Monday, 30 May 2011

Yemen Unrest Spreads South



Source :Yemen Unrest Spreads South
By HAKIM ALMASMARI in San'a, Yemen, and MARGARET COKER in Abu Dhabi

A fresh armed uprising against Yemen's embattled president has erupted in the country's third-largest city, pitting well-armed Islamic fundamentalist tribal fighters against forces loyal to embattled President Ali Abdullah Saleh and his relatives, expanding the unrest from the capital in the north to the southern reaches of the nation.

The new front against President Saleh in Zinjibar, the capital of Abyan province, kicked off over the weekend when armed Islamists from the mountains outside the city moved in after hundreds of elite government units usually stationed there withdrew from their posts to bolster defenses elsewhere, the Defense Ministry said.
The security situation in Yemen has deteriorated rapidly over the past week, when political negotiations designed to end President Saleh's 33-year rule and allow him a dignified exit from office failed when he refused—for the third time—to sign the agreement hammered out among his aides, the political opposition and the international community. More than 150 people have died in clashes that have raged in San'a, the capital, a province north of the capital and now in the south in Abyan, which is one of the bastions of an al Qaeda cell prevalent in the country.
 
Zinjibar residents said fighters hail from local tribes which for years have lived outside of the central-government oversight. The group, which calls itself Ansar al-Sharia, or the Supporters of Islamic Law, isn't part of al Qaeda, residents say, but want to set up a fundamentalist Islamic emirate in the south, like the Taliban did in Afghanistan.
On Sunday, there was no sign that political negotiations had any possibility of being rekindled, and it is unclear how or if the international community can respond to the growing bloodshed. The U.S. and Saudi Arabia, both targets of Yemen-based Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, are concerned that the terrorist organization will take advantage of any civil war to increase its foothold and launch fresh attacks on international targets.
Armed fundamentalist fighters taking control of key cities like Zinjibar heighten that concern. Al Qaeda made a similar arrangement with the Taliban in Afghanistan during the 1990s, making common cause with coreligionists, which allowed Osama bin Laden to attack U.S. targets.
In Abyan on Sunday, residents said heavy clashes flared between the estimated 400 militants patrolling Zinjibar streets and Republican Guard units who have called in helicopter gunships to attack militant positions on the ground in attempts to regain control of the city.
It was impossible to confirm the total damage or deaths, but multiple residents on Sunday described horrifying scenes of urban warfare. They estimated that 200 homes were destroyed by the helicopter attacks, while medical personnel said at least 12 people were killed.
Most stores remained shuttered, and families cowered at home. Militants patrolling the city streets urged residents to stay inside while the attacks continue.
"Even if we are at home, we are scared that one bullet might enter through the window and kill a family member," said Salem Abdo, a Zinjibar resident. "Explosions are heard dozens of times every hour."
The fighting in the south escalated what had been a devolving situation in the north. On Friday, violent clashes between heavily armed tribesmen and government troops that rocked the Yemeni capital last week spread outside San'a. Now, at least three of Yemen's largest tribes are battling the central government forces, which are under the command of the president's son Ahmed and nephew Yahya.
A tribal militia opposed to President Saleh attacked military installations controlled by Republican Guards in the el-Fardha Nehem region, about 80 kilometers northeast of San'a, prompting the government to call in airstrikes, according to government and tribal sources.
Yemen is a primarily tribal community, particularly in rural areas, and loyalties to tribes runs deep. The Hashid tribe, one of the most powerful, commands hundreds of thousands of Yemenis and many of those are currently in the capital taking on government forces. In Fardha, another tribe controlled two Republican Guard bases as of Sunday, said government and tribal sources.
The uptick in violence has changed the nature of Yemen's protests—which like Egypt started as a peaceful call for transition— to a potentially dangerous armed-conflict scenario, as in Libya. When tribal blood is spilled, the tribal code of honor prioritizes revenge, and it is unclear how either President Saleh—or any possible successor—will be able to patch relations between these domestic constituents in the near future.
Critics accused President Saleh of allowing the militants to seize Zinjibar to distract from three months of mass protests calling for an end to his rule. Mr. Saleh has warned that without him, al Qaeda would seize control of Yemen.
The officials say militants seized tanks Saturday night after the governor, the security chief and the head of an army brigade left the town. Army units clashed with the militants outside the city. Medical officials said on Sunday that six civilians were killed.
Meanwhile, a Yemeni rights activist said on Sunday that a brigade of the powerful Republican Guard run by Mr. Saleh's son has defected to the opposition in a southern province. It is the first reported defection among the elite troops, which have been the core of Mr. Saleh's hold on power despite three months of massive street protests and defections by some military and tribal allies.
Activist Abdul-Rahman Ahmed said a letter from Brig. Gen. Ibrahim al-Jayfi, commander of the Guard's Ninth Brigade, was read to thousands of protesters in the provincial capital of Damar on Sunday.
Sheik Sadeq al-Ahmar of the powerful Hashid tribal confederation, whose fighters battled Mr. Saleh's troops for five days last week, has called on the Guard to help topple Mr. Saleh. The clashes killed 124 people.
—Farnaz Fassihi in Beirut 


