Saturday, May 5, 2012

VOA News: Africa: Nigerian Churches Ramp Up Security Against Attack Risk

VOA News: Africa
Africa Voice of America
Nigerian Churches Ramp Up Security Against Attack Risk
May 5th 2012, 22:22

Throughout northern Nigeria, Christian churches are ramping up security as a militant Islamist sect, Boko Haram, targets places of worship. At a church in the northern city of Kaduna, Christians are refusing to let the near-constant threat of attack keep them from Sunday services.

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Near-daily violence in northern Nigeria is increasingly targeting churches. Bombings and other attacks have killed dozens of Christians in recent months.

Armed policeman keep watch outside this Assemblies of God parish in the Kakuri area of Kaduna, as church members pray inside.

Trust in God, says head minister, Reverend Emmanuel Daudu, does not mean letting down your guard. "We don't fear but we are security-conscious because we don't have to be relaxing and our enemies to take us unawares. We have to be alert always because we don't know their plans against us or against the church," he said.

All vehicles are checked for weapons and explosives before they enter the compound. Three policemen and a dozen volunteer security guards, led by Aminu Timothy Babah, patrol the grounds.

"We are feeling that let's try and do what we are able to do, to do the best we can, to make sure that the tension that is rising in the minds of people at least is being cooled down or being reduced," he said.

A car bomb exploded on a city street in Kaduna on Easter Sunday, killing 40 people and wounding several more. Many suspect the intended target was a nearby church compound.

The militant Islamist group, Boko Haram, has repeatedly pledged to "purify" northern Nigeria of Christians.

The sect has launched several deadly attacks against churches, the most recent at a university in Kano that killed 15 people.  Witnesses said gunmen threw explosives and then fired at those trying to flee.

Here in Kaduna, Christians like Amako Laraba say nothing can keep them from going to church.

"When you send your children to school, you are little bit afraid what might happen in the town but in the church we are safe. The Bible teach me that we should have faith in God. This is our town. This is our home. This is where we should worship so we feel very free," he said.

The two-hour service is a cathartic experience. Joyous bursts of singing break up bouts of fiery preaching and concentrated prayer.  

There are fears that attacks against Christians in this already volatile region could aggravate tensions, and even spark reprisal attacks on Muslims.

Church members, however, say they continue to pray for redemption and peace.

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VOA News: Africa: Life Returning to Normal in Mogadishu

VOA News: Africa
Africa Voice of America
Life Returning to Normal in Mogadishu
May 5th 2012, 18:35

The defeat of al-Qaida-linked Islamic militants in Somalia's capital, Mogadishu, has triggered an influx of people escaping starvation in the countryside.  The city has grown from 1.8 million to 2 million residents in eight months, putting a strain on humanitarian agencies trying to help tens of thousands of people living in tent cities with no means of support.  Officials say security is much improved, although there are still sporadic clashes and the occasional suicide bomb attack.

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VOA News: Africa: Boko Haram, Nigerian Troops Battle at Wedding Party

VOA News: Africa
Africa Voice of America
Boko Haram, Nigerian Troops Battle at Wedding Party
May 5th 2012, 19:07

A wedding thrown by members of the radical Boko Haram Islamist group ended in deadly violence Saturday.

A Nigerian military spokesman said troops were monitoring the wedding in the northeastern city of Maiduguri when members of the Boko Haram sect opened fire on them.  Lieutenant Colonel Sagir Musa said three civilians were killed and four people were wounded.

Musa said soldiers only began firing after they came under attack.

The shooting is the latest in a series of increasingly violent incidents possibly involving the radical Islamist group.

Officials in eastern Taraba state said gunmen in military uniforms abducted five people from a remote, tied their hands and shot and executed them late Friday.

Nigerian officials blamed Boko Haram militants Friday for a deadly jailbreak, also in the country's northeast.

Authorities in Borno state said gunmen stormed the prison and killed two guards, allowing an unknown number of prisoners to escape. Police spokesman Samuel Tizhe said 23 prisoners have since been recaptured.

Some Nigerians also alleged the group might have been involved in a brutal cattle raid earlier this week that left 34 people dead.

