China’s Li Na Takes French Open Tennis Title

Posted June 4th, 2011 at 4:20 pm (UTC-5)
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At the French Open tennis tournament in Paris on Saturday, Li Na became the first Chinese player — and the first player from any Asian country — to win a Grand Slam singles title.

Li defeated last year's women's French Open winner, Italy's Francesca Schiavone, 6-4, 7-6.

Both players are age 29, which is considered old in the world of tennis. When Schiavone took the 2010 title, she became the oldest first-time women's champion since professionals began competing in 1968. She also was the first Italian Grand Slam women's champion.

Li, who was seeded sixth in the French tournament, was defeated in the Australian Open final earlier this year. She is now expected to jump to number four in the international rankings. Her victory also could spark renewed interest in tennis in her Chinese homeland.

Both players won six games in the final set, leading to a tie-breaker that Li won 7-0. When Schiavone hit long on match point, Li celebrated her victory by falling on her back onto the clay Paris court. It was her first title on clay.

The men's final will be played Sunday between world number one Rafael Nadal of Spain, the five-time French Open champion, and Switzerland's Roger Federer, the former world number one who took his only French Open title in 2009.

Former U.S. Secretary of State Dies

Posted June 4th, 2011 at 4:20 pm (UTC-5)
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Former U.S. Secretary of State Lawrence Eagleburger has died at age 80.

Word of his death came from representatives of former President George H.W. Bush and former Secretary of State James Baker. No other details were immediately available.

The White House has issued a statement calling Eagleburger “a distinguished diplomat and public servant” and noted that, he served the nation during the “pivotal days” at the end of the Cold War, after the fall of the Berlin Wall.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton noted that Eagleburger had served in the U.S. Army before joining the foreign service. She called him “a strong voice and stalwart champion for America's values.” Eagleburger last month appeared at a State Department event with Secretary Clinton and former Secretary Madeleine Albright.

Eagleburger was the only career foreign service officer to rise to the position of Secretary of State.

He served in the position under the first President Bush for five months in 1992 when his predecessor, James Baker, stepped down from the post to run Mr. Bush's unsuccessful re-election campaign.

George H.W. Bush was U.S. president from 1989 to 1993. He is the father of President George W. Bush, who served from 2001 to 2009.

UN Official Says Humanitarian Crisis Continues in DRC

Posted June 4th, 2011 at 4:20 pm (UTC-5)
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A top United Nations humanitarian official says the international organization needs to “scale up” humanitarian aid, especially in the Democratic Republic of Congo, just weeks after the central African nation asked peacekeepers to leave.

In a speech Saturday in the capital, Kinshasa, Catherine Bragg said some 600,000 Congolese are returning home after fleeing violence. But the assistant secretary-general for humanitarian affairs said 600,000 more Congolese have recently fled their homes due to attacks and insecurity.

Bragg said this new group of displaced people come largely from remote areas, where it is difficult for the U.N. and others to intervene, both because of the violence and because there simply are not roads.

Bragg's comments follow three days of visits across the Democratic Republic of Congo, where the U.N. official met with local communities and officials, U.N. personnel, aid groups, and international partners.

Bragg said she learned that relief efforts have been appreciated, but more needs to be done to develop the country, as well as to bring stability and security to conflict-torn regions.

She said DRC's government is ultimately responsible for maintaining stability and protecting its people, but that aid workers she saw asked for “stronger efforts” from the U.N., especially by increasing the reach of their operations.

Last month, the DRC asked the U.N. to withdraw its peacekeepers and allow the country to take over its own security, saying the country has made significant progress in reducing threats to the safety of citizens.

The U.N. Security Council acknowledged that overall peace and security has recently improved in Congo. But it said security challenges remain in several eastern and Orientale provinces.

There are currently 20,000 U.N. peacekeepers in Congo.

Colombia Announces Killing of Top FARC Rebel

Posted June 4th, 2011 at 4:20 pm (UTC-5)
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Colombia's army says it has killed the security chief for the head of the country's main rebel group, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia.

An army spokesman said Saturday that Alirio Rojas Bocanegra, known as “El Abuelo,” or “The Grandfather,” had been killed.

