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May 31, 2006

Tony Baffoe preaches strength in unity

Although born in Germany, Anthony Baffoe was always destined to lend his classy defensive skills to Ghana, his country of origin.

Now retired, the former Cologne star is back in the employ of his beloved national side in the role of international relations officer, a job from which he took time out to chat exclusively with FIFAworldcup.com about his most cherished memories and hopes for the Black Stars in Germany.TonyBaffoe

FIFAworldcup.com: So Anthony, what have you been doing since you hung up your boots?

Anthony Baffoe: First of all, I worked as a model, then I did some media work, presenting television programmes in Germany. But at the moment, I’m having a break from both those areas and have been working as the international relations officer for the Ghanaian national team for the last two months.

Looking back at your career, which moments are freshest in your mind?

One of the highlights was definitely my first cap for Ghana. It was 13 January 1991 at Kumasi, and we won 4-0. Two minutes from the end, the coach took me off so the crowd could give me a standing ovation. I got hold of a national flag and did a lap of honour. Ever since, a shiver runs down my spine whenever I hear my country’s national anthem. My first Africa Cup of Nations (Senegal 1992) is another very special memory, despite the fact that we lost in the final to Côte d’Ivoire and I missed a penalty!

Ghana’s current side has qualified for the FIFA World Cup™, something your ‘golden generation’ never managed to do.

Before we reached the final in Senegal, Ghana had missed out on every CAN for the previous ten years. Unfortunately, the pressure simply got to us and we fell apart after the semi-final with Nigeria, which explains why we lost the final and then made a mess of our subsequent World Cup qualifying campaign.

What’s been different about the Black Stars' successful campaign this time around?

Undoubtedly the team’s sense of togetherness and cohesion. This generation is on the right track and has a host of talented players like (Stephen) Appiah, (Sulley) Muntari, (Michael) Essien and (John) Mensah. Whenever I meet them, I remind them to stay united, to forge increasingly closer bonds. That’s the only way to get to the top.

Ghana have been drawn in Group E with FIFA World Cup regulars Italy, the Czech Republic and the United States. How would you assess your country’s chances?

You might find it surprising, but I’m not afraid of anyone. There’s no denying it’s a difficult group, but I wouldn’t expect anything else at a World Cup. We certainly won’t be just making up the numbers, as we’re determined to show African football in the best possible light. Cameroon were the pioneers who blazed the trail for the likes of Nigeria and Senegal. I see no reason why Ghana can’t follow in their footsteps.

How far do you think Ghana can go?

Getting past the group stage would be a major success in itself. I especially hope we won’t be on the receiving end of any thrashings. I would love us to be able to show that football in Africa is developing and that its players are genuine competitors.

Can the Black Stars expect a lot of support?

There are quite a lot of Ghanaians living pretty much all over Germany, and others will be coming from ever corner of Europe. I’m also sure that our style of play will win over plenty of neutrals.

How do you rate the chances of the other four African nations involved?

Togo and Angola might not have the footballing pedigree of the likes of Côte d’Ivoire, Tunisia and Ghana, but the important thing is to leave a good impression of African football. That’s why I would like all Africans to get behind their representatives, whichever of the five teams from our continent is playing.

What do you think of the measures taken by FIFA to combat racism?

It’s quite right that FIFA has decided to toughen up its anti-racism regulations. When guys like Marc Zoro or Samuel Eto’o are on the verge of walking off the pitch, clearly something has to be done. They’ve sent a strong signal to the world and I hope it will be a catalyst for change.

What do you make of the 23-man squad announced by the Ghana coach, Ratomir Dujkovic?

It’s not really my place to comment. If you asked five different people to draw up such a list, none of them would be identical. Perhaps I would have included a few different names, but we’ll judge his side after the first match.

Why haven’t you pursued a career in coaching?

Because it just isn’t the career for me. While I’d love to give youngsters a few tips once or twice a week, full-time coaching does not appeal to me at all. It’s the obvious thing to do when your playing career ends, but I haven’t chosen that path.

Source:
GHP
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May 29, 2006

Prez Jet Smuggled to China?

“We didn’t evaluate Gulfstream III” -Conklin & de Decker
Chinese jets cost $20m each

The Vice President of Conklin & De Decker, David Wyndham has denied virtually every claim by Information and National Orientation Minister, Kwamena Bartels in respect of the sale of Ghana’s Gulfstream GIII jet to a Chinese company.

Conklin & de Decker have stated emphatically that they do not undertake aircraft valuation and could not have valued Ghana’s Gulfstream as claimed by the Minister.

The company’s Vice President in response to The Enquirer’s enquiries also denied any role and knowledge about a purported evaluation which might have been carried out by the government and which arrived at a $5M as the value of the aircraft.

The company has again refuted claims attributed to Conklin & de Decker by the Minister that the current going price for airworthy Gulfstream is USD$6.5 million and revealed that the prices of Gulfstream has gone up by 3% in the past year.

According to them, there are currently 23 Gulstreams listed for sale and the lowest going price is even higher than the amount Ghana is selling its Gulstream which is has been maintained and is in good condition.

“The Ghana Gulfstream GIII is serial number 0493, a 1986 model. The average value for a 1986 GulfStream GII (again according to Vref Values) is USD$7.0 million. This is a retail price.

“ Currently, the Vref Aircraft Value reference (Guide for selling prices of Airplanes) shows Gulf Stream III values between USD$5.1 million to USD7.4” David Wyndham stated in response to The Enquirer’s enquiries.

Mr. Wyndham further stated that “The values for airworthy Gulfstrem GIII aircraft can vary. Older aircraft in excellent condition can be worth more than the newer aircraft in poorer condition. The engines are costly to overhaul and the maintenance status of the engines can affect the aircraft value by several hundred thousand dollars”

“We do not perform aircraft appraisals and do not have the specific details of the Ghana aircraft other than the serial number” Conklin & de Deckers, said in an email to The Enquirer.

When The Enquirer contacted Mr. Bartels over the revelations from Conklin & de Decker, he said “Raymond Archer, I not talking to you, I have nothing to do with you”

"Why?" Archer asked

“Because you are not the kind of journalist I want to have anything to do with” He concluded and hanged up the phone on Mr. Archer.

KWAMENA BARTELS & GULFSTREAM ANNOUNCEMENT

Last week, Information and National Orientation Minister, Mr. Kwamena Bartels, announced that the government of Ghana had traded-in the controversial Gulfstream GII for four K-8 (Karakorum 8) and a flight simulator.

According to a statement issued by Mr. Bartels last week, the aircraft had been valued at a cost of $5 M. The Aircraft is said to be with its ‘current owners”
The new Information Minister last week quoted Conklin & de Decker as giving the value of the Gulf Stream as $6.5M, with sections of the media saying that the Gulfstream was sold at $5M because it of its age.

“... currently, the market price for an airworthy Gulfstream GII is $6.5M” Bartels quoted Conklin as saying and gave credibility to his claim by adding that Conkilin & de Decker are world acclaimed and approved valuers in the aviation. This claim has been denied by the Company.

It has also emerged that the sale of the Gulfstream as down payment for four K-8 aircrafts and a flight simulator was not referred to Parliament for scrutiny and approval.

The Constitution requires such international transactions to be laid before parliament for ‘prior’ approval. The NDC government also failed to seek prior approval for the purchase of the jet.

Parliament does not know the details of the sale and purchase but the Gulfstream has already been flown to the National Aero-Technology Import and Export Corporation in China, a company the Minister has described as “new owners” It has also emerged that the unit price of a new K-8 jet is about $20 million.

