четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Raul says he's staying at Schalke

GELSENKIRCHEN, Germany (AP) — Spanish striker Raul Gonzalez said Sunday he would see out his contract with Schalke, ending transfer speculation linking him with a move away from the Bundesliga club.

Raul told Schalke's website that he felt "at home" at the club and that "the affection shown to me by the Schalke fans is extraordinary and unforgettable ... I'm definitely staying at Schalke and will honor my contract."

Raul said he had no problems with coach Ralf Rangnick and that "we're all concentrated on together achieving the best for Schalke this season."

The 34-year-old former Real Madrid player — who turned down a move to Premier League side …

The Retreat from Reason: Mysticism

The Retreat From Reason: Mysticism

Escape from a Harsh Reality.

The fourteenth century was on many fronts a desperate age, an age of disintegration. The papacy had been weakened morally and militarily by generations of struggle against the powerful rulers of the Holy Roman Empire, a dynasty that traced its legitimacy to the time of Charlemagne in the ninth century and controlled both Germany and northern Italy. As a result of this and other political conflicts, the papacy had become virtually a captive of the French crown at Avignon. Later in the century there were simultaneously three different men claiming to be pope. The magnificent structure of scholastic theology, elaborated as no other system of theology in the history of the world, was crumbling, brought down by the assaults of the Ockhamists. The bubonic plague was ravaging Europe, killing off approximately a third of the population. Especially hard-hit were urban centers, in which the universities were located. We know of at least two philosophers who fell victim to the epidemic. Yet, paradoxically, amid the social and ecclesiastical chaos, the age also witnessed the flowering of mysticism. Perhaps it was in part an escape from realities that had become too harsh, or it represented a retreat from the rational. Whatever the case, it was the age …

Ties that bind: Risky business

Canadian banks improved their lending practices in the early 1990s after a series of bad corporate loans left them reeling. But last year banks saw the return of corporate loan losses and we saw our bank stocks tumble. Now they're tinkering with lending practices again and asking us not to worry - after all, it's just temporary.

LOSSES DEVELOP Corporate loan defaults send bank profits plummeting in the early '90s. In 1992, Royal Bank alone has loan-loss provisions totaling $2.35 billion - including $800 million owed by developer Olympia & York. Banks are criticized for lending to businesses without sufficient collateral.

BEAUTIFUL LOANERS Banks vow to "deal …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Kanepi, Vinci win in straight sets in first round of Prague Open

Eighth-seeded Kaia Kanepi of Estonia beat Karolina Sprem of Croatia 7-5, 6-0 in the first round of the Prague Open on Monday.

Kanepi was the only seeded player in action on the …

Hong Kong confirms 2 more cases of swine flu

Hong Kong has confirmed two more cases of swine flu to bring the territory's total to six.

Thomas Tsang of the city's Center for Health Protection said Saturday the two latest patients are a mainland Chinese man from San Francisco and a 20-year-old Hong Kong woman who was studying in New York.

Both …

Sandra Simonson

Works With Children Director of the Child Development Center atTruman College in Uptown. Founded the center in 1976. Truman is oneof seven City Colleges. Top-Notch Program She has quietly built a national reputation with ayear-round program that helps children flourish. She mixes Uptownpreschoolers of all races with youngsters from every background andarea of the city. The center is considered one of the best trainingfacilities for child care students. Interest in Kids' Minds "I'm very interested in the way kids' mindswork. They're open, receptive to new ideas. You can effect change.These are the years that are truly important in development. It's ahelluva lot cheaper than putting …

Bidders compete for Ga.'s Sea Island at auction

SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP) — Two bidders are competing to become the new owners of the Sea Island Co. as the Georgia resort operator goes on the auction block to settle its bankruptcy case.

The auction Monday in Atlanta was closed to reporters. A Sea Island spokesman says bidding had been going on for five hours.

The winner will become Sea Island's new owner if the sale is approved by …

Industrial output rises more than expected in Nov.

Industrial production rose a better-than-expected 0.8 percent in November, a sign of recovery taking root in some parts of the U.S. economy.

The gain shows that businesses and consumers are spending more, clearing inventories and spurring factories to produce more goods. Economists expected the Federal Reserve …

THE WEEK THAT WAS

UFqthedDragnet The United States wants to bring Pol Pot to trial. A U.S. envoyasked China for help arresting the elusive former leader ofCambodia's Khmer Rouge, which is believed responsible for killinguntold numbers of people during its 1975-79 regime. PresidentClinton reportedly has ordered the Defense, State and Justicedepartments to draft plans to arrest Pol Pot. China did not say ifit would help. Still secretive

Iraq's attempts to show that it eliminated its biological weaponsprogram in 1991 are "incomplete and inadequate." The assessment by ateam of experts that gathered in Vienna in March to evaluate Iraq'scompliance with United Nations resolutions on disarmament was …

James returns to Heat practice

MIAMI (AP) — LeBron James returned to practice with the Miami Heat on Saturday, reporting no problems with his ailing right hamstring.

The NBA's two-time reigning MVP was sidelined by a hamstring cramp during an exhibition game against CSKA Moscow on Tuesday and had not played or …

RBS fined for breaching money laundering rules

Britain's financial services regulator has fined the Royal Bank of Scotland 5.6 million pounds ($8.9 million) for failing to follow rules designed to prevent banks lending to people who are on government ban lists.

The Financial Services Authority said Tuesday that RBS failed to properly screen its customers and their transactions during 2008.

The regulator says …

World trade body ruling reflects pre-crisis time

The World Trade Organization's ruling that European loans for Airbus were illegal subsidies is being cheered by U.S. lawmakers loyal to the Boeing Co., even though the preliminary decision may seem quaint in a world where government subsidies, bailouts and takeovers are now commonplace.

Friday's ruling reflects the world as it existed five years ago when the United States brought the case against the European Union, arguing that such subsidies were unfair trading practices.

But since then, the deep global recession has led to hundreds of billions of dollars in government subsidies and intervention in nearly all the world's major economies, including big government ownership stakes in banks, and auto and insurance companies.

Furthermore, other countries, including China, Japan and Brazil, are busy expanding or developing their domestic airline industries.

At issue is a 1,000-page confidential ruling that was given to U.S. and European trade officials. It was not released yet, and officials were under instructions not to speak publicly.

Still, lawmakers from Washington state and other U.S. states where Chicago-headquartered Boeing has a major presence were briefed by the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative on Friday.

Sen. Patty Murray, a Democrat from Washington state who led efforts in 2004 to get the Bush administration to initiate the WTO case, said the ruling "confirms that Boeing has been competing on an uneven playing field for decades."

Friday's decision confirms that "all Airbus aircraft have received illegal subsidies and that these have caused material harm to Boeing," said Rep. Norm Dicks, a Washington Democrat.

Neither Boeing nor Airbus would comment on the ruling publicly, nor would U.S. or E.U. trade officials.

However, European officials who were briefed had a somewhat different take on the ruling than American lawmakers, suggesting that it was more of a mixed bag and that many of the complaints lodged by the U.S. had been dismissed and the government loans to Airbus were in some instances deemed a permissible form of financing.

The WTO finding was the first step in a process that could take years to produce a final result.

The organization doesn't have the power to impose sanctions itself, but it can allow a nation that has been harmed _ in this case the U.S. _ to raise tariffs or impose other barriers to imports from an offending country or countries.

And that wouldn't be limited to aircraft. It could also include, for instance, purses, sweaters or French wines. The amount of such tariffs could be high enough to offset the damages done by the illegal practices.

"The United States has always maintained that the European governments have provided unfair subsidies to Airbus that harm U.S. interests," said Deborah Mesloh, deputy assistant U.S. trade representative in Washington, ahead of Friday's ruling.

Friday's ruling was Part One of the process. A ruling on an EU counter-complaint against the U.S. claiming that the Pentagon and NASA are indirectly subsidizing Boeing is being heard by a separate WTO panel and a ruling is expected in about six months.

"We have a good case against them, and they have a serviceable case against us," said Jeffrey Schott, a trade expert with the Peterson Institute for International Economics.

Both disputes in the Boeing-Airbus rivalry are over what is projected to be a $3.2 trillion global aviation market over the next 20 years.

Sen. Maria Cantwell, a Democrat from Washington state, said the case "sets an important precedent that must be respected by all countries with an emerging commercial aircraft industry." She also said it should discourage European governments from going ahead with an additional $4.6 billion in proposed subsidies for Airbus to develop its new extra wide-bodied A350 airliner, which will compete with Boeing's long-delayed 787 Dreamliner.

Financing for the A350 airliner was not part of the U.S. case before the WTO.

___

Associated Press writers Alexander G. Higgins in Geneva, Mike Obel in New York and Donna Borak and Martin Crutsinger in Washington contributed to this report.