Lawyer: Mladic won't live to see a trial



Source : Lawyer: Mladic won't live to see a trial
(AP) – 29 minutes ago



BELGRADE (AP) — The lawyer for war crimes suspect Ratko Mladic says the former general is so ill he won't live to see the start of his trial on genocide charges.

Attorney Milos Saljic asked Monday for a battery of doctors to examine the 69-year old. Mladic was arrested last week after 16 years on the run, and is said to have suffered at least two strokes.

But Bruno Vekaric, Serbia's deputy war crimes prosecutor, says Mladic is employing delaying tactic and that nothing should prevent his extradition to the international war crimes court in The Hague, Netherlands.

The U.N. tribunal charged Mladic with genocide in 1995, accusing him of orchestrating the massacre of 8,000 Muslim men and boys in Srebrenica and other war crimes of Bosnia's 1992-95 war.


Special session on school finance looms after Senate filibuster



Source : Special session on school finance looms after Senate filibuster


By Terrence Stutz/Reporter 
12:43 AM on Mon., May. 30, 2011 | Permalink 


Sen. Wendy Davis, D-Fort Worth, derailed the GOP-backed school finance legislation - cutting $2 billion a year from public schools - with a short filibuster that ended just after midnight on Monday morning. The measure had already passed the House with solid Republican support and Senate sponsors were hoping to push the bill through before the midnight deadline for passage - until Davis took the floor and said she would be talking at length against the proposal.

Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst and GOP leaders in the Senate still held out the possibility that they could get the necessary four-fifths vote of the chamber to suspend rules and take up the legislation on the last day of the regular session on Monday. But that would require at least six Democrats to join the 19 Republicans in voting to bring the proposal up - a margin that might be very difficult to achieve. Dewhurst said he is prepared to go into a special session to pass the legislation if necessary.

If the votes are not there to approve the measure Monday, Gov. Rick Perry has said he will call a special session as early as Tuesday to take up school finance. Perry also has the ability to add other issues that failed during the regular session, such as a measure to prohibit sanctuary cities in Texas for illegal immigrants. Davis said she decided to block passage of the school measure because it would cut education funding by $4 billion over the next two years and threatens the jobs of thousands of teachers and school employees. She does not favor a tax increase to make up the deficit, but wants to see the state tap its rainy day fund - which will have more than $6 billion in the coming two-year budget cycle.




2011 USA Cycling Pro Time Trial Championships



Source : 2011 USA Cycling Pro Time Trial Championships
2011 USA Cycling Pro Time Trial Championships Dave Zabriskie Rocks the Clock to Claim 6th Gold Medal and Stars & Stripes Jersey

An on form Dave Zabriskie (Garmin-CervĂ©lo) claimed his sixth national time trial championship today at the  in Greenville, South Carolina at the 2011 Greenville Hospital Systems -USA Cycling Professional Time Trial Championships.