Source:
Raymond Archer (The Enquirer)

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Stars Thrash Reggae Boyz

Ghana’s Black Stars thrashed the Reggae Boys of Jamaica 4-1 in an international friendly played at the Walkers stadium in Leicester, England.

Ghana dominated the first half and took a deservingly 2-0. Sulley Muntari gave the World Cup debutants the lead after five minutes, before Damion Stewart made it 2-0 with an own goal in the 19th minute.

Jamaica came back strongly after the break and pulled a goal back through Jason Euell.

The stars however sealed the victory with two goal from Appiah and Mathew Amoah

...details later

 

Ghana [4 - 1] Jamaica
5' [1 - 0] S.A. Muntari
19' [2 - 0] D. Stewart (o.g.)
58' [2 - 1] J. Euell
66' [3 - 1] S. Appiah
68' [4 - 1] M. Amoah
Ghana Line-up: Sammy Adjei - Dan Quaye, Sammy Kuffour/Shilla Illiasu, John Mensah, Habib Mohammed - Michael Essien/Derek Boateng, Eric Addo/Hans Adu Sarpei, Stephen Appiah/Otto Addo, Sulley Muntari/Dramani - Asamoah Gyan, Matthew Amoah/Pimpong




Source:
GHP

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Egyptian Police Accused of Torturing Protester

Opposition activists in Egypt are accusing the police of torturing and sexually abusing a protester who was arrested after a peaceful demonstration last week. The man's lawyer says he is seriously injured and has been denied medical treatment for four days. 

People who have seen Mohammed el-Sharqawi say every inch of his body is covered with bruises, cuts and welts.

One of his lawyers, Gamal Eid, told reporters that the defense team nearly cried when they saw him on the night he was arrested - he was a different person than the man they had seen that morning.

"We could not see his eyes because they were so swollen. He could barely speak through his battered mouth. There were shoe prints on his neck and chest," said Eid.

The lawyer says Sharqawi was examined by a doctor Sunday, after 72 hours in police custody, but has received no medical treatment. His injuries are believed to be severe, and possibly life-threatening.

Other political detainees say they are going on a hunger strike until he is treated, and until the people who beat him are held accountable.

VOA's phone calls to several Interior Ministry spokesmen went unanswered. The ministry has issued terse statements to a few other news organizations denying the allegations of torture.

Sharqawi and his colleague Karim el-Shaer were arrested Thursday after a peaceful demonstration. Both men had been released from prison only days earlier, after being jailed for participating in earlier anti-government protests.

Eyewitnesses said both of them were beaten severely in the street by plainclothes security agents known locally as baltagaya, or thugs.

The prosecutor has ordered that they be held in custody for 15 days.

In a written message smuggled out of his prison cell and circulated over the Internet, Sharqawi graphically describes beatings and abuse during his arrest. He accuses police and state security agents of sexually assaulting him using a rolled-up piece of cardboard.

Another activist, Ahmed El-Droubi, shared a cell with Sharqawi for 28 days before they were both released last week. He visited his old cell mates in prison on Saturday, after a bruised and battered Sharqawi had re-joined them.

"And I saw him. He was physically destroyed. Psychologically, he was very roughed-up ... He is urinating blood. They actually stomped and kicked his sexual organs until he peed blood right there while they were torturing him. But after all that, he is still strong. He still smiles. Definitely, he was broken inside, but he still believes in what he is doing, and he will not stop," he said.

El-Sharqawi is a member of a group called Youth For Change, an offshoot of the reform movement known as Kifaya, which is Arabic for Enough.

Kifaya leader George Ishak denounced the treatment of Mohammed el-Sharqawi. "This thuggery … these crimes will not stop us. If we remain silent in the face of these violations, then we are all violated," he said. 

More than 500 activists have been arrested during the past five weeks for participating in demonstrations in support of the independence of the judiciary.

Most of the detainees are members of the banned Muslim Brotherhood. Others, like Mohammed Sharqawi, come from Kifaya or other secular or leftist political groups.

The crackdown on peaceful protesters has drawn criticism from the European Union and the U.S. State Department.

The U.S. Congress is considering whether to renew the United States' $1.7-billion economic and military aid package for Egypt for another year. The House appropriations committee approved the package last week, over the objections of some committee members who are concerned about Egypt's human-rights record. The Bush administration backed passage of the bill, calling good relations with Egypt vital to U.S. national interests.

Source-VOA
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May 28, 2006

Chicagoans Revel Kente Dance!

Chicago,IL...Fifteen years after the Church of the Ghanaian Community of Chicago held the first Kente Day in Chicago to raise the awareness of the Ghanaian traditional cloth , donned by  Chiefs, Queens and People of high social class, the Ohemaa Magazine took the Ghanaian Kente to another level in Chicago on May 27 2006,by organizing a well attended Kente Dance at 925 S. Homan.
The function attended by Chicago area Chiefs and Queens , were  led by Nana Addae Baffour and Ohemaa Abena Amponsah, the Asantefuohene and hemaa of Chicago and its metropolis. Also in attendance were, Nana Akwafo Adu Brempong II,chief of Okyeman's in Chicago, Naa Ashami Dzaami, Ga Queen in Chicago, Mr. and Mrs.Pastor Benjamin Quamson,  Dr. Mark Kutame and Mr. John-Henry Assabil,Secretary and Treasurer of the Ghana National Council of Metropolitan Chicago (GNC)respectively,Mr. Asare Boafo, (G.N.C) Assistant Welfare Officer,Nana Akwasi , former Asantefouhene , Chicago, Nana Owusu Ansah, elder, Asanteman Association of Chicago, Mr. Boafo Papafio,"mayor of Chicago" and head of Chicago Emcees, Chiefs and elders of the Okuapeman Associations from Toronto, Atlanta , New Jersey and Dallas, Ms. Florence Acheampomg, Mr and Mrs. Barnnieh  Agyeman and Mr. and Mrs. Sampson Akotuah.
The crowd, estimated at 300, were all dressed in various kinds of Kente, making the hall bright with Kings and Queens beaming with pride of being Ghanaians or just part of the unfolding history.
The Emashie Kpalogo troupe, most of its members being remnants of  the popular Ga Cultural troupe ,Wolomei,kept the few Kpalogo lovers in the crowd on their feet with their "old kpalogo school music ". The young Kpalogo dancers for the group were just marvelous to watch. Live music "rappers" kept attendees on their toes with their lovely dancing and "rapping" on live music.
The slippery dance floor and the intermittent crackling sound interrupting the music did not stop revelers dancing all night to D.J music  provided by the top D.J in Chicago, Yeboah of Millennium Soundz fame.  
The President of the Ohemaa Magazine, Mr. Boateng used the occasion to formally launch his magazine in Chicago and promised to team up with groups and organizations in Chicago to bring more entertainment to Chicagoans.
 Paa Kwasi Sam and Nana Sipi Bekoe were introduced as the official representatives/ distributors of the Ohemaa Magazine in Chicago.
Source-Ghanaweb.com.
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May 27, 2006

Ghana-Construction work on new Prez Palace begins

 
 Construction Hammer

Accra, May 26, GNA - President John Agyekum Kufuor on Friday laid the foundation stone to formally mark the commencement of work on the 30 million-dollar Presidential Complex to provide a befitting residence for the Presidency at the Flagstaff House in Accra.

The Complex consists of official residence for the President and offices and is being funded from an India Government concessionary loan. The loan has a-50 per cent grant element with repayment of spread over 25 years. The loan has an in-built moratorium of five years. Shapooji Pallonji Company Limited, an Indian construction firm, is undertaking the project scheduled for completion in 18 months. President Kufuor called on all well-meaning Ghanaians to envision the project as a national heritage, which would in time help to define who they were, and what they portrayed to the world.

