RSS Feed     Twitter     Facebook

Posts Tagged ‘Oslo’

Berlian Laju to acquire Camillo Eitzen, add tankers: Update 2

PT Berlian Laju Tanker, Indonesia’s largest shipping company, agreed to buy Camillo Eitzen & Co. ASA in a deal valued at 1 billion kroner ($244 million) to become the world’s largest operator of chemical tankers.

Camillo Eitzen, known as CECO, more than doubled in Oslo trading after Berlian Laju offered to buy the company with mandatory convertible bonds equivalent to 25 kroner a share. The bid is contingent on the Indonesian shipping line raising US$200 million ($282 million) in a private placement, according to a statement.

Noah and the Whale Tour & Album Stream

Noah and the Whale Embark on October Headline Tour Supporting Their New Album
NPR Music Offers “Exclusive First Listen”

Noah and the Whale

Noah and the Whale embark on an October headlining tour supporting their new album and its accompanying film The First Days of Spring, out October 6 on Cherrytree/Interscope. They will kick things off at L.A.’s famed Roxy venue on October 20 playing select cities across the U.S. before ending the tour with a special event to be announced soon. In addition, there will be a number of intimate screenings of the film in select cities.

The U.S. release and tour come on the heels of the August 31 U.K. release where the album debuted in the Top 10 and was met with an overwhelming response: NME 9/10 – “…Spiritualized-tinged grandiose beauty,” The Sunday Times 4/5 – “…a masterpiece,” 4/5 Q Magazine – “breathtakingly beautiful,” 4/5 MOJO – “Breathtakingly ambitious.” In addition, the band performed this past August on the main stages of Reading and Leeds, where they shared the bill with Radiohead, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Bloc Party and Vampire Weekend.

In 2008, chief singer and songwriter Charlie Fink first began thinking of making an album that was also a film, and as he sees it, vice versa. The First Days of Spring was recorded in London and New York with producer Emery Dobyns (Patti Smith, Antony & The Johnsons) and the film was shot on location in London and Surrey with an ensemble cast that includes model Daisy Lowe. The film can be seen as a companion piece to the album, as a visual version of it, or as a piece of work in its own right but this decision is one which Noah and the Whale have decided to leave up to the listener and viewer.

NPR Music is currently streaming the entire new album, one week ahead of its official release. The First Days of Spring is available for free, on-demand listening now through October 6 at npr.org/music, as part of the site’s “Exclusive First Listen” series.

Tour Dates

10/01/09 Thu Oxford Academy Oxford, GB

10/02/09 Fri Koko London, GB

10/04/09 Sun Waterfront Norwich, GB

10/05/09 Mon The Junction Cambridge, GB

10/07/09 Wed Concorde 2 Brighton, GB

10/08/09 Thu The Rockhouse DERBY, GB

10/10/09 Sat Exeter Phoenix Exeter, GB

10/11/09 Sun Komedia Bath, GB

10/12/09 Mon Princess Pavilion Falmouth, GB

10/14/09 Wed Leadmill Sheffield, GB

10/15/09 Thu Oran Mor Glasgow, GB

10/16/09 Fri Birmingham Academy Birmingham, GB

10/20/09 Tue The Roxy Theatre West Hollywood, CA

10/22/09 Thu Swedish American Hall San Francisco, CA

10/24/09 Sat Crocodile Cafe Seattle, WA

10/25/09 Sun Doug Fir Portland, OR

10/29/09 Thu Lakeshore Theater Chicago, IL

10/30/09 Fri The Pike Room Pontiac, MI

10/31/09 Sat Horseshoe Tavern Toronto, ON

11/07/09 Sat Debaser Stockholm, SE (w/ Phoenix)

11/08/09 Sun Brew House Gothenburg, SE (w/ Phoenix)

11/09/09 Mon Rockefeller Oslo, NO (w/ Phoenix)

11/10/09 Tue Vega Copenhagen, DK (w/ Phoenix)

11/12/09 Thu Docks Hamburg, GER (w/ Phoenix)

11/13/09 Fri Ringlokschuppen Bielefeld, GER (w/ Phoenix)

11/14/09 Sat E-Werk Cologne, GER (w/ Phoenix)

11/15/09 Sun Theatre Fabrik Munich, GER (w/ Phoenix)

11/17/09 Tue Zapata Stuttgart, GER (w/ Phoenix)

11/18/09 Wed Cocoon Frankfurt, GER (w/ Phoenix)

11/20/09 Fri Alte Feuerwache Mannheim, GER (w/ Phoenix)

11/21/09 Sat Huxley’s Berlin, GER (w/ Phoenix)


Will, Jada Pinkett Smith to host Nobel Peace Prize Concert

Hollywood actor Will Smith and wife Jada Pinkett are set to host this year’s Nobel Peace Prize Concert.
The star couple said that they are both humbled and honored to take part in the 16th Annual Nobel Peace Prize Concert to be held on Dec. 11 in Oslo, Norway.
“The opportunity to recognize the laureate’’s contributions to [...]

‘Oslo`: Microsoft`s Elusive Modeling Strategy

Microsoft’s Oslo software modeling technology appears to be something of a chameleon in that it continues to evolve and take on new appearances based on its surroundings. Now Oslo has moved to a different destination, or at least the Oslo team is adapting and merging with Microsoft’s Data Programmability team. Microsoft promises to share more on “Oslo” at its Professional Developers Conference (PDC) in November.
– Microsoft’s quot;Oslo quot; software modeling technology appears to be something of a chameleon in that it continues to evolve and take on new appearances based on its surroundings. Now quot;Oslo quot; has moved to a different destination, or at least the Oslo team is adapting and merging with Mic…



Scotland can bounce back – Burley

Scotland manager George Burley bemoaned his side’s luck in losing 4-0 to Norway but thinks they can bounce back to qualify for the World Cup finals.