Zabriskie who recently won the Tour of California Solvang time trial, setting a new course record, smoked the 30.7-mile rolling course in a time of 40:23.47 averaging over 30 miles per hour. 


Zabriskie was only a spare 5 seconds off the mark he set on the course in 2009 (39:37.14).


In a case of deja vu, Tom  Zirbel, the 2009 silver medalist to Zabriskie, posted a 40:54.79 to take his second silver medal. The Jamis-Sutter Home rider rode a blazing fast ITT finishing only 30 seconds off the winning pace.


“I came here for one reason, to win and take that jersey back and I accomplished that,” said Zabriskie, a two-time world championship medalist in the discipline. “I really love this event and wearing the Stars-and-Stripes – I take a lot of pride in that.”


“It’s definitely an emotional day for me,” explained Zirbel. “Before the race I was pretty focused but I didn’t really know what to expect because I didn’t have a time trial (due to mechanical difficulties) in California (AMGEN Tour of California). Now that I have a chance to reflect I’m getting a bit choked up.”


Moving up from fifth last year, Matthew Busche (Las Cruces, N.M./Team RadioShack) rounded out the podium, edging Brent Bookwalter (Athens, Ga./BMC Racing) by approximately a tenth of a second for the bronze with a time of 41:22.06.


“Coming in, I really had no expectations; I was honestly focused on the road race.” said Busche. “Coming out of California I knew I had pretty good form, but I knew Dave was riding like lightning and guys like Brent (Bookwalter) and Tejay (VanGarderen) are tough.”

Zabriskie looked to be in strong form posting a course record opening lap time of 13:10, putting him comfortably in the lead with only defending champion, Taylor Phinney (Boulder, Colo./BMC Racing) remaining. Also coming off the tough Tour the young Phinney couldn’t match those times posting only the sixth best opening lap at 13:45.


“Last year, when I found out I was going to miss (this event), I took that kinda personally,” said Zabriskie at the post-race press conference. “When I saw Taylor (Phinney) in the jersey, I was kinda, grrr, but he represented it well. It feels good to have it back.”


Following Bookwalter’s podium near-miss, reigning USA Cycling Professional Road Race National Champion Ben King (North Garden, Va./Team RadioShack) finished fifth with a time of 41:42. Former time trial junior world champion Danny Pate (Colorado Springs, Colo./HTC-Highroad) turned in the sixth best time at 42:00, just ahead of Phinney in seventh (42:13).

Kevin Harvick wins Coke 600 as Dale Earnhardt Jr. runs dry



Source : Kevin Harvick wins Coke 600 as Dale Earnhardt Jr. runs dry


By Nate Ryan, USA TODAY


CONCORD, N.C. — Kevin Harvick (FSY)  learned to like Charlotte Motor Speedway, but he wasn't feeling completely warm and fuzzy after finally conquering the track he hated in Sunday's Coca-Cola 600.

First, there was the fact he spent most of NASCAR's longest race complaining vociferously about the handling of his No. 29 Chevrolet.
"It's Charlotte," he said. "Even though we won, I'm still miserable. In about 30 minutes I will be happy when we drive out of that tunnel, and the month of May is over."

·    RESULTS: Coca-Cola 600

·    STANDINGS: Sprint Cup points leaders

·    GALLERY: Sprint Cup season in photos


Then there was how he won his first points event at the 1.5-mile superspeedway — and at whose expense it came.

Harvick inherited the lead when Dale Earnhardt Jr. (FSY)'s  No. 88 Chevrolet ran out of gas entering the final turn of the last lap. As Earnhardt coasted to a seventh that extended his Sprint Cup winless streak to 105 races, Harvick led the final 500 feet. David Ragan (FSY)  finished a career-best second, followed byJoey Logano (FSY) , Kurt Busch (FSY)  and A.J. Allmendinger

In all of his series-leading three victories this season, Harvick has seized the win late in the race. He had done the same to Earnhardt in April at Martinsville Speedway, seizing the victory with four laps remaining.