He said with only two years left in government, it should become abundantly clear that "I am not undertaking this project for myself. Rather the decision to build this complex is based on a vision beyond my own selfish interest."

President Kufuor said he was convinced that future generations would come to applaud the foresight of the Government. Making a strong case for Ghana to have such a monumental edifice, he said almost every society of the world had a special focal place of convergence, a place, which defined the people and embodied their ideals.

"Such a place becomes a rallying point in times of both joy and difficulties. In many places, this also becomes a major tourist attraction. Our sister country Nigeria has its Aso Rock, where the President of the Federation lives.

"Togo, Cote d'Ivoire and Burkina Faso all boast of deliberately and purposefully constructed impressive Presidential edifices. The Americans have the White House, which to them, symbolises everything that Americans hold dear. Great Britain has the Buckingham Palace for the Queen and the 10 Downing Street, the official residence the Prime Minister. France has the Elysee Palace for the President."

President Kufuor queried, "Is it not surprising that Ghana, which can be said to be the first born of Africa has not as yet, after 50 years of sovereign statehood, been able to build a befitting residence for its Head of State?"

He said the idea of modernising Accra was conceived with the Flagstaff House, which was the residence of Ghana's first President, Osagyefo Dr Kwame Nkrumah, as the nerve centre of the city. "Plans have been prepared in pursuit of this vision. With the realisation of this project, which is formally commencing today, the hope is that the plans for modernisation of the city will become unfurled and their execution launched to transform its image to befit our national capital."

Mr Anand Sharma, India's Minister for External Relations, described the project as a shinning example and symbol of India-Ghana relations and partnership for development.

He reminded the contractors of the special importance attached to the project and asked that they should not only complete it on schedule, but also ensure quality delivery.

Mr Hackman Owusu-Agyemang, Minister of Water Resources, Works and Housing, in a welcoming address, said Flagstaff House evoked powerful memory of Ghana's past and that the people should be grateful to President Kufuor for the courage and vision to salvage it after years of deterioration.

Source:
GNA
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Ghanaians abroad donate C470m to Stars

Accra, May 23, GNA -- Ghanaians resident in 29 countries abroad have so far raised cash amounting to 471.2 million cedis in support of the senior national team, Black Stars in their preparations towards next month's World Cup soccer fiesta in Germany.

This was said by Akwasi Osei Adjei, Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs, Regional Co-operation and NEPAD when he presented cash amounts of 5,000.00 euros collected from Ghanaians resident in Belgium and Germany and another 1,000.00 dollars from Ghanaians in Botswana for the Stars.

Mr Adjei said the amount presented on Tuesday includes the 45,000.00 dollars already presented on October 6, to the Sports Ministry. He said the amount was raised in response to the "Operation Six Points" declared by the President John Agyekum Kufuor somewhere last year to help the Black Stars qualify for their first World Cup after 10 failed attempts.

The Deputy Minister said in response, Ghanaian Missions abroad embarked on an active campaign to raise funds within the various Ghanaian communities for the national team.

"The overwhelming response and the support offered by Ghanaians resident in the 29 countries signified the desire of Ghanaians to ensure that the Black Stars succeed at the World Cup".

Mr Adjei also took the opportunity to wish the Black Stars the best of luck at the World Cup Tournament in Germany and said he remains hopeful and confident that their effort will be crowned with resounding victories.

Mr O. B. Amoah, Deputy Minister of Education, Science and Sport received the cash and expressed his ministry's gratitude to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs for their effort.

He said the Ministry of Foreign Affairs has not only helped with the raising of funds for the team but have also made sure that the team is always comfortable anytime they travel outside to play their matches. Mr Amoah also commended the Ministry of Foreign Affairs for their help and promised that the Stars will not disgrace them at the World Cup.

Source:
GNA
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Pre-World Cup Trial-Ghana 1 Turkey 1

BOCHUM, May 26 (GHP) - World Cup participants Ghana have been held to a 1-1 draw in an international friendly with Turkey.

Turkey, who were third in 2002 but failed to qualify for the World Cup in Germany, opened the score through Nihat Kahveci in the seventeenth minute after a defensive bludder by Pappoe.
But Ghana levelled on the hour mark, through Matthew Amoah on a pass from man-of-the-match Stephen Appiah

GhanaWeb Ratings

Richard Kingston 7
Samuel Kuffour 8
John Mensah 7
Emmanuel Pappoe 6
Michael Essien 5
Stephen Appiah 9
Matthew Amoah 8 / Alex Tachie-Mensah 5
John Paintsil 6
Eric Addo 6
Otto Addo 4 /Sulley Muntari 7
Asamoah Gyan 6/Razak Pimpong 6



Source:
GHP
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Powerful Earthquake Kills Over 3,000 in Indonesia

BANTUL, Indonesia (May 27) - A powerful earthquake flattened homes and hotels in central Indonesia early Saturday as people slept, killing more than 3,000 and injuring thousands more in the nation's worst disaster since the 2004 tsunami.

The magnitude-6.2 quake struck at 5:54 a.m. near the ancient city of Yogyakarta, 250 miles east of the capital, Jakarta. It was centered about 10 kilometers (six miles) below the surface, the U.S. Geological Survey said.

Activity picked up at nearby Mount Merapi, one of the world's most active volcanoes, and one geologist warned the temblor could still spark a large eruption, though another downplayed those concerns.

The strong quake knocked down houses, hotels, a hospital and government buildings, sending hysterical people running into the streets. Many roads and bridges were destroyed, hindering efforts to get taxis and pickup trucks filled with wounded to packed hospitals.

In the hardest-hit district of Bantul, rescuers tried to pull bodies from the rubble as residents started digging mass graves, rows of corpses awaiting burial beneath the blazing sun.

Subarjo, a 70-year-old food vendor, sobbed next to his dead wife.

"I couldn't help her," he said. "I was trying to rescue my children ... and then the house collapsed."

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono ordered the army to help evacuate victims and arrived in densely populated Central Java province Saturday afternoon with a team of Cabinet ministers to oversee rescue operations. He also told people not to fear a tsunami.

Sixteen hours after the quake struck, the number of dead stood at 3,068, Social Affairs Ministry official Sopar Jaya said, adding that two-thirds of the fatalities occurred in devastated Bantul.

"The numbers just keep rising," said Arifin Muhadi of the Indonesian Red Cross, adding that more than 3,400 people were hurt.

Civilians carried bloodied survivors, including children, into hospitals, sometimes jumping off flatbed trucks used in construction. Large cracks crisscrossed some roads, while others had collapsed.

Doctors struggled to care for the injured, hundreds of whom were lying on plastic sheets, straw mats and even newspapers outside the overcrowded hospitals, some hooked to intravenous drips dangling from trees.

"We need help here," said Kusmarwanto of Bantul Muhammadiyah Hospital, the closest hospital to the quake's epicenter, adding that his hospital alone had 39 bodies.

At nearby Dr. Sardjito Hospital, health officials tallied 60 dead, but more bodies were lined up in the hallway and some family members were taking them home before they could be added to the official toll.

"Our emergency care unit is overwhelmed," said Heru Nugroho.

Japan and Malaysia said they would send medical teams, and the United States and the European Commission also said they would send emergency aid. U.N. World Food Program and UNICEF offered humanitarian assistance and tents to shelter those left homeless.

The quake hit close to the rumbling Mount Merapi, and soon after the temblor a large burst of hot clouds and debris avalanched 3.5 kilometers (2 miles) down its western flank. No one was injured.

