

by Katherine Haddon, AFP

2 hrs 9 mins ago

KABUL (AFP) – US Vice President Joe Biden stressed Tuesday that his country’s troops could stay in Afghanistan after 2014 if Afghans want them to, on day two of a surprise visit to the war-torn nation.

Speaking after talks with President Hamid Karzai in Kabul, Biden said: “We’re not leaving if you (Afghans) don’t want us to leave”.

But he also emphasised that the planned handover of responsibility for security from international troops to Afghan forces in four years, agreed at a NATO summit in November, was on track.

2 Deadly border ambush clouds south Sudan vote

by Peter Martell, AFP

1 hr 57 mins ago

JUBA, Sudan (AFP) – A deadly ambush targeting south Sudanese returning from the north for a week-long independence vote clouded the mood of enthusiasm across the south that saw polling hours extended from Tuesday.

Misseriya Arab tribesmen killed 10 south Sudanese civilians and wounded 18 near the border as they were returning from the north, southern internal affairs minister Gier Chuang said on Tuesday.

“A convoy of returnees coming from the north to the south were ambushed yesterday (Monday) at about 5:00 pm (1400 GMT) by armed Misseriya. Ten were killed and 18 were wounded,” Chuang told a news conference in the southern regional capital Juba.

3 Assange vows more leaks, fears death penalty

by Danny Kemp, AFP

Tue Jan 11, 11:39 am ET

LONDON (AFP) – WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange vowed on Tuesday to step up the website’s release of secret US cables as his defence team warned he could face the death penalty if he is extradited from Britain.

Lawyers for the Australian released documents outlining their case after a brief court appearance in London during which a judge ruled that Sweden’s bid to extradite him would be heard in full on February 7-8.

Swedish authorities want to question Assange about allegations made by two women that he sexually assaulted them, but the 39-year-old insists the extradition attempt is politically motivated and linked to WikiLeaks’ activities.

4 Renault executive, China deny espionage charge

by Djallal Malti, AFP

1 hr 57 mins ago

PARIS (AFP) – A Renault executive suspected of spying on the French carmaker firmly denied Tuesday he had leaked secrets, as China angrily dismissed claims that it was involved in the scandal.

“Renault is making very serious accusations against me which I totally refute. The facts were outlined to me and I refute them as well,” Michel Balthazard told reporters.

He made the denial after he was summoned to a meeting with Renault bosses along with two other senior managers suspected of industrial espionage, reportedly involving the company’s electric car programme.

5 Europe’s clubs rack up record losses: UEFA

AFP

Tue Jan 11, 1:21 pm ET

NYON, Switzerland (AFP) – More than half of Europe’s top football clubs are still in the red, with a record 1.2 billion euro losses about a year before UEFA’s new financial rules kick in, officials said Tuesday.

“Two years ago almost 70 percent of clubs were in the red,” said Gianni Infantino, secretary general of European football’s governing body.

“At present there are still 56 percent – that means more than half of all professional football clubs are in the red,” Infantino told journalists as UEFA unveiled its club licensing report for 2009.

6 Pakistan trio corruption decision delayed

by Martin Parry, AFP

Tue Jan 11, 1:11 pm ET

DOHA (AFP) – An anti-corruption tribunal against Pakistan cricketers Salman Butt, Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Aamer ended Tuesday with no decision and a further hearing scheduled for February 5.

The three face charges of spot-fixing during Pakistan’s tour of England last year in a scandal that rocked the sport. It is alleged that they conspired in the bowling of deliberate no-balls in the Lord’s Test — claims they all deny.

They were provisionally suspended by the ICC in September, with the world governing body’s code of conduct carrying a minimum five-year ban if corruption charges are proved.

7 Anger grows in Tunisia as 50 reported killed in riots

AFP

Tue Jan 11, 12:40 pm ET

TUNIS (AFP) – Anger over a government crackdown on protesters in Tunisia grew Tuesday as a union official said 50 were killed in three days of violence, more than double a toll issued by the interior ministry.

More violence was reported overnight in the main central town of Kasserine where locals alleged gunmen on rooftops had shot at protesters in the worst unrest in the tightly controlled country in 23 years.

The government shut schools and universities until further notice as tensions mounted in the capital after students called for mass protests on Facebook pages that showed the Tunisian flag stained in blood.

8 Fighter test overshadows US-China defence talks

by Dan De Luce, AFP

Tue Jan 11, 11:31 am ET

BEIJING (AFP) – A test flight of China’s new stealth fighter jet on Tuesday overshadowed a US bid to shore up uneasy military relations, underscoring a growing rivalry between the two powers.

