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Posts Tagged ‘Pierre’

EC’s Mirel to visit Belgrade

European Commission (EC) Director for Western Balkans Pierre Mirel will arrive here on a two-day working visit on Thursday. As a part of an improved constant dialogue between the EU and Serbia, Mirel will discuss the progress made in reforms in certain sectors, it was announced.

Mirel: Bosnia hasn’t met conditions

European Commission Director for the Western Balkans, Pierre Mirel, said that Bosnia-Herzegovina has yet to fulfill all the conditions for visa liberalization. Mirel told Sarajevo daily Dnevni Avaz that Bosnia has yet to catch up with Montenegro and Serbia on the road map to achieving everything expected of the country in order for the European Union to abolish its visa regime towards Bosnia-Herzegovina.

Walking slowly can increase your chances of death from heart disease

Older adults who walk slowly are about three times more likely to die from cardiovascular disease than those who go at a brisk pace, research shows.
It is already known that walking pace is linked to increased hospital admissions and the incidence of falls and disability. Now experts say walking slowly is “strongly associated” with an [...]

Sarkozy in yet another nepotism row

French President Nicolas Sarkozy has been placed at the centre of fresh nepotism reports claiming he got an official cultural adviser to lobby a body that declined to fund a project by his eldest son.
Pierre Sarkozy, 24, a hip hop and rap producer-composer, was said to have been refused funding worth 10,000 euros from SCPP, [...]

15 Celebs That Support Roman Polanski

A list of almost 200 celebs is circulating now, including writers, directors, actors, all petitioning for Polanski’s release and rallying against his extradition to the US.

EC: Visa talks to begin with Kosovo

European Commission Director for the Western Balkans Pierre Mirel says that all EU member-states have agreed to begin visa liberalization dialogue with Kosovo. He submitted a progress report and feasibility study on Kosovo to senior officials in Priština yesterday.

Kosovo minister visits Brussels

Kosovo Minister Goran Bogdanović has discussed “the further functioning of the legitimate international presence in Kosovo“ with EU officials in Brussels.
In a statement, the Kosovo Ministry stated that Bogdanović had held meetings with the EU Council’s Director-General for External and Politico-Military Affairs Robert Cooper, EC Director-General for the Western Balkans Pierre Mirel and EULEX Chief Yves De Kermabon.

Oct. 6, 1887: An Architect for the Machine Age

<< previous image | next image >>

1887: Charles-Édouard Jeanneret-Gris, better known to the world as Le Corbusier, is born in the Swiss city of La Chaux-de-Fonds. He will change his name and take French citizenship in his 30s. More importantly, he will help pioneer the International Style of architecture and is one of the most [...]

Court gives bail to Congo’s Bemba

Jean-Pierre Bemba at pre-trial hearings at the Hague on 12 January 2009

The International Criminal Court (ICC) has ordered the conditional release of Congolese ex-Vice-President Jean-Pierre Bemba ahead of his war crimes trial.

However, the court said he would not be freed until it was decided which country would host him.

Mr Bemba, who led a rebel group during the Democratic Republic of Congo’s civil war, was arrested in Belgium last year and extradited to The Hague.

The charges relate to unrest in the Central African Republic.

Mr Bemba says his troops were not under his command once they crossed the border into CAR to help then-President Ange-Felix Patasse put down a coup attempt in 2002.

After a peace deal in DR Congo in 2003, Mr Bemba laid down his arms and joined an interim government as vice-president.

Conditions

An ICC statement said a pre-trial chamber had found that Mr Bemba’s continued detention was not necessary:

JEAN-PIERRE BEMBA

  • Son of famous businessman
  • Former assistant to former Zaire leader Mobutu Sese Seko
  • 1998: Helped by Uganda to former MLC rebel group
  • 2003: Becomes vice-president under peace deal
  • 2006: Loses run-off election to President Joseph Kabila but gets most votes in western DR Congo
  • 2007: Flees after clashes in Kinshasa

Warlord trial gives victims hope

Profile: Jean-Pierre Bemba

Timeline: DR Congo

• To ensure his appearance at his trial

• To ensure he did not hamper court proceedings

• Or to prevent him "from continuing with the commission of the same or related crimes".

