Wednesday, May 25, 2011

NY judge agrees to new DSK house arrest location (AP)

Strauss-Kahn lawyers deny contacting accuser

NEW YORK ? New York court officials say a new, more permanent location has been found for Dominique Strauss-Kahn's house arrest on sexual assault charges.

The Office of Court Administration says the judge received a phone call from all parties Wednesday and a new location was agreed upon. Spokesman David Bookstaver did not say where the new housing is or when the former leader of the International Monetary Fund will move. He is free on $1 million bail and under house arrest temporarily in an apartment in lower Manhattan.

The one-time French presidential contender was jailed for about a week in New York City after he was arrested May 14. A hotel maid says he sexually assaulted her in his hotel room. His attorneys have said Strauss-Kahn is not guilty.

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Car bomb destroys police station in Pakistan, 6 dead (Reuters)

Car bomb destroys police station in Pakistan, 2 dead By Faris Ali

PESHAWAR, Pakistan (Reuters) ? A suicide bomber drove an explosives-packed car into a police station on Wednesday as the Taliban intensified attacks against Pakistan's security forces after the killing of al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden.

At least five policemen and a soldier were killed in the attack in the northwestern city of Peshawar. The Pakistani Taliban said they were responsible.

The militants, allied with al Qaeda, have vowed to avenge bin Laden's killing by U.S. forces in a Pakistani town on May 2.

"We will continue attacks on security forces until an Islamic system is implemented in Pakistan, because the Pakistani system is un-Islamic," Ehsanhullah Ehsan, a spokesman for the Pakistan Taliban, told Reuters, adding the attack was also in revenge for bin Laden's death.

The blast came two days after a brazen Taliban raid on a heavily guarded naval base in the southern city of Karachi that killed 10 military personnel and destroyed two aircraft.

The police station, in a military neighbourhood, houses an office of the Criminal Investigation Department, which is responsible for investigating Islamist militants.

There is also a training facility for special forces and officers' residences nearby.

Senior provincial minister Bashir Bilour said up to 300 kg (660 lb) of explosives were used in the bomb that police said wounded 22 people.

Residents said the explosion rattled windows throughout the city. By mid-day, volunteers and rescue workers were removing rubble with spades, while bulldozers removed broken slabs of concrete.

Senior police officer Ejaz Khan said the bomber rammed his car into the station's gate, on the main road leading to Afghanistan through the Khyber Pass.

Another police officer said about 20 policemen were in the building when the attack happened.

"Three of our colleagues are still missing under the rubble and it will take another hour to clear the site," said officer Bahadur Khan.

"My colleague and I were on the roof, calling for dawn prayers, when all of a sudden there was a big explosion," said wounded policeman Muzaffar Khan. "We don't know what happened but the roof collapsed and we fell on the ground.

"I was trapped in the debris," he said. "I was screaming and crying for help. I was lucky that people pulled me out."

MILITARY UNDER PRESSURE

The police station is about a km (half a mile) from the U.S. consulate and in the same area where Taliban militants detonated a car bomb last week targeting a consular convoy.

One man was killed and about a dozen people were wounded, including two U.S. nationals, in that attack.

The commander of the naval base attacked by militants on Sunday was relieved of his command, the Navy said in a statement on Wednesday, a rare sign of accountability in the powerful military establishment.

"Commodore Raja Tahir has been relieved from his duties with immediate effect," it said adding an inquiry had been ordered to investigate the attack.

The string of attacks by al Qaeda-linked militants has raised concern about the possible presence of Islamist sympathisers within the military, which controls Pakistan's nuclear weapons.

A 2008 U.S. diplomatic cable released by WikiLeaks revealed U.S. concern that officers at a prestigious army institution were largely biased against the United States, a key ally which has given Pakistan more than $20 billion in aid over the past decade, about two-thirds of it military.

The military is also facing accusations of either incompetence, or possibly complicity, after it became clear that bin Laden had been hiding out in Abbottabad, a garrison town north of the capital, for several years before he was shot dead by U.S. forces.

After bin Laden's killing, some Pakistanis have questioned whether the funding for the military is really worth it. Pakistan spent 442.2 billion rupees ($5.15 billion), about 20 percent of its 2010/11 budget, on defence last year -- an increase of 17 percent from the year before.

This year it plans to spend 495 billion rupees ($5.76 billion), officials say.

"To me, it defies logic for allocating so much on defence," said Asad Shafqat, a banker in Karachi.

Experts, however, said changes in defence spending were unlikely.

"The balance between defence and social development has to change but I don't see that happening in the short term," said Shafqat Mahmood, a political analyst based in Lahore.

"Recent events have shown that we have to improve our defence and vulnerabilities."

(Additional reporting by Sahar Ahmed, Zeeshan Haider, Kamran Haider, Augustine Anthony, Haji Mujtaba and Saud Mehsud; Editing by Chris Allbritton and Robert Birsel)

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Costa Ricans object to alleged narcos as neighbors (AP)

SAN JOSE, Costa Rica ? Residents in surburbs of this Central American capital are refusing to live near two Mexicans who have been granted house arrest while a court deals with allegations they are drug traffickers.

In the latest uproar, people in a San Jose suburb staged a protest Tuesday that blocked a third try by authorities to find a residence for the suspects. The pair remain in jail.

The two men, whose full names have not been released, were arrested in October after police found 390 pounds (177 kilograms) of cocaine in a small plane they allegedly were flying and crashed into a river.

A judge granted them house arrest two weeks ago because prosecutors still had not filed charges.

Last week, residents of a luxury apartment building in a suburb west of San Jose canceled a rental contract for the men after discovering they are alleged drug traffickers. The move-in was suspended.

Officials then tried a residence in a suburb north of the capital, but people there took to the streets to protest against having the suspects in their neighborhood.

