Sunday, January 8, 2012

Pawnbrokers Prosper as Greece Struggles With Hard Times

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But the stores — pawnshops and gold dealers — are thriving as Greeks who are short of cash give up jewelry and other valuables to make ends meet and pay new taxes. The authorities reported a veritable explosion in the sector, with 90 percent of the nation’s 224 officially registered pawnshops having opened in the past year.

While these entrepreneurs insist that their services are legitimate, the Greek authorities contend that many of the shops are concealing a rapidly expanding illicit trade in gold, and that much of it is being smuggled out of the debt-racked country, confounding efforts to curb rampant tax evasion.

Similar trends have been reported in other countries that were hit by recession. In the United States and Britain, weakening economies and turmoil in credit markets have helped gold dealers thrive. A decade ago, the same happened in Argentina, after its economic meltdown.

In Greece, new outlets are springing up on streets where bankrupt stores have been boarded up. Competing with old-school pawnbrokers who work out of tiny stores on side streets, the new professionals lease central locations, taking advantage of falling rents. They advertise in newspapers and on television, and slip promotional leaflets under doors and on car windshields. Many also accept cars, yachts and real estate from Greeks no longer able to finance affluent lifestyles.

Many jewelers have joined in, putting placards in their windows reading “I buy gold.” And there are signs of foreign interest. One Italian jewelry wholesaler, which has opened several franchises in Greece, accepts gold teeth as well as jewelry in exchange for cash.

Although most traders are reluctant to talk, those who do say they are just seizing an opportunity created by hard times and the high price of gold, roughly $1,600 an ounce.

“Gold is strong — so there’s a lot of interest in selling,” said Yiannis Spiratos, manager of a pawnshop in central Athens. “We’re just serving that interest.”

He said that 8 in 10 customers sold their goods outright, rather than pawning them. “Some sell their jewelry because they never wear it; many say they need the money to pay the emergency tax,” he said, referring to a new tax on property owners.

Outside his shop, a smartly dressed middle-aged woman said she had just sold some earrings and her husband’s gold watch. “He couldn’t do it; he was too embarrassed,” said the woman, who gave her name only as Anna. She said she had made around $1,500 from the sale, after visiting four other shops for quotes.

With an increasing number of Greeks considering cashing in their jewelry or family heirlooms, the country’s consumer protection agency recently published guidelines to protect people from unscrupulous dealers. It warns against traders promising particularly high prices and advises consumers to weigh their jewelry at home or to have it assayed at a laboratory run by the national association of goldsmiths. The warning followed a government order for stricter inspections of gold dealers to ensure they are licensed and operating legally.

“The crisis is an opportunity for many, and that’s O.K. as long as it’s legal,” said Nikos Lekkas, the head of inspections at the Financial and Economic Crime Unit of the Ministry of Finance.

But although most gold dealers obtain the required operating license from the police, few keep a log of their transactions, as the law dictates. Inspections of pawnshops and gold dealers in Athens indicated that 80 percent were guilty of tax evasion, depriving the government of millions, and possibly billions, of euros in lost revenue, according to the financial crime unit.

Tax evasion remains one of the biggest drains on the Greek state, accounting for about $58 billion annually, or 13 percent of gross domestic product. That remains a sore point with the European Union and the International Monetary Fund, which have lent Greece billions of euros to avert a default that could be catastrophic for the euro zone.

Inspections by the financial crime unit suggest that some shops are fronts for illegitimate businesses shipping large quantities of gold out of the country illegally. In one recent raid, the police stopped a car near the western port of Patra that was carrying a half ton of silver bars, but no official documents.

The authorities traced the cargo to a pawnshop near Syntagma Square, in the heart of Athens. They said the shop had shipped, in a separate delivery, an eighth of a ton of gold bars to Germany, worth an estimated $8.72 million, again without documents. Investigators said they also traced six Cypriot and German offshore companies to pawnshops and gold dealers in Greece.

There are also signs that some pawnshops are receiving stolen goods, particularly jewelry, which is hard to trace because it is quickly sold or melted down in foundries.

Most pawnshops deny working with foundries. The foundries themselves — whose number tripled during the last year, with 10 now operating in the Athens area — were tight-lipped. Several denied that they worked with gold and none were listed as doing so in Greek directories.

Some financial experts say the trade is much like any other, some of it legal and some not, with the only difference being the higher value of gold.

“Since the beginning of time, people have melted down or sold their jewelry when the need arises,” said Babis Papadimitriou, an economics commentator. “This is what Greeks are doing now.”


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Yaffa Yarkoni, 86, Who Sang for Israeli Wartime Troops, Is Dead

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Ms. Yarkoni died of pneumonia after a years-long struggle with Alzheimer’s disease, her daughter Ruth Yarkoni-Suissa told Israel’s Army Radio.

Ms. Yarkoni’s career largely echoed Israel’s own history, and she became a symbol of the generation that built the state, her classic ballads harking back to a time Israelis remember as more heroic and less complicated.

One of her most beloved songs, “Bab el Wad,” is an ode to the Israeli fighters who died in ambushes while driving convoys to Jerusalem during the 1948 Arab-Israeli war. The lyrics were written by Haim Gouri, who later became one of Israel’s national poets.

Yitzhak Rabin, who went on to become prime minister, commanded the brigade that captured the area where the ambushes occurred. In a television interview shortly before his assassination in 1995, Mr. Rabin said “Bab el Wad” was one of his favorite songs.

That and other vintage songs sung by Ms. Yarkoni became anthems of Israeli memorial days.

Though she was renowned for performing for the troops on the front lines, Ms. Yarkoni told interviewers in her later years that she did not like being known as “the songstress of the wars” — and that she was hurt by critics who said she had built a career on the back of military conflict.

In 2002, she caused an uproar at the height of Israel’s military offensive in the West Bank meant to quell the violent second Palestinian uprising. She criticized the military and expressed empathy for the Palestinians, telling Army Radio: “We are a nation that went through the Holocaust. How can we do things like this to another nation?” She described Israel as “leaderless.”

Coming after months of Palestinian suicide bombings in Israeli cities, her comments touched a nerve in Israeli society, which is particularly sensitive to any comparisons made between its actions and those of Nazi Germany.

Ms. Yarkoni was branded a traitor by some. An organization of Israeli patriots canceled a gala concert that had been planned in her honor.

Still, Ms. Yarkoni’s death prompted an outpouring of popular affection.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a statement that her songs “were the soundtrack of Israel from its pre-state days, through the establishment of the state until our time.” President Shimon Peres said that while the Israeli military “conquered enemy positions, she conquered the hearts of the soldiers.” He called her the “nightingale” of the army and the entire nation.

Yaffa Abramov was born on Dec. 25, 1925, in Tel Aviv, to parents who had immigrated from the Caucasus. She began performing as a child with her siblings in a cafe run by their mother that became popular with artists.

She joined a local ballet company and married in 1944. Her husband, Joseph Gustin, joined the Jewish Brigade of the British Army and was killed in action in Italy in 1945, shortly before the end of World War II.

In 1948, she married Shaike Yarkoni, and together they had three daughters, Orit, Tamar and Ruth. Mr. Yarkoni died in 1983. Ms. Yarkoni is survived by her daughters, eight grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren.

She initially served as a wireless operator during the 1948 war, but soon joined an army entertainment unit.

As her career progressed, Ms. Yarkoni moved from singing mostly nationalistic songs to ballroom dance music, being a fan of swing, jazz and blues.

She was surprised and upset by the furor over her Army Radio interview in 2002. “How can anybody call me a villain?” Ms. Yarkoni said in an interview at the time with the Yediot Aharonot newspaper. She added, “Every time I see an Israeli flag, I cry.”


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Libya Sets Plan for Assembly on Constitution

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An Innocent in America Room for Debate: Are Teachers Overpaid? China Set to Punish Human Rights Activist A Renewed Optimism for Deals On Wall Street Competing histories across the Strait of Gibraltar contribute to its peculiar exclaves.

‘Glee’ Star Gets His Broadway Turn Medicare should demand evidence that a costly cancer treatment is more effective than cheaper options.

In Nigeria, designating Boko Haram as a foreign terrorist group will only inflame anti-Americanism among Muslims.


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Saturday, January 7, 2012

World Briefing | Asia: Kashmir: Protesters Fired On

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An Innocent in America Room for Debate: Are Teachers Overpaid? China Set to Punish Human Rights Activist A Renewed Optimism for Deals On Wall Street Competing histories across the Strait of Gibraltar contribute to its peculiar exclaves.

‘Glee’ Star Gets His Broadway Turn Medicare should demand evidence that a costly cancer treatment is more effective than cheaper options.

In Nigeria, designating Boko Haram as a foreign terrorist group will only inflame anti-Americanism among Muslims.


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Opposition Protests New Hungarian Constitution

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The protest — a day after the country’s new “majoritarian” Constitution took effect — was the first time that opposition groups, from political parties to civil organizations, joined forces to rally against the new Constitution, which was drawn up and ratified by Mr. Orban’s Fidesz party in defiance of criticism from Europe and the United States.

Fidesz used its two-thirds supermajority in Parliament to adopt the Constitution, which critics say tightens the government’s grip on the news media and the courts and dismantles democratic aspects of the judiciary. Last month, the government passed a measure that critics said seriously weakened the independence of the nation’s central bank.