The attack on a cattle market in the northern city of Potiskum also injured more than 20 people.  Scores of livestock were killed, stolen or maimed.

Witnesses say the attack followed an earlier incident where a gang sought to rob traders at the market.  One of the robbers was caught while trying to escape and burned to death.

The gunmen returned later that night shooting indiscriminately at the market and throwing explosives.

Some information for this report was provided by AP, AFP and Reuters.

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VOA News: Middle East: UN Mission Chief in Syria Cautiously Optimistic

VOA News: Middle East
Middle East Voice of America
UN Mission Chief in Syria Cautiously Optimistic
May 5th 2012, 18:26

The U.N. mission in Syria is a small contingent trying to monitor a very large conflict.  Violence continues in Homs, Hama, Damascus and elsewhere despite a cease-fire agreed to by the government and the opposition last month. (Hear the full interview here.)

It's been termed by some an impossible mission, but U.N. mission leader General Robert Mood says his team has already seen "very specific, concrete steps on the ground."

"We see that we have a calming effect on the situation," said Mood.  "So we have seen in these places a significant reduction in shelling. We have seen a significant reduction in shooting."

In the week since the mission got underway, both sides, he says, have pulled back from positions on monitors' advice.  But with just a few dozen unarmed observers to implement the U.N.-brokered peace plan, Mood is aware the situation can quickly regress.

"We are working on a specific plan where you can go back to the specific site where you had an engagement, where you gave advice and to verify that the advice, when it was taken, is respected also 12 hours or 24 hours or two days later," Mood added.

The Norwegian general is trying to monitor the end of hostilities even as more weapons are being added to the mix. The opposition in exile argues that the military wing of the uprising needs more firepower to counter a government supply still fed by Russia.  Mood acknowledges there is fragmentation.

"But what I can tell you from my engagement is that whomever I meet, they tell me that they want to move on the basis of [U.N.-Arab League envoy] Kofi Annan's Six Point Plan, and that includes the Free Syrian Army locally, and that includes Local Coordination Committees. I am fully aware that there are others with a different agenda, that have other ideas, but I have yet to see a credible alternative to Kofi Annan's Six Point Plan. So one way to put it is that it's, for now, the only game in town," Mood explained.

But there's a wild card recently thrown into that game, the emergence of jihadist groups such as Jabhat al-Nusra, claiming responsibility for various attacks.  The Syrian government has long blamed foreign terrorists for what started as a popular uprising.  Mood says he cannot confirm such groups are on the ground, but has heard reports of foreign militants from various sources. The threat, he says, provides for a rare moment of common ground between the government and its opponents.

"I've also received the message from almost the same players across the spectrum that they don't want to see the future of Syria - a very proud, warm, hospitable people - being dictated by groups from the outside having different agendas," Mood said.

While the chasm between a decades-long autocratic government and an increasingly militarized opposition remains huge, Mood, who served in a previous U.N. mission in the region, sees reason for hope.

"I get a sense that all the players are eager to see this move forward on the basis of political solutions because they see that the alternative - more violence, more kids being killed, more trouble for families in these hot spots - is a very bad alternative," Mood noted.

But he prefaces the statement by saying the willingness should not be overestimated.  It is, he says, "too early to judge."

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VOA News: Europe: Post-Shipwreck, Italian Cruise Line Launches New Vessel

VOA News: Europe
Europe Voice of America
Post-Shipwreck, Italian Cruise Line Launches New Vessel
May 5th 2012, 17:39

The Italian cruise line that suffered a deadly shipwreck earlier this year unveiled a new luxury cruise ship Saturday in Venice, along with new safety measures.

Costa Crociere's new nearly $670-million vessel, the Costa Fascinosa, will now be the largest cruise ship flying the Italian flag.

The launch of the more than 114,000-ton cruise ship comes nearly four months after the Costa Concordia ran aground off the Tuscan island of Giglio, killing 32 people. The ship, carrying 4,200 passengers and crew, capsized when its captain deviated from his planned route and struck a reef.

Costa chairman and retiring chief executive Pier Luigi Foschi said Saturday that such an incident should not have happened and will not happen again. He said the company, owned by the Florida-based Carnival Corporation, is fully accountable to the Italian authorities.