Bambang Dwiyanto, the Energy and Mineral Ministry's chief geologist, said the two events did not appear to be directly related, but warned that Saturday's earthquake could still trigger a larger eruption.

"It will influence the activities of Mount Merapi, particularly in the lava dome," he cautioned.

A geological researcher at the Indonesian Science Institute said, however, he did not think the quake was powerful enough to create a large eruption.

"It has increased pressure of lava and raised activities, but I don't think it will have a significant impact," said Dani Hilman.

The quake cut electricity and phone lines in some areas.

It also cracked the runway at the airport in Yogyakarta, home to the famed Borobudur temple, closing it to aircraft until at least Sunday while inspections take place, Transport Minister Hatta Radjasa said.

Officials did not know if the 7th century Buddhist shrine, one of Indonesia's most popular tourist attractions, was affected in the quake. Nearby Prambanan, a spectacular Hindu temple to the southeast, suffered some damage but it was not immediately clear how much.

Italy's ambassador to Jakarta, Francesco Maria Greco, interviewed on Sky TG24 TV, said there appeared to be no foreigners among the dead or injured but cautioned that many of the injured are scattered in various hospitals making it difficult to check everything out.

Source AP/Aol news

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May 25, 2006

Fighting Rocks Somali Capital

Vicious fighting has broken out again in the Somali capital, Mogadishu, killing and wounding dozens of civilians. The violence was the latest in a series of battles between militias loyal to the Islamic courts and militias belonging to an anti-terror coalition of secular factional leaders and businessmen. VOA Correspondent Alisha Ryu is the only Western journalist in Mogadishu and reports that as much as 95 percent of the city may be under the control of the Islamic courts.

The fighting began early in the morning, with anti-terror coalition militias firing the first volley.

The coalition offensive was apparently aimed at trying to regain control of some neighborhoods lost to Islamic courts' militias earlier this month in the north of the city.

 

Despite having heavier guns, coalition militias were unable to dislodge the Islamic militias. After several hours of fighting, coalition fighters found themselves on the defensive, retreating into central Mogadishu.

An intense battle soon began raging around the Sahafi Hotel, which had been the headquarters for the anti-terror group since it was formed in February.

Bullets ricocheted off walls and mortar shells exploded in the streets, sending residents scurrying for cover. Some residents ignored the danger to help load injured people into trucks and wheelbarrows. They were rushed to nearby Madina Hospital, where VOA saw an overwhelmed staff of doctors and nurses working feverishly to patch up gunshot and shrapnel wounds and perform life-saving surgeries.

The director of the hospital, Sheikhdon Salat, says even the facility was being hit by stray mortars and bullets.

"The bullets are crossing all over the hospital and we are in danger. All of us are in danger. We are in the battle zone," he said.

By mid-afternoon, Islamic militias occupied the Sahafi Hotel and appeared to be in control of most areas of Mogadishu.

The anti-terror coalition is made up of powerful Mogadishu-based factional leaders and businessmen, who say they have joined America's fight against terrorism. The coalition says the Islamic courts are made up of extremists, who are allied with al-Qaida terrorists and are providing safe havens for them in Somalia.

Leaders of the Islamic courts say they are only trying to help Somalia recover from the devastation it suffered at the hands of the factional leaders since the country disintegrated into lawlessness in 1991. The court leaders accuse the anti-terror group of receiving support from the United States, an accusation the coalition and the United States deny.

Source-VOA

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Top 10 Jobs for 2006 Grads

Thanks to an improving economy and healthy nationwide job creation, things are looking promising for the class of 2006.

"It's a great time to be a senior at a good college," said Lauren Shapiro, director of recruiting at Archstone Consulting, a Stamford, Conn.-based strategic and operations consulting firm. "They feel very recruited these days."

Seventy percent of hiring managers say they plan to recruit recent college graduates in 2006, and one-in-four expect to hire more new grads than last year, according to CareerBuilder.com's annual survey on college hiring.

While the job market is generally favorable, certain occupations are particularly new grad-friendly. In its 2006 spring salary survey, the National Association of Colleges and Employers ranked the top jobs for 2005-06 bachelor's degree graduates by the number of job offers reported. The following, listed with their average starting salaries, topped the heap:

Accounting (private)-- $45,817
Businesses are scrambling to expand their accounting departments to deal with new pressures from the Sarbanes-Oxley Act and global expansion, said Blane Ruschak, national director of university relations at Big Four accounting firm KPMG. Young accountants are cashing in on these new jobs.

Although most companies prefer to hire candidates with accounting degrees, recruiters also look at business, finance, economics and even liberal arts grads to fill their staffs, Ruschak said.

Management Trainee -- $38,482
Management trainee programs are intensive "boot camps" through which new graduates can learn about all facets of the organization, said Rosemary Haefner, vice president of human resources for CareerBuilder.com. This gives new hires from all educational backgrounds the benefit of shadowing others and getting more personalized training.

Employers use management trainee programs because they "...usually include tests throughout the experience ... which disciplines the trainee to learn the ropes and not just punch the clock, and allows the organization quicker insight into whether they can mold the trainee into a successful employee," Haefner said.

Financial/Treasury Analysis-- $46,335
Financial analysts help banks, insurance companies, mutual and pension funds, securities firms and other businesses make investment decisions, according to the U.S. Department of Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics.

To get hired, candidates need stellar math skills -- therefore, business, economics, finance and mathematics majors will find themselves especially in-demand. Once hired, financial analysts should expect long hours, but many earn large bonuses that substantially increase their earnings.

Sales-- $38,830
New graduates make excellent salespeople because they're high energy, driven to success and undaunted by rejection. They also save their employers training time, Haefner said.

Whereas new graduates are eager to learn, "Experienced salespeople tend to bring their own sales methodologies to a new position, and companies are faced with the added step of working with the salesperson to 'unlearn' their previous techniques so they can adopt their new employer's approach."

Students hoping to start a career in sales should get involved on campus and use their résumés to demonstrate how they've used the traits of a successful salesperson in their everyday lives -- for example balancing school and work or playing competitive sports, Haefner explained.

Project Engineering-- $50,365
Globalization is translating into more job opportunities for engineering graduates, said Karen Clark, who leads the engineering recruitment effort for Washington Group International, a leading integrated engineering, construction and management solutions company.

"The engineering fields are in-demand now because of the multitude of projects to help improve living conditions throughout the world," she said.

Project engineering -- a job that hires across all engineering disciplines -- is no exception. These workers are responsible for planning, scheduling, estimating the cost, labor and performance of engineering activities and other duties at their particular projects.

Consulting-- $50,120
The consulting market is bouncing back to levels not seen since 1999 or 2000, and that's translating into more opportunities for new graduates at both the bachelor's and MBA levels, said Archstone Consulting's Lauren Shapiro said. New graduates are raw talent, she said. "We know we can mold them."

Consulting isn't just for those with an economics or business degree, Shapiro said. Her firm also recruits liberal arts majors, because "that wide-ranging education gives a very good skills set." To get hired in consulting, research is key, she says. Candidates should be well-versed on the company, their job function and the industry.

Design/Construction Engineering-- $48,109
"Construction engineers are responsible for ensuring that all engineering construction plans and specifications are adhered to," said Washington International's Karen Clark. They spend their days at the project site reviewing design drawings and equipment specifications, preparing reports and other duties.

Employers look at qualified students across all engineering disciplines and construction management grads to fill their entry-level positions.

Accounting (Public)-- $44,668
Public accounting firms provide audit, tax and advisory services for client companies or the marketplace -- and they look to university campuses for the bulk of their personnel, said KPMG's Blane Ruschak. Many public accounting firms hire large amounts of young accountants, who eventually either move into management roles or leave for private accounting and other professions.