On Tuesday, the mayor of suburban Moravia northeast of San Jose, alerted his constituents that authorities planned to put the alleged traffickers in their town.

About 20 protesters joined Mayor Juan Pablo Hernandez outside the house that apparently had been rented for the suspects. One of the signs residents carried read "Narcos out."

"We ask judicial authorities to think about how this will affect a quite community like this one," Hernandez said.

Officials backed off again, and the court will consider the suspects' situation Wednesday.

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Two German airports shut as volcanic cloud drifts (Reuters)

A small plane flies past a smoke plume from the eruption of the Grimsvotn volcano in southeastern Iceland By Mark Trevelyan

LONDON (Reuters) ? Two German airports halted flights on Wednesday as ash from an Icelandic volcano drifted across northern Europe, but traffic across much of the region started to return to normal.

The weekend eruption of the Grimsvotn volcano forced the cancellation of some 500 European flights on Tuesday, with Scotland especially hard hit.

The volcano seems to be losing steam, but the ash plume continues to affect some air travel.

In northern Germany, Hamburg and Bremen airports canceled takeoffs and landings, and German authorities said Berlin terminals could also face closure from 6 a.m. EDT.

"Currently there is no forecast when the restriction will be lifted," Hamburg airport said on its website.

Grimsvotn erupted on Saturday and smoke belched as high as 20 km (12 miles) into the sky. The eruption is its most powerful since 1873 and stronger than the volcano that caused trouble last year.

In Iceland, however, volcano experts said the eruption was easing.

President Olafur Grimsson told the BBC: "The volcano seems to be calming down. The eruption is gradually being diminished and the ash cloud is definitely smaller than it has been."

While the ash has disrupted travel plans, including the state visit of U.S. President Barak Obama to Britain, it has not created the kind of chaos caused by an Icelandic volcano last year when more than 10 million people were hit by a six-day European airspace shutdown. That cost airlines $1.7 billion.

But the eruption has exposed disarray among the authorities who decide on aviation safety as they try to apply new rules to avoid another mass closure of European airspace.

PATCHWORK

New procedures put the onus on airlines to make judgments on whether it is safe to fly through ash, in coordination with the forecasting authorities and civil aviation bodies.

Highlighting problems, sources told Reuters that a British research plane designed to sample ash remained grounded for a second day in a wrangle over its deployment.

The rules are also not accepted by all, with Germany backing a tougher stance for the sake of safety, aviation sources said.

"The potential for a patchwork of inconsistent state decisions on airspace management still exists," IATA Director General Giovanni Bisignani said in a statement.

British airport operator BAA, majority owned by Spanish infrastructure group Ferrovial, warned some flights would continue to be affected.

But it said flights were expected to resume at Glasgow Airport Wednesday morning, and it expected a "fuller program" of services at Edinburgh.

In Scandinvia, traffic was mostly normal after some disruptions on Tuesday.

Norwegian airport operator Avinor said commercial air traffic would operate normally on Wednesday, including helicopter flights to offshore oil and gas platforms.

Sweden's Swedavia said a number of flights had been canceled from Gotheburg's Landvetter Airport.

However, Scandinavian Airline SAS, said it had not canceled any flights in Sweden, though one flight to and from Hamburg from Copenhagen would not depart.

"We expect normal traffic today," SAS spokeswoman Malin Selander said.

She said the airline had received permission from the Swedish Transport to fly in so-called ash 'grey zones', but had not yet done so.

Domestic flights in Finland were operating normally, though two flights to and from northern Germany have been canceled.

Dutch airline KLM said it would cancel 19 flights on Wednesday to and from Britain, Norway, Sweden and Germany. It expected to operate all other flights as scheduled.

Budget airline Ryanair said it had safely sent two planes into what authorities had deemed high ash zones over Scotland, and criticized "bureaucratic incompetence."

Eurocontrol said the around 500 flights canceled on Tuesday were out of around 29,000 expected that day.

(Editing by Ralph Boulton)

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Sunday, May 22, 2011

Mexico mass graves of 219 signal major cartel rift (AP)

By E. EDUARDO CASTILLO, Associated Press

DURANGO, Mexico ? The vacant car repair lot hardly looks out of place in a vibrant but gritty part of the northern colonial city of Durango, famous as the set for John Wayne westerns.

Only a closer look reveals the secrets hidden at "Servicios Multiples Carita Medina," clues to exactly what kind of "multiple services" were rendered. The freshly turned soil is sprinkled with lime to kill the smell and littered with discarded Latex gloves and an empty cardboard box: "Adult Cadaver Bag. 600 gauge, Long Zipper, For Cadavers of up to 75 inches. 15 pieces."

In the most gruesome find in Mexico's four-year attack on organized crime, police dug up 89 bodies in the repair lot, buried over time in plain sight of homes, schools and stores.

Then, like the killers, authorities left one of Mexico's most puzzling crime scenes completely open and unprotected.

It was the largest of seven graves found in bustling urban areas of the city of almost 600,000, where a total of 219 bodies have been uncovered since April 11.

Publicly, authorities say they don't know who's inside the graves in a state that was home to Mexican revolutionary Pancho Villa, but that today is more synonymous with the country's powerful Sinaloa drug cartel. Officials only say the mass graves probably hold the corpses of executed rivals from other gangs or possibly kidnap victims and even some police.

A new and more detailed account, however, comes from a top federal police official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to The Associated Press because of security reasons. The official said investigations indicate the grave holds rivals of the Sinaloa cartel, and that the once orderly and brutally efficient gang is undergoing a bloody internal power struggle in Durango.

The Sinaloa cartel had seemed immune to the kind of missteps, mindless violence and internal power struggles that have plagued other drug gangs, to the extent that most Mexicans believed the Sinaloa cartel was either exceedingly sophisticated or in cahoots with the government.