The cruise line is also introducing a number of new safety measures, including new procedures for providing emergency training for passengers and a real-time monitoring system to allow the company to follow the routes of all its ships.

The captain of the Costa Concordia, Francesco Schettino, remains under house arrest, accused of manslaughter and abandoning ship.

Some information for this report was provided by AP, AFP and Reuters.

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VOA News: Middle East: UN Mission Chief in Syria Offers Cautious Hope

VOA News: Middle East
Middle East Voice of America
UN Mission Chief in Syria Offers Cautious Hope
May 5th 2012, 16:46

The following is a transcript of an interview with the Head of the U.N. Supervision Mission in Syria, Norwegian General Robert Mood, done in Damascus on May 5, 2012 by VOA Middle East Correspondent Elizabeth Arrott.

ELIZABETH ARROTT: U.N. officials have said they've seen signs that there's been a reduction in violence under the plan, but we're still seeing these amateur videos of really quite horrific attacks. What can you quantify in terms of a reduction in violence since you have been here?

GENERAL ROBERT MOOD:
I arrived six days ago, on Sunday, so the mission has been on the ground for six days.  What is very important to note is that where we go, currently, with 40 unarmed observers, but we are spreading out into different cities - so we are on the ground in Homs, in Hama, in Idlib and Daraa and Rif Damascus - we see that we have a calming effect on the situation, so we have seen in these places a significant reduction in shelling. We have seen a significant reduction in shooting.  We cannot be in all places obviously with that amount of observers, but I can indeed verify that in six days we have seen a calming effect and a reduction in violence where we have people deployed on the ground.

ARROTT:
Specifically, do you see things like the Syrian army not firing unless it is being fired upon.  Have you have seen the withdrawal of tanks, of troops back to their barracks and if so that they've stayed there and it's continued after your team has left.  Is there a way to monitor that?

MOOD: What I can verify in a couple of instances, in several instances that my observers already on the ground have engaged with both elements from the Syrian army and with elements from the opposition and they have taken the advice of the observers to move to a different location because this would be seen as something that would be challenging the agreement and the commitment that has been made by the parties.  So, we are seeing very specific, concrete steps on the ground that the arrival of the observers have an effect and their advice on the ground is being respected.

ARROTT:
And again, how can you ensure that is held after you leave the area?

MOOD: Our challenge indeed that we are currently have 40 observers and we will become 300 observers I hope by the end of the month if not earlier.  We cannot obviously be in every hot spot all the time, and whether you have 300 or several more hundred observers that is going to continue to be the case.  So, what we are working on is a specific plan where you can go back to the specific site where you had an engagement, where you gave an advice and to verify that the advice when it was taken is respected also twelve hours or twenty four hours or two days later.

ARROTT:
The point of the mission is to get to a point where it's calm enough that serious political talks can take place, presumably that would be Mr. Anan's call when that is being reached, but from a military stand point, what are you looking for?


MOOD: We are specifically looking, in UNSMIS (UN Supervision Mission in Syria), at the violence, at the cessation of violence, at the calming effect and of course we are combining that with the talks we have with all parties, with leaders from many factions.  I have myself left what we could name government controlled areas and had engagement locally, on the ground, with the opposition, with the armed opposition and received commitments from them.  And a common message, a very strong common message from the government and from the opposition is that they would like to see Kofi Annan succeed with his Six Point Plan.  I get the sense that there is a willingness.  We should not overestimate it.  It is too early to judge how big this opportunity is.  But I get a sense that all the players are eager to see this move forward on the basis of political solutions because they see that the alternative - more violence, more kids being killed, more trouble for families in these hot spots - is a very bad alternative.

ARROTT: So you're hearing from the Free Syrian Army people here that they want to abide by the plan, but we're also hearing from the opposition, especially outside, that they want to have the military wing of the opposition armed.