___

On the Net:

World Trade Organization: http://www.wto.org/

Boeing: http://www.boeing.com/

Airbus: http://www.airbus.com/en/

U.S. Trade Representative: http://www.ustr.gov/

European Union: http://europa.eu/index(underscore)en.htm

Fiesta time: Spain celebrates first World Cup win

Spain's World Cup champions flew home from South Africa on Monday for a massive celebration, including meetings with the Spanish king and prime minister and an open air bus ride through the city's historic center.

At least several hundred thousand fans were expected to line the streets of the capital to celebrate Spain's first ever World Cup title, less than 24 hours after 300,000 jammed the city center for a raucous party just after the win.

The team, which beat the Netherlands 1-0 in extra time in Johannesburg on Sunday night, was set to arrive at Madrid's international airport at about 2:30 p.m. local time (1230 GMT). The players were to rest for several hours in an airport hotel before meeting King Juan Carlos and Prime Minister Rodriguez Zapatero.

But the highlight will be the team's 5-kilometer (3-mile) open air bus ride past Madrid landmarks amid crowds of cheering Spaniards decked out in bright red and yellow _ the colors of the Spanish flag.

Spaniards who partied past midnight to celebrate dragged themselves into work Monday, but were ready to launch the party again after the team's arrival.

Hair salon owner Marisa Dalon stayed up celebrating until her grown children finally arrived home at 3 a.m.

"It is the greatest day imaginable. We are so incredibly proud," beamed Dalon, 42.

Security guard Francisco Delgado made it to work at 6 a.m. after just three hours of sleep.

"I'm so unbelievably proud not just that we won but of how we won, playing clean and in a dignified manner," said Delgado, 49. "The Dutch were tough and very unsporting. We can hold our heads up and I'd even be proud if we had lost because of the class and dignity of our game."

The victory dominated the country's media, with newspapers paying tribute to the first Spanish team to claim football's most prestigious trophy and television stations replaying Andres Iniesta's winning goal over and over.

Under the front page headline "World Champions," leading Spanish newspaper El Pais called the win "an ode to happiness."

Spain "gave an injection of universality, showed its style of football despite those who sneer at it, after an emotional, uncomfortable game against a coarse Netherlands. It succumbed to a rival that was well-versed in the art of the unpredictable, as well as being intoxicating and mature," El Pais said.

The winning goal came with four minutes left in extra time when Iniesta took a pass from Cesc Fabregas and blasted the ball into the net.

"It was poetic justice because football won and football, that marvelous universal folklore, is Iniesta," said the El Mundo newspaper. "The little wizard had to be the one who in minute 116 put the nail in the coffin of the 11 most quarrelsome Dutchmen in history."

Iniesta plays for Barcelona, the club that forms the core of the Spanish team, along with players such as Xavi Hernandez, Gerard Pique and Carlos Puyol. Eight Barcelona players were members of the World Cup-winning squad.

Some news reports saw the national team as an example to follow for a country hit hard by the European debt crisis and various regions demanding greater autonomy.

"It would be good if the collective enthusiasm for the team became a stimulus for Spanish society in the face of the current problems and even that it became the motive to demand that our country should resemble and work like this group of young men," the ABC newspaper said.

Officials said about 75,000 fans celebrated the victory waving the Spanish flag celebrated in Barcelona Sunday night, where more than 1.1 million people protested a day earlier against a Spanish court ruling that their autonomous Catalonia region must remain part of Spain.

The Barcelona celebration turned ugly after midnight when fans threw bottles at riot police, prompting officers to disperse them with volleys of rubber bullets. No serious injuries were reported. Madrid police also broke up some rowdy street partying.

In the small northern Basque town of Barakaldo around 700 fans had their viewing of the game interrupted midway through the second half when the electricity feed to a giant screen in the town was cut by an act of vandalism.

No one was immediately blamed for the incident but the armed Basque separatist group ETA has often carried out similar acts of sabotage on television transmitters.

The fans in Barakaldo scrambled to nearby bars to watch the rest of the game, the Europa Press news agency reported.

Several people were hurt in the Basque region after clashes flared between people cheering the national squad and others chanting separatist slogans.

The incidents happened around midnight in the port city of Bilbao and in the agricultural center of Alava, Basque regional police said. One man was arrested after hitting two people with a stick, and another was injured after he was assaulted in a bar.

____

Associated Press Writers Guy Hedgecoe and Harold Heckle contributed from Madrid.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Stotler unit fraud charged

A Stotler Group unit has defrauded its commodity pool customersand a receiver should be appointed to safeguard investor funds, itsfederal regulator said in a complaint filed late Tuesday.

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission is requesting aninjunction that would bar the Chicago-based trading firm from"further misuse of public funds," an agency spokesman said. Thecomplaint also alleges that Stotler's use of pool money to fund itsoperations violates agreements with customers that specify the moneyshould be used for commodity trading.

The action follows disclosure that Stotler pool operatorsinvested $4.5 million from its Compass Futures Fund in its parentcompany's commercial paper. The parent also accepted a $1 millionloan from its Advanced Portfolio Management private commodity pool.

Stotler's use of pool assets for those purposes amounted to "afraud or deceit," the two-count civil complaint says. It alleges thecompany failed to properly disclose the transactions to poolparticipants or the CFTC. U.S. District Judge Milton Shadur ofChicago is expected to hear the complaint as soon as today. Stotlerofficials didn't respond to repeated requests for comment.

In a related move announced Tuesday, Chicago Board of Tradedirectors said they had given a unanimous vote of confidence toexchange Chairman Karsten "Cash" Mahlmann, who also is Stotler'schairman.

News of the vote, which coincided with news of the questionablecommodity pool transactions, drew a negative reaction from manyexchange members who believe the directors acted prematurely. "Toinvade customer funds for capital is just sacrilege," said onemember. "I honestly think he should've resigned," said another.

Exchange members familiar with the board meeting said Mahlmanntold directors he knew nothing of the pool transactions until "twohours before" the Monday afternoon briefing.

"That came as a surprise to Cash as well," said one Mahlmannsupporter, who noted the exchange chairman gave up day-to-daymanagement of Stotler three years ago when Thomas Egan became thecompany's chief executive. "I personally have strong confidence inCash and his integrity," the member said. "With Cash, it's the Boardof Trade first."

Also Tuesday, Stotler warned employees at its six operatingsubsidiaries, including the Des Moines-based R.G. Dickinson & Co.securities firm, to expect a "mass layoff" beginning immediately.

In a notice enclosed with paychecks distributed to Stotleremployees Tuesday, the company attributed the layoffs to "sudden,dramatic and unexpected actions outside Stotler's control."

The company's "unforeseeable business circumstances" result fromthe Board of Trade's declaration two weeks ago that Stotler hadfailed to meet capital requirements, the notice says.

Stotler last week said it is shutting down its largest unit, theStotler & Co. commodity futures firm, and sources say transfer ofcustomer accounts to other firms should be completed by Friday. Thatcould pave the way for a bankruptcy filing, the sources say.

Some Stotler employees already are finding other jobs. TheChicago Corp. on Tuesday announced the hiring of Robert J. Genetski,who has served as president of Stotler Economics since 1988.

Genetski will serve as senior vice president and chiefeconomist at the Chicago Corp.

Also ending a relationship with Stotler is Edwin L. Miller, theDallas-based commodity pool operator who directed trading of theCompass fund that's now the subject of the CFTC complaint.

Miller said in an interview Tuesday he was unaware until lastweek of the decision by Stotler's general partners to invest most ofthe $5.5 million fund's assets in the company's own commercial paper.

When he learned of the investment, Miller said, he promptlyresigned. The Compass fund has demanded repayment from StotlerGroup, and it's not allowing customers to redeem shares, he said.

"There are general partners who see the moral, ethical and legalobligations here," said Miller, president of ELM Financial. "Withoutthe investor, we're all out of a job."

Driver crashes into pack of Los Angeles bicyclists

LOS ANGELES (AP) — A driver plowed into a group of bicyclists on a midnight ride Thursday in a suspected drunken driving crash that injured 11 riders, at least one critically, police said.

A group of about 100 cyclists were on a ride about 8 miles south of downtown Los Angeles when they were struck by a Honda Civic shortly before 2 a.m.

Some bicyclists told KTTV a woman driving the car appeared to be using a cell phone before the crash. They said she slowed down then sped up and slammed into the group, sending some riders flying into the air and dragging at least one under her car.

Some witnesses said the car didn't stop as it mowed down a row of riders.

Television reports showed the car's smashed front end and shattered windshield.

Christine Elizabeth Dahab, 27, of Los Angeles was booked for investigation of driving under the influence and remained jailed on $15,000 bail, according to a Sheriff's Department website.

An email message to Dahab from The Associated Press was not immediately returned, and no message could be left at a phone number listed on her Facebook page.

The crash injured 11 riders, including at least one person who was hospitalized in critical condition and expected to survive, said Officer Jacquelyn Abad.

