Friday, December 30, 2005
TANGERANG, Indonesia (CNN) -- We're greeted by an anxious-looking young woman, a stooped-over grandfather and a slender young man with a thin goatee and a white soccer shirt whose wife had just died.Just two hours before, at the Ministry of Health where we had just finished an interview, we heard the news about the death of his young wife. A laboratory test found she was infected with the H5N1 bird flu virus. Now we're in her home village to see where she might have become infected and if her family or friends are sick, too.The young woman at the door is the sister of the 19-year-old victim. The young man is the victim's husband and father of their 10-month-old daughter.Before heading out, we hurriedly agreed to the ministry's ground rules: use our smallest video camera so as not to intimidate the family, and stay out of the way. In exchange for the chance to tag along we'll give a ride to two members of the ministry's investigation team.The drive takes two hours, and we stop to ask directions at least half-a-dozen times.In the back of our cramped SUV, winding through dusty streets on the outskirts of Jakarta, our worried translator asks if we still have protective masks. Thankfully, I left them in the car the day before. I give her a quick lesson on how to make it fit properly.We'll have to make do without boots and gloves. Even if we had them, the investigation team doesn't, there's no way I could wear protective hazmat gear when I walk up to an unprotected, grieving family to ask for an interview. The mask is bad enough, although I'm glad to have it.Abruptly, we find ourselves off the busy main street on a dirt lane of small, concrete homes. We pull over, get out and follow the medical detectives to a thatched-roof clubhouse that will serve as our meeting place.Six or seven other investigators from the Ministry of Health are already sitting with the frightened family on the floor inside, filling out questionnaires, taking blood samples and dropping them into a small picnic cooler. We leave our shoes on the porch and join everyone inside. In a surrealistic touch, a big-screen TV is blaring a Foghorn Leghorn cartoon. No one bothers to turn down the volume.We sit in the back of the room as our translator whispers updates: The 10-month-old daughter of the dead woman is sick, too, and so is the woman's 8-year-old brother and 5-month-old niece, cradled in the arms of the woman who greeted us. Bird flu? No one knows. Not taking any chances, the health team calls for an ambulance.The investigators show little emotion as they take down this information, but I can see them privately exchanging looks. This case has them worried.Children watch us from over the railing while clucking chickens stare through a backyard fence. The day before, on the spot where we're sitting, the dead woman's family washed her body to prepare it for burial. I begin to wish I had brought a pair of gloves.It takes most of the afternoon to take blood samples and interview all the friends and neighbors. Everyone is beginning to look a little bored, and we find ourselves outside, stripping off our masks to get fresh air.The young father holds his sick baby, then hands her off to a relative and sits smoking a cigarette, staring out at the road. I don't ask him how he feels about his wife being dead or his baby maybe having the same disease.A few days later we learn that the two youngest children were not infected with bird flu after all. They're fine. The 8-year-old boy, on the other hand, is Indonesia's ninth confirmed case of H5N1. He's luckier than his sister, though. After receiving treatment with Tamiflu, he was still in the hospital but expected to recover.By the time I get the news, I'm home with bronchitis. My doctor isn't happy to hear that I've been interviewing bird flu victims and tromping through yards near dead chickens. He sends me for tests. And even though I know it's very unlikely that I've caught anything life-threatening, I can swear there's relief in his voice when he says, "We didn't find anything."
BENNINGTON, Vermont (AP) -- A high school teacher is facing questions from administrators after giving a vocabulary quiz that included digs at President Bush and the extreme right.Bret Chenkin, a social studies and English teacher at Mount Anthony Union High School, said he gave the quiz to his students several months ago. The quiz asked students to pick the proper words to complete sentences.One example: "I wish Bush would be (coherent, eschewed) for once during a speech, but there are theories that his everyday diction charms the below-average mind, hence insuring him Republican votes." "Coherent" is the right answer.Principal Sue Maguire said she hoped to speak to whomever complained about the quiz and any students who might be concerned. She said she also would talk with Chenkin. School Superintendent Wesley Knapp said he was taking the situation seriously."It's absolutely unacceptable," Knapp said. "They (teachers) don't have a license to hold forth on a particular standpoint."Chenkin, 36, a teacher for seven years, said he isn't shy about sharing his liberal views with students as a way of prompting debate, but said the quizzes are being taken out of context."The kids know it's hyperbolic, so-to-speak," he said. "They know it's tongue in cheek." But he said he would change his teaching methods if some are concerned."I'll put in both sides," he said. "Especially if it's going to cause a lot of grief."The school is in Bennington, a community of about 16,500 in the southwest corner of the state.Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
OAK RIDGE, Tennessee (AP) -- Copies of a high school's student newspaper were seized by administrators because the edition contained stories about birth control and tattoos, stirring a First Amendment debate.Administrators at Oak Ridge High School went into teachers' classrooms, desks and mailboxes to retrieve all 1,800 copies of the newspaper Tuesday, said teacher Wanda Grooms, who advises the staff, and Brittany Thomas, the student editor.The Oak Leaf's birth control article listed success rates for different methods and said contraceptives were available from doctors and the local health department. Superintendent Tom Bailey said the article needed to be edited so it would be acceptable for the entire school.The edition also contained a photo of an unidentified student's tattoo, and the student had not told her parents about the tattoo, said Superintendent Tom Bailey."I have a problem with the idea of putting something in the paper that makes us a part of hiding something from the parents," he said.The paper can be reprinted if the changes are made, he said."We have a responsibility to the public to do the right thing," he said. "We've got 14-year-olds that read the newspaper."Thomas said she wasn't sure about making changes. "I'm not completely OK with reprinting the paper," she said.First Amendment experts were critical of the seizure."This is a terrible lesson in civics," University of Tennessee journalism professor Dwight Teeter said. "This is an issue about the administration wanting to have control. Either the students are going to have a voice, or you're going to have a PR rag for the administration."Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
PANAMA CITY, Panama (AP) -- Known for its famed waterway, Panama's capital boasts more than just a spot to watch the ships cross through the engineering marvel.Visitors can chose between a swim in the Pacific or the Caribbean, hear tales of pirates looting the city's original site, find bargain shopping, sample tropical fruits and try their luck at the horse races in Panama City.OUTDOORS: Head to the Amador Causeway and snap photos of Panama's downtown or the Bridge of the Americas, where traffic crosses over while ships cruise through the canal. Once part of the off-limits Canal Zone guarded by the U.S. military, the Causeway has become a favorite of locals and tourists. The thin strip surrounded by the ocean houses duty free shops, restaurants, hotels and dance clubs. Construction signs and sites make it evident that there's more on the way. Kiosks sell hammocks, guayaberas, hats and molas, brightly-colored fabrics with elaborate, hand-sewn designs of the Kuna Indian tribe.By day, 20-somethings and families catch the cool of the ocean breeze while biking, in-line skating, or jogging along the Causeway. It's a strenuous and humid walk, so renting multi-seat bikes at the stretch's entrance works best.For a day of diving, snorkeling and other water sports, head for Taboga Island, on the Pacific coast. Ferries bound for Isla Taboga leave from a Balboa pier and the Causeway each morning and return in the late afternoon.MUSEUMS: Check out any of the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute's stations. Visit one of the island sites, such as the Barro Colorado Field Research Station, for a boat ride across the canal's Gatun Lake and a chance to see a half-dozen native monkey species in their natural setting.At the Marine Exhibition Center in Punta Culebra, view sloths, pelicans and other tropical forest-dwellers along with an unfettered view of the ships crossing and the rhythmic pounding of waves crashing on jagged rocks. Both kids and adults will be mesmerized watching the crab-eating shark and hearing the boas slithering in the dry forest walk within the park.CUSINE: For breakfast, sip a frothy cafe con leche, made with locally-grown coffee beans, or cinnamon tea. Beer connoisseurs should look for local brews Soberana, Balboa and Atlas, which have a light taste that's thirst-quenching in the sticky climate.Pencas offers a view of the ocean and authentic Panamanian cuisine, which is inexpensive even at many upscale eateries. On the restaurant's menu are mini-tamales wrapped in plantain leaves, pesada de nance (a cereal-textured fruit dessert with bits of white cheese), dorado en salsa de coco (fish in coconut sauce) and ojaldas (a fried bread). On Wednesday nights, Pencas features a troupe of foot-shuffling folk dancers and a live band complete with accordion. As the show wraps up, dancers and some of the servers extend their hands for a dance with audience members. When I told our waiter that I didn't know the steps, he turned to my mom and asked "Does the lady dance?"HISTORY: History buffs should explore the remnants of Panama's colonial past to learn about its history in the quest for riches in the Americas. Just a taxicab away from most points in the capital city is Panama la Vieja. In 1671, Panama la Vieja was sacked by pirates, led by Sir Henry Morgan. Red-brick streets, a cathedral spire and crumbling walls, arches and buildings of the Spanish settlement era remain.Guided tours telling of the colony's former grandeur and demise are available.Some miles away is the Casco Viejo, an old colonial neighborhood with narrow streets and pastel-colored buildings in the midst of renovation. Its architecture resembles New Orleans' French Quarter.Just like locals have for centuries, watch the sunset from the Paseo de las Bovedas, a sea walk along an old Spanish military fort that served as a prison. Other sites include the Catedral Metropolitana, El Teatro Nacional and the unguarded Church of the Golden Altar. Several restaurants and cafes also dot the neighborhood.GAMBLING: Place a bet on the horse races at the Hipodromo Presidente Jose A. Remon on a Thursday afternoon and mingle with locals and visitors. The horseracing park also opens weekends and holidays.More than a half-dozen other casinos also offer all night games of chance in Panama. Among the favorite spots is the casino at the Hotel Panama.NIGHTLIFE: Hit the Causeway or the city's financial district for some dancing, dining and drinking.ELSEWHERE: Panama City also connects travelers by plane, bus or boat to other provinces. You can spot large green plantain leaves and dozens of noni plants heading out of the capital city. If you roll down the car windows while driving through heavily forested areas, you might hear the monkeys shrieking. The province of Colon is where gold and silver from the Americas passed before being transported to Europe. Explore the cannons and the lush green Spanish fortress in Portobelo.Bocas del Toro offers scuba diving and national parks for trekking.Baru volcano is Panama's highest point at 11,408 feet. Close by is the alpine town of Boquete, in the province of Chiriqui.SAFETY: Panama is relatively safe, but be aware and don't venture into some neighborhoods at night. The country has a special police force to help tourists.DRIVING: Driving within the city can be erratic and some areas have few traffic signs or lights.TAXIS: Taxis looking for a fare usually honk. Wave to flag them down and settle on price before taking trips.Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