"Whatever could have gone wrong tonight went wrong," he told BBC Scotland.

"It has been a disastrous result, to lose by four when we were looking to cement our position in second place but we will be in there fighting.

"We lost, but we still have two games left. If we win those, I still feel we can be in the play-offs."

The result means Scotland remain level with Macedonia on seven points but slip from second to third in qualifying Group Nine on goal difference.

With the eight best runners-up from the nine qualification groups progressing to the play-offs (* see note at foot of story), Burley’s men almost certainly need to win their remaining two games – a double-header against Macedonia and the Netherlands at Hampden Park – to have any hope of securing a spot.

Scotland play Macedonia on 5 September knowing that defeat would all but end their hopes of reaching South Africa 2010.

"Up to the sending-off, I thought we maybe had the better of it as far as chances were concerned"

Scotland manager George Burley

A draw would leave them having to beat the already-qualified Dutch on 9 September but by that point Macedonia and Norway, who meet on the same day, could both be above them.

Victory over the Scots lifted Norway off the bottom of the table and revived their own play-off aspirations.

Egil Olsen’s side made a woeful start to their campaign, with three draws and two defeats from their opening five matches, but they are now just a point adrift of Scotland and Macedonia.

They play bottom-of-the-group Iceland in Reykjavik on 5 September before hosting Macedonia in Oslo four days later.

"I said before the game that I thought we needed six points to make the play-offs," said Burley.

"So nothing has changed. We have two games left and they are both at home, so we have to pick ourselves up and show the character necessary to get into second place and the play-offs.

"Norway would like to be in our position just now and I have no doubts that we can beat Macedonia at home. Holland was always going to be difficult but they have qualified so I believe we have the players who can win both games.

"If we can’t win our two games, we don’t deserve to get in the play-offs."

Norway took the lead immediately after Gary Caldwell was sent off after picking up two yellow cards, while fellow central defenders Steven Caldwell and substitute Christophe Berra both had to come off through injury.

"All our problems started with the sending off and then it went from bad to worse," said Burley, who has been in charge of Scotland since January 2008.

606: DEBATE

"Scotland disgraced our nation tonight – they almost gave up after 1 – 0, those players need to have a long look at the themselves and as for burley you’ve had it chief!!"

19.afc.03

"Before the sending off, I thought we more than held our own, we had three half chances and were slightly on top. Then they scored right away and it was a wicked deflection off Scott Brown for the first goal.

"Steven Caldwell was complaining about his groin at half time and we had to then bring him off. We moved Alan Hutton in to the middle and then Christophe Berra, who had come on, picked up a hamstring injury and Steven Whittaker came on, so we had five different defences.

"It was a horrible result but it is gone now. You can’t say it was a disaster because we still have a chance.

Burley thought Caldwell was unlucky to receive a second booking, which came after the Celtic defender hauled back John Carew.

"I thought it was very harsh – Carew was pulling Gary and Gary was trying to hold his own," said Burley. "I don’t think the referee realised he’d booked Gary, the Norwegian players said he’d already been booked.

"If the referee had realised he had already booked him before, he wouldn’t have sent him off."

And Burley refused to place any blame on stand-in goalkeeper David Marshall, who has now conceded 11 goals in his three international appearances for Scotland.

"I don’t think you can fault him for any of the goals," the manager added. "The free-kick at the end, he (Pedersen) whipped it into the top corner and I don’t think anyone would have saved that.

"And the other ones were decent finishes, although the first one was fortunate when they got the deflection."


* Group Nine consists of five teams, one less than the other pools. When calculating the best runners-up, therefore, matches played against the sixth-placed finishers in Groups One to Eight will not be taken into consideration.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Bosom pals pep up German politics

Controversial <a href=CDU election poster” border=”0″ vspace=”4″ hspace=”4″>

A German politician has unleashed a new weapon to soften up voters in Berlin: Chancellor Angela Merkel’s bust, alongside her own.

Vera Lengsfeld, 57, has ruffled feathers in Mrs Merkel’s conservative Christian Democrat (CDU) party with the unauthorised CDU election poster.

"We have more to offer" is the slogan on the poster, 750 copies of which were hung in Kreuzberg district of Berlin.

Mrs Lengsfeld faces an uphill struggle against a popular Green politician.

"I needed to come up with something to even be noticed," Mrs Lengsfeld said, adding that the posters had massively boosted traffic to her website.

FROM BBC WORLD SERVICE

More from BBC World Service

She is hoping to win a parliamentary seat in Germany’s 27 September general elections.

But the incumbent Green politician Hans-Christian Stroebele has won twice previously in the Kreuzberg district.

The shot of Mrs Merkel sporting an evening gown with plunging neckline was taken at the 2008 opening of Oslo’s opera house.

Some of the posters have been stolen as souvenirs since they went up on Sunday, the AFP news agency reports.

A CDU spokesman said Mrs Lengsfeld’s poster campaign had not been agreed with the party.

And the CDU women’s arm chided Mrs Lengsfeld, saying, "We don’t need to do things like this any more."


