Wednesday, 29 February 2012

Jessica Biel Shows Off a Sparkling Engagement Ring at Chateau Marmont

She may not have been photographed sporting it yet yet, but Jessica Biel was showing off her sparkly engagement ring on the patio at West Hollywood's Chateau Marmont while hanging out with a friend.

According to an onlooker, the sparkler was glittering in the sunlight – and it was a large, round rock surrounded by tiny diamonds. The actress was dressed comfortably in a gray blazer, black shorts and a rose-colored blouse. Biel sipped on a coffee and chatted up her friend – a bearded guy in a red plaid shirt and black-framed glasses.

Says the onlooker: "She looked really lovely, polished, calm and happy."

The two enjoyed each other's company for over an hour, never leaving their table and mostly keeping to themselves.

Source - http://feeds.people.com/~r/people/headlines/~3/9q9sq4DjwhU/0,,20574457,00.html

Monday, 27 February 2012

Kate Is Getting New, Custom-Designed Shoes!

Duchess of Cambridge

Allpix / Splash News Online

One young designer is going to going to get his or her kicks outfitting the Duchess of Cambridge in new shoes.

Six students from the footwear design program at De Montfort University in Leicester, England, have submitted designs to Kate – who will select which pair of shoes she likes best when she visits the university on March 8.

The visit kicks off a tour around the U.K. by Kate's grandmother-in-law, Queen Elizabeth, to mark her 60 years on the throne.

Among the shortlisted designers – Sam Sawkill, 27, Summer Spencer, 23, Kay Yeng Cheng, 22, Tabitha Duffield, Becka Hunt, 20, and Mei Chun Lai, 21 – aesthetics were important.

"I wanted to make a cool and sexy shoe for a formal occasion," said Sawkill.

Summer Spencer was inspired by Kate and husband William's coat of arms, with its tartan reflecting the couple's time in college in Scotland, while Tabitha Duffield used daisies and pink leather in her design. Becka Hunt said she was inspired by 19th-century fashions, as well as Kate's engagement ring and overall style.

"We were thrilled when the Palace asked for six designs for the Duchess to choose from," said Kevin Guildford, who heads the university's footwear design program. "It's the most fabulous opportunity for the students who couldn't hope for a bigger fashion icon to endorse their designs."

During the visit, the Queen and Kate will also watch four university graduates showcase their collections. Two of the graduates have internships at Vivienne Westwood.

The Queen, her husband, the Duke of Edinburgh, and Kate will arrive in the city by train. They will also be attending a service at the city's cathedral and visiting local faith leaders.

Later this week, Kate will join the Queen and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, at a tea party at Fortnum and Mason's in London.

Students from De Montfort University and their designs

Allpix / Splash News Online

Credit - http://feeds.people.com/~r/people/headlines/~3/ZBKnsl-HjsU/0,,20395222_205740...

Thursday, 23 February 2012

Assad's tanks move in to Syrian rebel stronghold

Two journalists killed in Homs shelling. Marie Colvin an American born war reporter for the Sunday Times of London and French photographer, Remi Ochlik - have been killed in Syria. They died during the latest bombardment of Homs. ITN's Tim Ewart has a clip from one of Colvin's last reports.

 

By msnbc.com news services

Syrian President Bashar Assad's military sent tanks into the rebel district of Baba Amr in the an opposition stronghold of Homs on Thursday after 20 days of sustained bombardment, opposition sources told Reuters. 

"Tanks have entered the Jobar area in the south of Baba Amr," activist Abu Imad told Reuters from the city.

Government forces also resumed shelling the neighborhood, where hundreds have died in a weeks-long siege.


About 30 people, including two Western journalists, were killed in shelling on Wednesday — most of them in Baba Amr, which is the center of the resistance in the city.

GOP rivals back arming of Syria's rebels

Homs-based activist Omar Shaker said intense barrages hit residential districts in Baba Amr again Thursday, but there was no immediate word on casualties. He said food, water and medical supplies are running dangerously low in Baba Amr.

"Every minute counts. People will soon start to collapse from lack of sleep and shortages in food," he said.

On Wednesday, shelling of Baba Amr killed American-born veteran war correspondent Marie Colvin and French photographer Remi Ochlik.

NBC's Richard Engel reports on the tense situation in Syria where an American reporter and French photojournalist were recently killed.

They were among a group of journalists who had crossed into Syria illegally and were sharing accommodations with activists, raising speculation that government forces targeted the makeshift media center where they were staying. But opposition groups had previously described the shelling as indiscriminate. At least two other Western journalists were wounded on Wednesday.

A Syrian Foreign Ministry spokesman offered condolences to the families of Colvin and Ochlik but rejected any responsibility for their deaths. The spokesman urged foreign journalists to respect Syrian laws and not to sneak into the country.

NYT: As others isolate Syria, Chavez sends fuel to it

Britain's Foreign Secretary William Hague said nations were considering action against Syria in meetings on the sidelines of an international conference in London. Hague said he would discuss "what we can achieve" with U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and many of the Arab League leaders.

Officials say Britain, the United States, Turkey, Qatar and others plan talks on the margins of a conference on Somalia.

Meanwhile, a panel of U.N. human rights experts said Thursday that the United Nations has a secret list of top Syrian officials who could face investigation for crimes against humanity carried out by security forces.

The U.N. experts indicated that the list goes as high as President Bashar Assad.

NBC's Richard Engel answers reader questions about Syria

Thousands of Syrians have died in the violence since March and the panel, citing what it called a reliable source, said at least 500 children are among the dead.

"A reliable body of evidence exists that, consistent with other verified circumstances, provides reasonable grounds to believe that particular individuals, including commanding officers and officials at the highest levels of government, bear responsibility for crimes against humanity and other gross human rights violations," said the report by the U.N.-appointed Independent International Commission of Inquiry on Syria.

"The commission has deposited with the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights a sealed envelope containing the names of these people, which might assist future credible investigations by competent authorities."

It doesn't say who these investigating authorities might be, but the U.N.'s top human rights official has previously called for Syria to be referred to the International Criminal Court in The Hague. Members of the 47-nation U.N. Human Rights Council are expected to hold a special meeting on Syria in Geneva next week, at which the panel's report will be formally presented.

Systematic killing of civilians
The U.N. panel was denied entry to Syria by the government, which accused it of ignoring official information and exceeding its mandate. The panel instead gathered much of its information from sources outside the country, including human rights activists and Syrian army defectors.

The report claims that the ruling Baath Party's National Security Bureau was responsible for translating government policies into military operations that led to the systematic arrest or killing of civilians.

It says the four main intelligence and security agencies reporting directly to Assad — Military Intelligence, Air Force Intelligence, the General Intelligence Directorate and the Political Security Directorate — "were at the heart of almost all operations."

The report details how businessmen helped hire and arm informal pro-government militias known as the Shabbiha.

"In a number of operations, the commission documented how Shabbiha members were strategically employed to commit crimes against humanity and other gross violations," it said.

The report also identifies 38 detention centers "for which the commission documented cases of torture and ill-treatment since March 2011."

Armed opposition groups, loosely connected under the umbrella of the Free Syrian Army, also committed some gross human rights abuses, the panel said. It cited the torture and execution of soldiers or suspected pro-government militia members.

But such actions were "not comparable in scale and organization with those carried out by the state," it added.

More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

 

Original - http://pheedo.msnbc.msn.com/click.phdo?i=c62015c8ac922c2081fe4815b788b680

Monday, 20 February 2012

Can the stock market pick the next president?

NEW YORK — The number has been repeated so often by presidential prognosticators that it's an article of faith: No president has been re-elected since World War II with an unemployment rate higher than 7.2 percent.

But the stock market turns out to be a pretty good predictor, too.

The Dow Jones industrial average has soared 62 percent since President Barack Obama took the oath of office during some of the darkest days of the Great Recession. The Dow was just below 8,000 then and stands near 13,000 today.

If a recent study of stock markets and presidential elections is any guide, Obama can start preparing his second inaugural address.

"There's something to this," says Phil Orlando, chief equity market strategist at Federated Investors, the $370 billion investment firm.

There are plenty of other signs often consulted for their political forecasting power, like whether a team from the National Football Conference or the American Football Conference wins the Super Bowl.

This one makes a little more sense: When the economy picks up and unemployment falls, confident investors put money into riskier investments and stocks rise. Voters are likely to reward the sitting president with another four years.

"The stock market reflects trends in the economy," Orlando says. And as any political operative can attest, in a presidential campaign, it's the economy — you know the rest.

The study was backed by the Socionomics Institute, a think tank studying how a shared mood among a group sways its members' actions. Their researchers dug up data on economic output, prices, unemployment and stock-market performance and matched them to presidential elections.

They went all the way back to the first re-election in 1792, when George Washington beat John Adams and won a second term as the president.

