Friday, June 26, 2009

Two weeks after: Iran rallies fade, elite split

TEHRAN (Reuters) - Iran's leadership has quelled mass protests over a disputed presidential poll two weeks ago, but the battle has moved off the street into a behind-the-scenes struggle splitting the clerical establishment into two camps. EDITORS' NOTE: Reuters and other foreign media are subject to Iranian restrictions on their ability to report, film or take pictures in Tehran.

Hardline preacher Ayatollah Ahmad Khatami is expected to reinforce the government message when he leads Friday prayers that the June 12 election in which President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was declared victor was legal and fair.

Supporters of defeated candidate Mirhossein Mousavi, who want the result annulled, plan to release thousands of balloons on Friday with the message: "Neda you will always remain in our hearts," in memory of the young woman killed last week who has become an icon of the protests.
The last mass protests were on Saturday and a combination of warnings, arrests and the threat of police action have driven large demonstrations off Tehran's street with small gatherings dispersed with tear gas and baton charges.

The worst unrest since the Islamic Revolution of 1979 set off by the poll left about 20 people killed, prompting President Barrack Obama to say he was "appalled and outraged" by the security crackdown in the world's fifth largest oil exporter.

Group of Eight powers meeting in Trieste plan in a statement to deplore post-election violence, to urge Tehran to settle the crisis through peaceful, democratic means and to respect basic rights including freedom of expression, a diplomat said.

The condemnation by Obama, who had been trying to improve ties with Iran before the election, prompted Ahmadinejad to accuse Obama of behaving like his predecessor and say there was not much point in talking to Washington unless Obama apologized.

"I tell (the United States) that all those people who voted and all the Iranian nation will stand against them," the Iranian president, who was elected for a second four-year term, said in response to Obama's comments.

Before the poll, Obama, aiming to change the policy of George W. Bush toward Iran, had hoped to persuade Tehran to drop what Washington suspects are plans to develop nuclear bombs, while seeking cooperation in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Death spurs Michael Jackson album sales

LOS ANGELES, June 25 (Reuters) - In death, Michael Jackson is enjoying a commercial renaissance that had eluded him for years.
The self-proclaimed "king of pop" who died suddenly on Thursday occupied the top 15 slots on online retailer Amazon.com Inc's (AMZN.O) best-selling albums within hours.

The No. 1 disc, not surprisingly, was the 25th anniversary reissue of his 1982 blockbuster "Thriller," the biggest selling album in history with estimated worldwide sales of almost 50 million copies. Three different configurations of "Thriller" came in at number 12, 13, and 14.
Second place went to 1979's "Off the Wall," which was followed by 1987's "Bad." Both were also massive sellers upon their initial release. His last studio album, 2001's "Invincible," came in at a more modest No. 10.

The other albums on the list were mostly compilations either of his solo work or his hits with the Jackson 5.

Jackson's Sony Music label, a unit of Sony Corp (6758.T) (SNE.N), said he sold an estimated 750 million records worldwide, and released 13 No. 1 singles.

"His artistry and magnetism changed the music landscape forever," Sony Corp Chairman, CEO and President Sir Howard Stringer said in a statement. "We have been profoundly affected by his originality, creativity and amazing body of work."

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

First Summit for Emerging Giants

The world's newest economic grouping is to hold its first summit in the Russian city of Yekaterinburg on Tuesday.

Bric is named after its four member states - emerging giants Brazil, Russia, India and China.

They are expected to put efforts to improve the global economy at the top of the agenda.

The BBC's Rupert Wingfield Hayes, in Russia, says Bric's main goal is to force the West to give greater recognition to the developing giants.

China is now the world's third biggest economy, while Russia, India and Brazil are catching up with many key European economies.

The term Bric was coined by US investment bank Goldman Sachs which used it to describe the growing power of emerging market economies in 2001.

Its research suggested that the four developing economies could be amongst the world's strongest by 2050.

The meeting in Yekaterinburg, a city some 1,420km (880 miles) east of Moscow, will include presidents Dmitry Medvedev of Russia, Hu Jintao of China, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva of Brazil and Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.

Working together
Analysts say that as the global recession bites, the four Bric nations are showing a growing willingness to work together.