But the portrait now emerging from the 219 corpses is of a cartel that is riven by internal cracks, according to the official.

In recent months, at least two local groups sought to break off from Sinaloa and control the drug shipment routes through Durango for themselves, the official said. A third group, known as the "M's," remained loyal to Sinaloa boss Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, who has been named one of the richest and most influential people in the world by Forbes magazine, with a fortune of more than $1 billion.

A leading member of the "M's" and the fourth-highest ranking Sinaloa operator in Durango, Bernabe Monje Silva, was arrested by federal police on March 27 and led police to the grave sites, the police official said.

Jorge Chabat, a Mexican expert on the drug trade, said that while the Sinaloa cartel is one of Mexico's most stable gangs, it has had internal divisions, as witnessed several years ago when the Beltran Leyva brothers broke off to form their own cartel.

Chabat said disputes like the one in Durango "are part of the jockeying that goes on in the world of drug trafficking" and said the split will probably result in increased violence in Durango.

The Sinaloa and Zeta cartels had already been in a dispute for remote territory in Durango long dismissed as narco-land. Cartels grow marijuana and poppies in the secluded mountains, where outsiders don't go without military escorts and rumors have it that Sinaloa boss Guzman himself has been hiding.

In April, the discovery of 183 bodies in 40 graves in the northeastern border state of Tamaulipas caused an international furor, as families from the U.S., Mexico and Central America showed up in search of loved ones who had been reportedly pulled off buses, then vanished in the vast reaches of farmland near San Fernando, the scene of two mass killings in less than a year.

The Mexican government reinforced its troops there and made a sweep of 74 alleged Zetas members and collaborators ? including some local police_ whom officials say were responsible for the deaths.

The larger discovery in Durango, however, has been met with little more than a shrug and the swearing by neighbors that they never heard or saw anything unusual as assassins buried scores of bodies under city streets.

In fact, it can sometimes seem like the region was written off long ago as narco-controlled territory. Last week, no one was lining up to look for loved ones or to give DNA even as the difficult task of identifying bodies continues.

Some of the corpses in Durango have been in the ground less than six months, buried since the Sinaloa cartel's internal dispute broke out; others have been there for as long as four years.

In some cases, the remains are nearly skeletal after months or years in the desert-like conditions of Durango, whose state symbol is a scorpion.

Working in refrigerated trailers brought in after the sheer number of bodies outstripped the capacity of the city's morgue, experts wearing masks and sterile suits struggled to detect identifying signs, tattoos or fingerprints from the bodies that still retained some skin.

Piles of cadavers in white plastic body-bags were stacked along a wall of the trailer, awaiting examination.

Authorities have only identified one victim so far, a 31-year-old man from the state of Durango. They would not give his name or other details.

Questions remained about how the gunmen could have used the burial ground to dump bodies for so long without being caught.

"The bodies weren't buried all at one time, it was done gradually," said Jorge Antonio Santiago, the spokesman for the Durango State Human Rights Commission. "In the face of that fact, we are also demanding an explanation of why nobody detected this."

Some argue that police in Durango may have turned a blind eye to the grim goings-on in their city, though none have been implicated, unlike in the Tamaulipas killings.

A few nearby homes have a view of the lots, as does a private school, but invariably local residents say they saw nothing.

"I never imagined that something was happening here," said a woman who was walking by one the lots last week. The woman, who would not identify herself for fear of reprisals, said the owner of the lot lived in the United States and rented out the property.

Looking over the sandy soil, the woman expressed the same fear and resignation that has permeated northern Mexico after 4 1/2 years of drug violence that's claimed over 35,000 lives.

"Of course it is disturbing ... but what can you do?" she asked.

A woman selling used clothing near another mass grave three blocks away, where 17 bodies were found, said she had occasionally seen luxury vehicles drive by, but never noticed anything suspicious. She believes the victims were brought in, already dead, and quietly buried at night, protected by darkness and a pervasive cloak of fear.

"If anyone talks," she said, "they might get their head cut off."

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Rescuers say 1 of Scottish loch whales has died (AP)

EDINBURGH, Scotland ? Rescue workers say 60 pilot whales that risked becoming beached on a Scottish island may have been accompanying a sick member of their pod.

The charity British Divers Marine Life Rescue said Sunday that one of the animals had died, and the others had disappeared from view.

A post mortem indicated the dead whale may have died of an infection.

The whales arrived at Loch Carnan in Scotland's Western Isles Thursday and came close to beaching Friday morning, but were driven back into deeper water.

The rescue group's Dave Jarvis said that is appears that these "extremely social creatures" have been accompanying an ill member of their pod whose "infection may have caused this animal to strand."

He said rescuers would be alert in case the pod reappeared.

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Fears of more flight chaos as Iceland sees new eruption (AFP)

Fears of more flight chaos as Iceland sees new eruption by Agnes Valdimarsdottir

REYKJAVIK (AFP) ? Safety experts warned Sunday that ash from an erupting Icelandic volcano that closed the country's airspace may blow across large swathes of western Europe, raising fears of new flight chaos.

Air safety officials said ash from the Grimsvoetn eruption may reach north Scotland by Tuesday before sweeping across Britain to hit France and Spain two days later.

But experts said the impact should not be as far-reaching as 2010, when a similar event caused widespread flight cancellations.

Ash deposits were sprinkled over the capital Reykjavik Sunday, some 400 kilometres (250 miles) to the west of the volcano, which has spewed an ash cloud about 20 kilometres into the sky.

Less than 24 hours after the eruption began late Saturday, experts and authorities in Iceland said the volcanic activity had begun to decline.

That has raised hopes that the ash plume might not be big enough to cause much trouble once the winds change.

"It has been declining now a bit since this morning," Magnus Tummi Gudmundsson, a geophysicist at the University of Iceland, told AFP late Sunday.

