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Suu Tov KhmerKrom (mysong myvoice)

Wednesday, August 12

Russian PM Putin visits breakaway Abkhazia

Writer: AFP
Published: 12/08/2009 at 06:00 PM

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin arrived in Abkhazia on Wednesday on his first visit to the breakaway Georgian region since Moscow recognised it as independent last year, a spokesman told AFP.

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin gives an interview to Abkhaz media in Sochi. Putin has arrived in Abkhazia on his first visit to the breakaway Georgian region since Moscow recognised it as independent last year, a spokesman told AFP.

"That is his first visit" since Russia recognised Abkhazia and fellow breakaway Georgian region South Ossetia as independent following a five-day war with Tbilisi last August, the spokesman said.

Putin will meet the local leadership to discuss economic cooperation and other issues, he added.

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Galapagos face ecological disaster due to tourism: study

Writer: AFP
Published: 12/08/2009 at 06:00 PM

Mosquitoes brought into the Galapagos on tourist planes and boats threaten to wreak "ecological disaster" in the islands, central to Darwin's theory of evolution, a study said Wednesday.

File photo of a seal on the shores of San Cristobal island in the Galapagos. Mosquitoes brought into the Galapagos on tourist planes and boats threaten to wreak "ecological disaster" in the islands, central to Darwin's theory of evolution, a study said.

The insects can spread potentially lethal diseases in the archipelago off Ecuador's Pacific coast, used by Charles Darwin as the basis of his seminal work "On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection".

"Few tourists realise the irony that their trip to Galapagos may actually increase the risk of an ecological disaster," said Simon Goodman of Leeds University, one of the study's co-authors.

"That we haven't already seen serious disease impacts in Galapagos is probably just a matter of luck."

The study found that the southern house mosquito, Culex quinquefasciatus, was regularly hitching rides on planes from the South American mainland, and island-hopping on tourist boats between the different islands.

Species threatened by diseases such as avian malaria or West Nile include the islands' best-known residents, its giant tortoises, as well as marine iguanas, sea lions and finches.

Arnaud Bataille, another researcher on the eight-page study, said: "On average the number of mosquitoes per aeroplane is low, but many aircraft arrive each day from the mainland in order to service the tourist industry."

Worse, "the mosquitoes seem able to survive and breed once they leave the plane," he added.

Goodman noted that Ecuador recently introduced a requirement for all aircraft flying to the Galapagos to have insecticide treatment, but said similar moves are needed for ships, and the impact needs to be evaluated.

"With tourism growing so rapidly, the future of Galapagos hangs on the ability of the Ecuadorian government to maintain stringent biosecurity protection for the islands," he said.

The study, co-authored by Leeds University, the Zoological Society of London, the University of Guayaquil, the Galapagos National Park and the Charles Darwin Foundation, was published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society, Britain's de-facto academy of sciences.

Some 10,000 people, mostly fishermen, live on the volcanic Galapagos archipelago, which rose from the Pacific seabed 10 million years ago and became famous when Darwin visited to conduct research in 1835.

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Clinton takes good governance message to Nigeria

Writer: AFP
Published: 12/08/2009 at 04:01 PM

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton took her campaign for good governance Wednesday to Nigeria, hoping to deepen ties with the African power but also help fight corruption and religious strife.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton (right) speaks to a refugee as she tours a refugee camp on the outskirts of Goma in the Democratic Republic of Congo on August 11. Clinton has taken her campaign for good governance to Nigeria, hoping to deepen ties with the African power but also help fight corruption and religious strife.

On a whirlwind trip through Africa, Clinton was holding a day of talks in Abuja, the capital of the continent's most populous nation, including a meeting with President Umaru Musa Yar?Adua.

Clinton was also due to hold a roundtable discussion with religious leaders in the wake of recent violence, the latest part of US President Barack Obama's bid to reach out to the Islamic world.

Clinton's top Africa advisor said that ties with Nigeria were crucial to the US relationship with the continent due to the country's vast size and its major oil industry, much of which feeds the US market.

"Nigeria is undoubtedly the most important country in sub-Saharan Africa," Johnnie Carson, the assistant secretary of state for Africa, told reporters on Clinton's plane to Abuja from the Democratic Republic of Congo late Tuesday.

Carson said that the United States had a "very good relationship" with Nigeria over recent years and hailed the country's increasingly active regional profile, including efforts to stabilise Sierra Leone and Liberia.

"Despite our close relationship, Nigeria faces a number of major challenges," Carson said.

He pointed to attacks on oil facilities in the Niger Delta -- which cost the developing country hundreds of thousands of barrels in crude a day -- and a flare-up in religious strife in a nation with sub-Saharan Africa's biggest Muslim population.

Nigerian security forces late last month crushed an uprising by a self-styled Taliban fundamentalist group in several northern states, leaving more than 800 people dead, the majority of them sect members.

The Obama administration has made outreach to the Islamic world a signature US policy, hoping to assuage some of the bitterness among many Muslims over former president George W. Bush's policies, particularly in the invasion of Iraq.

Clinton was set to hold a roundtable discussion with religious leaders at the Yar'Adua Centre, named after Shehu Musa Yar'Adua, the late elder brother of the current president and advocate of democratic rule.

A senior US official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that Clinton would listen to the religious leaders but that her main message would be on good governance and electoral reform.

Yar'Adua won a 2007 election that poll monitors said was riddled with problems. Nonetheless, some observers saw it as at least a small step forward in a regional giant that has only experienced few peaceful transitions of power.

"Nigeria is at something of a political crossroads. The last elections were deeply flawed," the senior US official said.

He said that Clinton would encourage Nigeria to undertake electoral reforms to ensure future polls can move forward without so much controversy.

Clinton will also hold a public forum with representatives of civil society on ways to fight Nigeria's notorious corruption.

Clinton has made good governance a key issue on her seven-nation trip. Obama in an address in Ghana last month called on Africans to take charge of their futures by standing up against corruption.