While various organizations have staged protests over the past year, Monday’s rally was a previously unseen show of unity by various opposition parties and civil groups, and timed to coincide with the extravagant gala organized by Fidesz to celebrate the signing of the Constitution. Thousands of disgruntled Hungarians poured into Budapest’s Andrássy Street, which is lined with luxury shops leading down from the opera house.

“Democracy has disappeared in Hungary — they even took the republic from us,” said Tamas Kollar, 56, referring to his nation’s name change, from the Republic of Hungary to simply Hungary. Mr. Kollar said he felt robbed of his rights under Mr. Orban’s government.

Organizers addressing the crowd estimated that tens of thousands had turned out to fill the square outside the ornate National Opera, in the heart of the city. Riot police officers had secured the area and moved into the crowd after scuffling broke out among protesters and members of the far right, identified by the red and white flags they carried, who then dispersed.

The far-right Jobbik party said in a statement that it would not participate in the protest, but called its supporters to a parallel demonstration nearby, leading to fears of clashes reminiscent of 2006 riots over demands that Ferenc Gyurcsany, then the prime minister, step down.

Since then, Hungarians have seemed reluctant to take to the streets. Although protests took place throughout 2011, they were relatively small. Monday’s turnout fed opposition hopes that a sizable crowd could send a clear message to the government.

Petr Konya of the Hungarian Solidarity Movement, which helped organize the demonstrations, told the cheering crowd that 2012 would be a year of hope.

“We want the rule of law back and we want the republic back,” Mr. Konya said, to loud cheers. “Viktor Orban forgot that the power belongs to the people, it belongs to us, and we will get it back from them.”

Mr. Orban and his supporters insist that the changes to the Constitution and other laws are only steps that make good on campaign promises to do away with the old order and complete the transition from Communism that had stalled under previous governments.

Palko Karasz reported from Budapest, and Melissa Eddy from Berlin.


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The Lede Blog: Activists Document Raids on Civil Society Groups and a Protest in Cairo

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A video interview with Julie Hughes, the director of the National Democratic Institute’s office in Egypt, which was raided by the authorities on Thursday, posted online by Wafd, an Egyptian political party.

Updated | 8:01 p.m. As my colleagues David Kirkpatrick and David Goodman report, “Egyptian security forces stormed the offices of 17 nonprofit groups around the country on Thursday, including at least three democracy-promotion groups financed by the United States, as part of what Egypt’s military-led government has said is an investigation into ‘foreign hands’ in the recent outbreak of protests.”

Sarah Carr, a journalist and rights activist, uploaded several photographs of the raid on the office of the National Democratic Institute, which is financed by the United States government and affiliated with the Democratic Party.

While Ms. Carr was forced to observe the raid from outside the organization’s office, she was also in touch with Hana Elhattab, an Egyptian who works with the National Democratic Institute and posted several updates on her Twitter feed from inside the office during the raid. In a series of updates over the course of about two hours, she reported that the heavily-armed officers refused to allow employees to leave the premises, were “taking pictures like it’s a crime scene” and confiscated equipment, “even taking empty flip charts, personal laptops, and Skype conferencing equipment.”

Ms. Elhattab managed to keep providing updates on the raid as it unfolded, and her Twitter timeline detailed the anger and frustration of an Egyptian working to promote democracy being treated like a criminal by the country’s military government.

Since the raid came on the same day that some Egyptian officers were acquitted of killing protesters on Jan. 28, the day that Egypt’s revolution took hold, Ms. Elhattab also used her Twitter feed to express her rage.

Another activist blogger who documented the raid from outside the National Democratic Institute office, Mostafa Hussein, posted on his Twitter feed a photograph of boxes of confiscated equipment, and wrote: “At NDI, they’re confiscating everything. Video conf. equip, printers, laptops, server. There is an archive at the garage they’re going thru.”

The security forces also raided the Cairo office of a similar democracy-promoting organization affiliated with the Republican Party, the International Republican Institute. As the blogger Mohamed El Dahshan noted on Twitter, the Egyptian newspaper Al Ahram reported last month that an Egyptian government investigation into the finances of nonprofit groups said that the the N.D.I. and I.R.I. had received $6.7 million from the State Department this year.

Shadi Hamid, the director of research at the Brookings Doha Center, observed, the Egyptian military, which takes $1.3 billion in aid a year from the United States, is not well-placed to argue that groups sponsored by the American government are suspect.

Despite the fact that they accept so much money from the U.S. government themselves, Egypt’s military rulers seem to be emulating the Kremlin, which temporarily suspended the work of both the National Democratic Institute and the International Republican Institute in 2006, after accusing them of instigating or assisting the so-called “color revolutions” in other former Soviet republics.

Earlier this month, the Russian government harassed Golos, an election-monitoring group partially financed by the United States through the N.D.I. As my colleague Ellen Barry reported, on the eve of Russia’s parliamentary elections, state-controlled television “aired a documentary suggesting that Golos was being used by Western governments to spark Arab-spring-style civil unrest after the Russian elections.”

Later on Thursday, a number of activists posted photographs and text updates on the progress of a protest march in Cairo, which drew attention to the plight of a blogger who was jailed in April for “insulting the military” on Facebook.

As The Lede explained in a previous post on the jailed Coptic Christian blogger, Maikel Nabil, the fact that he is both an opponent of Egypt’s military and an outspoken supporter of Israel makes his case unusually complicated.

However, discontent with the military rulers of the country has grown since his arrest. As this video — produced by Aalam Wassef, an activist campaigning for the blogger’s release — shows, his supporters argue that Mr. Nabil was one of the first to suggest that the army was not, in fact, on the side of the protesters.As the video indicates, Mr. Nabil was prosecuted after he argued on his blog that the revolutionary slogan “The People and the Army Are One Hand” was misguided from the start.

Since many Egyptians without access to the Internet or satellite channels never see video like this documenting abuses by the military government, activists have started to bring projectors with them to protests, to screen the footage in public. An activist who writes on Twitter as The Big Pharaoh posted this image on Thursday night of video of a recent attack on protesters by soldiers on the outside wall of Egypt’s high court.


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WORLD: A Date With the Censors

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Reality TV shows have become common on Chinese television but the sometimes racy and materialistic content has attracted the attention of China’s censors.

Produced by Jonah M. Kessel and Edward Wong


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India Ink: Islamic Center, Hindu Priest's Home Targeted in New York

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Four sites in Jamaica, Queens, were firebombed Sunday night by an attacker who favored Starbucks Frappucino bottles filled with flammable liquid. The attacker, who has not been captured, targeted an Islamic center, a bodega owned by a Muslim man, the home of a Hindu priest which had a shrine in its window and the home of residents who said they were Christian.

The imam at the Islamic center said he had heard about the attack on the Hindu temple, and added, “Some people confuse Hindus and Muslims.” Read more ?


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India Ink: Image of the Day: January 3

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This report on India from the journalists of The New York Times and a pool of talented writers in India and beyond provides unbiased, authoritative reporting on the country and its place in the world. India Ink also strives to be a virtual meeting point for discussion of this complex, fast-changing democracy – its politics, economy, culture and everyday life.


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Relatives of 9/11 Victims, Suspecting Hacking, Await Answers

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Some heard mysterious clicking sounds on their home and mobile phones. The fiancée of one man who died at the World Trade Center remembers listening to snippets of someone else’s conversation on her line. A husband of another victim recalls hearing somebody remotely accessing his home answering machine, which still held the final, reassuring message left by his wife shortly before the crash of Flight 93. Others say they are baffled as to how details about their loved ones appeared in British tabloids within days of the attacks.

Ten years later, their long-held suspicions aroused by The News of the World phone-hacking scandal in London, dozens of relatives of victims contacted the Justice Department. On Aug. 24, eight of them met with Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. and asked him to determine whether their privacy had been violated. As a first step, they asked him to see whether Scotland Yard had a record of their names or phone numbers among the material seized from a private investigator who hacked cellphone messages for the tabloid.

Four months later, they are still waiting to hear back and are frustrated by the Justice Department’s silence.

“It’s not that hard to find out — it’s quite a simple thing, really, isn’t it?” said Patricia Bingley, a British citizen whose son, Kevin Dennis, a 43-year-old trader at Cantor Fitzgerald, worked on the 101st floor of the World Trade Center’s north tower.

Ms. Bingley said she was stunned to see, in the Sept. 18, 2001, issue of The Sun, a photograph of her son reading a bedtime story to his two sons, which she did not give to the paper. The story also contained details about her son that she said no one from her family had provided to The Sun. “It never made sense to me,” she said, adding that she suspects hacking or worse by the paper. “I’d like very much for the government to tell us whether this happened or not. Celebrities seem to have no trouble finding out.”

In July, as revelations about widespread phone hacking by the tabloid were spilling out, another British newspaper, The Daily Mirror, reported that a private investigator said that News of the World reporters had offered to pay him to retrieve phone records of Sept. 11 victims. After the report, which was not confirmed by other news organizations, the Justice Department opened an investigation. To date, no evidence has emerged publicly that Sept. 11 victims were hacking targets.