NEW YORK (AP) -- It's been an event-filled year for the cruise industry, with ships housing Katrina evacuees, ports in New Orleans and Mexico damaged by storms, a freak seven-story wave washing over one ship and a pirate attack on another.But for average cruise vacationers -- and there will be an estimated 11 million of them this year -- the headlines are not as important as the nitty-gritty of planning a trip."The weather issues are unfortunate, but people understand that weather is weather," said Carolyn Spencer Brown, editor at CruiseCritic.com. "The pirate attack, the rogue wave -- they're pretty bizarre and unusual, but they're more of a curiosity than anything else," especially since passengers were not seriously injured in either incident.What cruisers do want to know are the basics. How much will it cost, what's the itinerary, how do you book a trip, and what is there to do on board?The Cruise Lines International Association says 90 percent of cruisers still book through travel agents. But even cruisers who use travel agents may want to begin their research on the Internet. CLIA, which represents 19 major cruise lines serving 97 percent of the North American market, has a Web site at http://www.cruising.org featuring cruise news and listings for travel agents who specialize in cruises. Every cruise line also has its own Web site. Or check out sites like http://www.411cruise.com, http://www.cruises.com, http://www.cruiseweb.com and http://www.cruisedeals.com. Compare prices, departure ports, dates and destinations, whether you end up booking online or not.The Web also offers reader reviews and advice. CruiseCritic.com's commentary on the pros and cons of children on ships is amusing but also a bit disturbing. More than one reader wrote in about unsupervised children getting drunk on board, while a captain's wife penned a column for the Web site about the occasional havoc wreaked by kids gone wild at sea.Itineraries are a top consideration for cruisers. The Caribbean remains the cruise industry's No. 1 destination, with 41 percent of cruises tracked by CLIA making ports of call there. Next most popular were the Mediterranean and Alaska.But cruise lines also vary their itineraries with new ports of call each year. For example, Crystal Cruises' world cruises plan to stop in Ashdod, near Jerusalem, in 2007; it will be the company's first call in Israel since 1999.This year, hurricanes had a major impact on Gulf region itineraries. Carnival's Holiday, which had been home-ported in Mobile, Alabama, was chartered by the federal government as part of the Katrina relief effort and is now docked in Pascagoula, Mississippi. Ships that had been home-ported in New Orleans are operating from other Gulf ports in Florida and Texas. But New Orleans is starting to appear on itineraries again, with a British-based ship, the Minerva II, confirmed for a port call in February. Other ships are due back in the Big Easy in spring and later next year.In Cozumel, Mexico, docks were damaged, but ships are offering service by tender, meaning they moor offshore and passengers are ferried in. Carnival reports that it has resumed service at all the Mexican ports they used prior to Wilma, but some itineraries have been modified where land facilities are not yet able to accommodate the number of visitors they had before.Round-the-world cruises remain popular, with more lines offering more options. Some passengers will sign up for the whole three-month tour, but 10-day or two-week chunks of global itineraries are also available. In 2007, Cunard will recreate the bygone days of glamorous ocean liners by scheduling the Queen Mary 2 for its first world cruise. The ship will depart for its 80-day trip from Fort Lauderdale, Florida, on January 10, 2007, at the same time that the Queen Elizabeth 2 heads off on its 25th voyage around the world.In Hawaii, meanwhile, cruises have grown from a seasonal business to a year-round industry, led by NCL America, which has three luxury liners serving the islands -- the Pride of Aloha; the Pride of America, which launched in June as the largest U.S.-flagged cruise ship ever; and the Pride of Hawaii, debuting summer 2006.Other new ships due out in 2006 are the Concordia, from Costa Cruises, the largest cruise line in Europe; Holland America's Noordam; MSC's Musica; Princess Cruises' Crown Princess; and Royal Caribbean's Freedom of the Seas, which will eclipse the Queen Mary 2 as the largest passenger ship ever when it sails on its maiden voyage to the Caribbean in June. Amenities will include a rock-climbing wall, ice-skating rink and a Flowrider, an onboard surfing machine.But destinations are not the only thing to look at in booking a cruise. Consider themes, celebrity guests, on-board activities, land-based excursions and even which brands cruises partner with. Spencer Brown, the CruiseCritic.com editor, points out that to appeal to parents, Royal Caribbean has partnerships with Fisher-Price toys and Johnny Rockets, the '50s-style burger-and-fries chain, which has devised a kids' menu for the ships. Other Royal Caribbean programs range from "murder mystery" themes for whodunit fans, to "Harley Cruises," in which guests bring their motorcycles on board and then head off on bike tours at every port of call.Carnival also offers programs appealing to a wide variety of tastes, from a series of cruises for racing fans featuring NASCAR legend Rusty Wallace, to an upscale menu with items like foie gras terrine and petits four designed by a three-star Michelin chef from France, Georges Blanc. The meals are structured so that one person can order a Georges Blanc entree while a diner at the same table can have a regular American-style steak. Some of Blanc's selections will be offered at no extra charge in Carnival's main dining rooms, while others will be offered in the ships' upscale supper clubs, which carry a $30-a-head charge.Radisson Seven Seas Cruises has an ongoing partnership with Jean-Michel Cousteau -- son of the famed ocean explorer Jacques -- to provide lectures and excursions related to oceanography and the environment. Other Radisson programs include shopping with experts from the BBC's "Antiques Roadshow" in Turkey, Greece and Rome, and Polynesian island adventures like parasailing, a kayak safari and swimming with stingrays."People want to go home and talk about their experiences," said Bob Sharak, CLIA's executive vice president. "People still like to get a suntan, but they also want to go home and say they were up in the trees with howler monkeys."Programs on Crystal Cruises include talks by celebrities like actress Debbie Reynolds and skater Dorothy Hamill; art classes, such as learning to sculpt using chunks of alabaster; and an onboard gallery of stunning photos of life in China. The images carry the cachet of a big name: They are sponsored by the Smithsonian Institution, which also sends lecturers on Crystal Cruises. This is the first time the museum has sent an exhibit to sea.MSC Cruises, meanwhile, offers "Baseball Greats," cruises where passengers can interact with Hall of Famers Bob Feller, Ralph Kiner and Earl Weaver. And Holland America is installing culinary arts centers on all of its ships where guests can learn from celebrity chefs, cookbook authors and other experts.Although the six new ships debuting in '06 will increase the supply of cruises, don't count on prices dropping. The cruise industry has been able to maintain a 102 percent capacity (which means every cabin is occupied, and a few rooms house more than two people) for the past few years despite an increase in berths. Prices have crept up, but you can still cruise for four or five nights (depending on itinerary and room) for under $500, especially in fall, early spring and other off-peak times.According to CLIA's 2004 survey, 70 percent of cruisers plan their trips at least four months in advance. So if your heart is set on a date or destination, "it's a good idea to book as early as possible to guarantee the itinerary of the ship and the cabin you want," said Sharak. "Typically you also get better deals when you book early."Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
WATSONVILLE, California (AP) -- Farmer Vanessa Bogenholm won't go near the pesticide methyl bromide even though it could boost her strawberry harvest. But just down the coast in Salinas, grower Tom Jones says his berry farm can't survive without the powerful toxin.The two farmers both help California supply more than 85 percent of the nation's strawberries, but they part ways when it comes to methyl bromide, a soil fumigant that an international treaty has banned as of this year for all but the most critical uses.Methyl bromide continues in wide use because the Bush administration has convinced other treaty signatories that U.S. farmers can't do without it -- whether for California berries, Florida tomatoes, North Carolina Christmas trees or Michigan melons.The treaty, called the Montreal Protocol, has targeted methyl bromide because it is among chemicals that deplete the earth's protective ozone layer.It also can cause neurological damage, but methyl bromide's tenacity demonstrates the difficulty of banishing a substance that is wildly successful at delivering what both farmers and consumers want: abundant, pest-free and affordable produce.The administration, at the urging of agriculture and manufacturing interests, is pushing for continued treaty exemptions at least through 2008, and officials will not commit to an ending point.The administration's "fervent desire and goal" is to end methyl bromide's use, said Claudia McMurray, a deputy assistant secretary of state. The exemption requests are decreasing in the next two years, with golf courses, for example, making the cut this year but not next.However, McMurray said, "I can't say to you that each year the numbers (of pounds used) would automatically go down."The reason is that agriculture does not have a substitute that can match methyl bromide's stunning efficiency at destroying soil disease and pests.Odorless and colorless, methyl bromide is a gas that usually is injected by tractor into soil before planting, then covered with plastic sheeting to slow its release into the air. Eradicating parasites and disease like root rot, it results in a spectacular yield, reduced weeding costs and a longer growing season.But workers who inhale enough of the chemical can suffer convulsions, coma and neuromuscular and cognitive problems. In rare cases, they can die.Less is known about the long-term effects of low levels of contact, said Dr. Robert Harrison, an occupational and environmental health physician at the University of California, San Francisco.In Montreal Protocol negotiations, the administration used a treaty provision designed to prevent "market disruption," to win exemptions that leave the United States 37 percent shy of the phaseout required by 2005, with at least 10,450 tons of methyl bromide exempted this year. While that is down from some 28,080 tons used in 1991, this year's total is higher than it was two years ago.That is not what the treaty envisioned, said David Doniger, senior attorney with the Natural Resources Defense Council. In the 1990s, he worked on the protocol as director of climate change for the Environmental Protection Agency."Nobody expected you would use the exemptions to cancel the final step of the phaseout or even go backward," Doniger said.U.S. officials go to a Montreal Protocol meeting in Senegal on December 7 for talks on exemptions for 2007.Bogenholm, like others in California's $1 billion organic industry, has found a non-chemical solution for her 65-acre farm overlooking the Pacific. She accepts a smaller yield and the higher costs of crop rotation and intensive plant management, but gets a price premium for pesticide-free berries.Once a conventional farmer, her epiphany came one day when she donned protective gear and locked her dog in the car so he wouldn't inhale methyl bromide leaking from a nozzle."I thought this was an insane way to make food," she said.More prevalent are farmers like Jones, who produces 10 percent of his 213 strawberry acres organically. He says he couldn't compete if he converted the rest, with three times higher weeding costs and fewer berries to show for it.Like many California growers, Jones also produces a third of his berries with alternative chemicals, but he said results are "not even close" to methyl bromide's soil purification.From Florida comes a similar complaint. "We're not totally clueless. We've seen this train coming. We've tried every alternative and put every engine on the track, but none of them run," said Reggie Brown, manager of the Florida Tomato Committee.With methyl bromide probably sticking around for several years, the EPA is re-examining its health and safety standards.California launched regulations last year to improve its strictest-in-the-nation protections for farmworkers and others.That's not enough for teacher Cheri Alderman, whose school borders a strawberry field in this coastal agricultural belt. She fears her students could inhale a dangerous whiff of the fumigant as it seeps into the air."A little dribble of poison is still poison," she said.After air monitoring detected elevated methyl bromide levels at the school four years ago, county