He was reported to have died in an operation in Tolima, an area more than 200 kilometers southwest of the Colombian capital, Bogota.

The army said Rojas was the leader of security forces for the FARC's top commander, who goes by the alias “Alfonso Cano.”

In an apparent reference to the operation that killed Rojas, Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos posted a message on Twitter announcing “a new great blow to the FARC.”

Rojas reportedly served for at least 23 years in the leftist guerrilla group which has been designated as a terrorist organization by Colombia, the United States and the European Union.

FARC rebels have been at war with the Colombian government since the 1960s.

While most of the group's funding comes from cocaine trafficking and extortion, the leftist rebels are believed to be holding an unknown number of people for ransom or political leverage.

Earlier this week, President Santos announced that a top FARC commander had been captured across the border in Venezuela in a joint effort by the two countries.

Ties between Colombia and Venezuela have been strained over Colombia's accusations that Venezuela harbors top FARC officials.

Artic Oil Drilling Halted Because of Protesters

Posted June 4th, 2011 at 11:10 am (UTC-5)
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A Scottish oil company was forced to suspend operations on an offshore oil rig near Greenland Saturday after 18 activists climbed aboard the rig.

The activists from the group Greenpeace said they want to force Cairn Energy to publish its oil spill response plan.

The activists say Arctic oil drilling is dangerous because the freezing temperatures and remote location would make it difficult to contain an oil spill.

Earlier this week, police arrested two Greenpeace activists on the same rig, the Leiv Eiriksson, because they had attached themselves to the rig in a plastic pod. Their actions forced a four-day delay to the start of the drilling.

Cairn recently won permission from Greenland to expand its drilling project in the region from three wells to seven. Last month it announced plans to drill four wells this year at a cost of $600 million.

The company says it has filed a legal action against Greenpeace in the Netherlands, asking for compensation of nearly $3 million for every day it must suspend operations due to Greenpeace actions.

Thousands Mark Anniversary of China’ s Tiananmen Square Crackdown

Posted June 4th, 2011 at 11:05 am (UTC-5)
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The Chinese cities of Beijing and Hong Kong were the scenes Saturday of demonstrations to mark the 22nd anniversary of the bloody Tiananmen Square crackdown during which hundreds, perhaps thousands, died.

It was on June 4, 1989, when the Chinese government sent tanks and soldiers into the square in central Beijing, the Chinese capital, to crush weeks of pro-democracy demonstrations.

The anniversary is being marked in the midst of another Chinese government crackdown, this one against activists, lawyers, writers and bloggers.

The U.S. State Department has been joined by the government in Taiwan in calling on China to release jailed dissidents and account for those killed, detained or missing in the Tiananmen Square crackdown. But a Chinese foreign ministry spokesman insisted the matter is closed.

The group Chinese Human Rights Defenders said Saturday that security officers took former government official Bao Tong to an unknown location this week. And the Information Center for Human Rights and Democracy said liberal intellectual Chen Ziming and many others have been placed under house arrest.

Seven Dead in Latest Burkina Faso Unrest

Posted June 4th, 2011 at 11:05 am (UTC-5)
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Burkina Faso says seven people, including a young girl, were killed when the military suppressed a mutiny in the country's commercial capital, Bobo Dioulasso.

Officials Saturday said that six soldiers died in an exchange of gunfire Friday between rioting troops and the soldiers sent to subdue them. The officials said the young girl was shot by a stray bullet during the battle.

Witnesses in the southwestern city said the mutinous soldiers had spent several days looting and shooting into the air. Merchants then retaliated by ransacking local government offices.

Forces arrived and surrounded the Ouezzin Coulibaly military camp where many of the protesting soldiers were based. Later, military officials said they regained control of the camp and were searching for some soldiers who had fled.

The West African nation has seen a series of protests in recent months by soldiers, police, teachers and students. Until now, most of those demonstrations have taken place in the administrative capital, Ouagadougou.

The unrest began in February with protests against rising food prices, crime and slow government reform.

These protests mark the most significant uprising to date against the government of President Blaise Compaore, who has ruled the nation for nearly 25 years.

Mr. Compaore seized power in a 1987 coup and was re-elected to another term last November.