The researchers found a solid connection between the stock market's direction in the three years leading up to Election Day and the election results. Gains of 20 percent or more for the Dow nearly assured victories for sitting presidents. Drops of 10 percent or worse got them tossed out.

Voters returned Calvin Coolidge to the White House in 1924, just as the Roaring '20s started roaring. They booted Herbert Hoover in 1932 while the stock market suffered through a three-year plunge.

The authors of the Socionomics Institute study say everything can be traced back to the prevailing optimism or pessimism. Their organization studies "the social mood." But how do you read the mood of a whole country?

The authors say that the stock market is the best available gauge of how the country is feeling, "because investors can act swiftly to express their optimism or pessimism." Bad day? Time to sell. Things looking up? Time to buy.

"An increasingly positive social mood produces a rising stock market as well as votes for the incumbent, and an increasingly negative social mood produces a falling stock market as well as votes against the incumbent," they write.

To the authors, it's the mood that determines the election, not the stock market. The stock market is just a reliable gauge of the national temper, an incredibly accurate mood ring.

In recent successful re-election campaigns, the connection appears clear. Ronald Reagan won re-election in 1984 following the Dow's 41 percent surge and despite an unemployment rate of 7.2 percent. Bill Clinton was awarded a second term after the Dow gained 63 percent in the three years leading up to Election Day.

The Bottom Line: Obama may keep his job even if you lose yours

But there are misfires. James Madison, for instance, won re-election in 1812 despite a 34 percent drop in the market over three years. George H.W. Bush lost to Bill Clinton even though the Dow rose 51 percent over his term in office.

Doug Wead, a presidential historian who served in the elder Bush's administration, says the stock market theory sounds suspect.

"The stock market isn't even a good indicator of the economy," he says. "You can have the stock market going up while the rich get richer and the poor get poorer."

Story: This could be week stocks' rally comes to an end

There's also the danger of oversimplifying — relying on one number, in this case the Dow's performance, while ignoring everything from scandals and wars to third-party candidates.

In William Howard Taft's last three years in office, the Dow lost 12 percent, and Taft lost the 1912 election to Woodrow Wilson. But if Theodore Roosevelt hadn't split from the Republicans and run under the Progressive Party banner against Taft that year, Taft might have returned to office.

It was a similar story with the first President Bush in 1992. The independent candidate Ross Perot siphoned off votes from both candidates, but historians generally believe more came from Bush's Republican camp. Clinton won with just 43 percent of the popular vote.

The Bottom Line: The 10 richest US presidents

The economy also slipped into a recession during Bush's second year in office, and as he campaigned for re-election, the unemployment rate hovered well above the dreaded 7.2 percent mark.

Orlando, of Federated Investors, says a change in any single statistic won't guarantee a president gets re-elected. Analysts should consult a range of figures. One that looks less reassuring for Obama is his approval rating, he says.

No president has been re-elected with a Gallup approval rating below 48 percent approaching Election Day. Obama's numbers are improving, and the election is more than eight months away, but for now he's teetering on the edge — 48 percent.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Credit - http://pheedo.msnbc.msn.com/click.phdo?i=c49e7f9c71e3862f7202e23273b999ef

Saturday, 18 February 2012

Iranian warships sail into Mediterranean

By the CNN Wire Staff

updated 5:57 PM EST, Sat February 18, 2012

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • It's only the second time such ships have crossed the Suez Canal since 1979
  • The move comes amid heightened regional tensions
  • Report: The mission carries a "message of peace and friendship," a rear admiral says

(CNN) -- Two Iranian warships sailed through Egypt's Suez Canal into the Mediterranean Sea, Iran's semi-official Mehr news agency reported Saturday, amid heightened tensions in the region.

The move represents only the second time such ships have crossed the Suez Canal since the Islamic republic's 1979 revolution.

The first time took place in February 2011, just days after Egypt's post-Hosni Mubarak government gave the green light to the passage -- putting Egypt's new military leaders in a prickly position with its Israeli neighbor.

"As the Navy affected the region with its presence in the Mediterranean Sea last year, the Navy's 18th fleet will in the best way carry the message of peace and friendship to regional countries, and display the might of the country and the sacred system of the Islamic Republic of Iran," said Rear Adm. Habibollah Sayyari, according to Mehr.

It was not clear from the report where the two vessels, a destroyer and a supply ship, were headed.

The canal is an internal body of water, and as such, Egypt has sovereignty over it. But Egypt also is bound by the 1978 Camp David Accords, which guarantee the right of free passage by ships belonging to Israel and all other nations on the basis of the Constantinople Convention of 1888.

The warships' reported movement comes as tensions between Iran and Israel are high, with speculation of a pre-emptive Israeli strike on Iran to stop its suspected nuclear weapons program. Israel has also blamed Tehran for attacks on Israeli targets in India, Georgia and Thailand.

The United States and the European Union bolstered sanctions against Iran after a November report by the International Atomic Energy Agency that said Iran could be developing nuclear weapons. Iran insists its program is strictly for civilian energy purposes.

On Friday, Western nations welcomed a letter from Iran offering a resumption of stalled nuclear talks, though they were still determining the Islamic republic's sincerity.

The Suez Canal is a key waterway for international trade. It connects the Mediterranean Sea with the Red Sea, allowing ships to navigate between Europe and Asia without having to go around Africa. Millions of barrels of oil move through the Suez every day en route to Europe and North America.

CNN's Shirzad Bozorgmehr contributed to this report.

Via - http://rss.cnn.com/~r/rss/cnn_topstories/~3/Y8SCJuq6P-M/index.html
http://ecokatur.com

Thursday, 16 February 2012

Frankie Delgado Is Engaged

Frankie Delgado

Jordan Strauss/Wireimage

Talk about a memorable Valentine's Day! Former Hills star Frankie Delgado popped the question to his lady love on the year's most romantic day.

"I can confirm that on Valentine's Day that Frankie Delgado got engaged to long time girlfriend Jennifer Acosta while vacationing in Cabo, Mexico," his rep Eric Podwall tells PEOPLE exclusively.

The following night Delgado was back in Los Angeles celebrating at Beacher's Madhouse at The Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel with close pals Brody Jenner and Evan Ross.

"He seemed really happy and was very appreciative when Evan Ross congratulated him," says an onlooker. "He was all smiles when the emcee announced that the bottle via flying [little person] was compliments of Evan Ross on his new engagement and the crowd cheered for him."

Original - http://feeds.people.com/~r/people/headlines/~3/RBnQRknfyvY/0,,20571232,00.html

Sunday, 12 February 2012

Activist: Syrian army uses human shields on tanks

Violence rages across Syria

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • At least four people are killed in shelling or gunfire Sunday, an opposition activist group says
  • Arab League members gather in Cairo to discuss its next steps on Syria
  • Opposition group: At least 687 people, including 59 children, were killed last week
  • Syrian state-run media says a military general was assassinated in Damascus

Are you there? Send us your images or video

(CNN) -- Syrian government forces are using detained civilians as human shields, placing them on tanks in the besieged city of Homs to prevent the opposition Free Syrian Army from fighting back, an opposition activist said.

The latest tactic came as shelling rained on city's Baba Amr neighborhood once again Sunday, residents say, marking at least the eighth straight day President Bashar al-Assad's troops have pummeled Homs in an attempt to wipe out the opposition.

"My house is dancing. I am almost dead because of the siege," said the opposition activist, named Omar.

Three civilians were killed in Sunday's shelling on Baba Amr, according the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, an opposition activist group. A fourth civilian was killed by gunfire near the town of Bab Houweid, the group said.

While residents in Homs wonder whether their house will be the next attacked, Arab League members gathered in Cairo on Sunday to discuss its next steps on Syria.

The international community has repeatedly failed to convince al-Assad's regime to stop the massacre, so it's unclear what effect the Arab League talks could have.

But U.N. diplomats are mulling another draft resolution -- this one brought forth by Saudi Arabia -- and are expected to convene Monday.

The Saudi draft resolution will be submitted to the U.N. General Assembly, where vetoes are not allowed, but resolutions are not legally binding. Russia and China have vetoed previous U.N. Security Council attempts at passing a resolution condemning the Syrian regime.

The latest, three-page draft "strongly condemns" the violations of human rights by Syrian authorities. It cites "the use of force against civilians, arbitrary executions, killing and persecution of protesters, human rights defenders and journalists, arbitrary detention, enforced disappearances, interference with access to medical treatment, torture, sexual violence and ill-treatment, including against children."

The text was provided to CNN by a diplomatic source on the condition that it not be posted in full because it could be amended.

At least 687 people, including 59 children, died in the past week, the Local Coordination Committees of Syria reported late Saturday. About two-thirds of those deaths occurred in Homs, said the LCC, an opposition activist group.

The capital city of Damascus has not seen the level of bloodshed other cities have endured in the 11-month Syrian uprising, but the reported killing a Syrian general there could indicate the resistance is spreading to the seats of power.