officials say they pressed the grower. This fall he used a different chemical on the fields nearest the school.Even California's required buffer zones and ban on applying methyl bromide within 36 hours of school time don't comfort Alderman. The school draws youngsters on weekends too, and families live nearby. "It's ridiculous to think that as long as we don't do it on school days, then were OK," she said.Growers say they believe the fumigant is safe when used correctly."I'm comfortable working with the product and educating our personnel," said Jim Grainger, a fourth-generation farmer who grows 700 acres of steak tomatoes in Florida.Not so for Guillermo Ruiz and Jorge Fernandez who were used to seeing dead dogs, deer and birds in the fields treated with methyl bromide. They believe their headaches, confusion, nervousness and vision trouble stem from 10 years, ending in 2003, working in the fields removing the plastic."My eyes watered. I threw up. It gave me headaches," said Ruiz.The American Association of Pesticide Control Centers logged 395 reports of methyl bromide poisonings from 1999 to 2004. A national total remains elusive because farmworkers often do not seek medical care.Advocates for farmworkers contend in a San Francisco Superior Court lawsuit that California's exposure limits to protect neighbors are too lax. State regulators lately have emphasized stricter enforcement and tougher penalties.The size of the U.S. inventory of methyl bromide inventory is secret. The EPA refuses to disclose how much, saying the figure is confidential business information. Doniger's group says in a lawsuit against the agency that the amount exceeds 11,000 tons.Its continued use makes people such as Lynda Uvari uneasy.In her Southern California community of Ventura, people thought they had the flu a few years back. Then they noticed that their illness coincided with fumigation of a nearby field. They settled a suit with the strawberry grower.Now Uvari wonders about methyl bromide's legacy, even whether it could be linked to her son's endocrine problems."That's in the back of our minds all the time," Uvari said. "You always question."Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
HONG KONG, China (AP) -- Budget permitting, China wants to be able to put a man on the moon and build a space station in 15 years, a space program official said."I think about 10 to 15 years later, we will have the ability to build our own space station and to carry out a manned moon landing," Hu Shixiang, deputy commander in chief of China's manned space flight program, said in Hong Kong on Sunday.But the goal is subject to full funding, Hu said, explaining that China's space program must fit in the larger scheme of the country's overall development.He said China wants to master the technology for a space walk and docking in space by 2012.China is developing its space program at its own pace, not competing with the United States, Hu said."It's not the competition of the Cold War era," he said.Hu is visiting Hong Kong following China's second successful manned space mission, together with the mission's two astronauts, Nie Haisheng and Fei Junlong. He made his comments in a televised question-and-answer session with news executives.The two astronauts orbited Earth for five days last month aboard the Shenzhou 6 capsule, traveling 2 million miles (3.2 million kilometers). China's first manned mission was in 2003, when astronaut Yang Liwei orbited for 21 1/2 hours.Hu stressed that China intends to explore space for peaceful purposes, saying Beijing "is willing to work hard with people around the world for the peaceful use of space."Chinese space officials want to study the possibility of making rockets with 25 tons capacity -- three times the capacity of exiting rockets -- but the government hasn't approved the funding, he said.Hu dismissed suggestions that the space program is too costly in a country that while growing rapidly, is still struggling to eradicate poverty in the countryside.The recent space mission cost 900 million Chinese yuan ($111 million), compared to the 190 billion yuan ($23.5 billion) China spent on combating pollution last year, he said.Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Vaccines can keep chickens from dying of bird flu, but can immunized birds still silently spread infection?It's an important question, as China and Vietnam vaccinate millions of chickens in an effort to stamp out a worrisome strain of bird flu called H5N1.Scientists in the Netherlands put the question to a test -- using vaccines against a different strain -- and concluded that vaccinating poultry indeed can block viral spread between birds."Vaccination can be an attractive tool to prevent outbreaks of highly pathogenic AI (avian influenza) viruses in poultry, thereby achieving the aim of eliminating the source of human infections," concludes lead researcher J.A. van der Groot of the Netherlands' Central Institute for Animal Disease Control.Birds catch numerous strains of influenza, but only a few types are particularly deadly to both fowl and people. Today, the H5N1 strain is the worst. At least 68 people so far have died from H5N1 in Asia since 2003, almost all linked to contact with sick birds -- and millions of birds have died or been slaughtered in an effort to contain the virus. Health experts fear that the bird flu one day could mutate into a virus that is easily passed from person to person, sparking a global epidemic.Hence the interest in chicken vaccines.Previous research found that vaccination could protect individual chickens from falling ill with various flu strains. But there have been reports of asymptomatic chickens shedding virus after vaccination, raising concern.So van der Groot and colleagues tested two vaccines against the H7N7 bird-flu strain, by housing infected chickens together with healthy vaccinated ones.Two weeks after inoculation, both vaccines completely blocked H7N7 spread between chickens, they reported Monday in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.Some transmission occurred one week after vaccination, but the virus' reproduction rate already had dropped enough that the researchers predict only a small number of new infections that soon after the shots.There were marginal differences in effectiveness between the two vaccines, however, leading the researchers to conclude that poultry vaccines' ability to stop viral spread should be tested before health authorities choose which one to use.The research backs guidelines from the United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization, which recommends targeted vaccination of poultry as one measure to control outbreaks of bird flu -- along with other steps such as culling infected flocks -- and already warns that it can take two weeks for full protection.So far, the H5N1 virus has not been found in U.S. birds. If a bird outbreak did occur here, the Agriculture Department stockpiles poultry vaccine that would be used to help contain it.Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
LUCASVILLE, Ohio (AP) -- Ohio carried out the nation's 999th execution since 1977 on Tuesday, putting to death a man who strangled his mother-in-law while high on cocaine and later killed his 5-year-old stepdaughter to cover up the crime.John Hicks, 49, was put to death a day after Eric Nance was executed in Arkansas for killing a teenager by slashing her throat with a box cutter.The 1,000th execution since the death penalty was reinstated is likely to come as soon as Wednesday, when Robin Lovitt is set to die in Virginia for fatally stabbing a man with scissors during a pool hall robbery. (Watch the death penalty approach a landmark -- 2:09)On Monday, Gov. Bob Taft had refused to commute Hicks' sentence from death to life in prison, said Andrea Dean, a spokeswoman for the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction.Hicks offered a tearful apology for the 1985 murders in an interview earlier this month with Ohio Parole Board members, and said he loved both victims -- 56-year-old Maxine Armstrong and 5-year-old Brandy Green. He detailed the killings and said his cocaine high made him desperate and paranoid.Hicks had traded his VCR for about $50 worth of cocaine, court records show. After taking the drugs, he realized that he needed to get the VCR back before his wife wondered where it was, so he decided to steal money from Armstrong.Hicks found his stepdaughter asleep on the couch at Armstrong's apartment. He woke her and brought her to bed and then strangled Armstrong, first with his hands and then with a clothesline.He left her apartment with about $300 and some credit cards. He used some of the money to buy back his VCR and purchase more cocaine.Realizing Green could identify him as the last person at the apartment, he returned and attempted to suffocate the 5-year-old with a pillow then strangle her with his hands. She struggled, and Hicks covered her mouth and nose with duct tape.He left Cincinnati, but turned himself in to police in Knoxville, Tennessee.Hicks was the fourth person executed in Ohio this year and the 19th since the state resumed executions in 1999.Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
EL PASO, Texas (CNN) -- President Bush traveled to his home state of Texas on Tuesday to tout his new push to crack down on illegal immigration from Mexico.The president says he wants to "harden" the southern U.S. border and to implement a program for Mexican guest workers that critics say is a form of amnesty.Bush toured the U.S.-Mexico border at El Paso, which sits across the Rio Grande from the Mexican city of Juarez -- where many people enter the United States illegally each year. (Watch Bush try to wrangle tough issues on the border -- 2:40)"We're adding infrastructure to make the cities secure as well as the rural parts of our border secure," Bush said during a news conference."You're seeing a combination of fencing, cameras -- infrared -- and border patrol agents all doing their job."During a similar event Monday in Arizona, Bush announced his new push. "The American people should not have to choose between a welcoming society and a lawful society," Bush told customs, immigration and border patrol officers at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base. "We can have both at the same time."Bush endorsed building more jail cells to hold those caught inside the United States illegally, speeding up deportations, cracking down on fraudulent papers and "hardening" the border with additional officers, fences and monitoring devices."Securing our border is essential to securing the homeland," he said.Bush also urged Congress to back his proposal for a temporary-worker program, a long-standing idea he said would match legal immigrants with employers "to fill jobs that Americans will not do." But he said the program would not provide a path to citizenship for those who entered the country illegally, saying that doing so would encourage other would-be migrants to cross the border."I support increasing the number of annual green cards that can lead to citizenship," Bush said. "But for the sake of justice and for the sake of border security, I'm not going to sign an immigration bill that includes amnesty."Bush also said he would crack down on U.S. businesses that hire illegal immigrants, saying American employers "have an obligation to abide by the law."The renewed focus on immigration follows a sharp drop in the president's approval rating, and recent polls indicate most of his fellow Republicans oppose his handling of the issue.Many of his conservative allies have criticized the guest-worker program, which they say would allow illegal immigrants to obtain legal status. Many Democrats also have opposed the proposal, which Bush first outlined in January 2004. (Full story)U.S. Rep. Tom Tancredo, an outspoken advocate of a tough stance on illegal immigration, said Bush's credibility "is on the line, big time" over the issue."People even in his own party are worried about whether or not you can really take to the bank what he tells you," the Colorado Republican said. "So the president has not only got to actually say the right stuff, he's got to do the right stuff. We've got to see action on top of words."But one GOP analyst has warned that Bush must strike a delicate balance by talking tough on border security without alienating swing voters, women and Hispanics -- the latter a group that Republicans have tried to court since Bush's first presidential campaign."Republicans are talking about solutions rather than just making a lot of noise," said Leslie Sanchez, former director of Hispanic communications for the Republican National Committee. "But with those solutions come a lot of things that can look like immigrant-bashing."White House spokesman Scott McClellan said Bush wants a "comprehensive" overhaul of immigration policy, emphasizing both border security and the guest-worker proposal. But he denied this position represented any shift in the president's focus.CNN's Elaine Quijano contributed to this report.