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Scots give Marshall Norway chance

World Cup Qualifier, Group Nine: Norway v Scotland
Venue: Ullevaal Stadion, Oslo Date: Wed, 12 August Kick-off: 1800 BST
Coverage: Live on BBC Two, BBC Radio Scotland, Radio 5 live and BBC Sport website


Cardiff City goalkeeper David Marshall

Rangers goalkeeper Neil Alexander says Cardiff City’s David Marshall deserves to be in goal for Scotland’s World Cup qualifier against Norway on Wednesday.

With Craig Gordon injured and Allan McGregor banned, manager George Burley must decide between Alexander and Marshall for the match in Oslo.

Alexander said: "I think David Marshall will play and deservedly so.

"I know what it’s like to be in the squad for years and be overlooked. I’m here as cover because Craig’s missing."

Former Celt Marshall, playing in the English Championship with the Bluebirds, has had to bide his time at international level as understudy to Gordon and McGregor.

And Alexander, who has been vying with McGregor for the Rangers goalkeeping position in pre-season matches, added: "David’s been through a lot because of circumstances and he probably thinks he deserves to play.

"I can’t really disagree with that. He’s been in the squad a long time as the number three.

"Having been behind Allan McGregor, he now find himself in the number two position.

"With Craig out, he keeps going up the ladder and maybe thinks he’s entitled to play. That’s fair enough. I can fully understand that, but that’s the manager’s decision."

"That’s three months I’ve been out now and I’ve not had a single game in that time"

Sunderland and Scotland keeper Craig Gordon

Gordon was back at Tynecastle on Saturday as his current club Sunderland played former team Hearts in a friendly.

And, having suffered serious ankle and knee injuries in the past year, he was at least able to take part in Sunderland’s warm-up.

After the match Gordon told BBC Radio Scotland’s Sportsound programme: "That was the probably the most strenuous workout that I’ve had so far and everything went well; I had no after-effects from it.

Scotland goalkeeper Craig Gordon

"We’ve come a long way in a short space of time. Over the last week to 10 days it has improved at great speed and I was just out of contention for getting some time on the park.

"On Monday I’ll be back in full training so it really was that close. That’s three months I’ve been out now and I’ve not had a single game in that time.

"That would be a big ask to go straight into a World Cup qualifier."

Gordon revealed that Burley had given him every chance of making the squad for the vital Group Nine match.

He said: "I spoke to the manager quite a few times leading up to him naming the squad.

"He was checking on my progress and was absolutely brilliant with me, but unfortunately we decided that, with my lack of game time, it was probably best that I was left out."

Scotland are second in Group Nine and have three games remaining to try to secure a play-off place.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

New brooms

Fatah revamps its leadership at a much delayed congress

Fatah, the Palestinian nationalist movement founded by Yasser Arafat, has just completed its first general congress in 20 years. The elections to the party’s central committee, a key Palestinian power centre, have resulted in advances by a number of West Bank and Gaza figures that came to prominence after the late Mr Arafat’s return to historical Palestine as part of the Oslo process. They notably include Mohammed Dahlan, a powerful but divisive figure whose elevation is unlikely to help resolve the feud between Fatah and Hamas.

The elections produced a clearout of most of the old guard on the central committee. According to the unofficial tally, 14 of the 18 elected members of the committee are newcomers. The chairman of the committee, Mahmoud Abbas, the president of the Palestinian Authority, was re-elected by a show of hands. A further four members will be appointed. …

Muse: The Resistance

British Trio Muse Unveil New Single, “Uprising,” Off

The Band’s Forthcoming Album, The Resistance, Due Out September 15


Muse

A glammed-up rock stomper, “Uprising” (check it below) is the first single from Muse‘s self-produced fifth studio album The Resistance, which will be released on September 15. Recorded in Italy, the album was mixed by famed audio engineer Mark “Spike” Stent, who is known for his work with U2, Depeche Mode, No Doubt, and Oasis, among many others. The single is the first new music from Muse since Black Holes and Revelations, which debuted at Number 9 on Billboard’s album chart in July 2006. Over the last few years, Muse – comprised of vocalist/guitarist Matt Bellamy, bassist Chris Wolstenholme and drummer Dom Howard – have played to sold-out crowds worldwide in support of Black Holes, which spawned modern rock hits “Knights Of Cydonia,” “Starlight” and “Supermassive Black Hole.”

In anticipation of their new album, Muse will perform at the 2009 MTV Video Music Awards on September 13, two days before The Resistance is released in the U.S. In addition, the band will open select shows for U2, including two shows at Giants Stadium in New York, this fall.

Muse 2009 Tour Dates:

09/25/09 Fri Giants Stadium East Rutherford, NJ*

09/29/09 Tue FedEx Field Landover, MD*

10/01/09 Thu Scott Stadium Charlottesville, VA*

10/03/09 Sat Carter Finley Stadium Raleigh, NC*

10/06/09 Tue Georgia Dome Atlanta, GA*

10/09/09 Fri Raymond James Stadium Tampa, FL*

10/12/09 Mon Dallas Cowboys Stadium Arlington, TX*

10/14/09 Wed Reliant Stadium Houston, TX*

10/22/09 Thu Hartwall Arena Helsinki, FI*

10/24/09 Sat Hovet Stockholm, SE

10/25/09 Sun Oslo Spektrum Oslo, NO

10/26/09 Mon Parken Copenhagen, DK

10/28/09 Wed Color Line Arena Hamburg, GER

10/29/09 Thu O2 World Berlin, GER

11/01/09 Sun Le Galaxie Amneville, FRA

11/02/09 Mon Sportpaleis Antwerpen Antwerp, BEL

11/04/09 Wed Sheffield Arena Sheffield, GB

11/05/09 Thu Liverpool Echo Arena Liverpool, GB

11/06/09 Fri The O2 Dublin, IR

11/09/09 Mon SECC Glasgow, GB

11/10/09 Tue National Indoor Arena (NIA) Birmingham, GB

11/12/09 Thu O2 Arena London, GB

11/13/09 Fri O2 Arena London, GB

11/14/09 Sat Ahoy Hall Rotterdam, NL

11/16/09 Mon Lanxess Arena Cologne, GER

11/17/09 Tue Bercy Paris, FRA

11/18/09 Wed Hallenstadion Zurich Zurich, SWI

11/20/09 Fri Olympiahalle Munich, GER

11/22/09 Sun Halle Tony Garnier Lyon, FRA

11/25/09 Wed Zenith Toulouse, FRA

11/27/09 Fri Pavello Olimpic Barcelona, ES

11/28/09 Sat Palacio de los Deportes Madrid, ES

11/29/09 Sun Pavilhao Atlantico Lisbon, POR

12/01/09 Tue Zenith Limoges, FRA

12/02/09 Wed Zenith Dijon, FRA

12/04/09 Fri Palaolympico Turin, IT

*=Opening for U2



Fatah extends stormy conference

PA President Mahmoud Abbas in front of Yasser Arafat poster at Fatah conference

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas’s Fatah faction’s first party congress for 20 years has been extended amid rows between rival camps.

The meeting, which was originally scheduled to last three days, will go on for at least an extra day.

Participants are divided over the process for voting in new members of its powerful central committee.

Younger members want to wrest more control from older leaders seen as corrupt and ineffective.

Nabil Amr, a spokesman for the conference, told local media the second day, Wednesday, was "stormy".

Proceedings have been hindered by a row over the treatment of the votes of about 400 Gaza-based delegates who been prevented from travelling to the congress in the West Bank town of Bethlehem by Fatah’s rival faction Hamas.

Hamas controls the Gaza Strip, and refused to allow the delegates to leave unless Fatah released some 900 Hamas prisoners the Islamist movement says are being held in the West Bank.

"The Palestinians of course are committed to a peaceful solution, however, we maintain the right for armed struggle when it is necessary and as an option"

Mahmoud Abbas

Can Fatah reinvent itself

Profile: Fatah movement

One proposal is to allow the Gaza delegates to vote via telephone or email, another to allocate a specific number of seats on the committee for the Gaza wing of the faction.

The second option is controversial as it is thought likely to benefit former Gaza security head Mohammad Dahlan, a younger but divisive figure widely believed to be corrupt.

Delegates seeking to modernise Fatah have also accused the "old guard" of packing the conference with sympathisers to squeeze out younger members.

They accused those who control the Central Committee of adding hundreds of extra delegates to the original list of 1,550.

"They illegally keep adding new members. No one knows the actual numbers," Fatah member Mansuor al-Sadi told Reuters news agency, accusing the committe of "trying to hijack the congress".

A row also broke out when another delegate, Hossam Khader, who has been critical of corruption among Fatah leaders, challenged Mr Abbas to provide a detailed report about the Central Committee’s activities in the 20 years since the last conference.

Mr Abbas reportedly told him his lengthy opening speech on Tuesday should suffice and ordered him to sit down.

Charter debate

International interest in the conference has so far centred on whether Fatah will alter its charter, which calls for armed struggle to end the existence of Israel.

This dates back to Fatah’s formation in the 1950s by the late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat.

But by backing the Oslo peace process in the early 1990s, Fatah effectively renounced violence and recognised Israel.

On Tuesday Mr Abbas said Fatah was committed to peace, but maintained armed struggle as an option.

Correspondents say that without major reform Fatah will struggle to restore its image among Palestinians, which will be particularly important if elections scheduled for January 2010 go ahead.

Nonetheless, opinion polls suggest that Fatah is currently more popular than its main rival, Hamas.

It lost Palestinian parliamentary elections to Hamas in 2006.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Porcupine Tree: Incident

Porcupine Tree Unravel New Album The Incident Due September 22


Porcupine Tree

Inspired by a flashing road sign that reduced a horrible traffic accident to the antiseptic phrase “POLICE-INCIDENT,” British prog act Porcupine Tree‘s front man Steven Wilson composed the 55 minute, 14-track song cycle as a reflection on other “incidents” reported in the media and news.

The different topics include – the evacuation of teenage girls from a religious cult in Texas, a family terrorizing its neighbors, a body found floating in a river by some people on a fishing trip, and more. Each song is written in the first person and tries to humanize the detached media reportage.

Personal incidents that profoundly affected Wilson, have also been included on the new album include a lost childhood friendship, a seance, his first love, and the day that he decided to give up secure employment to follow his dream of making music.

The new album is in typical Porcupine Tree fashion and as presumed the band ranges effortlessly between art-rock and acoustic psychedelica, prog, and metal. Listen to an album preview medley at the band’s MySpace page.

The Incident will also come with a second CD of four songs that developed from band’s writing sessions last year but which are conceptually independent from the set of songs on the first disc. It will also be released as a 5.1 surround mix and as a limited special edition that comes with two books of artwork related to the album encased in a slipcase.