The car turned from a blind corner and hit riders who had stopped in a traffic lane to wait for others to catch up, said Sgt. David Krumer, the LAPD's bicycle liaison.

There were no skid marks so it was difficult to determine how fast the car was moving, Krumer said.

He could not confirm reports that a streetlight in the area was out.

"It appears that they were stopped in traffic" and some who had dismounted to chat with friends technically were pedestrians, Krumer said.

Bicyclists have a legal right to use the right traffic lane unless they impede traffic, and pedestrians are barred from traffic lanes, Krumer said. Violators potentially could be cited, he added.

However, drivers have a legal responsibility to exercise caution regardless of the circumstances, Krumer said.

"They're not at fault simply for being out there in the roadway," he said of the cyclists.

The riders were taking part in a weekly midnight ride starting in Koreatown that was advertised on the urban cycling website Midnight Ridazz. Night rides by loose confederations of riders have become increasingly popular in congested Los Angeles.

"There's no traffic so you can more easily get a group of 50 to 60 riders together and stay together as a group," Krumer said.

However, it is not necessarily safer than daytime rides.

"If you're driving at 2 in the morning, that's when all the DUI drivers are likely to be out," he said.

Some rides have reputations for being rowdy or quirky while others attract more straightforward riders, Krumer said.

Krumer said he hasn't seen an increase in reported accidents involving cyclists, but there can be tense relations with motorists on the crowded Los Angeles streets.

"Everybody wants their particular real estate on the roadway," he said. "Some drivers see bicyclists as taking away space and slowing them. Cyclists sometimes see drivers as maniacs going at unsafe speed."

Egypt to keep open border with impoverished Gaza

After three years of cooperating in the Israeli blockade of Gaza, Egypt said that it will leave its border with the Palestinian territory open indefinitely for humanitarian aid and restricted travel.

With international pressure building to ease the blockade, an Egyptian security official said on Monday that sealing off Hamas-ruled Gaza has only bred more militancy.

The decision to ease the restrictions erected by Israel to isolate and punish Hamas comes a week after a deadly Israeli raid on a flotilla bound for Gaza. The move restores a link to the outside world for at least some of Gaza's 1.5 million Palestinians. It also appeared calculated to defuse anger in the Arab and Muslim world over Egypt's role in maintaining the blockade and to show that Egypt, too, is now pressing Israel to open at least its land crossings with Gaza.

"Egypt is the one that broke the blockade," Egyptian Foreign Ministry spokesman Hossam Zaki said. "We are not going to let the occupying power escape from its responsibilities."

The U.S., which has called the current border restrictions unsustainable, is among those pressing for changes. Vice President Joe Biden met Monday with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak in the Red Sea resort of Sharm El-Sheikh.

He released a statement afterward saying the U.S. is closely consulting with Egypt and other allies to find new ways to "address the humanitarian, economic, security, and political aspects of the situation in Gaza."

In another escalation of the tension off Gaza's shores, Israeli naval forces shot and killed four men wearing wet suits off the coast on Monday. The militant group Al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades said the men were members of its marine unit training for a mission.

Egypt was not exactly a reluctant participant in imposing the blockade. Like Israel, Egypt watched with concern as Hamas militants wrenched control of Gaza from their rivals in the Fatah movement of Western-backed President Mahmoud Abbas during bloody street battles in 2007.

Egypt, which had its own war against Islamic radicals in the 1990s, fears sharing a border with a territory controlled by Islamic militants who have the backing of rising regional rival Iran. Just to the south, Egypt's Sinai peninsula has been the scene of major terrorist attacks against tourist hotels, the last one in 2006.

Egypt paid a price for its part in the blockade, including protests at home against the government of Mubarak, who has been accused of being "an agent" for Israel. And in January 2008, Hamas militants blew up a section of the Gaza-Egypt border wall in an attempt to end the blockade, allowing hundreds of thousands of Gazans to pour into Egypt to stock up on supplies and visit friends and relatives they had not seen for years.

It took 12 days for Egyptian forces to restore order and close the border.

In announcing the change in Egypt's position, a security official acknowledged his country was in a "continuously critical situation," and he said Israel was wrong to think the closure could pressure Hamas to meet a series of demands, including the release of an Israeli soldier, Gilad Schalit, who has held since 2006.

"Israel still insists that the blockade is a pressure tool. It can release Schalit and force Hamas to stop resistance. ... On the contrary, it becomes more extremist," said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue.

Egypt's new measures constitute an incremental change rather than a radically different approach to the border closure, in part because Egypt does not want to end up bearing sole responsibility for large-scale Gaza aid operations.

For the time being, Egypt is only allowing a restricted group of Gazans to leave the territory, including medical patients, students attending foreign universities and those with residency abroad. In nearly a week, thousands of Gazans have left and 500 tons of medical supplies were trucked in. It has done so before, sporadically and for a period limited to two or three days.

Egypt will not transfer large cargo shipments or construction material because the border crossing is designed primarily for travelers, the security official said. One such convoy, organized by Egypt's Islamic opposition movement, the Muslim Brotherhood, was stopped Monday before it got close to the border.

And while it eases movement at the crossing in the border town of Rafah, Egypt is intensifying its efforts to stop a thriving smuggling trade through hundreds of tunnels under the border. Those passages have been Gaza's key economic lifeline but have also been a pathway for weapons.

Egypt late last year began building an underground, metal barrier to seal the smuggling tunnels, and the security official said Egypt hoped to finish that work in the next few months.

"We have a constant security concern, because Iran has its aims. Hezbollah has its aims. Hamas has its aspirations and aims, and al-Qaida could very well be present in Sinai and Gaza," the official said.

Egypt's decision to open the border came soon after Israel's deadly raid on an international flotilla of activists trying to break the blockade a week ago. Israel has not publicly protested the Egyptian move, but officials declined to comment Monday.

Iran's Red Crescent Society said Monday it was preparing by the end of the week to send three cargo ships and a plane with humanitarian supplies for Gaza in cooperation with Turkey, whose government unofficially sponsored last week's attempt to break the blockade.

It was not clear if the ships would actually attempt to sail from Iran, in which case Egypt would most likely stop them at the Suez Canal. The Egyptian security official said he feared an Iranian ship heading to Gaza would only complicate efforts to ease the blockade.

In any event, Israel said it would not allow the vessels to dock in Gaza.

Israeli military officials said their navy is ready for all scenarios. Speaking on condition of anonymity according to military rules, they said if armed Iranian forces tried to enter Gaza, they would be repelled by force.

Hamas welcomed the Egyptian border measures but said it hoped all Gazans would soon be able to travel freely without restrictions.

"We have said since the first day that the blockade on Gaza will end, and we can see that on the ground right now. And we voice our hope that all other restrictions will be removed," Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum said.

Hamas tightly controls access to Rafah, and only travelers with the proper permits can reach the terminal.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has signaled in recent days that he is open to easing the blockade, but cannot allow ships to sail freely into Gaza's port, fearing weapons will reach Hamas militants. Netanyahu's spokesman, Mark Regev, said officials are considering various ideas but declined to elaborate.

Israel currently allows through only basic humanitarian goods, but Regev said it is expanding the volume of items getting in and has initiated building projects when there is a third-party guarantor to make sure construction materials do not end up benefiting Hamas.

___

Associated Press writers Aron Heller in Jerusalem and Ibrahim Barzak in Gaza City, Gaza Strip, contributed to this report.

Phillies beat Rays 10-2, take 3-1 Series lead

Joe Blanton became the first pitcher in 34 years to homer in the World Series, Ryan Howard drove in five runs with two homers and the Philadelphia Phillies routed Tampa Bay 10-2 on Sunday to move within one win of their first championship since 1980.

Jayson Werth also homered as the Phillies took a 3-1 lead in the best-of-seven Series.

Cole Hamels will try to close out the Phillies' second Series title on Monday night against Scott Kazmir in a rematch of Game 1 starters. Hamels (4-0) is trying to become the first pitcher to win five postseason starts in one year.

Of the 42 teams to take 3-1 World Series leads, 36 have gone on to win the crown.

"It will be absolute bedlam," Howard said of a Phillies' possible title. "It will be one of the craziest places on Earth. It's kind of scary to imagine."

After splitting the first two games in Florida, the Phillies improved to 6-0 at home this postseason. That includes a rain-delayed 5-4 win in Game 3 that ended at 1:47 a.m. Sunday.

Jimmy Rollins made a great escape from a rundown in the first inning _ perhaps with the help of an umpire's blown call _ energizing the Phillies and rattling the Rays.

A day after hitting his first homer of the Series, Howard connected twice.

The major league leader in homers and RBIs hit a three-run drive off Andy Sonnanstine that made it 5-1 in the fourth and delighted a crowd of 45,903. Howard struck again with a long, two-run shot in the eighth.