He stressed however that the eruption, with its column of smoke still stretching some 10 kilometres into the air, remained powerful.

"It will have to decline considerably more before we can consider it of no danger," he said.

Whether it will cause air travel chaos or not "will depend on the power of the eruption and the strength of the winds," he added.

Fortunately, Gudmundsson said, so far "the winds are not nearly as strong as last time around." On that occasion, in April 2010, the nearby Eyjafjoell volcano erupted, spewing a massive cloud of ash that caused the planet's biggest airspace shutdown since World War II.

"This time it is probably going to be more local."

Oli Thor Arnason, a meteorologist at the Icelandic Meteorological Office, agreed. For ash from Iceland's most active volcano to reach mainland Europe, "the eruption has to keep on going as strong as it is now for the next couple of days" he said.

Historically, Grimsvoetn eruptions have tended to have very brief explosive stages, with the intensity usually subsiding significantly within a few days.

But residents living near Grimsvoetn saw little sign of improvement Sunday.

"It's just black outside, and you can hardly tell it is supposed to be bright daylight," Bjorgvin Hardarsson, a farmer at Hunbakkar Farm in the nearby village of Kirkjubaejarklaustur, told AFP by phone.

"You'd think it was night," said Vilhelm Tunnarsson, a photographer for local Icelandic media staying at a nearby hotel. At times he had been unable to see 30 centimetres (11 inches) in front of him, he added.

"I went out a little this morning, and had ash in my eyes and mouth and nose. And I just went five metres (yards) to my car and back ... I was covered," he said.

Rescue workers have been hard at work handing out masks and goggles and helping local farmers with their animals.

Ash deposits from Grimsvoetn, Iceland's most active volcano located at the heart of its biggest glacier Vatnajoekull, even reached the capital, prompting Iceland's airport authority, Isavia, to announce the main airport Keflavik was shutting.

The airspace closure "affects pretty much all of Iceland," Isavia spokeswoman Hjordis Gudmundsdottir told AFP Sunday morning.

The situation remained unchanged all day, and by evening Gudmundsdottir said Iceland's airports would likely remain closed all night and into Monday morning.

However, she stressed, with the winds blowing the ash to the north it was a far better situation than last year, when ash from Eyjafjoell was blown to the south and southeast over mainland Europe.

Saturday's eruption was the most powerful in over a century at Grimsvoetn, which has erupted nine times between 1922 and 2004, a spokeswoman for the Icelandic Meteorological Office told AFP Sunday evening.

European air safety organisation Eurocontrol said they expected no impact on European airspace outside Iceland or on transatlantic flights for at least 24 hours.

When the Eyjafjoell eruption began in April 2010, orders were given to close vast swathes of European airspace for fear the ash could wreak havoc on aircraft engines.

But experts said the ash generated by the latest eruption, a bit coarser and heavier, might not travel as far.

"I don't expect this will have the same effect as Eyjafjoell volcano because the ash is not as fine," geologist Gunnar Gudmundsson told AFP.

"The eruption is still going strong, but because the ash is basalt it is rougher and falls back down to earth much quicker."

When it last erupted in November 2004, volcanic ash fell as far away as mainland Europe and caused minor disruptions in flights to and from Iceland.

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British end military mission in Iraq (AP)

By LARA JAKES, Associated Press

BAGHDAD ? The last of Britain's military forces in Iraq pulled up anchor Sunday, ending more than eight years of fighting militants and training security forces since invading in 2003.

Eighty-one Royal Navy sailors turned over the task of patrolling waters off the southern port city of Umm Qasr on the Persian Gulf to Iraq's fledgling navy. It was the last hands-on mission that British troops had in Iraq since combat forces pulled out of the southern city of Basra in July 2009.

Brig. Gen. Max Marriner, commander of British forces in Iraq, cited dramatic security gains across the country, and particularly in the south, that he said British troops helped make happen.

"Security has fundamentally improved and as a consequence, the social and economic development of the south has dramatically changed for the better, as too have people's lives," Marriner said in a statement.

He said the Iraqi Navy is ready to go the mission alone, "so now is the time for the UK to dress back and let them complete the mission they were created for."

Officials said 179 British troops died in Iraq since the 2003 invasion that ousted Saddam Hussein.

But the war has been unpopular in Britain, where a government inquiry is examining mistakes made in the build-up to and aftermath of the U.S.-led invasion.

The question of whether information making the case for war that was presented to Parliament in September 2002 was "sexed up" has been hotly debated since the invasion, as has the failure to find any evidence that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction.

A small number of British defense officials will continue to work at the embassy in Baghdad, and 44 British military personnel also will remain in Iraq as part of the NATO training mission at the Iraqi Military Academy at a base in the capital's south.

Iraqi government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh said U.S. sailors will continue training Iraqi forces to secure waters off the nation's coast through the end of the year.

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Obama says he'd repeat bin Laden raid (AP)

LONDON ? U.S. President Barack Obama says he would order another covert military raid like that which killed Osama bin Laden if it was necessary to stop terrorist attacks.

Pakistan is furious that that United States sent Navy SEALs to raid bin Laden's Pakistan hideaway earlier this month without informing Pakistani authorities.

Obama told the BBC in an interview broadcast Sunday that "we are very respectful of the sovereignty of Pakistan," but "our job is to secure the United States."

He said he could not allow "active plans to come to fruition without us taking some action," and would send troops again if a senior Taliban leader was found in Pakistan.

"We cannot allow someone who is planning to kill our people or our allies' people ? we can't allow those kind of active plans to come to fruition without us taking some action," Obama said,

The president told the BBC's "Andrew Marr Show" that he hoped the raid would be "a wake-up call where we start seeing a more effective cooperative relationship" with Pakistan, an important but awkward ally in Washington's fight against al-Qaida-inspired terrorism.

