Sunday, March 28, 2010

Obama on New Arms Control Treaty with Russia

THE PRESIDENT: Good morning, everybody. I just concluded a productive phone call with President Medvedev. And I'm pleased to announce that after a year of intense negotiations, the United States and Russia have agreed to the most comprehensive arms control agreement in nearly two decades.

Since taking office, one of my highest priorities has been addressing the threat posed by nuclear weapons to the American people. And that's why, last April in Prague, I stated America's intention to pursue the peace and security of a world without nuclear weapons, a goal that's been embraced by Presidents like John F. Kennedy and Ronald Reagan.

While this aspiration will not be reached in the near future, I put forward a comprehensive agenda to pursue it -- to stop the spread of these weapons; to secure vulnerable nuclear materials from terrorists; and to reduce nuclear arsenals. A fundamental part of that effort was the negotiation of a new Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty with Russia.

Furthermore, since I took office, I've been committed to a "reset" of our relationship with Russia. When the United States and Russia can cooperate effectively, it advances the mutual interests of our two nations, and the security and prosperity of the wider world. We've so far already worked together on Afghanistan. We've coordinated our economic efforts through the G20. We are working together to pressure Iran to meet its international obligations. And today, we have reached agreement on one of my administration's top national security priorities -- a pivotal new arms control agreement.

In many ways, nuclear weapons represent both the darkest days of the Cold War, and the most troubling threats of our time. Today, we've taken another step forward by -- in leaving behind the legacy of the 20th century while building a more secure future for our children. We've turned words into action. We've made progress that is clear and concrete. And we've demonstrated the importance of American leadership -- and American partnership -- on behalf of our own security, and the world's.

Broadly speaking, the new START treaty makes progress in several areas. It cuts -- by about a third -- the nuclear weapons that the United States and Russia will deploy. It significantly reduces missiles and launchers. It puts in place a strong and effective verification regime. And it maintains the flexibility that we need to protect and advance our national security, and to guarantee our unwavering commitment to the security of our allies.

With this agreement, the United States and Russia -- the two largest nuclear powers in the world -- also send a clear signal that we intend to lead. By upholding our own commitments under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, we strengthen our global efforts to stop the spread of these weapons, and to ensure that other nations meet their own responsibilities.

I'm pleased that almost one year to the day after my last trip to Prague, the Czech Republic -- a close friend and ally of the United States -- has agreed to host President Medvedev and me on April 8th, as we sign this historic treaty. The following week, I look forward to hosting leaders from over 40 nations here in Washington, as we convene a summit to address how we can secure vulnerable nuclear materials so that they never fall into the hands of terrorists. And later this spring, the world will come together in New York to discuss how we can build on this progress, and continue to strengthen the global non-proliferation regime.

Through all these efforts, cooperation between the United States and Russia will be essential. I want to thank President Medvedev for his personal and sustained leadership as we worked through this agreement. We've had the opportunity to meet many times over the last year, and we both agree that we can serve the interests of our people through close cooperation.

I also want to thank my national security team, who did so much work to make this day possible. That includes the leaders with me here today -- Secretary Clinton, Secretary Gates, and Admiral Mullen. And it includes a tireless negotiating team. It took patience. It took perseverance. But we never gave up. And as a result, the United States will be more secure, and the American people will be safer.

Finally, I look forward to continuing to work closely with Congress in the months ahead. There is a long tradition of bipartisan leadership on arms control. Presidents of both parties have recognized the necessity of securing and reducing these weapons. Statesmen like George Shultz, Sam Nunn, Henry Kissinger, and Bill Perry have been outspoken in their support of more assertive action. Earlier this week, I met with my friends John Kerry and Dick Lugar to discuss this treaty, and throughout the morning, my administration will be consulting senators -- my administration will be consulting senators from both parties as we prepare for what I hope will be a strong, bipartisan support to ratify the new START treaty.

With that, I'm going to leave you in the able hands of my Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, as well as Secretary of Defense Gates and Joint Chief of Staff Chairman Mike Mullen. So I want to thank all of you for your attention.

Hillary.

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Friday, March 26, 2010

GoDaddy.com to pull out of China

San Francisco: The world's largest registrar of internet domain names said that it was pulling out of China in the wake of strict new laws that allegedly will increase government surveillance of web sites.

"There appears to be a recent increase in China's surveillance and monitoring of the Internet activities of its citizens," said Christine Jones, general counsel for Go Daddy, at the Congressional-Executive Commission on China (CECC).

Jones said the new Chinese policies required every website owner to submit photographs, business information and individually signed forms, as well as their physical address, email address and telephone numbers.

"We didn't want to act as an agent of the Chinese government," Jones said. "We can't let them be strong and us be weak all the time. We just have to stop it, and then we'll start offering .CN domain names again."

GoDaddy.com, which has more than 40 million domain names under management, took the step just two days after Google announced that it was moving its Chinese-language search service out of mainland China to avoid strict government censorship laws. The move set up a strident clash with the Chinese government, which has already started to filter search results received from Google's Hong Kong-based Chinese-language servers.

Go Daddy has offered .CN domain names since 2005, and said it would continue serving its existing websites. However, they, too, are required to submit the new information or could be shut down by the Chinese government.

"We were advised that domain names of registrants who did not register as required, would no longer work," Jones said.

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70k networking professionals needed in India

New Delhi: Networking giant Cisco estimates that India is facing a shortage of 70,000 professionals in networking alone, as datacenters increase in number and the internet expands to help businesses and homes alike. "It is high time India trains more number of networking professionals to reap benefits," Milind Gurjar, Director of Global Market Development and Training Delivery at Cisco, told Hindustan Times.

According to the company, globally, the shortage of quality networking professionals is as high as one million. Gurjar said young networking professional aspirants should consider specialized courses after acquiring experience for a couple of years to tap the emerging opportunity. Cisco says, an increasing trend to outsource IT infrastructure management will only widen the shortfall in the months to come.

Apart from maintaining switches and routers, networking experts also take care of security and risk management in datacenters and employ "virtualization" under which a job done by a machine can now be executed through software, enabling easier network management from remote locations. Gurjar added that in a survey conducted on CCIE (Cisco Certified Internetwork Expert) certified individuals reveals that these areas will be in hot demand over the next five years.

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iPhone, the most risky smartphone

Bangalore: 57 percent of the workforces believe that Apple's phone is the worst mobile device threat, followed in a distant second by Android at 39 percent. Only 28 percent said the BlackBerry line is the problem, while Nokia's Symbian-based phones accounted for just 13 percent of smartphone security fears, according to survey.

A study done by nCircle found that Apple is the most risky high end phone due to its continued lack of interest in enterprise-class security. Andrew Storms, Security Operations Director, nCircle said, "Although Apple made gestures towards this with the addition of hardware encryption to the iPhone 3GS and multiple administration features like remote wipe, it hasn't actively maintained any of these efforts. The general consensus is that Apple continues to do only the absolute minimum to address enterprise security and supportability requirements. Hardware encryption was almost immediately subverted. This is not the kind of behavior security professionals want to see in vendors."

Now if Apple wants to keep its customer base intact, it needs to see into this. The perception of the iPhone hasn't precluded it gaining a stronger footprint in large business, where its Exchange support has given it a place alongside BlackBerry and Windows Mobile in some offices.

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U.S.-Pakistan Cooperation in Construction of Roads in Pakistan

U.S. and Pakistan Sign Letter of Intent on Support for Construction of Priority Roads in Pakistan to Aid in Malakand Reconstruction

Deputy Secretary of State Jacob J. Lew and Pakistan's Finance Secretary Salman Siddique today signed a letter of intent regarding cooperation in construction of priority roads in Pakistan to aid in Malakand Reconstruction. Implementation of the construction project is scheduled to begin following the signature of an Amended Letter of Agreement between the Government of the United States and the Government of Pakistan and the obligation of funds. The project will consist of $40 million in United States assistance to upgrade two key roads: the Peshawar Ring Road and the road from Kanju to Madyan in Swat, North West Frontier Province. Both nations seek to prioritize the issues of greatest importance to the Pakistani people: security and economic growth. Better roads improve security by enhancing access by law enforcement officials, lower the cost of marketing farm output, enhance trade and transportation, and generate jobs. The projects will be executed through the NWFP Governm
ent and will be awarded to Pakistani companies using established, competitive procedures.

The project will involve the construction of approximately 43 kilometers of the Kanju-Madyan road in Swat, NWFP. This strategically important road in the devastated Swat area will facilitate the movements of security forces, help maintain public safety, and address post conflict infrastructure rehabilitation.

The Peshawar Ring Road project will reconstruct the ring road, which passes through rural areas, by adding a third truck lane, constructing a four kilometer bypass of the Hayatabad residential area, and linking the road to the Matani bypass road that the United States is currently supporting. This road was originally built in the late 1990s as a dual carriage way with two lanes in each direction, but is now the main route for heavy trucks and trailers traveling through the Torkam Pass, the major trade route to and from Afghanistan. As a result of the heavy truck traffic the road has been severely damaged, which slows traffic and makes vehicles more vulnerable to criminal elements along the way.

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TOP UN HUMAN RIGHTS OFFICIAL IN AFGHANISTAN CALLS FOR REPEAL OF AMNESTY LAW

The United Nations human rights office in Afghanistan today called for the repeal of a controversial amnesty law in the Asian country, saying that it green-lights impunity for serious crimes and continued rights violations.

“This law relieves Afghan authorities of their obligation to investigate and prosecute, on their own initiative, those allegedly responsible for gross violations of human rights,” Norah Niland, the Representative of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, told journalists today in Kabul.

“The law is likely to undermine efforts to secure genuine reconciliation, which is of course about bringing together different elements of a fractured society,” Ms. Niland added.

In 2007, Afghanistan’s Parliament approved the Reconciliation and General Amnesty Law, which provides blanket immunity and pardons former members of Afghanistan’s armed factions for actions committed prior to December 2001.

The UN has a global position that blanket amnesties are troubling, Ms. Niland said, because they prevent a country from dealing with the past and moving out of a crisis.

Asked if she supported repealing the law, Ms. Niland said: “The answer is the High Commissioner for Human Rights and Afghan civil society and human rights NGOs [non-governmental organizations] in and outside of the country have asked that the law be repealed.”

Ms. Niland also criticized the Shi’a personal status law – parts of which appear to sanction rape within the marriage – saying it “legitimized discriminatory practices against women.”