A CPA is a must in the public accounting world, so at KPMG, 70 to 80 percent of new hires are accounting majors who have the requirements to take the CPA exams, Ruschak said. Most have a five-year degree or have taken at least 30 post-graduate classroom hours to qualify themselves for the CPA exams.

Teaching $30,377
Job growth, retiring teachers and high turnover are creating good opportunities for new graduates looking for teaching positions -- especially in special education, math, science, some foreign languages and computer sciences, said Reg Weaver, president of the National Education Association.

A good teacher should have a strong command of the content they teach and have high expectations of kids, a good sense of humor and a good dose of common sense, he said. "If you don't believe every child can learn, don't come into the profession. If you don't care for kids, don't come into the profession. If you recognize that you have something really to offer the kids, come on in."

Field Engineering-- $50,812
Field engineers -- who are located at the site of the project and typically report to project engineers -- are also in high demand, said Washington International's Karen Clark. An engineering or construction management degree and solid internship experience will give candidates a competitive edge.

Source: CareerBuilder.com.

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Kontihene To Perform at Chicago House

Chicago, USA -- The show at the House of Blues got even bigger.

Nana Quame, the prolific golden-voiced boy whose hits include “Atia Donko” “Odo Shock” “Soja” has arrived in Chicago.Quame Kontihene Singer SamQ

Kontihene whose hits include “Aketesea,” “Esi,” “Asesa and has produced Kwabena Kwabena whose “Aso” is ruling the charts has been added to the star-studded show. To make the show even more gregarious and worth the fans’ satisfaction, House of Blues intends to open the doors at 10:00 p.m. instead of 12:00 a.m. as already planned. Bring on your dancing shoes for a pop-chain extravaganza. Come one come all and support our Ghanaian superstars who are making their debut at this historic venue.

Pictured are from left Nana Quame, Kontihene, She(backup singer extraordinaire) and Sam Q., Chicago’s no. 1 deejay.

Source:
GHP
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Prof Adu-Boahene is dead

Prof. Albert Adu Boahene has died at the 37 Military Hospital in Accra after a prolonged illness. AduBoahen

An Emeritus Professor at the Department of History, University of Ghana, he is Ghana’s most renowned historian, also noted for both his political activism and international role as a visiting professor to universities throughout the world, and as a consultant to UNESCO.

He is author of several books including: A History of West Africa, African Perspectives on Colonialism, Africa In The Twentieth Century , The Ghanian Establishment The Horizon History of Africa Yaa Asantewaa and the Asante–British War of 1900–1 , The monographs Mfantsipim and the Making of Ghana: A Centenary History 1876–1976, for which he won the Noma Award for Publishing in Africa in 1997. He was also editor of UNESCO’s eight volume History of Africa series.

He was the NPP presidential candidate in the 1992 General Election

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Threading a Catheter into the Heart

Cardiac (Heart) Catheterization. 

Definition:

An invasive imaging procedure that involves inserting a catheter into a blood vessel in the arm or leg, and guiding it to your heart with the aid of a special x-ray machine. Contrast dye is injected through the catheter so that x-ray movies of your valves, coronary arteries and heart chambers are taken.

Your doctor uses cardiac cardiac cath to:

  • evaluate or confirm the presence of heart disease (such as coronary artery disease, valve disease or disease of the aorta)
  • evaluate heart muscle function
  • determine the need for further treatment (angioplasty or bypass surgery)

To prepare:

  • Prior to your procedure, tests may be scheduled such as routine bloodwork, electrocardiogram (ECG), and chest x-ray. These will be scheduled as a separate appointment.
  • Although some patients are hospitalized (inpatients) when they undergo catheterization, it is most commonly done as an outpatient procedure.
  • You can wear whatever you like to the hospital. You will wear a hospital gown during the procedure.
  • Leave money, jewelry, and other valuables at home. If you normally wear dentures, glasses or a hearing assist device, plan to wear them during the procedure to assist with communication.
  • Your doctor or nurse will give you specific instructions about what you can and cannot eat or drink before the procedure.
  • Ask your doctor what medications should be taken on the day of your test. You may be told to stop certain medications, such as Coumadin (warfarin, a blood thinner).
  • If you have diabetes, ask your physician how to adjust your medications the day of your test.
  • Tell your doctor and/or nurses if you are allergic to anything, especially iodine, shellfish, x-ray dye, penicillin-type medications, latex or rubber products (such as rubber gloves or balloons).
  • You may or may not return home the day of your procedure. Bring items with you (such as robe, slippers and toothbrush) that may make your stay more comfortable. When you are able to return home, arrange for a companion to bring you home.

What to expect:

  • Please bring a list of your medications (including over-the-counter) and dosages. When you arrive for your appointment, please tell your nurse if you are taking Coumadin (warfarin), Plavix (clopidogrel), diuretics (water pill) or insulin. Also remind the staff if you are allergic to anything, especially iodine, shellfish, x-ray dye, penicilin-type medications, latex or rubber products (such as rubber gloves or balloons).
  • You will be given a hospital gown to wear.
  • A nurse will start an intravenous (IV) line in your arm so that medications and fluids can be administered during the procedure.
  • The cardiac catheterization room is cool and dimly lit. The air must be kept cool to prevent damage to the x-ray machinery that is used during the procedure. You will be offered warm blankets to make you more comfortable.
  • You will lie on a special table. If you look above, you will see a large camera and several TV monitors. You can watch your cardiac cath on the monitors.
  • The nurse will clean your skin at the site where the catheter (narrow plastic tube) will be inserted (arm or groin). The catheter insertion site may be shaved.
  • Sterile drapes are used to cover the site and help prevent infection. It is important that you keep your arms and hands down at your sides, under the sterile drapes.
  • Electrodes (small, flat, sticky patches) will be placed on your chest. The electrodes are attached to an electrocardiograph monitor (ECG), which monitors your heart rate and rhythm.
  • You will be given a mild sedative to relax you, but you will be awake and conscious during the entire procedure.
  • In some cases, a urinary catheter may be needed during the procedure.
  • The doctor will use a local anesthetic to numb the site. A plastic introducer sheath (a short, hollow tube through which the catheter is placed) is inserted in a blood vessel in your arm or groin. A catheter will be inserted through the sheath and threaded to the arteries of your heart. You may feel pressure as the introducer sheath or catheter are inserted, but you should not feel pain. Tell the nurse or doctor if you feel any pain.
  • When the catheter is in place, the lights will be dimmed and a small amount of contrast material will be injected through the catheters into your arteries and heart chambers. The contrast material outlines the vessels, valves and chambers.
  • When the contrast material is injected into your heart, you may feel hot or flushed for several seconds. This is normal and will go away in a few seconds. Please tell the doctor or nurses if you feel:
    • an allergic reaction (itching, tightness in the throat)
    • nausea
    • chest discomfort
    • any other symptoms
  • The x-ray camera will be used to take photographs of the arteries and heart chambers. You will be asked to hold your breath while the x-rays are taken. When all the photos have been taken, the catheter will be removed and the lights will be turned on.
  • You may have an interventional procedure combined with your cardiac catheterization.