An "armed terrorist group" assassinated Brig. Gen. Issa al-Kholi, a military physician who was the director of Hamish Hospital, in front of his Damascus house Saturday morning, the state-run Syrian Arab News Agency said. Three gunmen fatally shot him, the media outlet said.

Andrew Tabler, a Syria expert at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, said al-Kholi is from a powerful Alawite military family and is a relative of Mohammed al-Kholi, the former head of air force intelligence under Hafez al-Assad, President Bashar al-Assad's father and predecessor who ruled Syria for three decades.

The al-Assad family is Alawite, a minority in Sunni-dominated Syria that has a major presence in the military and government.

While al-Kholi was not likely a senior officer or affiliated with a key regime unit, his assassination is believed to be the first of a higher-ranking Syrian officer in the capital, said Jeffrey White, a defense analyst at the institute.

Free Syrian Army Lt. Col. Mohamed Hamado said al-Kholi is "definitely close to Bashar's inner circle" and that his family has been close to both Bashar al-Assad and his father. The Free Syrian Army is the anti-regime resistance group led by military defectors.

The deputy head of the Free Syrian Army said the killing could have been carried out by the regime itself.

The al-Assad regime "is now assassinating and targeting anyone they suspect of joining the revolution or thinking of defecting. That may have been the case with General al-Kholi," Col. Malek Al Kurdi said.

Al Kurdi claims the regime "assassinated" the deputy head of the armed forces, Gen. Bassam Najm el-Din Antakiali, in September, even though state media reported that he died of an "acute heart attack."

CNN cannot independently confirm details of the fighting in Syria because the government has severely limited the access of international journalists.

Al-Assad's regime has insisted its crackdown is aimed at armed gangs and foreign terrorists bent on destabilizing the regime.

But virtually all reports from within the country indicate al-Assad's forces are slaughtering protesters and other civilians en masse. Opposition activists in Homs describe relentless bomb explosions from Syrian forces, wounded people bleeding to death in the streets because they can't get medical attention and snipers picking off civilians running for cover.

U.N. officials estimate 6,000 people have died since protests seeking al-Assad's ouster began nearly a year ago. The LCC says the toll has far exceeded 7,000.

CNN's Salma Abdelaziz, Ivan Watson, Amir Ahmed, Joe Sterling, Richard Roth and journalist Mohamed Fadel Fahmy contributed to this report.

Original - http://rss.cnn.com/~r/rss/cnn_topstories/~3/VwifTmsUDXM/index.html

Thursday, 9 February 2012

Israel uses terror group to kill Iran nuke scientists

Mehdi Marizad / Fars via AP file

A car that was bombed by two assailants on a motorcycle in Tehran on Jan. 11, killing Iranian nuclear scientist Mostafa Ahamdi Roshan, is removed by a mobile crane. The photo was distributed by the semi-official Iranian photo agency Fars.

Deadly attacks on Iranian nuclear scientists are being carried out by an Iranian dissident group that is financed, trained and armed by Israel’s secret service, U.S. officials tell NBC News, confirming charges leveled by Iran’s leaders.

ROCK CENTER EXCLUSIVE

The group, the People’s Mujahedin of Iran, has long been designated as a terrorist group by the United States, accused of killing American servicemen and contractors in the 1970s and supporting the takeover of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran before breaking with the Iranian mullahs in 1980.

The attacks, which have killed five Iranian nuclear scientists since 2007 and may have destroyed a missile research and development site, have been carried out in dramatic fashion, with motorcycle-borne assailants often attaching small magnetic bombs to the exterior of the victims’ cars.

U.S. officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the Obama administration is aware of the assassination campaign but has no direct involvement.

The Iranians have no doubt who is responsible – Israel and the People’s Mujahedin of Iran, known by various acronyms, including MEK, MKO and PMI.

Mohammad Javad Larijani, a senior aide to Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, describes what Iranian leaders believe is a close relationship between Israel's secret service, the Mossad, and the People's Mujahedin of Iran, or MEK, which is considered a terrorist organization by the United States.

“The relation is very intricate and close,” said Mohammad Javad Larijani, a senior aide to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran’s supreme leader, speaking of the MEK and Israel.  “They (Israelis) are paying … the Mujahedin. Some of their (MEK) agents … (are) providing Israel with information.  And they recruit and also manage logistical support.”


Moreover, he said, the Mossad, the Israeli secret service, is training MEK members in Israel on the use of motorcycles and small bombs.  In one case, he said, Mossad agents built a replica of the home of an Iranian nuclear scientist so that the assassins could familiarize themselves with the layout prior to the attack.

Much of what the Iranian government knows of the attacks and the links between Israel and MEK  comes from interrogation of an assassin who failed to carry out an attack in late 2010 and the materials found on him, Larijani said. (Click here to see a video report of the interrogation shown on Iranian televsion.)

The U.S.-educated Larijani, whose two younger brothers run the legislative and judicial branches of the Iranian government, said the Israelis’ rationale is simple. “Israel does not have direct access to our society. Mujahedin, being Iranian and being part of Iranian society, they have … a good number of … places to get into the touch with people. So I think they are working hand-to-hand very close.  And we do have very concrete documents.”

Two senior U.S. officials confirmed for NBC News  the MEK’s role in the assassinations, with one senior official saying, “All your inclinations are correct.” A third official would not confirm or deny the relationship, saying only, “It hasn’t been clearly confirmed yet.”  All the officials denied any U.S. involvement in the assassinations. 

As it has in the past, Israel’s Foreign Ministry declined comment. Said a spokesman, "As long as we can't see all the evidence being claimed by NBC, the Foreign Ministry won't react to every gossip and report being published worldwide."

For its part, the MEK pointed to a statement calling the allegations “absolutely false.” 

The sophistication of the attacks supports the Iranian claims that an experienced intelligence service is involved, experts say. 

In the most recent attack, on Jan. 11, 2012, Mostafa Ahamdi Roshan died in a blast in Tehran moments after two assailants on a motorcycle placed a small magnetic bomb on his vehicle. Roshan was a deputy director at the Natanz uranium enrichment facility and was reportedly involved in procurement for the nuclear program, which Iran insists is not a weapons program.

Previous attacks include the assassination of Massoud Ali-Mohammadi, killed by a bomb outside his Tehran home in January 2010, and an explosion in November of that year that took the life of Majid Shahriari and wounded Fereydoun Abbasi-Davani, who is now the head of Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization.

In the case of Roshan, the bomb appears to have been a shaped charge that directed all the explosive power inside the vehicle, killing him and his bodyguard driver but leaving nearby traffic unaffected.

Although Roshan was directly involved in the nuclear program, working at the huge centrifuge facility between Tehran and Qom, Iran’s religious center, at least one other scientist who was killed wasn’t linked to the Iranian nuclear program, according to Larijani.

Speaking of bombing victim Ali-Mohammadi, whom he described as a friend, Larijani told NBC News, “In fact this guy who was assassinated was not involved in the nitty-gritty of the situation.  He was a scientist, a physicist, working on the theoretically parts of nuclear energy, which you can teach it in every university. You can find it in every text.”

“This is an Israeli plot.  A dirty plot,” Larijani added angrily. He also claimed the assassinations are not having an effect on the program and have only made scientists more resolute in carrying out their mission.

Not so, said Ronen Bergman, an Israeli commentator and author of “Israel’s Secret War with Iran” and an upcoming book tentatively titled, “Mossad and the Art of Assassination.”

Israel has long used assassination against its enemies, "hoping that by taking out individuals, they can alter, change the course of history," says Ronen Bergman, an Israeli commentator and author of "Israel's Secret War with Iran" and an upcoming book tentatively titled "Mossad and the Art of Assassination."

Bergman said the attacks have three purposes, the most obvious being the removal of high-ranking scientists and their  knowledge. The others:  forcing Iran to increase security for its scientists and facilities and to spur “white defections.” 

He explained the latter this way: “Scientists leaving the project, afraid that they are going to be next on the assassination list, and say, ‘We don't want this.  Indeed, we get good money, we are promoted, we are honored by everybody, but we might get killed.  It isn't worth it.  Maybe we should go back to teach … in a university.’”

There are unconfirmed reports in the Israeli press and elsewhere that Israel and the MEK were involved in a Nov. 12 explosion that destroyed the Iranian missile research and development site at Bin Kaneh, 30 miles outside Tehran.  Among those killed was Maj. Gen. Hassan Moghaddam, director of missile development for the Revolutionary Guard, and a dozen other researchers. So important was Moghaddam that Ayatollah Khamenei attended his funeral. 

Unlike the assassinations, Iran claims the missile site explosion was an accident; the MEK, meanwhile, trumpeted it but denied any involvement. 

Indeed, there may be other covert operations carried out either by Israel acting alone or in concert with others, according to Bergman.