Tour Dates:

09/15/09 Tue Moore Theatre Seattle, WA

09/16/09 Wed Roseland Theater Portland, OR

09/18/09 Fri The Warfield San Francisco, CA

09/19/09 Sat Club Nokia Los Angeles, CA

09/21/09 Mon House Of Blues Cleveland, OH

09/22/09 Tue The Vic Theatre Chicago, IL

09/24/09 Thu Terminal 5 New York, NY

09/26/09 Sat Electric Factory Philadelphia, PA

09/27/09 Sun House of Blues Boston, MA

09/29/09 Tue Metropolis Montreal, QC

09/30/09 Wed Queen Elizabeth Theatre Toronto, ON

10/08/09 Thu Leeds Academy Leeds, GB

10/09/09 Fri Hammersmith Apollo London, GB

10/10/09 Sat Colston Hall Bristol, GB

10/12/09 Mon Heineken Music Hall Amsterdam, NL

10/13/09 Tue Olympia Paris, FRA

10/14/09 Wed Ancienne Belgique Brussels, BEL

10/15/09 Thu Capitol Hannover, GER

10/17/09 Sat Aladin Bremen, GER

10/18/09 Sun Vega Copenhagen, DK

10/19/09 Mon Stockholm Globe Arena Stockholm, SE

10/21/09 Wed Ice Hall Helsinki, FI

10/23/09 Fri Sentrum Scene Oslo, NO

10/24/09 Sat Mejeriet Lund, SE

10/25/09 Sun Docks Hamburg, GER

10/26/09 Mon Huxley’s Berlin, GER

10/29/09 Thu Haus Auensee Leipzig, GER

10/30/09 Fri Lowensaal Nuremburg, GER

10/31/09 Sat Gasometer Vienna, AUS

11/01/09 Sun Petofi Hall Budapest, HU

11/04/09 Wed Alcatraz Milan, IT

11/06/09 Fri Estragon Bologna, IT

11/21/09 Sat Sa Bandeira Porto, POR

11/22/09 Sun La Riviera Madrid, ES

11/28/09 Sat Tonhalle Munich, GER

12/06/09 Sun Wulfrun Hall Wolverhampton, GB

12/10/09 Thu Manchester Academy Manchester, GB

12/11/09 Fri ABC Glasgow, GB


Eric Blinderman: Do Governments Need The Media to Bring Criminals to Justice?

America’s Most Wanted has successfully bridged the gap between entertainment and law enforcement; The Wanted attempts to do this on an international scale.

Abraham H. Foxman: Unsettling Signs: The U.S. Takes on Israel on Settlements

While some may believe America has acknowledged a special relationship with Israel, the record of U.S. policy toward many significant issues in the conflict shows something entirely different.

Chechen separatist in rare talks

File image of Akhmed Zakayev, from December 2006

A Chechen separatist envoy and a regional government representative say they have held talks on bringing stability to the south Russian region.

The prime minister of the government-in-exile, Akhmed Zakayev, and Dukuvakha Abdurakhmanov, chairman of the Chechen parliament, said they had met in Oslo.

Mediators said the talks were the first between the two sides in eight years.

Russian forces have fought two wars against separatists in the mainly Muslim republic since 1994.

The conflicts claimed more than 100,000 lives and left it in ruins.

Mr Zakayev represents the separatists’ political wing, not the military wing that is leading the insurgency in Chechnya.

He said the two sides had "discussed political issues being solved not by force but by political means".

"I would like to express delight that this has taken place," he added. "I’m strongly convinced every Chechen person should be well aware of the processes taking place, and should take part in them."

"This meeting has been authorised not only by [Chechen President Ramzan] Kadyrov himself… It has been happening in perfect co-ordination with the highest leadership in the Kremlin"

Ivar Amundsen
Chechnya Peace Forum

Mr Abdurakhmanov meanwhile said the talks had centred on "the total political stabilisation of the Chechen Republic and the final consolidation of Chechen society".

Norwegian mediator Ivar Amundsen, the director of the human rights group, Chechnya Peace Forum, said it was the first time there had been "a serious political dialogue between the Russian-installed regime in Chechnya and the government-in-exile".

"This meeting has been authorised not only by [Chechen President Ramzan] Kadyrov himself… It has been happening in perfect co-ordination with the highest leadership in the Kremlin," he told reporters, adding that further talks would be held in London.

Six months ago, Mr Kadyrov declared that political normalisation could not be achieved without the involvement of Mr Zakayev.

He repeated the offer of reconciliation last month, telling Russian television that there would be no point in imprisoning him and that he would like the former actor to play a role in reviving Chechen culture.

Spreading insurgency

Mr Zakayev was a leading rebel in Chechnya until 2000, but fled and sought asylum in the UK when Russia regained control.

In 2003, a British court rejected Moscow’s request for his extradition on kidnapping and murder charges, saying that there was substantial risk of him being tortured by the authorities.

map

Two years ago, Mr Zakayev declared himself prime minister of the rebel Republic of Ichkeria after the President, Doku Umarov, described Western countries as the enemies of all Muslims, and announced his intention to install shariah across the region.

Any statement of support from him for the Kremlin-backed government in Chechnya would aid Moscow, analysts say.

Chechnya has in recent years been more peaceful. In April, President Dmitry Medvedev ordered the end of a decade-long "counter-terrorism operation", intended to pave the way for the withdrawal of thousands of troops.

But since then several attacks have taken place. Earlier this month, two police officers and two soldiers were killed in a gun battle with militants in southern Chechnya.

Fighting has also spread to neighbouring Dagestan and Ingushetia, where correspondents say a violent Islamist insurgency is growing.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

James Zogby: The Evolution of the Acceptance of a Palestinian State

With Benyamin Netanyahu agreeing to a Palestinian State (albeit one that meets his specifications), and the European Union’s Javier Solana calling for a Security Council…

Headless cause

By Swaminathan Natarajan
BBC Tamil

Tamil Tiger supporters in London

The military defeat of the Tamil Tigers in May has thrown the leadership of Tamil politics wide open.