NEW YORK (AP) -- "Bohemia is dead," Taye Diggs' character proclaims disdainfully in "Rent." Now it's being reincarnated, with the film version of the long-running Broadway musical now in theaters.From director Chris Columbus (of the first two "Home Alone" movies and the first two "Harry Potters"), the film is extremely faithful to the Tony- and Pulitzer Prize-winning rock opera about friends struggling with drug addiction, AIDS, poverty and artistic expression in New York's East Village.Just before the show opened off-Broadway in 1996, its creator, Jonathan Larson, died unexpectedly at 35 of an aortic aneurysm. That strengthened the bond between its eight original cast members, six of whom reprise their roles in the film.Besides Diggs returning as the yuppified Benny, there's Anthony Rapp as aspiring filmmaker Mark; Adam Pascal as angst-ridden singer-songwriter Roger; Wilson Jermaine Heredia as drag queen Angel; Jesse L. Martin as Angel's professor boyfriend; and Idina Menzel as Maureen, the self-centered performance artist.Joining the cast are Rosario Dawson as junkie exotic dancer Mimi and Tracie Thoms as Maureen's lawyer girlfriend, Joanne. Pascal, Rapp, Heredia and Thoms snuggled with lattes on a big, comfy couch to discuss the leap from stage to screen.Q: What was your reaction when you heard there was going to be a "Rent" movie?ADAM PASCAL: It had gone through several studios and had been attached to different directors, the most of which was (with) Spike Lee. That project actually got to the screen test phase and literally the plug was pulled at the last minute. But we weren't a part of it.TRACIE THOMS: I was supposed to be a part of it.PASCAL: Were you?THOMS: I was supposed to be in the back, dancing on a table. I auditioned for him twice in 2001 and he loved me but he thought I was too young, so he was like, "I'm gonna try to put her in it somewhere."PASCAL: And then I hadn't heard anything about it until I literally got a phone call all at once saying the movie was happening, Chris Columbus was doing it, and he was really interested in having us be a part of it. ... I was amazed that it was being done, I was amazed that he was interested in us, I was amazed that it was him.WILSON JERMAINE HEREDIA: I didn't hear about it until the very last minute, because I was under a rock in Westchester (County) and I wasn't really paying attention to the media. I got a call from a friend and he said, "You know that Christopher Columbus is looking for you, none of us can find you, where the hell are you? ... My first question was, "Is Jesse doing it? How many people are doing it?"Q: Can we discuss why two of the original cast members didn't come back for the film? There have been various rumors.HEREDIA: Daphne Rubin-Vega (the original Mimi) was pregnant and the character also was age specific. She had to be 19 because Mimi is 19 years old. And with Fredi (Walker, the original Joanne) I think it was just a mutual agreement that she was most likely too old for the role, but it was all amicable. Director Chris Columbus (right, with Dawson) was determined to do the film with original cast members.Q: This thing that was so small and personal for you on the stage is now going to the big screen all across the country. Did you think it would translate?ANTHONY RAPP: I don't know that I was ever worried about that. I just wanted to make sure that it was done with the right intention. When I sat down with Chris at the first meeting, I just felt at ease within five minutes because of the way he was talking about it. I was asking him, "Well, what about 'La Vie Boheme,' and what about all of it?" And first of all, he said the statement that I don't think any director who's been as successful as he has been would make lightly -- which is, "This is the most important film I'll ever make."Q: It must have felt good that he was so true to the original material -- right down to Angel's Santa Claus suit.HEREDIA: It felt great -- also for me personally that he allowed me to really play with the character and to really move as the character. He trusted me -- he trusted all of us completely. Then again, I haven't worked with a lot of film directors.Q: Tracie, you were a huge fan of the show for a long time before you were cast in the movie. What about it spoke to you?THOMS: It affected me on so many different levels and at the time that I saw it I couldn't even comprehend what they were. I was just a sobbing mess in the balcony of the Nederlander (Theater) and I just couldn't figure out why I was so moved. I just thought they were all geniuses. ... But also just the story, on so many levels it helped me -- the passion that these people, the characters, were following their dreams, regardless of if they were starving or dying.Q: What was the hardest part of making the movie?HEREDIA: For me it would just have to be the heels. But really, in retrospect thinking about it, even that didn't really bother me. I was just so happy. It didn't really feel like work at all.THOMS: Also, Chris was just so smart for casting all these guys who had been living with the characters for eight years. And I had been auditioning for the character for eight years so I felt like I had been living with the characters for eight years, too. And Rosario grew up in the same situation these people were living in, so she's been preparing for it for her entire life.Q: "Rent" takes place in such a specific time and place -- one year from Christmas Eve 1989 to 1990, on East 11th Street between Avenues A and B. I know you've been asked this question before so I'm not going to ask you whether "Rent" is still relevant, but --RAPP: I am astonished to tell you, I read a thing today that somebody said online that AIDS isn't a big deal anymore. I'm paraphrasing, but I'm like, "What are you talking about?" I couldn't believe that anyone would have the audacity to make a statement like that -- that it doesn't mean the same thing that it did.THOMS: The numbers are astounding.RAPP: It's a part of our lives. And it's gone under the rug but that's not because it's not relevant, that's because people have turned their attention elsewhere.THOMS: And also because people aren't walking around with lesions on their faces anymore. People aren't just completely dropping dead. You have somebody like Magic Johnson who came out -- it was a big thing -- but he's still walking around, opening up Starbucks and movie theaters, and he seems like he's doing OK.HEREDIA: But AIDS is not the only issue or theme in the film. It's about community. It's about making sure that the people around you, letting them know every single day, that you appreciate them because you really don't know what's going to happen tomorrow. There are so many universal themes: It's about disenfranchised artists, it's about love, it's about loss of love. This is why it still rings true today.Q: OK, last question: Have you guys seen the movie "Team America," which features puppets performing in "Lease: The Musical"?RAPP: Yes, we watched that number again during rehearsal.Q: The "Everyone Has AIDS" song?RAPP: Yes, it's hilarious.Q: 'Cause the lead puppet looks kinda like Roger.PASCAL: Yeah, but he's also wearing a scarf, too, so he's like a combination of Mark and Roger.Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Vonage Holdings Corp., the nation's largest non-cable provider of Internet phone service, could be barred from signing up new customers in many markets because it failed to meet the deadline to provide reliable emergency 911 service to all subscribers.The Federal Communications Commission gave Vonage and other companies that sell Internet-based phone service 120 days to comply with its order requiring enhanced 911, or E911, in all their service areas.The deadline to show the government where E911 is available was Monday. House and Senate lawmakers had urged FCC Chairman Kevin Martin to give companies more time and more tools to speed deployment, but no extension was granted.In its compliance report to the FCC, Vonage said only 26 percent of its customer base had full E911 services. The company -- which has more than 1 million subscribers -- said it was capable of transmitting a call back number and location for 100 percent of its subscribers, but that it still was waiting for cooperation from competitors that control the 911 network.AT&T declined to comment on its compliance levels before filing its report with the FCC. Calls to the company on Tuesday were not immediately returned. AT&T offers Voice over Internet Protocol, or VoIP, to about 57,000 customers through its CallVantage service.SunRocket, which has more than 50,000 subscribers nationwide, said it had equipped 96 percent of its customers with full 911 services.The VON Coalition, an industry group, had estimated that overall about two-thirds of Internet phone users would have enhanced 911 by the deadline.Citing public safety concerns, the FCC in May ordered companies selling Voice over Internet Protocol, or VoIP, to ensure that callers can reach an emergency dispatcher when they dial 911. The dispatchers also must be able to tell where callers are located and the numbers from which they are calling.VoIP providers were told that if they failed to meet the deadline they could no longer market their service or accept new customers in areas that didn't have enhanced 911. They will not have to disconnect current customers who don't have full 911 service, as some providers had feared.FCC spokesman David Fiske declined to discuss possible enforcement actions against offending companies. "At this stage," he said, "the agency is focused on the compliance filings by VoIP providers."David Kaut, a telecom analyst at Legg Mason, said VoIP companies will take a hit if the FCC follows through on its threat."If you can't add customers in, say, a third of your territories, that's a significant part of the market where you are all of a sudden capped," said Kaut. "These are supposed to be growth companies."Voice over Internet Protocol shifts calls from wires and switches, using computers and broadband connections to convert sounds into data and transmit them via the Internet. In many cases, subscribers use conventional phones hooked up to high-speed Internet lines. But the service can be mobile, making it difficult to ensure that the call goes to the correct local emergency center.There are about 3.6 million VoIP users in the United States. Of those, about half get their service from cable TV companies that already provide enhanced 911 capabilities. Other providers offer a 911 service that directs emergency calls to a general administrative number, but those lines haven't always been staffed around the clock.The order applies to companies selling VoIP service that uses the public phone network to place and terminate calls.Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
NEW YORK (AP) -- Although Internet domain names may be getting longer or more complex as Web sites creatively squeeze into the crowded ".com" address space, most single-letter names like "a.com" and "b.com" remain unused.That may soon change as the Internet's key oversight agency considers lifting restrictions on the simplest of names.In response to requests by companies seeking to extend their brands, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers will chart a course for single-letter Web addresses as early as this weekend, when the ICANN board meets in Vancouver, British Columbia. Those names could start to appear next year.But the transition won't be easy -- and it could lead to six-figure sales of this new online real estate, akin to opening New York's Central Park to development."Obviously this is a valuable commodity," said Kurt Pritz, ICANN's vice president for business operations. "How would the name be sold?"Names are normally released on a first-come, first-served basis for $10 or less, a policy that favors those who have written programs to automatically and frequently check for a name's availability. Auctioning names to the highest bidder is one possibility.ICANN also must decide whether companies need to seek such names individually if they want them across all suffixes, including ".com," ".info" and ".biz."Single-letter names under ".com," ".net" and ".org" were set aside in 1993 as engineers grew concerned about their ability to meet the expected explosion in demand for domain names. They weren't sure then whether a single database of names could hold millions -- more than 40 million in the case of ".com" today.Six single-letter names already claimed at the time -- "q.com," "x.com, "z.com," "i.net," "q.net," and "x.org" -- were allowed to keep their names for the time being.One idea was to create a mechanism for splitting a single database into 26 -- one corresponding to each letter. So instead of storing the domain name for The Associated Press under ".org," it would go under "a.org." In other words, "ap.org" would become "ap.a.org."Now, engineers have concluded that won't be necessary. They have seen the address database grow to hold millions of names without trouble, so they are now willing to let go of the single-letter names they had reserved.