The court said hearings to decide which country would take Mr Bemba and to decide on the conditions of his release would be held in the second week of September.

In June, a pre-trial panel of judges found that there was sufficient evidence to establish substantial grounds to believe that Mr Bemba was "criminally responsible" for murders, rapes and pillaging.

Fighters from his Movement for the Liberation of Congo were accused of committing these atrocities when they intervened in the conflict in CAR.

He is to face trial on three counts of war crimes and two of crimes against humanity.

One of his defence lawyers has suggested that the charges may be politically motivated, to remove Mr Bemba from future elections in DR Congo.

He lost a landmark run-off election against President Joseph Kabila in 2006.

He later fled the country after being charged with treason after his bodyguards clashed with the army in 2007.


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

‘Dire shortage’ at UN food agency

A World Food Programme plane in Darwin, Australia (file image)

The UN food agency says it is facing critical funding shortages that have forced it to cut aid deliveries to millions of people facing starvation.

The World Food Programme (WFP) said it could have to close parts of its airway, used to fly aid workers to humanitarian trouble-spots.

Deliveries have already been suspended to north Uganda, Ivory Coast and Niger.

The organisation has issued similar warnings in the past when facing funding shortages.

The UN Humanitarian Air Service (UNHAS), operated by WFP, has a budget for 2009 of $160m (£96m) but has received less than $90m in fees and contributions this year.

WFP spokesman Greg Barrow said UNHAS was "a vital component of humanitarian operations across the world".

"But because of a funding shortfall there is now a grave risk that the air service … could literally be grounded in the next few weeks due to a lack of funds," he said.

Closures

<img src="http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/46140000/jpg/_46140495_007349512-1.jpg" align="left" width="226" height="170" alt="People queue for WFP aid in Peshawar, Pakistan (20 May 2009)” border=”0″ vspace=”4″ hspace=”4″>

WFP said funding for the airline’s Chad service will run out on 15 August and needs $6.7m (£4m) to continue flying to the end of the year.

Spokeswoman Emilia Casella said the single-plane service flies an average of 4,000 humanitarian passengers to and from Chad each month.

She said the cancellation would not stop food deliveries taking place, but would mean that aid workers would not be able to reach communities that need them most.

The service supplying Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea needs $3.3m (£1.9m) to continue flying to the end of the year.

Pierre Carrasse, Chief of WFP’s Aviation Branch, asked how workers could reach the often remote areas affected by conflict without the airline.

"How will WFP reach the hungry How will doctors reach their patients How will people have clean water if the engineers who help to build wells can’t get there," he asked.

Shortages have already led to UNHAS closing its service in Ivory Coast in February.

The Niger service, also suspended that month, is expected to resume in August after a recent donation from the UN Common Emergency Relief Fund.

The UN says 102 million people in 78 countries received food aid last year. </p


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

The indie kid’s guide to classical

Chopin has made it on to Radio 1, courtesy of Muse’s latest hit United States of Eurasia. But don’t stop there,
kids: here’s where you and your iPod should venture next

Kids up and down the country are tuning in to Radio 1 and scratching their heads. What’s that weird, long piano section doing at the end of Muse’s new Bohemian Rhapsody-esque single, United States of Eurasia. Isn’t that (whisper it) . . . classical music? Being played on the nation’s favourite youth station? That’s right, kids, it’s Chopin’s Nocturne in E-flat major, Op 9 No 2 to be precise. So now, for all you puzzled young ‘uns out there, here’s how to get in to that classical music vibe . . .

How do you listen?

What you need to do is close the curtains, take your clothes off, lie face down with your teeth sunk deep into the carpet. Then get your butler to sprinkle your buttocks with rose petals and put on the 16-plus hours of Wagner’s operatic tetralogy, The Ring, before he retreats, locking the door on you, until the bloody ordeal is over. Not really: what you need is peace, quiet and concentration.