Meanwhile, the Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Afghanistan, Staffan de Mistura, met today with representatives from Hezb-e-Islami, a political party in Afghanistan.

The meeting was held in consultation with President Hamid Karzai and in accordance with the expanded mandate of the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA), which gives the operation a wider supporting role in preparation for parliamentary elections slated for September.

Mr. de Mistura indicated that the ongoing discussions with Afghan authorities further underscored the importance of Afghan-led dialogue to bring stability to this country.

UNAMA said in a pres release following the visit that the UN, as per its traditional role and expertise, will always be available to assist Afghans to find proper avenues for pursuing constructive political dialogue.

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83rd Academy Awards® Key Dates

Beverly Hills, CA — The 83rd Annual Academy Awards will be presented on Sunday, February 27, 2011, Academy President Tom Sherak announced today.

The ceremony will again take place at the Kodak Theatre at Hollywood & Highland Center® in Hollywood, and will be televised live by the ABC Television Network.

Key dates currently scheduled are:

* Saturday, November 13, 2010: Governors Awards presentation
* Wednesday, December 1, 2010: Official Screen Credits forms due
* Monday, December 27, 2010: Nominations ballots mailed
* Friday, January 14, 2011: Nominations polls close 5 p.m. PT
* Tuesday, January 25, 2011: Nominations announced 5:30 a.m. PT, Samuel Goldwyn Theater
* Wednesday, February 2, 2011: Final ballots mailed
* Monday, February 7, 2011: Nominees Luncheon
* Saturday, February 12, 2011: Scientific and Technical Awards presentation
* Tuesday, February 22, 2011: Final polls close 5 p.m. PT
* Sunday, February 27, 2011: 83rd Annual Academy Awards presentation

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Academy’s Contemporary Documentaries Series Returns with “Trouble the Water”

Beverly Hills, CA (March 23, 2010) –The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences kicks off Part Two of its 28th annual “Contemporary Documentaries” screening series with Oscar®-nominated films “The Witness – From the Balcony of Room 306” and “Trouble the Water” on Wednesday, March 24, at 7 p.m. at the Linwood Dunn Theater in Hollywood. Admission to all screenings in the series is free.

“The Witness – From the Balcony of Room 306” is a poignant retelling of Dr. Martin Luther King’s assassination as witnessed by the Reverend Samuel “Billy” Kyles on April 4, 1968, a crucial turning point in the civil rights movement. Directed by Adam Pertofsky and produced by Vicki Tripp, R. Stephan Mohammed and Margaret Hyde, “The Witness – From the Balcony of Room 306” earned an Academy Award® nomination for Documentary Short Subject. Hyde will be present to take questions from the audience following the screening.

“Trouble the Water” is a redemptive tale of two self-described street hustlers who survive Hurricane Katrina and then seize a chance for a new beginning. Directed and produced by Tia Lessin and Carl Deal, “Trouble the Water” earned an Academy Award nomination for Documentary Feature. Lessin and Deal will be present to take questions from the audience following the screening.

The 28th annual “Contemporary Documentaries” series is a showcase for feature-length and short documentaries drawn from the 2008 Academy Award nominations, including the winners, as well as other important and innovative films considered by the Academy that year.

The screening schedule for Part Two, which runs through June 2010, is as follows:

Wednesday, April 7

“The Final Inch”
Directed by Irene Taylor Brodsky
Produced by Brodsky, Tom Grant
Academy Award nominee: Documentary Short Subject

“The Forgotten Woman”
Directed by Dilip Mehta
Produced by David Hamilton, Noemi Weis

Wednesday, April 21

“Downstream”
Directed by Leslie Iwerks
Produced by Philip Alberstat, Randy Bradshaw, Mark Cranwell

“Fuel”
Directed by Josh Tickell
Produced by Greg Reitman, Dale Rosenbloom, Daniel Assael, Darius Fisher, Rebecca Harell

Wednesday, May 5

“At the Death House Door”
Directed and produced by Steve James, Peter Gilbert

“They Killed Sister Dorothy”
Directed by Daniel Junge
Produced by Henry Ansbacher, Nigel Noble

Wednesday, May 19

“Viva la Causa”
Directed by Alonso F. Mayo, Bill Brummel
Produced by Bill Brummel

“I.O.U.S.A.”
Directed by Patrick Creadon
Produced by Christine O’Malley, Sarah Gibson

Wednesday, May 26

“The Conscience of Nhem En”
Directed and produced by Steven Okazaki
Academy Award nominee: Documentary Short Subject

“Standard Operating Procedure”
Directed by Errol Morris
Produced by Errol Morris, Julie Bilson Ahlberg

Wednesday, June 9

“Tongzhi in Love”
Directed by Ruby Yang
Produced by Thomas Lennon

“The Betrayal (Nerakhoon)”
Directed by Ellen Kuras
Co-directed by Thavisouk Phrasavath
Produced by Ellen Kuras, Flora Fernandez-Marengo
Academy Award nominee: Documentary Feature

All films will screen at the Linwood Dunn Theater at the Academy’s Pickford Center for Motion Picture Study on Wednesdays at 7 p.m. All seating is unreserved. The filmmakers will be present at screenings whenever possible.

The Linwood Dunn Theater is located at 1313 Vine Street in Hollywood. Free parking is available through the entrance on Homewood Avenue (one block north of Fountain Avenue). For additional information, visit www.oscars.org or call (310) 247-3600.

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Academy Selects Film Scholars

Beverly Hills, CA (March 23, 2010) – Hollywood’s copyright debates and the career of Oscar®-winning director Lewis Milestone will be the topics explored by Peter Decherney and Harlow Robinson, respectively, who have been selected by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences as the 10th pair of Academy Film Scholars.

The Academy’s Institutional Grants Committee selected the two scholars for the honor on the basis of their manuscript proposals. Each will receive $25,000 from the Academy to aid in the research and writing of their respective projects.

Decherney, an assistant professor of English and cinema studies at the University of Pennsylvania, will tackle the film industry’s engagement with copyright law and digital media, in such areas as antipiracy campaigns, filmmakers’ rights, plagiarism, fair use and the legal environment for new technologies. The book will also demonstrate how Hollywood has responded to its intellectual property issues through self-regulation. Decherney’s book will be titled Hollywood’s Copyright Wars.

Robinson, a Matthews Distinguished University Professor in the Department of History and Program in Cinema Studies at Northeastern University, will delve into Milestone’s 37-year career, during which he completed 38 feature films. They include the Best Picture nominees “The Front Page” (1931), “Of Mice and Men” (1939) and “Mutiny on the Bounty” (1962) as well as Best Picture winner “All Quiet on the Western Front” (1930). As part of his research Robinson plans to interview current filmmakers, including Steven Soderbergh, who directed the remake of Milestone’s “Ocean’s Eleven” (1960). The book will also examine Milestone’s contributions to a variety of film genres, including film noir, musical, comedy and war drama. Robinson’s book is tentatively titled Lewis Milestone: A Hollywood Career.

Decherney and Robinson will receive the first half of their $25,000 grants at a luncheon this April. The remaining half will be presented upon completion of the manuscripts, when the scholars will present their projects in lecture form at a public Academy event.

Established in 1999, the Academy Film Scholars program is designed to “stimulate and support the creation of new and significant works of film scholarship about aesthetic, cultural, educational, historical, theoretical or scientific aspects of theatrical motion pictures.”

Decherney and Robinson join 13 other Academy Film Scholars who are currently working on projects: Tino Balio, University of Wisconsin – Madison; John Belton, Rutgers University; Donald Crafton, University of Notre Dame; Jane Gaines, Duke University; Jan-Christopher Horak, University of California, Los Angeles; David E. James, University of Southern California; Richard B. Jewell, University of Southern California; Peter Lev, Towson University; Stuart Liebman, Queens College of the City University of New York; Charles Musser, Yale University; Steven J. Ross, University of Southern California; Shelley Stamp, University of California, Santa Cruz; and Emily Thompson, Princeton University. Anne Friedberg of the University of Southern California passed away before significant progress could be made on her project.

Academy Film Scholars who have completed projects are writer Cari Beauchamp; Thomas Doherty, Brandeis University; Dana Polan, New York University; and David Rodowick, Harvard University.

The Academy’s cultural and educational wing – the Academy Foundation – annually grants more than $1 million to film scholars, cultural organizations and film festivals throughout the U.S. and abroad. It is also through the Foundation that the Academy presents a rich assortment of screenings and other public programs each year.

For grant guidelines and information about the Academy Film Scholars program, contact Grants Coordinator Shawn Guthrie at (310) 247-3000, ext. 306, via e-mail at sguthrie@oscars.org, or visit http://www.oscars.org/education-outreach/grants/filmscholars/.

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Monday, March 8, 2010

Varudu Audio Released, Download Varudu Songs

Varudu is an upcoming Tollywood film directed by Gunasekhar due to be released in early 2010. This film, starring Allu Arjun in the lead role along with Tamil actor Arya, enacting a negative character for the first time, Suhasini Mani Ratnam, Ashish Vidyarthi, Sayaji Shinde and Brahmanandam in supporting roles. D.V.V. Danaiya is producing the film.


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Best animated feature film of the year, Oscar 2010

A. Hello everybody. I'm Pete.

Q. Hey, Pete. I just wanted to say to you, what is it about animation that allows you to tell such different stories? This is, as we spoke about before, is a movie about a 78 year old guy and a chubby little kid and all the other things that are involved. What does animation give you that, you know, that other movies do not?
A. Well, I think for me there's a level of abstraction that is involved that, because it's not real actors on the screen, because they're designed and they're character that simplifies it, it allows the audience to kind of project a little bit of themselves in that character in a way that they might not for Tom Cruise or, you know, whoever. And plus, I think there is something about our process so. Of course we use scripts as everyone else does, but we very quickly move to storyboards, which are almost like a comic book version of the film. And we film those with our own dialogue and music and sound effects and that then becomes a real heavy reliance on the visual because we're telling it visually. We end up cutting lots of dialogue, and it's thereby we are allowing ourselves the visual side of the artist to express that as well, so that's my only guess.