(There are no immediate plans to release two-letter combos that have been reserved under some suffixes -- they were set aside not for technical reasons but to avoid confusion with two-letter country-code suffixes such as ".fr" for France.)Meanwhile, a handful of companies have asked ICANN to free up the single characters. Overstock.com Inc., for instance, prefers a single-letter brand of "o.com" because its newer businesses no longer fit its original mission of providing discounts on excess inventory.The ICANN board must now decide whether and how to release the names. At its meeting Sunday, it could ask staff to come up with a proposal or refer the matter to an ICANN committee for further study.Matt Bentley, chief executive of domain name broker Sedo.com LLC, said single-letter ".com" names could fetch six-figure sums, and a few might even command more than $1 million from some of the Internet's biggest companies. Yahoo Inc. applied for a trademark to "y.com" this year."Obviously there's nothing more exquisite than names that are in extremely rare supply like that," Bentley said. "They would have a lot of cachet as a brand name. I could see there would be tons of demand."Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) -- U.S. troops flew two endangered cheetah cubs to the Ethiopian capital Tuesday after instigating their rescue from a remote village where a restaurant owner had held them captive and abused them.The male and female cubs -- whom the soldiers named Scout and Patch -- were released on the grounds of the Ethiopian president's official residence after their 680-mile journey from the eastern hamlet of Gode."This is the first kind of rescue of animals, let alone cheetahs, that we have done," said Sgt. Leah Cobble, 26, of Washington, as she cuddled the two purring cubs on the runway of Bole International Airport before handing them to government veterinarian Fekadu Shiferaw.The saga of the cubs started last month when U.S. counterterrorism troops, carrying out humanitarian work in the Gode region, discovered that the animals' owner was keeping them tied up with ropes around their necks at his restaurant and forcing them to fight each other for the amusement of patrons and village children. One cub is blind in one eye.The soldiers alerted the Ethiopian government and a U.S.-based cheetah rescue organization, drawing international attention to the cubs' plight. They also tried to persuade restaurant owner Mohamed Hudle to hand over the cubs, but he wanted $1,000 for each animal -- 10 times the average income in this impoverished nation of 77 million people.Fekadu, the veterinarian, intervened. He flew to the village Saturday, confiscated the cubs and handed them over to U.S. forces for Tuesday's transport. The vet said Mohamed was not paid for the animals and that both had received antibiotic treatment and appeared in good health."Had we not had the help of the U.S. military, it would not have been possible to rescue these animals," Fekadu said after arriving with the cubs aboard the U.S. plane.The cheetah is endangered worldwide because of loss of habitat, poaching and other factors, according to the Ohio-based Cheetah Conservation Fund.Keeping wild animals is illegal without a license, but Ethiopia's wildlife laws are rarely enforced. Fekadu said the cubs eventually may have been sent to the Middle East as part of the wildlife trafficking trade in this part of Africa.Mohamed said he bought the cubs from poachers who had kicked the female cub -- Patch -- in the face, blinding her.The cubs now will live at the National Palace, home to President Girma Woldegirogis, along with three rescued lions and some vervet monkeys.But palace animal keeper Kura Tulu said financial help may be needed to give the cubs the best of care. There is only an annual budget of $3,500 to look after all the animals at the palace, Kura said.U.S. soldiers in the Horn of Africa are part of a task force that provides intelligence-gathering help to countries in the region, tries to bolster cooperation and border protection, and mounts humanitarian projects -- digging wells, building bridges, helping construct schools -- aimed at improving the U.S. military's image among Muslims."This is not the usual kind of support we offer," Cobble said of the cheetah rescue. "This was a way to support the Ethiopian authorities and local leaders, and we were happy to do that. It has turned out very well for everyone, but mostly the cheetahs." Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) -- Three Venezuelan opposition parties on Tuesday pulled out of congressional elections planned for Sunday, saying the conditions were tilted toward President Hugo Chavez's government.Henry Ramos, leader of the country's largest opposition party, Democratic Action, said the National Elections Council favored pro-government candidates and has failed to correct errors in the nation's voter registry."Imagine what it means to us for a party like Democratic Action to say today that under these conditions, we cannot participate in the electoral process," Ramos told a news conference. His party, founded in 1941, once dominated Venezuelan politics.Two other parties, Project Venezuela and the Social Christian Party, or Copei, later said they too were withdrawing."There are not conditions for voting," said Cesar Perez, Copei's secretary general.Chavez and his allies have vowed to expand their congressional majority to two-thirds, which would allow them to push through the legislature constitutional reforms that opposition leaders strongly oppose.During a speech to government supporters, Venezuelan Vice President Jose Vicente Rangel denied that Chavez held sway over the election council."The opposition says this election isn't clean. It's the cleanest in Venezuela's history, but they have interests opposed to the National Electoral Council," Rangel said."The Democratic Action party has withdrawn from the elections, very good! They can go to hell!" Rangel added.Lawmakers allied with Chavez control 52 percent of the 165-seat National Assembly.Democratic Action holds 23 of the 79 opposition-held seats -- more than any other opposition party -- and is the country's second oldest political party. The center-left party dominated politics from the fall of Venezuela's last dictatorship in 1958 until Chavez's meteoric rise to power in 1998.Ramos said his party is demanding a suspension of the elections until equal conditions exist for parties of all political leanings.Henrique Salas, president of Project Venezuela, which holds seven seats in the assembly, said the electoral council had shown bias in past elections."It's evident that we Venezuelans have the right to vote, but not the right to elect. We vote, but the National Elections Council elects," Salas told the Venezuelan TV channel Globovision. Salas is a former presidential candidate who was defeated by Chavez in 1998 elections.The announcements came a day after the election council decided high-tech thumbprint identification devices will not be used in the elections. Critics argued they endangered voters' confidentiality.Ramos said the council still had not convinced opposition candidates that the voting software did not endanger voters' confidentiality."The secrecy of the vote is not guaranteed," he said.Ramos denied Venezuelan government accusations that the opposition has been acting in the interests of the U.S. government, which is often critical of Chavez. He also took a dig at Chavez for forging close ties with Cuban leader Fidel Castro."We don't sit on the U.S. ambassador's lap, nor do we sit on the Cuban ambassador's lap," Ramos said. "We don't have assistance from the CIA or the Pentagon, or Fidel Castro's G2" security agency.Observers from the Organization of American States and the European Union are on hand for Sunday's vote.Members of the electoral council have repeatedly denied accusations of a pro-government bias.Observers have backed the results of past Venezuelan elections, including a referendum vote against Chavez last year that he won by a wide margin."We felt we were victims of fraud" in that vote, despite the observers' conclusion that the vote was clean, Ramos said.The National Assembly is being expanded by two seats to have 167 members after Sunday's election.Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
JERUSALEM (CNN) -- Former Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres will resign from the Labor Party, Israeli Channel 10 reported Tuesday night.Peres' office would neither confirm nor deny the report. Peres was in Spain and not available for comment Tuesday.The Channel 10 report said that Peres will support the peace effort of Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon but will not run for another term in the Knesset, Israel's parliament.Peres was recently defeated by Amir Peretz in elections for Labor Party chairman. Peres, 82, has been a pillar of the left-leaning party for decades.During that time, he and Sharon have been political rivals but remained friends.Last week, Sharon left the right-leaning Likud bloc -- which he helped found in the 1970s -- and announced the creation of a new party, Kadima, officially separating himself from those in Likud who protested his pullout of Israeli settlers and troops from Gaza.Sharon's move, which was widely expected, revolutionizes the Israeli political scene. Kadima, which means "forward," is expected to end the longtime dominance of two parties in Israeli politics, Likud and the Labor.At a news conference after his announcement, Sharon said he thought Peres was considering quitting politics after his Labor defeat, but he was lavish in his praise of Peres, whom he said he has known since the 1950s.Peres is in Barcelona, Spain, where a joint Israeli-Palestinian soccer "peace team" -- sponsored by the Shimon Peres Center for Peace -- was to play a match against FC Barcelona.Aides said that Peres will return to Israel on Wednesday afternoon. He is expected to talk then with reporters about his plans.In Barcelona on Tuesday, Peres also had kind words for Sharon but told The Associated Press he would "decide tomorrow night" about whether to leave Labor."The real change is not in the Labor Party. The real change is in the Likud Party," he told the AP. "Mr. Sharon took a different direction for a Palestinian state. He wants to continue the peace process."Kadima met Monday, and its leaders laid out central principles publicly for the first time, supporting the creation of a peaceful Palestinian state, giving up some land to ensure Israel's Jewish majority, and maintaining all of Jerusalem under Israeli control.The announcement brought few surprises. The points laid out have long been espoused by Sharon and his supporters."The people of Israel have a national and historic right to the land of Israel," Justice Minister Tzipi Livni said at the meeting. "Because there is a need for Israel to remain a Jewish majority, we will have to give up part of the land of Israel in order to maintain a democratic, Jewish state."She added that the party supports "the establishment of a Palestinian state alongside Israel.""The Palestinians will have to commit to dismantle the terror organizations, collect illegal arms and carry out security reforms," Livni said. "Israel will keep the major settlement blocks and Jerusalem will remain unified."She said political settlements will be based on the "road map" for Middle East peace backed by the United States, the European Union, Russia and the United Nations.The new party's principles overlap in several areas with those of Labor and Likud. But Kadima positions itself as a centrist alternative and has attracted prominent members of both camps.Livni vowed that Kadima "will work to alter the method of governance in Israel."Kadima officials cautioned that the party is in its infancy and that its platform may grow and change.Polls taken last week suggested that if the elections took place immediately, Kadima would win the most seats in the 120-member Knesset.The report of Peres' decision to back Sharon's new party comes days after nearly 1,600 people crossed the Gaza-Egypt line in both directions, passing through the first-ever Palestinian-controlled international border. (Full story)The deal that led to the historic opening of the Rafah Crossing was announced earlier this month by U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.Copyright 2005 CNN. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Associated Press contributed to this report.
