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From Yahoo News Top Stories

1 Tunisia’s new leader takes power amid chaos

by Dario Thuburn, AFP

15 mins ago

TUNIS (AFP) – Tunisia’s new acting president pledged an open political system on Saturday following the abrupt end of former strongman Zine El Abidine Ben Ali’s 23-year rule as the Arab state veered towards chaos.

Soldiers and tanks were deployed around the capital Tunis after extensive looting of shops and homes and vandals set fire to the main railway station.

The crackle of gunfire echoed in the largely deserted streets of the city centre, which was sealed off by security forces to prevent protests.

2 Tunisian president toppled after 23 years in power

by Dario Thuburn, AFP

Fri Jan 14, 5:06 pm ET

TUNIS (AFP) – Tunisian President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali fled the country on Friday amid a wave of deadly social protests in a dramatic end to his 23 years in power that is wholly unprecedented for the Arab world.

In a solemn address on state television after a day of riots, Prime Minister Mohammed Ghannouchi announced that he had taken over as interim president.

He invoked an article in the constitution that allowed him to take over temporarily if the president was not able to carry out his duties.

3 Crackdown in Tunis after protests topple president

by Dario Thuburn, AFP

Sat Jan 15, 10:11 am ET

TUNIS (AFP) – Tunisia’s speaker of parliament took power on Saturday amid chaotic scenes in the streets of the capital after President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali fled from protests after 23 years of iron-fisted rule.

The army locked down central Tunis to prevent further demos and AFP reporters saw soldiers and plainclothes security personnel dragging dozens of suspected looters out of their cars at gunpoint and taking them away in trucks.

The crackdown followed a night of looting in Tunis and its suburbs.

4 Tunisia on edge after protests force out president

by Dario Thuburn, AFP

Sat Jan 15, 3:17 am ET

TUNIS (AFP) – Tunisia was on edge Saturday after President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali ended his 23 years of iron-fisted rule by fleeing a wave of deadly social protests in the first such departure for an Arab leader.

Ben Ali signed a decree handing interim presidential powers to Prime Minister Mohammed Ghannouchi and flew out of the capital Tunis to refuge in Saudia Arabia after failing to quell growing public anger against his regime.

There were scenes of looting overnight in the suburbs of Tunis, witnesses said on state television, but the streets were mostly empty on Saturday with shops shuttered and army patrols in the city centre visibly stepped up.

5 ‘Last trumpet’ sounds in south Sudan vote

by Peter Martell, AFP

1 hr 46 mins ago

JUBA, Sudan (AFP) – A Christian bishop blew the “last trumpet” on rule by the Muslim north on Saturday as a week-long referendum on independence for south Sudan closed and a slow count got under way.

“Secession. Secession. Secession,” the returning officer intoned as he carefully unfolded each ballot paper cast at a polling station in a school in the southern regional capital of Juba before pronouncing the voter’s choice.

There was the odd vote for unity with the mainly Arab, Muslim north but they were dwarfed by the huge pile in favour of turning the mainly Christian, African south into the world’s newest nation and putting the seal on five decades of conflict.

6 BP embarks upon Russian Arctic energy exploration deal

by Roland Jackson, AFP

2 hrs 15 mins ago

LONDON (AFP) – British oil giant BP has agreed a huge Arctic exploration deal and share-swap with Russian state firm Rosneft, but the green lobby Saturday slammed the move so soon after the Gulf of Mexico oil spill.

BP chief executive Bob Dudley and Rosneft President Eduard Khudainatov flew into London on Friday to sign the agreement, which allows them to jointly exploit the vast untouched oil and gas resources of Russia’s Arctic region.

Dudley hailed the “historic” deal, which has the backing of the Russian and British governments, telling BBC radio: “This is one of the last great unexplored hydrocarbon basins in the world.