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Iran speaker rejects prison rape claims

Writer: AFP
Published: 12/08/2009 at 03:00 PM

Iran's parliament speaker Ali Larijani on Wednesday rejected claims that some election protesters had been raped in custody and rapped the opposition leader who raised the allegations.

File picture shows Iranian riot police on a street in Tehran in June during protests following presidential elections. Parliament speaker Ali Larijani dismissed on Wednesday allegations by an opposition leader that male and female election protesters had been savagely raped in custody

"The issue of detainees being sexually abused is a lie," Larijani told parliament, the official IRNA news agency reported.

"Following an investigation of detainees in Kahrizak and Evin prisons, no cases of rape and sexual abuse were found," he said, referring to the jails where most people arrested after the June election were initially detained.

Defeated presidential candidate Mehdi Karroubi claimed in a letter to powerful cleric Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani that several male and female protesters had been raped in custody and called for an investigation.

"A number of detainees have said that some female detainees have been raped savagely. Young boys held in detention have also been savagely raped," Karroubi said in his letter dated July 29.

About 4,000 opposition supporters were arrested over the unrest that swept Iran after President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's disputed re-election, officials said. Most have been released, but around 200 remain behind bars. At least 110 have also been put on trial.

Some protesters are still being held in the capital's notorious Evin prison, but the authorities have closed Kahrizak jail south of Tehran after an order from supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Larijani issued a stern warning directed at Karroubi over the allegations.

"The contents of the letter were shocking and the letter was immediately published by foreign media. Considering the sensitivity of the issue, I asked a parliamentary fact finding panel to investigate," Larijani said.

He also asked Karroubi to submit any evidence or testimony about the rapes for a "serious probe" into the claims.

"This is also a warning to politicians to take care and not to make any claims to the media before a proper investigation is done so that it is not exploited by foreigners."

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Minister in Russia's Ingushetia shot dead

Writer: AFP
Published: 12/08/2009 at 03:00 PM

The minister of construction in Russia's turbulent Ingushetia region, Ruslan Amerkhanov, was shot dead Wednesday inside his ministerial office, officials said.

A Russian special forces soldier sits on an armoured vehicle in Russia's Ingushetia region. The minister of construction in Ingushetia, Ruslan Amerkhanov, was shot dead Wednesday inside his ministerial office, officials said.

"The construction minister has been shot dead in his office," Madina Khadziyeva, spokeswoman for Ingushetia's interior ministry, told AFP.

Russian news agencies said Amerkhanov was shot dead at point-blank range when a group of armed men burst into his office in Ingushetia's capital of Magas.

Overwhelmingly Muslim Ingushetia and other regions in Russia's northern Caucasus are battling Islamist militants who are waging a low-level but increasingly deadly insurgency against the pro-Kremlin local authorities.

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Suu Kyi to challenge verdict as global anger grows

Writer: AFP
Published: 12/08/2009 at 12:00 PM

Burma democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi and her US co-defendant are to appeal against their convictions, lawyers said Wednesday as the ruling junta faced a global wave of anger over her extended detention.

Protestors demonstrate outside the embassy of Burma in London. Burma democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi and her US co-defendant are to appeal against their convictions, lawyers said as the ruling junta faced a global wave of anger over her extended detention.

US President Barack Obama led worldwide outrage at the military regime's decision on Tuesday to give Suu Kyi another 18 months of house arrest, a verdict that shuts the Nobel peace laureate out of elections in 2010.

The UN Security Council broke up an emergency meeting with no condemnation of Burma and China urged respect for the country's sovereignty, but Burma's Southeast Asian neighbours issued a rare expression of disappointment.

In Rangoon, Suu Kyi's lawyer Nyan Win said her legal team would appeal because they were "not satisfied" with the judgement, which stemmed from a stunt in which American man John Yettaw swam to her lakeside house in May.

A prison court sentenced her to three years of hard labour after finding her guilty of breaching the terms of her incarceration, but junta strongman Than Shwe commuted the punishment to a year and a half under house arrest.

"We assume that the judgement is totally wrong according to the law," Nyan Win told AFP, adding that he had received approval from Suu Kyi to proceed and could do so on Wednesday if they received a copy of the judgement.

Police and security forces blocked off the road outside her house on Wednesday.

Lawyers for Yettaw, who was sentenced to seven years of hard labour and imprisonment, would appeal "step by step" to the Burma court system and if necessary urge Than Shwe to deport him, lawyer Khin Maung Oo said.

He said Yettaw was "very calm" and "hopes for the best".

Suu Kyi, 64, has been confined for 14 of the past 20 years, ever since the military regime refused to recognise her National League for Democracy's landslide victory in the last elections held in 1990.

The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean), of which Burma is a member, added to the global chorus of dismay at the verdict, expressing "deep disappointment".

It also called for the immediate release of Suu Kyi but added that the 10-nation group -- which has been criticised in the past for failing to tackle the junta -- would "remain constructively engaged with Burma".

But China -- a key ally and major military supplier of the junta -- urged the international community to "fully respect Burma's judicial sovereignty", foreign ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu said.

The UN Security Council, which counts China and Russia among its five veto-wielding members, failed to sign off on a US-drafted statement condemning the verdict on Suu Kyi.

Debate was due to resume on Wednesday after some delegations, including China, insisted on sending the draft statement to their capitals.

In Washington, Obama called for Suu Kyi's "immediate, unconditional release" and for the freeing of more than 2,000 other political prisoners held in Burma.

The US president said the "unjust" sentence against Suu Kyi would never be able to stamp out the people of Burma's desire for freedom, accusing the regime of "continued disregard" for UN Security Council statements.

UN chief Ban Ki-moon said he was "deeply disappointed" by the Suu Kyi verdict.

Burma's state media hit back at outside involvement, with the junta-controlled New Light of Burma newspaper deriding those who "interfere in the internal affairs of other countries".

On the streets of Rangoon there was no sign of the unrest that the state media had warned against.