Many in the U.S. suspect bin Laden must have had official help during his years hiding in Pakistan. Obama said it was unclear who knew of his whereabouts.

"What we know is that for him to have been there for five or six years probably required some sort of support external to the compound," Obama said. "Whether that was non-governmental, governmental, a broad network, or a handful of individuals, those are all things that we are investigating, but we're also asking the Pakistanis to investigate."

Obama said he had taken a "calculated risk" in launching the bin Laden raid, a triumph that could easily have ended in disaster.

He said the SEAL team was exceptionally well prepared, "but there's no doubt that that was as long a 40 minutes as I care to experience during my presidency."

Obama begins a six-day trip to Europe on Monday, visiting Ireland, Britain, France and Poland.

In Britain, he and his wife Michelle will stay at Buckingham Palace as a guest of Queen Elizabeth II.

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Durango's Killing Fields: The Grave in the Garden (Time.com)

By TIM PADGETT / DURANGO

Mexican soldiers found a seventh mass grave in Durango, Mexico, this week, and its location was as unexpected as the six before it. TIME was one of the first media at the scene on Thursday, May 19, as forensic officials descended on a white stucco house in the upscale Jardines de Durango neighborhood to unearth presumed drug-cartel victims buried in the garden. Like the other grisly fosas, or narco-graves, uncovered in this northern desert city since last month - many of which were in middle-class backyards or near schools - the latest raised an unsettling question: How could residents and authorities not know something was terribly amiss at the house on Calle Petunias? "That's the incredible part," says Jorge Santiago, spokesman for Durango State Human Rights Commission.

Just as staggering is the number of bodies recovered so far in the Durango fosas: 218, a figure sure to rise with the newest discovery, and which surpasses the 183 exhumed since last month in the border state of Tamaulipas. Like the Tamaulipas corpses, many of those found in Durango are believed to be innocents as well as mafiosos. Either way, the sheer volume has human rights advocates looking at Mexico's bloody drug war, which in four years has produced almost 40,000 gangland murders, through a more disturbing prism. To them it smacks of massacres witnessed in the Balkans in the 1990s, or Central America in the 1980s or South America in the 1970s - especially since corrupt Mexican police, like the 17 arrested for alleged involvement in the Tamaulipas slaughter, frequently take part. "It's purely demoniacal," says Javier Sicilia, a Mexican poet whose son, Juan Francisco Sicilia, 24, was murdered by narco-criminals this year. "It threatens our democracy." (Read about why Mexico's drug cartels are moving into human smuggling.)

But like the killing of Sicilia's son, the macabre fosas are also putting more human names and faces on the victims of Mexico's narco-carnage, including the thousands of missing persons. As bodies, many badly decomposed, were brought to refrigerated trailers behind the Durango state attorney general compound this week, hundreds of families braved the overpowering stench to come and take DNA tests, hoping to find out if any of the fosa dead are loved ones who violently disappeared months or years ago - either because they were involved in drug trafficking themselves, or because they were targeted for robbery, kidnapping and extortion amid turf battles between gangs like the powerful Sinaloa Cartel and the vicious army commandos-turned-narcos known as the Zetas.

Among those coming forward was Rosario L�pez, 34, a Durango hair stylist whose longtime boyfriend, Julio C�sar Rocha, 23, a car stereo technician, was snatched off the street seven months ago by suspected narcos - who, say witnesses, may also have been cops - in a black Ford Lobo truck. L�pez says local authorities have done little to investigate his disappearance. (More than 90% of Mexico's violent crimes go unsolved.) But after convincing his parents to offer DNA samples, she now waits to see if Rocha is one of those recently exhumed - to get closure but, just as important, to finally force a professional probe into his case. "It's a pain, a daily anguish you can't describe," says L�pez, who lived with Rocha and planned to marry him. "These criminals don't just take people, they take away whole futures." (See "Can Obama and Calderon Solve Mexico's Bloodshed [EM] and the Bad Blood?")

Residents like L�pez applaud the state and federal governments for giving them access to the DNA tests. But other families, many arriving at the attorney general's office from nearby states, were more circumspect - worried that narco spies were scattered around the compound listening to their conversations. Durango officials fear it too. "We don't know who's friend or enemy here anymore," one told TIME.

One hope, says Sicilia, who has turned his son's killing into a surprisingly broad civic protest movement against Mexico's violence, is that cases like Rocha's will help the world realize "that the dead aren't just figures and abstractions, narcos killing narcos, but potentially all of us." And that in turn may put pressure on Mexican leaders to get more serious about judicial and police reform - which is the country's only real solution to the narco-crisis, and which President Felipe Calder�n has pushed along with his gutsy but ill-conceived military campaign against the cartels - and on U.S. leaders to reduce the drug consumption and smuggled guns that play such a large role in the tragedy south of the border. (See pictures of Mexico's drug tunnels.)

Calder�n sent federal forensic aid to Durango this week to help state investigators, who human rights monitors had complained were ruining evidence at the fosas by using large backhoes to extract bodies. (Calder�n, however, didn't help his p.r. cause on Thursday when, during a visit to Las Vegas to promote Mexican tourism, he less than tactfully quipped that the "only shots" visitors to Mexico will face are "tequila shots.") As more decapitated bodies begin turning up in the city - including that of a local high-ranking prison official - the President has also sent in highly trained Marine units.

To symbolize the shared responsibility of the drug war, Sicilia's Hasta la Madre! (We've Had It!) movement supporters are planning a caravan next month from Mexico City to the violence-plagued border city of Ju�rez. There they hope a southbound American caravan will arrive across the Rio Grande at the U.S. border city of El Paso, Texas. It won't end Mexico's narco-violence, but it might wake more people up to the kind of human horror that Durango is now discovering in its gardens.