Q. Well, congratulations.
A. Thank you.

Q. Hi Pete. Congratulations.
A. Thank you.

Q. You mentioned that one stage about how this idea came from a flip book or a math book that you used to make a flip book way back when. And I was just wondering, do you still have the flip book and are there any other books from your school days that you might be turning into a film?
A. Well, this one, just to clarify, wasn't actually from that. It was just the idea that, "Oh my gosh, I can make things look like they're alive" that got me hooked and that's why I'm here today is that idea of movement. But I still love flip books and I make this every Christmas. It's our Christmas cards to friends, a little book that I make. And I think it's basically the same thing that we do at Pixar only we use millions of dollars worth of computer equipment instead of, you know, 45 cents' worth of paper.

Q. Hi Pete. I'm over here.
A. Oh, hi.

Q. So I wanted to ask you if you have any advice for some of the kids back in Bloomington, how they too can get an Oscar?
A. Well, get lucky. Beyond that, I'd say draw, draw, draw. I don't think there's anyone who's ever regretted being able to draw and just it really it helps you see the world, things that you might notice or might not notice otherwise. When you draw them, you put them down on paper. Suddenly they become clear and it's just a great way to amplify and visually see the world better. Beyond that, just do it. More than ever before, there is technology out there. Make movies and love what you do.


Q. Hi, Pete. I'm interested in your view on the future of filmmaking and whether when we gather in here in 10 or 15 years' time they'll be traditional dramas as best pictures or whether technology will change all of that and, as Avatar almost did this year, and change, and your movie did too, and sort of made things different in terms of what is the best picture and what are actors and the director and stuff like that?
A. Well, I think Avatar is definitely changing things regardless of the awards. It's just as we move forward it seems as though the line between animation and real life is getting blurrier and blurrier. And I think as time goes on that technology becomes cheaper and more accessible, you just see more of that out there. But, no matter what technology comes new into the fray, it's always all about storytelling and characters and that's why good writers and directors will always be and actors will always be in need.

Q. Hi, Pete. Congratulations. Wanted to see if you feel like there's pressure from inside the halls of Pixar to constantly at least top what the last film has done or at least equal that amazing legacy?
A. You know, it's pretty there is like a little bit of sibling rivalry, but it's a very supportive and really I mean when one film does well, we all do well, and the whole system is very, very unique. I think in moviemaking today where when I show my movie as I'm working on it, along the way I get to use Brad Bird and John Lasseter and Andrew Stanton and all these amazing filmmakers who sit and watch what I'm doing and give comments and suggestions. And if they're great ideas, I get to take credit for them. And if I don't like them, I don't have to take them. You know. So it's very unique and amazing, and I think that contributes to what we do. But there's not really like a high I had to top this last guy, or whatever, like that. Thankfully.

Q. Hi, Pete. Just wondering if you could talk about the arrival of 3D as a creative tool to be taken seriously?
A. I think 3D can be a gimmick or it can be legitimate just like anything else. For us it's is a tool in which to amplify and tell the story. So if you've seen Up on in 3D, the scenes where Carl, say, is VERY depressed or alone, we purposefully made that flat when he floats up into the sky and takes off. And you want majestic and uplifting. We really stretched out the depth, so we tried to reflect what the main character is feeling just like you would with lighting or cinematography or music or any other of the tools. That's the way we look at it. It is a great new tool, a new toy to play with. Thank you.

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82nd Academy Awards, Opening Transcript

Announcer: LADIES AND
GENTLEMEN, THIS YEAR'S NOMINEES
FOR ACTOR AND ACTRESS IN A
LEADING ROLE --
JEFF BRIDGES.
SANDRA BULLOCK.
GEORGE CLOONEY.
HELEN MIRREN.
COLIN FIRTH.
CAREY MULLIGAN.
MORGAN FREEMAN.
GABOUREY SIDIBE.
JEREMY RENNER.
MERYL STREEP.
LIVE, FROM THE KODAK THEATRE AT
HOLLYWOOD AND HIGHLAND, IT'S
"THE 82nd ANNUAL ACADEMY
AWARDS."
[ APPLAUSE ]
AND NOW, THE MOMENT YOU'VE ALL
BEEN WAITING FOR --
>> GOOD EVENING, LADIES AND
GENTLEMEN, AND WELCOME TO "THE
82nd ANNUAL ACADEMY AWARDS."
I'M NEIL PATRICK HARRIS.
I KNOW, WHAT AM I DOING HERE?
\M WHY WOULDN'T CROSBY
GIVE UP HOPE
WHY DOES HAROLD CALL KUMAR
WHEN HE SCORES DOPE \M
\M AND WHY DOES A PRISONER
DROP THE SOAP \M
\M 'CAUSE
NO ONE WANTS TO DO IT ALONE \M
\M CAN'T IMAGINE CINDERELLA
WITHOUT THE BALL
OR THE BATTLING BURTONS
WITHOUT A BRAWL \M
\M CAN'T THINK ABOUT BOTOX
WITHOUT YOU ALL \M
\M 'CAUSE
NO ONE WANTS TO DO IT ALONE \M
\M YOU CAN'T TAKE JULIA CHILD
FROM HER PIE
OR TAKE JAMES CAMERON
FROM HIS CGI \M
\M YOU HAVE TO SHARE BILLING
YOU HAVE TO SHARE FAME
AT LEAST THERE'S SOMEONE
TO SHARE THE BLAME \M
\M THIS IS WHY GINGER
LOVED HER FRED
IT'S WHY WARREN BEATTY
STAYED IN BED \M
\M SO WHETHER TEAM JACOB
OR TEAM ED
YOU'RE JUST A LASSIE
MISSING HER BONE \M
\M AND NO, NO
NO ONE WANTS TO DO IT ALONE \M
\M\M
\M TONIGHT THERE'S TWO HOSTS
TO SPLIT THE FEE
I FIRED MY AGENT
'CAUSE ONE'S NOT ME \M
\M ALEC'S ON LOAN
FROM NBC
AND STEVE'S ALREADY DONE IT
ON HIS OWN \M
\M SO GO, GO
BALDWIN AND MARTIN
THE BIGGEST PAIR
SINCE DOLLY PARTON \M
\M THE SHOW'S REALLY STARTIN'
AND NO ONE WANTS TO DO IT
ALONE \M
[ CHEERS AND APPLAUSE ]
\M\M
>> HERE WE GO, DARLING.
[ APPLAUSE ]
>> THANK YOU.
THANK YOU VERY MUCH.
THANK YOU.
>> LADIES AND GENTLEMEN, I AM
PLEASED TO INTRODUCE ACTOR,
WRITER, MUSICIAN, GRAMMY AND
EMMY WINNER, ONE OF THE MOST
ENDURING ENTERTAINERS OF ALL
TIME, MR. STEVE MARTIN.
[ CHEERS AND APPLAUSE ]
>> THANK YOU, THANK YOU VERY
MUCH.
THANK YOU.
AND THIS IS ALEC BALDWIN.
[ LAUGHTER ]
WELCOME TO "THE 82nd ANNUAL
ACADEMY AWARDS."
EVERYONE WANTS AN OSCAR, BUT
THEY'RE VERY HARD TO GET.
>> THAT'S RIGHT, STEVE.
BALLOTS ARE SENT OUT TO 6,000
MEMBERS OF THE ACADEMY.
>> YES, AND THEN THEY MARK THEIR
BALLOTS AND THEN THEY ARE
TABULATED BY PRICE WATER HOUSE.
>> AND THEN NO MATTER WHAT, THEY
NOMINATE MERYL STREEP.
>> MERYL STREEP HOLD ALSO THE
RECORD FOR MOST NOMINATIONS AS
AN ACTRESS, OR AS I LIKE TO
THINK OF IT --
[ APPLAUSE ]
OR AS I LIKE TO THINK OF IT,
MOST LOSSES.
[ LAUGHTER ]
THE BIGGEST CHANGE THIS YEAR,
THE BEST PICTURE CATEGORY HAS
DOUBLED.
WHEN THAT WAS ANNOUNCED, ALL OF
US IN HOLLYWOOD THOUGHT THE SAME
THING -- WHAT'S FIVE TIMES TWO?
[ LAUGHTER ]
>> AND HAVING TEN FILMS IS A
GOOD THING.
IT MEANS THAT SOME MOVIES CAN
GET ATTENTION THAT ORDINARILY
WOULD NOT.
LIKE "THE LAST STATION."
CHRISTOPHER PLUMMER NOMINATED
FOR BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR.
[ APPLAUSE ]
>> WHAT'S THAT MOVIE ABOUT?
>> IT'S ABOUT LEO TOLSTOY AND
HIS WIFE, SOFIA.
>> OH, ALEC, YOU SHOULD HAVE
SAID "SPOILER ALERT"!

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Best animated short film, 2010 Academy Awards

Q. I'm going to ask you a question in French if you don't mind?
A. I don't mind.


Q. French?
A. Maybe I should answer in English.


Q. French?
A. French.


Q. Congratulations.
A. Thank you very much.


Q. You chose to make the film in English and it is also interesting to me that Ronald McDonald is the villain of the piece. What kind of comments are you making about American commercialism and how it spread around the world?
A. The film is set in Los Angeles and also because of geographic reasons it's I don't think it's a film about America or about Los Angeles or California. I think it's about our modern western world. So it also applies to France and to I don't know, Buenos Aires, where I'm from, so it's not about Americans. It's about the way we live and the way we are not affected, but the way we react to these logos. I think there's a that says when we when we close the eyes and open it very fast, we can see the exterior, about 40 logos, without noticing so your brain produces about 40 levels in less than one second. So the idea with this film is, well, you can think about the logo this film is about total logo.

Everything is logo so you don't see that and I think that's what happens is in real life you don't see that, so making them characters sets some props (sic) and making the whole world of logo I think it's just a couple about what regarding the you say he's the villain. Yeah, I think he's the nicest character of the film. I think Ronald should be proud to be the main character of this film. And the film is not talking about what the logos represent. The logos are used for what they are. So we are not saying I don't know McDonald is not doing good sandwiches. We are just just Ronald playing in the film. I mean, he just did the actor for us. So yeah, I don't know if I answered your question.


Q. Nicholas, hi. Congratulations.
A. Thank you.


Q. Unfortunately your three directors were not able to come here with you. Did you speak about collaborating with them and just a little bit about the whole experience of getting this film?
A. I met the three directors in 2004. They already had a little screen from the first story board of him so they already had worked on the film. And they worked together at the time at animation and graphic studio called H5 Studio and basically the work with them was very easy because they are themselves directing music videos an also advertising, so they do very well.The logos, the brands and they knew how to play with them so I think it was also for them very cathartic being able to play with the logos after being after working with them for so many years it was like freedom for them. In terms of directing and technically and artistically, I mean, they are very mature and very I don't know. It looked like they already had done so many films even if this was their first short film.