NEW YORK (AP) -- Simon Cowell will be insulting prospective singers on "American Idol" for several years to come.Fox announced Tuesday that it had reached a deal that keeps the insult-wielding talent show judge on television's most popular show for at least five more seasons. His contract had been due to expire at the end of the season that starts in January.The announcement comes with the settlement of a lawsuit against Cowell by fellow British pop impresario Simon Fuller. The lawsuit was reportedly a stumbling block in Fox being able to reach a deal to keep Cowell on "American Idol."A spokeswoman for Fremantle Media, which distributes "American Idol" and produces Cowell's new show, "X-Factor," confirmed the case had been settled out of court, but refused to give details. She said both sides were happy with the outcome.Fox would not comment Tuesday on reports that it was considering moving one of the two weekly editions of "American Idol" to Thursday night.In his copyright infringement lawsuit, Fuller had claimed that Cowell had copied the format of "Pop Idol" -- the British version that predated the U.S. version of "American Idol" -- for "X-Factor."The deal announced Tuesday extends Fox's partnership with "American Idol" producers 19 Entertainment Ltd., Fuller's company."I'm delighted to be committing to a further run with Fox in the States," Fuller said. "Simon Cowell is a key component of the incredible success of 'American Idol,' and I'm delighted that we'll continue working as a team with FremantleMedia and Fox."Cowell said his job as on-air judge is a personal thrill, and that he's happy to be working with "my good friend Simon Fuller."Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
NEW YORK (CNN) -- Two portraits of George Washington by renowned artist Gilbert Stuart, one of them commissioned as a gift for Alexander Hamilton, are to be auctioned Wednesday at Sotheby's in Manhattan.The Hamilton painting depicts the first American president during his final year in office. Washington is seated in a black velvet suit jacket with a sword resting across his lap and holding a document he has signed.Sotheby's predicted it will sell for more than $10 million.Stuart (1755-1828), who portrayed most of the notables of the early United States, did nearly 100 paintings of Washington. His best-known image of the president, a head from an incomplete portrait, graces the $1 bill.The "Constable-Hamilton" portrait, as it is known, is the only one of Stuart's paintings of Washington with a seascape in the background.A wealthy merchant-trader named William Constable commissioned the portrait in 1797 for Hamilton, a fellow New Yorker who was the nation's first secretary of the treasury.Art historians believe it to be a tribute to Hamilton's actions to boost American trade by spearheading the creation of the U.S. Navy and Coast Guard and negotiating a treaty with Britain to halt seizures of American cargo ships, according to the auction catalog.The portrait is among a group of works being sold by the New York Public Library, which is unloading 15 paintings and four sculptures to raise money for its endowment to acquire books and manuscripts."The quality is clearly there. It is a magnificent portrait in a wonderful state of preservation, [it] has been obviously very carefully taken care of by the library for many years," said Peter Rathbone, Sotheby's director for American paintings and sculpture."The fact that it does come directly through Hamilton's family to the library, and Hamilton's importance as a figure in this country certainly adds to the luster and importance of the work," Rathbone said.The picture is considered more valuable than a second Stuart portrait of Washington also consigned by the library to Sotheby's.The second portrait shows Washington standing, his left hand holding a sword and his right hand resting on a copy of the Constitution unrolled on a table.This work, from 1796, is known as the "Munro-Lenox" portrait for its two 19th century owners. Peter Munro was a nephew of John Jay, the nation's first chief justice.Munro's family sold it to James Lenox, who founded a library that merged with other collections to form the New York Public Library.Rathbone said it is unusual for two high-quality Washington portraits by Stuart to be on the market at the same time."They do appear with some regularity, but never works as important or as rare," he said."They should ideally go to a public institution," Rathbone added, "so they remain on public view. We have no control over that."The National Portrait Gallery previously acquired a similar full-length Stuart portrait of a standing Washington for $20 million.
FORT LAUDERDALE, Florida (AP) -- Authorities are searching for the parents of a 3-month-old girl who died last year after her parents allegedly gave her lethal doses of vodka to quiet her crying, police said.Makeisha Dantus died in 2004 but her parents were not charged until last month. By that time, they had disappeared.The couple, Mackenson Dantus and Mardala Derival, are wanted on charges of aggravated manslaughter. Authorities said they believe the couple, both Haitian immigrants, were still in Florida. (Watch: neighbors talk about night baby died. -- 1:44)Detective Katherine Collins said Tuesday that the delay in charging the couple stemmed in part from their lack of cooperation."The last thing you're expecting is for a child to die of alcohol poisoning at age 3 months," she said. "A homicide case is very delicate, and they take time, unfortunately."Makeisha's father called 911 on February 14, 2004, because the baby was unresponsive, Collins said. The baby died at the scene.According to a police report, the parents told officers that for about a month they had fed their daughter a bottle filled with a mixture of water, sugar and vodka to help her sleep.Small quantities of alcohol have historically been used to quiet crying babies, but authorities said the amount fed to Makeisha was extreme.The Broward County Medical Examiner's Office determined that the infant had a blood alcohol level of 0.47 percent. The legal limit for drivers in Florida is 0.08 percent.Former Medical Examiner Dr. Ronald Wright said that for a baby to ingest that much alcohol would be the equivalent of a 160-pound adult drinking 18 beers.According to a police report, the final autopsy showed that the child had been fed fatal doses of alcohol shortly before her death and her liver indicated severe buildup of excess fat due to alcohol consumption.Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- The U.S. Supreme Court takes on two high-profile abortion cases this week, refocusing attention on one of the court's biggest judicial and social conflicts. The confirmation battle over court nominee Samuel Alito is likely to center to a large extent on these cases and his own views on abortion rights."For better or worse, the issue of abortion seems to be the one on which the Supreme Court is judged more than any other," said Edward Lazarus, a former clerk to Justice Harry Blackmun, the author of the 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling legalizing abortion. (Watch the cases being heard) Parental notification an issueThe most-watched case, to be argued Wednesday, deals with a 2003 New Hampshire law that would make it illegal for an abortion to be performed on a minor unless a parent or legal guardian had been notified in writing 48 hours in advance. The only exception would be if the procedure was necessary to prevent the minor's death.A federal appeals court found that exception is not broad enough, ruled it unconstitutional and blocked it from taking effect."This law does seem to be crafted to demand some kind of Supreme Court review," Lazarus said. "It really goes to this question of how much you have to protect the life versus the health of the mother. That comes from the initial ruling in Roe v. Wade. It's not an issue that has been settled at the court."Among those who would have been affected by the law is a New Hampshire woman who recently spoke with CNN. She had an unplanned pregnancy as a teenager. "I decided it was best for me to have an abortion because I did not want to be a parent at that point in my life," she said.Now 20 and a college senior, she is speaking out against the state statute."These laws are only about eroding access to abortion," she told CNN. "If you want to talk to your parents, you can do that, but if the state steps in and tells you that you have to do that to protect your reproduction, it is very disappointing."Poll: Americans favor limits, oppose banAt least 33 states have parental notification laws. A new CNN/USA Today/Gallup Poll found 69 percent of Americans surveyed favored a law requiring minors to get parental consent for an abortion; 28 percent opposed such a requirement. But 61 percent did not support a constitutional amendment to ban abortion, consistent with polls over the years on the question. Thirty-seven percent favored such an amendment."In a narrow sense, the public is very concerned about parental notification and other restrictions on the right to abortion," said Thomas Goldstein, an appellate attorney who has argued many cases before the justices."More broadly, this case is really a bellwether for where the Supreme Court is going to go in terms of limiting Roe v. Wade, and potentially eventually overruling it."New Hampshire argues separate provisions -- which it calls "safety valves" -- provide for a health exception by allowing doctors to seek an emergency judicial waiver of the notification requirement for non-life-threatening health issues.Legal scholars say the case will turn on whether New Hampshire's law represents an "undue burden" on women seeking abortions. The high court has followed that standard when deciding whether such laws are too restrictive. Supporters of the state say the law in question falls far below that."Should parents be notified if a minor's going to have an abortion? Of course our answer is that they should be notified," said Jay Sekulow, chief counsel of the American Center for Law and Justice. "You're not talking about parental consent, you're just talking about notification," he added. "In high school, a kid can't even have an aspirin without getting a parental slip, so the idea that they could have an abortion procedure without telling the parents that it's about to happen just seems to be outrageous."Decision has national impactA ruling in the case will have national implications for a variety of laws dealing with access to abortion.The last time the high court intervened in an important abortion-related case was in 2000, when it threw out a Nebraska law banning a controversial late-term procedure opponents called "partial-birth" abortion. Since Roe v. Wade, various states have tried to place restrictions and exceptions on access to the procedure, prompting a string of high court "clarifications" on the issue over the years.In the New Hampshire case, the justices will delve into a subtle but potentially monumental argument over what legal standard should be applied when courts review abortion laws. A federal judge in the case last year allowed courts to block the law while the case was appealed.That legal standard is important because the "partial-birth" issue is now back before the high court. Both the federal government and several states have prohibited the late-term abortion procedure, but the ban has not yet been allowed to go into effect. President Bush signed the 2003 Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act, but it contains no health exception.Appeals could reach the high court within weeks, and if the justices accept the cases, they could be heard next spring, with two new members on the bench.Protest restrictions revisitedA separate case argued an hour before the New Hampshire appeal will tackle another contentious product of the abortion debate: protests outside medical and reproductive clinics.Courts have been wrestling with this issue for two decades, prompting one lawsuit and appeal after another. Complicating matters have been conflicting rulings over the years from the Supreme Court.As far back as the mid-1980s, anti-abortion groups began offering "classes" on abortion-clinic protest strategies. The high court in the past has ruled on protest guidelines: specifying distance from the clinics and what kind of conduct is permissible.The justices will revisit their ruling of two years ago that said protesters cannot be prosecuted simply for harassing patients and staff, blocking doors and other disruptive behavior. The court will clarify whether federal laws against racketeering and extortion can be used against those who, according to the official court filing, organize "sit-ins and demonstrations that obstruct public's access" to medical clinics.Abortion rights supporters say those laws were the only solution to what they call dangerous, often violent behavior aimed against those seeking or providing the medical procedure."There are protections now through some laws to make sure that people are safe, coming and going, from reproductive health providers," said Karen Pearl, interim president of Planned Parenthood, which operates 850 affiliated health centers. "This case is important because it puts again, into our law, one more way to stop that kind of violence and domestic terrorism against providers and against patients who need services."This group and others filed suit in federal court more than a decade ago.Operation Rescue, one of the plaintiffs in the case, says this is about free speech and the right of assembly.