7 BP, Rosneft announce share swap, Arctic exploration deal

by Frederic Pouchot, AFP

Fri Jan 14, 6:59 pm ET

LONDON (AFP) – The heads of energy giant BP and state-run Russian oil firm Rosneft announced a deal Friday to swap shares in a joint venture to exploit the vast untouched energy resources of the Arctic.

In what BP chief executive Bob Dudley said was a “historic” deal, the firms will explore and develop Rosneft’s three licensed blocks on the Russian Arctic continental shelf for what are expected to be major reserves of oil and gas.

The deal puts BP — still recovering from the Gulf of Mexico oil spill last year, which is set to cost the firm 40 billion dollars — at the forefront of the race to exploit the potentially huge energy reserves in the Arctic.

8 Turkmenistan says ready for energy partnership with EU

by Anton Lomov, AFP

1 hr 11 mins ago

ASHGABAT (AFP) – Turkmenistan’s leader said Saturday his energy-rich country was ready to sell gas to Europe as the EU Commission urged it to apply for membership in the World Trade Organisation.

“Turkmenistan’s adhesion to the WTO would exert positive influence on economic development in the country and its attraction for investors,” Commission chief Jose Manuel Barroso said after talks with President Gurbanguly Berdymukhamedov.

“The European Union urges Turkmenistan to apply for WTO membership,” he added, while on his first official visit to the country.

9 Lebanon in crisis ahead of Hariri murder charges

by Rana Moussaoui, AFP

2 hrs 9 mins ago

BEIRUT (AFP) – Murder charges for ex-premier Rafiq Hariri’s assassination are due on Monday, a day after the head of Hezbollah, members of whose group are expected to be named in the chargesheet, is to address Lebanon.

The long-awaited indictment and Hassan Nasrallah’s speech come with Lebanon in deep crisis after the collapse of the government on Wednesday when Hezbollah and its allies resigned over the probe.

Daniel Bellemare, prosecutor of the Special Tribunal for Lebanon (STL) based in The Hague, is due to submit the chargesheet to pre-trial judge Daniel Fransen on Monday, the French newspaper Le Monde reported.

10 Straight-shooting Al-Attiyah wins Dakar Rally

AFP

Sat Jan 15, 2:09 pm ET

BUENOS AIRES (AFP) – Qatar’s Nasser al-Attiyah clinched the Dakar Rally on Saturday, ending two years of heartache on the gruelling event, while defending champion Carlos Sainz was left with the consolation of taking the 13th and final stage.

Versatile Al-Attiyah, who helped Qatar to a shooting gold medal at the Asian Games last November and has also appeared at the Olympics, had virtually wrapped up the title on Thursday when Sainz’s hopes were shattered by a broken suspension.

That cost the former double world rally champion, a Volkswagen teammate of the Qatari, 80 minutes in lost time.

11 Fiat-Chrysler deal hangs in balance

AFP

Fri Jan 14, 7:27 pm ET

TURIN, Italy (AFP) – Survival of Fiat’s historic Mirafiori plant in Turin hung in the balance Saturday after the workforce finished voting on a divisive deal with the new Fiat-Chrysler auto giant that could prove key for the company’s future.

A trade union source said around 2330 GMT Friday that only a quarter of the votes had been counted and the “no” votes were slightly ahead. Final results were not expected before the early morning hours.

The Mirafiori plant has been at the heart of Fiat for more than 70 years but Fiat-Chrysler boss Sergio Marchionne has threatened to close the factory and take production to the United States if workers vote against the deal.

12 Fiat Mirafiori staff approve tough new deal

AFP

Sat Jan 15, 7:06 am ET

TURIN, Italy (AFP) – Staff at Fiat’s Mirafiori plant in Turin on Saturday approved a tough deal on working conditions that is to save their factory and prove key to the future of the new Fiat-Chrysler auto giant.

According to a final tally of the vote, those supporting the deal obtained 54.05 percent. Turnout was 94.2 percent, with 5,119 of the plant’s 5,431 employees taking part.

Counting went on all night after the polls closed at 1830 GMT Friday.