Rory MacFarquhar, a Moscow-based economist at Goldman Sachs, said the significance of the summit would be political rather than economic.
Both Russia and China have questioned the role of the dollar in the world's economy, leading to speculation that Bric might be considering the creation of a new global reserve currency.
However, on Sunday a Kremlin spokesman said that would not be on the agenda.

Russian Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin said Tuesday's meeting would focus more on ways to reform international financial institutions.

His remarks led to a rise in the value of the dollar on international markets.

However, the BBC's business reporter Katie Hunt says that fears that such big holders of dollar assets may be looking to switch from the US currency have unsettled financial markets and US politicians.

Japan bans all exports to North Korea

TOKYO: Japan on Tuesday banned all exports to North Korea to punish the communist state for its nuclear and missile tests, a trade ministry official said.

"The cabinet has approved the total ban on exports to North Korea," said trade ministry official Masaru Yamazumi. "The ban will be effective until April 13 next year. We have expanded the ban to cover all goods."

The cabinet of Prime Minister Taro Aso earlier agreed on the new sanctions, an official told AFP, without specifying what those sanctions were. Tokyo's latest move comes amid worries Pyongyang may conduct another nuclear test after the UN Security Council voted on Friday on tougher sanctions in response to the regime's May 25 nuclear test and missile firings.

Japan first imposed formal bilateral sanctions on Pyongyang in 2006 after North Korea staged its first atomic test. Tokyo has since stopped all imports from North Korea and visits by its citizens, except in special cases, and banned port calls by its ships. To target regime leaders, Japan has also banned exports of 24 luxury products – including caviar, fatty tuna and high-end consumer electronics.

Japan's exports to the North totalled 792.6 million yen (8.2 million dollars) in 2008, mainly machinery and transport equipment, such as trains and vehicles, food, electronics and industrial goods, the finance ministry says.

Last month, Japan also tightened a watch on money flows to North Korea, requiring that all remittances over 10 million yen be reported, lowering the limit to a third of the previous threshold. - AFP/so

South Korean leader in US as North Korea tension soars

WASHINGTON: South Korean President Lee Myung-Bak on Monday started a visit to the United States to plan action on North Korea, which staged a giant rally in a defiant show of support for its nuclear drive. The US Congress approved a resolution supporting Lee against the North hours after he arrived.

Lee was due to meet late Monday with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton before a summit on Tuesday with President Barack Obama. Lee was expected to ask Obama for explicit security guarantees after North Korea tested a nuclear bomb, stormed out of a six-nation disarmament accord and scrapped six decades of accords with the South.

The North's ruling party newspaper Rodong Sinmun said Monday that Lee's request was "intolerable" and said that such commitment would be "virtually formalising a provocation for nuclear war." Dennis Blair, the US intelligence chief, said on Monday that a scientific analysis concluded that North Korea "probably" carried out its second-ever nuclear test in May with a yield of "a few kilotons." The UN Security Council last week tightened sanctions against North Korea over the test, including calling for stricter inspections of cargo suspected of containing banned missile and nuclear-related items.

North Korean state media said that some 100,000 people rallied in Pyongyang against the UN Security Council resolution, blaming Washington for organising it. North Korea is ready to "deal telling blows at the vital parts of the US and wipe out all its imperialist aggressor troops no matter where they are in the world," military officer Pak Jae-Gyong was quoted as telling the rally. Lee, a conservative businessman, took office last year.

To the delight of many in Washington, he reversed a decade-long "sunshine policy" under which Seoul provided aid to the impoverished North with few conditions. In Seoul, Unification Minister Hyun In-Taek said that North Korea never intended to give up its atomic weaponry and is thought to have been developing a secret programme for seven to eight years despite taking part in talks. In its response to the UN Security Council resolution, the communist state vowed on Saturday to build more bombs and to start a new weapons programme based on uranium enrichment. Hyun told a parliamentary hearing he believes the enrichment programme - a second route to an atomic bomb after the North's admitted plutonium operation - had in fact been in existence for years.

"As the US raised the accusation in 2002, I believe (the uranium enrichment programme) had started before that. I believe it has been there for at least seven to eight years," Hyun said in answer to a question.