What am I supposed to be listening for?

Radio 3 helps here. It offers two great entry points to classical music. On Discovering Music (Sunday teatime), leading conductors take you passage by passage through a whole work, explaining what the composer was trying to achieve and what you might enjoy. In Building a Library (Saturday mornings), a critic anatomises different recordings of the same work in a manner that switches between the hilariously pernickety and the genuinely instructive – you can even download it as a weekly podcast.

What should I avoid?

For the time being, avoid anything labelled Salford Toccata by Harrison Birtwistle, explosante fixe . . . by Pierre Boulez, Helikopter-Streichquartett by Karlheinz Stockhausen. Stuff by Alban Berg, Arnold Schoenberg and Olivier Messiaen might well have you calling 999 and shouting hysterically “Fire in the pet shop! Fire in the pet shop!”

What should I try?

Download Thomas Tallis’s Spem in Alium and, if you have functioning ears, prepare to weep. It is a 10-plus minute, 40-part motet written in the late 16th century: a wall of sound more overwhelming than anything in Phil Spector’s philosophy.

Liked that. Now what?

David Mellor is, as we know, wrong about everything, but the name of his Classic FM show, “If you liked that, you’ll like this”, is helpful here. If you liked the Chopin on Muse’s single, then listen to some more Chopin music – say Martha Argerich’s 1965 concert of his sonatas, mazurkas and nocturnes. Or try the andantino from Schubert’s sonata in A – it’s what Isaiah Berlin insisted be played at his funeral. If you like Roy Orbison, Terence Trent d’Arby or – though you really shouldn’t – James Morrison, then you might well like lieder. Lieder is German for songs – helpfully as short as anything on Chris Moyles’s playlist, but more heartfelt than anything that comes from his mouth. Try some lieder cycles: Schubert’s Winterreise or Schumann’s Dichterliebe will shatter your heart. If you like Kraftwerk, you’ll probably dig minimalist music: try Steve Reich’s Music for 18 Musicians or his Different Trains.

Any chance I’ve heard any of this classical stuff before?

Remember Torvill and Dean hurling each other across the ice? Perhaps you weren’t even a twinkle in your dad’s eye then, but if you were, you might enjoy realising that that stuff they were skating to was Ravel’s Bolero and you’d get a kick listening to it properly. And then there was Wagner’s Ride of the Valkyries used when Robert Duvall napalmed Vietnam.

Symphonies – they go on and freaking on. Help me over this experiential hump.

Don’t try (yet) the forbiddingly sculptured hours of Bruckner’s symphonies. Plump instead for Beethoven. You’ll know the opening to his fifth (“Da-Da-Da-Dah”) but stick around for its second movement which, if you have heartstrings, will pluck them mercilessly. If you don’t find the first movement of his sixth the perfect accompaniment to a summer walk in the country, then look into my eyes as I give you the frowning of a lifetime. For those of you whose attention spans have been ruined by daytime telly, Haydn symphonies (try his No 94th, the so-called”Surprise”) are often obligingly short.

Five downloads to getyou started

Schubert: the Trout Quintet

Bach: Brandenburg Concertos

Mozart: Clarinet Concerto

Beethoven: Symphony No 9

Puccini: Madame Butterfly

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Samar’s story

Four-year-old Samar Abed Rabbu lost her two sisters during Israel’s offensive in Gaza last December and January.

The BBC’s Christian Fraser has been following the plight of Samar and her family – now divided across two continents, as Samar receives treatment in Belgium with her mother.


Throughout these months of gruelling therapy Belgian doctors say Samar Abed Rabbu has demonstrated remarkable courage.

Samar Abed Rabbu, a little girl injured during Israel's offensive in Gaza

She is desperate to walk again – she even simulates it on the bed with her fingers – but there is nothing the Belgian doctors can do to repair Samar’s broken back.