Chinese state media carried images of the purported debut flight of the J-20 warplane just as US Defense Secretary Robert Gates met with President Hu Jintao — who heads to Washington next week — and other officials.

The timing of the flight appeared to be a snub to Washington, following carefully choreographed statements from both governments designed to smooth over tensions that flared over US arms sales to Taiwan and maritime disputes.

9 Portugal says no bailout on eve of bond auction

by Anne le Coz, AFP

Tue Jan 11, 10:38 am ET

LISBON (AFP) – Portugal insisted Tuesday it would not need a bailout on the eve of its first issue of long-term debt since Ireland’s rescue even as its central bank forecast the economy would plunge into recession.

Portugal has been beset by speculation that its eurozone peers want it to accept a bailout so as to avert a wider crisis that could drag down others, including neighbour Spain, after Greece and Ireland sought help in 2010.

The pressure has mounted, through official denials and repeated rumours that a rescue was imminent, as Lisbon goes to the markets on Wednesday in what could be a crunch test of its ability to continue raising fresh funds.

10 Portuguese central bank split over bailout

by Anne le Coz, AFP

Tue Jan 11, 6:35 am ET

LISBON (AFP) – A split at the Portuguese central bank over whether Portugal needs a bailout has erupted publicly, but the finance minister insisted on Tuesday that the country was doing everything to avert a rescue.

Portugal, widely seen at risk of being the next eurozone country to need rescuing after Greece and Ireland, intends to make a critical issue of debt on Wednesday but the rates it has to pay have risen sharply.

Carlos Costa, the governor of the Bank of Portugal, rejected late on Monday suggestions that the country would require financial aid.

11 China forex reserves hit record, lending above target

by Allison Jackson, AFP

Tue Jan 11, 8:59 am ET

BEIJING (AFP) – China said Tuesday its foreign exchange reserves hit a record high at the end of 2010, which is likely to fuel calls for a stronger yuan when President Hu Jintao visits Washington next week.

The increase in the forex holdings, already the world’s largest, highlighted imbalances in global trade and the challenge Beijing faces in stemming a flood of liquidity into the country.

China’s foreign exchange reserves expanded 18.7 percent from a year earlier to $2.847 trillion at the end of December, the central bank said in a statement, amid strong demand for Chinese exports.

12 Goldman pledges openness, avoids shakeup

By Dan Wilchins, Reuters

Tue Jan 11, 1:52 pm ET

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Goldman Sachs Group Inc pledged to be more open about how it makes money and to put clients’ interests ahead of its own, eager to rebut criticism that it acts more like a hedge fund than a bank.

Goldman disclosed how much it earned from trading on its own behalf for the first three quarters of 2010, and will release that information for future periods, too.

The disclosure changes were part of a 63-page report that the bank issued on Tuesday regarding how the bank will change its business practices after reviewing them for more than eight months.

13 Schwab in $119 million SEC accord, two execs charged

By Jonathan Stempel, Reuters

28 mins ago

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Charles Schwab Corp will pay $118.9 million to settle regulatory charges that it hid from investors the mortgage-related risks in a seemingly safe, multibillion-dollar bond mutual fund.

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission announced the settlement and filed a civil lawsuit charging two Schwab executives, Kimon Daifotis and Randall Merk, with violating securities fraud laws over how the Schwab YieldPlus fund was marketed.

Schwab, a discount brokerage and fund company, expects a $97 million fourth-quarter after-tax charge for its settlement, which it said resolves related proceedings by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority and Illinois regulators.

14 Verizon Wireless ends long wait for iPhone fans

By Sinead Carew, Reuters

11 mins ago

NEW YORK (Reuters) – After waiting three-and-a-half years Verizon Wireless customers will finally get their hands on Apple Inc’s iPhone next month.

The top U.S. wireless operator ended months of speculation and anticipation from impatient consumers on Tuesday by announcing that it would begin selling a version of the iPhone on February 10 at the same prices as AT&T Inc.

“I’m going to switch right away. I’m going to go back to Verizon,” said Raheem Noble, 24, a New York City rapper, who was on his way to buy the device before being told that preorders would not begin until February 3.

15 Japan to buy euro debt, Portugal resists bailout

By Tetsushi Kajimoto and Axel Bugge, Reuters

Tue Jan 11, 11:11 am ET

TOKYO/LISBON (Reuters) – Japan promised on Tuesday to buy euro zone bonds this month in a show of support for Europe’s struggle with a seething debt crisis.