MOOD: There is an element of fragmentation in all this that obviously is a challenge. But what I can tell you from my engagement is that whomever I meet, they tell me that they want to move on the basis of Kofi Annan's Six Point Plan, and that includes the Free Syrian Army locally, and that includes Local Coordination Committees. I am fully aware that there are others with different agenda, that have other ideas, but I have yet to see a credible alternative to Kofi Annan's Six Point Plan. So one way to put it is that it's for now the only game in town. That means everyone involved, whether we are talking about the observers on the ground, whether we are talking about Kofi Annan, whether we are talking about the Syrian government, the opposition, everyone, they need to work together and to try, each of them, to widen these opportunities and then we have a choice. We can move in a direction of a political solution, slowly, step by step.  Not in six days, not in twelve days, but step by step in a direction where we will have the political dimension being dominating instead of the violence being dominating.

ARROTT: There seems to be an additional wild card thrown into this: the emergence of some jihadist groups like Jabhat al Nusra.  How serious do you think the threat is that they could scuttle the plan by making it impossible for the Syrian government to stand down?

MOOD: I've heard, I've been given these messages by several people.  I cannot verify that there are other groups on the ground but I'm receiving the same messages.  Now the message from me, from the mission, from the U.N. and I believe in this context I could also add from the other players involved is we are not going to serve the aspirations of the Syrian people by more weapons, by more bombs, by more violence.  We are going to serve the aspirations of the Syrian people and the families and the children of Syria by choosing the other route.  So whomever, whomever sees more guns, more bombs, more violence as a solution in Syria should refrain from putting that into the situation and give the Syrian people the opportunity to move forward without violence.

ARROTT:
Have you heard reports about the emergence of these groups, presumably from the government, but also from the opposition side?

MOOD: I have heard the argument from several sides that there are - might be someone in the country that come from the outside and to be quite frank, I've also received the message from almost the same players across the spectrum that they don't want to see the future of Syria - a very proud, warm, hospitable people being dictated by groups from the outside, having different agendas. They want the Syrian people to decide their direction on the basis of Kofi Annan's Six Point Plan.

ARROTT: On a practical matter, we've heard reports that sometimes when people opposed to the government come and speak to the monitors when they're traveling around, that there have been reprisals against them afterwards.  What steps do you take to make sure that while you're trying to help that you don't actually make the situation worse for certain individuals?


MOOD: There's obviously a risk when we are in a situation where you have what you could call an abyss of suspicion. Not surprisingly and understandable from whichever direction you look at it, that you the fear of how information might be used and you have different reports on these things going on.   So, what we are doing on the ground is to make sure that when we engage with people that we are doing that in a place, in a setting where, to the extent possible, we can hope, we can believe, we can verify that risk is minimized. And we also take very strong care that we are using names, we are using any information in a way that will not put anyone at a greater risk.  

ARROTT: The mission, obviously, is to work for the cease-fire but there are other elements involved including the release of detained, arbitrarily detained people, the easing of the humanitarian situation.  You're stretched so thin on the monitoring level, how do you prioritize these other areas?

MOOD: The mission of the United Nations Supervision Mission in Syria can be described, simplified in two dimensions.  We are focusing on monitoring the cessation of armed violence in all its forms.  We're doing that by presence on the ground, by pushing out and by engaging in a dialogue building trust with the parties.  The second part of it, which is secondary, is to support the other elements of the Kofi Annan's plan. On these issues - you have the humanitarian issues, you have the detainees issues, you have other issues - on these issues, we report, based on listening, seeing, going to places and observing and when we collect that information, we make sure that that assessment, that evaluation, that information is received by the agencies that have a delivery responsibility in Syria.  Key players being the Syrian Red Crescent, key players being the other agencies, delivering on this. Our role is to report and then try to give them, or verify the information to them so that they can take care of the delivering aspects of those points of Kofi Annan's Six Point Plan.  

ARROTT: In your time previously in Syria, you've spoken about the warmth of the Syrian people.  Among the people that you built relations with, were any of them opposed to Assad and being able to in, what you call, the abyss of suspicion in previous times?

MOOD: I left Syria last time in February 2011.  It was a very different situation. I think it is key for any audience, if I might use that term, outside Syria to understand that the Syria we meet on the ground is very different from the Syria they see through the dramatic headlines in the media and through the reports in the written media.  The Syrian people, they are proud, they are warm, they are extremely proud of their history.  They are also proud of the secular characteristics of their society. And they are scared about the alternative, many of them, because that alternative for them is seen as a collapse and a direction that would lead to even more violence and more suffering.