Jodi Westbrook Flowers, a lawyer at a South Carolina firm that represents more than 6,700 relatives of Sept. 11 victims, said she and her colleagues had scoured the British tabloids and found scores of details about the victims. Relatives were not certain how the tabloids found out so much so quickly after the attacks.

One of the relatives, whom she declined to identify, said that five days after Sept. 11, The Sun published the words from a voice mail message left on his cellphone by his son, who was aboard one of the planes that hit the World Trade Center. (British authorities are also investigating whether hacking occurred at The Sun, which, like The News of the World, is owned by News Corporation.)

In late September, Ms. Flowers, of the Motley Rice law firm, sent Mr. Holder phone numbers of two dozen relatives of victims and asked that Scotland Yard run them through the 12,000 pages of documents seized from the home of Glenn Mulcaire, the private investigator responsible for most of the hacking by the now-shuttered News of the World. She said at least 100 of her clients, in both the United States and Britain, now want similar information.

On Nov. 3, Vida G. Bottom, chief of the Justice Department’s public corruption unit, wrote to the lawyers, saying, “The F.B.I. has undertaken a preliminary review to assess the veracity of those allegations.”

Ms. Flowers said she was disappointed by the vagueness of the response. “We asked a simple threshold question, and we basically received a nonanswer,” she said.

Ms. Flowers added, “If there was no hacking, it is wildly coincidental that so many people describe similar experiences.”

Even so, two Justice Department officials with knowledge of the inquiry said they did not expect much to come of the investigation. The officials, who declined to be identified because they were not authorized to discuss a continuing criminal inquiry, said the investigation remained open in case Scotland Yard discovered evidence confirming the suspicions of the Sept. 11 relatives. They both said they were doubtful such evidence would emerge.

Tracy Schmaler, a Justice Department spokeswoman, said only, “It’s an ongoing investigation.”

Charlie Savage contributed reporting.


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Kinshasa Journal: In Congolese Capital, ‘Power Cut’ Applies to Food

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Of course, the small ones will fuss. “Yes, sure, they ask for food, but we don’t have any,” said their mother, Ghislaine Berbok, a police officer who earns $50 a month. There will have been a little bread for them at breakfast, but nothing more.

“At night they will be weak,” she said. “Sure, they complain. But there is nothing we can do.”

The Berboks are practicing a Kinshasa family ritual almost as common here as corrugated metal roofs and dirt streets: the “power cut,” as residents in this capital of some 10 million have ironically christened it. On some days, some children eat, others do not. On other days, all the children eat, and the adults do not. Or vice versa.

The term “power cut” — in French, délestage — is meant to evoke another unloved routine of city life: the rolling blackouts that hit first one neighborhood, then another.

Délestage is universally used in French-speaking Africa to describe these state-decreed power cutoffs, but when applied to rationing food it illustrates a stark survival calculus, one the head of a household must painfully impose on the rest. And unlike the blackouts, it is not merely a temporary unpleasantness mandated from on high.

“If today we eat, tomorrow we’ll drink tea,” said Dieudonné Nsala, a father of five who earns $60 a month as an administrator at the Education Ministry. Rent is $120 a month; the numbers, Mr. Nsala pointed out, simply do not add up. Are there days when his children do not eat? “Of course!” Mr. Nsala answered, puzzled at the question. “It can be two days a week,” he said.

Though residents here frequently gather on crowded street corners to argue politics, their daily struggle may help explain why the capital did not experience sustained mass demonstrations after disputed election results were announced last month. Sporadic protests and street clashes certainly erupted, but the margin of survival here is simply too slim for most people to demonstrate for very long.

“People in Kinshasa are so poor, they are living hand to mouth,” said Théodore Trefon, a researcher at the Royal Museum for Central Africa in Belgium. “They simply don’t have the means to mobilize for a long time.”

Beyond that, the government leaves little room for expressions of popular discontent. Human Rights Watch said that Congolese soldiers had killed at least 24 people and detained dozens more after the flawed elections that returned President Joseph Kabila to office.

Whatever the city’s misgivings about the vote, daily life itself is enough of a challenge.

“On the weekend, you’ve got to do everything you can to have food because you are at home with the children,” said Mr. Nsala, the administrator. “But there are days, for sure, when we don’t eat. I’ll say, ‘There isn’t enough to eat, so you, maman and the kids, you take it.’?”

Mr. Nsala, soft-spoken and precise in his diction, stared at the floor of his modest cinder-block, metal-roofed living room. Fuzzy television news played in the background. His wife was selling vegetables out front, to supplement the meager family income. Don’t ask him about meat.

“Maybe, if we make a sacrifice,” he said, pointing out that a pound of beef costs $5.

At the Berbok household — where Ghislaine’s husband, a teacher, earns $42 a month, adding to her salary as a police officer — there has been no fish in a year.

“Délestage. That means: ‘Today we eat. Tomorrow we don’t.’ The Congolese, in the spirit of irony, have adopted this term,” said Mr. Nsala quietly. He added that the family had eaten the day before: “So, today, there is nothing.”

The food délestage is not new in Congo, a country rich in minerals and verdant landscapes yet also one of the hungriest on earth, according to experts. It is last on the 2011 Global Hunger Index, a measure of malnutrition and child nutrition compiled by the International Food Policy Research Institute, and has gotten worse. It was the only country where the food situation dropped from “alarming” to “extremely alarming,” the institute reported this year. Half the country is considered undernourished.

Ten years ago, even poor Congolese could expect to eat one substantial meal a day — perhaps cassava, a starchy root, with some palm oil, and a little of the imported frozen fish that is a staple here. But in the last three years, even that certainty has dropped away, said Dr. Eric Tollens, an expert on nutrition in Congo at the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven in Belgium, where he is an emeritus professor at the Center for Agricultural and Food Economics.

Isaac Ngwenza contributed reporting.


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U.S. Military Deaths in Afghanistan

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An Innocent in America Room for Debate: Are Teachers Overpaid? China Set to Punish Human Rights Activist A Renewed Optimism for Deals On Wall Street Competing histories across the Strait of Gibraltar contribute to its peculiar exclaves.

‘Glee’ Star Gets His Broadway Turn Medicare should demand evidence that a costly cancer treatment is more effective than cheaper options.

In Nigeria, designating Boko Haram as a foreign terrorist group will only inflame anti-Americanism among Muslims.


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Friday, January 6, 2012

The Lede Blog: Video Shows Monitors at Syrian Protests

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Video posted online by Syrian activists on Friday is said to show Arab League monitors in the middle of a large protest in the city of Idlib.

As my colleagues Kareem Fahim and Hwaida Saad report, activists said that the Syrian security forces opened fire on several demonstrations on Friday, killing or injuring protesters in Hama and the Damascus suburb of Douma, despite the presence of Arab League monitors in the country.

Undeterred by the threat of violence, tens of thousands of people appeared to take to the streets across the country intent on showing the monitors the central role played by peaceful protest in the uprising. Video posted online by activists showed monitors in yellow jackets surrounded by vast crowds in the northern city of Idlib.

According to an activist who writes on Twitter as Alexander Page, two brief clips posted on YouTube by a video blogger named Eliasecis showed protesters gathering on Friday outside Hamdan hospital in Douma after an Arab League vehicle was spotted there.

In April, Al Jazeera reported that three doctors, including the private hospital’s director, Dr. Hosam Hamdan, were arrested “because they had disobeyed orders from the secret police to refuse treatment to protesters.”

In a third clip from the same blogger, protesters could be seen surrounding the Arab League monitors as they left the hospital.

Protesters continued to call for Syria’s president, Bashar al-Assad, to step down. But, as Reuters reports, one of the Arab League monitors was caught on live video broadcast by Al Jazeera telling protesters at a mosque in Douma: “Our goal is to observe… it is not to remove the president, our aim is to return Syria to peace and security.”

Ahmed Al Omran, a Saudi journalist with NPR who sifts through Syrian protest video on his Twitter feed, notes that this graphic clip is said to show the bloody face of a young man activists said was shot in Douma on Friday.

The same journalist pointed to this video, said to have been recorded in Douma on Friday as the activist behind the camera was shot by the security forces.

On Thursday, Mr. Omran reported on the death of another video activist, Basil Al-Sayed, who was reportedly killed in the city of Homs on Wednesday while filming an assault by the security forces.

Video posted online by an activist in Homs on Friday showed residents sharing their accounts of the security crackdown with one of the monitors.

In another encounter with monitors, said to have been recorded on Friday in the devastated neighborhood of Baba Amr in Homs, Mr. Omran points out that protesters could be heard chanting: “No dialogue with Bashar!”

Another activist uploaded this clip of a boisterous, antigovernment demonstration in Homs, which has been one of the most active centers of dissent since the uprising began.

Borzou Daragahi, a Financial Times correspondent, observed that some of the protesters “were shown dressed in long white shrouds, symbolizing their readiness for martyrdom, and waving Islamic flags.”

The activist Sham News Network channel on YouTube featured video of what looked to be an even larger demonstration in the Deir Baalba neighborhood of Homs on Friday.

According to Mr. Daragahi, protesters in Deir Baalba mocked a statement by the Sudanese head of the observer mission, Lt. Gen. Mohamed al-Dabi, who called conditions in the city “reassuring.” Mr. Daragahi reported that the protesters in turn reminded the world that General Dabi was the chief of a military intelligence branch in Sudan that has been accused of atrocities, displaying a sign that read: “Homs is fine? And Darfur is fine as well?”

