2013年3月18日星期一

The explosion could be heard several kilometers

Car bomb kills at least 10 in Somali capital

By Feisal Omar and Abdi Sheikh

MOGADISHU (Reuters) - A suicide car bomber killed at least 10 people on Monday in the worst attack in the Somali capital this year when he tried to kill Mogadishu's security chief near the presidential palace, police and rebels said.

Al Qaeda-linked Islamist militant group al Shabaab said it carried out the attack along Maka al Mukarram road that runs between the palace and the national theatre, a route lined by tearooms that were engulfed in fire from the blast.

A public minibus driving along the road burst into flames, when the suicide bomber set off explosives packed into his car in an attempt to kill Khalif Ahmed Ilig, the Mogadishu security chief, police and the rebels said.

Ambulance sirens wailed through the city's congested streets and a Reuters witness at the scene saw pools of blood on the ground. Residents joined in the rescue operations, pulling victims from the tea-houses and the minibus.

Police said seven civilians, three government security officers, and the bomber died in the blast that brought part of the city to a standstill. At least seven others were injured.

"The suicide car bomber targeted a senior national security officer whose car was passing near the theatre," senior police officer Abdiqadir Mohamud told Reuters, adding that the official had been injured.

"Most of the people who died were on board the minibus - civilians. This public vehicle coincidentally came between the government car and the car bomb when it was hit. Littered at the scene are human hands and flesh."

The explosion could be heard several kilometers (miles) away in Mogadishu's central business district.

Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, elected last year in the country's first national vote since dictator Siad Barre's overthrow in 1991, was in another part of the city during the blast, police said. The presidential palace stands about 100 meters from where the explosion struck.

Civil war followed the fall of Barre, which left Somalia without effective central government and awash with weapons, ushering in two decades of turmoil.

Security in Mogadishu has improved greatly since a military offensive drove Islamist rebels allied to al Qaeda out of the city in August 2011. But bombings and assassinations in Mogadishu, blamed on militants, still occur often.

The attack on Monday was the worst so far this year, police said, a stark reminder of two decades of civil strife, in a war-torn country where the central government depends heavily on a 17,600-strong African Union peacekeeping force for its survival.

"A wall, a tea-shop and two small shops collapsed from the blast. I could see injured people being pulled from under these places. There are pieces of human flesh and blood on the scene," resident Farah Abdulle told Reuters.

"This is Maka Al Mukaram road, the riskiest and busiest street in Mogadishu."

"REVENGE"

Al Shabaab spokesman Sheikh Ali Mohamud Rage said the group was behind the attack. The group, which wants to impose its strict version of Islamic law, or Sharia, said the strike was in revenge for the killing of people believed to be its members over the past few weeks.

"A car bomb by a mujahid targeted Khalif, the Mogadishu national security chief. He is seriously injured," Rage, told Reuters. "Many of his body guards and other security officials died and many others were wounded. It was revenge."

On Sunday, al Shabaab fighters regained control of Hudur, the capital of Bakool province near the Ethiopian border, after Ethiopian troops who have been part of an African offensive against the militants withdrew from the dusty town. It was not immediately clear why the Ethiopian troops pulled out.

In September, al Shabaab withdrew from the southern Indian Ocean port of Kismayu under pressure from African union troops, their last major urban bastion in the Horn of Africa state.

This signaled their demise as a quasi-conventional military force. However, they pledged to step up a campaign of suicide bombings and hit-and-run attacks.

(Writing by James Macharia; Editing by Jon Hemming)

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000 people commented on the post

Italy's Grillo warns members who defied vote orders

By James Mackenzie

ROME (Reuters) - Beppe Grillo, leader of Italy's 5-Star Movement, accused parliamentarians in his group who defied party orders over a secret ballot of lying and told them to "take the consequences", sparking furious online debate among his followers.

In the first sitting of parliament since February's inconclusive election, a handful of Senators from the anti-establishment 5-Star Movement cast their ballots with the center-left in an election to choose the new speaker, despite instructions to cast a blank vote.

In a post on his blog late on Saturday night, Grillo said 5-Star parliamentarians were bound to follow voting directions agreed by a majority in advance and indicated that he expected any members who failed to do so to resign.

"If anyone has not met this obligation, they have lied to voters and I hope they will take the necessary consequences," he said. He said he wanted 5-Star senators to declare their votes.

Whether the implied threat is carried out or not remains to be seen but it underlines the challenge Grillo, who is not in parliament himself, will face in controlling his group from a distance.

More than 10,000 people commented on the post, with opinions split between those accusing him of acting like a dictator and others accusing rebels who voted with the left in choosing anti-Mafia judge Pietro Grasso as Senate speaker of betrayal.

