Friday, March 23, 2012

VOA News: Economy: Economists Say Steep Challenges Await Next Administration

VOA News: Economy
Economy Voice of America
Economists Say Steep Challenges Await Next Administration
Mar 24th 2012, 00:38

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A panel of leading economists at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace says whoever wins the 2012 election has his work cut out. Whether President Barack Obama wins a second term or Americans decide change is necessary, the economists say the next administration faces an uphill challenge. Among them are persistently high unemployment, a surging national debt and the inability of political leaders to agree on very much.

"Under my administration, America is producing more oil today than at any time in the last eight years," said Obama.

"Since the president [Obama] has been president, the cost of gasoline has doubled," said former Massachusetts governor and Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney.

Soaring gasoline prices

Even as America's political leaders argue over who has the better energy policy, most economists say there's little anyone can do in the short term to lower gasoline prices.  

The same goes for fixing Europe's debt crisis - or the slowdown in Chinese manufacturing.

But a panel of economic experts says there's no shortage of domestic problems that require immediate attention. The housing market remains weak. Income inequality in the U.S. is now among the highest in the world. And despite a slowly improving job picture, labor economist Ron Blackwell said nearly one in five Americans is either unemployed or underemployed

"Whatever it means economically, this is socially and politically unsustainable," he said.

Also unsustainable is the nation's rising debt, now approaching $15 trillion.

Add to that the increasing burden on American taxpayers as millions of baby boomers - those born between 1946 and 1964 - reach retirement age.

"This is going to be 40,000 per person in today's dollars in about 15 years. Multiply that by 7 to 8 million baby boomers - you're talking about $3 trillion per year or so in today's dollars, each year to pay the baby boomers their Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid [health] benefits," said economist Laurence Kotlikoff.

Seeking elusive compromise

It's a scenario Kotlikoff said will eventually bankrupt the country if political leaders do nothing. But finding agreement will be difficult.  

With the majority of election spending now being financed by the top one half of one percent of the American population, former U.S. undersecretary of Commerce Robert Shapiro said a handful of wealthy donors can now dictate who gets what done in Congress.

"What that is doing is exacerbating a polarization, which has developed in the last 15 years - and a polarization that is particularly dangerous because it's a polarization that coincides with a nearly even division of the country," said Shapiro.

While the panel insists the slowly recovering U.S. economy remains among the most dynamic and most resilient in the world - Shapiro said today's highly contentious climate could lead to political paralysis on the most important economic issues of the day.

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VOA News: USA: Economists Say Steep Challenges Await Next Administration

VOA News: USA
USA Voice of America
Economists Say Steep Challenges Await Next Administration
Mar 24th 2012, 00:38

<!--AV-->
A panel of leading economists at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace says whoever wins the 2012 election has his work cut out. Whether President Barack Obama wins a second term or Americans decide change is necessary, the economists say the next administration faces an uphill challenge. Among them are persistently high unemployment, a surging national debt and the inability of political leaders to agree on very much.

"Under my administration, America is producing more oil today than at any time in the last eight years," said Obama.

"Since the president [Obama] has been president, the cost of gasoline has doubled," said former Massachusetts governor and Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney.

Soaring gasoline prices

Even as America's political leaders argue over who has the better energy policy, most economists say there's little anyone can do in the short term to lower gasoline prices.  

The same goes for fixing Europe's debt crisis - or the slowdown in Chinese manufacturing.

But a panel of economic experts says there's no shortage of domestic problems that require immediate attention. The housing market remains weak. Income inequality in the U.S. is now among the highest in the world. And despite a slowly improving job picture, labor economist Ron Blackwell said nearly one in five Americans is either unemployed or underemployed

"Whatever it means economically, this is socially and politically unsustainable," he said.

Also unsustainable is the nation's rising debt, now approaching $15 trillion.

Add to that the increasing burden on American taxpayers as millions of baby boomers - those born between 1946 and 1964 - reach retirement age.

"This is going to be 40,000 per person in today's dollars in about 15 years. Multiply that by 7 to 8 million baby boomers - you're talking about $3 trillion per year or so in today's dollars, each year to pay the baby boomers their Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid [health] benefits," said economist Laurence Kotlikoff.

Seeking elusive compromise

It's a scenario Kotlikoff said will eventually bankrupt the country if political leaders do nothing. But finding agreement will be difficult.  