Activists also documented protests and confrontations across Syria on Friday. This video of a clash between protesters and the security forces was said to have been filmed in Dara’a, the southern city where the uprising began in March.

According to Mr. Omran, in this video clip, one of the Arab League observers in Dara’a explained that he had seen government snipers in the city and called on the authorities to remove them.

Protesters also reportedly took to the streets of the city of Hama, where an uprising in 1982 was brutally crushed by Hafez al-Assad, the current president’s father. Near the end of this video of a rally in Hama, one of the protesters waves a sign that compared the health risks of living under the rule of Mr. Assad to the danger posed by smoking.

This post has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: December 30, 2011

An earlier version of this post misstated the name of a New York Times reporter writing about the protests in Syria. He is Kareem Fahim.


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Ismail Haniya of Gaza Visits Turkey

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Here in Turkey, where Mr. Haniya arrived after visiting Egypt and Sudan, he was quoted by the semiofficial Anatolian Agency on Monday as saying that “the Arab Spring is turning into an Islamic spring.”

Turkey, ruled by the Islamic-based Justice and Development Party, has grown close to Hamas and has downgraded its relations with Israel. In 2010, a group of ships and boats sailed from Turkey in an effort to break the Israeli naval blockade of Gaza, and Israeli commandos boarded the vessels to stop them. When they met with resistance, the commandos killed nine activists on board. Turkey has demanded an apology and compensation; Israel has refused.

Mr. Haniya visited the Mavi Marmara, the largest ship of the flotilla, on Monday and said, “The blood of Mavi Marmara martyrs and that of Palestinian martyrs is joined for a hopeful future.”

While Mr. Haniya tours the region seeking financial and political support — he is heading to Iran, a major backer, in the coming days, according to the semiofficial Iranian news agency FARS — his rivals in the Fatah-dominated Palestinian Authority were due to meet with Israeli officials on Tuesday for the first time in 15 months.

The meeting, organized in Amman, the Jordanian capital, by King Abdullah II of Jordan, is viewed as an effort to revive peace negotiations aimed at establishing a Palestinian state, but both Palestinian and Israeli officials were keeping expectations for the meeting low. Hamas opposes negotiations with Israel as a waste of time, and it urged the Palestinian Authority not to attend.

By calling the meeting, King Abdullah is, in part, seeking to parry the rise of Islamism, especially that of Hamas within the Palestinian movement. Though Israeli officials want to help him in that task, it was not clear whether they would arrive in Jordan with proposals that could lure the Palestinians back into direct talks.

Hamas has long maintained its political headquarters in Syria, where an uprising against President Bashar al-Assad has shaken the country for nearly a year. Mr. Haniya declined Monday to comment on the situation in Syria, or to directly address numerous reports that the group is seeking another base.

“The Hamas leadership currently lives in Damascus,” Mr. Haniya said on NTV, a private television news channel, declining to elaborate on a possible move. “Everything, however, remains open to discussion.”

In a meeting with Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey on Sunday, Mr. Haniya thanked him for Turkey’s continuing support for the lifting of the Israeli embargo on Gaza, and he briefed senior Turkish officials on civilian hardships in Gaza. Mr. Haniya also praised Turkey’s acceptance of 11 Palestinians, former prisoners who were released last year as part of the exchange that led to release of the Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit.

Omer Celik, a senior party official in Turkey, called the Gaza conflict Turkey’s “national issue” and urged Israel to recognize Hamas as a legitimate political organization; Israel, the United States and European nations regard it as a terrorist group.

“If Israel is sincere about the peace process,” Mr. Celik said on NTV, standing next to Mr. Haniya, “it should quit declaring organizations like Hamas that support the peace process illegal, and stop building settlements.”

Turkey backs Egyptian-led reconciliation efforts between Hamas and Fatah that began in May but are moving slowly. Israel says that if Hamas joins the Palestinian Authority, there can be no peace talks. At the moment, Mahmoud Abbas, president of the Palestinian Authority and head of Fatah, is caught between reconciling with Israel and reconciling with Hamas.

Mr. Haniya’s tour is expected to take him to Qatar, Tunisia and Bahrain in addition to Iran.

Sebnem Arsu reported from Istanbul and Ethan Bronner from Jerusalem.


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At War Blog: In Libya, Modified Weapon Becomes Less of a Threat

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An article in The New York Times last week discussed an American proposal to buy heat-seeking, shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missiles from the many armed groups and people in Libya who are holding them. Even the older variants of these missiles, known in nonproliferation circles as Manpads, are a threat to civilian aviation; the American proposal is intended to take as many of the weapons as possible out of circulation, with hopes of trimming the number available on black markets.

All of the Manpads identified to date in Libya have been variants of the SA-7, an early Soviet-designed variant of a class of weapon that would eventually evolve to the American-made Stinger and other similarly frightening but lesser known models made in several nations. The story noted that the West’s working estimate for the number of missiles imported by the Libyan military during Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi’s long rule runs to 20,000. But that is a rough guess at the quantity imported — not the quantity on the loose after the war.

…the number now missing is a fraction of that. Precise estimates are impossible, officials say, because no one is sure how many the military still possessed at the outset of the uprising or later after months of fighting.

Some of the missiles were fired in training and in war. Others were disassembled by rebels, who used their tubes as makeshift launchers for other looted ordnance. Many of the missing missiles were looted, either by rebels or would-be profiteers. Many more were destroyed in bunkers that were hit in airstrikes.

One line in there — about rebels using tubes as makeshift launchers — provides the background you will need to interpret the short video below. In it, Kevin Dawes, an unusual battlefield wanderer from the United States, has made a record of the phenomenon of Manpads being repurposed for ground-to-ground war.

As an aside, it is worth noting that Mr. Dawes is a controversial figure and his behavior in Libya and elsewhere has been the subject of considerable online critique. Some of his wanderings with Manpads were the subject of a separate post on my own blog, here. This post will steer wide of the larger discussion about who Mr. Dawes is, and what he was doing in Libya, to examine some of the video record he has been posting from his travels. If nothing else, his video record provides a useful window on Libyan rebel behaviors, and in places is valuable for that alone.

The video is short. Watch it.

Note the start. By the tenth second, what you see, notwithstanding Mr. Dawes’ description of an Igla, is an anti-Qaddafi fighter heading toward a firefight with an SA-7 tube. But at a glance you might notice that this is not an ordinary SA-7 tube, at least not an ordinary SA-7 tube that is ready to fire an SA-7. It is missing its battery unit, and it has no gripstock.

Moreover, someone has outfitted the tube with a wooden dowel as a foregrip, and what looks to be a wooden shoulder rest, too. If you look more closely, you’ll also see something — but not an SA-7 missile — protruding from its aft end. The activities of the many other rebels in the video should provide a hint at what is happening in the video. This fighter is obviously not preparing to fire at an aircraft. He is heading toward a group of cornered Qaddafi fighters — not a tactical situation that demands heat-seeking, ground-to-air fire.

What you are seeing is yet another improvised launcher for the 57-millimeter air-to-ground rockets. Libya’s rebels proved adept at working with what they could scrounge to carry on their war. In this case, by removing the heat-seeking missile from the SA-7 tube and replacing it with a captured 57-millimeter rocket, the rebel had become equipped with a lightweight launcher for firing a single high-explosive rocket at a ground target.

We’ve covered at some length the early Mad Max-style 57-millimeter rocket launchers that rebels put together by taking rocket pods designed for aircraft and fitting them to pickup trucks. The weapons were dangerous, and often used badly. Libya’s rebels may have seen in them a sign of their uprising’s resolve and grit. But they had little means of employing their truck-mounted systems discriminately or accurately. Rather, the way the rebels often fired them served to undermine their standing, showing that their battlefield conduct could resemble that of the Qaddafi forces they loathed.

The system on the video, documented by Mr. Dawes, was the man-portable version of the same rocket, and it summons a somewhat different reaction. The nature of shoulder-fired arms stands to make them potentially more discriminate. And in this case, though the weapon may be dangerous to the man who fires it and to his colleagues standing nearby, this particular makeshift weapon contains, in its own odd way, a good sign.

Libyans and the officials and contractors now trying to assess the risks of the former Qaddafi Manpad stocks have noted that some of the SA-7s were disassembled for this kind of use. Every SA-7 that has been dismantled for conversion to a makeshift 57-millimeter rocket launcher is an SA-7 that will never be fired at a Boeing, a Tupolev or an Airbus.

And so Mr. Dawes has given us a curious little record of the Libyan war. You won’t find many people who would endorse this kind of weapon. But you will find, here and there, a few nonproliferation heads nodding with grudging approval. Why? Because this is one heat-seeking missile that need not be tracked down, bought and destroyed. In the annals of makeshift arms, this is the law of unintended consequences, turned kind.

Follow C.J. Chivers on Facebook, on Twitter at @cjchivers or on his personal blog, cjchivers.com, where many posts from At War are supplemented with more photographs and further information.


