Tag: InternationalNews

  • U.S. Accusations Shock Brothers’ Kyrgyz Hometown

    One trail in the search for clues about why two ethnic Chechen brothers may have carried out the Boston Marathon bombings leads to a sleepy town in Kyrgyzstan where former neighbors recalled a quiet family that was never in trouble.

    Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev are remembered as decent and obedient boys from their time in the 1990s in the small community of Chechens in Tokmok, a leafy town under the snow-capped Tien Shan mountains outside the capital, Bishkek.

    Tamerlan, the elder of the two, studied well. His father, Anzor, made a living selling used cars and was welcomed with open arms when he visited the town again two years ago, 10 years after the family left for Russia and then the U.S.

    The news that Tamerlan had been shot dead by police and Dzhokhar captured after a daylong manhunt on suspicion of carrying out the April 15 bombing, in which three people were killed, was greeted with shock and disbelief.

    “The Tsarnaevs were such a good family. They yearned to be well-educated. None of them were rowdy. It was a very cultured family,” said former neighbor Raisa Kaayeva, a middle-aged housewife who is also an ethnic Chechen.

    “I feel it with my heart — these boys were framed. Why did they go to this America? They should have stayed in Russia to lead a quiet life. Now they have been made scapegoats. I pity these boys. I was weeping when I saw it on TV — their lives were broken, as well as the lives of their mother and father.”
    Badrudi Tsokayev, a friend of the father, waved his hands repeatedly as he described his shock at hearing the news. Like others who recalled the family, he saw no signs of radicalism.

    “I wouldn’t imagine seeing this even in a nightmare,” Tsokayev, 60, said on a quiet street in Tokmok, 60 kilometers from Bishkek. “As a child, Tamerlan was such a quiet boy. Today everyone is calling me with just one question — is this true?”

    He said Anzor Tsarnaev, who was born in Kyrgyzstan, had been fiercely proud of Tamerlan’s prowess in the boxing ring and said his son had been looking forward to going to Sochi to watch the 2014 Winter Olympics next February.

    It is in this town of 53,000 that the boys would have become aware of their Chechen roots.

    They would have learned about the difficult fate suffered by their predecessors in Soviet times that has fostered a sense of injustice among some Chechens and helped fuel an independence drive in Chechnya that led to two wars with Moscow in the 1990s.

    Kyrgyzstan, a mainly Muslim nation of 5.5 million which hosts U.S. and Russian military air bases, had a huge influx of ethnic Chechens in 1944. Hundreds of thousands of Chechens and ethnically close Ingush were evicted from their homes in the North Caucasus and moved to Central Asia in cattle wagons after being accused by dictator Josef Stalin of collaborating with Nazi Germany.

    About 99,000 of the Chechens and Ingush ended up in what was then the Kyrgyz Soviet Republic.

    In Tokmok, the Tsarnaev clan alone inhabited a whole street before most of them moved back to their native village of Chiri-Yurt in Chechnya in the 1960s, residents said. About 20 Chechen families still live in a district popularly known as the Glass Factory, after the building that dominates it.

    The brothers would have become more familiar with Islamist militancy when they moved in 2001 to Dagestan, the southern Russian province that lies at the heart of an Islamist insurgency and sees daily violence, and where their parents still live.

    In Tokmok, they lived in a modest brick house before moving to a more spacious, two-story house opposite School No. 1 in the town center, where Tamerlan and his two sisters studied.

    A school register shows Tamerlan’s date of birth — Oct. 21, 1986 — and the date when he entered the fifth grade, Jan. 18, 1999. He studied here for a year. Dzhokhar, born in 1993, was too young to go to school at the time.

    “Yes, the Tsarnaevs studied here. I wouldn’t say they were anti-social or anything like that. No, I can’t say so,” said school director Lyubov Shulzhenko.

    “The Chechen community here is so closely-knit and decent. We have never had problems with their children,” said Natalya Ryabovol, a physics teacher.

    In the Soviet era, Tokmok hosted a busy base which trained military pilots for pro-Soviet countries stretching from eastern Europe to Africa. A Soviet-made jet fighter is perched on a pedestal at the town’s entrance.