"People are glad that she (Suu Kyi) is at home... But things will be quiet again after one week as our people have to worry about their own lives. It is more important than politics," said security guard Zaw Naing.

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Suu Kyi, US man to appeal Burma judgement: lawyers

Writer: AFP
Published: 12/08/2009 at 11:00 AM

Burma pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi and US national John Yettaw will both lodge appeals against the ruling junta's decision to convict them, their lawyers said Wednesday.

Protestors demonstrate outside the embassy of Burma in London. Suu Kyi and US national John Yettaw will both lodge appeals against Burma's decision to convict them, their lawyers said Wednesday.

Suu Kyi's house arrest was prolonged for another 18 months on Tuesday, sparking international outrage, while her co-defendant Yettaw was sentenced to seven years of hard labour and imprisonment.

Suu Kyi's lawyer Nyan Win said her legal team would appeal because they were "not satisfied" with the judgement, which stemmed from an incident in which Yettaw swam uninvited to Suu Kyi's lakeside home in May.

"We assume that the judgement is totally wrong according to the law," said Nyan Win, adding that he had received approval from Suu Kyi to go ahead with the appeal.

He said they could begin the process Wednesday if they received a copy of the judgement.

Judges originally sentenced Suu Kyi to three years of hard labour and imprisonment, but Than Shwe, head of Burma's military regime, the State Peace and Development Council (SPDC), signed a special order commuting the sentence.

He ordered her to serve out 18 months under house arrest.

Yettaw's lawyer Khin Maung Oo they would also appeal "step-by-step" to the Burma court system. If necessary he said "we will write to the chairman of the SPDC for Mr Yettaw to be deported."

He said Yettaw was "very calm" and "hopes for the best."

US President Barack Obama led a global wave of condemnation over Aung San Suu Kyi's extended detention, which effectively rules her out of Burma's elections scheduled for 2010.

The Nobel peace laureate has been confined for nearly 14 the past 20 years, ever since the military regime refused to recognise her National League for Democracy's landslide victory in the last elections held in 1990.

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K.Rouge jail chief asks for 'strictest' punishment

Writer: AFP
Published: 12/08/2009 at 05:00 PM

The Khmer Rouge's main jail chief told a war crimes court Wednesday he would like the "strictest level of punishment" -- even death by stoning -- for his crimes against the Cambodian people.

Kaing Guek Eav, better known as Duch, the former main Khmer Rouge jail chief, is pictured in court in Phnom Penh in March 2009. Duch told a war crimes court he would like the "strictest level of punishment" -- even death by stoning -- for his crimes against the Cambodian people.

Duch, whose real name is Kaing Guek Eav, is on trial for overseeing the torture and execution of about 15,000 people at Tuol Sleng detention centre in the late 1970s.

The 66-year-old told the UN-backed tribunal that the country "can condemn me to whatever the highest level of punishment is" after his likely conviction.

"If there is a Cambodian tradition -- like it existed in the past when people threw rocks at Christ to death -- Cambodian people can do that to me. I would accept it," said Duch, who converted Christianity in the 1990s.

Duch has previously accepted responsibility for his role governing the jail and begged forgiveness for war crimes and crimes against humanity.

But he has consistently rejected claims by prosecutors that he held a central leadership role in the Khmer Rouge, and says he never personally killed anyone during the brutal 1975-79 regime.

"I will accept without challenges... all judgments which will be made by this chamber, the judgment of my role as the chairman of S-21 and all the crimes committed there," he said.

"I am humble before the Cambodian people, I accept all of these crimes and would like the Cambodian people to condemn me to the strictest level of punishment."

"My life is just one life and cannot compare to those lives which were lost during the period," he added.

Led by Pol Pot, who died in 1998, the Khmer Rouge emptied Cambodia's cities in a bid to forge an agrarian utopia, resulting in the deaths of up to two million people from starvation, overwork and torture.

Speaking of those who lost family members, Duch said, "I accept their regret, their sorrow and their suffering."

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Taiwan scrambles to rescue 700 in mudslide villages

Writer: AFP
Published: 12/08/2009 at 03:00 PM

Taiwan Wednesday began airlifting to safety more than 700 people found alive in a trio of villages flattened by muddy landslides, as the island's death toll from Typhoon Morakot hit 67.

Taiwan troops evacuate survivors in Shiaolin, Tainan county, southern Taiwan, following floods caused by Typhoon Morakot. Taiwan's military on Wednesday began a helicopter rescue of more than 700 people who were found alive in three villages flattened by landslides, a senior military officer told AFP.

The military launched the helicopter operation in the battered island's south after the region was hit by its worst flooding in half a century, inundating entire villages in water and mud and cutting off all access by road.

"We have found around 700 people alive in three villages last night and 26 more this morning. We are deploying 25 helicopters to evacuate them," Major-General Richard Hu said.

Hu said he was unable to confirm how many people had been buried or killed by the landslide in Hsiaolin and in two other remote villages in Kaohsiung county.

Heavy rains in the mid-afternoon forced rescuers to suspend the airlift after ferrying 173 of the villagers to safety, the military said, but it was not immediately clear if the effort would resume later Wednesday.

Officials have downplayed media reports that up to 600 people had been killed just in Hsiaolin, parts of which vanished under a tidal wave of mud at the weekend.

Rescuers said Tuesday that around 100 people in Hsiaolin were feared to have been buried alive.

"We believed that some were buried but it's not possible to estimate how many at this moment as almost 90 percent of the houses were buried," Hu said.

"I saw the mountain crumbling in seconds almost like an explosion and buried half of our neighbourhood," said Huang Chin-bao, 56, from Hsiaolin village.

Huang said he and 40 neighbours were guided by his two dogs to higher ground to take shelter. "The dogs are our saviours," he said.

Feelings were running high at a school in the county where relatives of the missing had gathered. Police and soldiers had to push back some who tried to storm their way onto the departing helicopters.

"I cannot wait any more. I want to look for my family," a man in his 40s shouted as he argued with soldiers.