Their first personal author film, but they were very professional and it was very easy to work with them. They shared some tasks, some doing more about preparing story board and gathering the logos. The other one was more about doing the animatic (sic) and building the film, the editing and one was supervising the animation. And so it was they were like complementary. And when you work with many people, and especially many directors, sometimes they don't agree. In the end I think the film is very great, and they did a really great job. And I have to say it took longer than Avatar. It took more directors than Avatar.


Q. Congrats. Great film. Congrats on the award. I'm curious. Given a lot of trademark used in the film what are the distribution plans here in the States, and have you encountered any legal resistance because of that?
A. Not yet. So I hope that this little man will protect me from everything that could come, but the film is being distributed in festivals, in Cannes Film Festival in May 2009 and so far nothing really happened, let's say. Or at least we received some e mails from brands that were happy to be in it. For instance, like two weeks ago we received a very nice e mail from the Los Angeles Zoo. They were really happy to be in the film. We didn't ask anybody. Of course, if not I think the film would not exist today, so we're happy to have taken the decision to make it anyway. So yeah, basically I think it's it would be it would not be good for them if I mean, if they do something bad to us. And to him. But I have to say that I would like to share also this award with my lawyer. He became like my best friend basically.


Q. Thank you so much. Congratulations.
A. Thank you.

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Emerson College Students Win Grand Prize in Academy/mtvU Oscar® Correspondent Contest

Beverly Hills, CA — The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and mtvU, MTV’s 24-hour college network, today announced that Terry Stackhouse and Zach Cusson from Emerson College are the Grand Prize winners for the “Oscar Correspondent Contest.” As part of their prize, they will receive a spot on the red carpet for the 82nd Academy Awards® arrivals on Sunday, March 7, and will have access to the backstage press rooms and the Governors Ball. Oscar coverage from the winning team will be posted on mtvU.com and MTVNews.com the week of March 8.

“Terry and Zach made a strong impression among the online voters and with the Academy and mtvU selection panel. We are certain they will represent college journalists well,” said Academy President Tom Sherak. “They are in for an experience like no other – the energy and excitement on Oscar’s® red carpet is truly unique.”

Stackhouse and Cusson beat out teams of college journalists from across the nation to win this opportunity. The Academy and mtvU selected an initial group of ten semifinalists from the contest entries, then in an online competition and vote, the group was narrowed down to three.

“mtvU is committed to shining a spotlight on top student talent, and Terry and Zach truly demonstrated that they have what it takes to join the ranks of reporters from around the world who descend on L.A. each year to cover the Oscars,” said Carlo DiMarco, Vice President of University Relations, mtvU. ”The mtvU Oscar Correspondent Contest is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for these young journalists, and we’re thrilled to work with the Academy to make this happen.”

The three finalist teams were flown to Los Angeles, where they have been covering Academy Awards pre-events such as the Animated Feature Symposium, Foreign Language Film Award Nominees Photo Op, the Makeup Artists and Hairstylists Symposium, and the Governors Ball preview.

The winning team was selected through a second mtvU online poll and evaluation by a panel composed of Academy staff and professional entertainment journalists. The journalists were Jess Cagle from Entertainment Weekly, Sandy Cohen from the Associated Press and Bonnie Tiegel from “Entertainment Tonight” and “The Insider.”

Runners-up Rachel Berry and Christian Hartnett of Chapman University, and Brandon McCaskill and Kiarra Hart of Florida A&M University earned bleacher seats along the red carpet, where they will be able to watch guest arrivals. They also will receive admission to the 2010 Bleacher Fan Oscar Viewing Party, sponsored by Kodak, at the historic El Capitan Theatre. Kodak provided each of the finalists with a Kodak Zi8 pocket video camera and a Kodak EasyShare M381 digital camera.

Academy Awards for outstanding film achievements of 2009 will be presented on Sunday, March 7, 2010, at the Kodak Theatre at Hollywood & Highland Center®, and televised live by the ABC Television Network beginning at 5 p.m. PT/8 p.m. ET. The Oscar presentation also will be televised live in more than 200 countries worldwide.

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Saturday, March 6, 2010

U.S. hopes to find more common ground with India

Washington: With national interests converging, the U.S. hopes to find more common ground with India, a growing world power that has a significant role to play on virtually all major challenges of the century, says a senior U.S. official.

"We think that India has a significant role to play on virtually all of the major challenges that we face in this century, from global economic dislocation to energy security, climate change, the spread of weapons of mass destruction, and violent extremism," said Robert O. Blake, Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs.

"Given India's history as a leading non-aligned movement nation, we have sometimes been at odds in the United Nations and India has opposed UN involvement on sensitive matters such as Kashmir," he said at the Johns Hopkins University Model UN Conference Friday.

"Nonetheless, with our national interests converging, we hope to find more common ground with India in the coming years."

India like the U.S. understands the importance of the United Nations, Blake said, noting "India is one of several countries seeking a permanent seat on the UN Security Council, underlining the importance it attaches to the United Nations."

"Soon to be the world's most populous country, India already boasts a trillion-dollar-plus economy and is a growing world power," he noted.

Blake recalled that last July, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton visited India and launched a Strategic Dialogue which called for increased collaboration in nearly every field, from developing renewable energy technology to fighting extremism.

India and three other South Asian nations - Pakistan, Bangladesh and Nepal - are among six countries that contribute more than 5,000 police and military personnel to UN peacekeeping operations, he said noting, "They have played a critical role in, for example, helping Haiti recover from the earthquake."

In the case of U.S., the UN plays a helpful and necessary role in nearly every aspect of its operations, "particularly as we strive to build a functioning, efficient, and responsive democracy," Blake said.

Previous Post's: Microsoft to launch social networking phone in U.S.

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Microsoft to launch social networking phone in U.S.

San Francisco: Software giant Microsoft is to launch its own mobile phones in the U.S. later this year as it aims to challenge the growing smartphone dominance of its main rivals Apple and Google, the technology blog Gizmodo reported Friday.

The phones will be made available in July exclusively on Verizon, the largest cellphone carrier in the US, and will be aimed at heavy users of social networks, said the report, which featured what it said were leaked images from the phones' marketing campaign. The two phones are codenamed "Pink" and "Pure", and will be manufactured for the software giant by Sharp, the report said.

The report came after Microsoft last month unveiled a new mobile operating system that was widely praised by technology pundits.

Microsoft used to enjoy a leading position in the smartphone arena but has seen its position severely eroded by Apple's iPhone, by the Blackberry and by numerous devices running Google's Android operating system.

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Google to insert automated captions on YouTube

San Francisco: Google is to add automatic captions to the tens of millions of English-language videos it hosts on YouTube, the web search giant said Friday.

The move will make the videos more accessible to deaf viewers but will also help Google index the content and supply relevant ads alongside it, analysts said.

Google has been experimenting with the automated captions for several months with a handful of high profile partners like the University of California, Berkeley, Yale University and National Geographic. All other captions on YouTube videos were provided by the videos' producers.

Google has been working on speech recognition technology for some five years, and uses the technology to transcribe audio voice mails through its Google Voice service, and to provide spoken Web searches from smart phones.

However, engineers warned that the technology is far from perfect and that the machine translations are sure to contain mistakes.

"We know it's not perfect, and sometimes it will be funny," said Google engineer Ken Harrenstien, who is deaf. "But it's better than nothing."

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Big B, Guru Dutt among 25 Asian legends

Washington: Bollywood legends Guru Dutt, Nargis, Meena Kumari, Amitabh Bachchan and Pran have been named in the list of CNN's top 25 Asian actors of all time released ahead of the Oscar night Sunday.

With five actors listed, India tops the list featuring actors from India, China, Pakistan, Japan, Cambodia, Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia and Korea.

"In the history of the Academy Awards, only two Asians have ever taken home a Best Actor or Actress statue (we don't count Ben Kingsley as true Asian)," said CNN announcing the list celebrating "the top Asian legends of the silver screen.

"Yet Asia has produced incredibly talented thespians that have changed the course of their nation's cinematic history."

Guru Dutt has been "frequently compared to Orson Welles for directing and starring in films that ushered in a golden era of Hindi cinema. Because of his soulful acting, Guru Dutt's 'Pyaasa' and 'Kaagaz Ke Phool' are now included among the greatest Indian films of all time".

Dutt's best role was listed in "Pyaasa" (1957), a story of a struggling poet in post-independence India, produced, directed and starred by him.

"Amitabh Bachchan's deep voice and broodiness immortalised him as the 'angry young man' of 1970s Bollywood. Although films such as 'Sholay' made him an action hero, he also successfully played comic and romantic leads," CNN said.

Bachchan's best role role is listed as Inspector Khanna in "Zanjeer" (1973) cemented his image as a dark and deep character, triggered to explode.

Pran, CNN said, is "the pre-eminent villain of Hindi cinema, appearing in over 350 films (typically listed last in the opening credits as "...and Pran.") He was equally at ease playing a powerful lord or an impoverished villager. So great is his notoriety as a villain that some Indian parents dare not name their sons Pran."

"Upkaar Upkaar" (1967) demonstrated Pran's versatility and earned him a Filmfare Best Supporting Actor Award, CNN noted. He surprised audiences by playing a good Samaritan and singing the chart-topping "Rishte naate pyar wafaa sab".

"From the 1940s to 1960s, the beautiful Nargis starred in many commercially successful as well as critically acclaimed films. Because of her versatility and natural expression, she is regarded as one of the greatest actresses in the history of Hindi cinema," CNN said.

"Nargis stole the show in the Oscar-nominated 'Mother India' (1957), known as the Indian 'Gone with the Wind.' She plays a strong-willed woman, Radha, who survives tragedy after tragedy," CNN noted.

Meena Kumari, the channel noted, is famous for playing grief-stricken parts that mirrored the sufferings in her private life.

Dubbed "The Tragedy Queen", Kumari starred in more than 90 films in a career that spanned from 1939 to her premature death by cirrhosis in 1972. Many of her works, such as "Baiju Bawra" and "Parineeta", are considered classics today, it said.

Meena Kumari's "troubles in 'Sahib Bibi Aur Ghulam' (1962) were eerily similar to her own: alcoholism, destructive relationships, the yearning to be understood", CNN said describing it as her best role.