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At War Blog: In Common

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Lance Cpl. Benjamin Whetstone Schmidt was killed in Afghanistan on Oct. 6. He was a 24-year-old native of San Antonio, a Marine scout sniper and a son of proud parents. Like many others, Corporal Schmidt volunteered for the combat tour that cost him his life because, as he explained to his friends and family, he wanted to go back to protect his fellow Marines.

Even before it emerged that he had been killed by friendly fire, his explanation had struck me because my son Ricky had given the same reason for extending his commitment in order to make his last deployment, though luckily for us it ended well. At the time, I had told him that he had done quite enough and that maybe it was time to leave the Marines and to go back to college. But he said he? had to go talk to the “Afghanistan dude:” the gunnery sergeant who would explain his options.

A few days later, as that discussion was related to me, Ricky, who had already served four years, was told he was free to leave the Marines — if he was comfortable with letting the younger guys he had helped train go into battle without having him there to guide and protect them. And, of course, that sealed it. I had warned him that the “dude” would be better skilled in the art of persuasive guilt than any grandmother or Catholic school nun ever could be, but I knew my words would have no more weight than the breath that conveyed them.

My son never met Corporal Schmidt, but they were not exactly strangers. The corporal’s father, Dr. David Schmidt, is well known in San Antonio as the team physician for the Spurs of the National Basketball Association. But, in a much less publicized role, he is also the team physician for the Trinity University Tigers, the Division III football team that my son joined when he returned home safely from Afghanistan and went to college.

In early September, Ricky had injured his shoulder in practice and was being treated by Dr. Schmidt. During office visits, they talked about football, the Marines, Afghanistan and, of course, Dr. Schmidt’s son. Corporal Schmidt had spent three semesters at Texas Christian University in Fort Worth before enlisting, just as Ricky had spent a year at the University of Connecticut. Benjamin Schmidt felt he was not ready for school and needed to distinguish himself in some other way before finishing his education; Ricky had felt the same way two years before.

Corporal Schmidt had also been a football player at Alamo Heights High School, a school that my daughter had attended before she also went to T.C.U. Dr. Schmidt described his son as handsome, complex and thoughtful, and very funny. But the words that would come to haunt Ricky were his own, when he told Dr. Schmidt just weeks before the scheduled end of his son’s deployment that he should not worry, adding that “Lance Corporal Schmidt will be O.K.”

On Oct. 7, Ricky called me, distraught on hearing the news of Corporal Schmidt’s death, and asked, “What can I ever say to Dr. Schmidt now that he’s not O.K.?” I told him that his reassurance was not a promise broken but a comfort, and that he was not accountable for Dr. Schmidt’s loss. But Ricky could not let it go, Nor, I suppose, could Corporal Schmidt have done so had their fates been reversed, an almost imponderable situation that I have now considered too many times to count. These Marines, all of them, are forever part of an organization that instills an ingrained responsibility to protect one other as both its principal weapon and its shield. And so for this one Marine, now a college sophomore, even being at home a half a world away did not soften the sting of this tragedy.

He wrote to Dr. Schmidt that night:

I do not know what to tell you, Dr. Schmidt, I have no idea, the only thing I can think to say is what I would hope somebody tell my father if my time was up: You see, over there, life doesn’t seem the same, not for us, the wins and the losses are too surreal to really hit home. We talk about “home” we talk about everything that that word means, or we think it means to us, “Ah man when I get back…,” but they are just fantasies. They are distant, and they are strictly when you have literally nothing better to do. The only thing that matters out there is the present, the guys you are with, and the idea of something greater. I believe that your son is not much different than me in this regard, not even a little. Your son is a hero, a true hero. Many people, such as me, have the burden of coming back, and fading away, forgotten. Your son will never be lost this way, he will live forever. There are many good men alive today because of a great man; and their stories, legacies and lives are a gift from him. My deepest condolences sir.

This year, with the end of the Iraq war, coming home is a common thought among us all. Still, skeptics see it as a ploy, strategically set to occur at the beginning of a national election year. Others see it as a victory and a promise kept. But to the troops and the families, from Iraq and Afghanistan, coming home is all that is on their minds. Dr. and Mrs. Schmidt, I want you to know that your son Benjamin is also on mine.

This is the fourth post that Tom Cassone has contributed to At War. Read his other posts here. If you have a loved one serving overseas and would like to contribute an essay about your experience, please write to us at AtWar@nytimes.com


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As European Union Expands, Unanimity Breaks Down

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But, as the union expands, the notion of universal consent is seen as increasingly unworkable and could be starting to break down. Legislators here are devising new approaches that will enable smaller groups of countries to adopt laws among themselves — without the threat of a veto if all 27 member nations fail to agree.

The move toward smaller groupings reflects a growing fragmentation of the European Union and has been developing for some time. But it took on added significance after a spectacular dispute at the European summit meeting in December, when Prime Minister David Cameron of Britain failed to achieve new safeguards from European Union laws for his nation’s financial-services sector. In retaliation, he blocked a proposed treaty change aimed at helping to strengthen the euro.

Under current rules, groups of at least nine nations may go ahead with legislation if an agreement has stalled. However, they can do so only after all 27 countries have been through the time-consuming process of trying and failing to agree. So far, that has happened in only two cases, but others in which this principle may apply are working their way slowly through the system.

Most prominent are two pieces of draft tax legislation that have been drawn up in a way that ensures that they could work without the cooperation of the British if necessary. Moreover, they seem intended to operate in a way that could prevent Britain from gaining a big competitive advantage from staying outside the plan and undercutting other nations that adopt it.

The most diplomatically fragile proposal involves a financial transaction tax, which has been proposed by the European Commission and could raise about $74 billion a year, starting in 2014. Under the plan, the tax would be levied at a rate of one-tenth of 1 percent on all transactions between institutions. Derivatives contracts would be taxed at the rate of one-hundredth of 1 percent.

French and German policy makers see this as a “Robin Hood tax,” a way of discouraging speculative transactions and raising cash from the bankers who provoked the financial crisis.

Financial analysts say that it was Britain’s concern over this impending legislation — and the potential damage it could do to its banking industry — that was at least partly responsible for its unyielding stance at the December meeting. British leaders feared that in the absence of global regulations, banks would simply relocate from London to New York, Singapore or other lower-tax domains. The British government points out that even a study by the European Commission, the executive arm of the European Union, suggests that the tax could reduce European gross domestic product by 1.76 percent.

Under the proposed legislation, a British veto would no longer prevent nine or more nations that wanted to go ahead from doing so. In principle, this would allow Britain to continue as a partial tax haven. But a clause in the law would require banks in the smaller group of nations to pay the tax on some transactions, even if they operate in London.

Similarly, moves to harmonize the base on which corporate taxes are assessed in Europe could work among a smaller number of nations even if Britain did not take part. Large corporations operating across borders would be able to opt for a unified tax system in the countries that sign up for the plan. That would simplify tax issues for companies operating in the participating nations and might even tempt some to relocate to them at the expense of Britain, which is likely to stay out.

“Obviously, these proposals are both on the table for 27 member states, and we would like to see them agreed by the 27,” said Emer Traynor, spokeswoman on taxation for the European Commission. “However, if that is not possible, these proposals are also workable if done by a smaller group. It is still completely feasible for a smaller group of member states to go ahead with them and deliver big benefits.”

Despite Britain’s December veto of the treaty change on the euro, no additional protection for financial services was secured by the British. Neither of the two tax plans has yet been discussed fully by the 27 member nations, and smaller groups of countries could not contemplate forging ahead unless they were rejected.

The new way of devising laws is not always aimed against Britain. The British have, in fact, joined one plan, which aims to build a European system for patent protection. But the shift in the way the union is legislating is significant because it changes the rules of the game.

Some European officials argue that Britain, which has long promoted the idea of a more variable model of European integration, with countries free to pick and choose the degree of cooperation, is now experiencing the downside. Laws are being drafted in the knowledge that Britain may not take part and so are intended to prevent it from reaping a competitive advantage by staying out.


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India Ink: Quick Action in Kashmir After Shooting

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The government of Jammu and Kashmir took swift action after security forces killed an 18-year-old male Monday, arresting five men in connection with the shooting.

Altaf Ahmad Sood was killed when Central Industrial Security Forces fired on a group that was protesting electricity shortages outside the National Hydroelectric Power Corporation in the border town of Boniyar, Kashmir. State Chief Minister Omar Abdullah visited the family of the deceased youth on Tuesday, and then used Twitter to denounce the death, calling the circumstances “tragic, shocking and inexcusable.” The youth was shot twice in the chest, Mr. Abdullah said in a statement.

Local people were protesting power cuts in front of the company that runs the local hydroelectric power project. It is not clear whether the victim was part of the group of protesters.

An inspector and four constables of the C.I.S.F., a central government paramilitary unit, were arrested over the shooting. Mr. Abdullah’s quick response may be an attempt to avoid a repeat of the summer of 2010, when 120 protesting boys were killed by police over a span of several months. Protests over individual shootings would often lead to more violence and shootings. The summer of 2011 passed peacefully.

The government handled “much tougher situations last summer without a single casualty,” Mr. Abdullah told NDTV, an independent news channel.

Monday’s incident immediately provoked sharp reactions from political figures in the state. “People were demanding basic amenities of life, like power, and you give them bullets,” said Mahbooba Mufti, the main opposition leader.