The fiery ex-comic, who has come down heavily on followers who have defied him in the past, has frequently been criticized for his authoritarian streak, prompting former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi to say his movement was "like Scientology".

He refuses any deal with the mainstream parties which he says are indistinguishable from each other and equally responsible for driving Italy into crisis.

However the incident highlighted tensions in the movement, which draws heavily from a generation of young Italians much less willing to accept direction from any leader, a point which emerged clearly from much of the online commentary.

"Stop talking rubbish, Beppe. What do you want? To be some kind of long-distance Duce?" wrote Diego G, referring to the wartime fascist dictator Benito Mussolini. "Who do you think you are? The 'divine' interpreter of the popular will?"

Others however were much harsher on the dissenters and there were plenty of comments supporting Grillo. "They have to respect the rules of the movement. Kick them out," wrote Gionata T.

On Sunday, Giuseppe Vacciano, one of the senators who disobeyed instructions, defended his decision to vote for Grasso and said he was ready to resign if necessary.

(Reporting By James Mackenzie; Editing by Janet Lawrence and Stephen Powell)

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$13 billion

Cyprus president tries to amend bailout plan
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    NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) — Cyprus' president said Sunday that he is trying to amend a key provision of an unpopular eurozone bailout plan that would tax deposits in the country's banks to reduce its effect on small savers.

    But in a nationally televised speech, President Nicos Anastasiades also urged lawmakers to approve the tax in a vote Monday, saying it is essential to save the country from bankruptcy.

    About 25 lawmakers from the communist-rooted AKEL party, the socialist EDEK and the Greens said they won't vote for the tax in the 56-seat Cypriot parliament amid deep resentment over a move some called disastrous. If Parliament rejects the tax, that would put the entire aid package in jeopardy.

    The vote was initially set for Sunday but was postponed until Monday — a national holiday in Cyprus. On Saturday frightened savers rushed to automated teller machines to withdraw as much of their cash as they could. Cypriot officials have expressed fears of a fully-fledged bank run once lenders reopen their doors on Tuesday.

    The announcement of the vote postponement set off an immediate scramble among top European financial officials. One lawmaker told The Associated Press that European Central Bank was pressuring Cypriot authorities to hold the vote without delay.

    "I completely share the unpleasant sentiment that this difficult and onerous decision has caused," Anastasiades said. "That's why I continue to give battle so that the decisions of the eurozone are amended in the next hours to limit the effect on small depositors."

    In exchange for €10 billion ($13 billion) in rescue money, creditors would impose a one-time tax of 6.75 percent on all bank deposits under €100,000 ($131,000) and 9.9 percent over that amount.

    A senior government official said it wants to reduce the tax on bank deposits under €100,000, with a corresponding increase in the tax on deposits over that amount. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the talks.

    The deposit tax is part of a bailout agreement reached early Saturday after talks by finance ministers from euro countries and representatives of the International Monetary Fund and the European Central Bank.

    The Cypriot bailout follows those for Greece, Portugal, Ireland and the Spanish banking sector, and it is the first one that dips into people's savings to finance a bailout. Analysts worry the move could roil international markets and jeopardize Europe's fragile economies.

    Officials in Spain and Italy tried over the weekend to reassure their citizens by saying the situation in Cyprus is unique, and that bank deposits in their countries will remain safe.

    In Cyprus, the levy — which also would hit wealthy Russian depositors who have put vast sums into Cyprus's banks in recent years — is expected to raise €5.8 billion to recapitalize the nation's banks and service the country's debt.

    Cypriot banks got into trouble after losing some €4.5 billion on their Greek government bond holdings after eurozone leaders decided to write down Greece's debt last year.

    Anastasiades didn't provide any specifics on what he would do to try to limit the pain on small depositors, but he explained why he decided to consent to the taxes. Anastasiades, who only assumed the Cypriot presidency on March 1st, had vehemently rejected any idea of going after deposits to help pay for a bailout during the campaign and after his election.

    "The solution that we have reached is certainly not the one we wanted, but it is the least painful under the circumstances because above all it leaves the management of our economy in our own hands," Anastasiades said Sunday.

    He said the tax would only be as much as the interest collected on deposits over two years and stressed that it would only happen once because it would ensure the bailout wouldn't push the country's debt to unsustainable levels.

    Anastasiades said savers would be compensated with bank shares. Moreover, all those depositors who opt to keep their money in Cypriot banks for at least two years would receive government bonds with a value equal to their losses. The bonds will be backed up by future revenue generated from the country's newfound offshore gas deposits.

    He said pension and provident funds will remain untouched, and there won't be any need for further salary and pension cuts, or an earlier demand by creditors for a financial transaction tax, which would have damaged Cyprus' financial services-driven economy.