Several analysts and officials believe ailing leader Kim Jong-Il, 67, is intensifying military tensions to bolster his authority as he tries to put in place a succession plan involving his youngest son, Kim Jong-Un. Amid US reports that North Korea could be preparing its third nuclear test, South Korea has sent extra troops and naval units to border islands seen as a likely flashpoint.

The US House of Representatives approved a resolution demanding that North Korea end its "hostile rhetoric" against Seoul and abide by UN resolutions and the six-nation nuclear accord.

Deaths at Massive Pro-Opposition Rally in Tehran

Iranian state television is reporting that at least seven people were killed Monday when they allegedly tried to attack a military post in Tehran, near the site of a massive pro-opposition rally.

The Press TV report Tuesday says several others were injured when unidentified gunmen fired into the crowd around sundown after a peaceful rally.There had been earlier reports from eyewitnesses saying armed members of a pro-government militia opened fire at one point, killing at least one demonstrator and wounding several others Monday. Some of the protesters had set the militia headquarters on fire.

Another Rally PlannedIranian protesters are planning to hold another demonstration Tuesday against the disputed re-election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad -- defying government warnings, and in spite of the violence at Monday's rally.Hundreds of thousands of Iranians flooded the streets of the capital Monday to see and hear defeated reformist presidential candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi, a former prime minister. Mr. Mousavi told the crowd through a loudspeaker that people want to defend their votes and their rights. He has accused the government of voter fraud.

President Ahmadinejad himself is out of the country. He arrived in Russia Tuesday to attend a regional summit, one day later than originally planned.The protesters Monday chanted their support for Mr. Mousavi and said their votes for him should be counted. Official results said Mr. Ahmadinejad won re-election by a landslide, with Mr. Mousavi a distant second. Riot police were visible during Monday's opposition rally, but they took no action to disperse the crowd.

Obama ConcernedIn Washington, President Barack Obama said the world is inspired by images of peaceful protesters in Iran, but is watching the situation closely. Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has asked the powerful Guardian Council of Islamic clerics to investigate allegations of voter fraud. Mr. Mousavi had appealed to the Council Sunday to cancel the election results.President Ahmadinejad says the election was free and fair.Official election results show Mr. Ahmadinejad won 63% of the vote, compared to 34% for Mr. Mousavi, his main rival.





By VOA News 16 June 2009

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Could North Korea Provoke a New Korean War?

To fear a new Korean War is historically inaccurate, because, in fact, the last one never ended: the world's most dangerous border, across which some 2 million North Korean, U.S. and South Korean troops face each other along the 38th parallel of the Korean Peninsula is, in fact, simply an armistice line.

On July 27, 1953, the U.S. and North Korea signed a truce pausing, but not ending, a war that claimed more than 2 million lives, including those of 36,940 U.S. troops. And the North's recent nuclear and missile saber-rattling has many growing nervous about the potential for a resumption of hostilities. North Korea, in fact, announced on May 27 that it was withdrawing from the armistice.

It declared it could no longer guarantee the safety of ships sailing through the Yellow Sea off its western coast, and would no longer respect the legal status of several islands off South Korea's coast. It also vowed to attack South Korea if North Korean vessels suspected of smuggling nuclear and missile components are stopped and searched by a U.S.-led U.N. naval armada — a proposal currently under discussion.
U.S. officials are concerned that political instability inside the Pyongyang regime may raise the danger of confrontation. "Dear Leader" Kim Jong Il has been weakened by a stroke suffered late last year, his 26-year old heir apparent is not yet ready to take the reins and the North Korean military is eager to maintain its preeminence in the coming political succession. "Any time you have a combination of this behavior of doing provocative things in order to excite a response — plus succession questions — you have a potentially dangerous mixture," said U.S. Director of National Intelligence Dennis Blair on Monday.

Despite the rising tensions, however, a number of factors militate against a new chapter being opened in the Korean War. South Korea, backed by the U.S., doesn't want war, because the North has some 13,000 artillery tubes aimed at Seoul and the more than 10 million South Koreans living within 30 miles of the DMZ. North Korea, backed by China, doesn't want war because if it comes, it all but guarantees the collapse of Kim's regime, which is also the family business. (See pictures of the rise of Kim Jong Il.)