    Many of the townspeople today make a living by growing fruit and vegetables and tending cattle. The attack in Boston seems part of another world.

    Kyrgyzstan, which borders China, is politically fragile after the toppling of two presidents since 2005. It says it cannot be held responsible for the brothers’ actions.

    {A house in Tokmok where the Tsarnaev brothers, Dzhokhar and Tamerlan, lived before leaving for Dagestan.}

    {Schoolchildren marching on Friday in front of a school where Tamerlan Tsarnaev studied in Tokmok.}

    {The Moscow Times }

  • Toyota readies U.S. production of Lexus ES by 2015

    {{Toyota Motor Corp (7203.T) plans to assemble the Lexus ES 350 sedan at its Kentucky plant in 2015, marking the first time the Japanese automaker has built a vehicle from its luxury lineup in the United States.}}

    Toyota said on Friday it will invest $360 million at the Georgetown factory, which makes the Toyota Camry and other models. The move will create 750 new jobs and boost the plant’s production capacity by 10 percent to 550,000 vehicles.

    Expanding U.S. production fits in with Toyota’s strategy to make cars in the markets where its customers live. The move also counters the effect of the strong yen, which has made exporting from Japan expensive.

    “This decision is in line with two key goals,” Toyota President Akio Toyoda said at a news conference in New York. “First, to serve our U.S. customers. And second, reduce the effect of the exchange rate on our customers.”

    The U.S. market is the world’s largest for luxury vehicles.

  • Napolitano re-elected Italy’s president

    {{Italy’s Parliament on Saturday re-elected Giorgio Napolitano to an unprecedented second term as president, after party leaders persuaded the 87-year-old to serve again in hopes of easing the hostility that has thwarted formation of a new government.}}

    Napolitano easily surpassed the simple majority required to be elected Saturday afternoon. He garnered 738 votes, far more than the 504 needed for victory for another seven-year mandate.

    Parliament had a much harder time. It took it three days of balloting to choose a president, reflecting the legislature’s deep polarization following inconclusive nationwide elections in February.

    After the weeks of stalemate, Napolitano can formally begin one of the head of state’s most important tasks once he takes a new oath of office. He must figure out who has the best prospects of putting together a new government, with enough support to successfully work with Parliament and survive a mandatory vote of confidence.

    That won’t be easy. Italy’s main political parties — essentially three distinct ideological blocs in Parliament and their often shifting allies — are heavily polarized, and antagonism only grew sharper during the gridlock.

    Napolitano, a former Communist, will have to quickly start sounding out parties about a potential premier. The next government faces pressure to bring urgently needed economic and electoral reforms to the recession-mired nation.

    Italy has had a caretaker government for months, led by economist Mario Monti, a Napolitano appointee whose harsh austerity measures of higher taxes, pension reform and slashed spending helped keep Italy from succumbing to the debt crisis.

    Napolitano, citing his advanced age, had repeatedly refused to be a candidate for another term that would see him turn nearly 95 when it runs out. But he yielded to the appeals out of a sense of responsibility toward the nation, he said.

  • China Slams US for its Human Rights Record

    {{China slammed the human rights record of the United States in response to Washington’s report on rights around the world, saying that U.S. military operations have infringed on rights abroad and that political donations at home have thwarted the country’s democracy.}}

    The report released Sunday in China — which defines human rights primarily in terms of improving living conditions for its 1.3 billion people— also cited gun violence in the U.S. among its examples of human rights violations, saying it was a serious threat to the lives and safety of America’s citizens.

    The Human Rights Record of the United States in 2012 said the U.S. government continues to strengthen the monitoring of its people and that political donations to election campaigns have undue influence on U.S. policy.

    “American citizens do not enjoy a genuinely equal right to vote,” the report said, citing a decreased turnout in the 2012 presidential election and a voting rate of 57.5 percent.

    The report from the information office of the State Council, or China’s Cabinet, which mostly cited media reports, said there was serious sex, racial and religious discrimination in the U.S. and that the country had seriously infringed on the human rights of other nations through its military operations in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Yemen.