Just 2-for-33 (.061) with one RBI in his career to that point, Blanton homered in the fifth _ only the 15th home run by a pitcher in the World Series, and the first since Oakland's Ken Holtzman in 1974.

"I guess I just stuck with my same approach to hitting since I got here, you know: Close my eyes and swing hard in case," Blanton said. "Hope something good happens. Better to be lucky than good, I guess."

Blanton, with a body type that's a throwback to an era of pudgy pitchers, had quite a night. He gave up four hits _ including solo homers to Carl Crawford and pinch-hitter Eric Hinske _ struck out seven and walked two in six-plus innings.

Even when Jason Bartlett's grounder up the middle caromed off him in the fifth, the ball went straight to third, where Pedro Feliz threw to first for the out.

Four pitchers combined for one-hit relief, with Ryan Madson striking out B.J. Upton on a 3-2 changeup to end the seventh with two runners on, preserving a 6-2 lead.

The middle of Tampa Bay's lineup kept fizzling, with No. 3 hitter Carlos Pena and cleanup man Evan Longoria combining to go 0-for-29 in the Series. Second baseman Akinori Iwamura made two errors that led to unearned runs, and a frustrated Longoria struck out three times and swiped a hand through the air when a call went against him at third base.

"We just got to get back into it. We know what's going on. We're just not reacting," Rays manager Joe Maddon said. "We have to not give them four outs in an inning, we have to have better at-bats."

Had the Phillies come up with more timely hits _ a familiar story _ Philadelphia could have blown open the game earlier. The Phillies were 4-for-14 with runners in scoring position and are 6-for-47 in the Series.

Sonnanstine, 2-0 in the postseason coming in, needed 89 pitches to get through four innings. He allowed five runs _ three earned _ six hits and three walks.

Rollins doubled just inside the first-base line leading off and advanced on Werth's fly to right. After Chase Utley walked, Howard hit a comebacker to Sonnanstine. Instead of throwing to second in an attempt to start a double play, the pitcher ran toward a trapped Rollins off third.

Sonnanstine then threw to Longoria, who appeared to tag Rollins. But umpire Tim Welke signaled safe.

Pat Burrell walked on five pitches, forcing home the first run. Before that, Sonnanstine had never walked a batter in 18 career batters with bases loaded. Shane Victorino followed with a slow bouncer that Sonnanstine scooped up and flipped with his glove to the plate for a forceout. Feliz then flied out.

Utley reached leading off the second when Iwamura allowed his leadoff grounder to bounce off him for an error and scored with two outs on a single by Feliz.

Crawford homered in the fourth, but Rollins reached on another error by Iwamura starting the bottom half, when his grounder rolled under the second baseman's glove in the hole near first base. Werth walked and, one out later, Howard drove a pitch into the lower deck in left for a 5-1 lead. Howard had been 0-for-6 with five strikeouts in the much-focused on runners in scoring position stat.

Hinske, activated before the game to replace injured Cliff Floyd, homered in the fifth.

Venezuela's Chavez waiting for word from Colombian rebels on hostage release

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said Sunday he is waiting to hear from Colombia's largest rebel group about two rebel-held hostages that the guerrillas promised to release to the leftist leader last month.

Chavez lamented that his initiative to help free the hostages _ former congresswoman Consuelo Gonzalez and former vice presidential candidate Clara Rojas _ failed last week, when rebels said operations by Colombia's U.S.-backed military had prevented a planned handover.

"We continue waiting for new contacts for the liberation of Clara and Consuelo," Chavez said during his weekly television and radio program "Hello President."

The FARC had vowed to release Gonzalez and Rojas, along with a 3-year-old Colombian boy named Emmanuel _ the product of a relationship between Rojas and a guerrilla fighter.

But the rebels failed to free the hostages despite efforts by Chavez to facilitate the release. Results of a DNA test later proved Emmanuel has been in a Bogota foster home for more than two years, rather than held captive in the jungle by rebels.

"The nicest and most important thing is that Emmanuel is free," Chavez said, acknowledging the results of the DNA test. Previously, Chavez said "the FARC will have to explain to the world" if rebels were not holding the boy in the jungle as they had claimed.

After the DNA test results were release, the FARC accused the Colombian government of "kidnapping" the boy to sabotage Chavez's efforts to broker the release.

The FARC is holding 44 other prominent hostages _ including former Colombian presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt and three U.S. defense contractors kidnapped nearly six years ago.

Rebels are offering to free them only in exchange for hundreds of imprisoned guerrillas. Numerous obstacles to a prisoner swap remain, such as the FARC's demand that high-ranking rebels in U.S. custody be freed.

CANADA'S FATALLY FLAWED AFGHAN MISSION: Harper is happy to turn Canada from peacemaker to war-maker

It is alarming for many Canadians to watch Stephen Harper, the head of a minority government with the support of fewer than 40% of citizens, turn Canada into a nation of war. But that is what is happening.

The roots of Harper's preference for war go to the core of his view of government: maintaining a strong, war-fighting armed forces is one of the few roles that Harper believes government should have. He is fighting a war against a battlehardened and determined enemy in one of the most fiercely independent nations on Earth. The complexity of Afghan society confounds all but a few who would try to understand it. Yet, for Stephen Harper, understanding Afghanistan seems almost irrelevant. But it is relevant, because this is a war that Canada and the West cannot win, any more than Britain and the Soviet Union could before us. And Canada will share disproportionately in its ultimate loss in terms of dead and wounded, billions of dollars wasted, and our international reputation sullied for a long time to come. It will go down in history as one of our country's biggest foreign policy disasters.

Stephen Harper's contempt for Canada and what it became in the decades following the second World War is firmly on the record. Most of his comments-his sneering dismissal of our egalitarianism and sense of community-relate to social programs like Medicare. He once described Canada as "a second-tier socialistic country, boasting ever more loudly about its social services to mask its second-rate status."

It was not until recently that he revealed his disdain for Canada's three decades of peacekeeping. In a CBC interview conducted as Parliament resumed sitting in September, Harper showed that he relished the fact that Canadian soldiers were war-fighting, and dismissed Canada's peacekeeping history as virtual cowardice: "For a lot of the last 30 or 40 years, we were the ones hanging back." He even mused that the deaths of Canadian soldiers were a boost for the military-cathartic after years of not being able to kill or die like real soldiers. "I can tell you it's certainly engaged our military. It's, I think, made them a better military, notwithstanding-and maybe in some way because of-the casualties."

Utterly blind to how the rest of the world sees the conflict in Afghanistan, Harper told the CBC that Canada's role in Afghanistan is "...certainly raising Canada's leadership role, once again, in the United Nations and in the world community."

You have only to look at Harper's history and his government's "five priorities" to understand why he would get Canada and himself deeper into a conflict he cannot win. For five years, in the middle of his political career, Harper was with the National Citizens Coalition, an extreme right-wing organization that was founded by an insurance company millionaire explicitly to fight public Medicare. Its slogan is "More freedom through less government." It is virtually impossible for Stephen Harper to recognize Canadian leadership in any field-such as Medicare-that he believes Canada should not be involved in. For the Conservative prime minister, the Afghanistan conflict may be literally the first time that Canada has shown real leadership in decades.

Harper can finally be proud of Canada, now that we are making war. It does not even matter to him that more Canadians question the country's commitment to the increasingly distorted mission in Afghanistan (49%) than support the mission (38%). Embarrassed for years about living in a "socialist" country, Harper can now hold his head high where it counts: in Calgary and Washington, D.C.

Four of Harper's five priorities following the last election reflect his "less government" imperative. Cutting taxes is critical to creating "less government" because, as long as you have robust revenue (even surpluses), citizens will expect you to deliver those things they desire. Combatting crime is one of the "core" activities of Canada for Harper and all neocons. While priority No. 3, cleaning up government, is a noble cause, many experts on the effective running of government say that aspects of his huge Accountability Act will serve to paralyze the federal government. His "child care" grants were transparently designed to ensure that government would not be involved in the provision of child care at all.

In the secretive and tightly controlled world of the Harper government, it isn't always easy to determine who Harper is listening to for advice. But his disdain for government and his enormous intellectual arrogance suggest that bureaucrats, including civilian military officials and the diplomatic corps, are not high on his list. These are the people who would have tried to give Harper an objective analysis of how the Afghanistan conflict was going back in February when he took over as prime minister. But, given that they were part of a military establishment that was responsible for the peacekeeping culture he detested, he was unlikely to listen to any cautionary advice.

They were part of the problem, not part of the solution.

He was much more likely to listen to those running the U.S. (whom he has admired to the point of worship for many years) and to those Canadian generals who were also rejecting the peacekeeping culture. In fact, Harper's predecessor, Paul Martin, had already signalled a political change.