Two actors from Pakistan, Mohammad Ali and Zeba Bakhtiar, have made it to the list.

Zeba also starred in Bollywood film "Heena", a cross-border love story between an Indian boy and a Pakistani girl.

India is followed by China, which has three names in the list Zhou Xun, Gong Li and Ruan Lingyu, the faces of Chinese silent cinema.

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iPhone set to surpass BlackBerry

Toronto: Apple's iPhone is set to overtake Research In Motion's BlackBerry in the global smart phone market by next year, according to Forbes online. Currently, BlackBerry enjoys about three percent of the world's mobile phone market, while Apple's has about two percent share of the market. But BlackBerry's lead over iPhone is shrinking and Apple will overtake RIM by early next year, Forbes said Friday.

"We expect Apple's market share to overtake that of RIM by 2011, and for Apple and RIM to have 11 % and 8 percent market share, respectively, by the end of Trefis forecast period,'' the online issue said.

Trefis has been defined as a new financial platform to know how a company's products impact its stock.

"We believe sales of the iPhone will eventually outpace BlackBerry sales,'' Forbes said.

Giving its reasons, Forbes online said, "Apple's ecosystem of consumer products (Macs, iPad, Apple TV) and services (iTunes, iPhones apps) make the iPhone a more attractive phone for many consumers compared to the BlackBerry."

" End of AT&T exclusivity will give Apple's iPhone wider distribution in the U.S. (comparable to BlackBerry distribution).

"iPhone is making inroads with business customers that have traditionally preferred the BlackBerry.''

Both the wireless giants have made big gains since 2007, with iPhone increasing its market share from 0.3 percent to two percent, and BlackBerry going up from one percent to about three percent. The Canadian icon BlackBerry captured the world's corporate market because of secure messaging.

However, with Apple's sleek iPhone gaining the consumer market, the numbers game is slowly slipping away from the BlackBerry.

Given Apple's marketing muscle, online reach and multiple cutting-edge products with synergy, analysts say it is only a matter of time before the iPhone overtakes the BlackBerry in the global smart phone market.

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Statement on Execution of Political Prisoners in Iran

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
Office of the Spokesman
March 5, 2010

STATEMENT BY PHILIP J. CROWLEY,
ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF STATE FOR PUBLIC AFFAIRS

Execution of Political Prisoners in Iran

The United States notes with great concern reports the Iranian courts have upheld a death sentence for 20-year-old university student Mohammad Amin Valian. Valian was arrested for throwing stones during the December 27 Ashura demonstrations, a crime to which he confessed. For this minor act, he was found guilty of 'warring against God.' It appears this would be the first person facing execution after the election, although we do note due process concerns about other executions. We find this disproportionate punishment deplorable and urge his immediate release.

Furthermore, we join the international community in calling on Iranian authorities to release all political prisoners. If the Iranian government wants the respect of the international community, it must respect the fundamental freedoms of its people.

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Donors' Conference March 31 to Mobilize Support for Haiti

Washington - A donors' conference to mobilize international support for the long-term development and recovery of Haiti will take place at U.N. headquarters in New York March 31.

"The government of Haiti faces enormous challenges following the devastating earthquake of January 12," the State Department said March 4 in announcing the conference. "Meeting these challenges will require a sustained and substantial commitment from the international community, in support of the government and people of Haiti."

"At the donors' conference, Haiti will present its vision of Haiti's future and how international support can assist," the announcement said.

Sponsors for the ministerial-level conference, formally called the International Donors' Conference Towards a New Future for Haiti, include the United States and the United Nations in cooperation with the Haitian government, and also with the support of Brazil, Canada, the European Union, France and Spain.

"Donor countries, international organizations and other partners will have an opportunity to pledge resources, to coordinate support of Haiti's long-term recovery, and to commit to a sustained effort to support Haiti," the department announcement said.

In addition, the Dominican Republic, which is Haiti's nearest neighbor, will host an international conference of high-level technical donors to evaluate the economic consequences of the earthquake. It is scheduled for March 16-17 in Santo Domingo and will serve as the basis for the donors' conference at the United Nations, according to Dominican government officials.

PRELIMINARY STUDY

A preliminary study by the Inter-American Development Bank ( http://idbdocs.iadb.org/wsdocs/getdocument.aspx?docnum=35074108 ) (PDF, 240KB) indicates that it could cost as much as $14 billion to rebuild Haiti's homes, schools, roads and other structures damaged by the earthquake.

"The earthquake, which hit about 15km (10 miles) southwest of the capital city Port-au-Prince, was followed by several strong aftershocks and has caused significant loss of human life, the displacement of hundreds of thousands" of people and severe damage to the economic infrastructure of the country, the IDB's team of economists said in a preliminary assessment released February 16 in Washington.

"The study confirms that the Haitian earthquake is likely to be the most destructive natural disaster in modern times, when viewed in relation to the size of Haiti's population and its economy," the development bank said.

A more detailed accounting of the cost of reconstruction - which the development bank, World Bank and the U.N. Development Fund are conducting - will be completed in several months based on a Post Disaster Needs Assessment, the IDB said in releasing its preliminary report.

The Haitian government estimates the current number of dead at approximately 230,000 people. The number of people displaced in the Port-au-Prince area is estimated at 700,000 people, according to the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), and the total impact of the earthquake affected 3 million people in a country with a population of slightly less than 9 million people.

The development bank study estimated that reconstruction costs could be as low as $8.1 billion or as high as $13.9 billion. "These estimates are useful to put this event into perspective and to inform the international community of the enormity of the challenge that lies ahead in the task of reconstructing Haiti," the IDB report's authors said.

"This sum ... will be beyond the scope of one agency or one bilateral donor, making donor coordination key in any reconstruction effort," the authors added. "The implications of such an estimate are significant. Raising such a figure will require many donors, bilateral, multilateral and private."

Compounding the loss of life is that the magnitude 7.0 earthquake was centered in the Caribbean island's capital city - Haiti's center of commerce, government and communications.

World Bank President Robert Zoellick said in a recent opinion article in Politico ( http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0110/32284.html ) that after the first rush of humanitarian assistance to help save lives and provide water, food, shelter, medicine and other basic supplies to the survivors, thoughts must turn to recovery and reconstruction of the Caribbean nation.

It is a challenge, he acknowledged, that will not be an easy one. "After peacekeeping missions and billions of dollars in aid, Haiti remains a country with some of the worst human development indicators in the world," he said. "Yet we know that progress is possible."

"Before the hurricanes in 2008 and again before [January's] earthquake, Haiti had been moving forward with successful and peaceful elections, stabilization of chronic insecurity, and increased revenue collection and investment," Zoellick said. "Building on these successes, Haiti's reconstruction and recovery require long-term commitment."

U.S. COMMITMENT

The United States, which began offering humanitarian assistance almost immediately, has already committed $712.73 million to Haitian relief and reconstruction efforts, according to USAID and Defense Department reports. President Obama also is expected to request special funding for reconstruction of at least $1 billion from Congress soon, according to published news accounts.

For more on Haiti, see the feature Partnering with Haiti for Reconstruction ( http://www.america.gov/rebuild_haiti.html ).

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President Obama Signs Travel Promotion Act

Washington - A bill signed into law by President Obama March 4 is aimed at encouraging more international visitors to come to the United States.

The Travel Promotion Act of 2009 (TPA) creates a new public-private partnership between the U.S. government and the nation's travel and tourism industry. The new law calls for creation of the Corporation for Travel Promotion, which will oversee the development and implementation of a global marketing and promotion campaign aimed at increasing the number of international visitors to the United States. The corporation will be funded through fees collected from international travelers from Visa Waiver Program ( http://travel.state.gov/visa/temp/without/without_1990.html ) countries and matching contributions from the private sector, according to the U.S. Department of Commerce.

Unlike many other nations, the United States never has had a national travel promotion board, although a number of individual states, such as California and Florida, have established such entities to encourage visits by international travelers.

The new federal law aims to reverse the United States' downward-trending share of the global travel market. In 2009, the United States welcomed 2.4 million fewer overseas visitors than in 2000, a decline that has cost the U.S. economy an estimated $509 billion in total spending and $32 billion in direct tax receipts, according to the U.S. Travel Association (USTA), a trade group that lobbied for passage of the legislation.

The Commerce Department said it "stands ready to work with the private sector to promote international travel to the United States" and added that the travel and tourism sector is the United States' top services export, valued at $142 billion and supporting more than 1 million American jobs.

"When international visitors come to the United States they spend money on a wide range of goods and services that support U.S. jobs," said Secretary of Commerce Gary Locke. "Creating a global tourism promotion program to encourage international visitors to vacation in America will help spur economic growth and create more jobs."

Overseas visitors spend an average of $4,500 per person, per trip in the United States. Oxford Economics, a consulting company, estimates the travel promotion program under the Travel Promotion Act will generate $4 billion in new visitor spending and 40,000 new jobs annually. According to the Congressional Budget Office, the program will reduce the federal budget deficit by $425 million over the next 10 years.

The law directs Secretary Locke to appoint an 11-person board of directors that will be charged with establishing the nonprofit corporation. Board members will be chosen from the private sector and are expected to represent all segments of the travel industry, according to USTA.

The U.S. travel industry is enthusiastic about the new law.

"By signing the Travel Promotion Act, President Obama has acted to support the power of travel to serve as an economic stimulant, job generator and diplomatic tool," said USTA President Roger Dow.

"Today, America extends a heartfelt 'Welcome' to the rest of the world," said James Rasulo, senior executive vice president and chief financial officer of The Walt Disney Company and past national chairman of the U.S. Travel Association. "It is a great example of the innovative solutions government and industry can create when they work together toward a common goal."

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As Election Begins, "Iraq Is Ready," United States Says

Washington - Voting in Iraq is under way for voters such as hospital patients, prisoners and security personnel who will be on duty for the main March 7 election. The State Department says so far the process is going well, despite a handful of security incidents that affected three voting centers.

"Iraq is ready, and we think they'll be able to protect their citizens as they go to the polls on Sunday," Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs P.J. Crowley said March 5. The U.S. Embassy in Baghdad has reported that Iraq's security forces and election officials seem well prepared "and the voters enthusiastic," Crowley added.

The security incidents that have occurred have "failed to deter the determination" of those Iraqis who were eligible to vote early, he said.