With the majority of election spending now being financed by the top one half of one percent of the American population, former U.S. undersecretary of Commerce Robert Shapiro said a handful of wealthy donors can now dictate who gets what done in Congress.

"What that is doing is exacerbating a polarization, which has developed in the last 15 years - and a polarization that is particularly dangerous because it's a polarization that coincides with a nearly even division of the country," said Shapiro.

While the panel insists the slowly recovering U.S. economy remains among the most dynamic and most resilient in the world - Shapiro said today's highly contentious climate could lead to political paralysis on the most important economic issues of the day.

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VOA News: Economy: BRICS Push for Political Clout

VOA News: Economy
Economy Voice of America
BRICS Push for Political Clout
Mar 23rd 2012, 22:37

Brazil, Russia, India and China have become powerful engines of global economic growth over the past decade.  The economist who first named these diverse emerging economies the "BRIC" nations, says their growth will continue, and may spread to some other emerging economies.

Leaders of the BRICS are gathering in India on March 28 for a summit that one expert says will "make or break" their efforts to build political clout to match their economic power.

Brazil and three other large developing nations caught the atttention of a Goldman Sachs economists more than a decade ago, prompting him to preeict they had the key ingredients for powerful economic growth.

These so-called BIRC nations - Russia, India and China are the others - are now joined by South Africa.

That Goldman Sachs economist, Jim O'Neill, says the BRICS grew even faster than he expected.  He says they far outpaced the rate of expansion in Europe and the United States.

"These guys [nations] have come to be the marginal, critical player of virtually everything in the world economy," he said.  "They were not so important collectively, and other than China, hardly relevant individually; today they are nearly 25 percent of global GDP about 10 percent more than I thought would have been likely 11 years ago."

While the rate of growth is slowing in China and Brazil, O'Neill says BRIC expansion is nowhere near finished.

The head of a company that operates more than 37,000 restaurants in 117 nations, David Novak agrees.  His firm runs Pizza Hut and Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurants around the globe.

"Look at China for example. There are 300 million people in the consuming class in China. Most experts say in eight years it will be 600 million," Novak said.  "So there is a tremendous tail wind just in terms of population growth in these countries."

Novak says his company is also placing "big bets" on India and Russia, while working to expand in Brazil, Vietnam and some African nations, even though some other analysts say there may be faster economic growth in smaller emerging nations like Mexico, Indonesia, South Korea and Turkey.

While BRIC countries have the respect and attention of business leaders, the co-director of the BRICS Research Group, University of Toronto Professor John Kirton, says these major emerging nations want to convert their economic gains into greater political influence.

"This is really a wake-up call for the West and Japan," he said.  "I think we will see from Delhi, this is not just an idle threat."

Kirton says the BRICS are fed up with Europeans and Americans always taking the top post at the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund.  He says the major emerging nations have the financial clout to start their own global financial institutions and pick a new generation of leaders.

Skeptics say the BRICS may share skills in manufacturing and exporting, but are so diverse in culture, language and politics that it will be difficult for them to unite and form effective international institutions.  But Kirton says they are united by their annoyance at an established order that gives them too little respect.

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VOA News: Middle East: US Soldier Charged in Connection to Afghan Massacre

VOA News: Middle East
Middle East Voice of America
US Soldier Charged in Connection to Afghan Massacre
Mar 23rd 2012, 23:19

The U.S. military has filed murder charges against Army Staff Sergeant Robert Bales in connection to the killings of 17 Afghan villagers, including nine children.  

Bales now faces 17 counts of pre-mediated murder and a possible death sentence. He heard the formal charges on Friday.

The case stems from the killing of 17 villagers in Kandahar province on March 11, near a U.S. military outpost where Bales was stationed.
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Afghan witnesses say Bales stabbed and shot the villagers, and set some of them on fire. A number of children were among the victims.

Bales' attorney spoke to reporters this week after meeting with his client for several hours.

"He has an early memory of that evening and he has a later memory of that evening. But he doesn't have memory of in between," said Bales' defense attorney, John Henry Browne.

Like many other U.S. service members in this decade of war, Bales had multiple deployments. He was on his fourth combat tour and suffered a brain injury in an earlier deployment. That has fueled questions about combat stress, frequent deployments and head injuries.

None of those questions or possibilities are quelling the anger of some Afghans who were already upset by another recent incident - the inadvertent destruction of the Quran by U.S. service members.  