So at the surface of it, in Syria today, the amount of normalcy, to put it that way, across the country is rather surprising. And the highways, they're all very high quality, so you can, if you travel in Syria avoiding, let's say, the hotspots, you can get a feel for a very, very normal, open, hospitable country - almost a normalcy.  But then you have almost a black and white change, because when you go into the hotspots, you meet children, families, individuals that have been through a terrible amount of suffering and that are living under conditions that are not conditions any human beings should be living under.   So it's a different situation.  

But I think it's fair to say that the Syrian people, they are now at a very, very important crossroads - they Syrian government and the opposition alike.  There is a possibility.  We have a choice.  We can move this country together - the observer force, the government, the opposition, the politicians - in the direction of less violence and a political solution.  The other choice is not something I want to talk about and address, but it's a choice that I hear all the parties being skeptical to and fearing. That provides some hope for the future of this mission and the future of the Syrian people and their aspirations.

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VOA News: Middle East: International Artists Bring New Excitement to Zimbabwe

VOA News: Middle East
Middle East Voice of America
International Artists Bring New Excitement to Zimbabwe
May 5th 2012, 16:49

Zimbabwe has long struggled with such issues as land seizures, violence, election irregularities, human rights abuse and economic troubles.  But each year, Zimbabwe hosts a week-long event that provides a respite from the daily drudgery.  The Harare International Festival of the Arts (HIFA) brings international artists from around the globe.

Music is known as the universal language. If that maxim is confirmed anywhere it is at the Harare International Festival of the Arts, or Hifa, in Zimbabwe.

There are artists from Europe, Latin America, Central America and Africa.  One can hear music being sung in nearly every language imaginable, and the effect is the same. Happiness.

The German reggae music band Jamaram is playing in their native language. Fans try sing along. The festival is not just about music. There are actors, dancers and other practioners of the performing and visual arts.  Samm Monro, better known as Comrade Fatso, is a British-born Zimbabwean artist participating at the HIFA.  He says the arts festival plays an important role in Zimbabwean culture.

"I think HIFA week is really an important week in Zimbabwe," said Monro. "It gives us an opportunity to see what we can do as Zimbabweans. It creates an amazing space of mixing between Zimbabwean cultures, classes, et cetera."

Jamaram is a German eight-member music group performing three shows at the HIFA. One of the shows is performed free of charge for Zimbabweans who can not afford the festival's $20 entry fee. Jamaram member Samuel Philip says music is not just about entertaining people.

"No matter where you are from in the world when you do music… it does not matter, music brings people together. It is the classic. It is the universal language," he said.

HIFA organizers say they want the arts festival to become as grand as the popular Rio Festival in Rio De Janeiro, Brazil, to develop Zimbabwe's ailing economy. HIFA Chairman George Mutendadzamera says the 13-year-old annual festival is more than just artists entertaining Zimbabweans.

"It is the economic impact of HIFA," he said. "The bottom-line is when you have a festival we drink. There is employment creation. We generate wealth. Last year we created something short of 1300 jobs."

While artists and HIFA organizers are positive about the festival's cultural and economic benefits, Stanley Kwenda, the director of Artists for Democracy thinks Zimbabwean artists are being overshadowed by their international counterparts.

"Local artists like Mokoomba should get more time," he said. "They are as good as international artists. This crowd as you can see has been energized by Mokoomba. We did not get what we wanted from Mokoomba. Let us have local groups which are of international quality. We want them to give local artists more time than they give to Oprah  music, like they do to foreign artists. Mokoomba is fantastic."

Whatever the criticism, the HIFA Arts Festival is an event that has rocked Zimbabwe. And with HIFA's close Sunday, many might wish for more to help them forget their miseries in the troubled nation.

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VOA News: Europe: France's Sarkozy Set For Defeat by Socialist

VOA News: Europe
Europe Voice of America
France's Sarkozy Set For Defeat by Socialist
May 5th 2012, 16:31

France holds its presidential runoff election Sunday, with Socialist challenger Francois Hollande expected to defeat incumbent Nicolas Sarkozy.

The latest opinion polls indicate President Sarkozy has narrowed the gap behind his Socialist rival, but Hollande is still expected to emerge victorious.