Just as he was then, Harvick was sincerely contrite about denying NASCAR's most popular driver's first trip to victory lane in nearly three years.

"I feel like complete crap, to tell you the truth," Harvick said. "Man, when I saw that thing slowing down, I was like, I really want to win the race, but why can't it be on a day when we're running bad or have something going wrong.

" Everybody sitting up here would say we want (Earnhardt's team) to win, and they're so close to winning and both times they had a chance. We are going to do what we have to do to win the races, and today it all just worked out strategy-wise that we won. But I feel so stinking bad for him, and I know how bad he wants it. But it'll happen. They keep running like that, it'll happen."

Said Richard Childress, owner of Harvick's No. 29 Chevy (which was once the No. 3 driven by Earnhardt Jr.'s late father): "We all want to see Dale Jr. win. Like Kevin said, he's going to win his races, and I'll be the first one there to congratulate him because I am an Earnhardt fan at heart, no doubt. But I pull for my guys and I want to see them win, and I'm really proud of everybody on this Budweiser team for what they did, and Junior will win."

Earnhardt, who ran well all night after starting 25th, also struck a positive tone, telling his crew on the radio that "I'm really happy to be with you guys. You all have made me a hell of a driver. We're going to get us one."

It seemed as if the stars were aligning for it to happen late Saturday. Earnhardt was running third behind Greg Biffle (FSY)  and Kasey Kahne (FSY)  with four laps remaining when a caution flew for an engine failure in Jimmie Johnson (FSY)'s  No. 48 Chevy.

The yellow set up a green-white-checkered overtime finish, and Biffle pitted from the lead because his Ford didn't have enough fuel.

On the Lap 401 restart, Earnhardt quickly passed Kahne and built a decent lead on the backstretch as several cars wrecked behind them.

NASCAR, though, elected not to throw another caution that would have extended the distance of already the longest race in its history.

On the final lap, Earnhardt slowed entering Turn 3 as Harvick passed on the outside.

"The spotter is like 'Man, they are comin', they are comin'!' " Earnhardt said. "And I'm like, 'I'm just crusin' here, what am I supposed to do? Get out and pedal this thing with my feet?' "

Perhaps the Hendrick Motorsports driver was in good spirits because he had a feeling he wouldn't be able to stretch is final tank of E15 for 57 laps.

"We weren't supposed to make it," he said. "We run out of gas and kind of knew it. We played our hand. I tried to save a ton of gas. I know I didn't save enough but as much as I could."

"I'm disappointed we didn't win. I know all our fans are disappointed to come so close. But if we'd have won that race, it'd have been a gift. We were a top-five car but never put ourselves in the lead. We ran good tonight. I'm proud of my guys and how the car unloaded. I'm proud of how we worked all night long. We've been around for a long time, we'll get plenty. Don't worry about that."
There was solace in that Earnhardt solidified his fourth-place ranking in the points with his seventh top 10 (tied with Harvick and Kyle Busch (FSY)  behind only points leaderCarl Edwards (FSY)'  nine).
"It takes a long streak of wins to get where you want to go and get confidence where you want it," Earnhardt said. "We're really fortunate to take home seventh-place points. I'd have loved to have won this race, but on the other hand, I thought it was a coin flip with a win and a 20th. The risk is so high there. This points system is different. You can't give away points. We're lucky to get out of here with anything after running out of gas on the back straightaway."
Harvick felt just as fortunate after earning only his fifth top 10 and second top five in 21 starts at Charlotte.
"We were lucky," he said in victory lane. "It's nothing against the racetrack, I just don't like racing here! But to be in victory lane, it says a lot about this Budweiser team. I griped and griped and griped all freaking day about how terrible it was. When I pull in the gate, I just have a bad attitude here, so hopefully this helps."