The shooting “is an attack on the democratic rights of citizens to protest peacefully,” said Mohammad Yousuf Tarigami, a communist party legislator in the state.


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Bob Anderson, Sword-Fight Choreographer, Dies at 89

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Philip Bruce, president of the British Academy of Fencing, confirmed the death.

Mr. Anderson was a superior and versatile athlete who as a sailor in the Royal Marines in the 1940s won interservice fencing championships with all three of the sport’s weapons — foil, épée and saber. Saber, a flat-bladed weapon with which points are scored by striking with the side of the blade, was his specialty. (In foil and épée only the tip of the swords are used to score.) Mr. Anderson represented Great Britain at the 1952 Helsinki Olympics and twice in the world championships in the saber competition.

Just before the Olympics, Mr. Anderson was asked to be a fight choreographer and stunt double for the film “Master of Ballantrae,” an adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson’s swashbuckling tale of an 18th-century Scottish lord who takes up piracy, Mr. Anderson and the film’s star, Errol Flynn, became great pals in spite of a mishap during which, as the two men were being filmed in a sword fight, Flynn was wounded in the thigh. Flynn immediately took responsibility for the accident, though Mr. Anderson was thereafter known as the man who stabbed Errol Flynn.

Over the next several decades Mr. Anderson became well-known in Hollywood as a sword master — part instructor, part stuntman, part fight choreographer. With a reputation as a perfectionist, he earned the nickname “Grumpy Bob.”

Among many other projects, he worked with James Bond (a k a Sean Connery) on “From Russia with Love” (1963); with Ryan O’Neal in Stanley Kubrick’s picaresque 19th-century drama based on a novel by Thackeray, “Barry Lyndon” (1975); with Cary Elwes and Mandy Patinkin, who played ambidextrous combatants in “The Princess Bride” (1987); with Aramis, Athos, Porthos and D’Artagnan (Charlie Sheen, Kiefer Sutherland, Oliver Platt and Chris O’Donnell) in “The Three Musketeers” (1993); with Antonio Banderas and Catherine Zeta-Jones in “The Mask of Zorro” (1998) and “The Legend of Zorro” (2005); and with the director Peter Jackson on the epic Medieval fantasy “The Lord of the Rings: the Fellowship of the Ring” (2001).

Most famously, Mr. Anderson worked on George Lucas’s original “Star Wars” trilogy. He played a behind-the-scenes role in the first film, “Star Wars” (1977), but in the next two, “The Empire Strikes Back” (1980) and “The Return of the Jedi” (1983), he appeared on-screen as the evil, black-helmeted Darth Vader in the scenes in which he battles the young hero, Luke, who is secretly his son, with sabers whose blades are laserlike lights.

He was uncredited in the part; the role was voiced by James Earl Jones and played by David Prowse, a hulking actor, 6 feet 7 inches tall, who was simply not good with a saber. Mr. Anderson stepped in, and though he was six inches shorter than Mr. Prowse, his identity was a secret until Mark Hamill disclosed it in an interview.

“I finally told George I didn’t think it was fair any more,” Mr. Hamill told Starlog, a science fiction magazine. “Bob worked so bloody hard that he deserves some recognition.” Robert James Gilbert Anderson was born on Sept. 15, 1922, in Hampshire, England, southwest of London. Survivors include his wife, Pearl, three children and several grandchildren.

In addition to his film work, Mr. Anderson was for many years the coach of Great Britain’s national fencing team, and he was also, in the 1960s and 1970s, president of the British Academy of Fencing, which oversees the training of fencing coaches in the United Kingdom. A statement by the academy on Monday said, in part: “It is true to say that nearly 100 percent of fencing in Britain today is directly or indirectly attributable to the work of this man.”


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WORLD: Greece's Dangerous Cuts

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As Greece is forced to make steep spending cuts, many families are falling into poverty and face losing healthcare coverage.

Produced by Nikolia Apostolou


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In Iran, Election Fears and Economic Woes Test Leaders

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But a likely boycott by Iran’s harshly silenced reformists and fears of election-related violence, combined with dire economic problems arising from Iran’s isolation over its suspect nuclear program, are creating new challenges for Iranian leaders as they face their first domestic legitimacy test since the disputed presidential election of 2009.

Despite assertions by the leaders that reformist candidates will be allowed to participate in the parliamentary elections, to be held in March, the two principal reformist opposition figures in Iran, Mir Hussein Moussavi and Mehdi Karroubi, both former presidential candidates, remained under house arrest for most of 2011, their supporters say, and both are urging followers to stay away from the polls.

Even Iran’s mildly reform-minded former president, Mohammad Khatami, who has not been treated as harshly by the government, said in December that reformist candidates would not run in the March elections. That would create a glaring gap that could prove worrisome in providing the appearance of a choice of candidates, and undermine the quest for legitimacy.

“It was expected that the conditions would be granted so that the reformists could participate in the elections, but the conditions were not met,” Mr. Khatami was quoted as saying in Iranian news accounts.

The issue is important because Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and his hard-line subordinates have sought to portray their country as the true genesis of the Arab Spring political uprisings that have convulsed many of Iran’s neighbors. For Iran’s reformists to publicly reject the vote, even before it happens, carries credibility risks that Iran’s conservative leadership did not face in previous elections, analysts said.

“The reformists have categorically denounced the legitimacy of the election,” said Hamid Dabashi, a professor of Iranian studies and comparative literature at Columbia University. “The issue that Khamenei now faces is the legitimacy of the regime. How is he going to manufacture a parliamentary election?”

The election has been further complicated by the severe economic pressure from the West over Iran’s nuclear energy program, which Western powers suspect is masking Iranian plans to make nuclear weapons.

While Iran’s nuclear independence is a popular domestic position that cuts across political lines, the painful economic results of Western sanctions are hurting Iranians — and risk widespread voter discontent — by causing increased shortages, unemployment and inflation. Iran’s currency, the rial, has plunged in value against the dollar in recent months and on Monday hit a new all-time low.

“This is not a good time for the Iran government to lack popularity,” said Alireza Nader, an expert on Iran in the Washington office of the RAND Corporation, a research group.

The government has responded to the sanctions with a combination of military muscle-flexing, defiance and diplomatic overtures. In recent days, the Iranians have held naval war games, threatened to close vital Persian Gulf oil shipping lanes, test-fired two new missiles and announced the production of their first nuclear-fuel rod. At the same time, confronting a new punitive measure signed into law over the weekend by President Obama that could effectively choke Iranian oil sales, the Tehran leadership has said it wants to reopen talks on the nuclear issue.

Iran’s top police commander, mindful of the mayhem that shook the country after the 2009 presidential election, which the defeated reformists thought they had won, has warned that security forces will crush any effort by “the enemy and their domestic lines” to cause trouble.

The commander, Ismail Ahmadi Moghadam, a confidant of Ayatollah Khamenei, has also expressed his expectation that the only winners would, by definition, be “those who believe in the regime and have the trust of the public.”

Ayatollah Khamenei lost considerable credibility in the 2009 presidential election when he declared it a crime to challenge the suspiciously lopsided results that re-elected his choice, the incumbent, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. For the ayatollah, the March election must show — or be made to show — that he is still a revered and unchallenged authority, Iranian political historians and analysts said.

“The regime is very concerned that the election will not appear legitimate,” Mr. Nader said. “There is a good chance that the upcoming parliamentary election can become another occasion for a mass demonstration, or that lots of Iranians will choose not to participate.”

For many disaffected Iranians, the electoral system is already stacked against a significant choice of candidates for the 275-seat Majlis, or Parliament. Those who wish to run for office must register with a religious oversight authority known as the Guardian Council, which decides who is eligible. The registration phase, which began Dec. 24, ended Friday, and the Guardian Council is expected to release its final list of approved candidates in late January or early February. The government announced Friday that more than 3,000 applicants had asked to be considered.

“The regime wants to pretend it’s business as usual and everyone is taking part,” said Mehrzad Boroujerdi, an associate professor of political science at Syracuse University. “The game plan is to entice some of the more conservative elements of the reformists to take part, so they can say, ‘You see?’?”

Mr. Boroujerdi also said that the election could serve as a dress rehearsal for the next presidential election, scheduled to be held in 2013, and that it will offer insights into how Iranians feel by whether they even bother to vote. “This is going to speak volumes about the configurations of various forces,” he said. “That makes it quite important.”

Others said the candidate vetting process and March vote would offer insights into whether supporters of Mr. Ahmadinejad, who has had a falling-out with Ayatollah Khamenei since the 2009 election, will be denied eligibility to run, a move that would give the ayatollah unquestioned control of the final makeup of Parliament.

There has been speculation that Ayatollah Khamenei may propose to the next Parliament that the office of the president be abolished, to be replaced by a system in which lawmakers select a prime minister — a suggestion that the ayatollah made last year. “They are playing with the idea of doing away with the whole game of a presidential election,” Mr. Dabashi said. “Khamenei may use this occasion to implement that possibility.”

Artin Afkhami contributed reporting.


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Thursday, January 5, 2012

Pakistani Panel Begins Inquiry Into Memo

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ISLAMABAD — A three-member Supreme Court panel opened an inquiry on Monday into a controversial memo suggestive of a civilian-military power struggle, seeking statements from the Pakistani spy chief and Pakistan’s recently resigned ambassador to United States, as well as a former American national security adviser, before adjourning to Jan. 9.