Washington has made clear that it wants to solve this latest flare-up via diplomatic channels. "Our focus is now — and has been and likely will continue to be — on coming up with diplomatic and economic pressures that will persuade the North to abandon its pursuit of nuclear weapons and the platforms to deliver them," Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell said June 8. And if that fails? "We all need to be prudent about our planning for defensive measures." That suggests neither Washington nor Seoul is going to take preemptive military action. The immediate priority of the U.S. and its allies is to prevent North Korea from spreading its nuclear know-how around the world. And their own lever is China's influence over the hermit regime.

"There's a view that if you want to get the Chinese to act on North Korea, you need to signal a willingness to take military action," Scott Snyder, a Korea expert with the Council on Foreign Relations, said last week. "But at the same time, how do you do that — especially in conjunction with allies — without the Chinese feeling that you're trying to manipulate them tactically?" China's role will be key, according to Larry Wortzel, who served two tours as a U.S. Army military attaché in Beijing.

"China will not let North Korea collapse," he was told by several top People's Liberation Army officials during the Clinton Administration, according to his account in the latest issue of the U.S. Army journal Parameters. Beijing will help Pyongyang survive any sanctions. "There are limits to what the United States and its allies can do," he warns, "unless they want a complete break with, or to invite conflict with, China.

" China's motives are twofold: keep North Korean refugees from flooding across the border, as well as keep a U.S. ally from emerging on China's doorstep. If it came to war, however, a key goal of any large North Korean attack would be to launch as many shells and rockets toward Seoul from its artillery tubes and launchers, many self-propelled or on railcars. The goal of U.S. and South Korean forces would be to destroy that artillery capability before too many rounds could be launched. While North Korea would build any attack around its 1.2 million–strong army, the U.S. and South Korea would rely more on their air and naval forces.

The Pentagon has largely refrained from saber-rattling, and is not planning to reinforce the 28,000 U.S. troops now in South Korea, or the 35,000 stationed in Japan. When pressed, U.S. military leaders concede that even their defensive plans will be tougher to implement given the fact that they currently have roughly 175,000 troops deployed in Afghanistan and Iraq. "There would have to be a level of ad hoc conglomeration of forces," General James Conway, the Marine commandant, told a Senate panel June 2. "But in the end, I am convinced we would prevail."

TIME[dot].com

Senate approves tobacco measure

WASHINGTON - The Senate struck a historic blow against smoking in the United States yesterday, voting overwhelmingly to give regulators new power to limit nicotine in the cigarettes that kill nearly a half-million Americans a year, to drastically curtail ads that glorify tobacco, and to ban flavored products aimed at spreading the habit to young people.

President Obama said he was eager to sign the legislation. The House passed a slightly different version in April, but planned a vote for today to accept the Senate bill, sending it to Obama's desk. Cigarette foes said the measure would not only reduce deaths, but cut the $100 billion in annual healthcare costs linked to tobacco.

"Miracles still happen. The United States Senate has finally said 'no' to Big Tobacco," Senator Edward M. Kennedy, the Massachusetts Democrat has championed the bill for more than a decade, said minutes after the Senate's 79-17 vote.

Supporters of regulation of tobacco have struggled for more than a decade to overcome powerful resistance - from the industry and elsewhere. In 2000 the Supreme Court ruled 5-4 that the Food and Drug Administration did not have the authority to regulate tobacco products, and the Bush administration opposed several previous efforts by Congress to write a new law.

Final passage "will make history by giving the scientists and medical experts at the FDA the power to take sensible steps that will reduce tobacco's harmful effects and prevent tobacco companies from marketing their products to children," Obama said.

Obama's signature would add tobacco to other huge, nationally important areas that have come under greater government supervision in his presidency. Those include banking, housing, and autos.

Cigarette smoking kills about 400,000 people in the United States every year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. About 45 million US adults are smokers, though the prevalence has fallen since the surgeon general's warning 45 years ago that tobacco causes lung cancer.

The legislation would give the drug agency authority to regulate the content, marketing, and advertising of tobacco products.