After the procedure:

  • The catheters and sheath are removed.
    • If the catheter was inserted in the arm: The incision will be bandaged. You will need to keep your arm straight for at least an hour. You will be able to walk around. You will be observed for a few hours to monitor any symptoms or side effects of the procedure. You will be given instructions regarding how to care for your arm when you return home. Tell your nurse if you think you are bleeding (wet, warm sensation) or feel any numbness or tingling in your fingers.
    • If the catheter was inserted at the groin: The incision will be closed with applied pressure, suture device or a "plug." A "plug" is a material which works with your body's natural healing processes to form a clot in the artery. You will need to lie flat and keep the leg straight for two to six hours to prevent bleeding (less time if a plug was used). Your head cannot be raised more than 30 degrees (2 pillows high). Do not try to sit or stand.
    • A sterile dressing will be placed on the groin area to protect it from infection.The nurse will check your bandage regularly, but call your nurse if you think you are bleeding (have a wet, warm sensation) or if your toes begin to tingle or feel numb.
  • You will need to drink plenty of liquids to clear the contrast material from your body. You may feel the need to urinate more frequently. This is normal. If you are on bedrest, you will need to use a bedpan or urinal.
  • Your doctor will tell you if you are able to return home or will need to stay overnight. In either case, you will be monitored for several hours after the procedure.
  • Treatment, including medications, diet and future procedures, will be discussed with you prior to going home. Care of the wound site, activity and follow-up care will also be discussed.

The cardiac cath procedure only takes about 30 minutes, but plan to spend about 5 to 9 hours from the preparation through the recovery time.

Source-Clevelandclinic.org

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Stress Test-What you ned to know.

A test used to provide information about how the heart responds to stress. It usually involves walking on a treadmill or pedaling a stationary bike at increasing levels of difficulty, while the electrocardiogram, heart rate and blood pressure are monitored.

Your doctor uses the stress test to:

  • determine if there is adequate blood flow to your heart during increasing levels of activity
  • evaluate the effectiveness of your cardiac treatment plan
  • determine the likelihood of having coronary artery disease and the need for future testing
  • To prepare:
    • Do not eat or drink anything except water for four hours before the test.
    • Ask your doctor what medications should be taken on the day of your test. If you use an inhaler for breathing, bring it to the test. If you are diabetic, ask your physician how to adjust your medications the day of your test.
    • Wear comfortable clothes and soft-soled shoes suitable for walking. Women should wear a bra.
    • Do not bring valuables

    What to expect:

    Ten small areas of your chest are cleaned, and small sticky electrode patches are attached to these areas. Men may expect to have their chest partially shaved to help the electrodes stick. The electrodes are attached to an electrocardiograph (ECG) monitor that charts your heart’s electrical activity during the test.

    Your blood pressure and ECG recording will be taken before, during and after exercise. You will begin to exercise by walking on a treadmill or pedaling a stationary cycle. The degree of difficulty will gradually increase. You will be asked to exercise very hard until you are exhausted.

    At regular intervals, the lab personnel will ask how you are feeling. Please tell them if you feel chest, arm or jaw pain or discomfort; shortness of breath; dizziness; lightheadedness; or any other unusual symptoms. It is normal for your heart rate, blood pressure, breathing rate and perspiration to increase during the test. The lab personnel will watch for any symptoms or changes on the ECG monitor that suggest the test should be stopped.

    After the test you will walk or pedal slowly for a couple of minutes to cool down. Your heart rate, blood pressure and ECG will continue to be monitored until the levels are returning to normal.

    Although the appointment lasts about 60 minutes, the actual exercise time is usually between 7 and 12 minutes.

    Ask your doctor if you have any questions about the exercise stress test.

  • Source - Clevelandclinic.org

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    May 24, 2006

    World Cup-Full Ghana Squad in Austria

    All players are in camp - Tony Baffoe
    A spokesperson for the senior national team, Anthony Baffoe, told GhanaWeb, this morning, that all the members of the senior national team are present at the training camp in Seeboden in Austria's southern province of Carinthia.

    Chelsea's midfielder, Michael Essien, last Saturday at the camp gave Ratomir Dujkovic his full squad for the first time since ending the World Cup qualifiers last October.

    And as the team entered full scale training at the weekend, it was a feeling of great expectation from a ‘novice’ squad awaiting the hour to present the world with what optimists believe could be the World Cup’s surprise package.

    Apart from Ghana’s regular 23 names sent to FIFA, Dujkovic also has his five on standby players at his disposal, as he prepares the Stars for the first of three pre-tournament games against Turkey in Bochum, Germany.

    Among players in camp is forward player Baba Amando who threatened to quit after his World Cup appearance fate was left hanging on the possibility of an injury to any of the first-choice 23 players.

    In a shake-up exercise last Sunday, the Stars featuring a blend of regulars and standby players lost 1-0 to a local select side in Carinthia.

    Friday’s match could be a genuine assessment of the team in an atmosphere expected to be almost similar to what is expected at the World Cup after a mixed fate in pre-camping trials.

    While the 1-1 draw with Stuttgart seemed to have atoned for the 1-0 defeat by highly-ranked Mexico, the 3-0 drubbing by French side, Nice, took the shine off the Stars’ fine build-up towards the tournament.

    Ghana Football Asociation President, Kwasi Nyantakyi, who leaves Accra today for the team’s Austria camp told the Graphic Sports that an attractive package has been planned for the team to motivate them in their maiden appearance at the mundial.

    He said the package would be disclosed to the team well ahead of their final journey to Germany where they will contest United States of America, the Czech Republic and three-time world champions, Italy, in Group E.

    Before then they will play Jamaica in Leicester, England, next Monday and face South Korea in Edinburg, Scotland, on June 4.

    The Stars open their campaign against Italy in Hanover on June 12.

    Source:
    GHP/Graphic Sports

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    Huge bonuses for stars, if .....

    The government of Ghana has promised to give US$ 20,000 to each player of the national team for every win at the World Cup finals in Germany next month.

    This will mean that the government will have to pay out a minimum of US$460,000 for any win in Group F where they face Italy, the Czech Republic and the United States.

    Deputy sports minister Osei Bonsu Amoah said the amount would increase if the Black Stars go beyond the group stages of the competition.

    They have been holding their pre-World Cup camp in Austria.

    "We are making this offer to encourage the players to give their utmost best for the country," Amoah told BBC Sport.

    "The offer will be greatly improved if they go beyond the group stages of the competition."

    The Black Stars will be arriving in Germany on Thursday where they will be making their debut at football's most prestigious event.

    They face European giants Italy in their opening group game on 12 June in Hanover.

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    Stars are ready to shine

    Austria, May 23, GHP -- Calling the atmosphere in the camp "fantastic", national team co-coordinator Tony Baffoe has sounded a confident tone as the Black Stars began its final stage of preparations for the World Cup.

    Ghana meets Turkey on Friday May 26, at the Bochum stadium at 20:45pm local time. The last time Ghana played at this stadium, they were thrashed 6-1 by the German national team.

    "This is vital test for us, but the spirits are high in the camp and the players are all keen to play'' Baffoe said.

    The FULL Ghana squad had a fourth day of training on Tuesday. The team leaves Austria for Germany on Thursday May 25, lodging at the Dortmund Hilton to prepare for match against the Turks.

    On Saturday, the team leaves Dortmund for there World Cup base, Wurzburg, where they will be presented to the people of the city, at 17:00, at the annual 3-day African festival.

    The major of Wursburg will hold a reception for the team later that evening.

    Stars will depart for England the next day to prepare for the friendly against Jamaica before rounding off the pre-World Cup preparations with the game against South Korea on June 4.

    The Stars will finally settle at Wurzburg on June 5 to prepare for their first game against Italy on the 11 of June.

    Source:
    GHP
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    Kotoko qualify for Knockout Finals

    Sekondi, May 24 GNA - Kumasi Asante Kotoko defeated Sekondi Hasaacas 3-1 on penalties in the semi-final of the Professional League Board (PLB) Special Knockout match played at the Sekondi Gyandu Park on Wednesday.