He said he had not heard anything from his family since the typhoon dumped a record three metres (120 inches) of rainfall on southern Taiwan over the weekend.

Chu Chia-jung, 21, said she was desperate for news with only one of her many relatives in Hsiaolin accounted for.

"I've been really, really worried about my close relatives there," she said. "I hope the military can speed up their search and rescue."

Authorities said Typhoon Morakot, which also killed eight people in eastern China, had left at least 67 people dead in Taiwan.

The toll included three rescuers who died when their helicopter crashed into a river in heavy fog in the southern county of Pingtung on Tuesday.

Another 61 people were missing in Taiwan and 45 others injured.

Armoured vehicles, marine landing craft and rubber dinghies have been mobilised in the rescue operation, which involved more than 17,000 troops across the island, the defence ministry said.

The typhoon has caused at least 7.2 billion Taiwan dollars (225 million US) in agricultural damage while nearly 30,000 houses were still without power and 750,000 homes without water, according to officials.

Officials said Hong Kong pop star and actor Andy Lau was to lead a string of Taiwanese entertainers fronting a major fundraising event.

Lau, one of Hong Kong's biggest names and also popular in China and Taiwan, will join more than 200 homegrown stars to take donation pledges over the phone from the Taiwanese public on Friday in the four-hour fundraiser.

Taiwanese charities and companies have also launched donation drives for flood victims, raising more than two billion Taiwan dollars as of Tuesday, reports said. Official figures were not available.

Morakot is one of the worst typhoons to strike Taiwan in 50 years. In August 1959, a typhoon killed 667 people and left around 1,000.

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Japan digs out from typhoon, quake disasters

Writer: AFP
Published: 12/08/2009 at 03:00 PM

Disaster-hit Japan pushed on with recovery efforts Wednesday, a day after a strong earthquake struck and three days after a typhoon brought flashfloods and landslides that killed at least 15 people.

A collapsed section of the Tomei Expressway in Makinohara, west of Tokyo, after a strong earthquake on August 11. In coastal regions near Tokyo, where a 6.4 magnitude earthquake struck early Tuesday, hospitals were still treating some of the 120 people injured in the tremor, while officials confirmed one death caused by the quake.

In the flood-hit western town of Sayo, 400 rescue workers and troops searched debris-strewn river banks for survivors or victims of inundations brought by Typhoon Etau that have left 17 people missing nationwide.

In coastal regions near Tokyo, where a 6.4 magnitude earthquake struck early Tuesday, hospitals were still treating some of the 120 people injured in the tremor, while officials confirmed one death caused by the quake.

A 43-year-old woman found dead after being buried under a pile of books in the city of Shizuoka, west of the capital, was confirmed to have died as a result of the quake, a city official said.

Construction crews were meanwhile scrambling to repair a section of the Tomei Expressway, the main road artery linking Tokyo with the western city of Osaka, that was damaged in a landslide triggered by the quake.

"We are trying to resume operations as quickly as possible, but we found further damage and are carefully conducting the repair work," said Susumu Takahashi, a spokesman for Central Nippon Expressway Corp.

Government inspectors were also conducting safety checks on the Hamaoka nuclear plant, which automatically shut down two reactors when the quake hit offshore 170 kilometres (105 miles) southwest of Tokyo.

The tremor caused 24 minor impacts on the plant, such as cracked building walls, but caused no radioactive leak, said a company official.

"An inspection team from the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency has entered the plant and started examining the safety conditions," said a spokesman for the operator Chubu Electric Power Co.

The quake also caused some damage to 3,300 buildings in the worst hit prefecture of Shizuoka and nearby areas, also toppling the stone wall of an ancient castle and damaging the tiled roof of a temple.

Tokyo was sunny again after Typhoon Etau veered off into the Pacific Ocean after threatening to hit the capital, but elsewhere rescue workers were still digging through the rubble brought by its torrential rain storms.

In Tokushima on the southwestern island of Shikoku, police found the body of a nine-year-old boy who had been missing since the weekend.

In the worst-hit town of Sayo in western Hyogo prefecture, where 12 deaths were reported after a rain-swollen river burst its banks and ripped away three bridges, rescue workers were searching for victims.

The coastguard also deployed three patrol boats in waters near the mouth of the river to search for those still missing, a local official said.

"We can't comment on their chances of survival," he said.

Earlier in the week, a 68-year-old woman was found dead in a landslide in Okayama prefecture, and the body of a 22-year-old woman was found in a flood-hit town in Nagano prefecture.

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Taliban kill Afghan district police chief: official

Writer: AFP
Published: 12/08/2009 at 03:00 PM

Taliban militants attacked a government compound in northern Afghanistan, killing the district police chief and a guard, an official said Wednesday, in more pre-election bloodshed.

Afghan policemen keep watch after a suicide attack against NATO forces in Kunduz province on August 10. Taliban militants attacked a government compound in northern Afghanistan, killing the district police chief and a guard, an official said Wednesday, in more pre-election bloodshed.

The attack happened in the province of Kunduz, where insecurity has spiralled this year with several attacks despite the presence of NATO troops.

After the militants attacked the compound in Archi district, the police chief emerged from his own headquarters to help, said the Archi governor, Shaikh Dabi.

"The Taliban ambushed him and killed him," he said.

"The Archi district police chief and one of his bodyguards were killed and three other police were wounded," he said.

Locals said the insurgents set fire to the district government building.

The worsening security in Kunduz has been blamed on the return of militants who fled after the 2001 US-led invasion removed the Taliban regime.

The area is also on a new transit route coming through Tajikistan for supplies for Western forces in Afghanistan to fight the insurgency.

Military operations are under way across Afghanistan, mostly in the south, to secure areas ahead of landmark August 20 presidential and provincial council elections.

There are concerns that the threat of violence will keep voters away from the polls, undermining the credibility of the elections.

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Searchers believe sunken Tongan ferry found: police

Writer: AFP
Published: 12/08/2009 at 02:00 PM

Searchers believe they have found the wreck of a ferry which sank last week in Tonga with the loss of nearly 100 lives, police said Wednesday.