The March 11 massacre has sparked calls for revenge and harsh justice.

"We demand from the court in the United States to give the death penalty to the U.S soldier who massacred the civilians, because he deserves hanging, because he committed the biggest crime. We want a punishment based on Islamic sharia law."

The case has raised tensions between the U.S. and Afghan governments.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai has demanded that U.S. troops - scheduled to be in his country for two more years - stay out of Afghan villages.

For now, Bales is at a military prison in the U.S. state of Kansas, awaiting word on his fate.

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VOA News: Asia: BRICS Push for Political Clout

VOA News: Asia
Asia Voice of America
BRICS Push for Political Clout
Mar 23rd 2012, 22:37

Brazil, Russia, India and China have become powerful engines of global economic growth over the past decade.  The economist who first named these diverse emerging economies the "BRIC" nations, says their growth will continue, and may spread to some other emerging economies.

Leaders of the BRICS are gathering in India on March 28 for a summit that one expert says will "make or break" their efforts to build political clout to match their economic power.

Brazil and three other large developing nations caught the atttention of a Goldman Sachs economists more than a decade ago, prompting him to preeict they had the key ingredients for powerful economic growth.

These so-called BIRC nations - Russia, India and China are the others - are now joined by South Africa.

That Goldman Sachs economist, Jim O'Neill, says the BRICS grew even faster than he expected.  He says they far outpaced the rate of expansion in Europe and the United States.

"These guys [nations] have come to be the marginal, critical player of virtually everything in the world economy," he said.  "They were not so important collectively, and other than China, hardly relevant individually; today they are nearly 25 percent of global GDP about 10 percent more than I thought would have been likely 11 years ago."

While the rate of growth is slowing in China and Brazil, O'Neill says BRIC expansion is nowhere near finished.

The head of a company that operates more than 37,000 restaurants in 117 nations, David Novak agrees.  His firm runs Pizza Hut and Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurants around the globe.

"Look at China for example. There are 300 million people in the consuming class in China. Most experts say in eight years it will be 600 million," Novak said.  "So there is a tremendous tail wind just in terms of population growth in these countries."

Novak says his company is also placing "big bets" on India and Russia, while working to expand in Brazil, Vietnam and some African nations, even though some other analysts say there may be faster economic growth in smaller emerging nations like Mexico, Indonesia, South Korea and Turkey.

While BRIC countries have the respect and attention of business leaders, the co-director of the BRICS Research Group, University of Toronto Professor John Kirton, says these major emerging nations want to convert their economic gains into greater political influence.

"This is really a wake-up call for the West and Japan," he said.  "I think we will see from Delhi, this is not just an idle threat."

Kirton says the BRICS are fed up with Europeans and Americans always taking the top post at the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund.  He says the major emerging nations have the financial clout to start their own global financial institutions and pick a new generation of leaders.

Skeptics say the BRICS may share skills in manufacturing and exporting, but are so diverse in culture, language and politics that it will be difficult for them to unite and form effective international institutions.  But Kirton says they are united by their annoyance at an established order that gives them too little respect.

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VOA News: Americas: BRICS Push for Political Clout

VOA News: Americas
Americas Voice of America
BRICS Push for Political Clout
Mar 23rd 2012, 22:37

Brazil, Russia, India and China have become powerful engines of global economic growth over the past decade.  The economist who first named these diverse emerging economies the "BRIC" nations, says their growth will continue, and may spread to some other emerging economies.

Leaders of the BRICS are gathering in India on March 28 for a summit that one expert says will "make or break" their efforts to build political clout to match their economic power.

Brazil and three other large developing nations caught the atttention of a Goldman Sachs economists more than a decade ago, prompting him to preeict they had the key ingredients for powerful economic growth.

These so-called BIRC nations - Russia, India and China are the others - are now joined by South Africa.

That Goldman Sachs economist, Jim O'Neill, says the BRICS grew even faster than he expected.  He says they far outpaced the rate of expansion in Europe and the United States.

"These guys [nations] have come to be the marginal, critical player of virtually everything in the world economy," he said.  "They were not so important collectively, and other than China, hardly relevant individually; today they are nearly 25 percent of global GDP about 10 percent more than I thought would have been likely 11 years ago."

While the rate of growth is slowing in China and Brazil, O'Neill says BRIC expansion is nowhere near finished.