See pictures of a Mexican meth gang waging a drug war.

See the world's most influential people in the 2011 TIME 100.

View this article on Time.com

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Saturday, May 21, 2011

Bids for bizarre royal wedding hat pass $120,000 (AP)

Princess Beatrice

LONDON ? Auction site eBay says a bidder has offered 75,000 pounds ($120,000) for the spiraling headpiece worn by Princess Beatrice to last month's royal wedding.

The 22-year-old granddaughter of Queen Elizabeth II startled commentators with the swirling hat she wore to the wedding of her cousin Prince William and Kate Middleton.

The silk Philip Treacy creation has been compared to antlers, a toilet seat and a pretzel, and has been photoshopped into scores of unlikely scenarios on the Internet.

Beatrice has taken the joke in stride and put the hat on sale for charity. Proceeds will go to UNICEF and Children in Crisis.

On Saturday 38 bidders were competing for the hat, described on eBay as a "unique sculptural celebratory headpiece."

The auction ends Sunday.

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Baghdad trials city-wide security siren (AFP)

Baghdad trials city-wide security siren

BAGHDAD (AFP) ? Iraqi authorities tested a Baghdad-wide siren system on Friday designed to alert residents to foreign attacks, natural disasters and fires, the first such system since Saddam Hussein's 2003 ouster.

Hundreds of sirens are due to be rolled out across the country in the coming months and years, but at 11:00 am (0800 GMT) on Friday, 126 loud hailer sirens rang out across the violence-wracked capital for one minute.

"The system has four tones to warn of natural disasters, fires, pollution and war," Major General Latif Karim Mizhir, the head of Baghdad's emergency response unit, told AFP. A fifth tone, which was used in the test, signals all-clear.

"It will also help us connect with emergency response centres in all of Iraq's regions, and to address the people," he added.

Friday's siren alerts were preceded by a media campaign and a mass mobile phone text message sent to residents to warn them of the test. Baghdad authorities also used the loudspeaker system Friday morning for reminders.

A total of 300 sirens have so far been installed -- 126 in Baghdad and the rest in provincial cities -- with a further 700 set to be put in place across the country.

Despite what is ostensibly a city-wide deployment, parts of the capital did not hear the sirens, such as the south Baghdad neighbourhood of Dora.

Saddam's regime had its own siren system in the major cities that was used frequently during the 1980-1988 war with Iran and the 1991 Gulf War, but no such system has been used since he was overthrown by US-led forces.

"I was born listening to these sirens," said 62-year-old Abu Shaala, speaking in central Baghdad's commercial Karrada district. "From the years of the Iran-Iraq war, and then the Gulf War, and then the invasion in 2003."

Nearby, 36-year-old Uday said that the volume of the siren was "lower than the old one".

"The older one used to shake us in our beds, and woke us up in the middle of the night," he said. "It only meant war, and it only meant that we had to take cover."

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Yemen opposition signs transition of power deal (Reuters)

A boy shouts slogans with anti-government protesters during a rally to demand the ouster of Yemen's President Ali Abdullah Saleh in Sanaa By Mohamed Sudam and Mohammed Ghobari

SANAA (Reuters) ? Yemen's opposition signed a Gulf-brokered transition deal on Saturday that will ease President Ali Abdullah Saleh out of power within a month, provided he ratifies the agreement as promised on Sunday.

Saleh, a shrewd political survivor who has outlasted previous challenges to his nearly 33-year rule, faces mounting diplomatic pressure to sign after backing out twice before over technical details at the last minute.

"We signed the initiative in the presence of envoys from the U.S., Britain, the European Union and the Gulf Cooperation Council secretary-general Abdullatif al-Zayani," the opposition leader, who declined to be named, told Reuters.

A Yemeni official earlier said Zayani, who heads the GCC bloc grouping Yemen's wealthy Gulf Arab neighbors which have headed mediation efforts, was in Yemen to see the opposition sign, and that Saleh and the ruling party would sign on Sunday.

The United States and Saudi Arabia, both targets of foiled attacks by al Qaeda's Yemen wing, are keen to end the Yemeni stalemate to avert deeper chaos that could give one of the militant network's most potent arms more room to thrive.

Washington has stepped up pressure on Saleh to sign and implement the deal, and President Barack Obama said in a speech on U.S. policy in the Arab world on Thursday that Saleh needed to "follow through on his commitment to transfer power."

Saleh also appeared to be under pressure to sign ahead of a meeting of GCC foreign ministers expected on Sunday in Riyadh to discuss prospects for Yemen after Saleh failed to sign the deal last week in a last-minute reversal.

Protesters, frustrated that three months of daily rallies have failed to dislodge Saleh, want him out immediately in the Arabian Peninsula state, which is also facing revolts from northern Shi'ite rebels and southern separatists.

They have threatened to step up their campaign by marching on government buildings, a move that brought new bloodshed last week as security forces fired to stop them. Strikes have brought commerce to a halt in many cities.

On Saturday, 35 protesters were wounded as security forces confronted protesters at a university in the Red Sea port city of Hudaida, witnesses said. Dozens were suffering from the effects of teargas.

AL QAEDA THREAT

Saleh, who appeared willing to finally agree to hand over power despite months of resistance, nevertheless warned Yemen's allies that al Qaeda could take over in a political and security vacuum after he steps down.

"If the system falls ... al Qaeda will capture Maarib, Hadramout, Shabwa, Abyan and al-Jouf (and) it will control the situation," Saleh said, listing provinces where al Qaeda's Yemen-based wing has been active.

"This is the message that I send to our friends and brothers in the United States and the European Union ... The successor will be worse that what we have currently," he said.

Saleh is a clever operator who has survived many tussles with rivals in the fractious Arabian Peninsula state, and has skillfully used patronage and favors to keep tribal and political backers loyal.