In office five years, President Sarkozy has faced criticism for his handling of the economy, as well as his brash style.

Council on Foreign Relations analyst Charles Kupchan says the president has lost the popularity he once enjoyed.

"Sarkozy promised what he called 'a rupture' - a break with the past, a liberalization of the French marketplace," he said. "And he has made some incremental steps to tax reform and to try to liberalize the labor market, and he has raised the retirement age - but French growth is really stuck in neutral.  And the second thing is that Sarkozy seems to have lost his political touch.  Many, many French voters see him as insufficiently 'presidential' - he is down in the trenches.  They see him as hyperactive and unable to stick to a steady course."

Hollande is a veteran politician who headed the Socialist Party for several years, but he has never held a top government post.  Friday marked his and Sarkozy's final day of campaigning.

"Don't imagine that your problems will dissipate, evaporate suddenly with the outgoing candidate.  No, we will have to work together," said Hollande. "I can't disappoint you, that's why I have promised nothing in this campaign that I am not able to live up to.  You will not be disappointed, you will not be forgotten.  You will be defended, you will be respected because what constitutes our strength, yours and mine, is that you will respect your next president and the next head of state will respect each and everyone one of you for whatever you are, citizens of the Republic.  Together on the sixth of May, long live the Republic, long live France."

Nicolas Sarkozy
François Hollande
Nicolas Sarkozy

 

  • Elected President of France in 2007
  • Raised France's legal retirement age from 60 to 62
  • Born in 1955 and raised in Paris
  • Married to former supermodel Carla Bruni
  • Committed to balancing France's budget by 2016
François Hollande

 

  • Has never held national government office
  • Called for 75% tax on France's richest people
  • Wants to cut president's salary by 30%
  • Born 1954 in Roen
  • Not married; former partner of Segolene Royal

The Socialist candidate's presidential bid received a boost Thursday, when former candidate, centrist Francois Bayrou, said he would vote for him.  Bayrou won 9 percent of the vote in the first round of the presidential elections last month.

President Sarkozy downplayed Bayrou's announcement at a campaign rally Friday.

"Each one of us, each one of us has the decision in our hands," he said. "Those who don't vote will let others decide for them.  Those who vote, will decide with their spirit and conscience, but they should not let others decide for them."

Meanwhile, far-right leader Marine Le Pen, who finished third in the first round of balloting last month, said she will not support either candidate in the runoff.

In a televised debate Wednesday, Hollande and Sarkozy accused each other of lying during exchanges on economic policies.  In campaigning, Hollande has blamed the president for France's unemployment rate of nearly 10 percent and called for sweeping changes to improve the nation's public finances.

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VOA News: Asia: Japan Shuts Down Last Nuclear Reactor

VOA News: Asia
Asia Voice of America
Japan Shuts Down Last Nuclear Reactor
May 5th 2012, 16:41

Nearly 14 months after a powerful earthquake and tsunami triggered the most severe nuclear accident since Chernobyl, Japan is shutting down the last of its nuclear reactors.  After the accident, the Japanese government imposed safety tests on all nuclear power plants. But public concerns about their safety have slowed down the process to restart the reactors, leaving Japan's nuclear industry with an uncertain future.

For the first time in 42 years, the portion of nuclear power in Japan's energy mix is set to reach zero on Saturday night, when the last of the country's 50 commercial reactors is taken offline at the Tomari plant in Hokkaido.

After the March, 2011 earthquake and tsunami caused meltdowns at the Fukushima Daiichi plant, the Japanese government imposed inspections known as stress tests on all nuclear reactors. One by one, they were required to shut down to check their resistance to earthquakes and tsunamis.

The first reactors to have cleared the process were units 3 and 4 at the Ohi nuclear plant in Fukui Prefecture, central Japan. In early April, the government decided they were ready to go back online, as explained by the deputy cabinet secretary for public relations Noriyuki Shikata.

"We have learned enough about the cause of the accident at the Fukushima Daiichi NPP and also what needs to be done in the case of the Ohi NPP supposing that a severe accident could take place at those locations," said Shikata.

Despite the government seal of approval none of the cleared reactors have been restarted.

