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Older News Archivescom0116
NEWS SUNDAY, AUGUST
1, 2010 NEWS
EARLY EDITION
Obama:
Republicans Holding Small Businesses "Hostage"
President Barack Obama on Saturday accused Republicans of holding American
small businesses "hostage to politics" after Republican senators refused
to back a $30 billion small-business lending package. Senate Republicans
blocked the package on Thursday, dealing a fresh blow to Obama's efforts
to show Americans, in the midst of a tough election year, that his administration
is focused on tackling stubbornly high unemployment. With opinion polls
showing eroding support for Obama's handling of the economy, Democrats
fear voters will punish them for the 9.5 percent unemployment rate come
November, when all 435 seats in the House of Representatives and 37 of
the 100 seats in the Senate will be in play in mid-term elections. MSNBC
VOA VIEW: Obama and Democrats are no friends
of business.
Reports
Alert FDA To Possible Contamination
Over a seven-month period, manufacturers and distributors have reported
125 food safety issues directly to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration,
most concerning Salmonella or allergens, the agency said. Food Coach Cynthia
Sass has tips to avoid food-borne illness.One report prompted a recall
that resulted in the removal of 177 products from the market, Michael R.
Taylor, the FDA's deputy commissioner for foods, told reporters during
a telephone press briefing. The reports were sent to the Reportable Food
Registry, created when Congress mandated in 2007 that manufacturers, processors,
packers, and distributors report to the FDA any potentially harmful safety
problems with food and animal feed. ABC
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'Big
Spending' Democrats May Face Town Hall Anger Anew
As members of Congress head back to their districts for the August
recess, they could be met by the same rowdy town halls that rocked the
national healthcare debate last summer. But this summer, record-breaking
government spending would fuel the voter uprising, conservatives say. "This
is democracy's way of making a midcourse correction and providing checks
and balances to a runaway federal government," Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas,
told Fox News. Led by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Senate
Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., Democrats face two tough decisions
with big economic and political consequences. Fox
Court
Denies Request For Expedited Hearing On Arizona Immigration Law
A federal appeals court has denied Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer's request
for an expedited hearing on the state's controversial immigration law.
Instead, the case has been scheduled for a hearing during the first week
in November. Brewer had wanted public oral arguments in the case for mid-September.
The Justice Department had urged a slower schedule, and the 9th Circuit
U.S. Court of Appeals agreed in a brief order issued Friday evening. Arizona
filed its appeal Thursday, asking the court to lift U.S. District Judge
Susan Bolton's preliminary injunction on the immigration law. CNN
VOA VIEW: Democrats want to wait until
after the elections.
Obama
Hopes Rep. Rangel Can Leave "With Dignity"
President Barack Obama called ethics charges against Representative
Charles Rangel "very troubling" on Friday and said he hoped the lawmaker
could end his career "with dignity." Democrats have urged the New York
lawmaker, one of the most senior members of Congress and its former chief
tax writer, to settle the charges to avoid a trial they fear could hurt
them in congressional elections in November. Obama's comments may be seen
as indirect encouragement for Rangel to cut a deal or step down for the
good of the Democratic Party. If he resigned, that would effectively end
the congressional investigation. Reuters
VOA VIEW: Rangel is pushing his luck.
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Obama
Says `Tough Decisions' On $60 Billion Automaker Aid Now Paying Off
President Barack Obama said the “tough decisions” he made to give almost
$60 billion in aid to the U.S. auto industry saved a million jobs and led
to the strongest period of growth for automakers in a decade. In his weekly
address on the radio and the Internet, Obama said the help given to General
Motors Co. and Chrysler Group LLC have led to a “hopeful story” of economic
recovery following the nation’s worst economic crisis since the Great Depression.
“There’s no doubt that we have a long way to go and a lot of work to do
before folks here and across the country can feel whole again,” he said
in the address, recorded at a GM plant in Hamtramck, Michigan, yesterday.