Portugal, the latest euro zone member in the market’s firing line, continued to fend off pressure to seek an EU-IMF bailout. Prime Minister Jose Socrates said his country had beaten its goal for reducing the 2010 budget deficit and did not need outside help.

Lisbon faces a crucial test on Wednesday of its ability to fund itself on the market at affordable rates after Greece, which sought a financial rescue last May, cleared its first funding hurdle of 2011, selling six-month money on Tuesday at just under the rate of its bailout loans.

16 Spill panel calls for offshore drilling reform

By Ayesha Rascoe, Reuters

44 mins ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – A White House panel probing BP’s massive oil spill called for an overhaul of the regulatory system that was entirely unprepared for the disaster, but the plan was sure to face opposition from Republicans reluctant to expand government oversight.

The White House oil spill commission said in its final major report that the U.S. government needs to expand its drilling regulations, as well as set up an independent drilling safety agency.

Many of the recommendations would require Congressional approval and Republicans have been critical of extensive new regulations, saying they would further slow the exploratory pace following last year’s drilling moratorium that was imposed in response to the spill.

17 Ten killed in Sudan ambush as south votes: minister

By Jeremy Clarke and Jason Benham, Reuters

1 hr 1 min ago

JUBA, Sudan (Reuters) – Armed men killed 10 southern Sudanese in an ambush, a southern minister said on the third day of a referendum on independence for the south in which voters have defied gloomy predictions and turned out in huge numbers.

The attack on a convoy of people returning to the south for the referendum was the latest reported violent incident to mar the week-long vote, which is expected to see the south emerge as a new nation.

Vote organizers told Reuters the big turnout so far meant the total was almost guaranteed to reach the 60 percent of voters needed to make the poll valid.

18 Eurozone to discuss rescue fund capacity on Jan 17

By Jan Strupczewski and Ilona Wissenbach, Reuters

Tue Jan 11, 2:05 pm ET

BRUSSELS (Reuters) – Euro zone finance ministers are likely to consider next week the option of raising the effective lending capacity of the currency bloc’s rescue fund as part of efforts to calm sovereign debt markets, euro zone sources said.

The possibility of boosting the actual capacity of the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) to a full 440 billion euros, from around 250 billion now, could be part of moves aimed at boosting market confidence.

“I think this increase of the capacity of the EFSF is something that will definitely be on the table next week,” said one source with knowledge of the preparations for the meeting of euro zone finance ministers on Monday.

19 Portugal PM rules out aid, central bank gives gloomy outlook

By Shrikesh Laxmidas and Daniel Alvarenga, Reuters

Tue Jan 11, 10:38 am ET

LISBON (Reuters) – Portugal’s central bank predicted the economy would shrink this year, painting a gloomier outlook just as the government sought on Tuesday to quash persistent talk of a bailout.

Prime Minister Jose Socrates told a news conference that Lisbon had no plans to seek aid after what he said were “excellent” budget execution results for 2010.

But the Bank of Portugal forecast the economy would shrink 1.3 percent this year as austerity measures crushed internal demand — in sharp contrast to the government’s projection that exports would help gross domestic product (GDP) to grow 0.2 percent.

20 Australian floods could send food prices soaring

By Victoria Thieberger, Reuters

Tue Jan 11, 9:40 am ET

MELBOURNE (Reuters) – The worst flooding in the Australian state of Queensland in 50 years could push up the nation’s fruit and vegetable prices by as much as 20 to 30 percent, lifting inflation and potentially dampening retail spending.

Economists and the country’s top supermarket chains said new, torrential flooding and rains across farmlands in southeastern Queensland in the past day had damaged crops and cut roads, preventing moving goods to market.

Unlike some previous natural disasters, which affected a smaller geographic area and a narrow range of foods, many vegetables are likely to be affected. In 2006, Cyclone Larry caused a spike in banana prices and this alone helped to lift the overall inflation rate.

21 China overshoots loan target and more tightening to come

By Aileen Wang and Koh Gui Qing, Reuters

Tue Jan 11, 8:50 am ET

BEIJING (Reuters) – China overshot its bank loan target in 2010 and finished the year with money growth still running too fast, underscoring the need for more decisive policy tightening to keep inflation in check.

At the same time, a record $199 billion surge in foreign exchange reserves in the fourth quarter pushed China’s stockpile, already the world’s biggest, to $2.85 trillion, highlighting that money streaming in from abroad was complicating policy efforts at home.