“Two labs caught fire,” said Bergman, enumerating the attacks. “Scientists got blown up or disappeared.  A missile base and the R&D base of the Revolutionary Guard exploded some time ago, with the director of the R&D division of the Revolutionary Guard being killed along with … his soldiers.” 

Bergman added, “So, a long series of … something that was termed by an Israeli (Cabinet) minister … as ‘mysterious mishaps’ happening and rehappening to the project. Then the Iranians claim, ‘This is Israeli Mossad trying to sabotage our attempts to be a nuclear superpower.’”

Dr. Uzi Rabi, director of the Dayan Center at Tel Aviv University, said the supposed accidents could all be part of “psychological warfare” conducted against Iran. “It seems logical. It makes sense,” he said of possible MEK involvement, “and it’s been done before.”

Rabi, who regularly briefs Israel’s parliament, the Knesset, on Iran also said the ultimate goal of the range of covert operations being carried out by Israel is “to damage the politics of survivability … to send a message that could strike fear into the rulers of Iran.”

For the United States, the alleged role of the MEK is particularly troublesome.  In 1997, the State Department designated it a terrorist group, justifying it with an unclassified 40-page summary of the organization’s  activities going back more than 25 years.  The paper, sent to Congress in 1998, was written by Wendy Sherman, now undersecretary of state for political affairs and then an aide to Secretary of State Madeleine Albright.

The report, which was obtained by NBC News, was unsparing in its assessment. “The Mujahedin  (MEK) collaborated with Ayatollah Khomeini to overthrow the former shah of Iran,” it said. “As part of that struggle, they assassinated at least six American citizens, supported the takeover of the U.S. embassy, and opposed the release of the American hostages.”  In each case, the paper noted, “Bombs were the Mujahedin's weapon of choice, which they frequently employed against American targets.”

“In the post-revolutionary political chaos, however, the Mujahedin lost political power to Iran's Islamic clergy. They then applied their dedication to armed struggle and the use of propaganda against the new Iranian government, launching a violent and polemical cycle of attack and reprisal."

U.S. officials have said publicly that the information contained in the report was limited to unclassified material, but that it also drew on classified material in making its determination to add the MEK to the U.S. list of terrorist organizations. 

Sean Gallup / Getty Images file

Maryam Rajavi, president of the National Council of Resistance of Iran, greets several hundred Iranian expatriates who had gathered to welcome her at Tegel Airport in Berlin, Germany, on March 22, 2010.

The MEK and its sister organizations have since the beginning been run by Massoud and Maryam Rajavi, a husband-wife team who have maintained tight control despite assassination threats and internal dissent. Massoud Rajavi, 63, founded the MEK, but since the U.S. invasion of Iraq has taken a backseat to his wife.

The State Department report describes the Rajavis as  “fundamentally undemocratic” and “not a viable alternative to the current government of Iran.”

One reason for that is the MEK’s close relationship with Saddam Hussein, as demonstrated by this 1986 video showing the late Iraqi dictator meeting with Massoud Rajavi. Saddam recruited the MEK in much the same way the Israelis allegedly have, using them to fight Iranian forces during the Iran-Iraq War, a role they took on proudly.  So proudly, they invited NBC News to one of their military camps outside Baghdad in 1993.

“The National Liberation Army (MLA), the military wing of the Mujahedin, conducted raids into Iran during the latter years of the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq War,” according to the State Department report. The NLA's last major offensive reportedly was conducted against Iraqi Kurds in 1991, when it joined Saddam Hussein's brutal repression of the Kurdish rebellion. In addition to occasional acts of sabotage, the Mujahedin are responsible for violent attacks in Iran that victimize civilians.”

“Internally, the Mujahedin run their organization autocratically, suppressing dissent and eschewing tolerance of differing viewpoints,” it said. “Rajavi, who heads the Mojahedin’s political and military wings, has fostered a cult of personality around himself.”

The U.S. suspicion of the MEK doesn’t end there. Law enforcement officials have told NBC News that in 1994, the MEK made a pact with terrorist Ramzi Yousef a year after he masterminded the first attack on the World Trade Center in New York City.  According to the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, Yousef built an 11-pound bomb that MEK agents placed inside one of Shia Islam’s greatest shrines in Mashad, Iran, on June 20, 1994 At least 26 people, mostly women and children, were killed and 200 wounded in the attack.

That connection between Yousef, nephew of 9-11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammad, and the MEK was first reported in a book, “The New Jackals,” by Simon Reeve. NBC News confirmed that Yousef told U.S. law enforcement that he had worked with the MEK on the bombing.

In recent years, the MEK has said it has renounced violence, but Iranian officials say that is not true, that killings of Iranians continue.  Still, through some deft lobbying, the group has been able to get the United Kingdom and the European Union to remove it from their lists of terrorist groups. 

The alleged involvement of the MEK in the assassinations of Iranian nuclear scientists provides the U.S. with a cloak of deniability regarding the clandestine killings. Because the U.S. has designated the MEK as a terrorist organization, neither military nor intelligence units of the U.S. government, can work with them.  “We cannot deal with them, “ said one senior U.S. official. “We would not deal with them because of the designation.”

Iranian officials initially accused the Israelis and MEK of being behind the attacks, but they have since added the CIA to the list. Three days after the Jan. 11, 2012, bombing in Tehran that killed Roshan, the state news agency IRNA reported that Iran’s Foreign Ministry had sent a diplomatic letter to the U.S. claiming to have “evidence and reliable information” that the CIA provided “guidance, support and planning” to assassins directly involved in the attack.  

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton  immediately denied any connection to the killings. “I want to categorically deny any United States involvement in any kind of act of violence inside Iran,” Clinton told reporters on the day of the attack.

But at least two GOP presidential candidates have no problem with the targeting of nuclear scientists.  In a November debate, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich endorsed “taking out their scientists,” and former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum called it, ”a wonderful thing.”

The MEK’s opposition to the Iranian government also has recently earned it both plaudits and support from an odd mix of political bedfellows.

A group of former Cabinet-level officials have joined together to support the MEK’s removal from the official U.S. Foreign Terrorist Organization list, even taking out a full-page ad last year in the New York Times calling for the removal of the MEK from the U.S. terrorist list.  Former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean, former U.S. Attorney General Michael Mukasey, former U.N. Ambassador John Bolton; former Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge, former FBI Director Louis Freeh and former Rep. Patrick Kennedy were among those whose signatures were on the ad.

“There’s an extraordinary group of bipartisan or even apolitical leaders, military leaders, diplomats, the United States … the United Kingdom, the European Union, even a U.S. District Court in Washington, said that this group that was put on the foreign terrorist organization watch list in 1997 doesn’t deserve to be there,” Ridge said in November on “The Andrea Mitchell Show” on MSNBC TV.

U.S. politicians also have been pushing the U.S. government to protect the 3,400 MEK members and their families at Camp Ashraf in Iraq, about 35 miles north of Baghdad.  With the departure of U.S. troops, the MEK feared that Iraqi forces, with encouragement from Iran, would attack the camp, leading to a bloodbath. At the last minute, however, agreement was brokered with the United Nations that would permit the MEK members’ departure for resettlement in unspecified democratic countries.  As of this week, there’s been little movement on the planned resettlement.

Jassim Mohammed / AP file

Iranian fighters with the National Liberation Army, the military wing of the MEK, clean armored personnel carriers in 1997 after a field exercise near Camp Ashraf in Iraq.

The Iranians see what’s happening as terrorism and hypocrisy by the United States.  They have forwarded documents and other evidence to the United Nations – and directly to the United States, they say. 

“I think this is very cynical plan.  This is unacceptable,” said Larijani. “This is a bad trend in the world.  Unprecedented.  We should kill scientists … to block a scientific program?  I mean this is disaster!”

Daniel Byman, a professor in the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University and also a senior fellow with the Saban Center for Middle East Policy at the Brookings Institution, said that if the accounts of the Israeli-MEK assassinations are accurate, the operation borders on terrorism.

“In theory, states cannot be terrorist, but if they hire locals to do assassinations, that would be state sponsorship,” said Byman, author of the recent book, “A High Price: The Triumphs and Failures of Israeli Counterterrorism.” “You could argue that they took action not to terrorize the public, the purpose of terrorism, but only the nuclear community.  An argument could also be made that degrading the program means that you don’t have to take military action and thus, this is a lower level of violence and that really these are military targets, where normally terrorist targets are civilians.”

But ultimately, Byman said, there is a “spectrum of responsibility” and that Israel is ultimately responsible.

Ronen Bergman, while not speaking on behalf of the Israeli government, suggests that there is a justification, citing an oft-repeated but disputed quote in which Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s said that Israel should be wiped off the face of the earth.