The head of a company that operates more than 37,000 restaurants in 117 nations, David Novak agrees.  His firm runs Pizza Hut and Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurants around the globe.

"Look at China for example. There are 300 million people in the consuming class in China. Most experts say in eight years it will be 600 million," Novak said.  "So there is a tremendous tail wind just in terms of population growth in these countries."

Novak says his company is also placing "big bets" on India and Russia, while working to expand in Brazil, Vietnam and some African nations, even though some other analysts say there may be faster economic growth in smaller emerging nations like Mexico, Indonesia, South Korea and Turkey.

While BRIC countries have the respect and attention of business leaders, the co-director of the BRICS Research Group, University of Toronto Professor John Kirton, says these major emerging nations want to convert their economic gains into greater political influence.

"This is really a wake-up call for the West and Japan," he said.  "I think we will see from Delhi, this is not just an idle threat."

Kirton says the BRICS are fed up with Europeans and Americans always taking the top post at the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund.  He says the major emerging nations have the financial clout to start their own global financial institutions and pick a new generation of leaders.

Skeptics say the BRICS may share skills in manufacturing and exporting, but are so diverse in culture, language and politics that it will be difficult for them to unite and form effective international institutions.  But Kirton says they are united by their annoyance at an established order that gives them too little respect.

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VOA News: Europe: BRICS Push for Political Clout

VOA News: Europe
Europe Voice of America
BRICS Push for Political Clout
Mar 23rd 2012, 22:37

Brazil, Russia, India and China have become powerful engines of global economic growth over the past decade.  The economist who first named these diverse emerging economies the "BRIC" nations, says their growth will continue, and may spread to some other emerging economies.

Leaders of the BRICS are gathering in India on March 28 for a summit that one expert says will "make or break" their efforts to build political clout to match their economic power.

Brazil and three other large developing nations caught the atttention of a Goldman Sachs economists more than a decade ago, prompting him to preeict they had the key ingredients for powerful economic growth.

These so-called BIRC nations - Russia, India and China are the others - are now joined by South Africa.

That Goldman Sachs economist, Jim O'Neill, says the BRICS grew even faster than he expected.  He says they far outpaced the rate of expansion in Europe and the United States.

"These guys [nations] have come to be the marginal, critical player of virtually everything in the world economy," he said.  "They were not so important collectively, and other than China, hardly relevant individually; today they are nearly 25 percent of global GDP about 10 percent more than I thought would have been likely 11 years ago."

While the rate of growth is slowing in China and Brazil, O'Neill says BRIC expansion is nowhere near finished.

The head of a company that operates more than 37,000 restaurants in 117 nations, David Novak agrees.  His firm runs Pizza Hut and Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurants around the globe.

"Look at China for example. There are 300 million people in the consuming class in China. Most experts say in eight years it will be 600 million," Novak said.  "So there is a tremendous tail wind just in terms of population growth in these countries."

Novak says his company is also placing "big bets" on India and Russia, while working to expand in Brazil, Vietnam and some African nations, even though some other analysts say there may be faster economic growth in smaller emerging nations like Mexico, Indonesia, South Korea and Turkey.

While BRIC countries have the respect and attention of business leaders, the co-director of the BRICS Research Group, University of Toronto Professor John Kirton, says these major emerging nations want to convert their economic gains into greater political influence.

"This is really a wake-up call for the West and Japan," he said.  "I think we will see from Delhi, this is not just an idle threat."

Kirton says the BRICS are fed up with Europeans and Americans always taking the top post at the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund.  He says the major emerging nations have the financial clout to start their own global financial institutions and pick a new generation of leaders.

Skeptics say the BRICS may share skills in manufacturing and exporting, but are so diverse in culture, language and politics that it will be difficult for them to unite and form effective international institutions.  But Kirton says they are united by their annoyance at an established order that gives them too little respect.

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VOA News: USA: US Soldier Charged in Connection to Afghan Massacre

VOA News: USA
USA Voice of America
US Soldier Charged in Connection to Afghan Massacre
Mar 23rd 2012, 23:19

The U.S. military has filed murder charges against Army Staff Sergeant Robert Bales in connection to the killings of 17 Afghan villagers, including nine children.  

Bales now faces 17 counts of pre-mediated murder and a possible death sentence. He heard the formal charges on Friday.