13 http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20110115/ts_nm/us_tunisia_protests

By Tarek Amara and Christian Lowe, Reuters

1 hr 35 mins ago

TUNIS (Reuters) – Gunmen fired at random from cars in Tunis on Saturday and inmates staged a mass jailbreak while leaders tried to prevent Tunisia from descending into chaos after the president was swept from power.

It was not clear who the assailants were but a senior military source told Reuters that people affiliated to former President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali were behind the shootings.

Soldiers and tanks were stationed in the city center to restore order in the aftermath of a night of looting that broke out when Ben Ali fled to Saudi Arabia following a month of violent anti-government protests that claimed dozens of lives.

14 BP and Russia’s Rosneft in share swap, Arctic pact

By Tom Bergin, Reuters

Sat Jan 15, 10:28 am ET

LONDON (Reuters) – BP Plc and Russia’s state-controlled Rosneft agreed to a share swap under which they plan to jointly explore for offshore oil and gas in a deal that gives the UK company access to areas of the Arctic previously reserved for Russian oil companies.

BP, recovering from its Gulf of Mexico oil spill disaster, will swap 5 percent of its shares, valued at $7.8 billion, for 9.5 percent of Rosneft in an agreement that immediately raised concerns about U.S. economic security from at least two American lawmakers and criticism from environmentalists.

The deal covers huge areas of the South Kara Sea in the Arctic that BP said could contain billions of barrels of oil and gas and had been previously off limits to foreign companies.

15 Tunisia hit with looting as new leader is sworn in

By ELAINE GANLEY and BOUAZZA BEN BOUAZZA, Associated Press

2 hrs 56 mins ago

TUNIS, Tunisia – Looting, deadly prison riots and street chaos engulfed Tunisia on Saturday, a day after mass protests forced its strongman to flee. A new interim president was sworn in, promising to create a unity government that could include the long-ignored opposition.

It was the second change of power in this North African nation in less than 24 hours.

Amid the political instability, looters emptied shops and torched the main train station in Tunis, soldiers traded fire with assailants in front of the Interior Ministry, and thousands of European tourists sought a plane flight home.

16 US soldiers killed while training Iraqis

By LARA JAKES, Associated Press

Sat Jan 15, 10:59 am ET

BAGHDAD – Two U.S. troops were killed Saturday by an Iraqi soldier who apparently smuggled real bullets into a training exercise and opened fire, raising fresh concerns about insurgents worming into the nation’s security forces as the Americans prepare to leave by the year’s end.

A U.S. military official said the shooter was immediately killed by American soldiers who were running the morning drill at a training center on a U.S. base in the northern city of Mosul. The U.S. official said the exercise was not meant to involve live ammunition, and an Iraqi army officer said the shooting appeared to have been planned.

Both officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to release the information. A U.S. statement confirmed that two soldiers were killed and a third was wounded by small-arms fire by what the military described as “an individual wearing an Iraqi army uniform.”

17 Record $14 trillion-plus debt weighs on Congress

By TOM RAUM, Associated Press

25 mins ago

WASHINGTON – The United States just passed a dubious milestone: Government debt surged to an all-time high, topping $14 trillion – $45,300 for each and everyone in the country.

That means Congress soon will have to lift the legal debt limit to give the nearly maxed-out government an even higher credit limit or dramatically cut spending to stay within the current cap. Either way, a fight is ahead on Capitol Hill, inflamed by the passions of tea party activists and deficit hawks.

Already, both sides are blaming each other for an approaching economic train wreck as Washington wrestles over how to keep the government in business and avoid default on global financial obligations.

18 Obama’s education focus faces big hurdles

By ERICA WERNER, Associated Press

1 hr 14 mins ago

WASHINGTON – Signs of trouble are arising for President Barack Obama’s plan to put education overhaul at the forefront of his agenda as he adjusts to the new reality of a divided government.