The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) LTTE never took part in elections but at its peak it had a standing army, a navy, a rudimentary air force and was able to control 15,000 sq km of land.

The LTTE proclaimed itself to be the sole representative of the Tamils and killed many leaders and intellectuals who differed from this view.

The last popular democratic leader of Tamils, Appapillai Amirthalingam, who led the moderate Tamil United Liberation Front (TULF) was assassinated 20 years ago by the LTTE.

To avoid the the Tigers’ bullets some politicians toed the LTTE line, others aligned themselves with the government to get protection, while others simply left the country.

So there is uncertainty over who will be the able to fill the vacuum created by the exit of the LTTE which dominated ethnic politics for more than two decades.

Whoever does emerge into a position of leadership will face many challenges.

Pressure power

Finding an acceptable solution to the ethnic problem is the main issue for Tamil parties.

But speeding up the resettlement process of close 300,000 people now living in the camps is the immediate challenge.

The LTTE’s aim was for an independent Tamil homeland.

During the Oslo round of talks in 2003 , it said it was ready to explore the chances for a federal solution but this assurance was short-lived and the peace process stalled.

Prabhakaran

But now that the LTTE have been wiped-out, Tamil political parties are pressing for greater devolution, but they fear a triumphant Sri Lankan Government may not yield much.

Moreover, the Tamil parties themselves are divided about what exactly they want from a political deal.

"Due to effective military actions, LTTE was able to force the government to start talks. But today there is no leadership that can exert such a pressure," says K Sarveshwaran, a professor at Colombo University.

Federal Sri Lanka

The pro-LTTE Tamil National Alliance (TNA), an umbrella group of Tamil parties, secured 22 out of 23 seats in the Tamil majority areas of the north and east during the last parliamentary elections.

It is trying to assume a leadership role by proposing a solution.

"Our proposals will be based on the Canadian and Swiss model of power sharing in a federal set up. We will try to build a consensus among the Tamil parties barring the ones which support the ruling party," says R Sampanthan, the leader of the TNA.

But the senior Tamil politician and leader of Tamil United Liberation Front (TULF) V. Anandasangaree, has already rejected the TNA’s call for unity.

"During the final months of the war, the whole world was urging the LTTE to release the civilians they kept as hostage. The TNA was the only organisation which did not ask the LTTE to free civilians. How can I forget that and ally with them now" he asks.

"When LTTE was controlling a large chunk of territory and negotiating with the government we supported them. But now the situation is different"

R Sampanthan, Leader of the TNA

R Sampanthan, the Leader of the TNA

He believes the Indian model of power sharing between the central and state governments will solve the problems in Sri Lanka.

But the Sinhala hardliners in the government are not keen to dilute the unitary structure of the Sri Lankan state.

The All Party Representative Committee set up by the President is also expected to come out with its final report soon, but there is scepticism that about whether it can pull off the feat of satisfying Tamils while not ruffling feathers in the Sinhala South.

End to violence

Former militant leaders like Douglas Devananda and Vinayagamurthy Muralitharan ("Colonel Karuna") have joined the government. Col Karuna has even joined the ruling party.

However, there is also some interest in whether the remnants of the Tamil Tigers, including its remaining leadership abroad, will have any influence on events in Sri Lanka

The head of LTTE’s international affairs Selvarasa Pathmanathan, told the BBC’s Tamil Service, that the LTTE would pursue the goal of independence but would not use violence.

He even announced his intention to form a transnational government.

But many Tamils in Sri Lanka are not excited. Even the pro-LTTE TNA is asserting itself.

"When the LTTE was controlling a large chunk of territory and negotiating with the government we supported them. But now the situation is different," Mr. Sampanthan the TNA leader says.

But signs of dissent have emerged among TNA parliamentarians.

Map of Sri Lanka

Some MPs have started praising the government and a few others have toned down their criticism.

But Professor Sarveshwaran says that the TNA can provide leadership to the Tamils at this critical juncture.

"The TNA won the confidence of majority of Tamils in the last elections. It can spearhead the Tamil demand to achieve an honourable settlement," he says.

The TNA is engaging the Indian government in an effort to bring pressure upon the Sri Lankan government.

But some are critical of this approach.

"Ordinary Tamils are angry with India. Without the help of India, the Sri Lankan Army would have never won the war," says one MP.

But Professor Sarveshawaran says "We must remember that even those countries which have supported Sri Lankan military efforts against the LTTE never questioned the validity of the Tamil cause."

"The Tamil problem predates the Tamil Tigers. A solution needs to be found for their aspirations. There is a leadership vacuum now but this is only temporary." </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Taste of change

Market in Nablus

By Heather Sharp
BBC News, Nablus

Business has more than doubled in recent months, said sweet shop owner Magdi Abu Salha, taking a break from slicing up knefi, the sticky cheese-based dessert for which his home town of Nablus is famed.

Two years ago the northern West Bank town was a stronghold of armed Palestinian militant groups.

And just three months ago, the six Israeli roadblocks and checkpoints that had ringed it for nine years had all but killed its economic life.

Magdi Abu Salha, Nablus sweet shop owner

Most residents could leave only by two routes – on foot or through checkpoints which often had long queues.

Israel says its system of closures and checkpoints in the West Bank is necessary to stop potential suicide bombers and other attackers, but many Palestinians have long viewed it as a form of collective punishment.

International efforts to boost the Palestinian Authority security forces have already borne fruit in Jenin, which saw movement restrictions eased last year.