Chinese banks issued 7.95 trillion yuan ($1.2 trillion) in new loans last year, the central bank said on Tuesday, more than the 7.5 trillion yuan that the government wanted for the full year. The broad M2 measure of money supply grew 19.7 percent, also topping the official target of 17 percent.

22 Ex-House leader DeLay gets 3-year prison term

By Kelley Shannon, Reuters

Mon Jan 10, 8:12 pm ET

AUSTIN, Texas (Reuters) – Former House of Representatives Republican Leader Tom DeLay was sentenced to three years in prison on Monday after a jury found him guilty of money laundering and conspiracy.

Senior Judge Pat Priest sentenced DeLay, 63, to a five-year sentence for money laundering and three years for conspiracy for a scheme to illegally funnel money to Republican candidates in Texas in 2002.

DeLay’s sentence caps a downward spiral for the flamboyant Texas dealmaker and former pest exterminator who had sought to rehabilitate his battered image by competing on the television show “Dancing with the Stars” last year.

23 Alcoa posts Q4 profit, sees 12-percent aluminum growth

By Steve James, Reuters

Mon Jan 10, 8:08 pm ET

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Alcoa Inc, the largest U.S. aluminum producer, reported a fourth-quarter profit on Monday and projected a 12-percent rise in demand for the metal in 2011, driven by aerospace and auto manufacturing.

But Alcoa shares, which hit a 12-month high last week, dropped 1.3 percent to $16.24 in after-hours trade on the New York Stock Exchange, with some analysts questioning whether the company’s bullish forecast was realistic. Others suggested some profit-taking by investors.

“Pretty much every one of our end markets is improving,” Chief Executive Officer Klaus Kleinfeld told analysts on a conference call when asked about his projection for a 12-percent global increase in aluminum demand.

24 U.S. carmakers steal Day One spotlight

By James B. Kelleher and David Bailey, Reuters

Mon Jan 10, 6:27 pm ET

DETROIT (Reuters) – Call them the comeback kids.

This city’s once beleaguered automakers dominated the first day of this year’s Detroit auto show, one of the industry’s premier events, as it opened for press previews on Monday.

Not only did General Motors and Ford Motor Co walk off with the top car and truck awards, and have plenty of fresh, new models to display, but they also struck a more confident tone than some of their foreign rivals as they talked about the industry’s prospects.

25 Morgan Stanley to spin off prop trading unit

By Joe Rauch, Reuters

Mon Jan 10, 6:23 pm ET

CHARLOTTE, North Carolina (Reuters) – Morgan Stanley will spin off its proprietary trading business into an independent firm in 2012, joining a host of Wall Street banks scrambling to comply with new rules that bar making market bets with their own capital.

The unit, known internally as process driven trading, will be named PDT Advisers and will be run by Morgan Stanley’s proprietary trading chief, Peter Muller.

Analysts said while Morgan Stanley will lose the proprietary trading units’ lucrative returns, the arrangement of PDT Advisers’ spin off will minimize the impact.

26 QE2 helpful and likely to remain: Fed officials

By Jonathan Spicer, Reuters

Mon Jan 10, 5:29 pm ET

NEW YORK (Reuters) – The U.S. Federal Reserve’s $600 billion bond-buying program helped solidify a shaky economic recovery and looks increasingly set to run its course, three top Fed officials indicated on Monday.

Atlanta Federal Reserve Bank President Dennis Lockhart, who voted for the controversial program on November 3, said he remained comfortable with that decision.

Minneapolis Fed President Narayana Kocherlakota and Dallas Fed President Richard Fisher, both of whom become voting members of the Fed’s interest-rate policy committee this year, said the U.S. central bank was unlikely to cut short its bond-buying plan.

27 Assange: WikiLeaks to speed release of leaked docs

By JILL LAWLESS and RAPHAEL G. SATTER, Associated Press

1 hr 4 mins ago

LONDON – WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange vowed Tuesday to step up his site’s release of secret documents while he fights extradition to Sweden, as his lawyers argued that sending him to Stockholm could land him in Guantanamo Bay or even on U.S. death row.

That claim, regarded by many legal experts as extremely unlikely, is part of a preliminary defense argument released by Assange’s attorneys ahead of a court hearing next month.

The Australian computer expert is wanted in Sweden to answer sex-crimes allegations. American officials also are trying to build a criminal case against WikiLeaks, which has published a trove of leaked diplomatic cables and secret U.S. military files on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

28 Spill report rekindles Democratic push for reform

By DINA CAPPIELLO and MATTHEW DALY, Associated Press

1 hr 45 mins ago

WASHINGTON – Democrats in Congress pledged Tuesday to push for tougher regulation of offshore drilling and to make oil companies more financially responsible for spills – steps a presidential panel says are necessary to prevent another catastrophic blowout.