File photo of the MV Princess Ashika ferry in Nuku'alofa. Searchers believe they have found the wreck of the ferry which sank last week in Tonga with the expected loss of nearly 100 lives, police said.

Tongan police commander Chris Kelley said the ship appeared intact and was lying upright on the sea floor at a depth of 110 metres (360 feet).

"I must emphasise the onsite team have not visually confirmed the identity of the vessel but the sonar information is such, along with other evidence, that we have a high level of confidence it is the Princess Ashika," Kelley said in a statement.

The ferry was 86 kilometres (53 miles) northeast of Nuku'alofa en route to Ha'afeva, in the outlying Nomuka islands, when it sank one week ago moments after issuing a mayday call.

The 34-year-old vessel went down quickly and only 54 survivors were rescued, while two bodies have been recovered and at least 93 people remain unaccounted for.

Reports from survivors suggested many sleeping passengers would have been trapped inside the ship when it sank around midnight on Wednesday.

Kelley said the sonar location of the vessel was corroborated by the presence of an oil slick.

Bad weather has forced the suspension of further operations, and Kelley said a New Zealand naval vessel would arrive on Saturday with equipment capable of taking pictures of the wreck to confirm it is the Princess Ashika.

But he indicated there was no immediate prospect of recovering bodies.

"It is important to understand that although the underwater vehicle is able to take pictures of the vessel, neither the New Zealand nor the Australian navies have the capabilities to conduct recovery operations beyond 60 metres," he said.

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US, Afghan troops launch operation to protect vote

Writer: AFP
Published: 12/08/2009 at 02:00 PM

US Marines and Afghan soldiers launched an operation early Wednesday against insurgents in Afghanistan's troubled south aimed at preventing disruptions to upcoming elections, the Marines said.

NATO soldiers patrol in Arghandab in the southern Afghan province of Kandahar. The spectre of deadly Taliban attacks is hanging over Afghanistan's upcoming elections, fuelling fears that voters will be too intimidated by the insurgents to cast their ballot in the presidential polls.

Operation Eastern Resolve II deployed 400 Marines and sailors and 100 Afghan soldiers to a Taliban stronghold of Helmand province, said Brigadier General Larry Nicholson, commander of the Marine Expeditionary Brigade in Afghanistan.

In a statement from Camp Leatherneck, in central Helmand, he said the aim of the mission in Naw Zad district was to prevent Taliban fighters from acting on threats to disrupt presidential and provincial council elections next week.

Afghanistan's second presidential election is due to take place on August 20 amid Taliban threats to prevent voters getting to polling booths and widespread fears of suicide attacks.

"Our mission is to support the Independent Election Commission and Afghan national security forces," Nicholson said.

"They are the ones in charge of these elections. Our job is to make sure they have the security to do their job."

Helmand is one of the world's main poppy-producing regions and a route for Taliban fighters crossing the border from Pakistan to join the insurgency.

International forces have been operating in the province's centre and south in recent months in an effort to push out Taliban forces and secure populated areas of the vast region ahead of the elections.

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Talks to end Philippine insurgency in doubt: rebels

Writer: AFP
Published: 12/08/2009 at 02:00 PM

Key talks in Norway later this month to end the 40-year communist insurgence in the Philippines were thrown into doubt on Wednesday, the rebels' top negotiator said.

New Peoples Army (NPA) rebels raise a communist flag at their base in the hinterlands of Davao del Norte, southern Philippines, in March. Key talks in Norway later this month to end the 40-year communist insurgence in the Philippines were thrown into doubt on Wednesday, the rebels' top negotiator said.

Netherlands-based Luis Jalandoni said in a statement to news agencies in Manila that the government's failure to release jailed guerrilla leaders was to blame.

"It is now doubtful whether the meetings scheduled for August 28 to September 5 in Oslo would be held," Jalandoni said.

"There are strong indications that the (Philippine government) intends to scuttle the resumption of formal talks."

President Gloria Arroyo's chief adviser on the peace talks, being revived after they were shelved in 2005, announced Tuesday that a number of jailed senior communist leaders are to be freed so they can take part in the talks as "consultants".

However, Jalandoni said that the government was making it "difficult or impossible the release of other detained (rebel) consultants."

He said the rebels also want the government to withdraw criminal charges against rebel consultants who have outstanding warrants for arrest.

Jalandoni warned Manila's failure to provide those whom the rebels designate as their negotiators or consultants for the peace talks blanket immunity would lead to the "scuttling (of) the Oslo meeting this month and probably the entire peace negotiations."

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Taiwan scrambles to rescue 700 in mudslide villages

Writer: AFP
Published: 12/08/2009 at 12:00 PM

Taiwan Wednesday began airlifting to safety more than 700 people found alive in a trio of villages flattened by muddy landslides, as the island's death toll from Typhoon Morakot hit 66.

Taiwan troops evacuate survivors in Shiaolin, Tainan county, southern Taiwan, following floods caused by Typhoon Morakot. Taiwan's military on Wednesday began a helicopter rescue of more than 700 people who were found alive in three villages flattened by landslides, a senior military officer told AFP.

The military launched the helicopter operation in the battered island's south after the region was hit by its worst flooding in half a century, inundating entire villages in water and mud and cutting off all access by road.

"We have found around 700 people alive in three villages last night and 26 more this morning. We are deploying 25 helicopters to evacuate them," Major-General Richard Hu said.

Hu said he was unable to confirm how many people had been buried or killed by the landslide in Hsiaolin and in two other remote villages nearby.

Some media reports had speculated that up to 600 people had been killed just in Hsiaolin, which vanished under a tidal wave of mud at the weekend.

Rescuers had said Tuesday that around 100 people in Hsiaolin were feared to have been buried alive.

"We believed that some were buried but it's not possible to estimate how many at this moment as almost 90 percent of the houses were buried," Hu said.