It's the 17th career victory for Harvick, 35, and this one might mean as much as any before it — even despite the hard feelings about Earnhardt.
"This is a huge accomplishment for us," Harvick said. "We've been at this for 10 years now. Just every time we've come here, just nothing has really went our way. I've struggled, so just to be in position to win the race was an accomplishment for us tonight.

"But to know the history, to know how much the Charlotte area means to this sport. That (trophy) will sit right next to those particular trophies and mean just as much as those because this is a hell of a race to win. We're going to celebrate it like it's our last one, because it might be. You never know."

Saturday, 28 May 2011

Ratko Mladic arrest: What next for Serbia?




Balkans analyst

"Mladic is the past," says Serbia's Interior Minister Ivica Dacic, referring to Thursday's arrest of the former Bosnian Serb army commander indicted by the UN war crimes tribunal on charges including genocide.

In many respects he is right and it is clear that the Serbian government is now hoping to cash in on the arrest, both at home and internationally.

For several months, the government - led by the Democratic Party of Serbian President Boris Tadic - has had a clear political agenda.

It wants Serbia to be awarded the status of a candidate for membership of the European Union in December.

After that, it wants to call a general election on the basis of keeping its promise of advancing Serbia's EU integration agenda.

Of the former Yugoslav republics, Slovenia is already a member of the EU.

Croatia is a candidate but also very advanced in its negotiations for membership, while Macedonia and Montenegro are candidates but have no date to start accession talks.

Ambitious plan

Now, on the back of Gen Ratko Mladic's arrest, Serbia's government is aiming even further than candidacy. It is going to ask for a date to start accession talks at the same time.

It is an ambitious plan and certainly one that Stefan Fuele, the EU's enlargement commissioner, sympathises with. However, with a widespread anti-enlargement mood in many EU member states, this may be too much.

Still, he says enthusiastically, the arrest of Gen Mladic was just the spark that was needed to reignite the Balkan accession process.

Western Balkan countries have been afflicted with apathy, he says, and EU members with "enlargement fatigue". He hopes that the arrest will make both of these "irrelevant".

The odds are that Serbia will get candidate status but a date to start talks may be too much to hope for.

And, besides, while the arrest of Gen Mladic is a huge obstacle removed from Serbia's path, it is not the only one.

Quite apart from having to fulfil standards on all sorts of requirements, for example demonstrating that it has a well-functioning judiciary, Serbia has another major political obstacle to overcome - Kosovo.

With an overwhelmingly ethnic Albanian population, Kosovo declared independence from Serbia in 2008. Serbia rejects this, but it does not control most of Kosovo either.

Few believe that Serbia can join the EU unless a stable solution to the issue is found. Since Cyprus became a member without having solved the problem of its division first, all EU officials will tell you that this is an experience that will never be repeated again.

In March, Serbia and Kosovo began talks on mainly technical issues, but ones which touch on sovereignty and affect people's lives.

The talks have been organised by the EU. So far the atmosphere has been surprisingly good, but, as of yet, no agreements have been made.

One diplomatic source said that if Serbia wanted to achieve candidacy and move beyond, just creating a good atmosphere was not good enough.

Progress needs to be made which would suggest that, in the long run, Serbia and Kosovo could be good and co-operative neighbours.

The type of thing diplomats want to see are simple and could be agreed without prejudicing each side's position.

Economic belt-tightening

For example, all the while retaining its stance that it does not recognise Kosovo as a state, it is possible that a first deal could be struck allowing Kosovars to travel through Serbia with their identity cards issued by the Kosovo government, which they cannot do now.

Delighted that at least one obstacle is out of the way, Milica Delevic, the director of the Serbian government's EU integration office, says that it is clear that much remains to be done but she is also conscious that EU states are in an anti-enlargement mood at the moment.

Still, membership is years away, even under the best of circumstances. But an election is not. And Mr Tadic will surely have derived deep satisfaction from wrong-footing the country's largest opposition party.

In the wake of Gen Mladic's arrest, its leader Tomislav Nikolic seemed at a complete loss for something to say, beyond the fact that he was "surprised".