The National Oil Spill Commission unanimously endorsed 15 recommendations to the oil industry, Congress and the Obama administration for preventing another large-scale oil spill. Most require action by Congress, but some could be done independently by the Obama administration, commissioners said.

The 380-page report provides an opening for Democrats to rekindle legislative efforts that failed after last year’s oil spill, the largest offshore incident in U.S. history. But they’ll face an even tougher road to passage this year, with a Republican majority in the House of Representatives set on cutting spending and reducing the government’s regulation of business. Adding to their burden, rising gasoline prices are prompting calls for more domestic energy production.

29 F. Lee Bailey: Paper proves OJ Simpson’s innocence

By CLARKE CANFIELD, Associated Press

1 hr 7 mins ago

YARMOUTH, Maine – Evidence of O.J. Simpson’s innocence was held back in the 1995 trial in which he was acquitted in the murder of his ex-wife and her friend in Los Angeles, one of his former lawyers says in a new document.

In the 20,000-word document, F. Lee Bailey tells of four people who could have bolstered Simpson’s case but never testified. He also gives an overview of the sensational trial from his own perspective.

Simpson was found not guilty. Most Americans are convinced that he is guilty, Bailey said, but the document might persuade some doubters that he is innocent.

30 Census: Long-distance moves in US hit record low

By HOPE YEN, Associated Press

2 hrs 8 mins ago

WASHINGTON – Americans are shunning long-distance moves at record levels as many young adults, struggling without jobs, opt to stay put rather than relocate to other parts of the U.S.

The new information from the Census Bureau highlights the extreme pressure that the sluggish economy is putting on people in this country, especially those in some of the hardest hit groups.

“It is truly a Great Depression for young adults,” said Andrew Sum, an economics professor and the director of the Center for Labor Market Studies at Northeastern University in Boston. “Young adults are working at lower rates than they ever worked before since World War II. As a result, you would expect migration to fall because they have nowhere to go to.”

31 New judges won’t claim villain role on ‘Idol’

By LYNN ELBER, AP Television Writer

1 hr 10 mins ago

PASADENA, Calif. – Now that Simon Cowell is gone, nobody is ready to claim the villain’s role on “American Idol.” New judges Jennifer Lopez and Steven Tyler told reporters Tuesday that they’re looking forward to using their experience to help guide new artists. The series is set to begin its 10th season on Jan. 19, with only Randy Jackson left from the original cast of judges.

The judges have been candid as they’ve filmed early rounds of the contest, Lopez said.

“We’re both very spontaneous with how we critique each and every person who walks in. … We’re very honest and in the moment,” said the singer-actress.

32 Lawmakers vote to ban picketing at Tucson funerals

By PAUL DAVENPORT, Associated Press

27 mins ago

PHOENIX – Arizona legislators quickly approved emergency legislation Tuesday to head off picketing by a Topeka, Kan., church near the funeral service for a 9-year-old girl who was killed during Saturday’s shooting in Tucson. Unanimous votes by the House and Senate cleared the way for the bill to go to Gov. Jan Brewer later Tuesday for her expected signature. It would take effect immediately.

Without specifically mentioning the Tucson shooting, the proposed law would prohibit protests at or near funeral sites.

Dozens of lawmakers co-sponsored the bill, and legislative action was completed within 90 minutes. The Senate’s committee hearing took just three minutes.

33 Protecting lawmakers: Arm them? Install shields?

By CHARLES BABINGTON and DONNA CASSATA, Associated Press

23 mins ago

WASHINGTON – Several lawmakers defiantly vowed Tuesday to arm themselves after the shooting rampage in Arizona despite the Senate’s top law enforcement officer’s admonition that more guns would not be the answer. “It’s not that I’m going to be like Wyatt Earp,” declared Rep. Steve Cohen, D-Tenn., who said he was re-applying for a state permit to carry a concealed weapon even if he didn’t necessarily plan to carry the pistol to public events.

In a Capitol already ringed by concrete stanchions and armed guards, members of Congress struggled to come up with new ways to ensure their safety in a democracy suddenly shaken by an assassin’s bullets. Republican and Democratic leaders signaled that closer coordination with local law enforcement was a practical first step after the Arizona shootings that left six dead and Rep. Gabrielle Giffords critically wounded.