Yemen Says Wounded President Remains in Country

Posted June 4th, 2011 at 11:00 am (UTC-5)
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The Yemeni government is denying reports that President Ali Abdullah Saleh is among a group of high-level officials who have gone to Saudi Arabia for treatment for wounds suffered in a rocket attack on the presidential compound Friday.

A government official said Saturday that Mr. Saleh is undergoing treatment at a military hospital in the capital, Sana'a. However, state-run media reports say the country's prime minister and at least four other high-ranking officials have sought treatment in the neighboring country.

Meanwhile, clashes continued on Saturday in Sana'a, where forces loyal to the president have been shelling homes of anti-government leaders.

The home base of dissident tribesman Sheikh Sadiq al-Ahmar is among those targeted. He is a leader of what Mr. Saleh has called “a gang of outlaws” who carried out Friday's attack on the presidential compound. Tribal officials said Saturday that 10 people had been killed and 35 wounded in the government's overnight shelling in al-Ahmar's neighborhood.

Separately, government and opposition leaders say security forces have withdrawn from the southern city of Taiz, a flashpoint of anti-government protests. The Reuters news agency quotes an opposition leader as saying looting and other unrest have been spreading in the city since the forces pulled out.

The ongoing conflict between forces loyal to Mr. Saleh and anti-government rebels has led to to fears the country may be on the brink of civil war. Mr. Saleh has three times over the past several weeks defied the Gulf accord that would end his 33-year reign.

Nearly 400 people have been killed since the popular uprising against Mr. Saleh began in January.

Anti-Graft Guru Begins Fast to the Death

Posted June 4th, 2011 at 10:50 am (UTC-5)
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One of India's most popular yoga gurus is leading followers in what is being called a fast to the death, part of a populist campaign to fight corruption.

Swami Baba Ramdev began his fast in front of thousands of supporters in New Delhi Saturday, promising India would be saved. He told them “nothing is impossible” and vowed they would not be defeated.

Ramdev's demands include a return of so-called black money, cash stashed in foreign bank accounts and used to pay bribes. He also is calling for the execution of corrupt government officials.

Critics charge Ramdev has ties to right-wing Hindu groups and question his sincerity, arguing he lives lavishly with money from his multi-million dollar business ventures. But his call to end widespread corruption appears to be resonating in a country still reeling from a $39 billion telecom scandal and a scandal-plagued Commonwealth Games that have seen some ministers end up in jail.

Earlier Saturday, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh sent four government ministers to meet with Ramdev in an attempt to stop his protest.

Ramdev refused to comment on what was said during the meeting but told supporters he would not be deterred.

Ramdev's supporters joined in mass fasting Saturday in Mumbai and other states across India.

British Foreign Secretary Visits Libyan Rebels

Posted June 4th, 2011 at 10:20 am (UTC-5)
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British Foreign Secretary William Hague has arrived in Libya for talks with opposition leaders in the rebel stronghold, Benghazi.

Hague is one of the highest-ranking foreign officials to visit the rebel-held territory. The foreign secretary said he plans to meet with leaders of the Transition National Council on Saturday as part of his efforts to “show support for the Libyan people.” He is accompanied by British International Development Secretary Andrew Mitchell.

Their visit to Libya comes at a time when NATO is employing new strategies for targeting installations linked to Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi.

For the first time, the alliance sent attack helicopters on low-altitude missions against military installations early Saturday.

NATO said British Apache and French Tiger and Gazelle helicopters carried out the assaults. Military officials said about 20 targets were destroyed, including a radar site and an armed checkpoint, in the first deployment of the aircraft since British and French leaders approved their use in recent days.

The commander of NATO's forces in Libya, Canadian Lieutenant General Charles Bouchard, said the successful assault demonstrates the “unique capabilities” of the attack helicopters. The use of lower-flying helicopters for attacks could diminish the possibility of civilian casualties, although they also could be vulnerable to strikes by surface-to-air missiles.

Despite this increase in the military campaign, there are new diplomatic efforts to try to persuade Mr. Gadhafi to give up power. French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe said Friday that his country is working with those close to the Libyan leader to get him to leave.

Russia is sending a special presidential representative, Mikhail Margelov, to Benghazi, to meet with the rebels.

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