“Meir Degan, the chief of Mossad, when he was in office, hung a photograph behind him, behind the chair of the chief of Mossad,” notes the Israeli commentator.  “And in that photograph you see -- an ultra-orthodox Jew -- long beard, standing on his knees with his-- hands up in the air, and two Gestapo soldiers standing -- beside him with guns pointed at him.  One of -- one of them is smiling.

“And Degan used to say to his people and the people coming to visit him from CIA, NSA, et cetera, ‘Look at this guy in the picture. This is my grandfather just seconds before he was killed by the SS,’” Bergman said. “’… We are here to prevent this from happening again.’"

Richard Engel is NBC News' chief foreign correspondent; Robert Windrem is a senior investigative producer.

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Tuesday, 7 February 2012

TRY IT, YOU BANKERS: Big lenders still expected to raise your rates

Graphic: Dan Fischer and Matt Pike Source: News Limited

Keeping rates on hold, the RBA caught most economists by surprise and disappointed homeowners.

Financial experts warn the big four banks - ANZ, Commonwealth Bank, NAB and Westpac - may lift their rates this week to protect their profits / File

  • Experts warn banks may lift their rates to protect profits
  • RBA has left official interest rates at 4.25 per cent
  • Treasurer Wayne Swan has warned banks not to do it

AUSTRALIANS face more home loan pain, with the big banks considering a rate rise this week.

Despite demand for a rate cut, the Reserve Bank yesterday left official interest rates at 4.25 per cent after consecutive cuts late last year.

Financial experts warn the big four banks - ANZ, Commonwealth Bank, NAB and Westpac - may lift their rates this week to protect their profits rather than wait for the RBA's March meeting.

South Yarra mum of two and businesswoman Nicole Michaels last night led a chorus of consumer and industry groups, unions and politicians demanding the banks resist. "If they raise rates we may be forced to sell our house," she said.

Treasurer Wayne Swan also warned the banks not to do it.

The rival banks are expected to stay silent until after ANZ's pricing committee meets on Friday to decide on the bank's lending rates for the next month.

Late last year, ANZ said it would make decisions independently of the central bank on the second Friday of every month.

Aussie Home Loans founder John Symond said the case for rates to rise could be justified by a massive jump in banks' cost of borrowing in the past 3-6 months.

"It will be up to the ANZ ... if they 'reprice' on Friday then that will open the door for the other banks - but if the ANZ doesn't then the other banks won't be game enough," he said.

Choice urged customers to ditch the big four in favour of other lenders if they increase lending rates because there were better deals at smaller lenders. Mr Swan said: "Any bank contemplating this move runs the risk of backlash from their customers. The reforms we've put in place make it easier for families to ditch their bank if it doesn't do the right thing by them."

Despite a slowing construction sector and struggling retail sector after the worst annual retail sales in almost 30 years, RBA governor Glenn Stevens said the interest rate setting was "appropriate" because growth was close to trend, lending rates were close to their medium-term average and inflation was close to its target level.

But the board said it would monitor the data closely in coming months "and adjust the cash rate as necessary to foster sustainable growth and low inflation".

Rate City chief executive Damian Smith said the market was very competitive and banks were willing to match rates no matter what their advertised rate.

But he warned against fixed rate loans as they offered less flexibility.

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Monday, 6 February 2012

Zelizer: Why Romney is winning

Mitt Romney scored his second straight victory, with a win Saturday in the Nevade caucus.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • Julian Zelizer: Mitt Romney's campaign has been underestimated
  • He says Romney has been successful at fundraising and largely avoiding costly mistakes
  • Romney was able to fend off attacks on his Bain Capital background, he says
  • Zelizer: Fight is likely to get much harder if he wins nomination and faces Obama

Editor's note: Julian Zelizer is a professor of history and public affairs at Princeton University. He is the author of "Jimmy Carter" (Times Books) and author of the forthcoming book "Governing America" (Princeton University Press).

Princeton, New Jersey (CNN) -- With his victories in Florida and Nevada, Mitt Romney has re-emerged at the front of the GOP pack.

Given the primary and caucus schedule for the rest of February, it will be extremely difficult for Newt Gingrich to regain the momentum that he had after South Carolina. Romney finds himself in a strong position to win the nomination.

Although there have been countless stories in the past few months about the latest "Anyone But Romney" candidate who was going to steal the crown from him, the former Massachusetts governor is still standing.

Julian Zelizer

The reasons for Romney's success have been widely discussed. Most of the explanations are less about him than about his opponents. In rather consistent fashion, commentators have argued that Romney remains the most "electable" candidate and, in the end, this year Republicans voters are going to make their decision based on who has the best chance of defeating President Barack Obama.

But there is more to Romney's success than the perception about his electability or his good looks. A variety of other factors have made Romney into a much stronger candidate than in 2008 and produced a campaign that keeps proving to be more formidable than expected.

The first factor is money. One thing that Romney has been very good at is raising campaign contributions. His opponents have been unable to match his prowess on the fundraising circuit. His campaign amassed $24 million in the final quarter of 2011. Gingrich raised nearly $10 million in that same period. The result is that Romney has accumulated a war chest that far outpaces his opponents.

Money matters in campaign politics, and Romney demonstrated how it could be put to good use in Florida. According to ABC News, Romney spent $7 million in Florida and a supportive super PAC spent $8.2 million, compared with $1 million by Gingrich and $2.2 million by the super PAC that has backed the former speaker.

Through a blistering advertising campaign, Romney and his supporters brought up all of Gingrich's baggage and effectively framed him as an unpredictable politician with a record of corruption and hypocrisy.

The second factor is Romney's steadiness. Even with all the ups and downs and twists and turns of the campaign, Romney has remained extremely disciplined. He has not panicked during the various media frenzies that he has confronted.

As numerous commentators have pointed out, this is in part as result of the experience of his father, Michigan Gov. George Romney. Though considered to be one of the strongest Republican contenders for the 1968 Republican nomination, his candidacy crashed and burned when he made a comment about the "brainwashing" he thought he had received from generals and the diplomatic corps during a trip to Vietnam (Romney was trying to explain why he now opposed the war). The comment turned him from the candidate who was likely to win in 1968 to the candidate who would never have a chance.

Mitt Romney has generally remained on message. He has continued to stick to his themes of having experience in the private sector and as governor, and he has continually boasted that his financial and managerial resume makes him a candidate who can win and do well as the nation's leader.

He has stayed away from most of the social issues and remained generally calm during the most heated moments of the debates. He has certainly suffered through many verbal slip-ups, such as his recent statement about not caring about the very poor.

In response to questions about his economic proposals, Romney told Soledad O'Brien, "I'm not concerned about the very poor. We have a safety net there. If it needs repair, I'll fix it. I'm not concerned about the very rich. They're doing just fine. I'm concerned about the very heart of America, the 90 to 95 percent of Americans right now who are struggling."

The comment caused a firestorm, but he has shown the ability to remain calm in the aftermath and stay focused until the media turns its gaze elsewhere. Although Romney has not enjoyed the huge upticks that other candidates like Gingrich and Rick Santorum enjoyed, neither has he really suffered from their downturns -- other than in South Carolina.

The final factor has to do with how Romney handled the most devastating attack he confronted. Gingrich went after Romney's background in Bain Capital by depicting him as a "vulture capitalist" who left unemployed bodies wherever he went in pursuit of profit.

At a critical moment, Romney responded by turning the attack in his favor. He portrayed himself as the defender of market capitalism. In doing so, he turned attacks on his background into attacks on the free market.

"We've understood for a long time that the Obama people would come after free enterprise," he said, "Little surprised to see Newt Gingrich as the first witness for the prosecution..." In conservative circles, this response dampened some of Gingrich's fire.

All of these factors have made Romney into a stronger candidate than he is often portrayed to be. But there is a big difference between winning the nomination and winning the general election. In a contest against President Barack Obama, the attacks on his record with Bain will play much better in Democratic circles as well as among independent voters than they have with the GOP.

If the economy continues to improve, it could easily dampen Republican criticism on the administration's policies and its claims to be the party that has the best grasp of how to stimulate economic growth.

For all his problems, Obama is also building a huge war chest of campaign contributions and will be able to continue his advertising assault on Romney. The president raised $68 million in the final months of 2011. Finally, the steadiness that Romney has displayed will certainly be severely tested in the fall as the national campaign heats up -- and there will be many more opportunities for slip-ups, mistakes and tense moments in front of the cameras.

But for now, Romney has remained the Teflon candidate of the 2012 race as he moves closer to the Republican nomination.

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The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Julian Zelizer.

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Husband, sons of missing woman killed in blaze

Peter Haley / The News Tribune via AP

A Pierce County Sheriff's deputy and Graham Firefighters work around the smoldering remains of a house near Fredrickson, Wash., Feb. 5, where, according to a sheriff's spokesman, three bodies were were found. The bodies are believed to be Josh Powell and his two sons.