Beyond that, talk centered on legislation that would make it a crime to carry a weapon within 1,000 feet of elected or high-ranking federal officials at publicly announced events and a proposal to install a Plexiglas enclosure to protect the House floor from gallery spectators – two ideas unlikely to get much traction in the new Congress. Democrats also called for rolling back a 5 percent, GOP-engineered cut in congressional spending and redirecting the money to security.

34 Verizon to start selling iPhone on Feb. 10

By PETER SVENSSON, AP Technology Writer

25 mins ago

NEW YORK – Verizon Wireless made the long-awaited announcement Tuesday that it will start selling a version of the iPhone 4 on Feb. 10, giving U.S. iPhone buyers a choice of carriers for the first time.

New Yorker Wes Moe can’t wait. He has wanted one to accompany his iPad and Mac, but held back because he shares a Verizon plan with his wife, a BlackBerry user.

“I’m super happy with all those other Apple devices, and I want that phone in my hands,” said Moe, 32.

35 Tucson suspect’s troubles didn’t keep him from gun

By MICHAEL R. BLOOD, Associated Press

40 mins ago

TUCSON, Ariz. – Jared Loughner had trouble with the law, was rejected by the Army after flunking a drug test and was considered so mentally unstable that he was banned from his college campus, where officials considered him a threat to other students and faculty.

But the 22-year-old had no trouble buying the Glock semiautomatic pistol that authorities say he used in the Tucson rampage Saturday that left six dead and 14 injured, including Rep. Gabrielle Giffords.

Loughner’s personal history did not disqualify him under federal rules, and Arizona doesn’t regulate gun sales. His criminal charges were ultimately dismissed, the Army information was private and Pima Community College isn’t saying whether it shared its concerns about Loughner with anyone besides his parents.

36 Homeless radio sensation briefly held by LA police

By JACOB ADELMAN, Associated Press

1 hr 20 mins ago

LOS ANGELES – The Ohio homeless man whose smooth broadcaster voice made him an Internet sensation was questioned by police after he and his daughter got into a heated argument at a hotel during a trip to Hollywood to appear on “Dr. Phil” and “Entertainment Tonight.”

“I don’t know how loud they were,” Officer Catherine Massey said, but the argument around 9 p.m. Monday at the Renaissance Hollywood Hotel & Spa led to a disturbance report.

“It was minor. Both parties were angry but there were no signs of visible abuse,” Massey said Tuesday. She said Ted Williams and his daughter “were brought in, calmed down, talked to and released” and she did not know the nature of the argument.

37 Policeman shoots Christian dead in southern Egypt

By HAMZA HENDAWI, Associated Press

Tue Jan 11, 3:52 pm ET

CAIRO – An off-duty policeman boarded a train and opened fire on Tuesday, killing a 71-year-old Christian man and wounding his wife and four others, the Interior Ministry said. The attack, less than two weeks after the suicide bombing of a church killed 21, sparked new demonstrations by enraged Christians who pelted police with stones in southern Egypt.

The church attack on worshippers leaving a New Year’s Mass in the Mediterranean port of Alexandria touched off three days of riots and demonstrations by furious Christians who criticized the government for failing to protect them and vented over what they see as persistent discrimination.

All of the casualties in the latest attack were Christians – four of them women – raising concerns it will ignite a new wave of protests by a community still traumatized by the suicide bombing.

38 Blackhawks, Canucks top list of NHL All-Stars

By IRA PODELL, AP Hockey Writer

53 mins ago

NEW YORK – The NHL All-Star game might do what the rest of the league can’t – break up the Vancouver Canucks.

The Canucks and the defending Stanley Cup champion Chicago Blackhawks commanded the spotlight Tuesday when each club had multiple players picked to the All-Star game roster. In all, 36 players along with 12 rookies, who will only participate in the skills competition during All-Star weekend, were chosen by the league’s hockey operations department.

Chicago was already well represented for the All-Star festivities later this month in Raleigh, N.C., as captain Jonathan Toews and defenseman Duncan Keith were among six players voted into the game in fan balloting. They were joined Tuesday by forwards Patrick Kane and Patrick Sharp.

39 Cam Do! Auburn wins BCS title 22-19 over Oregon

By EDDIE PELLS, AP National Writer

Tue Jan 11, 12:39 pm ET

GLENDALE, Ariz. – For a brief moment, Michael Dyer stopped running.

Hold on.

No whistle. No ref raising his hand.