He called on Friday for early presidential elections, which he said was aimed at preventing bloodshed as protests raged on. Saleh has seen a wave of desertions, including from within Yemen's military and political elite, since protests began.

"We welcome the Gulf initiative and we say that we will work with it in a positive way for the sake of our homeland (although) in reality it is a mere coup operation ... and part of foreign pressures and agendas," Saleh said at a ceremony.

A civilian was shot dead on Friday as gunmen clashed with the army at security checkpoints around the flashpoint province of Abyan, where al Qaeda militants are active.

Yemen, where half the 23 million population owns a gun, has caused concern for regional stability among its Gulf neighbors, particularly top oil exporter Saudi Arabia, as well as the United States, which has seen Yemen as an ally against al Qaeda.

(Writing by Firouz Sedarat and Cynthia Johnston; editing by Philippa Fletcher)

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Five killed in north Iraq violence: police (AFP)

Five killed in north Iraq violence: police

KIRKUK, Iraq (AFP) ? Violence in the disputed northern Iraqi province of Kirkuk left five people dead on Saturday, police said, just two days after a string of anti-police attacks in the region killed 29.

The latest violence further raises tension in Kirkuk and its eponymous capital, which are claimed by both the central government in Baghdad and Kurdish regional authorities in Arbil.

US officials have persistently said that the unresolved row is one of the biggest threats to Iraq's future stability.

On Saturday, gunmen killed Salim and Samah Abdulwahab, two Kurdish brothers aged 23 and 21 respectively, inside their home in north Kirkuk city, police First Lieutenant Laith Mahmud said.

Salim was a policeman while Samah worked in an auto repair shop.

"Police found their bodies covered in blood inside their home," Mahmud said.

In the east of the city, meanwhile, insurgents gunned down a handicapped man who was responsible for operating a neighbourhood electricity generator, Mahmud added. Kirkuk, like the rest of Iraq, suffers chronic power shortages, so districts often join together to pay for a communal generator.

And in Al-Rashad, 65 kilometres (40 miles) south of the provincial capital, a roadside bomb targeting an Iraqi army patrol killed two soldiers and wounded two others, according to police Brigadier General Sarhad Qader.

A separate roadside bomb against a police patrol in Al-Riyadh, east of Kirkuk city, also wounded two civilians, Qader said.

Saturday's violence comes two days after three bombings against police in the provincial capital killed 29 people, 26 of them policemen, and wounded 90 others, Iraq's deadliest day since March 29.

Kirkuk lies at the centre of a tract of disputed territory claimed by both Iraq's central government and by Kurdish regional authorities.

Currently, US forces participate in confidence-building tripartite patrols and checkpoints with central government forces and Kurdish security officers in Kirkuk and across northern Iraq.

But the withdrawal of some 45,000 US troops still in Iraq must be completed by the end of the year.

Violence is down dramatically in Iraq from its peak, but attacks remain common. A total of 211 Iraqis were killed in violence in April, according to official figures.

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Durango's Killing Fields: The Grave in the Garden (Time.com)

By TIM PADGETT / DURANGO

Mexican soldiers found a seventh mass grave in Durango, Mexico, this week, and its location was as unexpected as the six before it. TIME was one of the first media at the scene on Thursday, May 19, as forensic officials descended on a white stucco house in the upscale Jardines de Durango neighborhood to unearth presumed drug-cartel victims buried in the garden. Like the other grisly fosas, or narco-graves, uncovered in this northern desert city since last month - many of which were in middle-class backyards or near schools - the latest raised an unsettling question: How could residents and authorities not know something was terribly amiss at the house on Calle Petunias? "That's the incredible part," says Jorge Santiago, spokesman for Durango State Human Rights Commission.

Just as staggering is the number of bodies recovered so far in the Durango fosas: 218, a figure sure to rise with the newest discovery, and which surpasses the 183 exhumed since last month in the border state of Tamaulipas. Like the Tamaulipas corpses, many of those found in Durango are believed to be innocents as well as mafiosos. Either way, the sheer volume has human rights advocates looking at Mexico's bloody drug war, which in four years has produced almost 40,000 gangland murders, through a more disturbing prism. To them it smacks of massacres witnessed in the Balkans in the 1990s, or Central America in the 1980s or South America in the 1970s - especially since corrupt Mexican police, like the 17 arrested for alleged involvement in the Tamaulipas slaughter, frequently take part. "It's purely demoniacal," says Javier Sicilia, a Mexican poet whose son, Juan Francisco Sicilia, 24, was murdered by narco-criminals this year. "It threatens our democracy." (Read about why Mexico's drug cartels are moving into human smuggling.)

But like the killing of Sicilia's son, the macabre fosas are also putting more human names and faces on the victims of Mexico's narco-carnage, including the thousands of missing persons. As bodies, many badly decomposed, were brought to refrigerated trailers behind the Durango state attorney general compound this week, hundreds of families braved the overpowering stench to come and take DNA tests, hoping to find out if any of the fosa dead are loved ones who violently disappeared months or years ago - either because they were involved in drug trafficking themselves, or because they were targeted for robbery, kidnapping and extortion amid turf battles between gangs like the powerful Sinaloa Cartel and the vicious army commandos-turned-narcos known as the Zetas.

Among those coming forward was Rosario L�pez, 34, a Durango hair stylist whose longtime boyfriend, Julio C�sar Rocha, 23, a car stereo technician, was snatched off the street seven months ago by suspected narcos - who, say witnesses, may also have been cops - in a black Ford Lobo truck. L�pez says local authorities have done little to investigate his disappearance. (More than 90% of Mexico's violent crimes go unsolved.) But after convincing his parents to offer DNA samples, she now waits to see if Rocha is one of those recently exhumed - to get closure but, just as important, to finally force a professional probe into his case. "It's a pain, a daily anguish you can't describe," says L�pez, who lived with Rocha and planned to marry him. "These criminals don't just take people, they take away whole futures." (See "Can Obama and Calderon Solve Mexico's Bloodshed [EM] and the Bad Blood?")