“But what’s important is that we’re finally beginning to see some of the
tough decisions we made pay off.” Bloomberg
US,
Allies Complete Pacific Military Training
Monthlong military drills in the Pacific, which conclude this weekend,
were intended only as training exercises to combat terrorism and piracy
_ and were not meant to send a message to North Korea, the commander of
the drills says. Vice Adm. Richard W. Hunt said the biennial 14-nation
Rim of the Pacific military exercises had been planned for two years and
were not a reaction to North Korea's accusation earlier this month that
the U.S. and South Korea were plotting to attack. Hunt says Pacific nations
will be better able to combat terrorism, piracy and violent extremism as
a result of the exercises. The military drills that end Sunday brought
together 20,000 personnel, 32 ships, five submarines and more than 170
aircraft in waters surrounding Hawaii. Las
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Timing
Of National Guard's Deployment To Southwest Border Stirs Confusion, Anger
The 1,200 National Guard troops expected to arrive Sunday on the southwest
border for reinforcement won't finish deploying until late September, federal
officials say, stirring confusion and anger among Arizona lawmakers who
thought the deadline was Aug. 1. President Obama announced in May he would
send National Guard troops amid growing concerns about border violence
stemming from illegal immigration and drug smuggling. Many called for a
military presence along the U.S-Mexico border to assist border patrol agents
as Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer signed a controversial law making illegal immigration
a state crime -- a policy that a judge weakened this week in federal court.
Fox
News
3
Squabbling Companies Must Cooperate To Plug Well
On shore, BP, Halliburton and Transocean are engaging in a billion-dollar
blame game over the blown-out oil well in the Gulf of Mexico. At sea, they're
depending on each other to finally plug up the environmental disaster.
Workers say the companies' adversarial relationship before Congress, in
public statements and maybe one day in the courts isn't a distraction at
the site of the April 20 rig explosion, where Transocean equipment rented
by BP is drilling relief wells that Halliburton will pump cement through
to permanently choke the oil well. MSNBC
FDIC
Shuts Banks In Fla., Ga., Ore., Wash.
With 108 closures nationwide so far this year, the pace of bank failures
far outstrips that of 2009, which was already a brisk year for shutdowns.
By this time last year, regulators had closed 69 banks. The pace has accelerated
as banks' losses mount on loans made for commercial property and development.
Many companies have shut down in the recession, vacating shopping malls
and office buildings financed by the loans. That has brought delinquent
loan payments and defaults by commercial developers. The number of bank
failures is expected to peak this year and be slightly higher than the
140 that fell in 2009. That was the highest annual tally since 1992, at
the height of the savings and loan crisis. The 2009 failures cost the insurance
fund more than $30 billion. Twenty-five banks failed in 2008, the year
the financial crisis struck with force; only three succumbed in 2007. CBS
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BP
Puts Vietnam, Pakistan Assets Up For Sale To Raise Cash For Oil Spill
BP Plc, seeking cash to help pay for the worst-ever U.S. oil spill,
informed the governments of Vietnam and Pakistan that it put its production
assets in the countries up for sale. In Vietnam, BP plans to sell interests
in an offshore natural gas production field, a pipeline and a power generator,
said David Nicholas, a London-based spokesman at the company. In Pakistan,
it plans to sell oil and gas production fields, including deep-water sites,
the largest offshore acreage given to any single explorer in the country,
Nicholas said. Bloomberg
Informant
Says WikiLeaks Suspect Had Civilian Help
An Army private charged with leaking classified material to the whistleblower
website WikiLeaks had civilian help, a key figure in the case said Saturday.
The development, first reported in the New York Times, suggests an expansion
of the government's investigation into leaks including more than 76,900
secret Afghanistan war records posted on WikiLeaks in the past week. Army
and FBI officials didn't immediately return calls and e-mails from The
Associated Press asking if they are looking at possible civilian accomplices
of Army Pfc. Bradley E. Manning, who's charged under military law with
leaking classified material. Las
Vegas Sun
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Church
Plans Quran-Burning Event
In protest of what it calls a religion "of the devil," a nondenominational
church in Gainesville, Florida, plans to host an "International Burn a
Quran Day" on the ninth anniversary of the September 11, 2001, attacks.