And in recent weeks, Israel has deemed security gains sufficient for it to take what it describes as the "calculated risk" of removing and easing many key roadblocks and checkpoints across the West Bank.

Checkpoints lifted: Nablus journeys

West Bank map

Cars now drive within a few minutes through Hawarra, Nablus’s main checkpoint; the other roads in and out of the city have reopened.

Headscarved women pick through piles of shoes and bags as Arabic pop plays from loudspeakers on the newly bustling streets.

A cinema opened its doors in the city last month for the first time in 20 years.

Dozens of busloads of Israeli-Arabs have been coming to shop on Saturdays since April, when Israel began allowing them to cross the West Bank barrier from northern Israel, one day a week.

Political graffiti and posters of militants that have died are being replaced with signs saying "Welcome to Nablus, the economic capital". Palestinian policemen are enforcing new seat belt laws.

‘Change is possible’

In a complex perched on a rubble-strewn hill outside the town centre, Tony Blair, Middle East envoy for the international community and former British PM, toured the gleaming tiled floors of the Nablus Hyatt this week.

"We didn’t bring the swimming trunks," he quipped by the new hotel’s large, pristine pool.

Middle East quartet envoy Tony Blair

Tasked with improving the economic situation in the West Bank, he has pushed hard for the removal of the checkpoints.

"Two years ago, I couldn’t have come here, there were militia in the streets," he said.

"There’s still massive amount to do, but providing we keep building on the security and the economics, and then we add to that a credible political negotiation, what Nablus shows is that change is possible."

Suleiman Daifi, a member of the hotel’s board, says the $3.1m that a group of local figures ploughed into the facility was a "very dangerous investment".

The complex opened in April and is not yet covering its costs. But the management say the removal of the checkpoints and Israeli-Arab visitors have boosted business 20-30%.

Nablus Hyatt board member Suleiman Daifi

Israel’s new, right-leaning prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, has made much of the phrase "economic peace".

In opposition, he used it to refer to plans to boost economic activity in the West Bank as he did not consider the Palestinians, split between the Fatah-dominated Palestinian Authority and Hamas, ready for serious negotiations to end the decades-old conflict.

"Netanyahu wants to concentrate on the economic situation – as if all Arabs become rich they will forget the political issue… that’s wrong"

Essam al-Qudu
Businessman

Since coming to office, and under pressure from US President Barack Obama to kick-start peace talks, he has advocated political negotiations alongside economic measures.

But while he reluctantly backed the principle of a demilitarised Palestinian state, he has issued the new demand that the Palestinians recognise Israel as a Jewish state, and refuses to freeze all settlement activity.

Mr Daifi said he believes the peace process is "stuck".

"I think economic peace is a joke," he said. "The economy will not be sustainable if there is not a sustainable political situation."

Mr Blair said he believes American efforts will lead to the relaunch of a "credible" peace process "in the next few weeks, next few months".

‘Root of the problem’

On Wednesday, the IMF issued an unusually upbeat economic forecast for the West Bank, predicting 7% growth – but only if Israel continues to ease restrictions.

But Essam al-Qudu, who has to travel all over the West Bank as manager of a company which installs security systems, said there is no guarantee the checkpoints will even stay open.

He says there is already a "different atmosphere" in Nablus.

But he remembers the short-lived wave of optimism and freedom of movement in the wake of the 1993 Oslo peace accords, which gave way to heavy closures as the second Palestinian intifada or uprising broke out in 2000.

"Netanyahu wants to concentrate on the economic situation – as if all Arabs become rich they will forget the political issue… that’s wrong."

"The main root of the problem is the political situation – an independent state for us," he said.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Steady hands

Generic radioactive sign

How do you dismantle a nuclear bomb And how do you verify another country is genuinely disarming without compromising sensitive national security material

BBC security correspondent Gordon Corera was given exclusive access to a unique exercise run by the UK and Norway to find out.


The nuclear weapon is carefully lifted out of a large container and moved onto the floor.

Two engineers use an electric screwdriver to open up a side compartment and remove the "physics package" containing the sensitive parts of the bomb.

A scientist with a radiation detector beckons me forward as he points his machine towards the box.

It begins to emit an accelerating beeping noise. "The measurement is approximately a hundred times normal background radiation," he tells me.

"But it is not dangerous, I promise," he adds with a smile.

NUCLEAR DISARMAMENT PROCESS

  • 1: Nuclear weapon transported to disarmament facility
  • 2: Weapon is hauled by crane into storeroom and dismantled
  • 3: Physics package is removed and placed in separate container
  • 4: Inspectors use device to confirm radioactive material is present in container
  • 5: Container is then sealed in a side-room overnight with CCTV
  • 6: Next day physics package is transported to a hot cell for dismantling
  • 7: Radioactive material is removed safely and put into storage

Graphic

The lack of danger is because the bomb is not real. To inject an element of realism into this experiment, a weak radioactive material – Cobalt 60 – is used.

The dismantlement experiment is a joint exercise between the UK and Norway – the first of its kind – and was held a few miles from Oslo.

The five-day exercise has been keenly anticipated internationally as a way of building trust between nuclear weapons states and non-nuclear weapons states.

It is designed to see if one country can verify the disarmament of another country’s nuclear weapon, but without any sensitive information about national security and weapon design being compromised.

In a role reversal, the Norwegians play a nuclear weapons state (called Torland) and the UK team play inspectors from Luvania, a non-nuclear weapons state.