The FDA could order changes or bans on products that it determines are a danger to public health, and could limit nicotine yields, though not ban nicotine or cigarettes. Costs of the new program would be paid for through a fee imposed on tobacco companies.

WHO declares H1N1 flu pandemic

GENEVA: The A(H1N1) flu crisis has escalated into the world's first influenza pandemic in 40 years, the World Health Organisation declared on Thursday, after infecting tens of thousands of people in 74 countries. WHO Director General Margaret Chan said the declaration of a "moderate" pandemic should not spark panic and did not mean the death toll from A(H1N1), which currently stands at 144, would rise sharply.

The UN body said it was not recommending the closure of borders nor restrictions in movement of people, goods and services. But it warned the virus was spreading beyond the Americas where it was first detected in April.

"We will be raising our pandemic alert level to level six; and this means that the world is moving into the early days of its first influenza pandemic in the 21st century," Chan told reporters after a meeting of scientific experts.

"At this time, the global assessment is that we are seeing a moderate pandemic," she added. The WHO raised its six-phase alert level to five at the end of April, indicating an imminent pandemic.

The latest WHO figures show that the number of reported A(H1N1) infections has reached 28,774 in 74 countries, including 144 deaths. The vast majority of the deaths have been in Mexico, the original epicentre of the outbreak, and no deaths have been announced outside the Americas. "Moving to pandemic phase six level does not imply we will see increase in number of deaths or very severe cases," said Chan. "Quite on the contrary, many people having mild disease will recover without medicine in some cases, and it is good news, but the tendency to move into complacency is our biggest concern," she added.

Chan said the health agency is concerned that the virus is causing "very severe disease disproportionately" among people 30 to 50 years old. WHO Assistant Director General Keiji Fukuda warned the pandemic could last up to two years. "For a period for one to two years the virus is going around the world, and is getting people infected in a way a pandemic virus will get people infected... We need to be flexible how we respond to it," said Fukuda.

The declaration comes amid growing evidence that the virus, which originated in Mexico two months ago, is now being widely transmitted between humans in Asia and Europe as well as the Americas. EU officials promised measures on Thursday to reduce the impact of H1N1 flu as Spain said 22 schools in the Madrid region had been hit by the virus. The United States said it was well prepared to tackle the pandemic as it had been taking precautionary measures. "We acted aggressively to stay ahead of the virus as it spread across the country. Now our challenge is to prepare for a possible return in the fall," Health Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said in a statement.

Hong Kong authorities on Thursday ordered all primary schools in the city to be closed for two weeks after the first cluster of local H1N1 flu cases was found in the Chinese territory. In Germany, a school for Japanese youngsters in the western city of Duesseldorf was closed after 27 children tested positive for the virus. And in Australia, four H1N1 flu victims were admitted to intensive care wards. Following the announcement, the Red Cross and Red Crescent societies were mobilising to respond to the pandemic.

Chan said that it was up to individual countries to decide how to proceed given the outbreak was now classified as a pandemic. "The global level assessment is very different from national level assessment because it has to take into account the vulnerability of the population in a specific country and also the health system resilience," she said.

Although no vaccine against A(H1N1) has yet to be produced, drug companies are looking to come up with one by the end of June or early July and last month sent three "seed viruses" to drug companies for use in making a vaccine. Chan said the WHO would ask drug-makers to quickly prepare to produce H1N1 flu vaccines once the production of seasonal flu shots ends in the next couple of weeks.
The last flu pandemic came after an outbreak of the H3N2 viral strain from 1968-69, which originated in Hong Kong, and went on to kill up to two million people. - AFP/so/de

WHO PANDEMIC ALERT PHASES

Phase 1: No infections in humans are being caused by viruses circulating in animals.

Phase 2: Animal flu virus causes infection in humans, and is a potential pandemic threat.

Phase 3: Flu causes sporadic cases in people, but no significant human-to-human transmission.

Phase 4: Human-to-human transmission and community-level outbreaks.


Phase 5: Human-to-human transmission in at least two countries. Strong signal pandemic imminent.


Phase 6: Virus spreads to another country in a different region. Global pandemic under way.


POST-PEAK: Pandemic activity appears to be decreasing though second wave possible.Post-pandemic: activity returns to normal, seasonal flu levels.