40 Feds warn against ex-CIA operative’s release

By JIM SUHR, Associated Press

2 hrs 25 mins ago

ST. LOUIS – A disgruntled former CIA operative accused of dishing confidential documents to a New York Times reporter likely could spill more government secrets if not kept locked up pending his trial, the Justice Department warned in a court filing that casts the ex-operative as untrustworthy and dangerous.

The newly unsealed detention request underscores the federal government’s unease about Jeffrey Sterling, claiming his “underlying selfish and vindictive motivations” could spur him to disclose more government secrets now that he faces a 10-count indictment in Virginia.

“The cost to national security and the danger posed to lives of certain individuals is simply too high not to require the defendant’s detention in this matter,” according to the filing, which was unsealed late Monday.

41 Ex-Morris Brown College leader recounts her ruin

By ERRIN HAINES, Associated Press

Tue Jan 11, 4:28 pm ET

ATLANTA – Dolores Cross came to Morris Brown, the historically black college founded by former slaves, with a plan to pull the school out of debt and restore its pride. Instead, Cross and the school became each other’s downfall.

Tapped in 1998 to become the Atlanta school’s first female president, Cross left in shame in 2002, facing accusations she had stolen from the 129-year-old institution. In a new memoir “Beyond the Wall,” and her first public comments since her conviction, Cross attempts to understand and explain what led to her ruin.

She was accused of misappropriating millions of dollars and indicted on 27 charges, but in 2006 pleaded guilty to one count of embezzlement – essentially admitting she swindled about $11,000 in federal loans to cover administrative costs at the college. Yet she still believes she didn’t commit a crime.

42 Law’s creative use could be key in DeLay appeal

By JUAN A. LOZANO, Associated Press

Tue Jan 11, 4:10 pm ET

AUSTIN, Texas – The Texas money laundering law is usually associated with drug dealers or white collar criminals, and Tom DeLay’s defense attorneys say they will try to keep the former U.S. House majority leader out of prison with an appeal that focuses largely on questions about whether the law was ever intended to apply to election violations.

DeLay was sentenced this week to three years in prison and 10 years of probation for scheming to illegally influence Texas elections. Unlike in most money laundering cases, prosecutors argued he stood to benefit not financially but through political power.

The creative use of the statute – the first time it was ever applied in such a case – was key to his convictions on money laundering and conspiracy to commit money laundering charges.

43 Transgender vets want military access for own

By LISA LEFF, Associated Press

Tue Jan 11, 10:20 am ET

SAN FRANCISCO – Before handcuffing herself to the White House fence, former Petty Officer First Class Autumn Sandeen carefully pinned three rows of Navy ribbons to her chest. Her regulation dress blue skirt, fitted jacket, hat and black pumps were new – fitting for a woman who spent two decades serving her country as a man.

Sandeen was the only transgender person among the six veterans arrested in April while protesting the military’s ban on openly gay troops. But when she watched President Barack Obama last month sign the hard-fought bill allowing for the ban’s repeal, melancholy tinged her satisfaction.

“This is another bridesmaid moment for the transgender community,” the 51-year-old San Diego resident said.

44 AP-Petside poll: Most pet owners see a 6th sense

By SUE MANNING, Associated Press

Tue Jan 11, 6:29 am ET

LOS ANGELES – Lassie could always sense when Timmy was in trouble. Black Beauty knew the bridge was out.

Now two-thirds of American pet owners say they can relate – their pets have a sixth sense about bad weather. Forty-three percent say the same about bad news, according to an Associated Press-Petside.com poll.

Seventy-two percent of dog owners said they’ve gotten weather warnings from their pets, compared with 66 percent of cat owners.

45 Budget to put Texan self-sufficiency to the test

By CHRIS TOMLINSON, Associated Press

Tue Jan 11, 3:16 am ET

AUSTIN, Texas – There is one enduring political value in Texas: The state does not mollycoddle.

In the best of times, it spends as little as possible providing aid to the unemployed, the sick and the injured. Texans have consistently elected lawmakers who will add to the public safety net only when threatened with a federal lawsuit.

Now that the state must overcome a $15 billion budget shortfall, life for those who rely on the state for employment or support is likely to get even tougher.

46 In a pall, official Washington a stunned place

By BEN FELLER, AP White House Correspondent

Mon Jan 10, 9:41 pm ET

WASHINGTON – The nation’s capital lumbered to work in a pall Monday, somber from the Congress to the White House, as official Washington absorbed an assassination attempt against one of its own. Giving voice to the grief, President Barack Obama conceded that everyone was still in shock.