    The U.S.’s annual global human rights report issued Friday by the State Department said China had imposed new registration requirements to prevent groups from emerging that might challenge government authority.

    It said Chinese government efforts to silence and intimidate political activists and public interest lawyers continued to increase, and that authorities use extralegal measures such as enforced disappearance to prevent the public voicing of independent opinions.

    It also said there was discrimination against women, minorities and people with disabilities, and people trafficking, the use of forced labor, forced sterilization and widespread corruption.

    China’s authoritarian government maintains strict controls over free speech, religion and political activity — restrictions that the U.S. considers human rights violations.

  • Mikhail Gorbachev Blames eco-risks on Poor Global Leadership & Vision

    {{Former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev on Thursday painted a dim picture of the world’s environmental progress, two decades after he founded the environmental group Green Cross International.}}

    Laying much of the blame on a lack of leadership and vision, he railed against governments for falling short on nuclear disarmament, waste, development and climate change.

    The Nobel Peace Prize laureate launched the Geneva-based organization in 1993 as a kind of Red Cross that could help countries in environmental trouble.

    Reflecting on the 20 years since then, the 82-year-old Gorbachev acknowledged deep frustrations as an environmental crusader.

    “The current economic crisis is being aggravated by the growing pressure on the environment, by poverty, by persisting international conflicts and by the worsening state of the global environment,” a bespectacled Gorbachev said in Russian to reporters in Geneva by video link.

    “The gap between the poor and the rich is unacceptably wide. The response to climate change has been weak and disunited,” he said.

    “The possibility of building a more secure, more just and more united world has been largely missed.”

    U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon says that among his top hopes for 2013 is reaching a new agreement on climate change.

    Two-decade-old U.N. climate talks have so far failed in their goal of reducing the carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gas emissions that a vast majority of scientists says are warming the planet.

    Green Cross, an international organization with affiliates in Switzerland, the United States and two dozen other nations, has helped facilitate destruction of some 57,000 tons of chemical weapons and promoted nuclear disarmament.

    Alexander Likhotal, the Green Cross president, said leaders must be honest about the size of the real challenges facing them and recognize that “incremental gestures will no longer suffice.”

    Gorbachev, whose democratic changes led against his will to the collapse of the Soviet Union, urged governments to step up their efforts and use his policies of “perestroika” (restructuring) and “glasnost” (openness) to address global climate change and overconsumption of resources.

    {AP}

  • North Korea Repeats it Will not Give up Nuclear Arms

    {{North Korea reiterated on Saturday that it would not give up its nuclear weapons, rejecting a U.S. condition for talks although it said it was willing to discuss disarmament.}}

    North Korea, in a sign of a possible end to weeks of heightened hostility on the Korean peninsula, offered the United States and South Korea a list of conditions on Thursday for talks, including the lifting of U.N. sanctions.

    But the United States said it was awaiting “clear signals” that North Korea would halt its nuclear weapons activities.

    “The U.S. should not think about the denuclearization on the peninsula before the world is denuclearized,” reads in part an article published in state run Rodong Sinmun newspaper.

    “There may be talks between the DPRK and the U.S. for disarmament but no talks on denuclearization,” it said.

    North Korea signed a denuclearization-for-aid deal in 2005 but later backed out of that pact. It now says its nuclear arms are a “treasured sword” that it will never give up.
    It conducted its third nuclear test in February.

    The test triggered new U.N. sanctions which in turn led to a dramatic intensification of North Korea’s threats of nuclear strikes against South Korea and the United States.

    {reuters}

  • Indian Police Arrests Suspect for Rape of Girl 5 years

    {{Indian police arrested a man on allegations of rape and torture of a five-year-old girl in New Delhi, a spokesman said on Saturday, after the incident triggered protests and revived memories of a brutal December assault on a woman that shook the country.}}

    The man, 22, was arrested from eastern Bihar state, and is being brought to the capital, Police spokesman Rajan Bhagat said. The accused was a neighbor of the girl and did odd jobs, he said.