NEW ORLEANS, Louisiana (CNN) -- Frustrated New Orleans residents appeared before Mayor Ray Nagin Tuesday with complaints about the response to Hurricane Katrina, with two speakers asking why a nation fighting to stabilize Iraq can't resolve a crisis at home.One woman suggested that New Orleans residents board buses and travel to Washington to complain to Congress, which has approved billions of dollars for relief efforts."If they can destroy a country and build it up again, why can't they fix this state?" the woman asked. (Watch mayor get an earful from citizens -- 1:27)A man added, "It's a hard thing to believe that the United States of America is spending nearly one billion [dollars] per week in Iraq, and here, in New Orleans, the United States, we're being neglected.""Why do we have to beg and plead with our president, our congressmen, our elected leaders to tell them that we need help, when it's on the media every day?"Of more than a dozen speakers at a town hall meeting called by Nagin three months after Katrina, several sharply criticized the pace of restoring natural gas by Entergy New Orleans."I am in the cold," said a woman who identified herself as the owner of a bed and breakfast. "I can't cook. I can't do business. I can't take advantage of all the business people who are coming here."Power company seeks protectionPat Ricks, Entergy's customer service manager, told the residents that water from the August 29 storm that flooded most of New Orleans entered the gas lines, which he described as a "spider web."Ricks said the effort to drain the water was like "sucking water out of a bathtub with a straw."Entergy crews have removed 923,500 gallons of water from the gas pipelines in the city, according to the utility's Web site.Ricks agreed to meet with the woman privately and give her an estimate of when she can expect service to resume.Before Katrina, Entergy New Orleans had 190,000 electrical power customers and 145,000 gas customers. The company filed for bankruptcy protection shortly after the hurricane hit.Power is now available to 115,000 of those customers and gas is available to 76,000, the utility said on its Web site."While Entergy crews continue to make repairs to its heavily damaged substations and distribution infrastructure in the hardest-hit areas of the city, the company does not anticipate that it will restore large numbers of customers at the same pace as it has since Katrina made landfall," the Web site says.Residents also complained about a lack of debris and trash removal, inadequate or no response from police to calls, and price gouging by some landlords.One woman, angry at Nagin for what she said was the city's inadequate hurricane response, said she is being evicted from her home even though she has been paying her rent. Her rent check was refused for November."As far as rent gouging, we're getting more and more complaints of that," Nagin said.New Orleans vs. IraqKatrina killed 1,086 people in Louisiana, and more than $62 billion has been set aside by the federal government for relief efforts there and in other states. By comparison, the Pentagon has said a year in Iraq costs $69 billion, based on a monthly average of $5.8 billion.White House budget chief Josh Bolten has said "substantially more" money will be needed to help hurricane-ravaged communities rebuild.Nagin addressed security concerns at Tuesday's meeting in a New Orleans hotel.He said there are 1,500 police officers and 2,500 National Guard members patrolling parts of New Orleans. The Guard is committed to staying until police are fully able to step in, Nagin said.Nagin said the city's 2 a.m. curfew will remain in place."There are still way too many areas in the city that are dark at night," the mayor said. "I'm still not totally convinced our police force is at the level of stabilization to handle" around-the-clock security, he said.On Monday, Warren J. Riley -- the man Nagin named acting police superintendent after his predecessor stepped aside in the wake of Katrina -- was sworn in as the city's full-time chief. (Watch the new man in charge -- 2:31)After Eddie Compass stepped down, Riley moved swiftly to take control of the force, announcing an investigation of 12 officers accused of taking part in looting and suspending three officers seen on video beating an unarmed black man.In addition, Riley fired 45 police officers and six civilians, accusing them of abandoning their posts either before or after Katrina flooded most of the city. More than 200 other officers remain under investigation.The mayor is scheduled to host a second town hall meeting on Wednesday in Memphis, Tennessee, for displaced residents.
(CNN) -- A brutal and record-setting hurricane season that repeatedly pounded the United States, devastated the lives of tens of thousands and spawned the historic Katrina ends November 30, at least on paper.Though December storms are still a possibility, CNN meteorologist Chad Myers says, the hurricane season officially runs from June 1 to the end of November."The hurricane season is not an on and off switch. If the water is still warm enough, we could still get a tropical storm in December, and this could be one of those years where that could happen," Myers said. (Watch a look at worst year on record --2:27)A day before the scheduled end of the season, Tropical Storm Epsilon formed over the central Atlantic Ocean. Epsilon -- the fifth letter of the Greek alphabet used by forecasters since they ran out of their standard list of names -- is not expected to threaten land. (Full story)Including Epsilon, there were 26 named storms this year, surpassing the record of 21 set in 1933. Thirteen of the storms were hurricanes, edging by one the previous record set in 1969. Seven of the hurricanes were considered major. (Deadliest, costliest and other hurricane facts)The normal seasonal average is 10 named storms, six hurricanes, and two major hurricanes, according to the National Hurricane Center.Three of the hurricanes in the 2005 season reached Category 5 status, meaning they had wind speeds greater than 155 mph at some point during the arc of the storm."We've had two Category 5 storms in several seasons, but we've never had three," said Steve Kiser, a tropical cyclone program manger at the National Weather Service. "We also set some records for the lowest pressure levels, which is an indication of a storm's intensity. So, certainly this year, we had some very intense, very strong storms."Two of the three storms that struck the United States -- Katrina and Wilma -- caused severe damage.Hurricane Katrina, whose initial readings place it among the most intense storms since 1900, cut a wide swath of destruction across the Gulf Coast states of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama.Two months after Katrina hit the Gulf Coast, the death toll stood at 1,289. Thousands were displaced to shelters around the country as entire communities and cities were flattened by the storm.The Federal Emergency Management Agency said insurance claims totaled some $23 billion. Reconstruction costs are estimated to be at least $200 billion, making Katrina the costliest storm in history.Hurricane Wilma, which passed over South Florida, is estimated to have caused between $6 billion and $9 billion in insured losses, according to AIR Worldwide, a firm that advises the insurance industry. If the estimates prove true, Wilma would rank among the top three costliest storms on record."Needless to say, it's been six long months for people living along the East Coast and the Gulf Coast," retired Air Force Brig. Gen. David L. Johnson, director of the National Weather Service, said. Looking for a reasonClimatologists believe the 2005 hurricane season fell at the peak of a cycle that alternates between low-intensity and high-intensity seasons."The climatologists have gone back into the history books to look at these cycles and typically they're anywhere from 20 to 30 years," Kiser said."If we look in the 1970s and 1980s, we had a low period, and now in the mid-90s to the current season, we're in the high period," he said. "This [cycle] began in 1995 and since then, nine of the 11 tropical cyclone seasons have been above normal."CNN's Myers cautioned there is not enough historical evidence to fully support the idea. "There certainly is the possibility of cycle," he said. "[But] the problem with all of this is that we don't know what the hurricane seasons were like 150 years ago. ... It's hard to say with the shortness of data that we have, our spectrum is so small, and we've only been really studying this for 50 years, or maybe 100 years tops."Experts and observers, however, can concretely point to several weather conditions that contributed to the intensity of the season.We think we're at the beginning of the up trend, and not the down trend. -- Chad Myers, CNN meteorologistAtmospheric conditions like wind speeds and upper-level steering flows were conducive to strengthening storms this year, Kiser said. In other words, winds were generally moving in the same direction and typically with the same speed, helping storms retain their shape and uniformity."What is not conducive for hurricanes or will tend to weaken them is that at one level, you have winds from the south, and at another level, you have winds from the north. Additionally, you could have winds at 5 mph at one level, and winds at 50 mph at another level," Kiser said.Warm water, fuel for a tropical storm, was also easily available this year because of changes in sea surface temperatures. "Just as we get seasonal changes in air temperature over the longer period, you can get changes within the sea surface temperature, and that's part of this multidetailed pattern that we see," Kiser said.Myers and Kiser had somewhat differing perspectives over how much global warming may have contributed to this season."Global warming is a problem well-known by very many scientists and it's a problem we have to deal with," Kiser said. "However, I think basically we feel that the number and the intensity [of storms this year are] more related to this high-activity period."Myers says it is possible global warming may have warmed the waters by a degree or two. "It could be half a degree for all we know [and] that little bit of 'oomph' may have taken a Category 1 storm and made it to a Category 2. It may have taken a storm that was just a tropical storm, and made it into a hurricane," he said."There's no way to put 100 percent credence on any one thing to explain the season," Myers said. "You can't make chicken soup from chicken alone. You have to have other parts in the stock. It could have been the cycle in addition to the warm water temperatures in addition to the lack of an El Nino."An El Nino occurs when the ocean-atmosphere system in the tropical Pacific Ocean is disrupted.There is a fear next year's season could bring much of the same as 2005."If we are truly in a cycle, next year we probably will have between 15 and 20 cycles. If we are in a cycle being enhanced by global warming, we may have 24 storms again," Myers said. "There's also the chance the cycle ends next year, and it just shuts itself off. We don't think that's going to happen, we think we're at the beginning of the up trend, and not the down trend.