The government argues that without nuclear power, parts of Japan - including the central Kansai region, where the Ohi plant is located - would suffer severe power shortages this summer.

However, local residents are not sure they want to see those reactors back online yet.

Opinion polls, both in Fukui Prefecture and at the national level, indicate a majority of the public is opposed to an immediate restart of nuclear plants. The governors of neighboring prefectures demand stronger guarantees and safety measures. They also question the idea that the Kansai region needs the reactors to make it through the summer.

Deputy Cabinet Secretary Shikata says the government hasn't settled on a definite deadline for restarts. He says Tokyo remains committed to a "very intensive dialogue" with a broad base of stakeholders, including Fukui's neighboring prefectures.

Shikata admits that failure to restart the Ohi plant before the summer is now among the scenarios considered by the government.

"We think it is appropriate and desirable to restart the Ohi NPP," added Shikata.   "At the same time, we are assuming that no NPPs will be operating and the hot summer could come. If there continues to be very strong opposition or reservations, we will need to continue to engage the public, and this could be in the longer run reflected in the long-term energy mix for our economy or for our country."

In the meantime, Japan is compensating for the energy shortfall by relying on costly imports of coal, oil and natural gas. A situation that undermines Japan's energy security, its economy, and the nation's greenhouse gas emissions.

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VOA News: Africa: Calm Returns to Cairo Following Deadly Clashes

VOA News: Africa
Africa Voice of America
Calm Returns to Cairo Following Deadly Clashes
May 5th 2012, 14:25

Calm returned to Cairo on Saturday after Egypt's military rulers imposed an overnight curfew following clashes Friday that left a soldier dead and about 300 people injured.

On Friday, troops clashed with protesters demanding an immediate end to military rule, just three weeks before Egypt's landmark presidential election.

Soldiers fired tear gas and water cannons at thousands of demonstrators who massed near the Defense Ministry in Cairo's Abbassiya district.   More clashes erupted in the city late Friday.

Islamist protesters had been camping around the Defense Ministry for days. More than 300 people were arrested.

The violence took place two days after fighting in Cairo left at least 11 people dead and prompted the top two Islamist candidates for the presidency to suspend their campaigns.

Egypt's presidential election is scheduled for May 23 and 24.  The military rulers have vowed the elections will be fair.

The election will be the first since a popular uprising ousted longtime autocratic leader Hosni Mubarak more than a year ago.

The military council that took over from Mubarak has promised a democratic transition and transfer of power to an elected president by July 1.  But Egypt's generals have faced strong domestic criticism for their handling of that process, which has been plagued by periodic eruptions of deadly violence, often surrounding anti-government protests in major cities.

Islamists are angered by the ruling military's decision to bar ultraconservative Islamist cleric Hazem Abu Ismail from standing in the presidential contest.  Egypt's election commission disqualified Abu Ismail because his mother had taken joint U.S. citizenship.

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VOA News: USA: Thousands Attend the Kentucky Derby

VOA News: USA
USA Voice of America
Thousands Attend the Kentucky Derby
May 5th 2012, 14:36

The bourbon-laced mint juleps are flowing as thousands of people descend Saturday on Churchill Downs for the 138th annual Kentucky Derby. Millions more are watching one of the world's most famous horse races on television.

Spectators at the race in Louisville, Kentucky will likely be decked out in their usual fine regalia - pastel colored seersucker pants for the men and impressive millinery creations for the women.

Another tradition of the horse race is the playing of Stephen Foster's song - My Old Kentucky Home.  The song is controversial because it contains racist lyrics.

Weather forecasters say the sun will shine bright, but scattered thunderstorms are also predicted.

And then there are the horses - the real stars of the Kentucky Derby.

Sports writers say the 20-horse field is one of the most talented in years.  Odds makers say Bodemeister and Union Rags are the top contenders, relegating undefeated Gemologist to third place.

Some information for this report was provided by AP.

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VOA News: USA: Obama Begins Re-Election Campaign

VOA News: USA
USA Voice of America
Obama Begins Re-Election Campaign
May 5th 2012, 12:42

U.S. President Barack Obama officially starts his re-election campaign Saturday at two rallies.