Iraqis are voting for a four-year parliament in the country's second national election since the Baathist regime led by Saddam Hussein was toppled by U.S. and international forces in 2003.

In the run-up to the election, "every community seems to have been fully ... participating in the campaign," Crowley said. "We think that is very encouraging."

The U.S. Senate unanimously passed a bipartisan resolution March 4 recognizing the significance of the election and reconfirming the U.S. commitment to building "a robust, long-term partnership with Iraq that strengthens Iraq's security, stability, economy and democracy." The resolution also commends the Iraqi people for "the courage they have shown; the sacrifices they have endured; and the hard-won gains they have made in fighting terrorism, finding peace, and building democracy."

With all U.S. combat troops on schedule to withdraw from Iraq by the end of August, Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman John Kerry (Democrat from Massachusetts) said Iraq is entering "a new phase" in its political life.

"America's involvement in Iraq will change, but our commitment to the people of Iraq will not end. We are sending a strong bipartisan message that America remains deeply invested in Iraq's stability, democracy and well-being," Kerry said.

General David Petraeus, the commander of the U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM), told PBS Television's Charlie Rose March 3 that if all goes well, the election will result in a government that represents and is responsive to all of Iraq's sectarian and ethnic communities.

"You'll have as a result ... the new parliament, the new council of representatives. And then you'll have the next election, in a sense. And that will be the cobbling together of a coalition that will have to be made up of not just Shia, the majority sect, but also Sunni; and not just Arab but also Kurd," Petraeus said.

The communities have learned the lesson of how sectarian violence "tore the fabric of society" in 2006 and 2007 and know they will need to cooperate on a political level to form the next government.

"There's no way you can get the number of votes required to select that next prime minister, president, speaker of the council of representatives, and probably a package deal that includes some key ministers, without getting a cross-ethnic, cross-sectarian coalition of votes," he said.

The new government will be tasked with tackling lingering issues such as how power and oil revenues are to be shared between the communities, but Petraeus praised Iraq's potential for success.

The Iraqi population is "well-educated, is entrepreneurial, will go out and they're go-getters. So the potential is enormous. But it's enormous only if the people continue to work together. As we used to say, it's okay to shout, just don't shoot," he said.

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Peace Corps Seeks Strong and Lasting Connections in Central Asia

Washington - Peace Corp volunteers in Kazakhstan can face physical and cultural challenges, but they also can earn great personal satisfaction from doing work they know is needed and valued, according to Peace Corps Country Director John Sasser.

"This is a great country for volunteers not because it's perfect, but because our programs fit perfectly with what the government wants, especially in English teaching and youth assistance," Sasser said.

In the Kyrgyz Republic, too, the Peace Corps ( http://www.peacecorps.gov/ ) has focused on three key areas identified by the government: teaching English, assistance to nongovernmental and community organizations, and health education.

Claudia Kuric, Peace Corps country director for Kyrgyzstan, points to another critical facet of the Peace Corps experience. "The volunteers do important, productive work," she said. "They also build relations with the Kyrgyz people that can last a lifetime."

PEACE CORPS IN CENTRAL ASIA

The Peace Corps, one of the signature initiatives of President John F. Kennedy, was founded in 1961, and since has sent more than 195,000 volunteers to 139 countries.

The Peace Corps arrived in Kazakhstan, the Kyrgyz Republic and Turkmenistan more than 30 years later, in 1993. Although the three governments set different priorities, one common denominator has been assigning volunteers to teach English and health education and assistance. There are now 165 volunteers serving in Kazakhstan and 98 in the Kyrgyz Republic, with 38 serving in Turkmenistan.

The Kazakh government has established a national policy of supporting a "trinity" of languages: Kazakh as the official language, Russian for internal commerce and English for international commerce.

As a result, 70 percent of the education volunteers have been sent, as the English translation of a Kazakh phrase puts it, "deep in the woods," to teach at rural primary and secondary schools. A smaller group is assigned to teacher training in the country's colleges and universities.

Peace Corps Kazakhstan ( http://kazakhstan.usembassy.gov/peace_corps.html ) has recently been phasing out its broad but diffuse assistance to volunteer and community organizations, focusing instead on another government priority - the nation's youth.

The Kazakh youth assistance program has three elements, according to Sasser. One is leadership - showing what volunteerism is and how it works. Another is teaching basic work and office skills. Third is promoting healthy lifestyles - from preventing HIV/AIDS to dealing with alcohol abuse and promoting maternal health.

Peace Corps Kyrgyzstan ( http://bishkek.usembassy.gov/peace_corps2.html ), too, is placing a heavy emphasis on health education. "Last year, we conducted 39 winter and summer youth camps for over 800 children on the themes of youth leadership, healthy lifestyles and HIV/AIDS prevention," Kuric said.

Peace Corps Turkmenistan says it is the only large development organization operating in the country, with volunteers often the only foreigners in their villages and cities. Such cross-cultural experiences are a key aspect of the Peace Corps, where volunteers live with host families at times during their service to learn language, customs and cultures.

In Turkmenistan, the Peace Corps concentrates on health education and on teaching English. Health volunteers work in health clinics or make home visits to promote child, newborn and maternal health, healthy lifestyles and exercise and sports clubs.

In alignment with the Turkmenistan government's goals to open the country to greater levels of international cooperation and commerce, Peace Corps volunteers teach English as a second language and work with teachers to improve instruction methodologies. Volunteers teach in rural areas and secondary cities in primary and second schools, with a few teaching in the capital Ashgabat at universities, other teaching institutions and even the government's civil aviation department, Peace Corps Turkmenistan says.

LIVING THE VOLUNTEER LIFE

For volunteers, the Peace Corps experience is as varied as the locations in which they serve. Still, several common themes run through almost any account of life in the Peace Corps in parts of Central Asia.

One is the inevitable cultural adjustment to a new environment and culture, whether learning to light a coal-fired stove at minus 30 degrees Celsius (minus 22 degrees Fahrenheit), or being honored with a sheep's head at a special meal.

"To be honest, a year in and I still wake up on certain mornings and look out at the foggy mountains and I feel like I am living someone else's life," said Thomas Greene, a Peace Corps volunteer who works with a Kyrgyz organization for the rehabilitation of disabled children.

In his blog, "Two Stops Past Siberia ( http://kyrgycarl.com/ )," volunteer Carl Beien wrote a short essay on his efforts to understand the Kyrgyz economy during his quest to buy a traditional sheepskin coat.

Another consistent theme is the sheer intensity of the personal experiences and friendships that Peace Corps volunteers make in the course of their two-year tours.

"Kazakhs can seem reserved, even stern on first meeting," said Ryan Morris, a former volunteer who taught school in a small Kazakh town. "But once the veil is lifted, the level of hospitality is so moving, it's incredible."

In Kyrgyzstan, a local official who was hosting a volunteer in his home related that when the volunteer moved to an assignment in Talas, a day's drive away, the official's wife insisted he go there and make sure their friend was well and eating right, just as she would for her own children.

MAKING A DIFFERENCE

One question that all volunteers must wrestle with during their tours is: "Am I making a difference?" For country directors like Sasser in Kazakhstan and Kuric in Kyrgyzstan, who are able to take the long view, the answer is clearly yes.

"We are building lasting relationships between the American and Kyrgyz people," Kuric said.

But the perspective of an individual volunteer working in an isolated village can be different. "Sometimes it can feel like you're chipping away at a redwood [tree] with a spatula," Greene said.

For many, the key is accepting that meaningful change can be measured on an individual scale. It could be helping fellow teachers become more fluent in English, ensuring that promising students pass their examinations and go on to a university, or finding the international contacts necessary to sustain a community organization.

Shannon Huett, a volunteer working at a children's rehabilitation center in Pavlodar, Kazakhstan, points to the vital connection between friendship and commitment to achieve personal and professional success in the Peace Corps.

"My [Kazakh] counterpart is an amazing woman," she said, "and with as much energy as I want to put forth - that is the amount of satisfaction and joy I will derive from this journey."

Lauren Brauer, finishing three years with an English language teachers' association in the Kyrgyz Republic, said, "I think the most rewarding aspect of my work is realizing that projects I worked on will not end when I leave."

Whatever the lasting impact of an individual's assignment, it is no secret that the Peace Corp experience often has a powerful and lasting effect on the volunteers themselves.

"I came to Kazakhstan to help me build a foundation of work ethics, language and a love of other cultures," Huett said.

Brauer observed, "I feel that I have helped people to make positive changes in their lives. But mostly, I feel like the people I've worked with have made a big difference in my life."

CONTINUING INVOLVEMENT

Many former volunteers continue to be active long after they have left the country. Peace Corps Connect ( http://peacecorpsconnect.org/ ), sponsored by the National Peace Corps Association, comprises more than 300 different organizations of former Peace Corps volunteers.

Some are geographic (Iowa Peace Corps Association, Returned Peace Corps Volunteers of New Jersey). Others are organized by country of service, from Friends of Afghanistan to Friends of Zimbabwe.

The organization of former volunteers for Kazakhstan, for example, has 27 active members, and Friends of Kyrgyzstan, 16. Former volunteers are active on social media as well, with 269 members on the Friends of Turkmenistan Facebook page and 319 on the Friends of Kyrgyzstan Facebook page.

On the occasion of Peace Corps Week (March 1-7), Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said, "For many, the Peace Corps has been the start of a lifelong commitment to service and engagement with the world ( http://www.america.gov/st/texttrans-english/2010/March/20100301183126eaifas0.469505.html )."

(This is a product of the Bureau of International Information Programs, U.S. Department of State. Web site: http://www.america.gov)

Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 21:12:55 -0500
From: America.govCompList@STATE.GOV
Subject: Women's History Month: African-American Women's Entrepreneurship
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Women's History Month: African-American Women's Entrepreneurship

(March 16 webchat with entrepreneur and business strategist Sharon Freeman) (190)

Sharon Freeman will talk about key aspects of building one's own business and how to find useful resources toward this end. The webchat will take place on March 16 at 8 a.m. EST (13:00 GMT).

Dr. Sharon T. Freeman is an entrepreneur and business strategist who is the owner and manager of a number of successful businesses, including a consulting firm and an exporters' association. She lived and worked in Hong Kong for 11 years, where she started her flagship consulting practice in 1985. Since 1985, she has been engaged in a broad range of entrepreneurial endeavors and consulting assignments in more than 100 countries.