Jean Chr�tien warned about military demands for money: "It's never enough...They all need more and they all have plans for more." But Martin eagerly listened to the war generals and to Bay Street, who also supported a stronger military integrated into the U.S. war machine. Already the seventh-highest spender in NATO at nearly $14 billion, Martin added $12.8 billion over five years. Conservatives will top that by a further $5.3 billion, putting military spending much higher than at any time during the Cold War. Both Martin and Harper were bending over backwards to please George Bush.

U.S. Ambassador to Canada Paul Cellucci, in 2002, made a remarkable admission: the only order he received from the White House when he was appointed was to get Canada to dramatically increase its military spending.

It isn't just the money; it's how it will be spent. As defence analyst Steven Staples points out: "Without billions of dollars, the military can't afford to buy the high-tech weaponry required for joint operations with the Americans, the most lethal and technologically advanced fighting force in history-Defence spending fuels military integration [with the US]."

Harper is even more committed to the idea of fully integrated armed forces as part of the security and Prosperity Partnership, a formal integration agreement between the three NAFTA countries that will see huge areas of government policy "harmonized," including energy, water, drug testing, security, immigration and refugees, and more.

But military integration is the key to other areas of continental integration-such as open borders-that Canadian corporations want. "Security trumps trade," Paul Cellucci said repeatedly in lobbying other political parties and Bay Street against Chr�tien's refusal to increase the military budget. They won the money battle, but that's not enough. As Staples says: "Afghanistan is the proving ground for Canada-U.S. military integration."

But of course Harper will not talk about military integration, because that debate would damage an already unpopular engagement. In order to sell Canadians on our war-fighting mission in Afghanistan, the Harper government resorts to language that reduces the debate to an adolescent level. By constantly repeating phrases like "we can't cut and run" and we won't leave "until the job is done," or "we have to support our troops" or we "can't let the terrorists win," Harper hopes to frame the debate so that nothing substantive ever gets discussed. These are the kind of arguments you find among adolescent boys fighting in schoolyards: too immature and too driven by their testosterone to actually think straight about the consequences of their actions.

It might be productive if every conversation about Afghanistan had to begin with a quotation from Benjamin Franklin: "The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results." At least it might lead those discussing the war to delve a little deeper, to examine Afghanistan's social and political structures, its history and, most importantly, the record of the West in creating the current horrors.

As is stands now, we proceed as if Afghanistan was created from nothing on Sept. 11, 2001.

But Afghanistan does have a history. Canada's involvement is part of a 30-year continuum of Western (and Soviet) interference, and it cannot be surgically excised and declared pristine in its motives. So long as we ignore this history, we will have more body bags coming home, thousands of innocent Afghanis will die, and homes and whole villages will be destroyed-along with orchards, crops, and other means of survival-by our tanks, mortars, and U.S. "air -support."

Afghanistan was not always a country totally dominated by warlords and reactionary Islamic fundamentalism. This brand of Islam was largely imported into the country as part of the U.S.-inspired Cold War effort to defeat the Soviets. For a brief period, the country had a progressive, secular government which, according to University of Winnipeg professor John Ryan, "affirmed the separation of church and state, labour unions were legalized, health care and education became priorities, women were given equal rights, and girls were to go to school...A program was being developed for major land reform." [http://tinyurl.com/fvqzt]

That government was put in place following a 1978 military coup that removed an autocratic and unpopular president. Noor Mohammad Taraki, a Marxist (and a university professor, writer and poet) was asked by the army to form a government simply because the Marxists were the only ones who had an actual development program. Tragically for the Afghan people, however, the U.S. was not prepared to allow such a government to exist in the context of the Cold War. The U.S. used the CIA (and the assistance of Saudi Arabia and Pakistan) "to provide military aid and training to the Muslim extremists, who became known as the mujahedeen and 'freedom fighters'." Barely a year later, Taraki and his closest associates were killed in another coup. It was after this that the Soviets invaded in support of the government.

Years later, Zbigniew Brzezinski, President Jimmy Carter's National Security Advisor, boasted of implementing a plan to tie down the USSR in its own version of Vietnam and to bleed it into submission. According to Ryan: "Brzezinski saw this as a golden opportunity to fire up the zeal of the most reactionary Muslim fanatics-to have them declare a jihad (holy war) on the atheist infidels who defiled Afghan soil." What followed was the recruitment of thousands of non-Afghan Muslims (including Osama bin Laden) into a 10-year jihad, funded by hundreds of millions of U.S. dollars that destroyed much of the country.

In 1992, three years after the end of the Soviet occupation, the government was finally defeated and Afghanistan fell into absolute chaos, inter-tribal warfare, drug smuggling, and mass rape. In 1994, according to Middle East authority Eric Margolis, "a village prayer leader, Mullah Omar, armed a group of 'talibs' (religious students), and set about defending women from rape. Aided by Pakistan, the Taliban stopped the epidemic of rape and drug dealing that had engulfed Afghanistan, and imposed order based on harsh tribal and Sharia religious law."

Oil and gas are part of every U.S. intervention in the Middle East, and the U.S. had no qualms about dealing with the Taliban in the 1990s. Washington began to pour millions into Taliban coffers in the hope of signing a contract with U.S. oil giant Unocal to build a gas pipeline south from the Caspian Basin to Pakistan. The negotiations broke down in the spring of 2001-just months before 9/11. As for those attacks, they were planned in Germany, carried out by Saudis, and were almost certainly done without the knowledge of the isolationist Taliban. When the U.S. demanded that Osama bin Laden be handed over, the Taliban agreed to turn him over to an international tribunal upon seeing evidence of his guilt. But the U.S. had no such evidence. Instead, they invaded.

The government of Hamid Karzai is constantly touted as having been "democratically elected," and it is fair to say that Afghans voted in the election because they hoped it might make a difference. But the Karzai government is totally dependent for its survival on the U.S. and is heavily influenced by the U.S. oil industry. According to Le Monde newspaper, Karzai was a consultant for Unocal during the failed negotiations with the Taliban. Another Unocal consultant, Zalmay Khalilzad, was initially the U.S. envoy to Afghanistan. By May 30, 2002, he had in place a multi-billion-dollar contract for a gas pipeline.

Afghanistan's democracy is a fraud and operates more as a grim coalition of mujahedeen, warlords, drug-lords, oil company executives, and U.S. agents. Following 9/11, the U.S. recruited and armed its old mujahedeen creation to help in the task of defeating the Taliban, renaming them the "Northern Alliance." Many of the elected MPs stand accused of carrying out massacres, mass rape, torture, and other war crimes. A lengthy 2005 UN report (leaked to the Guardian newspaper) documents these atrocities and names those responsible. According to Afghani MP Malalai Joya, an Afghan woman legislator, Karzai has also "appointed 13 former commanders with links to drug smuggling, organized crime, and illegal militias to senior positions in the police force."

This is the context for Canada's involvement in Afghanistan. When Hamid Karzai visited Canada and told the House of Commons and the Canadian people that our troops are desperately needed in his country, he didn't tell the whole story. And who would blame him? But there is no excuse for the soft-peddling of the conflict by the mainstream Canadian media, who remain complicit in the government's misleading description of the "mission" and in covering for Harper's failure to protect Canadian troops.

Even a cursory examination of the facts about our country's disastrous involvement in Afghanistan reveals that the two men most responsible for this continuing nightmare are simply not up to the task of leadership. Stephen Harper and General Rick Hillier, his "butt-kicking" military chief, have demonstrated a level of ineptitude that should have Canadians extremely worried.

This military engagement will go down in Canadian history as one of the most shameful betrayals of Canadian soldiers in our history. Canadian troops are dying because neither their supreme commander nor their prime minister has the courage to acknowledge what is actually happening. They are dying so Stephen Harper can prove himself to George W. Bush. Hillier and Harper keep asking Canadians to "support our troops." But they insist our troops pursue a strategy ensuring more of them will die, and they mislead them about their prospects.

A quick survey of what is happening in Afghanistan puts the lie to every positive statement coming out of the government. First, the notion that we will still be doing development work and nation-building, once Afghanistan is "stabilized," is a cruel hoax. With the approximately 40,000 troops (half of whom are not allowed to fight) now stationed there, this simply will never happen. When the Soviet Union was finally driven out of that country, after 10 years of brutal conflict and 15,000 dead, it had 100,000 troops there, a functioning Afghan government working in cooperation with it, and an additional 100,000 Afghan troops fighting with it.

It is no wonder, as reported by CCPA defence analyst Stephen Staples [http://tinyurl.com/kk689], that Canadian soldiers are six times as likely to die in Afghanistan as American troops are in Iraq. No wonder, either, that the Senlis Council [http://tinyurl. com/pg5hw], a Brussels-based security and development policy group, assailed Canada's approach as continuing "...to unquestioningly accept America's fundamentally flawed policy approach in southern Afghanistan, thereby jeopardizing the success of military operations in the region and the stabilization, reconstruction, and development mission objectives."