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The panel also asked the attorney general to approach the Canadian company Research In Motion to obtain the record of BlackBerry messages between the former Pakistani ambassador, Husain Haqqani, and an American businessman of Pakistani origins, Mansoor Ijaz, who brought the memo to light.

The memo was purported to be from the Pakistani government, and asked for help in warding off a coup by the military in the wake of its humiliation by the American operation that killed Osama bin Laden, promising in exchange to alter parts of the country’s spy agency. Mr. Ijaz said in October that he was asked to convey the memo to Adm. Mike Mullen, who was then the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Eventually, he identified Mr. Haqqani as being behind the memo.

Mr. Haqqani has denied having anything to do with the memo. James L. Jones, a retired Marine Corps commandant and former national security adviser who delivered the memo to Admiral Mullen, said in a statement last month that he had no reason to believe that Mr. Haqqani had any role in its creation.


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Global Update: New H.I.V. Cases and AIDS Deaths Plummet in British Columbia

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New H.I.V. cases and AIDS deaths are both going steadily down in British Columbia, according to data released last week.

“We’re particularly pleased to see that our treatment-as-prevention strategy has taken off big-time,” said Dr. Julio S. G. Montaner, director of the British Columbia Center for Excellence in H.I.V./AIDS. His center was a pioneer in the strategy, which involves searching aggressively for people at risk of H.I.V. infection, talking them into being tested and putting those who are infected on antiretroviral drugs immediately, which lowers by 96 percent the chances that they will infect others.

In Vancouver, where he works, AIDS is concentrated in two largely separate groups: gay men and drug addicts. To reach the addicts, the city opened a center where they can inject under a nurse’s supervision without fear of arrest; the nurses also offer medical care, including tests.

Testing is increasing, and syphilis rates are holding steady, Dr. Montaner said, so the drop in new cases is not a result of fewer tests or greater condom use.

AIDS cases remain steady in Canada’s other provinces, except for those in the Prairies region, where they tripled, mostly among Indian addicts in Saskatchewan, which has no safe-injection center.

Last week, Science magazine named the treatment-as-prevention strategy, with the clinical trial of 1,763 couples on four continents that proved it worked, as its 2011 “Breakthrough of the Year.”

Dr. Montaner said he is frustrated that rich countries will not donate enough money to roll out the strategy in poor countries with huge H.I.V. epidemics.


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World Briefing | Middle East: Saudi Arabia: Help Wanted

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An Innocent in America Room for Debate: Are Teachers Overpaid? China Set to Punish Human Rights Activist A Renewed Optimism for Deals On Wall Street Competing histories across the Strait of Gibraltar contribute to its peculiar exclaves.

‘Glee’ Star Gets His Broadway Turn Medicare should demand evidence that a costly cancer treatment is more effective than cheaper options.

In Nigeria, designating Boko Haram as a foreign terrorist group will only inflame anti-Americanism among Muslims.


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World Briefing | The Americas: Peru: Mine Protest Resumes

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An Innocent in America Room for Debate: Are Teachers Overpaid? China Set to Punish Human Rights Activist A Renewed Optimism for Deals On Wall Street Competing histories across the Strait of Gibraltar contribute to its peculiar exclaves.

‘Glee’ Star Gets His Broadway Turn Medicare should demand evidence that a costly cancer treatment is more effective than cheaper options.

In Nigeria, designating Boko Haram as a foreign terrorist group will only inflame anti-Americanism among Muslims.


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World Briefing | Africa: South Sudan: Civilians Flee

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An Innocent in America Room for Debate: Are Teachers Overpaid? China Set to Punish Human Rights Activist A Renewed Optimism for Deals On Wall Street Competing histories across the Strait of Gibraltar contribute to its peculiar exclaves.

‘Glee’ Star Gets His Broadway Turn Medicare should demand evidence that a costly cancer treatment is more effective than cheaper options.

In Nigeria, designating Boko Haram as a foreign terrorist group will only inflame anti-Americanism among Muslims.


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2 Arrested in Torture of Afghan Girl

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But she was finally released by the local police in Baghlan Province, in northeastern Afghanistan, last week and will be sent to India for further medical treatment, the Afghan Interior Ministry said on Monday.

The case of the young girl, Sahar Gul, 15, has caused something of a sensation in Afghanistan, underscoring the unfinished business of advancing women’s rights here.

Her mother-in-law and her sister-in-law were arrested last week, officials said. Her father-in-law was arrested on Monday evening, according to Rahima Zarifi, the provincial director of women’s affairs in Baghlan.

The police are still searching for her husband, Ghulam Sakhi, 30, a soldier in the Afghan National Army who served in Helmand Province, the Interior Ministry said. He had fled, officials said.

President Hamid Karzai spoke out about the girl’s plight in a statement on Sunday, saying that the case had to be pursued and that the people responsible should be arrested. The swift official response may show a new willingness to help the plight of young women in this poor country, but it also highlights the suffering that officials say is still common.

Her mistreatment began after she was married six months ago, when she was 14. The girl, from Badakhshan Province, and her husband did not know each other well, Ms. Zarifi said.

When her new in-laws tried to force her into prostitution, she refused, and they locked her in a downstairs bathroom in their home in Dahiney Ghuri in Pul-i-Kumri, the capital of Baghlan Province, Interior Ministry and provincial officials said. They would not let her call her family, and denied her food. They also beat her with a rod, officials said.

She was released after her mother traveled to Baghlan and her uncle alerted the local police, who forced open the door to the room where she was being kept.

Munshi Abdul Majid, governor of Baghlan, said the search was continuing for the husband and for others responsible for the girl’s abuse. “This is an un-Islamic and inhuman act,” he said.

Jawad Sukhanyar and Sharifullah Sahak contributed reporting.


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At War Blog: Lens: From a Marine's Side of the Camera

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Over on the Lens blog, Sgt. Thomas James Brennan writes about the close bonds that form during battle, even between soldiers and the combat photographers documenting them. When Finbarr O’Reilly, a Reuters photographer, embedded with Sgt. Brennan’s squad of Marines in Afghanistan last October, he was a little guarded around the man with the camera. But the war didn’t give him time or space to hold onto those feelings. And conversations with Mr. O’Reilly, coupled with the closeness of battle, forged a bond between the men that continues to today. A bond was cemented with the commonalities the men shared, as Sgt. Brennan notes:

We mesh because we are so different, yet in so many ways alike, because we are not the status quo. We aren’t normal 9-to-5rs. Our 9 a.m. would start at 0600 hours and when our 5 p.m. would come, at 2100, we would tell stories of home or debate current events. Whether we shared the same ideals at that moment didn’t matter. The conversation was simply an escape from the harrowing reality we were in; a reality that few people share, a reality that brought Finbarr and me together.

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Egyptians Vote in Final Round of Parliamentary Elections

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The roughly nine governorates voting on Tuesday included the historic Brotherhood strongholds of Gharbiya and Daqahliyya in the Delta, where a number of the group’s best known candidates are running, including Mohamed Beltaggi, a former member of Parliament. And according to many estimates, its Freedom and Justice Party started the day with roughly 50 percent of the seats awarded in the first two rounds of the vote, having won roughly 40 percent of the seats allocated by party voting and a higher percentage of the seats contested by individual candidates.

Before Tuesday, the Brotherhood’s party had been forecast to win a plurality but not a majority.

The outcome remains uncertain, however, in part because Egypt’s military rulers have yet to spell out the formula that will be used to allocate seats according to each party’s share of the vote.

In an interview on Tuesday, Essam el-Erian, a leader of the Freedom and Justice Party who was elected to Parliament from Giza, said he doubted the party would win more than half the seats. “I doubt it,” he said. “Nothing is impossible but it would be very difficult.”

But if Freedom and Justice won a clear majority, it would enable the Brotherhood’s party to govern without forming a coalition, if it chose.

The Brotherhood has said repeatedly that it intends to form a coalition or unity government, in part to avoid unnerving Egyptian liberals or Westerners who may fear an Islamist takeover. It may also wish to share the responsibility for what is expected to be a difficult period of adjustment for the Egyptian state and economy.

But a majority that removed the necessity of forming a coalition government would diminish the power of the partners in any alliance as well as any other parties outside the coalition. That would reduce the clout of the ultraconservative Islamists who have so far trailed in second place in the first two rounds of the voting, winning as much as 25 percent of the seats by most estimates. And it would also reduce the voice of the various liberal parties, led by the business-friendly Free Egyptians and the left-leaning Social Democrats, who have won most of the remainder of the seats.

The Brotherhood has so far sought to ally itself with the liberals rather than the most conservative Islamists and it has reiterated that it has no plans to form an all-Islamist government. The strength of the ultra-conservatives, known as Salafis, has been the biggest surprise of the voting so far. Many espouse hard-line views seeking sharp reductions in the sale of alcohol, opposing women’s participation in political leadership or public life, and potentially restricting arts and popular culture deemed profane or sacrilegious.

Tuesday’s voting also sets up an potential confrontation between the new Parliament and Egypt’s military rulers. Brotherhood leaders have said they expect the Parliament to take authority over the hiring and firing of a prime minister to run the interim government. The military rulers have said they intend to retain that authority and allocate very little power to the Parliament.