    By this victory, Kotoko has set the stage for a titanic encounter in the finals against their archrivals, Accra Hearts of Oak who had earlier accounted for Kumasi King Faisal 3-2 in the other semi-final match played at Suyani Coronation Park.

    Hasaacas, determined to carry the day to put the smiles on the faces of their vociferous supporters carried the game to their opponents when Referee Atikese signalled hostilities to begin.

    However, this early pressure was short-lived as Kotoko soon took over to dictate the pace of the game, making several incursions into the area of Hasaacas.

    Hasaacas also had their moments but both teams could not find the opener as Joseph Addo in goal for Hasaacas and Eric Nii Baah for Kotoko stood firm to save all the dangerous shots.

    On resumption, a more determined Hasaacas earned a spot kick, which was expertly converted by John Ainoo in the 58th minute.

    Kwabena Dodzie, a torn in the flesh of Hasaacas defense all day found the equalizer for Kotoko after firing through a host of legs to beat Joeseph Addo in post in the 78th minute.

    From then on Kotoko never looked back as their attackers consisting of Adu Amofa, Emmanuel Owusu Ansah and Nashiru Gani kept probing for the leader, which never came, pushing the game into penalty kicks. During the penalty shoot-out, Paul Addo and Isaac Donkor's kicks were saved by Eric Nii Baa of Kotoko, while that of Eric Owusu hit the cross-bar.

    Edmond Owusu Ansah and Nashiru Gani scored for Kotoko, while Mutala Mohammed's shot also hit the post.

    Source:
    GNA
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    Taylor Hicks crowned 'Idol' winner

    LOS ANGELES-- Taylor Hicks, the mop-topped manic dancer who wooed TV audiences with his raw singing style and boisterous personality, was named the new "American Idol" Wednesday in a pop star-filled finale that included Prince and Mary J. Blige.

    Hicks, 29, of Birmingham, Ala., became the latest in a string of Southern and Midwestern contestants to win the Fox talent contest after collecting more viewer votes than runner-up Katharine McPhee, 22, of Los Angeles.

    Hicks leaned over, overcome by host Ryan Seacrest's announcement.

    "Soul Patrol!" he shouted, acknowledging his avid fans by their nickname. "I'm living the American dream," he added as he closed out the show with a performance of "Do I Make You Proud."

    It was Katharine vs. Taylor, McPheever vs. the Soul Patrol, with a recording contract and the fifth "Idol" title up for grabs.

    More than 63 million votes were cast, "more than any president in the history of our country has received," Seacrest said.

    Fans picked the raw sound and footloose moves of Hicks, who made his mark on Stevie Wonder's "Living for the City" on Tuesday's show. The sultry McPhee's well-trained voice was shown to perfection on the standard "Somewhere Over the Rainbow."

    Last season's victor, Carrie Underwood of Checotah, Okla., opened the finale, joining Hicks and McPhee on "I Made it Through the Rain" and later soloing on "Don't Forget to Remember Me."

    On Tuesday, Underwood won two trophies at the Academy of Country Music Awards, underscoring how much an "Idol" victory can mean. She was named top new female artist and won best single for "Jesus Take the Wheel."

    Other pairings of contestants and stars included Paris Bennett and Al Jarreau; McPhee and Meat Loaf; Chris Daughtry and Live; Elliott Yamin and Blige; Hicks and Toni Braxton, and the dozen finalists with Burt Bacharach and Dionne Warwick.

    Prince was a surprise final performer, taking the stage for two songs, including "Satisfied"--and without an "Idol" contestant alongside.

    Asked backstage if he had any advice for contestants, Meat Loaf replied: "If you want to do this, you're gonna go up and down, and up and down, and people are going to love you and hate you ... Just stick with it," he said.

    With two hours to fill the show also tossed in some comedy. Contestant Kellie Pickler was seen trying gourmet dining and dumping her escargot--snail--under her chair, while "Golden Idols" were awarded to also-rans who flopped in their auditions.

    Second-season runner-up Clay Aiken, with a slick new look, performed a "duet" on "Don't Let the Sun Go Down on Me" with his alter ego, a wannabe "American Idol" contestant who evoked the originally geeky Aiken.

    Hicks and McPhee weren't as odd a finals pairing as second-second finalists Ruben Studdard and Aiken, but close.

    McPhee was the first Los Angeles native to make it big on "American Idol." With a singer-vocal coach mom behind her and a starlet's beauty, McPhee looked and sounded groomed for success.

    Hicks, whose thatch of prematurely gray hair helped him stand out from the pack, had barely survived the first audition at which judge Simon Cowell warned he didn't have a chance of advancing in the contest.

    McPhee attended the prestigious Boston Conservatory for a semester; Hicks has been a fixture on honky-tonk stages. McPhee skillfully played to the cameras, all calculated seduction; Hicks stomped across the set, with Cowell once comparing him to a drunken dad at a wedding.

    The finale closed out a relatively tame contest compared to seasons past, when jammed phone lines, technical glitches and annoyingly untalented singers drew complaints from fans. Last year, judge Paula Abdul denied an ex-competitor's claims of an affair in 2003.

    This season's biggest jolt came when rocker Chris Daughtry of McLeansville, N.C., was voted out before the finale. Many observers had predicted he would win the contest after routinely drawing praise from the judges and online support.

    Despite the lack of offstage drama, or because of it, this edition of "American Idol" was the most-watched yet. Compared to last year, the show was up 14 percent in total viewers with an average weekly audience of 30.3 million--impressive growth for an established program.

    The Tuesday and Wednesday episodes routinely ranked as the top-rated TV shows, drawing 28 million or more viewers. The series also is seen via delayed broadcast or satellite delivery in more than 150 other countries.

    Debaroti Dasgupta, 26, accompanied by her mother, flew in from Malaysia for the show after winning a radio competition in which she impersonated finalist Elliott Yamin.

    "So my heart broke when he was out in the semifinals," she said before the show Wednesday at the Kodak Theatre. "But I"m here supporting Taylor and I hope he wins tonight."

    Source-aolnews- subscribe to aol today.

     

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    Gov's $10 billion jackpot for schools

    Gov. Blagojevich pushed a plan Tuesday to make Illinois the first state to put its lottery up for sale or lease, a move that could generate $10 billion -- including a $4 billion, four-year windfall of new dollars for an A to Z laundry list of school programs, ranging from a longer school year to merit pay for teachers and full-day kindergarten.

    Educators embraced most of the proposals; they are popular items teachers and administrators have wanted for years. But questions were immediately raised about the wisdom of leasing the lottery, and whether the plan truly solved a decades-old problem of inadequate state funding for schools.

    A sale or lease could generate $10 billion. But only $4 billion of that would amount to new dollars for schools -- and that money would be gone after four years. The other $6 billion would go into a trust expected to generate about $650 million annually through 2025 to replace the money schools get from the lottery now.

    In addition, the governor hopes to pump in another $2 billion from other sources over the four years for a total of $6 billion in new funding.

    "What happens after year four?" said Bindu Batchu of A+ Illinois, a school finance reform group. "We need to sustain an investment in education. We can't rely on one- time sources."

    Dawn Clark Netsch, the 1994 Democratic gubernatorial candidate who made school finance reform her campaign centerpiece, was leery of giving up valuable state assets.

    "I'm concerned about this idea that we're going to sell or lease most of our major state assets," Netsch said. "It seems we're continuing to push the responsibility for funding our services off into the future and taking away assets we may need in the future."

    Blagojevich's budget director, John Filan, downplayed the risks. The plan sets up a task force to address long-term funding strategy.