As a result of this "war on terror" mind-set, General Hillier has shown no interest in counter-insurgency strategy. As continued deadly attacks reveal, the much touted Operation Medusa" turns out to have been a complete waste of resources, and of Canadian and Afghan lives. In addition, it alienated thousands of Afghans whose "hearts and minds" must be won to give this mission any meaning at all.

Hillier's response to the shocking Canadian deaths was to send 15 Leopard tanks to bolster the troops-exactly the wrong thing to do, according to Gavin Cameron, a specialist in counterinsurgency wars at the University of Calgary's Centre for Military and Strategic Studies: "If you see tanks in your streets, it's hard not to think about it as an army of occupation."

No one in the Canadian military will criticize Hillier for such an inexcusably wrong-headed strategy. But Captain Leo Docherty, of the Scots Guards, the former aide-de-camp to the commander of the British task force in southern Afghanistan, does so indirectly. He resigned in disgust in September, calling a similar campaign in southern Helmand province "a textbook case of how to screw up a counter-insurgency. All those people whose homes have been destroyed and sons killed are going to turn against the British."

According to the Senlis Council, there are between 10 and 15 refugee camps in the provinces of Helmand and Kandahar, with up to 10,000 people in each, the result of Canadian and British conventional war tactics. They are receiving "...little or no help from relief agencies."

The third factor in this endless misery has to do with reconstruction. Canada has now spent over $4 billion on its Afghan mission-90% of which has been used in the military conflict. But even the development aid that has been spent in Afghanistan by other Western nations is often resented for the way in which it is spent-and wasted.

According to University of Manitoba Professor John Ryan [http://tinyurl.com/fvqzt], "...a recent report for the Overseas Development Institute, by Ashraf Ghani, the chancellor of Kabul University and former Karzai finance minister, has stated that in 2002 about 90% of the $1 billion spent on 400 aid projects was wasted." Problems abound-not least the gross disparity in pay for Afghan civil servants ($50 a month) and Afghans who work for Western aid organizations($1,000 a month). The government can barely hold on to its staff. Also, says Ryan: "Where the Afghan government could build a school for about $40,000, an international aid agency undertook the task of building 500 schools, at a cost of $250,000 each." Contracts for reconstruction are handed out to donor country corporations, who take huge fees up front and then hire layer upon layer of subcontractors who make sure they make their profit-leaving substandard construction behind. Says Ryan: "The result is collapsing hospitals, clinics, and schools, rutted and dangerous new highways..."

The Afghanistan conflict is no longer just a fight against the old Taliban. The Taliban has morphed into what many now suggest is a formal jihad-a general call to arms of all Afghans to rid the country of foreigners. Last May, according to the Toronto Star's Chris Sands, clerics in Kabul mosques were calling on worshippers to join the Taliban's fight against the Karzai government and NATO troops. The war is now everywhere-even in Kabul.

Even worse, says Star reporter Mitch Potter: "Money, as much as any concept of jihad, is the driving force today behind an unholy alliance of religious radicals, drug-running militias, smuggling cartels-and, in many cases, apolitical young Afghans simply looking for work-who have enlisted in the confrontation with foreign troops."

And what is Stephen Harper's response to this reality? "[Canadians] want a Canada that ...punches above its weight." It is reminiscent of George Bush's adolescent musing about Iraqi insurgents: "Bring 'em on."

Lastly, Harper chose to ignore evidence available at the time he extended the mission that the U.S. was losing interest in Afghanistan and was totally preoccupied with Iraq. He also ignored the caveats that European members of NATO had placed on what their troops could do in Afghanistan-the same caveats that now leave the NATO commander unable to send more troops into the south. In addition, Pakistan is doing virtually nothing to end the safe haven for the Taliban. The U.S. has now handed its messy war over to NATO. But, despite repeated, desperate pleas for more NATO troops for the south, almost none have been forthcoming.

There is an alternative policy that would bring Canada credit. According to retired international affairs professor Jack Warnock [http://www.actupinsask.org] of Regina, Canada should "withdraw all military forces from Afghanistan and withdraw from all projects being sponsored by the U.S. government and NATO [and then] work within the UN General Assembly to develop a new project for Afghanistan... completely separate from any U.S. or NATO project." Unrealistic? Not compared to the current policy of desperation and denial.

[Sidebar]

"You have only to look at Harper's history-including his five-year stint with the extreme right-wing National Citizens Coalition-to understand why he would get Canada and himself deeper into a conflict he cannot win."

[Sidebar]

"Harper is committed to fully integrating Canadian armed forces with the U.S. military as part of the Security and Prosperity Partnership, a formal agreement between the three NAFTA countries that also calls for harmonizing security, energy, water, and more."

[Sidebar]

"Afghanistan was not always a country dominated by warlords and reactionary Islamic fundamentalism. This brand of Islam was largely imported into the country as part of the U.S. efforts to defeat the Soviets."

[Sidebar]

"The two men most responsible for this continuing nightmare in AfghanistanStephen Harper and his military chief, General Rick Millier-have demonstrated a level of ineptitude that should have Canadians extremely worried."

[Author Affiliation]

(Murray Dobbin-mdobbin@telus.net-is a Vancouver-based columnist, author of several best-selling books, and a CCPA research associate and Board member.)

Maria Mutola: From the track to the football pitch

Eleven world championship titles and an Olympic gold medal were not enough for retired running great Maria Mutola.

Mutola, the former 800-meter runner from Mozambique who dominated women's middle-distance running for more than a decade, is pursuing further sporting success in her first love _ football.

The 37-year-old striker helped lead her South African club to the provincial playoffs in this World Cup-obsessed country. But her first prize in her adopted sport will have to wait after Luso Africa lost to the current provincial champion 4-2 in the Gauteng playoffs.

Mutola scored one goal, but her team conceded an equalizer in injury time and lost in extra time.

Mutola retired from athletics in 2008, following the Beijing Olympics, but her return a year later to her first sporting passion wasn't planned.

"It was a surprise," she said, sitting on the edge of Luso's basic home field in Germiston, on the eastern outskirts of Johannesburg. "I wasn't looking to play football. I brought a friend here to South Africa from Mozambique to look for a football team. And I ended up playing."

Mutola spent her youth playing football in the Chamanculo township on the outskirts of Maputo, Mozambique's capital, before her talent for running took her into international athletics. Twenty years competing in track and field's biggest events has helped on her return to the sport of her childhood.

"It was my first love, football, and for Luso my job is to score goals," Mutola said. "Most of my goals are scored because I can run and I have my speed. I am like Cristiano Ronaldo because he can run as well.

"But it's a little different with athletics and football. You have to play with the other players and you have to make sure that everybody connects with you and you connect with them."

Mutola has clearly connected after finishing as her team's leading scorer this season. She had four goals in one game, she said, but can't say exactly how many goals she has scored this year _ a hint of humility alongside a fierce competitive streak.

The league is competitive, too. It's the top women's division in South Africa and Luso has three South Africa internationals on its team.

Mutola has been in Johannesburg on and off since relocating her training camp to South Africa from Oregon 10 years ago. There has never been a more exciting time to be a footballer here, and Mutola's retirement from athletics means there's more time to enjoy what's going on around her.

"Just talking about the World Cup is amazing to begin with," Mutola said. "I have been coming to South Africa since 2000 and I have seen a lot of change. I see these beautiful stadiums around South Africa. Everything is upgrading.

"You can feel that the World Cup is in South Africa, and in Africa. It's good for the whole continent and I'm sure it will be a successful World Cup."

Mutola does miss athletics, despite two decades of grueling training regimes and strict diets, which she says she always hated.

"My career was very nice," she said. "I don't think there is anything I'd like to change apart from staying a little bit longer winning medals for my country and myself. I think I had a wonderful career. I'm very, very happy."

Mutola, a veteran of six Olympics who first represented Mozambique when she was 15 and finally became Olympic champion in 2000, has become a mentor for South African runner Caster Semenya.

Semenya, the 800-meter world champion who has been sidelined in a long-running investigation of her gender by the IAAF, called to ask for advice.

"At the time I was in Mozambique and she phoned me and said, 'This is Caster.' I was very surprised," Mutola said. "She phoned me for advice and I started chatting to her. It was when all the drama happened and she called up for my support. I had only just seen Caster for the first time on TV when she won gold at the world championships (in Berlin in 2009)."

Mutola says they now talk regularly on the phone.

The pair's life stories have striking similarities: humble African origins _ Semenya is from a tiny village in South Africa's northern Limpopo province _ and world-class talent discovered at a young age.

Mutola was also the subject of unfounded gender rumors at times during her career because of her muscular physique _ and her dominant performances.

The Mozambican probably understands better than anyone what the 19-year-old Semenya is going through.

"I advised her to be patient," Mutola said. "I think she is strong from the way we speak, but at the same time it's tough when you go for such a long time hoping you can run tomorrow and tomorrow never comes.