If Mr Nikolic had praised the arrest, he would have lost supporters, but if he had condemned it he would have lost the respectability he has tried to build for the party in western capitals since its founding in 2008.

So now all bets are on for EU candidacy for Serbia in December and an election in spring.

By then, Gen Mladic will have long since faded from the news and even if the government gets candidacy, the Democratic Party will also have to persuade voters that staying with them is their best bet in terms of jobs and income. This will be a much harder call, after several years of economic belt-tightening.

Tim Judah covers the Balkans for The Economist. He is also the author of The Serbs: History, Myth and the Destruction of Yugoslavia.

Former Serb military leader declared fit for war crimes trial




The former military leader of the Bosnian Serbs, Ratko Mladic, is fit enough to be extradited to the UN war crimes tribunal in The Hague, a court in Serbia has ruled.

The court dismissed his family's claims that he is too ill to face justice.

A judge at a special war crimes court in Belgrade agreed to the former general's extradition as it emerged that he was still in his pyjamas and had to be given help putting his clothes on when he was surprised in a dawn raid by Serb police at the culmination of a 16-year manhunt.

Mladic's relatives claimed he had suffered three strokes in the past 15 years, leaving him with a half-paralyzed right arm that meant that a male supporter had to help him get dressed when police finally caught up with him in the village of Lazarevo in northern Serbia.

The picture of a frail old man unable to dress himself is sharply at odds with that of the swaggering, bull-necked military commander who struck fear into the hearts of tens of thousands of Bosnian Muslims and Croats during the Balkan wars of the 1990s.

His family said his health problems were genuine, insisting that he is so incapacitated that he can barely speak.

His son, Darko, said: "He is in very bad shape. His right arm is half-paralyzed. His right side is partly numb. We are almost certain he cannot be extradited in such a condition."

But there was suspicion in Serbia and abroad that, like many aged Nazi war criminals before him, the pugnacious former commander of the Bosnian Serb army was exaggerating his state of health in a bid to evade extradition.

Maja Kovacevic, the judge in the war crimes court, said Mladic had been examined by a medical commission, "which has determined he is fit for further proceedings."

Mladic is likely to be extradited within the next nine days, EU officials said, despite an appeal due to be launched by his lawyers on Monday. Serbian officials said the extradition papers could be signed as early as Tuesday.

The 69-year-old ultranationalist is accused of orchestrating the worst atrocities in Europe since the end of the Second World War, including the massacre of 8,000 unarmed Bosnian Muslim men and boys in the town of Srebrenica in 1995 and the killing of around 10,000 of civilians during the 44-month siege and artillery destruction of Sarajevo, capital of the Bosnian-Muslim state that had declared independence from the former Yugoslavia.

He will face 11 charges when he appears before the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia in The Hague, including genocide, violation of the rules of war and crimes against humanity.

But for the 3,000 inhabitants of Lazarevo, the sleepy farming town near the Romanian border in which he was arrested, he remains a hero, not a war criminal. Most of the villagers are the descendants of ethnic Serbs who were transferred from their homes in Bosnia by Tito at the end of the Second World War.

Far from seeing Mladic as the perpetrator of unspeakable crimes, they regard him as a champion of the Serb cause.

Amid dusty lanes lined with cherry and almond trees, it was impossible to find anyone with a bad word to say about one of the world's most wanted men, who was arrested after being found hiding in a farmhouse owned by a cousin.

Some villagers even suggested that they rename their town, 85 km north of Belgrade, 'Mladic' as a mark of honour.

"He was an excellent man, a big man. I cannot say enough good things about him," said Rada Guzina, 86, Mladic's godmother and one of dozens of villagers linked to the former general's family.

"We had no idea he was here. We thought he was living somewhere in Serbia or maybe even in Russia."

Momcilo Zivkovic, 55, who is unemployed, said: "He is our hero, the best Serbian general, a man who enshrines all the best characteristics of the Serbian people. If we had known that he was here, we would have defended him, we would have fought for him."