The Dove World Outreach Center says it is hosting the event to remember
9/11 victims and take a stand against Islam. With promotions on its website
and Facebook page, it invites Christians to burn the Muslim holy book at
the church from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. "We believe that Islam is of the devil,
that it's causing billions of people to go to hell, it is a deceptive religion,
it is a violent religion and that is proven many, many times," Pastor Terry
Jones told CNN's Rick Sanchez earlier this week. CNN
Second
Senior Democrat May Face Ethics Trial
A second senior Democratic lawmaker may face a public ethics trial
this fall, adding a new threat to their party's efforts to keep control
of the House of Representatives in the November elections. The House ethics
panel is expected to say as early as on Monday that its investigative subcommittee
has found evidence that Representative Maxine Waters violated the chamber's
ethics rules, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters. The House
panel unveiled ethics charges against Representative Charles Rangel on
Thursday. Both lawmakers face potential public trials just weeks before
voters go to the polls for the November mid-term elections as a sour economy
and anti-incumbent mood already are indicating Democratic losses. Reuters
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Pakistan
Flood Death Toll Rises Above 800
A regional minister says the death toll in floods that have lashed
Pakistan has risen above 800. Mian Iftikhar Hussain, the information minister
for Khyber-Pakhtoonkhwa province in Pakistan's northwest, said Saturday
that the death reports have come in from districts around the region this
past week. Deluged roads and damaged bridges are hampering rescuers from
reaching thousands of flood victims, and fears of disease are rising as
some evacuees showed signs of diarrhea, fever and other illnesses. CBS
Taliban
Names Taken Off Sanctions List
The U.N. Security Council removed five members of the Taliban from
its sanctions list, a move seen as crucial to Afghanistan's future stability,
officials said. The three were among 20 names the government of President
Hamid Karzai submitted to the Security Council committee responsible for
maintaining the blacklist, The New York Times reported Saturday. Reconciliation
with the Taliban is being discussed by many as the only way of ending the
Afghan war, the Times reported.
Karzai has talked about taking all Taliban members off the sanctions
list, currently about 135 of them, but has not submitted any more requests,
diplomats said. UPI
Black
Lawmakers Call For Claim Action
Black U.S. lawmakers say the White House has promised $1.5 billion
in farm aid to Arkansas while claiming it can't pay a settlement to black
farmers. Six members of the Congressional Black Caucus called on President
Barack Obama to find a way to compensate black farmers who suffered discrimination
in government loan programs during the 1980s and 1990s, The Hill reported
Friday. As part of negotiations in the Senate to pass a small-business
bill, White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel promised bill sponsor Blanche
Lincoln, D-Ark, that the administration would pay out $1.5 million in disaster
assistance to farmers while they wait for programs in a 2008 farm bill
to be implemented, the Hill said. UPI
VOA VIEW: Another Obama "black thing."
'I Welcome
US Public's Support'
Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu reacted positively during a closed
meeting to discuss a Gallup poll that showed that the American public's
support for Israel at it's highest level since the First Gulf War, when
Saddam Hussein fired Scud missiles at Israeli population centers, Saturday
evening. A Gallup poll conducted in February as part of Gallup's yearly
World Affairs survey found that 67 percent Americans hold a favorable opinion
of Israel, among the highest favorable ratings for the 20 countries surveyed,
JTA reported. The poll also found that 63 percent of Americans supported
Israel in the Middle East conflict, while 15 percent supported the Palestinians.
The rest of those polled favored both sides, neither side, or had no opinion
with respect to the conflict. Jerusalem
Post
VOA VIEW: Obama is pro Palestinians.
'US
Pressuring PA Into Direct Talks'
Dr. Hanan Ashrawi, member of the Palestinian Legislative Council, reiterated
previous statements by Palestinian officials that the US would cease supporting
the Palestinian Authority if it refused to enter into direct negotiations
with Israel in an interview with London-based Arabic newspaper Al-Quds
al-Arabi published on Saturday. "They even threatened to isolate the Palestinians
and cut off relations," Ashrawi was quoted as saying. Ashrawi tells Arabic
newspaper of Washington's threats to cut ties. Jerusalem
Post
Pakistan Plays Down
David Cameron's Terror Comments
Leaked documents accuse Pakistani intelligence of helping Afghan militants
Pakistan says it expects "fruitful" talks between its president and David
Cameron despite the prime minister's comments over its alleged terror links.
Intelligence officials have cancelled a UK visit after Mr Cameron said
Pakistan should avoid links with groups that "promote the export of terror".
But the country's information minister said President Asif Ali Zardari's
visit would go ahead as planned on Tuesday. Qamar Zaman Kaira said relations
between the countries remained strong. He said any confusion over Pakistan's
commitment to tackling terrorism would be cleared up during the visit.