"I think she probably scared a lot of people with the 1 minute, 55 seconds at the world championships at the age of 18. That was amazing. Not a lot of people can do that."

The IAAF's prolonged silence on Semenya has made Mutola angry.

"They need to give her an answer instead of leaving someone hanging," Mutola said, the smile disappearing for the first time in the interview. "They need to say you can run or you cannot run. It's been too long. I think it's unfair to leave someone hanging like that."

Despite all her world championship victories, Mutola never broke an 800 world record. She was denied a new indoor world mark in 1998 when she stepped out of a lane.

Mutola thinks Semenya can go below the 1:53.28 outdoor record set by Jarmila Kratochvilova of the Czech Republic in 1983.

"With no doubt," she said. "I think so because if you can run 1:55 at the age of 18 you are probably going to break the world record."

As for her current sport, the Portuguese-speaking Mozambican has a firm World Cup favorite.

"I think Brazil will win," she said.

Then, realizing where she lives now, Mutola quickly added: "I hope South Africa do well, too, because this is Africa."

Soto's inside-the-park HR leads Cubs over Astros

Geovany Soto didn't get the automatic home run he deserved, but it didn't make a difference as the Chicago Cubs beat the Houston Astros 7-2 on Monday night.

Soto was credited with an inside-the-park homer in the fourth inning despite replays showing that it should have been an automatic home run. The ball bounced just to the right of the yellow line on the wall in left-center field. Astros center fielder Michael Bourn scooped it up and threw it home, but Soto scored easily before the throw got there.

Aramis Ramirez singled and Kosuke Fukudome walked before the hit. Ramirez added an indisputable two-run homer to the back row of the stands in the left field Crawford Boxes in the ninth inning.

It was the second straight night that major league umpires botched a home run call. New York Mets first baseman Carlos Delgado was robbed of a three-run homer Sunday night. Delgado's ball was originally ruled a home run but the call was reversed, turning it into a long foul ball. The replay of that play showed it should have been a home run.

Delgado ended up with an RBI single.

Soto's was the first inside-the-park home run for a catcher since Joe Mauer of the Twins hit one against the Angels on July 21 according to the Elias Sports Bureau. The last National League catcher to achieve the feat was Kelly Stinnett for Arizona on Aug. 29, 2005.

It's the first one for the Cubs since Derrek Lee hit one on Aug. 26 and the third in Minute Maid Park history.

The win is Chicago's ninth in the last 11 and puts the Cubs at 11 games over .500 for the first time since finishing the 2004 season at 16 over.

Ty Wigginton dived for, but missed Ryan Theriot's hard-hit grounder down the third base line in the seventh inning for a double. He scored on a single by Lee to push Chicago's lead to 4-2.

Ted Lilly (5-4) allowed four hits and two runs with six strikeouts in 5 1-3 innings for his fourth straight win. He didn't allow a hit until a double by Miguel Tejada with one out in the fourth inning.

Tejada stole third base and scored on a single by Carlos Lee that made it 3-1. Jim Edmonds chased a fly ball by Hunter Pence to the back of Tal's Hill in center field to end the inning.

Theriot had a run-scoring single in the eighth inning to make it 5-2.

The Cubs were able to shut down Houston's hottest hitters on Monday, breaking Lance Berkman's 17-game hitting streak and the career-high 16-game one by Pence. Both were 0-for-4 and Berkman struck out three times.

Chicago's Mark DeRosa got two hits on Monday to extend his hitting streak to 10 games, leaving him just one shy of his career mark.

The Astros had a chance to cut the lead in the eighth. Bourn singled before stealing second base. Kaz Matsui followed with a single that sailed just over the glove of a leaping Lee.

Michael Wuertz was replaced by Carlos Marmol after Matsui's hit.

Marmol pitched out of trouble with three consecutive outs. Tejada popped out, Berkman struck out swinging and Carlos Lee was out at first.

Wigginton doubled to start the fifth inning. Brad Ausmus grounded out before Jose Cruz Jr. walked. Wigginton scored on a single by Bourn to cut Chicago's lead to 3-2.

Astros starter Brian Moehler (1-1) allowed seven hits and three runs in five innings.

Notes:@ Astros ace Roy Oswalt, who left his last start in the seventh inning with a hip injury, was examined by team physician Dr. David Lintner on Monday and is expected to make his next start on Thursday.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

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AMERICAN CONFERENCE

East

W L T Pct PF PA Home Away AFC NFC DivMiami 3 1 0 .750 67 42 2-0-0 1-1-0 3-1-0 0-0-0 2-1-0New England 3 1 0 .750 107 76 2-0-0 1-1-0 2-1-0 1-0-0 1-0-0NY Jets 2 2 0 .500 104 75 2-1-0 0-1-0 2-1-0 0-1-0 2-0-0Buffalo 1 3 0 .250 80 84 1-1-0 0-2-0 0-2-0 1-1-0 0-1-0Indianapolis 1 4 0 .200 57 128 1-1-0 0-3-0 1-3-0 0-1-0 0-3-0CentralJacksonville 4 0 0 1.000 96 71 2-0-0 2-0-0 3-0-0 1-0-0 2-0-0Pittsburgh 3 1 0 .750 50 56 2-0-0 1-1-0 2-1-0 1-0-0 1-0-0Baltimore 2 2 0 .500 78 78 1-1-0 1-1-0 2-2-0 0-0-0 1-2-0Cincinnati 1 3 0 .250 78 95 0-2-0 1-1-0 0-2-0 1-1-0 0-2-0Tennessee 1 3 0 .250 68 81 0-2-0 1-1-0 1-3-0 0-0-0 1-1-0WestDenver 5 0 0 1.000 182 93 3-0-0 2-0-0 2-0-0 3-0-0 1-0-0Kansas City 4 1 0 .800 108 63 3-0-0 1-1-0 3-1-0 1-0-0 3-0-0Oakland 3 2 0 .600 81 111 1-0-0 2-2-0 0-2-0 3-0-0 0-2-0Seattle 3 2 0 .600 111 58 2-0-0 1-2-0 0-2-0 3-0-0 0-1-0San Diego 2 3 0 .400 64 95 1-1-0 1-2-0 2-3-0 0-0-0 0-1-0NATIONAL CONFERENCEEastW L T Pct PF PA Home Away NFC AFC DivDallas 3 2 0 .600 135 82 1-1-0 2-1-0 3-0-0 0-2-0 3-0-0Arizona 2 3 0 .400 81 114 1-1-0 1-2-0 2-1-0 0-2-0 1-1-0NY Giants 2 3 0 .400 92 111 1-1-0 1-2-0 1-2-0 1-1-0 1-1-0Philadelphia 0 5 0 .000 52 137 0-2-0 0-3-0 0-2-0 0-3-0 0-1-0Washington 0 5 0 .000 74 169 0-3-0 0-2-0 0-3-0 0-2-0 0-2-0CentralGreen Bay 4 0 0 1.000 111 70 2-0-0 2-0-0 3-0-0 1-0-0 2-0-0Minnesota 4 0 0 1.000 129 72 2-0-0 2-0-0 4-0-0 0-0-0 3-0-0Tampa Bay 2 3 0 .400 75 99 2-0-0 0-3-0 2-3-0 0-0-0 1-3-0Chicago 1 4 0 .200 109 126 1-2-0 0-2-0 1-2-0 0-2-0 1-2-0Detroit 1 4 0 .200 107 138 1-1-0 0-3-0 1-3-0 0-1-0 1-3-0WestAtlanta 3 1 0 .750 107 80 2-0-0 1-1-0 3-1-0 0-0-0 2-1-0New Orleans 3 1 0 .750 89 74 1-1-0 2-0-0 2-0-0 1-1-0 2-0-0San Fran 3 1 0 .750 133 86 3-0-0 1-0-0 2-0-0 1-1-0 1-0-0St. Louis 1 3 0 .250 99 115 0-3-0 1-0-0 0-3-0 1-0-0 0-1-0Carolina 0 4 0 .000 81 126 0-2-0 0-2-0 0-4-0 0-0-0 0-3-0Sunday's GamesAtlanta 51, Carolina 23Dallas 31, Washington 10Chicago 31, Detroit 27New York Jets 20, Miami 9New England 30, New Orleans 27Indianapolis 17, San Diego 12Buffalo 26, San Francisco 21Tampa Bay 20, New York Giants 3Oakland 23, Arizona 20Denver 41, Philadelphia 16Kansas City 17, Seattle 6OPEN: Baltimore, Cincinnati, Jacksonville, Pittsburgh, St. Louis,TennesseeMonday's GameMinnesota at Green Bay, 8:20 p.m.Sunday, Oct. 11Buffalo at Indianapolis, 1:01 p.m.Carolina at Dallas, 1:01 p.m.Kansas City at New England, 1:01 p.m.Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, 1:01 p.m.San Francisco at New Orleans, 1:01 p.m.Tennessee at Baltimore, 1:01 p.m.Washington at Philadelphia, 1:01 p.m.Chicago at Arizona, 4:05 p.m.Denver at Seattle, 4:15 p.m.New York Jets at St. Louis, 4:15 p.m.San Diego at Oakland, 4:15 p.m.Atlanta at New York Giants, 8:20 p.m.OPEN: Detroit, Green Bay, Minnesota, Tampa BayMonday, Oct. 12Miami at Jacksonville, 8:20 p.m.