President Obama and his wife, Michelle, will appear at what are being called  "Ready to Go" rallies in the mid-western state of Ohio and the southern state of Virginia.  

Obama faces a re-election fight in a polarized nation haunted by unemployment and sluggish economic growth. The economic problems he inherited and has struggled to solve are now part of his first term track record.  

The president said in his weekly address the recovery from "the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression " is a "work in progress."

Like the 2008 campaign, Obama is expected to mount an impressive electronic social media operation to reach voters.

Some information for this report was provided by AP.

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VOA News: USA: Sept. 11 Attack Mastermind, Co-Plotters to be Arraigned

VOA News: USA
USA Voice of America
Sept. 11 Attack Mastermind, Co-Plotters to be Arraigned
May 5th 2012, 11:58

Five men charged with planning and helping to carry out the terrorist attacks in the United States on September 11, 2001 are due to be arraigned Saturday at the U.S. military base in Cuba.

Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the self-proclaimed mastermind of the attacks, and his four co-defendants have been held for years at a U.S. military prison in Guantanamo Bay, while a legal and political battle played out over how and where to prosecute the men.  

All five face charges for killing nearly 3,000 people in the attacks in New York, Washington and Shanksville, Pennsylvania.  

The arraignment is the first step before the beginning of the trial.  The legal maneuverings are expected to last for years.

Several family members of the victims of the terrorist attacks were selected by lottery to travel to Cuba to watch the proceedings Saturday.

Some information for this report was provided by AP and AFP.

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VOA News: USA: Obama: Focus on Nation Building at Home

VOA News: USA
USA Voice of America
Obama: Focus on Nation Building at Home
May 5th 2012, 12:17

U.S. President Barack Obama says after more than a decade of war in Afghanistan, it is time to "focus on nation building here at home."

Obama said in his weekly address that Americans must ask themselves what kind of country the troops are returning to.  He said the country had to "secure the care and benefits" the veterans have earned, so that "we serve them as well as they have served us."

The president said his grandfather was able to go to college on the GI Bill after World War II when "the basic American promise" was if you work hard, you could do well enough to raise a family, own a home and send your kids to college." President Obama said "keeping that promise alive is the defining issue of our time."

President Obama said recovering from "the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression" is a "work in progress."

The president said the country needs to invest in jobs, education, clean energy, medical research, and faster transportation and communication networks.  He said the nation's priorities should not include more tax cuts for millionaires.

U.S. Senator Bob Corker, of Tennessee, said in the Republican weekly address that the spending and debt in Washington is "literally robbing" the next generation of the opportunity to "live their own American dream."

Corker said this year's presidential budget would "actually decrease" economic growth over the next decade.

The Tennessee senator said "growing the private sector," instead of the government would "ensure that we remain the strongest country in the world."

Some information for this report was provided by AP, AFP and Reuters.

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VOA News: Economy: Obama: Focus on Nation Building at Home

VOA News: Economy
Economy Voice of America
Obama: Focus on Nation Building at Home
May 5th 2012, 12:17

U.S. President Barack Obama says after more than a decade of war in Afghanistan, it is time to "focus on nation building here at home."

Obama said in his weekly address that Americans must ask themselves what kind of country the troops are returning to.  He said the country had to "secure the care and benefits" the veterans have earned, so that "we serve them as well as they have served us."

The president said his grandfather was able to go to college on the GI Bill after World War II when "the basic American promise" was if you work hard, you could do well enough to raise a family, own a home and send your kids to college." President Obama said "keeping that promise alive is the defining issue of our time."

President Obama said recovering from "the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression" is a "work in progress."

The president said the country needs to invest in jobs, education, clean energy, medical research, and faster transportation and communication networks.  He said the nation's priorities should not include more tax cuts for millionaires.

U.S. Senator Bob Corker, of Tennessee, said in the Republican weekly address that the spending and debt in Washington is "literally robbing" the next generation of the opportunity to "live their own American dream."

Corker said this year's presidential budget would "actually decrease" economic growth over the next decade.

The Tennessee senator said "growing the private sector," instead of the government would "ensure that we remain the strongest country in the world."

Some information for this report was provided by AP, AFP and Reuters.

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