"She has had two operations so far," said physiotherapist Pierre Van Lierde. "One in Gaza and one here in Brussels. But the bullets are lodged too deeply. It’s too dangerous to remove them and at least one of them is embedded in her spinal cord."

I first met Samar in January in a hospital in Egypt. She had been evacuated from Gaza for emergency surgery, just one of scores of children who were injured as the Israelis searched out their Hamas targets.

Shocking

But there was something particularly shocking about this story.

The family alleged that Israeli soldiers had opened fire at close range – as they lined up outside the house and while Samar’s grandmother waved a white flag.

When the war ended we travelled to Jabaliya, northern Gaza, to find Samar’s father. He told us that Samar’s two sisters – Soad, 7, and Amel, 2 – had been killed in the assault. We brought him news that his only surviving daughter was now paralysed.

Today, after months of treatment – paid for by the Belgian government – Samar is at least upright and learning to balance.

She must wear a plastic brace to correct the position of her spine.

Every day she undergoes intensive physiotherapy to move her legs and to build the strength in her upper body. On the day we visited her custom-built wheelchair had just been delivered.

Home in ruins

But these are all things that will all need to be replaced as she grows – and the question is how this family will cope when Samar is eventually sent back to Gaza.

"I am desperate to see her again. But I don’t want her to come back here – not to this"

Khaled, Samar’s father
Jabaliya, Gaza

The neighbourhood of Jabaliya looks exactly as it did when I was last there just over six months ago.

With the Israeli blockade still in place there is no concrete or steel to rebuild it. At the moment there is precious little to come back to.

In Gaza there is still no sign of the aid that was promised by the outside world.

In Jabaliya people are so desperate to salvage some respectability that they spend their days scavenging for broken bricks and metal, which they drag away on donkey-drawn carts.

In place of his home, Samar’s father Khaled has been given a prefabricated hut – which feels like a sauna in Gaza’s summer heat. It is without any running water or electricity.

"I miss my daughter terribly," he said. "I am desperate to see her again. But I don’t want her to come back here – not to this. What can I offer her She is much better where she is."

Khaled spends what little money he has on phone calls to Brussels.

Samar Abed Rabbu's father Khaled, by the wreckage of their former family home in Jabaliya, Gaza

Samar sings to him down the line.

So imagine the emotion as he had the chance to see her face in the pictures we had brought from Brussels.

The entire family gathered around as we showed Khaled the film – including Samar’s young brother.

"It’s been tough for all of us," said Khaled. "The family has been split for almost seven months – and we are still coping with the trauma and the grief. This little boy needs his mum."

Israeli denial

The Israeli Defence Force has told the BBC that their inquiry into the family’s allegations had found no evidence of such an incident. They stressed they have never targeted innocent civilians.

Donkey-drawn cart in Gaza

But the morals and behaviour of the army have been called into question by a number of serving soldiers who took part in the Gaza offensive – although the military has dismissed their testimonies as based on hearsay.

Back in Belgium, Samar’s mother Kawtar says she wants to stay in Europe, even though the family has been split.

"I want Samar to get better," she says. "I am just hoping that she won’t stay like this.

"The doctors say she is very smart and she performs well. I don’t want to take her to Gaza because I don’t want her to lose her mind like she lost her legs."

In the orderly surroundings of a Belgian hospital Samar has all the attention she needs. But it is tough enough dealing with a disability like this, never mind coping with it, amid the chaos and destruction of Gaza.</p


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

Language of hope

Yehuda Miklaf

As the community of Esperanto speakers prepares to mark the 150th anniversary of its author’s birth, the BBC’s Dina Newman looks at the continuing appeal of this language designed to foster harmony and coexistence – even in a troubled part of the world.

"Let’s say you go to a little village in the south of France," says Israeli Yehuda Miklaf. "You ask: Does anyone here speak English And they say: Henri does. So you go and say to Henri: Hi, I speak English. And Henri says: That’s nice.

"Then you ask: Who here speaks Esperanto They say: Pierre does. So you come up to Pierre and say: Hi, I speak Esperanto. Pierre says: Have you had lunch It really is like this."