    Cypriot lawmakers have already approved a raft of cuts to government worker salaries and pensions as well as tax increases under a preliminary bailout deal.

    The Cypriot president said if he hadn't accepted the tax on bank deposits, the European Central Bank would have stopped providing emergency funds to the country's top two lenders which would have led to the collapse of the banking system, the bankruptcy of thousands of small businesses, massive job losses, and ultimately the country's exit from the euro.

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  • 2013年3月14日星期四

    = to challenge crown five Yuta Iyama

    Jowa 37th = The Gosei-throne-Tengen-holder of the Honinbo title-stage ten (23) = to challenge crown five Yuta Iyama (33) Jowa (U-butterfly) 栩 Zhang go to Thailand wins St,r4i sdhc 2012年の世界の音楽販売は1999年以来13年ぶりに増加. 栩棋 Zhang war Jowa Go both days 21 and 22 of the day, the fourth station of the seven match series races will be held at Grand Hotel in Sakaide Sakaide, Kagawa Prefecture,グッチ サングラス 15304, Zhang Jowa Shiroban Nakaoshi to win up to 212 hands, and with two wins and two losses scoreline . Of the day both days 27 and 28, will be held at the fifth station of Atami Korakuen Hotel, Atami, Shizuoka Prefecture.

    2013年3月13日星期三

    3DSマジコン 会談後、首相が記者団に明らかにした

    【衆院選】鳩山元首相「政界引退し、第3の人生歩む」 野田首相「決断重く受け止める」民主党の鳩山由紀夫元首相は21日午後、党本部で野田佳彦首相と会談し、次期衆院選について「考え抜いた揚げ句、立候補しない決断をした。政界を引退し、第3の人生を歩みたい」と伝えた。首相は「決断を重く受け止める」と答えた,r4 karte 党総裁。会談後、首相が記者団に明らかにした,今年の新作コレクションからも目が離せない

    R4i SDHC 3DS をはじめ、プロデビュー戦の選手も多く、前半戦は若手育成の色濃いラインナップとなった

    【NJKF】3・17DAI、大石綾乃がダブルメインでタイ人と激突3月17日(日)大阪・旭区民センターにて開催される、NJKF・誠至会主催興行『NJKF 2013 2nd』の全対戦カードが発表された。

     ダブルメインでは、誠至会のDAI、2月17日にWBCムエタイ日本王座を初防衛した大石綾乃(OISHI GYM)がタイ人と対戦。またセミ以下ではNJKFジムと関西圏のジム所属選手が対戦,Acekard2i 2013年2月24日20時22分読売新聞。2月の後楽園大会でアマチュア王座を獲得したサムエル(誠至会)、北野克樹(誠至会)をはじめ、プロデビュー戦の選手も多く、前半戦は若手育成の色濃いラインナップとなった,r4i gold 後に教授

    R4 ULTRA 白102ではなく58に出て節をつけられ、黒がいけない

    【第24期女流名人戦】リーグ戦第11局(2)黒 五段 矢代 久美子 白 四段 向井 千瑛 162手完、白番中押し勝ち 【57~162】持ち時間各3時間 先番(黒)6目半コミ出し 【棋譜欄外】114コウ取る(94)、119同(111)、122同 ≪痛恨の錯覚で矢代敗北≫ 矢代久美子五段は昭和51年、東京都生まれ。平成17年に第24期女流本因坊位を獲得、翌年防衛した。 一方、向井千瑛(ちあき)四段は無冠とはいえ、タイトルに挑戦すること5回と、あと一歩のところに迫っている。昭和62年、東京都生まれ, 「キュリオシティ」は2011年11月に打ち上げられ、2012年8月に火星に着陸した。謝依旻(しぇいいみん)女流名人と同期の平成16年入段で、ライバル関係にある。実績では水をあけられてしまったがまだ発展途上、打倒・謝の可能性を十分に秘めている。 ★(前譜最終手)の切りにどう対応するかの場面。局後、「捨てるのは大きいよね」と矢代五段が言えば、向井四段もうなずいて同調する,」 恩師がW分析 野村克也氏 MLB抜きのWBCメンバーは中心選手が誰なのか不明 巨人・杉内、西武・涌井Wフライデー WBC合宿中に…キス写真も WBC韓国敗退で大誤算。★に対して黒Aとカケる手のことだ。次いで白57、黒B、白C、黒59、白D、黒Eと黒二子を捨て石にして外勢を得る手筋である。この後、白102なら黒58に手を戻してうまいが、それは勝手読み。白102ではなく58に出て節をつけられ、黒がいけない。< 前のページ12次のページ >