Giving students and teachers more flexibility is an idea with bipartisan support. Yet the debate about the overdue renewal of the nation’s chief education law, known as No Child Left Behind, is complicated by political pressures from the coming 2012 presidential campaign and disputes over timing, money and scope of the update.

While education might offer the best chance for the White House to work with newly empowered Republicans, any consensus could fade in the pitiless political crosscurrents, leaving the debate for another day, perhaps even another presidency.

19 New RNC chairman faces big challenges

By LIZ “Sprinkles” SIDOTI, AP National Political Writer

1 hr 38 mins ago

WASHINGTON – The new Republican Party chairman’s celebration may be short-lived.

From the get-go, Reince Priebus faces a ton of tough tasks in the wake of Michael Steele’s troubled tenure.

Priebus must dig the party out of a $22 million hole. He must prepare the GOP to take on President Barack Obama. He must unite a GOP in the midst of an identity crisis fueled by the tea party.

20 GOP ousts Steele, picks Priebus to head party

By LIZ “Sprinkles” SIDOTI, AP National Political Writer

Sat Jan 15, 3:12 am ET

OXON HILL, Md. – The national Republican Party, coming off huge election victories but facing a $22 million debt and an internal war over identity, ousted chairman Michael Steele Friday and chose Wisconsin party chief Reince Priebus to lead in the run-up to the 2012 presidential race.

The embattled Steele dropped his re-election bid halfway through an afternoon of balloting when it became clear he could not win another two-year term after a first marked by verbal missteps and financial woes.

“We have to get on track. And together we can defeat Barack Obama in 2012,” Priebus, the chairman of the Wisconsin GOP, said in a brief victory speech, pleading for unity within the fractured 168-member Republican National Committee. “We all recognize that there’s a steep hill here ahead of us, and the only way that we’ll be able to move forward is if we’re all together.”

21 Final day of voting in S.Sudan’s independence test

By JASON STRAZIUSO, Associated Press

Sat Jan 15, 12:40 pm ET

JUBA, Sudan – Voters in Southern Sudan began celebrating after the end of a weeklong independence referendum Saturday, a poll that is widely expected to lead to the creation of the world’s newest country.

Officials and observers noted high turnout and praised the peaceful voting process.

Results began trickling in immediately after polls closed Saturday evening. Almost everyone expects the south to vote overwhelmingly to break away from the north, cleaving one of Africa’s larger nations in two.

22 Presidential nominees stymied; Senate mulls change

By JIM ABRAMS, Associated Press

Sat Jan 15, 2:38 pm ET

WASHINGTON – George Washington had someone in mind to be a naval officer in Savannah. Georgia’s two senators wanted their guy in the job. The first president lost that fight with the inaugural Senate.

In the years since, the way of naming and confirming the nation’s top officials hasn’t become much smarter. More of a problem, in fact.

President George W. Bush had only about half his political appointees on the job at the time of the attacks on Sept. 11, 2001. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner in early 2009 found himself dealing with the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression without his team of deputies in place. The attempted bombing of an American airliner on Christmas Day 2009 occurred when the Transportation Security Administration was without an administrator.

23 Women should be allowed in combat, report says

By PAULINE JELINEK, Associated Press

Sat Jan 15, 8:51 am ET

WASHINGTON – Women, who make up some 14 percent of the armed forces, should finally be permitted to serve fully in front-line combat units, a military advisory panel says.

The call by a commission of current and retired military officers to dismantle the last major area of discrimination in the armed services could set in motion another sea change in military culture as the armed forces, generations after racial barriers fell, grapples with the phasing out of the ban on gays serving openly.

This latest move is being recommended by the Military Leadership Diversity Commission, established by Congress two years ago. The panel was to send its proposals to Congress and President Barack Obama.

24 Obama administration ends high-tech border fence

By SUZANNE GAMBOA, Associated Press

Sat Jan 15, 3:12 am ET

WASHINGTON – The Obama administration on Friday ended a high-tech border fence project that cost taxpayers nearly $1 billion but did little to improve security. Congress ordered the high-tech fence along the border with Mexico in 2006 amid a clamor over the porous border, but it yielded only 53 miles of protection.

Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said the lesson of the multimillion-dollar program is there is no “one-size-fits-all” solution for border security.

Napolitano said the department’s new technology strategy for securing the border is to use existing, proven technology tailored to the distinct terrain and population density of each region of the nearly 2,000-mile U.S-Mexico border. That would provide faster technology deployment, better coverage and more bang for the buck, she said.

25 At 100, Boston NAACP confronts city’s mixed past

By RUSSELL CONTRERAS, Associated Press

27 mins ago

BOSTON – For years, Michael Curry has heard this joke from African-Americans living in the South: No matter how bad things are for black people here, at least we don’t live in Boston.

Despite Boston’s deep liberal ties and an abolitionist past, many African-Americans still view Massachusetts and its largest city as a hostile place for people of color.

It’s a charge that stings, said the Boston-born Curry, a 42-year-old attorney. It’s a past he is vowing to tackle as the new president of the Boston branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the nation’s oldest.

26 With police watching, lawmakers resume meetings

By CRISTINA SILVA and SHANNON McCAFFREY, Associated Press

Fri Jan 14, 11:55 pm ET

LAS VEGAS – Rep. Shelley Berkley threw open the doors of her congressional office Friday, inviting constituents to stop in to ask questions, lodge complaints or plead for help. There was no metal detector, no pat-downs. People had only to fill out a card to see the congresswoman.

The open house was much the same as the event held by Arizona Rep. Gabrielle Giffords a week ago, except for one thing: In Las Vegas, five patrol cars idled in the parking lot.

At least a half-dozen lawmakers around the country met with constituents Friday at gatherings similar to the “Congress on Your Corner” meeting where Giffords was shot through the head. The events, they said, would send a message: Violence will not keep us from meeting face-to-face with our constituents at supermarkets, hardware stores or anywhere else.

27 Parties seek political profit from Ariz. shooting

By DAVID ESPO, AP Special Correspondent

1 hr 34 mins ago

WASHINGTON – Democrats, Republicans and independent groups across the ideological spectrum are seeking political profit from the shooting rampage in Arizona, often moderating their rhetoric in pursuit of their goals.

Often, but not always.

Two days after the Jan. 8 attack, the conservative Tea Party Express issued a fundraising appeal that said the accused gunman’s actions in the months leading to the shooting were “more consistent with Blame America First Liberals, not the tea party movement.”

28 Wyo. debate simmers decades after fluoridation

By MEAD GRUVER, Associated Press

Sat Jan 15, 12:31 pm ET

SHERIDAN, Wyo. – A Cold War “red scare” campaign against compulsory medication helped kill off five years of fluoridation in this northern Wyoming city in 1954.

The federal government has long since called fluoridation one of the greatest public health achievements of the 20th century. But it was only a few weeks ago that Sheridan’s City Council voted to resume fluoridating municipal drinking water.

Then, On Jan. 7, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services announced plans to lower the recommended level of fluoride in drinking water for the first time in nearly 50 years, based on a fresh review of the science that suggested some Americans, particularly children, may be getting too much fluoride

29 Key backer of NYC Islamic center takes lesser role

By DAVID B. CARUSO, Associated Press

Sat Jan 15, 3:03 am ET

NEW YORK – The preacher who hoped to use his unsought fame as imam of the mosque near ground zero to start a dialogue about Muslims in America said he’s taking a reduced role in the project so he can travel the country building “understanding among all people of faith.”

Feisal Abdul Rauf, who co-led the effort to build an Islamic community center near the World Trade Center site, is set to begin a national speaking tour Saturday.

On the day before his first engagement in Michigan, the nonprofit group controlled by the developer of the Islamic center said it supported Rauf’s work but needed someone who could spend more time on the nitty-gritty task of building a congregation.