There are currently believed to be about one million people around the world who speak Esperanto, devised in the 1880s by Dr Ludwig Lazar Zamenhof (1859-1917) whose 150th birthday is being marked this month by an International Esperanto Congress in his birthplace, Bialystok, Poland.

Ludwig Zamenhof

Language is identity, and Esperanto speakers have a strong sense of community, based on tolerance and equality.

"You’d have to be pretty weird not to be accepted in an Esperanto club," says Mr Miklaf who belongs to a group of speakers in Tel Aviv.

Some argue that this tradition of tolerance goes back to the original values of its founder.

"If I wasn’t a Jew from a ghetto, the idea of uniting humanity would either have never occurred to me, or it would have never taken such a firm hold of me throughout my life", wrote Zamenhof in 1905.

A resident of Warsaw, Zamenhof was alarmed at the growing wave of anti-Semitism throughout the Russian empire.

At first he was drawn to Zionism, the movement to resettle Jews in their own state in what was then Palestine – but then he turned against the idea.

"However attractive this dream seems…, the future Palestine would be very different from the idyllic Palestine of the past," he wrote in 1901.

"Jews will be living there as if on a volcano… conflicts and persecutions there will not stop until the Jews are expelled from there once again".

He suggested Esperanto as a neutral international second language, which would allow the Jews and other minority groups to retain their own cultural and linguistic identity and avoid both persecution and pressure to assimilate.

Easy learning

Zamenhof’s book Dr Esperanto (meaning Dr Hopeful) offered a simple grammar and a vocabulary of 900 words derived from Romanesque, Germanic and Slavic languages.

Through a system of suffixes and prefixes it had a built-in ability to generate new words.

ESPERANTO POETRY

La Lingvo de Espero
Ligighas mia vers’ al lingvo Esperanto
Se ghi ekzistos plu – do restos mia spur’;
Se mortos ghi – do mortos mia kanto.
Sed nun mi versu. Jughu la futur’.

The Language of Hope
My poems come together in Esperanto language.
If it continues to exist – so my trace will survive.
If it dies – so my song will die with it.
But for now, I shall write. Let the future judge.

By Mikhail Gishpling (Russian)

"Everyone who has learnt Esperanto knows the joy of using this flexible and witty language", says Esther Schor of Princeton University, who is writing a book on the history of Esperanto.

Zamenhof believed that his language was so simple that even an uneducated person could learn it in a week. This assessment was probably optimistic. But today most speakers would agree that a couple of months is sufficient to become fluent.

Prof Schor compares Zamenhof’s project to the revival of Hebrew which now serves as a common language to Jews who come to Israel from all over the world.

She also notes that Zamenhof spoke fluent Yiddish, which has a compilation of Hebrew, German and Russian words.

In fact, Zamenhof loved Yiddish and once attempted to reform it in order to make it "a cultivated language of Europe", but later abandoned the project and went back to the idea of a neutral language to unite humanity.

These days, Esperanto has gone far beyond being a purely Jewish, or minority, project.

Amina (not her real name), a young Jordanian woman from a conservative Muslim family in Amman, learnt Esperanto in secret so she could communicate with people in the outside world.

"It is hard to be different in our culture, she says. Sometimes I feel I don’t belong here. Esperanto became a kind of family for me, a nation, if you like.

"I cannot travel abroad by myself, so I can hardly meet my Esperanto friends. But I can write to people on internet," she says.

Strained history

Through Esperanto, Amina has made friends in Israel. But mostly, contacts between Jewish and Arab Esperanto speakers today are limited, though it has not always been so.

Tel Aviv Esperanto club

Back in 1924, the Esperanto club in Tel Aviv had both Jewish and Arab members.

One of the Arabs was called Arafat, and some modern members like to speculate whether he was a relation of Palestine Liberation Organisation chief Yasser Arafat.

Always keen to garner recognition from the outside world, the PLO issued a leaflet in Esperanto in the 1970s.