    The assault on the girl, which left her in a critical condition, revived memories of the gang rape by five adult men and a teenaged boy of a 23-year-old physiotherapy student on a bus on December 16 in New Delhi.

    The girl, whose parents work as laborers and live in a slum in the outskirts of Delhi, went missing from home on April 15, according to Manish Sisodia, an official of the Aam Aadmi Party which organized Friday’s protest.

    She was found with bruise marks on her body in the suspect’s house in a semi-conscious condition on Thursday by police after her parents had registered a complaint, media reports said.

    The suspect allegedly held the girl hostage for three days during which he raped and tortured her.

    {reuters}

  • Kim Kardashian Finally Granted Divorce

    {{At long last, Kim Kardashian has been granted the divorce she’s wanted from Kris Humphries.}}

    The pregnant “Keeping Up With the Kardashians” star was in court Friday morning with attorney Laura Wasser and was granted a dissolution of marriage due to “irreconcilable differences.”

    The court must sign off on the judgment by June 19. Humphries was not in court again today.

    Team Humphries consented after the judge told the NBA player would never prove fraud and recommended that he just needed to “settle and move on.”

    “As a result of this agreement, we will not have a trial in this case,” Judge Hank M. Goldberg said. “I want to congratulate the attorneys on both sides. This is a sensible way to resolve this case.”

    The reason the case carried on for well over a year is that Humphries wanted an annulment rather than a divorce, on the grounds that Kardashian committed fraud. He reportedly was seeking $7 million from his now ex-wife.

    Humphries will receive no money and each party will pay their own attorney’s fees.

    {wirestory}

  • Boston Bomber Arrested

    {{Lifting days of anxiety for a city and a nation on edge, police captured the surviving Boston Marathon bombing suspect, found bloodied in a backyard boat Friday night less than 24 hours after a wild car chase and gun battle that left his older brother dead and Boston and its suburbs sealed in an extraordinary dragnet.}}

    “We got him,” Boston Mayor Tom Menino tweeted. A cheer erupted from a crowd gathered near the scene.

    “CAPTURED!!!” police added later. “The hunt is over. The search is done. The terror is over. And justice has won. Suspect in custody.”

    During a long night of violence Thursday and into Friday, brothers Dzhokhar and Tamerlan Tsarnaev killed an MIT police officer, severely wounded another lawman and hurled explosives at police in a desperate getaway attempt, authorities said.

    Late Friday, less than an hour after authorities said the search for Dzhokhar had proved fruitless, they tracked down the 19-year-old college student holed up in the boat, weakened by a gunshot wound after fleeing on foot from the overnight shootout with police that left 200 spent rounds behind.

    He was hospitalized in serious condition, unable to be questioned about his motives.
    Tamerlan Tsarnaev, 26, died in the shootout early in the day.

    At one point, he was run over by his younger brother in a car as he lay wounded, according to investigators.

    The violent endgame unfolded four days after the bombing and just a day after the FBI released surveillance-camera images of two young men suspected of planting the pressure-cooker explosives that ripped through the crowd at the marathon finish line, killing three people and wounding more than 180.

    {Boston Marathon bombing suspect captured alive}

    {startribune}

  • Argentine Fans Attack Players After Defeat

    {{Dozens of fans of the Argentine football club Huracan have stormed the club’s changing rooms after a training session and assaulted some players.}}

    They also stole players’ belongings and damaged their cars outside the stadium in Buenos Aires.

    The masked fans carried out the attack after a disappointing result.

    Second division Huracan had been knocked out of Copa Argentina by first division opponents Godoy Cruz on penalties on Wednesday.

    “We were in the showers after Thursday’s training session when the disguised fans stormed the rooms and threatened the players,” said coach Jose Maria Llop.

    He said some of the players had been beaten.

    “When we left the stadium, we found out eight cars had been damaged,” he added.

    The club’s president, Alejandro Nadur, said the fans had come in two buses and entered the stadium.

    “What they did would not have been justified, even if we had lost 15-0 to Godoy Cruz,” he said.

    {BBC}