The lower house is Egypt’s primarily legislative body, and Field Marshall Mohamed Hussein Tantawi, the top military officer who is now acting as de facto chief executive, has scheduled its first session for January 23, two days before the anniversary of the outbreak of protests that ousted Mr. Mubarak.


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Lens Blog: Photos of an Isolated Region in Tajikistan

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Along a nearly inaccessible road in Tajikistan, the Greek photographer Myrto Papadopoulos is pursuing a quiet story of growth and change in a small, isolated society.

Ms. Papadopoulos’s project, “The New Plastic Road,” follows Liu Xin Jun, a Chinese truck driver, and Davlat, a Tajik merchandiser, along a trade route in the Pamir Mountains. From the town of Khorog, the most developed in the region, east to Murghab, a former Russian military post at high altitude close to the Chinese border, she sought to explore socioeconomic and political development in an area known as Badakhshan. Basic necessities?— food, water and electricity — are lacking in the area, in part because it is so far from the capital of Tajikistan, Dushanbe.

Ms. Papadopoulos sought images of the road, and life on the road.

“What we wanted to see is how this road really affects the society,” Ms. Papadopoulos said. “And do people receive what they want now with this opening of trade.”

DESCRIPTIONMyrto Papadopoulos A mother and her children pass in front of a gas station in Murghab, Tajikistan.

Tajikistan is a very poor former Soviet state. Its nearly inaccessible roads have hurt development. To reach Khorog, Ms. Padadopoulos endured a long and difficult drive through the mountains. “That’s how the region is,” she said. “There are very difficult places to reach.”

Virtually unreachable in the winter months, it is anything but a haven for tourism. Aside from a group of bikers and one or two mountaineers, Ms. Papadopoulos met few other travelers. “If something happens to you there,” she said, “it just happens.”

The road, which was reconstructed by China and opened in 2004, has also been a haven for drug-trafficking.

With China’s trade increase in central Asia, though, the situation has been changing. “All these things are suddenly moving,” Ms. Papadopoulos said.

Ms. Padadopoulos was featured on Lens in September 2011 (“In the Grecian Caves Where Time Slows Down,” Sept. 22). This was her first trip to central Asia. She plans to go to China and find the source of the trade, “where all these things are and where do they go.” The project will ultimately become a film about China’s investments in central Asia, which she is working on with her partner, Angelos Tsaousis.

The first trip was, for the most part, exploratory. “I tried to photograph what I saw,” Ms. Padadopoulos said.

In a way, she said, the environment — always very dark at night — felt peaceful. She especially felt that peace when photographing women.

“I really enjoyed sharing moments with the women. I felt very strong.”

And yet she felt a sense of melancholy, which comes out in the pictures — painterly, almost mystical. “I felt there was a sadness to them,” she said.

DESCRIPTIONMyrto Papadopoulos Washing clothes in Khorog, Tajikistan, which has a shortage of drinking water.

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Workers Locked Out at Caterpillar Locomotive Plant in Canada

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The action came after the employees in London, Ontario, rejected a contract proposed by Electro-Motive Canada. The Canadian Auto Workers union said the proposal would cut wages in half, substantially reduce benefits and end the current pension plan.

“It’s not really a proposal, it’s an ultimatum,” said Tim Carrie, president of the union local that represents the factory’s workers. “This is an attack on middle-class jobs.”

On a Web site with updates about the dispute, Electro-Motive, which Caterpillar acquired in 2010, said the lockout would remain in effect “until a ratified contract is in place.”

The company said the union’s decision not to strike constituted “acceptance of the new wages and benefits as represented in EMC’s final offer.” The company said it was “hopeful of a speedy ratification allowing union members to return to work.”

But some of the union’s executive members have suggested that Caterpillar’s contract demands were intended to provoke a shutdown of the Canadian factory as a prelude to moving all production to the United States.

Caterpillar has a long history of tough labor negotiations and bitter labor disputes. In 1995, workers at the company’s unionized operations in the United States returned to work after declaring a 17-month strike a failure. In 2009, workers took executives at Caterpillar France hostage during a dispute over the restructuring of operations in Grenoble.

Electro-Motive is the second-largest maker of locomotives in North America, after General Electric, and for most of its history was a unit of General Motors. While the parent company, Electro-Motive Diesel, is based in LaGrange, Ill., its only assembly plant in recent years has been the Canadian operation.

But last October, Progress Rail, Caterpillar’s rail operations holding company, opened a new locomotive assembly plant in Muncie, Ind.

The Canadian Auto Workers say that wages and benefits are substantially lower at the new American factory.

The union has suggested that, in addition to reducing labor costs, the company may also want to end Canadian production to avoid potential problems with “Buy American” provisions of United States government procurement rules. While the United States government has said that Canada is exempt from any such measures, labor leaders say that has not always been the case in practice.

The purchase of Electro-Motive Canada was reviewed by the Canadian government under the nation’s foreign investment laws. The union has asked the government to release what conditions, if any, were attached to the subsequent approval. The Canadian government recently settled a dispute with United States Steel under those laws after the company shut down a Canadian steel maker shortly after acquiring it.

“When a foreign company comes in and purchases an existing facility, there has to be a benefit to Canadians,” said Mr. Carrie, the union executive. “Americans coming in and trying to slash wages in half is not a benefit to Canadians.”

Industry Canada, the government department that handles investment reviews, was closed for the New Year holiday on Monday and did not respond to requests for comment.

Anne Marie Quinn, a spokeswoman for Electro-Motive Canada, declined to answer questions about the company’s contract demands, its long-term production plans or any commitments made to the Canadian government.

The company’s Web site about the labor dispute, though, said that the cost of wages and benefits for its workers in Illinois, who are represented by the United Automobile Workers, is about half that for the London plant.

The site says that the now-expired contract at the Canadian factory “also has?antiquated work rules that make the London operation inefficient.”


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Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Arab League Criticized Over Syria Observer Mission

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But the killings have continued, and the mission has been mired in controversy, much of it focused on its leader: a Sudanese general who, rights activists say, presided over the same kind of deadly and heavy-handed tactics in Sudan that the Arab League mission is seeking to curb in Syria.

Lt. Gen. Muhammad Ahmed al-Dabi, who once ran Sudan’s notorious military intelligence agency, has only compounded the criticism with his recent statements.

Last week, he spoke dismissively about the damage in Homs, a rebellious city that was shelled by government tanks and where dozens of people were killed. “Some places looked a bit of a mess, but there was nothing frightening,” Reuters quoted him as saying.

On Sunday, he publicly contradicted an Arab League observer who told residents in the city of Dara’a that he had seen government snipers and would tell Syrian officials to remove them.

“But he didn’t see,” General Dabi told the BBC, asserting that the observer was referring to a hypothetical case.

In interviews, several people who have dealt with the general said he was a likable and efficient administrator, and some said it was conceivable that he could run the observer mission with fairness.

Others, though, called him exactly the wrong kind of person to lead such a mission: a career enforcer for an authoritarian government who had shown a harsh hand in dealing with opponents.

“I don’t know if they looked into his background,” said Faisal Mohammed Salih, a columnist with the Sudanese newspaper Al Akhbar. “This is a human rights mission. They should have chosen someone who is sensitive to human rights issues. Military men in the Arab world should be the last choice for such missions.”

Several attempts to reach General Dabi on his cellphone or through the observer delegation’s office in Damascus were unsuccessful.

On Monday, the Arab League came to his defense. At a news conference in Cairo, the league’s director, Nabil al-Araby, called General Dabi a “capable military man with a clean reputation,” The Associated Press reported.

Mr. Araby addressed criticism that the observer mission was weak, understaffed and easily manipulated by the government, saying the observers were trying to be less reliant on the government’s planning, The A.P. said.

But he conceded the main criticism of Syrian activists, that the mission has been powerless to stop the bloodshed. Although the tanks had been withdrawn, he said, snipers persisted.

Syrian activists say more than 150 people have been killed since the monitors arrived last week. On Sunday, an Arab League advisory body, the 88-member Arab Parliament, called for the group to leave because the government was continuing to kill its opponents.

Given General Dabi’s biography, the activists have been skeptical of the mission from the start.

Originally from the town of Berber in northern Sudan, General Dabi, 63, graduated from military college in Sudan in 1969, according to a résumé he provided to journalists after his selection.

For decades, he played a forceful if quiet role in the government of President Omar Hassan al-Bashir. He was a member of a trusted inner circle who rose to power immediately after the 1989 coup that brought Mr. Bashir to power. Time and again, the president picked General Dabi for important security posts, often overseeing counterinsurgency campaigns or clampdowns on dissidents.

His first post in the Bashir government was as head of military intelligence. His name was rarely in the news, but reports by Amnesty International from the early 1990s document the role that military intelligence agents played in executions, torture and disappearances as the government fought insurgents in southern Sudan. The rebels were also accused of atrocities, including executions and indiscriminate shelling of cities.

Erwin van der Borght, the director of the Africa Program for Amnesty International, said General Dabi never investigated the “widespread” allegations of atrocities.

Isma’il Kushkush contributed reporting from Khartoum, Sudan, and Hwaida Saad from Beirut.


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