Before the first Arab-Israeli war of 1948-49, Esperanto speakers from Egypt and Palestine maintained regular links.

But after the creation of Israel contacts between Esperanto speaking Jews and Arabs in the Middle East came to a halt.

Today, very few Israeli Arabs learn Esperanto. Doron Modan has researched the history of Arab-Jewish Esperanto links and is now inspired, as he puts it, to realise Esperanto’s full potential.

"If we start a course for Jews and Arabs together, in a mixed environment, maybe in Jaffa or in Haifa, it can succeed. I can see it very clearly in my mind".

"We always have a right to dream. When I hear that Esperanto will never become an international language, I say – how do you know Are you going to be around for the next 200 years" </p


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

Indira Gandhi’s message of world peace still lies on the Moon

The details of the messages of peace from world leaders left on the Moon in a tiny silicon disk on the lunar surface in 1969 have been released, which includes late Indian Prime minister Indira Gandhi’s message as well.
According to a report in the Telegraph, the silicon disk was left underneath the US flag that [...]

Björk: Voltaic DVD/CD/VINYL

BJÖRK’S MULTI-MEDIA VOLTAIC OUT ON NONESUCH RECORDS


Björk

Björk‘s Voltaic, a very special DVD/CD/VINYL recording, was released in the U.S. earlier this month by Nonesuch Records, full track listings are below. Voltaic is a lovingly packaged celebration of the past two years of activities surrounding Björk’s Volta — her critically praised sixth studio album, which came out in 2007.

Björk’s band on the Volta tour included Mark Bell (LFO) on computers and keyboards and Damian Taylor on keyboards and programming. Also featured were Chris Corsano (Sonic Youth, etc.) on drums and percussion and Jónas Sen playing piano, harpsichord and church organ. Björk’s all female Icelandic 10-piece brass section rounded out the group. A dynamic, grand live experience, the Volta tour has been acclaimed around the world and recorded on DVD for those who were not able to catch the band in a live setting.

Voltaic CD 1 – CD of songs from the Volta tour performed live at Olympic Studios
1. Wanderlust
2. Hunter
3. Pleasure Is All Mine
4. Innocence
5. Army of Me
6. I Miss You
7. Earth intruders
8. All Is Full Of Love
9. Pagan Poetry
10. Vertebrae by Vertebrae
11. Declare Independence

Voltaic DVD 1 – DVD of live concert performances

1. Brennio Pio Vitar – Live in Paris
2. Earth Intruders – Live in Paris
3. Hunter – Live in Paris
4. Immature – Live in Paris
5. Joga – Live in Paris
6. Pleasure Is All Mine – Live in Paris
7. Vertebrae by Vertebrae – Live in Paris
8. Where Is the Line – Live in Paris
9. Who Is It – Live in Paris
10. Desired Constellation – Live in Paris
11. Army of Me – Live in Paris
12. Bachelorette – Live in Paris
13. Wanderlust – Live in Paris
14. Hyperballad – Live in Paris
15. Pluto – Live in Paris
16. Declare Independence – Live in Paris
17. Pneumonia – Live in Reykjavik
18. My Juvenile – Live in Reykjavik
19. Vokuro – Live in Reykjavik
20. Sonnets / Unrealities XI – Live in Reykjavik
21. Mouths Cradle – Live in Reykjavik

Voltaic CD 2 – CD of remixes of Volta songs

1. Earth Intruders – Spank Rock remix
2. Innocence – Simian Mobile Disco remix 12″
3. Declare Independence – Mathew Herbert 12″
4. Wanderlust – Ratatat remix
5. The Dull Flame of Desire – modeselektor’s RMX for girls
6. Earth Intruders – lexx remix
7. Innocence – Sinden remix
8. Declare Independence – Ghostigital in Deep End Dance remix 12″
9. The Dull Flame of Desire – Modeselektor’s RMX for Boys
10. Innocence – Alva Noto Unitxt remodel 12″ version
11. Declare Independence – Black Plus mix
12. Innocence – Simian Mobile Disco dub remix