The case stems from the killing of 17 villagers in Kandahar province on March 11, near a U.S. military outpost where Bales was stationed.
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Afghan witnesses say Bales stabbed and shot the villagers, and set some of them on fire. A number of children were among the victims.

Bales' attorney spoke to reporters this week after meeting with his client for several hours.

"He has an early memory of that evening and he has a later memory of that evening. But he doesn't have memory of in between," said Bales' defense attorney, John Henry Browne.

Like many other U.S. service members in this decade of war, Bales had multiple deployments. He was on his fourth combat tour and suffered a brain injury in an earlier deployment. That has fueled questions about combat stress, frequent deployments and head injuries.

None of those questions or possibilities are quelling the anger of some Afghans who were already upset by another recent incident - the inadvertent destruction of the Quran by U.S. service members.  

The March 11 massacre has sparked calls for revenge and harsh justice.

"We demand from the court in the United States to give the death penalty to the U.S soldier who massacred the civilians, because he deserves hanging, because he committed the biggest crime. We want a punishment based on Islamic sharia law."

The case has raised tensions between the U.S. and Afghan governments.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai has demanded that U.S. troops - scheduled to be in his country for two more years - stay out of Afghan villages.

For now, Bales is at a military prison in the U.S. state of Kansas, awaiting word on his fate.

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Middle East Voices
. Follow our Middle East reports on
Twitter and discuss them on our Facebook page.

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VOA News: Arts and Entertainment: Weighty 'Hunger Games' Hits Mark

VOA News: Arts and Entertainment
Arts and Entertainment Voice of America
Weighty 'Hunger Games' Hits Mark
Mar 23rd 2012, 22:21

In the futuristic drama, "The Hunger Games," based on Suzanne Collins' best-selling young adult novels, filmmaker Gary Ross offers up an exciting, fast-paced movie without sacrificing the weightier aspects of the story.  

The story revolves around the Hunger Games, an annual event where contestants fight to the death, in the ruins of what was once North America. The capitol of the nation of Panem forces each of its 12 districts to send a teenage boy and girl, called tributes, to compete in the nationally-televised event.

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It's rare that people sacrifice for one another, but Katniss Everdeen adores her little sister, who she has cared for her since their father died in the coal mines. When her sister is selected for the games, Katniss volunteers to go in her place.   

Her chances of survival are slim but she's a fighter who has spent all her life hunting to feed her family.

After the grim ceremony to select the tributes, Katniss and Peeta, the boy selected from her district, are taken to the capitol to prepare for the blood sport.

Actress Jennifer Lawrence, who portrays Katniss, says the film - like the Suzanne Collins' novels that inspired it - taps into the idea of political control through the media.

"We don't know what's going to happen in the future," Lawrence says, "but when you look at what's on reality television and just how history repeats itself, it's actually incredibly relevant."

Whether it's the political message, the heart-pounding scenes or the romance, the movie has already sold out in 2,000 theaters nationwide and many of those lucky enough to get tickets have traveled quite a ways to catch the premiere. Kristine Adler was one of them.  

Her mom described the ordeal involved in getting tickets. "I headed out of Chester [Virginia] at about one in the morning and got to the Barnes and Noble [bookstore] a little bit after three, and waited there until they opened at nine and was the first one in line and got the tickets for them and they have been very excited ever since."

The Motion Picture Association has defended its decision to give "The Hunger Games" a PG 13 rating, which suggests parental guidance for children under 13. It says the film does not linger on violence, but does caution that the movie can be tough on small children.

One mother who brought her young children wasn't overly concerned. "I grew up with horror movies and my kids have, too. So, we love the blood and guts in our family."

Most who attended an early screening in the Washington area were older. They expect "The Hunger Games" to be the next Harry Potter.  

"I think it will fill Harry Potter's shoes," said one teenager, "because now that that's over, I think a new teen book needs to step up."  

Jennifer Lawrence, with her nuanced performance as Katniss, proves she's up to the challenge - holding viewers spellbound for two-and-a-half hours.

This is great weekend entertainment - for those who can snag a ticket.

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VOA News: Africa: Uncertainty Reigns in Mali

VOA News: Africa
Africa Voice of America
Uncertainty Reigns in Mali
Mar 23rd 2012, 21:52

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Uncertainty reigns in Mali's capital as ethnic Tuareg rebels continued their offensive in the north, a day after mutinous soldiers overthrew Malian President Amadou Toumani Toure.