Feelings were running high at a nearby school where relatives of missing people had gathered. Police and soldiers had to push back some who tried to storm their way onto the departing helicopters.

"I cannot wait any more. I want to look for my family," a man in his 40s shouted as he argued with soldiers.

He said he had not heard anything from his family since the typhoon dumped a record three metres (120 inches) of rainfall on southern Taiwan over the weekend.

Chu Chia-jung, 21, said she was desperate for news with only one of her many relatives in Hsiaolin accounted for.

"I've been really, really worried about my close relatives there," she said. "I hope the military can speed up their search and rescue."

Authorities Wednesday said Typhoon Morakot, which also killed eight people in eastern China, had left at least 66 people dead in Taiwan.

The toll included three rescuers who died when their helicopter crashed into a river in heavy fog in the southern county of Pingtung on Tuesday.

"Their bodies have been found and we are working to transport the bodies from the crash site," a policeman told reporters.

Another 61 people are missing in Taiwan and 35 others injured.

Armoured vehicles, marine landing craft and rubber dinghies have been mobilised in the rescue operation, which involves more than 17,000 troops across the island, the defence ministry said.

Typhoon Morakot has caused at least 7.2 billion Taiwan dollars (225 million US) in agricultural damage while nearly 30,000 houses were still without power and 750,000 homes without water, according to officials.

Charities and companies have launched donation drives for flood victims, raising more than two billion Taiwan dollars as of Tuesday, reports said. Official figures were not available.

Detained former president Chen Shui-bian, who is facing corruption charges, donated one million Taiwan dollars to his home county Tainan and to neighbouring Kaohsiung.

Morakot is one of the worst typhoons to strike Taiwan in 50 years. In August 1959, a typhoon killed 667 people and left around 1,000.

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Hun Xen is ready to use the military to fight a defenseless woman, he also lashed out on unnamed foreign countries

Coward Strongmen vs Defenseless Women?

Hun Xen re-affirmed his defamation lawsuit stance

12 August 2009
DAP news
Translated from Khmer by Socheata

In the morning of 12 August 2009, during a ceremony for the distribution of diplomas and for the inauguration of the university of law and economic science, Hun Xen displayed his unwavering stance in regards to the defamation lawsuit he brought up. Hun Xen said that he will play along [in any appeals], whether it is by legal or military means, he will play along till the end. Hun Xen warned a certain woman, telling her not to act as a representative of women.

Hun Xen also issued strong warnings to a number of NGOs that are not neutral and that are leaning to the opposition party. Hun Xen also lashed out at a number of foreign countries that are always getting involved in Cambodia’s internal issues. He told these countries to pull out of Cambodia because Cambodia has sufficient democracy already.

During the ceremony, Cambodia’s Strongman also confirmed his strong stance to lead the government, and he said that he will continue leading the country in 2018 and 2023. He also reminded the opposition party to think about its own survival also.

Hun Xen also appealed on Cambodians to respect the traffic law, and they should install rear mirrors on their motorcycles and wear helmets to protect themselves. Hun Xen also called on motorcycle owners to pay taxes.
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New ipod




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iPOD VDO Gen 5.5 V.S iPOD Classic

iPOD 5.5G V.S. iPOD Classic




http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41Pi%2BhKqouL._SL500_AA280_.jpg
iPOD VDO Gen5.5 V.S. iPOD Classic < Design Step >



http://www.slashgear.com/gallery/data_files/7/4/iPod_classic_unboxing_2.jpg

ipod classic instructions
http://www.winsupersite.com/images/showcase/ipod_classic_6g_07.jpg
apple-ipod-touch-explode-4
ipod-touch-add-camera-mic-2
iphone-idive-300-gadget-2

iluv-imm153

igoogle





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Ipod













Shanling MC-30 Music Center

http://gigazine.jp/img/2006/09/13/new_ipod/06ipod_both_m.jpg


iPod is music player that have modern and beautiful design. This product made from Apple company. iPod is music player of mp3.


I think iPod more convenient than CD player because you no need to take CD to everywhere that you want to listen music, you just encode your file to mp3 and add it to iPod. Then you can listen it from iPod. Not only that you can add video such as the movie, concert and series etc. that you like to iPod. You can see it everywhere and everytime that you want because it in your iPod, and very easy to open and see it. And you don’t have to worry about space of iPod if you want to add movie and music. iPod have 60g. and 80g. like space of computer. So it is enough or maybe you cannot use all of space because it is a lot. About time of battery or time that you can use it continue when you see movie, it’s limit around 4hour and I think it enough for one movie. Not only listen to music and see movie but you can save you photo to iPod and play game too.


It is very interesting thing if you are the one that like to see movie and listen to music.




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Ipod popular

Apple- iPhone 3G

3G technology gives iPhone fast access to the Internet and email over cellular networks around the world. iPhone 3G also makes it possible to do more in more places: Surf the web, download email, get directions, and watch video — even while you’re on a call.

How it works.

iPhone 3G uses a technology protocol called HSDPA (High-Speed Downlink Packet Access) to download data fast over UMTS (Universal Mobile Telecommunications System) networks. Email attachments and web pages load twice as fast on 3G networks as on 2G EDGE networks.1 And since iPhone 3G seamlessly switches between EDGE, faster 3G, and even faster Wi-Fi, you always get the best speeds possible.

Talk and browse. At the same time.

iPhone already gives you mobile multitasking. But 3G technology lets you multitask in more places — without connecting via Wi-Fi. Since 3G networks enable simultaneous data and voice, you can talk on the phone while surfing the web, checking email, or using Maps. All from your 3G cellular network.

Go anywhere.

iPhone 3G meets worldwide standards for cellular communications, so you can make calls and surf the web from practically anywhere on the planet. And if you’re in an area without a 3G network, iPhone connects you via GSM for calls and EDGE for data.