UN set for H1N1 flu crisis talks

UN health officials have called an emergency meeting to discuss swine flu, amid rumours that the first global flu pandemic in 40 years will be declared.

The World Health Organization announced the meeting after a steep rise in the number of cases in Australia.
Hong Kong on Thursday announced it was closing all its nurseries and primary schools for two weeks after 12 students tested positive for the virus.
The last global flu pandemic came in 1968 over the Hong Kong flu.

That pandemic killed about one million people.

A disease is classed as a pandemic when transmission between humans becomes widespread in two regions of the world.

Evolving situation

The latest virus emerged in Mexico in April and since then thousands of cases have been confirmed throughout North and South America.

The H1N1 strain has spread to 74 countries but the WHO has resisted labelling the outbreak a full-blown pandemic.

WHO chief Margaret Chan talked to officials from eight countries with large flu outbreaks on Wednesday in an attempt to confirm the spread of the disease.

She has said she believes the situation can be regarded as a pandemic but says she wants clear evidence before making an announcement.

The WHO's move follows Australia's confirmation of more than 1,200 cases - a four-fold increase in a week.

All primary schools and nurseries in Hong Kong are to shut for 14 days from Friday in a bid to contain the virus, the territory's chief executive Donald Tsang said.

It follows confirmation that 12 secondary school pupils have contracted the illness. Secondary schools are not yet being ordered to close.

At least 50 people are now confirmed to have the virus in the territory.

The head of the WHO's global influenza programme, Keiji Fukuda, said the situation had "evolved a lot" in recent days.

"We are getting close to knowing that we are in a pandemic situation," he said.

Although most sufferers experience regular flu symptoms and make a full recovery, the WHO has confirmed 141 deaths from 27,737 cases.

The BBC's health correspondent, Jane Dreaper, says classifying the virus as a pandemic does not mean that the virus has suddenly become more deadly.

But it does send a clear signal to health officials and businesses to continue planning for the possibility of large numbers of people catching the virus, she says.

The move may speed up the production of vaccines and prompt national governments to impose measures such as travel bans.

The WHO's emergency committee is due to meet in Geneva at 1000 GMT.

Koreas talk amid UN sanction call

North and South Korea held rare talks lasting just under one hour, about their jointly managed Kaesong industrial park.

Hopes of progress were low amid tensions over the North's nuclear programme.
Key Security Council members have agreed on the wording of a draft UN resolution to expand sanctions against North Korea, diplomats say.
The move is a response to Pyongyang's recent nuclear and missile testing.

The BBC's correspondent John Sudworth says the Kaesong plant was seen as a symbol of possible reconciliation between the two halves of this divided peninsular, but amid the worsening security situation, the future of the project is now in doubt.

Last month North Korea announced that it was unilaterally scrapping wage and rent agreements, and if the 100 or so South Korean companies operating there didn't like it, they could leave. One South Korean firm did leave this week.

South Korea, for its part, wants a South Korean manager released from North Korean detention.
Officials in Seoul said they had low expectations from the talks, only the second this year, given the North's recent nuclear and missile tests.

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

France steps up hunt for plane's black boxes

FERNANDO DE NORONHA, Brazil : Search teams are to step up their search for the black boxes from an Air France jet that crashed in the Atlantic earlier this month with 228 people on board.

A tugboat contracted by France was to join operations in the area after it was fitted with specialized underwater listening gear on loan from the US military.

A French nuclear military submarine was already in the zone, 1,100 kilometres off Brazil's coast, since Wednesday, hunting for the recording devices. If it finds a signal, a deep-sea research mini-sub that was to arrive Thursday on board a French scientific ship would be deployed to recover the boxes, which hold data that could be key to discovering why the jet did not complete its journey.

Brazil, meanwhile, said it was determined to bring back to shore as many bodies and pieces of debris as possible from the crash zone. A flotilla of five Brazilian navy ships and a French frigate have already recovered 41 bodies. They were to be identified on the Brazilian mainland by dental records and DNA tests. That search and recovery part of the operation headed by Brazil was to continue to at least June 19, air force spokesman Brigadier Ramon Cardoso told reporters in the northeastern city of Recife. He explained that currents in the area could make the possibility of recovering bodies more difficult after that date.