Angered by the government's mishandling of the two-month old Tuareg rebellion, renegade soldiers ousted Toure just weeks before an election that would have marked an end to his term.

Coup leaders have since suspended the constitution and arrested government ministers, but said they plan to return the country to civilian rule via elections.

'People are afraid'
Meanwhile, Bamako residents said mutineering soldiers looted the presidential palace, gas stations and shops.

Waiting in line to buy gas, Youssouf Diawara said there's no petrol for his car. "[I] don't even have gas for my motorbike to get home," he said.

Coup leader Captain Amadou Sanogo has called on soldiers to respect private property, but residents say the pillage continues.

Bread has become scarce and the price of fuel has doubled.

"People are afraid because of the soldiers," said Adama Quindo, explaining that soldiers take what is in the car or make the driver get out and take the car itself.

Sometimes, Quindo added, they break into shops.

While many Malians have said they understand the soldiers' grievances, they long for a return to civilian rule.

"We want coup leaders to hold transparent elections, and those who win to stay in power because [we] prefer civilians to the military," said Ibrahim Sangare.

A benefit to MNLA?
Analysts say the coup, which started as a mutiny at a base near the capital, has set Mali back democratically and militarily.

Soldiers said they lacked adequate weapons, ammunition and food as they confronted Tuareg separatists in the north. Numerous troops have died or been captured since the rebellion began in January.

Mali was set to hold a presidential election on April 29, but president Toure, a former army officer and coup leader himself, was not seeking another term as he was nearing the end of his two-mandate limit.

"Their grievances are real and the coup reflects a deep frustration among the soldiers," said Andre Bourgeot, an expert at the Paris-based National Center for Scientific Research.

"The coup was led by rank-and-file soldiers and low-level officers," he added. "However, the coup is not going to get them resources to fight the rebellion in the north. It will take time to set up a new central order -- time that is bound to benefit the rebels."

According to National Movement for the Liberation of the Azawad (MNLA), rebel fighters took a northern town Friday without resistance.

The MNLA's second-in-command told VOA's French-to-Africa Service that they plan to continue their advance south. "The problem," he said, "is not with a specific government, [it] is with the occupation of Azawad," territory in northern Mali the group claims as its homeland.

The rebels include former pro-Gadhafi fighters who have returned to Mali with arms acquired from the Libya conflict.

Occurring in one of West Africa's most established democracies, the coup has sparked a storm of international condemnation.

According to the Economic Community of West African States [ECOWAS], a high-level African delegation is set to arrive in Bamako to meet with coup leaders and call for a return to constitutional order.

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VOA News: USA: Obama: Florida Shooting a Tragedy, Requires 'Soul-Searching'

VOA News: USA
USA Voice of America
Obama: Florida Shooting a Tragedy, Requires 'Soul-Searching'
Mar 23rd 2012, 21:47

U.S. President Barack Obama has commented publicly for the first time about the shooting death last month of an unarmed African-American teenager in the state of Florida.  The incident has stirred racial tensions and sparked new national debate over racial attitudes. 

Until Friday, President Obama had not spoken publicly about the shooting death of Trayvon Martin, the 17-year-old African-American shot and killed by a neighborhood watch volunteer who says he acted in self-defense.

That changed at the end of a White House Rose Garden event in which Obama announced his nominee to head the World Bank.

Obama noted that the Department of Justice has opened an investigation into the shooting in an Orlando, Florida suburb, saying he wanted to avoid impairing the probe.

'Soul-searching'

But he called the incident a tragedy, saying it should cause Americans to ask questions and expect a thorough examination of every aspect of what occurred.

"I think all of us have to do some soul-searching to figure out how does something like this happen," said the president.  "And that means we examine the laws, and the context for what happened, as well as the specifics of the incident."

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Obama said when he thinks about Trayvon Martin, he thinks about his children. "If I had a son he would look like Trayvon [Martin]," he said. "And I think they are right to expect that all of us as Americans are going to take this with the seriousness it deserves and that we are going to get to the bottom of exactly what happened."

A 28-year-old man, George Zimmerman, who in media reports has been identified as white and Hispanic, has not been arrested or charged.  Police say he told them he was attacked by Martin.

Martin's family members say that if Zimmerman were African-American he would have been arrested and jailed even if claiming self-defense in such a shooting.

A Florida grand jury is scheduled to meet April 10 to consider evidence.