More wireless. Less space.

iPhone 3G delivers UMTS, HSDPA, GSM, Wi-Fi, EDGE, GPS, and Bluetooth 2.0 + EDR in one compact device — using only two antennas. Clever iPhone engineering integrates those antennas into a few unexpected places: the metal ring around the camera, the audio jack, the metal screen bezel, and the iPhone circuitry itself. And intelligent iPhone power management technology gives you up to 5 hours of talk time over 3G networks.2 That’s some of the best in the business.

Phone

With iPhone, making a call is as simple as tapping a name or number. All your contacts appear in a list you scroll through with a flick of your finger. And Visual Voicemail plays your messages in any order you want, just like email.

Making a call on iPhone

Tap into calls.

Tap any phone number in Contacts, Favorites, an email, an SMS text message — or almost any other application — to make a call. If you have a lot of contacts, use the search feature to quickly find specific names. iPhone also makes it easy to talk to more than one person at the same time. With a tap, you can switch between calls or create a conference call.

Contacts on iPhone

Make contact.

Building your iPhone address book is simple. Contacts sync via iTunes each time you connect iPhone to your computer. You can even add contact information directly from Maps and SMS messages with just a few taps.

Answer in a pinch.

The stereo headset that comes with iPhone features a high-performance microphone — fitted with a windscreen for added clarity — that also serves as a Send/End button you pinch to answer or end calls.

See your voicemail.

Listen to your fourth voicemail message without listening to the three before it. Visual Voicemail shows you a list of all your messages — and who they’re from — so you can play them in any order you please.

Visual voicemail on iPhone

Get push contacts for enterprise.

With support for Microsoft Exchange ActiveSync, iPhone gives you push contacts and lets you access your company’s Global Address List.

MobileMe Contacts.

MobileMe keeps your contacts up to date across every device you use. You don’t have to dock your iPhone to your computer to sync your contacts — it happens over the air. Add, edit, or delete a contact from your iPhone, and it’s updated on your computer and on the web at me.com.

Everyone you know is everywhere you are.

Your contacts — and any changes you make — are updated on every device you use.

Contacts and MobileMe.

MobileMe automatically keeps your entire address book up to date, everywhere you go.

Mail

on iPhone looks and works just like email on your computer. With support for popular email servers and providers — including MobileMe, Microsoft Exchange, Yahoo! Mail, Google Gmail, and AOL — and most industry-standard IMAP or POP mail systems, iPhone puts email in your pocket.

Mail: See it in action

Mail app on iPhone
Mail app on iPhone

See it all.

iPhone supports rich HTML email, so images and photos appear alongside text. And you see email attachments in their original format, not as stripped-down versions. Rotate, zoom, and pan in more than a dozen standard file and image formats, including PDF, Microsoft Word, Excel, and PowerPoint; and also view iWork attachments.

Send fast.

iPhone recognizes email addresses in different applications. If you run across an email address on a web page or a map listing, for example, just tap it and iPhone opens a new message with the address already in it.

Type smart.

The intelligent iPhone keyboard with built-in dictionary predicts and suggests words as you type, making it fast and easy to write email.

Get push email for enterprise.

Receive and respond to work email fast on iPhone. New support for Microsoft Exchange ActiveSync gives you push email that arrives automatically

Safari

iPhone features Safari — the most advanced web browser ever on a portable device. And with 3G and Wi-Fi, you can browse the Internet really fast. iPhone also syncs your bookmarks from your PC or Mac and has Google and Yahoo! search built in.

Safari: See it in action

Safari on iPhone

Browse anywhere.

Access the web with Safari whether you’re connecting via EDGE, faster 3G, or even faster
Wi-Fi. iPhone automatically connects you to the fastest network available.

Browsing Safari on iPhone

Zoom with a view.

Get a closer look at any web page by zooming in and out with a tap or a pinch. View websites in portrait or landscape mode: Rotate iPhone 90 degrees and the website rotates, too.

Clip it.

If you check a website frequently — a favorite newspaper, blog, or sports site — why not create a Home screen icon for it? Make a Web Clip with Safari, and your favorite sites are always just a tap away.

iPod

With its beautiful 3.5-inch widescreen display and Multi-Touch controls, iPhone is also one amazing iPod. Browse your music in Cover Flow and watch widescreen video with the touch of a finger.

iPod with Jack Johnson on iPhone

Touch your music.

Scroll through songs, artists, albums, and playlists with a flick. Browse your music library by album artwork using Cover Flow. Even view song lyrics that you’ve added to your library in iTunes. Get a call while listening to music? A pinch of the microphone on your iPhone headset pauses the tune and answers the call.

iPod on iPhone

Watch in widescreen.

iPhone brings you a video experience unlike any other portable device. Watch TV shows and movies from the iTunes Store on the 3.5-inch widescreen display. Just tap to bring up video controls whenever you need them.

Sync it all.

Audio and video from your iTunes library sync to your iPhone when you connect it to your computer. Choose what you want to sync and iTunes does the rest.

Maps with GPS

Find your location, get directions, and see traffic — all from your phone. Maps on iPhone 3G combines GPS, Wi-Fi, and cell tower location technology with the Multi-Touch interface to create the best mobile map application ever.

Maps with GPS: See it in action

Maps with GPS on iPhone

Find yourself.

iPhone 3G finds your location via GPS or by triangulating your position using Wi-Fi and cellular towers. It also finds points of interest by keyword: Search for “coffee” and iPhone shows you every cafe nearby.

Maps with GPS on iPhone

Get directions.

Get directions to wherever from wherever. View a list of turn-by-turn directions or follow a highlighted map route and track your progress with live GPS tracking.

Enjoy the view.

Just like Google Maps on your computer, Maps on iPhone lets you switch between views of Google Map data, satellite images, and a hybrid of both. Multi-Touch makes the difference. Tap to Zoom, pan, and change your view on the move.

See traffic.

Maps on iPhone shows you live traffic information, indicating traffic speed along your route in easy-to-read green, red, and yellow highlights.

iTunes

Buy music over the air from the iTunes Wi-Fi Music Store on iPhone. Find a Wi-Fi hot spot and tap the iTunes button. Then take your pick from more than 6 million songs.

iTunes Wi-Fi Store: See it in action

iTunes Wi-Fi music store on iPhone

Buy on the fly.