By the end of the long day, Obama had secured plans to travel on Wednesday to the site of the shooting rampage, Tucson, Ariz., to attend a memorial service. Senior administration officials confirmed the trip to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because it had not yet been formally announced.

It was many hours earlier, on a frigid winter’s morning in Washington, that Obama led a national moment of silence for the 19 people shot outside a grocery store in Arizona on Saturday, including Democratic Rep. Gabrielle Giffords. She was the target of the attack and, remarkably, was fighting for recovery despite being shot in the head from close range. Six other people were killed, including a young girl.

47 Watchdog for Afghanistan reconstruction resigns

RICHARD LARDNER, Associated Press

Mon Jan 10, 9:28 pm ET

WASHINGTON – The U.S. official in charge of overseeing the billions of dollars being spent to rebuild Afghanistan announced his resignation Monday, just a week after he fired two of his top deputies in a major shake-up of the organization.

Arnold Fields’ decision to step down comes after key members of Congress urged President Barack Obama to dismiss him for incompetence and mismanagement. His critics claimed he failed to aggressively oversee the more than $56 billion the U.S. has poured into Afghanistan since 2002 to rebuild schools, roads and other facilities.

Fields was appointed by President George W. Bush as the special inspector general for Afghanistan reconstruction in June 2008 after the job was created by Congress. His resignation is effective Feb. 4.

48 Charges against new Navajo president still pending

By FELICIA FONSECA, Associated Press

Mon Jan 10, 9:00 pm ET

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. – Incoming Navajo President Ben Shelly will be sworn into office Tuesday with criminal charges still hanging over his head, while a judge considers whether to dismiss them as part of a settlement agreement.

Shelly announced Monday that he and his vice president had reached settlements with a special prosecutor, in which they would repay the money they’re accused of stealing from the tribal government in exchange for having criminal charges against them dropped.

A Window Rock judge approved the settlement regarding Rex Lee Jim, but a tribal judge in another district did not issue an immediate ruling in Shelly’s case. Crownpoint, N.M., District Judge Irene Toledo instead asked for additional briefs on how the court would enforce the agreement, staff attorney Patrick Dooley said.

49 Mo. gov. spares man whose execution was imminent

By JIM SALTER, Associated Press

Mon Jan 10, 7:16 pm ET

ST. LOUIS – Missouri’s governor decided to spare a convicted murderer’s life Monday, a little more than a day before the man was scheduled to die by injection for a 1994 killing.

Gov. Jay Nixon said in a statement that he was commuting the sentence for Richard Clay, 45, to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

Clay was convicted of killing Randy Martindale of New Madrid in 1994 but has maintained his innocence. Nixon’s statement did not explain why the governor decided to commute the sentence, and in fact said that after an exhaustive review, the governor is “convinced of Richard Clay’s involvement in the senseless murder of Randy Martindale” and finds “the evidence clearly supports the jury’s verdict of murder in the first degree.”

50 Sheriff in Giffords case lashes out about politics

By AMANDA LEE MYERS, Associated Press

Mon Jan 10, 6:25 pm ET

TUCSON, Ariz. – Pima County Sheriff Clarence Dupnik was thrust into the spotlight to face a nation demanding answers in the aftermath of the shooting of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords. He didn’t mince words.

The rampage, he said, grew in part from extreme political rhetoric, bigotry and hatred, especially in his home state of Arizona. Dupnik said he was angry and heartbroken over the tragedy, and was simply speaking his mind as an American, not a law enforcement official.

But in the midst of a national media pressure cooker, his comments raised the question: Did he overstep his authority in making the comments that he did?

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  1. Darfur rebel urges united secular north Sudan

    (AFP) – 10 hours ago

    KHARTOUM – Darfur rebel leader Abdelwahid Mohammed Nur on Tuesday hailed the independence vote under way in south Sudan but said he did not want secession for his own region but rather a united, secular north.

    Nur, who leads a major faction of the Sudan Liberation Movement/Army, said it was vital for north Sudan to learn the lessons of the likely breakaway of the south and to reject plans by President Omar al-Bashir to impose Islamic sharia law in the event of partition.

    “Our strategy at SLM … now we struggle to remain North Sudan united and the only way it can be done is with the implementation of the vision of the SLM, which is a secular, democratic state with equal citizenship” Nur told AFP by telephone, speaking in English.

    “About this persecution, and genocide, and racism, and jihadism … we have to learn from what happened in south Sudan, and we have to unite as Northern Sudanese people to stop all that. We are calling for a new beginning.”

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