Wednesday's Sports Scoreboard

All Times Eastern
American League
N.Y. Yankees 5, Chicago White Sox 1 F
Cleveland 6, Minnesota 4 F
Toronto 8, Baltimore 7 F
Tampa Bay 10, Boston 3 F
Detroit 17, Texas 4 F
Kansas City 5, Seattle 2 F
Oakland 3, L.A. Angels 2 F
National League
Colorado 1, San Diego 0 F
Pittsburgh 15, L.A. Dodgers 8 F
Florida 14, Houston 2 F
N.Y. Mets 9, Washington 7 F
Philadelphia 6, Atlanta 1 F
Cincinnati 3, St. Louis 0 F
Milwaukee 6, Chicago Cubs 2 F
Arizona 7, San Francisco 6 F
National Football League
No games today.
National Hockey League Preseason
No games today.
Top 25 College Football
No games today.
WNBA Basketball Playoffs
No games today.
Major League Soccer
No games today.

Philippine court hands down terror convictions

Three men, including one of the Philippines' top terror suspects, were sentenced to life in prison Friday for the 2000 Manila bombing that killed 11 people in an attack that revealed close coordination among militants across the region.

The five near-simultaneous bombings on Dec. 30, 2000 left a total of 22 dead and about 100 wounded, but the court found the three men guilty of only the main attack on a train station.

The ringleader, Saiffulah "Moklis" Yunos, was described by prosecutors as an explosives expert and self-confessed member of the main Muslim separatist group, the Moro Islamic Liberation Front. The two others convicted and sentenced to life without the possibility of parole were Abdul Patak Paute and Mamasakul Naga.

The judge said he rejected their denials and alibis because they were positively identified by witnesses.

The Philippine and U.S. governments accused Yunos of carrying out the bombings on behalf of the regional terror group Jemaah Islamiyah.

Officials said he worked closely with Indonesian Fathur Roman Al-Ghozi, a demolition expert who bolted from a Manila jail in July 2003 and was killed in a shootout with police three months later in the southern Philippines, a militant hide-out and training ground.

Prosecutors said Al-Ghozi and Yunos had confessed to buying about 155 pounds (70 kilograms) of explosives used to bomb the targets. Yunos prepared the bombs' wiring while Al-Ghozi admitted preparing the switch on the alarm-clock triggers and packing the explosives, they said.

It was the deadliest terrorist attack until the al-Qaida-linked Abu Sayyaf group bombed a ferry in Manila Bay in 2004, killing 116 people.

The main Muslim rebel group, which has been fighting for self-rule in the predominantly Roman Catholic nation's south, has repeatedly denied links to Jemaah Islamiyah and publicly renounced terrorism. But security officials believe some commanders are providing refuge to militants, including Indonesians fleeing a crackdown in their own country.

Rebel spokesman Eid Kabalu has said previously that both Al-Ghozi and Yunos had met with the group's present chief, Al Haj Murad, as fighters against the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan in the 1980s.

He said that after the war ended, Al-Ghozi and Yunos went to a rebel camp to join the group but they were turned away.

Philippine and U.S. officials have said that Yunos assisted Jemaah Islamiyah operations chief Hambali _ arrested in Thailand in 2003 _ in conducting surveillance of the U.S. and Israeli embassies in Manila.

___

Associated Press writer Oliver Teves contributed to this report.

Christian Filma Video de "Tu Retirada"

M�XICO, D.F.- El baladista e int�rprete de m�sica rom�ntica Christian Castro film� el videoclip de Tu Retirada, de Jos� Alfredo Jim�nez, primer sencillo de su disco El Indomable con el que ha hecho su presentaci�n dentro del g�nero ranchero. Tu Retirada se escucha en las radios de M�xico y Estados Unidos desde el martes anterior.

El indomable, que saldr� a la venta el pr�ximo 26 de junio, cont� con el apoyo de Vicente Fern�ndez.

La direcci�n e historia del video estuvo a cargo del mismo hijo de Ver�nica Castro y cont� con la producci�n de Miguel del Valle.

En conferencia de prensa durante la filmaci�n, se�al� que decidi� grabar un disco de ranchero por la influencia que recibi� cuando era peque�o, de grandes de la m�sica como Pedro Infante y Jorge Negrete, cuyas pel�culas las ve�an su abuelita y su mam� Ver�nica Castro.

Se�al� que sin el apoyo del "Charro de Huentit�n", con quien grab� a dueto los temas Golondrina presumida y Morena de ojos negros, no hubiera podido lograr su primer disco de rancheras, ya que le prest� a su productor de cabecera Pedro Ram�rez.

"La amistad de Vicente Fern�ndez me hace llorar y para poder cantar ranchero ten�a que tocar esa puerta tan grande. �l me ha brindado todo su apoyo para comenzar y le agradezco todo ese cari�o, porque me hace sentir como un hijo", indic�.

Mencion� que la historia del video la escribi� pensando en los filmes de Pedro Infante y Jorge Negrete. "Le llevo serenata a una mujer, pero ella no la agradece, pero no sabe que soy 'El indomable'. Enojado llego a la cantina y me peleo con quien me sale por enfrente. Son escenas muy bonitas en las que no hay mucha violencia", explic�.

Al preguntarle sobre su experiencia en la direcci�n del material, subray� que se siente muy bien, aunque reconoci� que siempre estuvo al pendiente su asistente.

"Tengo muy buen equipo de producci�n y en el video hay escenas con un caballo que lo hago parar en dos patas y realizo juegos de velocidad; hay que perderle el miedo al animal", sostuvo.

Tras mencionar que el disco es uno de sus sue�os hecho realidad y un lazo con sus ra�ces mexicanas, reconoci� que el ser charro no lo lleva en la sangre, como ocurre con Alejandro Fern�ndez, Pepe Aguilar, Pedro Fern�ndez y, por supuesto, Vicente Fern�ndez, pero dijo que su objetivo es interpretar la m�sica ranchera muy bien.

Macedonia fighting escalates Signing of accord still on for Monday despite clashes

SKOPJE, Macedonia--Macedonian army helicopter gunships rushedSaturday to try to rescue a police unit encircled by ethnic Albanianrebels in the mountains, state television reported.

The escalation in fighting--which threatened to further erodeconfidence in a tentative peace agreement for this troubled Balkannation--came as Macedonians buried seven soldiers and declared a dayof mourning following a spate of deadly rebel attacks.

The rebel fighters reportedly surrounded an unspecified number ofpolicemen in the village of Radusa, near the border with Kosovo.Helicopter gunships could be seen taking off from the capital,Skopje, just 10 miles away, and state television showed Sukhoi SU-25ground attack jets flying over the village.

The rebels were supported by reinforcements from Kosovo, themostly ethnic Albanian-populated, NATO-controlled province ofneighboring Yugoslavia, state television said. The claim could not beindependently confirmed.

The Defense Ministry said in a statement that the army and policewere jointly and "successfully pushing back terrorists" with "allavailable means."

The army lobbed artillery fire into rebel-held villages near thecountry's second-largest city, Tetovo, on Saturday, in attacks therebels said hit homes and other civilian property. The governmentsaid the rebels attacked first.

Crowds of mourners, Orthodox priests and soldiers gathered for thesoldiers' funerals at several cemeteries in Skopje. Officersdelivered emotional speeches, praising the slain men as heroes whodied defending their fatherland.

At one of the funerals, the body of army reservist MarjancoBoskovski, 28, lay in an open coffin, his face scarred from the blastthat shattered his truck, part of a military convoy that hit a landmine just north of the capital Friday.

Macedonia's ethnic Albanian militants took up arms in Februarysaying they want more rights for their community, which accounts fora third of the country's population of 2 million. The Macedonians saythe rebels simply want to seize a chunk of territory and call ittheir own.

On Wednesday, ethnic Albanian and Macedonian leaders agreed, underWestern pressure, to a peace settlement that should be signed Mondaydespite continuing violence.

Macedonians angry at the slayings rioted in Skopje late Friday,looting and ransacking ethnic Albanian-owned businesses. A mob surgedtoward the U.S. Embassy to protest what many Macedonians perceive asWestern bias in favor of ethnic Albanians. The crowd was turned back.

The U.S. State Department issued a warning the same day, advisingU.S. citizens to defer travel to Macedonia.