BBC
Israeli
Air Strikes On Gaza Kill Hamas Commander
Israeli air strikes on the Gaza Strip have killed a Hamas commander
and wounded 11 other people. Warplanes fired missiles at five targets across
Gaza, including Gaza City, last night for the first time since Israel's
three-week offensive in the territory ended 18 months ago. Hamas, the Islamist
group that controls the territory, said the man killed was Issa Batran,
42, a commander of its military wing in central Gaza and a rocket maker.
Eight of its supporters and three civilians were also injured. Guardian
New
Doubts On Recovery As US Economy Falters
The pace of the recovery of the world's largest economy slowed markedly
during the second quarter of the year, official data revealed yesterday,
prompting further anxiety about the global financial outlook. The Department
of Commerce said that US gross domestic product rose by 2.4 per cent on
an annualised basis over the three months to the end of June, down from
3.7 per cent during the first quarter. The data disappointed investors,
who had been expecting a figure of 2.6 per cent or higher, with shares
falling across Western stock markets in the hours following the release
of the data. Independent
Prescott:
Files On Iraq's WMD Made Me Nervous
Intelligence reports that were the evidence that sent British troops
into war in Iraq consisted of "a bit of tittle- tattle here and a bit more
information there", the former deputy prime minister John Prescott said
yesterday. The flimsiness of those reports made him "a little bit nervous",
but did not shake his support for the war, he told the Iraq war inquiry.
His role, as he saw it, was to support Tony Blair and keep the Cabinet
united. His remarks, on the last day of the summer session of the long-running
Chilcot inquiry, will add to widespread doubts about whether Iraq's alleged
weapons of mass destruction were the real reason that Mr Blair committed
the UK to war. His deputy appears not to have taken anything he was told
by intelligence very seriously. Giving evidence yesterday he airily dismissed
the former head of MI5, Eliza Manningham-Buller, saying: "She was always
on about the threat of terrorism. Along with it came 'Please give me more
money'." Independent
British
Troops Advance In Operation Black Prince
Bomb disposal teams slowly cleared the main road due south to the town
as commanders in Afghanistan said it might take a week to make safe the
route to the insurgents' haven. After 24 hours, 600 yards of the two-mile
long road from the edge of British controlled territory had been cleared.
Taliban fighters who had not attacked on the first day, began firing at
the base from four separate compounds on Saturday, prompting British soldiers
to fire back using sniper rifles and eventually a Javelin missile. Telegraph
Fury
As Israel President Claims English Are 'Anti-Semitic'
Israel's President Shimon Peres said that England's attitude towards
Jews was Israel's "next big problem". Photo: REUTERS Shimon Peres said
England was "deeply pro-Arab ... and anti-Israeli", adding: "They always
worked against us." He added: "There is in England a saying that an anti-Semite
is someone who hates the Jews more than is necessary." His remarks, made
in an interview on a Jewish website, provoked anger from senior MPs and
Jewish leaders who said the 87-year-old president had "got it wrong". But
other groups backed the former Israeli prime minister and said the number
of anti-semitic incidents had risen dramatically in the UK in recent years.
Telegraph
UN
Agency Adds Sites In Sri Lanka, Tanzania And US To The World Heritage List
The United Nations agency tasked with preserving global cultural heritage
today inscribed new sites in Sri Lanka, Tanzania and United States on its
World Heritage List. The new sited ¬– the Central Highlands in Sri
Lanka, the Papahânaumokuâkea islands and atolls in the United
States and the Ngorongoro Conservation Area in Tanzania – were recognized
by the World Heritage Committee of the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization (UNESCO). The committee has been meeting in Brasilia, Brazil,
this week to review candidates for inclusion on its World Heritage List
and assess the List of World Heritage in Danger. UN
News
UN
Officials Mourn Five Seminar Participants Killed In Accident In Jordan
Two senior United Nations officials today expressed deep sadness over
the deaths of five people, including two contractors for the UN Development
Programme (UNDP) and three Iraqi officials, who were killed in a bus accident
in Jordan yesterday. The Deputy Special Representative of the Secretary-General
for Iraq Christine McNab and Helen Clark, the UNDP Administrator, extended
condolences on behalf of the UN to the relatives of those who died and
the Government of Iraq. UN
News
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