Browse New Releases, What’s Hot, and Genres. Take a look at Top Songs and Top Albums. Or find exactly what you’re looking for with a quick search. Play a 30-second preview of any song, then tap once to buy it. Your music starts downloading instantly, and you can keep tabs on its progress by tapping the Downloads button.

iTunes Wi-Fi music store on iPhone

Sync it back.

When you connect iPhone to your computer, the music you bought on the go syncs to your iTunes library. If you’ve only partially downloaded a song to iPhone, your computer completes the download automatically.

App Store

Tap into the App Store and you’ll find applications in every category, from games to business, education to entertainment, finance to health and fitness, productivity to social networking. These applications have been designed to take advantage of iPhone features such as Multi-Touch, the accelerometer, wireless, and GPS. And some are even free. You can download them wirelessly and start using them right away.

App Store: See it in action

iPhone App Store image, with Travel Guide and Monkey Ball apps

Get applications anywhere.

The App Store on iPhone works over cellular networks and Wi-Fi, which means it’s accessible from just about anywhere. Browse categories, do a keyword search, or take a look at recommendations. Then download and install applications directly onto your iPhone.

iPhone with Super Monkey Ball app

Stay up to date.

Buy an application from the App Store and you always have access to the latest version. iPhone tells you whenever an application update is available. When a red number appears on the App Store icon, you know how many updates are ready to download.

YouTube

iPhone keeps you entertained with a YouTube application that opens right from the Home screen, so you can watch YouTube wherever you are. Videos load fast over 3G or Wi-Fi. Find a video you like? Bookmark it or share it with a friend.

YouTube: See it in action

YouTube video on iPhone

Watch what you want.

Explore Featured, Most Viewed, Most Recent, and Top Rated videos. Or search for the video you want with a keyword search. Once you find what you’re looking for, bookmark it to watch later.

Browse YouTube video on iPhone

Share from anywhere.

Email your favorite videos to your favorite people. Tap the Share button on any YouTube video detail page and iPhone creates an email with the video link already in it.

Photos + Camera

With a built-in camera and an advanced photo application, iPhone is the most photo-friendly phone ever. It takes snapshots, automatically syncs photos with your PC or Mac, displays albums with the flick of a finger, and posts pictures directly to a MobileMe Gallery.

Photos: See it in action

Photos on iPhone

Snap photos.

The iPhone camera snaps shots with a tap. Photos you take appear in the Camera Roll, and they sync back to your computer the next time you connect. iPhone even geotags your photos with information about where they were taken.

Syncing photos on iPhone

Sync photos.

iPhone uses iTunes to sync the photos you have in iPhoto on a Mac or Adobe Photoshop Elements and Adobe Photoshop Album on a PC. All the photos on your computer sync to your iPhone, so you can look at them — and share them — anywhere you go.

Share photos.

Show thousands of photos from the palm of your hand. Rotate iPhone to see a photo in landscape. Pinch to zoom in or out. Drag to reposition. Email a photo to a friend, set it as your wallpaper, or share it in a MobileMe Gallery.

Save photos.

If you run across a great image on the web — or get one in an email — save it to your photo library on iPhone. From there, it acts just like any other photo: You can set it as your wallpaper, share it on the web, or pass it on.

Accelerometer. Made to move.

iPhone accelerometer image

Accelerometer. Made to move.

iPhone responds to motion using a built-in accelerometer. When you rotate iPhone from portrait to landscape, the accelerometer detects the movement and changes the display accordingly. So you immediately see the entire width of a web page, view a photo in its proper aspect ratio, or control a game using only your movements.

How it works.

The accelerometer inside iPhone uses three elements: a silicon mass, a set of silicon springs, and an electrical current. The silicon springs measure the position of the silicon mass using the electrical current. Rotating iPhone causes a fluctuation in the electrical current passing through

Sensors

Built into iPhone are two small but intelligent sensors that pick up cues from the environment and adjust the screen accordingly. These sensors both work to maximize the battery life and improve your iPhone experience.

iPhone sensors
iPhone ambient light sensor

Proximity sensor.

When you lift iPhone to your ear, the proximity sensor immediately turns off the display to save power and prevent inadvertent touches.

Ambient light sensor.

The ambient light sensor in iPhone automatically brightens the display when you’re in sunlight or a bright room and dims it in darker places.

iPhone proximity sensor

Keyboard

The intelligent, software-based iPhone keyboard does more than a physical keyboard ever could. It’s there only when you need it, it adapts to any application, and it changes its keys to support typing in 21 languages. All you do is tap.

Keyboard: See it in action

Making a call on iPhone
Contacts on iPhone Contacts on iPhone

Type fast.

iPhone features a full QWERTY keyboard and gives you keys for every number and symbol with just a few taps. It speeds up typing by suggesting common contractions such as “can’t,” “don’t,” or “let’s.” And it lets you insert special characters and accents quickly: Just touch and hold a letter to see all of its possible forms. Slide your finger to the right one, and you’re done.

How it works.

While the keyboards on other mobile phones stay fixed in place, the iPhone keyboard adapts its keys and layout for different applications. With iPhone, you get exactly the right keyboard for the task at hand. And the iPhone keyboard appears when you need it and disappears when you don’t — giving you more room to view websites, email, maps, and video.

Contacts on iPhone

Type accurately.

iPhone analyzes keystrokes to suggest words as you type. It does this by employing complex mathematics to track the pattern of letters you type and match them to the pattern of other common words. iPhone uses a complete English dictionary to correct text, and it learns the words you type most often — including proper names and information from your contacts list.

Type (or write) in your language.

The iPhone keyboard’s intelligent design allows you to switch between 21 international layouts with a single tap. iPhone also features sophisticated character recognition software that lets you draw a Chinese character with your finger and tap to choose the matching result.

Contacts on iPhone
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