 

By msnbc.com staff and news services

Updated at 12:40 a.m. ET:

 GRAHAM, Wash. -- Authorities say the husband of a missing Utah woman intentionally set his home on fire Sunday, killing him and his two young sons shortly after the boys were brought to the home by a social worker for a supervised visit.

Neighbors had reported hearing an explosion, but Pierce County sheriff's spokesman Ed Troyer said Josh Powell's home was destroyed by a fast-moving fire that blew out several windows and was aided by some sort of accelerant.

Powell let the boys in the house, then blocked the social worker from entering, said Graham Fire and Rescue Chief Gary Franz.

The social worker called her supervisors to report that she could smell gas, and the home erupted in flames.


'I'm sorry, goodbye.'
Troyer said emails that Powell sent authorities seemed to confirm that Powell planned the deadly fire. Troyer didn't elaborate on the contents of the emails, but said they make police believe "this is intentional, this is planned."

A lawyer for Powell says he received a three-word email from his client just minutes before Powell and his two boys died in a house blaze. It said, "I'm sorry, goodbye."

Attorney Jeffrey Bassett told the Associated Press the email arrived at 12:05 p.m. Sunday, but he didn't see it until two hours later, when others informed him of the fire.

Sept. 29, 2011: Josh Powell could lose custody of his two sons.

Authorities said they found three bodies in the home late Sunday afternoon as fire crews and police continued to search the rubble.

"Everything we know right now, this has become a crime scene," Franz said.

Powell was under investigation in the disappearance of his 28-year-old wife, Susan Powell, from their home in West Valley City, Utah, in December 2009. He claimed he had taken the boys on a midnight excursion in freezing temperatures when she vanished.

Mother's parents had custody
The case took a bizarre turn last year after Powell's father, Steven, was arrested for investigation of voyeurism and possessing child pornography. Josh Powell was living at his father's home at the time, and a judge gave Susan Powell's parents custody of the boys, aged 5 and 7.

Ted S. Warren / AP file

Josh Powell leaves a courtroom on Sept. 28 in Tacoma, Wash., after a judge awarded temporary custody of Powell's two sons to Susan Powell's parents.

View images of the fire at NBC affiliate King5.com

Last week, a judge ruled that the children of missing Utah mother Susan Powell must remain in the custody of her parents, and that they would remain with the grandparents unless their father agreed to undergo psycho-sexual evaluation.

Troyer said the elder Powell was put on suicide watch in custody after he was told of the deadly blast. "Steve Powell didn't seem very upset by the news, but was angry towards authorities who notified him," Troyer said.

Sherry Hill, a spokeswoman for the state Department of Social and Health Services, said the social worker who was with the children was not a Child Protective Services employee but a contract worker with a private agency that supervises visits for the state.

"The visit supervisor for this particular agency had taken the children to the home. When she does that, she sits through the visit and might take notes on her observations," Hill said. "She pulled up in the car, and the kids ran out ahead of her. He closed the door and locked it. She wasn't able to get in, and that's when she smelled gas."

'He denied it'
"It's the most horrifying thing you can imagine happening," said lawyer Steve Downing, who represented Susan Powell's parents, Chuck and Judy Cox, in the custody fight. "The Coxes are absolutely devastated. They were always very fearful of him doing something like this, and he did it."

Bassett said he represented Powell free of charge because "every parent deserves the right to an attorney." Powell called or emailed him at least once a day, and often more than that, and in their conversations "he never once admitted doing anything regarding Susan. In fact, he denied it."

Impromptu vigil
Dozens of people gathered at an elementary school in nearby Puyallup, Sunday night, where the older brother attended class, KING 5 reported. Mourners placed candles, stuffed animals, balloons and messages at the front of the school.

Sgt. Mike Powell of the West Valley City Police Department in Utah, which is handling the investigation into Susan Powell's disappearance, said it was too soon to say how Josh Powell's death may impact their probe.

"Quite frankly, this has obviously quickly unfolded up in Washington and we're obviously just working through the details ourselves here," Powell said Sunday.

"We are in contact with authorities," Powell added. "It's obviously an ongoing situation in Washington at this point."

Kirk Graves, 39, of West Jordan, Utah, Josh Powell's brother-in-law, said he and his wife, Jennifer, were stunned by the news. (Jennifer Powell Graves is Josh Powell's sister.)

"It's a shock. A total complete shock," he said. "We never contemplated the idea he would do something like this. You just don't expect it from a father."

Kirk Graves said he and his wife think Josh Powell deliberately set off the fire to kill him and his sons.

"His world was falling apart around him and he was going to lose his boys and get arrested for Susan's disappearance," he said. "He's a narcissist and he has no love for anyone but himself.

The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

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Sunday, 5 February 2012

Support me or risk your own security - Gina

Gina Rinehart's lawyers have written to her children threatening to withdraw their 'ransom insurance'.

Gina Rinehart and daughter Ginia, who is the only one of her four children siding with their mother. Picture: Richard Polden.  Source: PerthNow

  • Rinehart tells kids "support me or risk your security"
  • Asks three of her four children to keep family battle secret
  • Mining queen threatens pulling ransom insurance

GINA Rinehart has given her three children an ultimatum - either keep the family's court battle a secret or risk their personal security.

Mrs Rinehart has reportedly sent a letter to John Hancock, Bianca Rinehart and Hope Rinehart Welker, telling them they have until 10am AEDT to support her bid for a suppression order that will stop details of the case being reported.

If the children do not agree, then Mrs Rinehart has threatened to stop paying ransom insurance for her children, meaning they will have to deal with any security threats to themselves or their family on their own, PerthNow reported.

“Given your clients’ continued opposition to.. the suppression of information from the media in relation to the proceedings.. we can only presume that your clients’ previously stated concerns for the personal safety of their families and themselves have now completely and entirely disappeared,” the letter reportedly said.

“Under these circumstances, it seems that your clients would place no value in the continuation of ‘ransom insurance’ that is currently provided to them and/or their young children."

Last week, the NSW Supreme Court refused to grant Mrs Rinehart a new suppression order on the legal stoush.

It resulted in the release of several emails between mother and children, revealing some details of the family battle.

The suppression order case is back in the NSW Supreme Court today.

 

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Obama: Diplomacy 'preferred solution' with Iran

updated 1 hour 5 minutes ago 2012-02-05T22:52:49

Israel is right to be concerned about Iran's push to join the league of nations that possess nuclear weapons, but diplomacy - not military intervention - remains the "preferred solution" to averting a potential arms race in the Middle East, President Barack Obama said Sunday.

During a live interview with TODAY's Matt Lauer, the president left the military option open if there's evidence that economic sanctions and diplomatic efforts fail to convince the Iranian regime to give up its nuclear ambitions and threats to close the Strait of Hormuz, the strategic gateway to the oil-rich Persian Gulf.

"I don't think Israel has made a decision. I think they, like us, think Iran has to stand down their nuclear weapons program," said Obama, speaking from the Blue Room of the White House. "Until they do, I think Israel is going to be very concerned, and we are as well."

Although Defense Secretary Leon Panetta has said publicly that Israel could be poised to make a preventive strike against Iran as early as late spring or early summer, Obama said the U.S. has close ties to Israel and will make sure that all diplomatic efforts are exhausted.

"We are going to make sure we work in lock step and work to resolve this, hopefully diplomatically," said Obama, who spoke about Iran, the economy and the Super Bowl during the five-minute interview.

"We're not taking any options off the table," Obama said. "Our preferred solution is diplomatic, we're going to keep on pushing on that front ... [but] I've been very clear that we're going to do everything we can to prevent Iran from getting a nuclear weapon and creating an arms race, a nuclear arms race, in a volatile region."

Obama said the international pressure on Iran through sanctions is working and Iran needs to say, "We will pursue peaceful nuclear power, we will not pursue a nuclear weapon ."

Obama: I deserve another term
During the interview, which will be broadcast in its entirety on TODAY Monday, Obama also talked about his re-election bid. He was reminded of a comment he made to Lauer three years ago, during an interview before the 2009 Super Bowl about the economic crisis, in which he said, "If I don't have this done in three years, then it's going to be a one-term proposition."

Lauer noted a new report showing U.S. unemployment has fallen below 9 percent, but many Americas still don't feel the poor economy has turned around, and asked Obama if he's made his case for re-election.

"I deserve a second term, but we're not done," Obama replied. "We've got to boost up American manufacturing, so that all our manufacturing is building again and selling overseas. We've got to make sure that we're pushing American energy ... and we've got to make sure the skills of American workers are the best in the world.

"We've made progress, and the thing right now is to just make sure we don't starting turning in a new direction that could throw that progress off."

But the president was less forceful in making a prediction on the 2012 Super Bowl. While he confidently picked Pittsburgh to beat Arizona before the 2009 Super Bowl, Obama refused to use a crystal ball on tonight's game, despite much goading from Lauer.