If you would like to participate in this webchat, please go to https://statedept.connectsolutions.com/womenshistory. No registration is needed. Simply choose "Enter as a Guest," type in your preferred screen name, and join the discussion. We accept questions and comments in advance of, and at any time during, the program.

The transcript of this webchat will be available on America.gov's webchat page ( http://www.america.gov/multimedia/askamerica.html ), where information about upcoming webchats is also available.

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Iraqis in America Proud to Vote

Washington - Iraqis living in the United States are heading to election centers nationwide March 5-7 to vote for the 325 members of Iraq's Council of Representatives. For Iraqis living in America, this vote is meaningful because it is the first time out-of-country Iraqis will be able to vote for the Council of Representatives.

At a press conference March 5 marking the vote at a polling station in Arlington, Virginia, Senator Richard G. Lugar, the ranking Republican on the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee, praised Iraqi-American election cooperation.

"I'm certain that all of my colleagues in the Senate and all Americans pray for the success of the elections in America and in Iraq," Lugar said.

Joining Lugar at the press conference, Iraq's ambassador to the United States, Samir Sumaida'ie, thanked the American people for the sacrifices they have made in securing Iraq's future.

"Today marks a transition into a new era of more stability and more progress for Iraq," Sumaida'ie said of the elections. "We want all people to see that the elections are conducted openly, transparently and freely."

The estimated 200,000 eligible Iraqi voters living in the United States are joining some 2 million Iraqis in 16 countries outside Iraq for the three-day vote. At nine polling stations across the United States, Iraqis can vote by showing proof of Iraqi citizenship, age and a connection to one of the country's 18 governorates. Iraq is holding ( http://www.america.gov/st/democracyhr-english/2010/March/20100305155712esnamfuak0.1457331.html ) its elections on March 7, and 18 million eligible voters can make their voice heard.

At the Arlington, Virginia, polling center Iraqis were enthusiastic about casting their votes in America. Iraqi-American Dana Aziz said the voting in America means a lot to him.

"I'm very proud of this day in which we have the right to vote as Iraqis in the United States," Aziz said. "It is a chance for the Iraqi people to express themselves through this election."

Arranging the out-of-country voting in the United States was the task of Iraq's Independent High Electoral Commission (IHEC), which also is responsible for elections inside Iraq. According to IHEC legal adviser Majdi Khouri, IHEC employees from Iraq flew to the United States at the end of January to lay the groundwork for the polling centers.

Around 350 people nationwide worked on election preparations. Election organizers held meetings in Iraqi-American communities and utilized the Internet and newspapers to promote the vote.

Khouri thanked American officials for helping with IHEC's election preparation efforts.

"The cooperation has been great in terms of security and organization," Khouri said. "They have also been helpful in providing materials and helping us overcome any obstacles."

Iraqi-born Abdul-Sattar Al-Obaidi, who also voted in Arlington, said there are two kinds of Iraqis voting in this election in America: those who hold dual U.S.-Iraqi citizenship are voting for the people they still care about in Iraq, whereas recently arrived Iraqis to the United States are voting as if they are still in Iraq.

Despite the differences in perspective, both types of Iraqis voting in America share a common bond, said Al-Obaidi. "We hope these elections lead to stability by selecting new people better able to run the county in accordance with the law."

Read more...

Women's History Month: African-American Women's Entrepreneurship

Sharon Freeman will talk about key aspects of building one's own business and how to find useful resources toward this end. The webchat will take place on March 16 at 8 a.m. EST (13:00 GMT).

Dr. Sharon T. Freeman is an entrepreneur and business strategist who is the owner and manager of a number of successful businesses, including a consulting firm and an exporters' association. She lived and worked in Hong Kong for 11 years, where she started her flagship consulting practice in 1985. Since 1985, she has been engaged in a broad range of entrepreneurial endeavors and consulting assignments in more than 100 countries.

If you would like to participate in this webchat, please go to https://statedept.connectsolutions.com/womenshistory. No registration is needed. Simply choose "Enter as a Guest," type in your preferred screen name, and join the discussion. We accept questions and comments in advance of, and at any time during, the program.

The transcript of this webchat will be available on America.gov's webchat page ( http://www.america.gov/multimedia/askamerica.html ), where information about upcoming webchats is also available.

Read more...

Western Hemisphere Leaders Discuss Economic, Social Opportunities

Washington - Government ministers from 14 Western Hemisphere nations gathered in Costa Rica March 4 to promote the conditions that will provide their citizens the economic and social opportunities necessary for regional and national stability.

The San Jose meeting is the third ministerial meeting held since the Pathways to Prosperity in the Americas initiative was created in late 2008 to link nations from Central and North and South America that are committed to advancing democracy and open markets while promoting inclusive growth, prosperity and social justice.

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton urged the ministers to close the economic gaps that exist for the farmers, craftspeople and small business owners most often excluded from financial services and access to global markets. And she promoted new efforts to reach marginalized populations and women to give them a chance through economic progress.

As the number of young people across the hemisphere rises, numbers of schools to educate them and jobs to provide them opportunities must rise as well, Clinton said ( http://www.america.gov/st/texttrans-english/2010/March/20100305120745xjsnommis0.7623865.html ).

"The Americas ... are one of the world's most dynamic and diverse regions, with a strong economic base that is evident in the multitude of creative solutions already at work in our countries," she told the ministerial meeting. "I've traveled throughout this hemisphere for 17 years now, and I meet people with smart ideas, a great work ethic and a strong entrepreneurial spirit everywhere. They just need the chance to show what they can do, to compete in a business environment that is fair and secure."

Clinton said the United States has had considerable success with the creation of small-business development centers where people get information and advice about starting businesses. While some of the Pathways member nations have adopted similar programs, Clinton said the United States wants to share it with others through exchange visits.

To help women entrepreneurs across the hemisphere, the United States recently hosted a conference for women from the Americas and launched a network ( http://www.america.gov/st/americas-english/2009/October/20091005151949lsreprac0.7795679.html ) to connect women just starting out with experienced women business leaders, Clinton said.

One area that has stymied effective trade among nations in the hemisphere, she said, is customs procedures that need to be modernized. Clinton proposed that Pathways nations agree to reduce logistics delays and costs by 5 percent, based on a similar practice developed by the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum.

"Efficient and effective customs practices are critical to attracting foreign investment and succeeding in global markets," she said.

The United States also is committed to supporting the expansion of English language instruction centers and an investment fund to upgrade technology, expand libraries and cultural programs, and build science and innovation centers, Clinton said. In addition, the United States is working to help small and medium-sized businesses to decrease the amount of water, energy and raw materials they use, protect natural resources, cut carbon dioxide emissions and save costs, she said.

The United States is also committed to working with its Pathways partners in modernizing laws that govern lending so that small and medium-sized businesses can use assets other than real estate as collateral for loans and can borrow larger amounts of capital at lower interest rates with longer repayment periods, Clinton said.

Clinton urged Pathways nations to help Haiti rebuild its textile and apparel factories to speed its immediate recovery efforts and stimulate future growth.

Members of the two-year-old Pathways to Prosperity initiative include Canada, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Peru, the United States and Uruguay.

Clinton is nearing the end of a weeklong trip to Latin America, having already visited Uruguay, Argentina, Chile and Brazil. She concludes her trip March 5 in Guatemala for meetings with Central American leaders and to discuss restoring full relations with Honduras after a presidential election ( http://www.america.gov/st/democracyhr-english/2009/November/20091123125743esnamfuak0.660412.html ) in November 2009 ended a political crisis there.

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Indonesia, United States Partner to Advance Free and Fair Trade

Washington - As the target date to create free and open trade and investment approaches, the United States and Indonesia continue to support a multilateral trading system for all 21 Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) member economies.

Established at Bogor, Indonesia, in 1994, and reaffirmed ( http://www.america.gov/st/texttrans-english/2009/November/20091115100228ptellivremos0.9120905.html ) during the 2009 APEC Economic Leaders' Meeting, the primary goal of the Bogor Declaration is "to support growth and prosperity in the Asia-Pacific region, through free and open trade and investment." In industrialized economies, the planned completion date is 2010; 2020 is the target for developing economies.

Thus far, APEC members have made progress toward regional economic integration by improving the flow of goods and services and coordinating national and international inspecting and testing standards. Between 2002 and 2006, transaction costs in APEC decreased by 5 percent, and average tariff rates fell from approximately 17 percent in 1989 to 5 percent in 2007.

These steps represent significant progress toward the Bogor goals, but that progress was slowed by the 2008 economic crisis. As the region focuses on recovery and economic growth, meeting the 2010 target is in doubt. In 2009, Singapore hosted more than 120 APEC meetings focused on restoring growth. In February, the APEC Secretariat said progress toward free and open trade (currently occurring in Australia, Canada, Japan, New Zealand, and the United States) is "not a point of conclusion but a means of informing future action." (See "Economic Recovery, Resisting Trade Protectionism Top APEC Agenda ( http://www.america.gov/st/business-english/2009/November/20091104135511dmslahrellek0.9469721.html ).")

In November 2009, the State Department's senior official for APEC, Kurt Tong, underscored the future-looking significance of the Bogor goals, saying they pull "APEC as a group in the same direction towards a higher standard of trade and investment liberalization."

A KEY REGIONAL PARTNERSHIP

The United States and Indonesia are working together to achieve economic recovery and advance the "three pillars" of APEC's Bogor agenda:

. Liberalize trade and investment.
. Facilitate business.
. Increase economic and technical cooperation.

The 2007 expansion of the U.S.-Indonesia trade and investment framework agreement (TIFA) is aiding recovery from the recent economic crisis. Originally signed in 1996, the TIFA represents significant bilateral cooperation and serves as a mechanism for dialogue.

Chaired by Indonesia's Ministry of Industry and Trade and the Office of the United States Trade Representative, bilateral working groups under the TIFA focus on intellectual property rights, agriculture, services and investment. Those discussions led to Indonesia's co-hosting with the United States the first Asia-Pacific Regional Dialogue to Promote Trade in Legally Harvested Forest Products in 2009. (See "Indonesia, U.S. Promote Conservation of East Asian Forests ( http://www.america.gov/st/energy-english/2009/July/20090701161049abretnuh0.1735803.html ).") The TIFA is also the basis for exploratory talks concerning a bilateral investment treaty and an updated investment incentive agreement.