30 New RNC head Priebus a driven, lifelong Republican

By TODD RICHMOND, Associated Press

Fri Jan 14, 10:11 pm ET

MADISON, Wis. – It’s hard to be much more Republican than Reince Priebus.

A member of the College Republicans at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, he rose through the state party ranks through a combination of smarts and sheer willpower. And his first date with his future wife was a Lincoln Day dinner.

The party devotion paid off Friday when the national GOP picked the tenacious 38-year-old Kenosha native as its chairman.

31 Poll: Certainty about equality unchanged since ’06

By ERRIN HAINES, Associated Press

Fri Jan 14, 9:33 pm ET

ATLANTA – Having a black president hasn’t exactly led Americans to believe their country has moved closer to the ideal of racial equality preached by Martin Luther King Jr., according to a new poll.

The AP-GfK poll found 77 percent of people interviewed say there has been significant progress toward King’s dream, about the same percentage as felt that way in 2006, before Obama was elected. Just more than one in five, 22 percent, say they feel there has been “no significant progress” toward that dream.

On Monday, the nation will mark the 25th anniversary of the federal observance of King’s birthday. The civil rights icon would have been 82.

32 Give me back my sign! Horoscope readers atwitter

By JOCELYN NOVECK and CHRIS WILLIAMS, Associated Press

Fri Jan 14, 6:56 pm ET

Sofia Whitcombe began her day with the startling realization that she might not be exactly who she thought she was.

“My whole life, I thought I was a Capricorn,” the 25-year-old publicist said. “Now I’m a Sagittarius? I don’t feel like a Sagittarius!” It felt, she said, like a rug had been pulled from under her feet.

“Will my personality change?” she mused. “Capricorns are diligent and regimented, and super-hard-working like me. Sagittarians are more laid back. This is all a little off-putting.”

33 GOP leaders: Anti-immigration stance hurts party

Associated Press

Fri Jan 14, 6:54 pm ET

CORAL GABLES, Fla. – Republican speakers at a conference on reaching Hispanic voters urged the party to tone down its rhetoric on immigration and to take up comprehensive reform in Congress, warning that the party could lose ground with the country’s increasingly diverse citizenry if it doesn’t.

“(Hispanics) will be the swing voters as they are today in the swing states. If you want to elect a center-right president of the United States, it seems to me you should be concerned about places like New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, Florida, Texas, places where but for the Hispanic vote, elections are won and lost,” said former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, who co-chaired the conference organized by the new Hispanic Leadership Network.

But those gathered at the South Florida conference seemed split over whether the GOP’s lack of Hispanic support is simply because of the party’s tone, or if there’s a more substantive problem with the GOP’s policies.

34 Union campaign to boost image of public workers

By SAM HANANEL, Associated Press

Fri Jan 14, 6:41 pm ET

WASHINGTON – Union leaders plan to launch a multimillion dollar campaign to boost the image of government workers and fend off pay cuts, benefit rollbacks and other anti-union measures in states under fiscal siege.

The scope of the effort is unusual in a non-election year, and it signals a growing concern that unions could lose significant clout in states where the political climate has changed with Republicans in control in many legislatures.

“It’s a pretty unprecedented attack on public sector workers and workers in all industries,” said Naomi Walker, director of state government relations at the AFL-CIO, the nation’s largest labor federation.

35 Missed deadlines in clearing haze over parks

By PHUONG LE, Associated Press

Fri Jan 14, 6:30 pm ET

SEATTLE – More than 30 years after Congress set a goal of clearing the pollution-caused haze that obscures scenic vistas at some of America’s wildest and most famous natural places, progress is still slow in coming.

Saturday marks the deadline for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to approve most state plans aimed at curbing pollution from coal-fired power plants and industrial sources to improve visibility at 156 national parks and wilderness areas such as Shenandoah, Mount Rainier and the Grand Canyon.

But as of Thursday, the agency hadn’t approved any state plans – or come up with its own, as required.

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