Residents like L�pez applaud the state and federal governments for giving them access to the DNA tests. But other families, many arriving at the attorney general's office from nearby states, were more circumspect - worried that narco spies were scattered around the compound listening to their conversations. Durango officials fear it too. "We don't know who's friend or enemy here anymore," one told TIME.

One hope, says Sicilia, who has turned his son's killing into a surprisingly broad civic protest movement against Mexico's violence, is that cases like Rocha's will help the world realize "that the dead aren't just figures and abstractions, narcos killing narcos, but potentially all of us." And that in turn may put pressure on Mexican leaders to get more serious about judicial and police reform - which is the country's only real solution to the narco-crisis, and which President Felipe Calder�n has pushed along with his gutsy but ill-conceived military campaign against the cartels - and on U.S. leaders to reduce the drug consumption and smuggled guns that play such a large role in the tragedy south of the border. (See pictures of Mexico's drug tunnels.)

Calder�n sent federal forensic aid to Durango this week to help state investigators, who human rights monitors had complained were ruining evidence at the fosas by using large backhoes to extract bodies. (Calder�n, however, didn't help his p.r. cause on Thursday when, during a visit to Las Vegas to promote Mexican tourism, he less than tactfully quipped that the "only shots" visitors to Mexico will face are "tequila shots.") As more decapitated bodies begin turning up in the city - including that of a local high-ranking prison official - the President has also sent in highly trained Marine units.

To symbolize the shared responsibility of the drug war, Sicilia's Hasta la Madre! (We've Had It!) movement supporters are planning a caravan next month from Mexico City to the violence-plagued border city of Ju�rez. There they hope a southbound American caravan will arrive across the Rio Grande at the U.S. border city of El Paso, Texas. It won't end Mexico's narco-violence, but it might wake more people up to the kind of human horror that Durango is now discovering in its gardens.

See pictures of a Mexican meth gang waging a drug war.

See the world's most influential people in the 2011 TIME 100.

View this article on Time.com

Most Popular on Time.com:

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Mexican police catch Gulf drug cartel leader (AP)

Gilberto Barragan Balderas By MARK STEVENSON, Associated Press

MEXICO CITY ? Mexican federal police captured a leading member of the Gulf drug cartel Friday at what appeared to have been his birthday party, authorities said.

Gilberto Barragan Balderas "is considered one of the main leaders of the Gulf Cartel" and is the subject of a $5 million reward by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, said Ramon Pequeno, head of anti-drug operations for the federal police.

Barragan Balderas was allegedly in charge of the cartel's operations in Miguel Aleman, across the border from Roma, Texas. Police captured him at a party at a ranch near another border city, Reynosa, which is across from McAllen, Texas.

Police said the party was apparently in honor of Barragan Balderas' May 19 birthday. Two alleged associates were also arrested in the raid, which also netted an assault rifle and three pistols.

No formal charges had been filed against any of the suspects.

Barragan Balderas, 41, is wanted on drug trafficking charges in the United States under a 2008 indictment.

A DEA statement says he was "responsible for obtaining advanced notice regarding the movement and locations of military and state police patrols and mobile checkpoints, thus protecting shipments of cocaine and marijuana for the Gulf Cartel and Los Zetas" before the two gangs split in 2010.

The Gulf and Zetas cartels are now bitter rivals, and federal police said one of Barragan Balderas' "duties was to defend territory in Tamaulipas against attacks by the rival Zetas."

The Zetas have also been expanding into other territories in Mexico and engaging in a series of turf battles with gangs other than the Gulf.

On Friday, the attorney general of the north-central state of Zacatecas said at least 10 people were killed in a gunbattle apparently involving the Zetas and a rival front of gangs known as the "United Cartels."

"I say at least 10 people, because witnesses say that the gunmen, before they left ... took away other bodies," Attorney General Arturo Nahle told a local television station.

Gunmen left 11 vehicles at the scene of the confrontation in the remote town of Florencia de Benito Juarez. Six of the vehicles were bulletproofed, officials said.

The United Cartels is believed to be an alliance between the Gulf, Sinaloa and the La Familia cartels, to form a common front against encroachments by the Zetas.

Also Friday, Mexico's federal security spokesman said homicides in the Mexican border city of Ciudad Juarez have dropped from an average of 11 a day in October to about four a day in April.

Alejandro Poire attributed the drop to the deployment of thousands of federal police and efforts by local prosecutors. But he added that "the problem is not 100 percent solved."

More than 6,000 people have died the past two years from drug-related violence in the city, which sits across from El Paso, Texas.

Despite the bloodshed, the state legislature is scheduled to award the city the title of "Heroic" Ciudad Juarez on Saturday in recognition of the city's participation in the 1910-17 Mexican Revolution.

The killings extend throughout various parts of Mexico. On Friday, police in the Pacific coast state of Guerrero reported they found the decpitated bodies of four men in the township of Tecpan de Galeana, about 50 miles (80 kilometers) west of Acapulco.

Also Friday, President Felipe Calderon met with a delegation of U.S. lawmakers led by Rep. Connie Mack, a Florida Republican who is chairman of the House subcommittee on Western Hemisphere affairs.

Calderon's office said in a statement that the president stressed "the importance of combatting ever more firmly and efficiently weapons trafficking and money laundering," two elements that Mexico says fuel the bloody drug war that has cost over 35,000 lives since late 2006.

He also "stressed the importance of fully recognizing the contributions that Mexican migrants make to the U.S. economy and society."

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