Indonesia's participation in these bilateral discussions is a step toward achieving the Bogor goals. In addition, the United States and Indonesia are collaborating to fight protectionist policies and, through APEC, are working to keep markets open and free.

During a meeting with Minister of Trade Mari Pangestu in May 2009, U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk said, "The United States and Indonesia have a common interest in further expanding and deepening our economic relationship by taking specific steps to resolve outstanding issues as well as through potential new initiatives."

Steps taken by the two countries in conjunction with APEC include supporting the multilateral trading system, accelerating regional economic integration, strengthening economic and technical cooperation and enhancing human security. Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs Kurt Campbell supported these goals during his March 3 testimony before Congress, calling for "continued integration of the U.S. economy with APEC economies [to] benefit workers, consumers, and businesses in the region." (See "Strong U.S. Engagement with Asia-Pacific Region is Vital ( http://www.america.gov/st/peacesec-english/2010/March/20100304131800dmslahrellek0.2256433.html ).")

High-level bilateral trade dialogues will continue in May, during the Obama administration's first Cabinet-level trade mission to the East Asia-Pacific region. Commerce Secretary Gary Locke plans to travel to Jakarta, Indonesia, as well as Shanghai, Beijing and Hong Kong. These talks represent a continuation of the process to build a comprehensive relationship between the United States and Indonesia with regard to increased cooperation on bilateral, regional and global issues.

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U.N. Fails to Enforce Sudan Sanctions

Washington - There have been "major and frequent" violations of the U.N. Security Council arms embargo imposed against Sudan in 2005, and U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Susan Rice condemned the council's inaction in the face of continued gender-based violence and military offensives. Rice called on the council to find a consensus to better enforce the sanctions to promote peace and stability in Sudan.

"We know that weapons continue to flow into Darfur, acts of sexual and gender-based violence continue unabated and with impunity, military overflights and offensive actions continue," Rice told reporters at the U.S. Mission to the United Nations in New York on March 4.

Despite the signing of a framework agreement and cease-fire between the Sudanese government and the rebel Justice and Equality Movement (JEM), "we continue to receive reports of offensive military actions by the government of Sudan in Darfur," Rice said.

Such behavior "does not suggest a new willingness on the part of Sudan to fully engage in the peace process," Rice said, adding that all of the Sudanese rebel groups must also "cease military activity and be part of the framework agreement if it is to be effective."

The ambassador said that in the face of "blatant disregard" of Resolution 1591 ( http://www.america.gov/st/washfile-english/2005/March/20050330130117EAifas0.719906.html ), which imposed an arms embargo on the Darfur region beginning in 2005, the Security Council has failed to reach any consensus on how to improve enforcement, despite "very concrete" recommendations presented to it by the U.N.'s Sudan Panel of Experts in fall 2009.

"If ... greater will existed to implement existing measures, that would be, in itself, progress. And that is, in fact, what we are decrying here today," Rice said.

"When the council imposes measures, whether on Iran, or North Korea, or Sudan ... those measures need to be fully and faithfully enforced. And in this instance, and frankly in contrast to some others, the level of commitment and energy behind enforcement is inadequate, and we're working to change that," she said.

The United States expects the Security Council's committee that monitors the implementation of the resolution to "find points of consensus" to improve implementation and to "shine a spotlight on sanctions violations."

"There are many steps that the committee could take, including looking at the role of the private sector, including rigorous follow-up, to ensure that this [sanctions] regime has more credibility than it currently has," she said.

The Obama administration will intensify its own efforts to provide information that may support implementation efforts. "We particularly are concerned about the importance of holding accountable violators who employ sexual violence against innocent civilians in Darfur," Rice said.

At the State Department, Special Envoy to Sudan Scott Gration welcomed the framework agreement and cease-fire signed between the Sudanese government and JEM, which he said "offers us an important opportunity to significantly reduce violence in Darfur," but he also stressed the need to include the Liberation and Justice Movement (LJM), which represents most of the other rebel groups.

"The United States supports a peace process that is inclusive, that is comprehensive," he said March 4. Along with the LJM, Darfuri civil society, internally displaced persons and refugees "must also have a voice in this process," he said. That will be important "as we start talking about things like land reform and compensation and wealth sharing."

The goal of making the peace process more inclusive is currently being hampered by JEM's insistence on exercising exclusive leadership over the other rebel groups, and the non-JEM rebels are having difficulties in choosing a leader and organizing themselves, he said.

Gration said the peace process and reduced violence would likely result in a decrease of people entering refugee camps, but "really won't change the conditions that the people are currently living under."

"We need a multipronged approach, one that brings a cease-fire, that brings stability and brings peace at that top level, but we also have to make the changes that will result in a more secure environment," to benefit those living in camps and villages who still face banditry and lawlessness.

"Gender-based violence still continues. That must stop. People's possessions are taken. They don't have their rights, human rights, in many cases. This has to be changed," he said. The Obama administration is working with the international community to establish order and the rule of law in the region, as well as increase the capacities of U.N. and African Union peacekeeping forces.

With national elections scheduled for April, Gration said Sudan and the Darfur region have entered a "crucial time," and the international community needs to take the opportunity to promote political transformation throughout the country to improve security and create a lasting peace.

"We will not rest until we've done everything we can to secure a brighter future for the next generation of Sudanese. Failure in this case is not an option, and we'll strive for success," he said.

Read more...

Friday, March 5, 2010

In the Middle East, Modest Progress Made on Women's Rights

Washington - A new report on women's rights in the Middle East and North Africa finds some progress but "a long road ahead."

Of all parts of the world, it is this region in which "the gap between the rights of men and those of women has been the most visible and severe," says the report by Freedom House ( http://freedomhouse.org/template.cfm?page=444 ), an independent, nonprofit organization that studies and advocates for human rights worldwide.

This is Freedom House's second effort to analyze the restrictions on women, country by country, in 17 Arab nations and territories; this report also includes Iran. The study found improvement, overall, in 15 of the countries since the release of the first report in 2005, with the most progress coming in Kuwait, Algeria and Jordan. Three places that have faced violent internal conflicts and a rise in religious extremism - Iraq, Yemen and the Palestinian Territories - lost ground in women's freedoms.

The report "charts progress as well as remaining challenges, giving countries a compass for the way forward," said Dalia Mogahed, a Freedom House trustee and executive director of the Gallup Center for Muslim Studies.

Ronald Schlicher, the U.S. principal deputy assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern affairs, said he was struck by "a substantial deficit in human rights" documented in most of the region, but he welcomed progress in the economic, educational and political lives of women, "and for the broader society as well." The State Department provided some of the funding for the Freedom House project.

Schlicher said the greatest gains came in the states of the Gulf Cooperation Council, which had scored the lowest in the report five years ago. In 2005, Kuwait gave women the same political rights as men, and four years later, Kuwaitis elected women to parliament for the first time. Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates appointed women to judgeships for the first time. And women in Bahrain, Kuwait and Qatar gained the right to travel without the permission of a guardian.

The study evaluated each country on the extent to which women who live there enjoy the principles included in the United Nations' Universal Declaration of Human Rights. On a scale of 1 to 5 - with 5 meaning that the government and others almost never prevent women from exercising their rights and that women almost never face gender-based discrimination - no country scored higher than 3.6 in any of the five categories on which they were rated:

. Nondiscrimination and access to justice.
. Autonomy, security and freedom of the person.
. Equal rights and equal opportunity.
. Political rights and civic voice.
. Social and cultural rights.

Ten of the 18 countries and territories failed to score as high as 3 in any of the five categories. A score of 3 means that women sometimes are not free to exercise their human rights, that they have "adequate human rights protections but they are poorly implemented," and that they "occasionally face gender-based discrimination."

One country, Saudi Arabia, scored below 2 in every category. A score of 2 means that women's rights are mostly restricted, that women "have very few adequate human rights protections and they often face gender-based discrimination."

Sanja Kelly, who directed the Freedom House project, said the trend is in the right direction for the region's women. "In several areas, women's rights have actually improved, and nowhere is this more evident than in education," she said. Female literacy rates are up, and in many countries women far outnumber men on college campuses.

They also have made economic gains. "Women are more represented in the work force than ever before," Kelly said.

Still, "the main message here is that women in the Middle East are being discriminated against in all aspects of their lives," she said.

Among the issues that Kelly said are common in most countries of the region are laws that set the status of women below that of men in court and on family matters; laws that prevent women, but not men, from conveying citizenship to their spouses and children; the acceptance of harassment and violence against women; and laws that promise equality but that are ignored.

Rana Husseini, a journalist and author of the report's section on Jordan, said her country had made important improvements in the lives of women. One problem she has covered is "honor killings," in which a man will kill a woman in his family over a matter of honor. Such killings are tolerated in much of the Middle East, but Jordan has set up a special tribunal to deal with them and handed down stiff prison terms. "We need to eliminate and erase any law that excuses the murder of women," Husseini said.

Huda Ahmed, who wrote the Iraq report, said women there have far more rights on paper than in the reality of a nation still subject to violent unrest. "The problem is, for every step forward, we take 10 steps backward, and always related to violence," she said.

Those involved in the study said women in many countries face a large gap between what the law says and what some in society permit. "We have very strict laws against sexual harassment, but women are being harassed in the streets, in the workplace, even in their homes," said Dalia Ziada, an Egyptian activist and head of the North Africa Bureau of the American Islamic Congress ( http://www.aicongress.org/ ).

Ziada said that Egyptian women can vote and hold office but that they "are usually used as decoration" by political parties.

"The solution is not about working on laws. The solution is about working on the mentality," she added.

One area that Ziada said offers promise for women is the spread of the Internet. Online, she said, women and men are equal because they cannot be distinguished from one another, and women can use that experience to look for equality in the rest of their lives.

"We all know that once we empower women, we empower all of society," she said.

The report is available in English at the Freedom House Web site, including a chart and graphs ( http://freedomhouse.org/uploads/special_report/section/269.pdf ) (PDF, 68KB) showing and comparing the countries' scores in each category of women's rights. The group is posting Arabic translations ( http://freedomhouse.org/template.cfm?page=384&key=271&parent=23&report=86 ) of the report and the country-by-country sections. The Freedom House program that focuses on rights in Iran, Gozaar ( http://www.gozaar.org/ ), has posted a Persian translation ( http://www.gozaar.org/template1.php?id=1343&language=persian ) of the report on women's rights in Iran.

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