'Stand Your Ground Law'


President Obama did not respond to a specific part of a reporter's question involving what is called a "Stand Your Ground Law" in Florida.  

Such laws have been enacted in various forms in 21 states.  They expand the right of persons to claim self-defense if they use deadly force against a threat beyond the confines of the home. 

U.S. lawmakers are urging a thorough investigation.   

Sheila Jackson Lee is a Texas Democrat and member of the Congressional Black Caucus.  Mitch McConnell is the Republican minority leader in the Senate.

LEE: "We are not going to let this rest until we find some relief and rest for this family."

MCCONNELL: "Well it was an incredible tragedy of huge proportions and I am glad it is being investigated, and we will take a look at it as the investigation moves along."

The Florida incident has sparked demonstrations, attended by prominent civil rights leaders, and new national debate about racial attitudes and racial profiling.

As of Friday, an online petition by Martin's family calling for the prosecution of George Zimmerman had at least 1.5 million signatures.

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VOA News: Asia: The Korean DMZ: What Might Obama See?

VOA News: Asia
Asia Voice of America
The Korean DMZ: What Might Obama See?
Mar 23rd 2012, 19:35

As U.S. President Barack Obama prepares to visit the Demilitarized Zone dividing the Korean Peninsula, we take a look at the area and what it symbolizes.

The Demilitarized Zone that separates North and South Korea is the most heavily-fortified border in the world.

Barbed wire, watchtowers and land mines line the DMZ, while across the nearly 250 kilometer-long stretch of land, an estimated two million troops - one million on each side - stand ready to resume battle at anytime.

The DMZ was established in 1953 as part of the armistice agreement that ended combat in the Korean War. There has never been a peace treaty, and the two Koreas have remained in a formal state of war ever since.

Balbina Hwang, visiting professor at Georgetown University and a former State Department adviser on Korean policy, says the zone reminds the world that the Korean War is not over.

"This place is physically a reminder of the fact that the Cold War might have ended around the world, but it is still very much in place on the Korean Peninsula," said Hwang. "This is very much a relic of the beginning of the Cold War, and it's still there, and it reminds us that the lives of millions and millions of people are in jeopardy every single day."

Although it is considered one of the most dangerous places on Earth, the DMZ has seen only isolated incidents of violence. In one of the most well-known cases, in 1976, North Korean soldiers killed two U.S. soldiers who were escorting a Korean work force using axes to trim a tree. The North Koreans killed the Americans with the workers' own axes.

International observers monitor the cease-fire at the DMZ, while U.S. troops are stationed alongside the South Korean soldiers.

Despite the threat of tensions, the zone - particularly the Joint Security Area where North and South Korean forces stand face-to-face - is a popular tourist attraction. Visitors can get a glimpse of North Korean soldiers and an apparently uninhabited town, what is referred to as the North Korean "propaganda village."

VOA's East Asia correspondent Steve Herman has visited the area and says the tours are strict, from U.S. Army escorts to instructions on appropriate clothing, to warnings against pointing at anyone on the North Korean side.

"They get very upset. I mean, it's very hard when you see something over there in the North, and you're talking to someone you're with, and you say, 'Hey, look at that over there,' and you start to point. I mean, I've done that. And the soldiers admonish you pretty quickly about it. Another thing that you will sometimes notice is how the South Korean soldiers stand behind these blue buildings. They obscure half of their bodies so as not to be a prominent target for the North Korean troops, so that does give you some indication of how hazardous the duty is at the JSA and in the DMZ," said Herman.

The blue buildings belong to the U.S.-led United Nations Command. Tourists can go into one where the two sides have held negotiations. The building straddles the border, with the dividing line going straight through its negotiating table.

Despite the signs of division, Won-Ki Choi, a senior reporter in VOA's Korean Service, said the DMZ, which he has visited many times, can also be surprisingly calm.

"The atmosphere is, sometimes it's [a] very unrealistic feeling," said Choi. "Because in your brain, [you think] "Oh this is where the tragedy of the Korean division [occurred] and this is [a] very military intensive place, but if you go there, there is nothing. Just the military and there are some sound[s] of each side criticizing each other, so sometimes it's [a] very peaceful atmosphere, but behind this peaceful atmosphere, is a very, very intensive structure of division, military is over there."

The zone has also become a common stop for U.S. presidents. When President Obama travels there for the first time on Sunday, he follows in the footsteps of Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, who took over after his father Kim Jong Il's death in December, visited the DMZ earlier this month.