REDUCING WEAPONS

  • There is currently a new push for global nuclear disarmament. Russia and the US announced in Moscow in early July that they would reduce their stockpiles and the UK has said it might be willing to reduce further its nuclear deterrent as part of any global disarmament talks. The non-nuclear weapons states have been pressing for more active disarmament and if there were further moves then allowing non-nuclear states to verify the disarmament would help increase confidence between the two sides.

Russian President Dimitry Medvedev and US President Barack Obama

The 10 inspectors from UK/Luvania remain in character as soon as they enter the gates of the nuclear facility. During meal breaks they are kept separate from both the Norwegian/Torland team and the joint planning group.

A huge amount of work goes in to making the exercise as realistic as possible.

A large, white binder contains briefing packs with fake Torland letters inviting the team to verify dismantlement of one of their Odin gravity bombs.

Stamped "secret", the Torland brief states that all details about the size, shape, composition, etc, "must be kept outside the knowledge of inspectors at all costs".

To complicate matters, inspectors are given a printout from a fake website which features what is alleged to be leaked pictures of the weapon.

"The aim is to develop methodologies we could use in inspections of a real nuclear facility but in an environment in which can do trial and error," explains Andreas Persbo of Vertic, which helped organise the event.

It is not an exercise in which the nuclear state is trying to clandestinely divert nuclear material or the inspecting side search for a covert facility.

Paintball guards

The main aim instead is to try to look for practical lessons and solutions to build confidence between the haves and have-nots in the nuclear world.

An engineer deals with the fake bomb

Even so, the British/Luvania team push the boundaries during the long negotiating sessions that begin and end each day, at one point submitting 15 questions, some of which the Norway/Torland team refuse to answer.

There is even an early disagreement over the question of what type of warning – if any – the guards would give before firing their weapons.

The guards, who follow the inspectors everywhere, are real Norwegian soldiers but armed with non-lethal weapons, similar to paintball guns.

The key task for the inspectors is to establish a chain of custody and ensure that at no point is any sensitive material diverted.

But this has to be done without ever actually seeing the sensitive material itself.

Initially, a truck takes a container carrying the device to the disarmament facility.

"It is a very choreographed process, almost like a ballet"

Andreas Persbo

From the start inspectors watch, photograph, seal and tag key items. They cover entry and exit points to the disarmament chamber, sweeping all those going in and out to ensure no radioactive material is smuggled away.

"It is a very choreographed process, almost like a ballet," says Mr Persbo. "Timings are very precise."

The amount of fissile material in a nuclear bomb is itself classified, so a number of techniques have to be employed by the inspectors to ensure nothing is diverted when they are not able to measure it in detail themselves.

Each country’s scientists have separately designed and built their own prototype devices known as "information barriers", which can confirm that an agreed amount of radioactive material is present in any container.

The machines provide a green light if the contents match the last reading but the actual contents are not revealed.

Engineers examine the fake bomb

There is genuine relief from the scientists when both come out with an agreed result of what is inside the container.

The other means for assuring the chain of custody are tags and seals.

Tags and seals

A tag is any form of identifying label, while a seal is used to ensure a room or box is not tampered with during times inspectors are not physically watching it.

These are surprisingly low-tech. A purple strip of adhesive goes across a door hinge. If it is moved then the colour changes and a warning appears on it.

Additionally, the seal has a blob of glue with multi-coloured glitter inside. This is photographed close-up by the inspectors once it is in place and then again when inspectors return.

The unique pattern would be almost impossible to replicate perfectly in a relatively short space of time. More high-tech variants are available involving fibre-optics and the next stage of the project may involve looking at ways of designing the most effective seals.

After the "physics package" is removed from the bomb and placed in a container, the inspectors are allowed to return into the room and watch it being placed in a storage room for the night.

Engineers move the fake bomb

The next morning, in the pouring rain, inspectors follow the container as it is moved by a cart to another part of the facility where the radioactive material is – at least notionally – removed in a hot cell using robotics arms.

Finally it is moved to a storage site.

"This is about having an understanding of what it means to take some material from A to B without really knowing what it is," explains Norwegian official Ole Reistad.

"Under other verification arrangements, it might be special types of fuel, it might be commercial secrets or it might be other security interests that you have to protect in some way."

Dress rehearsal

In practice no nuclear weapons state has ever allowed a non-nuclear weapons state to verify disarmament. But if there was to be multilateral disarmament in the future, it may well be important to provide such states with confidence over its actions.

Officials on both sides hope that this and any future events will lead to better understanding between nuclear weapons states and non-nuclear weapons states and more collaborations, allowing trust and confidence to be increased.

"This project in a way shows our commitment to try and find good practical ways of making sure we have nuclear disarmament"

Gry Larsen, State Secretary for Foreign Affairs, Norway

"Norway is very much committed on the disarmament agenda," explains Gry Larsen, Norway’s State Secretary for Foreign Affairs.

"This project in a way shows our commitment to try and find good practical ways of making sure we have nuclear disarmament."

UK inspectors and observers say they learnt about the challenges of being a non-nuclear weapons state and providing confidence, as well as ways of ensuring their own sensitive material is protected.

The Norwegians say they garnered a first-hand perspective of the sensitivities of nuclear states in protecting classified information.

The UK has talked of acting as a "disarmament laboratory" and being part of the process allows the UK to say that it is living up to its obligations under the Non-Proliferation Treaty for disarmament, although the emphasis is on developing the technical aspects of verification.

"It was lots of hard work but there’s opportunity for more progress in the future," said one UK Ministry of Defence official.

Other countries are also said to have shown interest in the work, including the US, Canada, Russia, Australia and Japan. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.