"You're not going to get to me," a laughing Obama told Lauer. "I say to look for a great game.
"I think this is going to be tough. I can't call it."

    1. Josh Powell & Two Sons Believed Dead in House Fire: Report
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    3. Katy Perry Dedicates a Song to Tim Tebow at Pre-Super Bowl Concert
    4. Super Bowl 2012: Tom Brady vs. Eli Manning - Who Do You Want to Win?
    5. Adriana Lima Reveals Her Valentine's Day Wish

Lauer asked Obama whether his female-centric household members - wife Michelle, daughters Malia and Sasha - are fans of Super Bowl quarterback Tom Brady, who leads the glamorous life as a model with wife Gisele Bundchen when he's not winning football games.

"I think they know he's a goodlooking guy, there's no doubt about it," Obama said. But he added Malia and Sasha don't decorate their White House bedrooms with his posters.

"The girls are 13 and 10; they're not quite at the age yet they start putting up the pictures of guys yet. When that happens, I may call some executive privilege and say that's not appropriate."

(Tune in to TODAY at 7 a.m. ET on Monday to see more of Matt's interview with President Obama.)

© 2012 MSNBC Interactive.  Reprints

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Gingrich explains his way forward

Gingrich vows to continue to Tampa

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • NEW: Gingrich says the goal is to make it to the Super Tuesday primaries
  • Newt Gingrich tells reporters he will not withdraw from GOP race
  • Gingrich says he will highlight differences between him and Mitt Romney
  • Super Tuesday primaries on March 6 include Gingrich's native Georgia

Las Vegas (CNN) -- On his heels after two straight primary defeats to rival Mitt Romney, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich insists he is in the Republican presidential race until the August nominating convention.

However, Gingrich is scaling back some expectations, outlining a survival strategy while continuing to boldly predict he will remain a viable force in the four-man race.

"Our goal is to get to Super Tuesday, which is much more favorable territory," Gingrich said Sunday on NBC's "Meet the Press," referring to March 6 contests in his native Georgia and nine other states.

The night before, Gingrich chose to surround himself with reporters instead of supporters after finishing a distant second to Romney in the Nevada caucuses.

Gingrich convened an unusual news as caucus results came in to dispel rumors that he was dropping out of the race and to lay out his strategy for winning the nomination.

He accused Romney's campaign of spreading false rumors.

"What happens is every primary day or caucus day, the Romney headquarters in Boston sends out the rumor that they believe I will withdraw, which of course is their greatest fantasy," Gingrich told reporters, "I'm not going to withdraw. I'm actually pretty happy with where we are, and I think the contrast between Governor Romney and me is going to get wider and wider and clearer and clearer over the next few weeks."

Coming out of a decisive loss in Florida last Tuesday, Gingrich aides had said their candidate would write off Nevada and instead look forward to states where he would be more competitive. Then, he showed up in Nevada.

For the most part, Gingrich kept a relatively light public schedule since arriving in Las Vegas early Wednesday and spent time huddled with senior campaign aides figuring out a realistic path forward.

"We frankly spent the last four days laying out a campaign for the next few months in which, although we will be outspent, we think we can communicate through the clutter and we think we'll be able to draw decisively for the American people how big the difference is" between himself and Romney, Gingrich told reporters on Saturday.

On Sunday, he continued to hammer what he called Romney's moderate record as Massachusetts governor while calling himself the most viable conservative alternative to face President Barack Obama in November.

Discomfort among GOP consevatives with the more-moderate Romney has kept Gingrich in the race against the better-funded and organized former Massachusetts governor.

In the campaign so far, conservatives have given Michele Bachmann, Rick Perry and Herman Cain a test drive before Gingrich's turn came at the end of last year.

Gingrich said Sunday that he plans to continue to draw distinctions between himself and Romney, and that will allow him to be competitive. Romney gave Gingrich an opportunity to make that distinction when he said last week there was a safety net to take care of the poorest Americans.

Gingrich pounced on that, saying that believing in a safety net went against conservative principles, but his message didn't seem to get much traction in Nevada.

"The safety net in many ways has become a spider web. It traps them at the bottom," Gingrich said Sunday. "Real conservatives want it to be a trampoline" that provides people an opportunity to get job, buy a house and improve their lives, he added.

At his news conference Saturday, Gingrich also played the part of the underdog, pitting himself against the Republican establishment that he said fears a prolonged campaign in which the eventual nominee is damaged by attacks from within.

The longer the campaign goes, he said, the more opportunities it affords him to demonstrate the differences between him and Romney.

The calendar in February doesn't appear to favor Gingrich, but he could get a bounce on Super Tuesday when he'll be running again in the South. His lone primary victory out of five contests so far came in South Carolina.

On March 6, there will be contests in Georgia, which he represented in Congress, as well as neighboring Tennessee and conservative Oklahoma. Gingrich predicted he will be close to Romney in convention delegates won after the Texas primary in April.

Gingrich's campaign has gone from middle to top to bottom to top to middle since he got into the race last year. Even the campaign's launch was a bit confusing when an adviser announced last March that he was getting into the race only to have a spokesman contradict the adviser.

Later, Gingrich contradicted his spokesman in a radio interview later to say that he was getting into the race.

His campaign was written off when most of his top level staffers left after Gingrich went on a Mediterranean cruise last summer when they thought he should be campaigning.

But Gingrich broke through at the end of last year, partly on some strong debate performances and partly because conservatives were not comfortable with the more moderate Romney.

The comeback seemed nearly complete when Gingrich claimed a stunning victory in South Carolina, turning a double-digit poll deficit into a double-digit primary win over the course of two weeks.

But in the days leading up to the primary, Romney realized that he had a fight on his hands and unleashed relentless attacks on the former House speaker on the stump and in ads from his campaign and outside groups that supported him.

Those attacks continued into Tuesday's Florida primary, where Romney won a decisive victory.

Gingrich discounted Florida, in which he says he was outspent in advertising 5-1, most of it attacks based on falsehoods, by his account.

"I am not going to defend the outcome in a state where I was outspent 5-1," he told reporters Saturday.

His strategy was clear. By talking to reporters, he said, his message will spread through the media beyond primary and caucus states.

"I have run a campaign which twice now has made me the frontrunner, and I suspect will be again by the Texas primary or so," Gingrich said. "That really is a national campaign."

CNN's Tom Cohen contributed to this report.

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Europe's big freeze claims more victims, snow hits travel

Finbarr O'reilly / Reuters

Joggers run in Greenwich Park after an overnight snowfall in London February 5, 2012.

By msnbc.com staff and news services

Bitterly cold weather sweeping across Europe claimed more victims on Sunday and brought widespread disruption to transport services, with warnings that the chilling temperatures would remain into next week.

Hundreds have lost their lives in eastern Europe as freezing weather sweeps across the continent westwards, while airports in Britain and France expected disruptions from new snow.


Below's a look by country:

Great Britain
In England, snowfall late on Saturday left roads were left impassable, and sections of motorways were brought to a standstill, forcing some divers to abandon their vehicles.

Some of London's famous landmarks were coated in snow, while fountains in Trafalgar Square were frozen solid.

Steven Keates, a weather forecaster at Britain's Met Office, said the severe wintry conditions were expected to last, and spread to other areas.

"It will still be very cold, maybe not quite the exceptional temperatures we've seen this last week, but still very cold," he told Reuters, saying the current front that brought snow and ice to Britain overnight was now heading to Belgium and Germany.

The harsh weather conditions that are being blamed for scores of deaths are expected to continue into next week. NBC's Kier Simmons reports.

"(It will be) perhaps turning increasingly unsettled across southern and eastern Europe, so that will probably bring a risk of snow for Italy across to Greece and up round the Balkan countries."

London's Heathrow, Europe's busiest airport, said it would run just 70 percent of normal services on Sunday as more than 6 inches of snow fell in parts of England overnight and temperatures dropped well below freezing.

London's Gatwick Airport said it would be running all scheduled flights. However, many of Britain's other airports were forced to shut runways overnight and warned there could be further disruption on Sunday.

France
The first winter snow in Paris fell overnight, coating the Eiffel Tower, and more snow was forecast throughout Sunday. The French capital's main airports were also expecting problems and advised passengers to check with the airlines before travelling.

Meanwhile the death toll rose to four, after a 12-year old boy died of hypothermia on Saturday after falling into a frozen pond in eastern France and a homeless person was found dead in the northeast.

Italy
Pope Benedict XVI donned an overcoat to bless the few pilgrims who braved Rome's unusually cold weather to visit St. Peter's Square.

"The snow is beautiful, but let's hope spring comes soon," the pope told the pilgrims, looking out over remnants of Rome's biggest snowstorm since 1986.

Rome's mayor was criticized for the lack of snow plows and salters. But the city counters that it can't spend millions of dollars on equipment that might not be used in decades.

Bosnia
Helicopters on Sunday evacuated the sick and delivered food to thousands of people left stranded by Bosnia's heaviest snowfall on record.