Media files:
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VOA News: Economy: Indonesia Signs Trade Deals with China

VOA News: Economy
Economy Voice of America
Indonesia Signs Trade Deals with China
Mar 23rd 2012, 18:46

Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has signed $17 billion in trade deals with Chinese leaders in Beijing.  

Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono wrapped up a two-day visit to Beijing, where he met with Chinese President Hu Jintao.  

Following the meetings the two countries signed $17 billion in trade deals in mining, hydropower, steel, agriculture and textiles industries.   

The agreements also included a range of strategic issues including maritime cooperation; Chinese tourism to Indonesia; and efforts to fight drug trafficking.

Before the meetings Hu commented on the importance of China's relationship with Indonesia.  

Hu says in these times of a complex and ever-changing international situation, this visit by the president will strengthen strategic communication between our two countries and expand practical cooperation.

Indonesia is a top destination for Chinese investment to meet China's growing demand for commodities such as palm oil and tin.  Last year bilateral trade reached nearly $61 billion.

Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hong Lei said today's meetings deepened strategic and economic cooperation between the two countries.  He says the two sides exchanged in depth views on bilateral relations and international and regional issues of common interest, and reached consensus.

Indonesia is the world's fourth-most-populous nation, and its economy is growing at a rate of 6.5 percent a year, making it a prominent trading partner for many countries in Asia.  Trade between Indonesia and China increased 50 percent year on year from 2010 to 2011.  

President Yudhoyono's China visit is the first stop on an Asian trip.  He next heads to Hong Kong on March 24th and Seoul on the 25th where he will meet with South Korean President Lee Myung-bak and attend the global nuclear security summit.

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VOA News: Middle East: UN Panel: Syrians Victims of Military Attacks

VOA News: Middle East
Middle East Voice of America
UN Panel: Syrians Victims of Military Attacks
Mar 23rd 2012, 18:36

The head of the U.N. Human Rights Council's Commission of Inquiry on Syria says his investigators are finding that Syrians are increasingly victims of military attacks on towns and villages.  Earlier in the crisis, victims of the Syrian crackdown tended to be involved in anti-government protests. Our correspondent at the United Nations reports on this new trend.

The three-member panel is headed by Paulo Pinheiro, a Brazilian human rights expert.  He told reporters that in the last week his investigators in the region have conducted 70 interviews and found a shift in the type of violence that has claimed more than 8,000 Syrian lives in the last year.

"There is something different that I would like  to stress: it seems to our colleagues that less people interviewed were victims of the excessive use of force during the quelling of protests, while more and more people appear to be killed or injured in the context of military operations against entire villages," said Pinheiro.

He said such attacks appear to be motivated by the pursuit of armed groups or the decision to collectively punish the population of an entire village.  He said in some cases, people reported that the village was warned it would be shelled if wanted persons did not surrender.  Pinheiro stressed that this is a new development which they are investigating further.

The commissioners also expressed concern about growing numbers of refugees in Lebanon and Syria.  The U.N. refugee agency has registered about 15,000 Syrians in Lebanon and 16,000 in Turkey.  A similar number are believed to be in Jordan.

Commission member Karen AbuZayd said that previously, individuals and families were fleeing Syria, but now entire neighborhoods are doing so.

"Now because of what is happening with the battles and the whole cities being emptied, people are coming out as whole groups and in greater numbers as whole villages and so on," said AbuZayd.

The panel noted the increasing number of high-level defections in the Syrian military, including at least four brigadier generals, as an interesting development.  They also said they had testimony that during the visit of Arab League observers to Syria in January, some doctors were instructed to drug their patients so they would be unconscious during the monitors' hospital visits.

The commission has not been granted access to Syria, but Pinheiro said this has not stopped the gathering of reliable information.  In addition to interviews with refugees and others with first-hand, verifiable information on the situation, Pinheiro said the commission has also utilized a lot of satellite information.

The commission was appointed last September and has produced two reports. The first said Syrian forces under government orders may have committed crimes against humanity in different parts of the country.

On Friday, the U.N. Human Rights Council extended the mandate of the commission of inquiry for another six months.  Friday's vote in the 47-member Geneva-based Human Rights Council was 41 states in favor, two abstentions and three votes against - Russia, China and Cuba.  One delegation was absent.

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