The Air France plane came down June 1 as it was flying from Rio de Janeiro to Paris. The cause of the disaster wasn't known, but speculation is focusing on the Airbus A330's airspeed sensors, which may have malfunctioned. Airbus has written to clients to assure them its A330 planes were safe, including those with older versions of the sensors, known as "pitot probes," according to a spokeswoman in France.

Airbus and Air France say older pitot probes have been problematic on other Airbus A330s and A340s, and the airline has stepped up a programme to install newer devices after pilots' unions threatened to refuse to fly. The European air safety agency said Tuesday that Airbus models were "safe to operate," but added that a bulletin had gone out to remind airlines of what to do "in the event of loss of, or unreliable, speed indication."

There has been speculation that the A330's speed probes could have iced up during a storm at high altitude and supplied false airspeed data to the cockpit. This, in turn, could have caused the pilots to fly too slow and stall, or too fast and rip the airframe apart, aviation experts say. The crash is the worst aviation accident since 2001, and unprecedented in Air France's 75-year history. - AFP/ir

World edges towards official H1N1 flu pandemic

GENEVA: Health authorities edged towards global A(H1N1) flu pandemic status on Wednesday as the virus wreaked havoc with Australian sports scheduling and Colombia reported its first death. While critics say the alert system is in need of repair, with the virus proving milder than other flu strains, experts are watching developments in Australia, Britain, Chile and Japan especially carefully.
The World Health Organisation held talks on Wednesday with those countries worst hit, seeking "undisputable" evidence of domestic human transmission, after a senior official said on Tuesday its highest, level-six alert phase was "very, very close" to being called. "I can confirm that the DG (director-general) is consulting with the ministries of health of seven or eight of the most affected countries to try to see if there is undisputable evidence of community spread," WHO spokeswoman Fadela Chaib told AFP.
Since the A(H1N1) virus was first discovered in the United States and Mexico April, some 74 countries have reported 27,737 cases including 141 deaths to the health agency. According to the WHO's latest tally of flu cases published on Wednesday, Chile reported 1,283 more infections, including one new death, bringing its total caseload to 1,694.

Britain added 109 new infections, bringing its total to 666, while Australia reached 1,224, including 173 new cases. Japan also reported 75 new infections, taking its total to 485. The Palestinian territories confirmed their first case in a four-year-old boy who returned to the West Bank from the United States five days ago. Fears are currently greatest in the southern hemisphere, with the onset of its winter season. Frequent flyers and people in large crowds remain particularly at risk - indeed Australian Rugby league players could be in and out of quarantine for months, authorities said. Friday's National Rugby League game between the Brisbane Broncos and the Canterbury Bulldogs is under threat awaiting test results on Broncos fullback Karmichael Hunt.

Senior WHO official Ian Barr predicted all sport would eventually be hit. "It won't just be the Broncos or rugby league clubs, it will be all sporting activities that will be compromised or their sporting schedule interrupted," Barr, deputy director of WHO's influenza centre, said on Wednesday. "The players are all susceptible, especially if they are sitting next to somebody on a plane for a few hours." Swimming Australia said on Tuesday it was shelving this month's Grand Prix in Melbourne. Around the world, a 24-year-old woman became the first person in Colombia to die of swine flu.

In China, New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin was released from quarantine in Shanghai, where he had been detained since Sunday after a fellow passenger on his flight fell ill with a suspected case of H1N1 flu. Nagin, known for being mayor of New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina in 2005, missed several meetings in the Chinese business hub due to the quarantine but will make it to two speaking engagements in Australia on Thursday and Friday.

In a statement, Nagin thanked Shanghai medical and city officials and said he was leaving China "in the best of health and spirits."

China has submitted passengers to temperature checks and at times quarantine at its airports in a bid to stop the spread of H1N1 flu. Those placed under quarantine have usually been released after a seven-day observation period, but the country's strict control measures have faced foreign criticism.

Egypt, Romania, the Czech Republic and Vietnam national authorities all reported new infections on Wednesday, while health chiefs in Hong Kong and Poland each signalled their first cases of human H1N1 flu where those infected had caught the virus locally. - AFP/de