Some 100 villages have been cut off and the capital Sarajevo is struggling with more than three feet of snow.

Serbia
Some 70,000 people remain cut off by the snow and freeze.

Croatia
In the coastal town of Split, where authorities declared emergency measures, dozens of people sought medical help for injuries sustained on ice and snow. Snow is extremely rare in Split, which is on the Adriatic coast.

Ukraine
Nine more deaths from cold were registered in Ukraine overnight, emergencies services said on Sunday, taking the death toll to 131 from a nine-day cold spell which has brought freezing temperatures to the ex-Soviet republic.

A statement from the Emergencies Ministry said 1,800 people were receiving hospital treatment for cold-related ailments.

The cold spell -- the most severe for Ukraine in six years with night temperatures down as low as minus 27 Fahrenheit in parts -- has tested the country's social network to its limits.

PHOTOBLOG: More images from Europe's deep freeze

Many of the dead were homeless people with bodies being found in the streets under snow, in rivers and in doorways. Metro stations in the capital Kiev have become sanctuaries overnight for the homeless to find warmth.

More than 3,000 heated tents have been set up around the country to provide makeshift accommodation and dispense food and drinks to homeless people.

Poland
Eight more people had frozen to death over the past 24 hours, bringing the death toll there to 53 since the cold snap began, PAP news agency reported National Police Headquarters as saying.

Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk has now asked local authorities to waive the ban on admitting inebriated individuals to homeless shelters.

Reuters, The Associated Press and msnbc.com's Alastair Jamieson contributed to this report.

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Boeing checks 787s for carbon fiber delamination

By Phil LeBeau, CNBC correspondent

 Boeing is inspecting its newest plane, the 787 Dreamliner for possible repairs to the carbon fiber composite structure of the plane.

The issue involves a problem known as delamination. In laymen terms structural stiffeners, or shims, were not attached to the composite skin properly. 

Over time, this can cause delamination, or damage the carbon fiber composite skin.

Boeing is not releasing many details about the problem or inspections.  In a statement, Boeing said it "..has found that incorrect shimming was performed on support structure on the aft fuselage of some 787s."

The company added, "There is no short-term safety concern. Repairs, should they be needed, will be implemented in the most efficient manner possible."

The problem was discovered within the last couple of weeks.  Boeing will not say how many Dreamliners have been identified as having a problem with their shimming.

Boeing has delivered five Dreamliners since September of last year, when All Nippon Airways took the inaugural delivery. The 60th Dreamliner is currently on the assembly line at Boeing's plant in Everett, Washington.

While the latest issue is not considered an immediate safety issue for the Dreamliner, it raises more questions about the manufacturing process of the 787. The program has been plagued with problems and costly delays since Boeing launched it in 2004.

Wall Street is watching the 787 program closely as Boeing has set an aggressive schedule for ramping up deliveries of the Dreamliner over the next two years. Boeing currently has a backlog of more than 800 orders for the Dreamliner.

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Saturday, 4 February 2012

Thousands brave icy chill to protest in Moscow

MOSCOW — Tens of thousands of Russians defied bitter cold in Moscow on Saturday to demand fair elections in a march against Vladimir Putin's 12-year rule, and supporters of the prime minister staged a rival rally drawing comparable numbers.

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Opposition protesters also organized smaller protests in other cities across the vast country, trying to maintain pressure on Putin one month before a March 4 presidential election he is expected to win.

Their breath turning to white vapor clouds in the frigid Moscow air, tens of thousands of protesters marched within sight of the red-brick Kremlin walls and towers, chanting "Russia without Putin!" and "Give us back the elections!"

Russia Today reported that organizers were expecting about 50,000 people to take part in the event, which it summed up with the headline "Frozen fury."

It said there were due to be rallies at Bolotnaya Square and Pushkinskaya Square.

Putin was president from 2000 until 2008, when he ushered Dmitry Medevedev into the Kremlin because of a constitutional ban on three successive terms as head of state. Putin became prime minister but remained the dominant leader.

On Saturday, Putin was 900 miles from Moscow, promising angry residents of the Ural Mountains town of Roza the state would move 3,800 people from homes threatened by shifting ground on the edge of the biggest open-pit coal mine in Eurasia.

"You see what we are doing, we are dealing with concrete problems of the people who live here," Putin said when asked about the demonstrations.

Anti-Putin protesters cope with bitter cold and big questions

Temperatures far below freezing tested the power and perseverance of a street protest movement fuelled by suspicions of fraud in a December parliamentary election and dismay among some Russians over Putin's plan to rule at least six more years.

In the capital, demonstrators bundled up against the cold marched down a broad central street, many wearing white ribbons that have become symbols of protests. A digital clock flashed the midday temperature: minus 17 C (1 F).

"Not one vote for Putin!" Vladimir Ryzhkov, an opposition leader, said to a roar of approval from the crowd at the rally that followed the march. Protesters packed a square across the river from the Kremlin, stamping and clapping to keep warm.

Opposition leaders are trying to maintain momentum after tens of thousands turned out on December 10 and December 24 for the biggest opposition protests since Putin was first elected president in 2000.

Polls indicate Putin is all but certain to win the presidency despite a decline from previous popularity levels, but opponents hope persistent protests will undermine his authority in a new six-year term and push him into concessions.

"We have already reached a point of no return. People have stopped being afraid and see how strong they are together," said Ivan Kositsky, 49. He said Putin "wants stability, but you can only find stability in the graveyard."

Kositsky wore an orange ribbon in a reference to the 2004 Orange Revolution in Ukraine, where peaceful protests following allegations of widespread election fraud helped usher an opposition candidate to the presidency.

Opposition leaders said up to 120,000 people joined their protest in Moscow, which appeared as large as the December rallies -- suggesting their fears a cold snap might keep people away were unfounded.

Many protesters had banners making light of the bone-chilling weather and calling for Putin to stand down:

"Down with the cold, down with Putin," one banner said. Others declared: "They froze our democracy" and "We are frozen in solidarity."

Europe tries to shield homeless in deep freeze

For Putin
Police said 138,000 people attended the pro-Putin rally a few km (miles) away in Moscow, but reporters estimated the crowd was smaller than that, and attendance at demonstrations in support of the former KGB spy has previously been swelled by the authorities ferrying in sympathizers by bus.

Teachers have said they came under pressure from trade unions to attend the pro-Putin rally.

"Trade union representatives called us together and said at least five to 10 people from each school had to go (to the Putin rally)," said Sergei Bebchuk, a 54-year-old headteacher who ignored the request and attended the opposition protest.

"I have something I believe in. We could not go there," he said, his daughter at his side with white ribbons in her hair.

At the pro-Putin rally, demonstrators carried posters saying "For Putin" with a check mark in a box next to his face. Another read "Putin led Russia out of civil war" and one said, "My children will live in Russia - I need Putin."

In keeping with Putin's warnings against revolutionary change and the anti-Western rhetoric he has employed in his campaign, the rally was billed as "anti-orange" - another reference to Ukraine, where Moscow has said Western-funded activists helped bring a pro-Western leader to power.

"My aim is to support the movement against the 'orange ones' - those America sends us to topple those in power and rock society," Kirill Domchenko, 25, a Moscow university student.

Putin in December accused the United States of encouraging opposition protests and said Western states are spending billions to influence Russian elections. He praised the 'anti-orange' demonstrators in remarks late on Friday, saying "I am grateful to them, I share their views," Interfax reported.

Maintaining momentum
The main opposition protests were suspended over the long New Year holiday, when Russia comes to a halt. Opposition activists had been concerned that the protests might lose momentum after Putin, 59, ignored all their main demands.

The protesters want a rerun of the parliamentary election, the release of prisoners jailed for political reasons, reform of the political system, dismissal of the central election commission chief and registration of more political parties.

The Kremlin has promised to let more parties contest elections but has rejected its main demands. Ryzhkov told the crowd protests must continue until Putin gives in, and another protest is planned for one week before the election.

Crowds of a few hundred turned out to protest against Putin in other cities across Russia, although the number protesting is still only a small part of the more than 140 million population.

On a central street in the Pacific port city of Vladivostok, demonstrators carried banners reading "Putin - out!" and "The crook is making for the throne again ... send him to a prison bunk."

The protesters are angered by allegations of fraud in a December 4 parliamentary election that was won by Putin's ruling United Russia party, albeit with a reduced majority in the lower house.

The plan by Putin and Medvedev to swap jobs after the presidential election is viewed by opposition supporters as openly flouting democracy.

"We are not sheep or cattle. We deserve respect," said Marat Yafyasov, 54, a lawyer who travelled from Yaroslavl, 250 km (155 miles) northeast of Moscow, to join the protest.

"We are out in the cold because we can't let this moment go, we have to keep the protest going."

Reuters and msnbc.com staff contributed to this report.

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