Voltaic DVD 2 – DVD of the Volta videos

1. Earth Intruders
2. Declare Independence
3. Innocence – Version 1 (winner)
4. Wanderlust
5. The Dull Flame of Desire
6. Innocence – David Saghiri
7. Innocence – Dimitrio Stankowicz
8. Innocence – Etienne Strubbe
9. Innocence – Juliet Himmer
10. Innocence – Laurent Labouille
11. Innocence – Mario Caporali
12. Innocence – Miko
13. Innocence – Misi Park & Pierre Khazem
14. Innocence – Christiano Leal
15. Innocence – Roland Matusek


Obama ‘examining Afghan killings’

Afghan warlord Gen Abdul Rashid Dostum after his troops defeated pro-Taliban forces at a fortress near his stronghold of Mazar-e-Sharif in northern Afghanistan, on 28 November 2001

The US president says he is examining an alleged massacre in Afghanistan amid allegations the Bush administration resisted efforts to investigate it.

Barack Obama told CNN he had told officials to "collect the facts for me" and could order a full inquiry.

The allegations concern the deaths of hundreds or even thousands of Taliban fighters who had surrendered to the US-backed Northern Alliance in late 2001.

They were in the custody of a US-backed warlord, Gen Abdul Rashid Dostum.

The allegations that the prisoners were deliberately left to suffocate in shipping containers, or were shot dead through the container walls, first surfaced in 2002 but there has been no formal investigation.

"The first reaction of everybody [in the White House] was, ‘Oh, this is a sensitive issue; this is a touchy issue politically’"

Pierre Prosper
Former US envoy for war crimes

On Friday the New York Times quoted government officials and human rights organisations as saying that "Bush administration officials had repeatedly discouraged efforts to investigate the episode".

The issue has gained fresh urgency since Gen Dostum was reinstated as military chief of staff to the Afghan president last month.

At present he remains in exile in Turkey after being suspended last year over allegations he threatened a political rival at gunpoint.

‘We have to know’

Now Mr Obama says he is looking into the affair.

"The indications that this had not been properly investigated just recently was brought to my attention," Mr Obama told CNN in an interview to be aired at 2200 on Monday (0200 Tuesday GMT).

"So what I’ve asked my national security team to do is to collect the facts for me that are known, and we’ll probably make a decision in terms of how to approach it once we have all of the facts gathered up," he said, according to excerpts released in advance.

On the question of whether he could order a full investigation, he replied: "I think that there are responsibilities that all nations have, even in war.

"And if it appears that our conduct in some way supported violations of laws of war, then I think that we have to know about that."

US ‘feared investigation’

According to a Newsweek report published in 2002, which cited a UN memo, the prisoners died in crowded container trucks while being transported from Kunduz in northern Afghanistan to Sheberghan prison, west of Mazar-e-Sharif.

A photo from April 2002 showing a test trench dug by the group Physicians for Human Rights forensic as part of a preliminary investigation for the UN at the Dasht-e-Leili site near Sherberghan, Afghanistan, in which 15 bodies were exposed

The prisoners were allegedly left to suffocate to death, or were shot inside the containers, before being buried in mass graves.

The estimates of the number who died range from several hundred to 2,000.

At the time Gen Dostum was on the CIA payroll and his militia was working closely with US forces, The New York Times said.

It said the US government was also worried about destabilising the government of Hamid Karzai, in which Gen Dostum was serving as a defence official.

The newspaper quoted Pierre Prosper – who served as the envoy for war crimes under President George W Bush – as saying that, at the White House, "Nobody said no to an investigation, but nobody ever said yes, either.

"The first reaction of everybody there was, ‘Oh, this is a sensitive issue; this is a touchy issue politically.’"</p


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

Obama Admin: No Grounds To Probe Afghan War Crimes

WASHINGTON — Obama administration officials said Friday they had no grounds to investigate the 2001 deaths of Taliban prisoners of war who human rights groups allege were killed by U.S.-backed forces.

The mass deaths were brought up ane…