RICHMOND, Virginia (AP) -- Virginia's governor on Tuesday spared the life of a convicted killer who would have been the 1,000th person executed in the United States since the Supreme Court allowed capital punishment to resume in 1976.Robin Lovitt's death sentence was commuted to life in prison without parole a little more than 24 hours before he was to be executed by injection Wednesday night for stabbing a man to death with a pair of scissors during a 1998 pool-hall robbery.In granting clemency, Gov. Mark R. Warner noted that evidence had been improperly destroyed after Lovitt's trial. (Watch what fueled clemency decision -- 1:06)"The commonwealth must ensure that every time this ultimate sanction is carried out, it is done fairly," Warner said in a statement.Warner, a Democrat, had never before granted clemency to a death row inmate during his four years in office. During that time, 11 men have been executed.The 1,000th execution is now scheduled for Friday in North Carolina, where Kenneth Lee Boyd is slated to die for killing his estranged wife and her father.The nation's 999th execution since capital punishment resumed a generation ago took place Tuesday morning, when Ohio put to death John Hicks, who strangled his mother-in-law and suffocated his 5-year-old stepdaughter to cover up the crime.Lovitt's lawyers, who include former independent counsel Kenneth Starr, and anti-death penalty advocates had argued that his life should be spared because a court clerk illegally destroyed the bloody scissors and other evidence, preventing DNA testing that they said could exonerate him.Lovitt was convicted in 1999 of murdering Clayton Dicks at an Arlington pool hall. Prosecutors said Dicks caught Lovitt prying open a cash register with the scissors, which police found in the woods between the pool hall and the home of Lovitt's cousin.Lovitt admitted grabbing the cash box but insisted someone else killed Dicks. Initial DNA tests on the scissors were inconclusive.Warner said he was "acutely aware of the tragic loss experienced by the Dicks family.""However, evidence in Mr. Lovitt's trial was destroyed by a court employee before that process could be completed," he said. "The actions of an agent of the commonwealth, in a manner contrary to the express direction of the law, comes at the expense of a defendant facing society's most severe and final sanction."Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
After months of denying that it was even considering plans to withdraw some troops, the Bush Administration last week shed first light on a possible timetable for trimming America's presence in Iraq. Pushed by newly assertive politicians at home as well as an eyebrow-raising statement from Iraq's leaders, and with a view toward congressional elections next fall, senior Bush officials began openly debating just how fast a withdrawal might proceed.U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, who tends to carefully calibrate every public utterance, dispensed with Foggy Bottom's typically foggy nostrums. "I do not think that American forces need to be [in Iraq] in the numbers that they are now for very much longer," she told Fox News. Although Pentagon officials bristled at Rice's venturing into military policy, they too have started discussing in public just how steep the drawdown should be from the 160,000 U.S. troops now in Iraq.The Administration's willingness to discuss removing forces from Iraq, where more than 2,100 Americans have died, followed a sharply worded statement from Iraqi leaders at an Arab League meeting in Cairo last week. The gathering of Sunnis, Shi'ites and Kurds not only demanded a timetable for the withdrawal of foreign troops but also gave implicit support to the insurgency by calling resistance "a legitimate right," so long as it doesn't involve "terrorism and acts of violence" against civilians, institutions and houses of worship.U.S. military commanders, who have long argued that troop reductions must depend on conditions on the ground, warn against any abrupt cutbacks. "A precipitous pullout would be destabilizing," says Army Lieut. General John Vines, the top ground commander in Iraq. And the Pentagon expects a spike in violence in the run-up to the December 15 election for a new parliament. But the debate over a withdrawal, spurred in part by Democratic Representative John Murtha's call two weeks ago for an accelerated departure, is now out in the open. Here are some of the key questions going forward:How serious is the troop-reduction plan?There isn't one plan, but several, each containing various options for Army General George Casey, the top U.S. military officer in Iraq. Pentagon officials acknowledged last week that the number of U.S. troops could be cut to 100,000 by the end of 2006. But Casey will face two "decision points" next year -- one in March, when he can fully assess the effects of the December 15 election, the other in June, when major U.S. units have to be told if they will deploy.At this stage, almost no one is talking about a rapid, large-scale troop drawdown. Inside the Pentagon, officers privately caution that troop levels could even rise if Iraqi security forces don't shape up as expected, if the insurgency grows more fierce or--of greatest concern--if civil strife evolves into full-fledged civil war. In fact, a senior Pentagon official tells TIME that Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld asked his planners last week to make sure they have a contingency option if things go very badly in Iraq next year.Even if the U.S. does decide to withdraw troops, it won't simply flee. Washington is spending millions on fortifying a few Iraqi bases for the long haul. "The challenge for us is, what is the right balance--not to be too present but also not to be underpresent. This will require constant calibration," U.S. Ambassador to Iraq Zalmay Khalilzad tells TIME. Indeed, last August, Army chief of staff Peter Schoomaker said that as many as 100,000 Army troops could remain in Iraq for four years.What conditions need to be met to begin a troop drawdown?First and foremost, the political process -- including significant Sunni participation -- must pass its capstone test during the December 15 election. Beyond that, Pentagon planners are tracking four main issues: enemy strength, the capability of Iraq's own security forces, effective local governance and technical and communication abilities to allow U.S. troops to talk to and support Iraqi forces when they need reinforcement. The U.S. military insists that all those benchmarks are trending in the right direction. For example, the Americans say that despite launching 50 attacks a day, the insurgents have been unable to derail political progress. Even more heartening are signs that locals are turning against the fighters: tips to U.S. forces have increased from 442 in February to 4,700 in September, although it's unclear how many lead to insurgents' being captured or killed.According to the Pentagon, less than half of Iraq's forces are combat ready. But that perception may be based on an unnecessarily strict standard. For instance, the Defense Department doesn't consider an Iraqi unit ready to fight until it can sustain itself with supplies, intelligence and communications -- a combination that takes U.S. forces years to develop. A Pentagon official said last week that 87,000 of the 212,000 Iraqis that the Defense Department classifies as "trained and equipped" are actually "in the fight," meaning fully capable of planning and waging active combat. The Iraqis have taken over from U.S. forces in a few regions, and the Americans have ceded control of 29 of the 110 military bases established by coalition forces. But U.S. troops on the ground have their doubts. "Don't trust anyone in the Iraqi army," a Marine sergeant told TIME last week as his unit moved out on patrol with Iraqi soldiers. And a senior U.S. official estimates that only 35,000 of the 110,000-strong Iraqi police force are effective and reliable.Does anyone support Senator John McCain's call to increase troops?Not many. In a speech in Washington on November 10, McCain countered those calling for a pullout, saying, "Instead of drawing down, we should be ramping up." He wants the military to add 10,000 more troops. Lower-level officers on the ground in Iraq tend to agree with the Senator; many complain that there are not enough forces to hold the territory that has been won from insurgents. But many commanders, including Army General John Abizaid, head of Central Command, argue that more U.S. troops would just mean more targets for insurgents. And some defense analysts contend that the war has so strained the U.S. Army--especially the National Guard and Reserve--that the Pentagon could not send more troops even if it wanted to.Will Iraq become safer as the U.S. begins pulling out?That's hard to say. The insurgents have been able to feed off the dislike most Iraqis have for the occupation. "The slow withdrawal of U.S. forces should eat away an important part of the insurgents' support base" and diminish their strength, predicts Seth Jones, an Iraq analyst at the Rand Corp. who advises the Pentagon. Many Sunni Arabs who boycotted Iraq's elections last January appear genuinely interested in participating in the December 15 vote, while Iraqi nationalists and former regime members active in the insurgency are signaling an interest in forming political parties rather than in continuing armed jihad. At the Cairo meeting, Iraqi leaders even indicated a willingness to cut deals with insurgents to bring them into the political process.But the CIA has been pessimistic about the likelihood of peace breaking out as U.S. troops leave. Allies in the region believe that a U.S. withdrawal would suck the steam out of the insurgency, but it may already be too late to prevent the breakup of Iraq. Some Saudi officials don't believe the situation is salvageable, says Nawaf Obaid, director of the Saudi National Security Assessment Project, which has prepared a classified study of Iraq for the Riyadh government. "As much as the Americans are trying to put a positive face on it," says Obaid, "it is highly unlikely that Iraq will emerge as a unified state."Although the U.S. is making progress in training Iraqi units to fight on their own, there is growing evidence that many Iraqi soldiers are more loyal to religious or ethnic factions than to the central government. Sunni Arabs are worried that the new Iraqi army and the Interior Ministry's security forces are infiltrated by partisan Shi'ite and Kurdish militias who target Sunnis for reprisals--a fear that gained credence this month with the discovery of 173 mostly Sunni detainees in an Interior Ministry building who were malnourished and in some cases showed signs of torture. "If the Iraqi security forces the Americans leave behind increasingly are identified as anti-Sunni, we're replacing one occupation with another," says Jeffrey White, a defense analyst with the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.Will the region be better off if the U.S. withdraws?Yes -- if the U.S. leaves behind a unified and democratic Iraq (two big ifs). Such an outcome would also improve Washington's tarnished image in the Middle East. Although most of the nearby governments believe toppling Saddam Hussein was good for Iraq and the region, the Arab world has almost universally condemned the U.S. invasion. Beyond that, many local leaders believe that the war has fueled terrorism in the region, as in the recent triple suicide bombing in Amman, Jordan. "You have ended up with a great big area -- from the Jordanian border to the outskirts of Baghdad -- being a lawless and terror-infested territory," says Ali Shukri, a former adviser to Jordan's King Hussein.Iraq's struggle to form a democratic government--with different constituencies competing for political power and votes-- has jolted other authoritarian regimes in the region. And by throwing its weight behind democracy elsewhere, the Bush Administration has helped other freedom movements in the region. In Egypt, for example, President Hosni Mubarak relented and this year allowed the country to hold its first ever multiparty presidential election. But if Iraq ends up in chaos after a U.S. military drawdown, the instability could spread to its neighbors -- and snuff out any hopes of freedom flowering elsewhere in the Arab world.Would a drawdown in Iraq make Americans safer back home?Not necessarily. Although al Qaeda has not mounted another strike against the U.S. on the scale of the 9/11 attack, it has successfully used the Iraq war in its terrorist-recruiting drive. Led by Abu Mousab al-Zarqawi, the Jordanian operative who directs many of the foreign jihadists, the Iraqi insurgency has attracted Islamic terrorists from around the world. But even without the provocation of Iraq, there's no reason to assume the terrorist threat to the U.S. would disappear. "Whether we pull out of Iraq or not," says a U.S. counterterrorism official, "al-Qaeda will still want to hit us where it hurts: in the homeland."But a withdrawal could help the U.S. redeploy to fight terrorists elsewhere. Iraq has placed a particular strain on forces belonging to the Pentagon and the CIA. The U.S. Special Operations Command, which Rumsfeld has ordered to lead the Pentagon's part of the war on terrorism, has 88% of its 7,000-odd commandos deployed overseas assigned to the wars in Iraq or Afghanistan. The CIA's clandestine service has only about 900 to 1,000 operatives, a large number of whom have rotated in and out of its Baghdad station, which has had as many as 500 spies and analysts.Strategically, however, any U.S. withdrawal would have to be conducted "from a position of strength," says Bruce Hoffman, a terrorism expert at Rand. Al Qaeda has always believed Americans lack patience and stamina when "the going gets rough," Hoffman says. "If the U.S. is seen as being stampeded out of the violence in Iraq, that will only be waving a red flag at the terrorists." But coming up with an exit strategy for Iraq -- without appearing to run away -- won't be easy.