    Plan 'has something for everyone'

     

     

    "We have four years of certainty here," he said. "In year five, we'll look for revenue sources."

    Added Supt. Blondean Davis of Matteson School District 162, who worked with the governor's staff on Meeks' behalf: "Four years is a lifetime in the education of a child." The plan "has something for everyone," she said.

    The governor wants the state Legislature to take up the proposal in the fall veto session, after the gubernatorial election.

    "It's a bold new plan to fundamentally change our schools," Blagojevich said Tuesday at a news conference at Healy Elementary School in Bridgeport. "Yes, there is a lot more funding in this plan, but it's a combination of funding, accountability, performance and an intolerance of failure."

    The smorgasbord of education ideas in the plan is so broad, it might appeal to rich and poor districts, and high-achieving as well as struggling schools.

    Chronically low-achieving districts would be offered a "turnaround team" and resources for a longer school year, after-school tutoring, summer school, libraries and expanded technology. If they refused state help and showed no uptick, they could face a state takeover.

    Any district also could apply for funds to help create small schools; "identity'' schools featuring a theme, such as agriculture or the arts; or merit pay for teachers whose kids show improving test scores. All districts also should benefit from more money for principal and superintendent mentoring, officials said. Poor districts would likely get help in updating textbooks; middle class districts could see help in expanding preschool offerings.

    The plan also includes selling $1.5 billion in bonds for new school construction.

    'Now the work starts'

     

     

    Illinois Federation of Teachers spokeswoman Gail Purkey noted that merit pay was tried unsuccessfully in two IFT school districts. Even so, she was ready to hear more.

    "There are a lot of things in here we support -- expanded school year, summer school, early childhood, raising the foundation level," Purkey said. "This was an idea briefing. Now the work starts."

    For decades, advocates have argued for basic reform in the way Illinois pays for its schools. They want to reduce reliance on property taxes while increasing income and sales tax. They've butted heads with Blagojevich, who pledged not to raise taxes.

     

     

     

    Two of the strongest tax swap backers, Sen. Miguel del Valle (D-Chicago) and independent Sen. James Meeks of Chicago, stood with Blagojevich Tuesday to support his plan.

    "You can't fix every problem in one swoop," Meeks said. "I'm still concerned about the imbalance in property taxes. We have four years to work on it."

    Source-Chicago Suntimes

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    Cheney a likely witness in aide's trial

    WASHINGTON-- Vice President Dick Cheney could be called to testify in the perjury case against his former chief of staff, a special prosecutor said in a court filing Wednesday.

    Special Counsel Patrick Fitzgerald suggested Cheney would be a logical government witness because he could authenticate notes he jotted on a July 6, 2003, New York Times opinion piece by a former U.S. ambassador critical of the Iraq war.

    Fitzgerald said Cheney's "state of mind" is "directly relevant" to whether I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, the vice president's former top aide, lied to FBI agents and a federal grand jury about how he learned about CIA officer Valerie Plame's identity and what he subsequently told reporters.

    Libby "shared the interests of his superior and was subject to his direction," the prosecutor wrote. "Therefore, the state of mind of the vice president as communicated to (the) defendant is directly relevant to the issue of whether (the) defendant knowingly made false statements to federal agents and the grand jury regarding when and how he learned about (Plame's) employment and what he said to reporters regarding this issue."

    In the Times article, former U.S. Ambassador Joseph Wilson accused the Bush administration of twisting intelligence on Iraq to justify going to war. In 2002, the CIA sent Wilson to Niger to determine whether Iraq tried to buy uranium yellowcake from Niger to build a nuclear weapon. Wilson discounted the reports. But the allegation wound up in President Bush's 2003 State of the Union address.

    Cheney wrote on the article, "Have they done this sort of thing before? Send an ambassador to answer a question? Do we ordinarily send people out pro bono to work for us? Or did his wife send him on a junket?"

    Libby told the agents and the grand jury that he believed he had learned from reporters that Plame is married to Wilson and had forgotten that Cheney had told him that in the weeks before Wilson's article was published.

    In his grand jury testimony, Libby said Cheney was so upset about Wilson's allegations that they discussed them daily after the article appeared. "He was very keen to get the truth out," Libby testified, quoting Cheney as saying, "Let's get everything out."

    Cheney viewed Wilson's allegations as a personal attack because the article suggested that the vice president knew that Wilson had discounted old reports that Iraq had tried to buy uranium yellowcake from Niger to build a nuclear weapon.

    Eight days after Wilson's article, conservative syndicated columnist Robert Novak identified Plame and suggested that she had played a role in the CIA's decision to send Wilson to Niger.

    Fitzgerald contends that Plame's status as a CIA officer was classified and that Libby was told that disclosing her identity could pose a danger.

    The prosecutor wants to use Cheney's notes on the Wilson article to corroborate other evidence he has that Libby lied about outing Plame to reporters.

    In a filing last week, Libby's lawyers said Fitzgerald would not call Cheney as a witness and would have a hard time getting the vice president's notes admitted into evidence.

    "Contrary to defendant's assertion, the government has not represented that it does not intend to call the vice president as a witness at trial," Fitzgerald wrote. "To the best of government's counsel's recollection, the government has not commented on whether it intends to call the vice president as a witness."

    Source-Suntimes.com

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    May 23, 2006

    Ghana, Nigeria Involved in International Bribery Case?

    CNN just reported that Congressman William Jefferson's, representing Louisiana's second congressional district, arrest is partially linked to bribery allegation involving a technology company he has a stake in, in Ghana and Nigeria .
    Congressman William Jefferson (Democrat-Louisiana), was caught on videotape accepting $100,000 in one-hundred-dollar bills from an FBI informant whose conversations with Congressman William Jefferson (Democrat-Louisiana), also were recorded, according to a court document released Sunday. Agents later found the cash hidden in his freezer." Hard, cold cash. People are now wondering if this is the same cash that Congressman William Jefferson (Democrat-Louisiana), asked rescue personnel to take him to his fashionable home in New Orleans five days after Hurricane Katrina to get. Is that what he removed from his house along with other items?

    "At one audiotaped meeting, Rep. William Jefferson, D-La., chuckles about writing in code to keep secret what the government contends was his corrupt role in getting his children a cut of a communications company's deal for work in Africa. As Jefferson and the informant passed notes about what percentage the lawmaker's family might receive, the congressman 'began laughing and said, "All these damn notes we're writing to each other as if we're talking, as if the FBI is watching,"' according to the affidavit. Jefferson, who represents New Orleans, has not been charged and denies any wrongdoing." He said he's not going to plead guilty to something he didn't do, and the facts of this, he says, have been terribly, terribly misreported and are out of context.

    He tells the informant at one point that money should be paid to businesses operated by his children. "I make a deal for my children. It wouldn't be me," Jefferson said, according to the affidavit.

    In a different conversation, Jefferson seeks to distance himself from bribes that must be paid to Nigerian and Ghanain government officials to facilitate transactions.

    "If he's gotta pay Minister X, we don't want to know. It's not our deal," Jefferson told the witness, according to the affidavit. "We're not paying Minister X a damn thing. That's all, you know, international fraud crap. We're not doing that. We're not doing any of that that gets us (unintelligible)."

    The affidavit also spells out "seven other schemes" in which Jefferson was involved; nearly all were blacked out in the document.

    The Jefferson investigation has provided fodder for Republicans who have suffered black eyes in the investigations of current and former GOP lawmakers, including Tom DeLay and Randy "Duke" Cunningham.

    Jefferson, who has pledged not to resign from Congress in the face of the bribery investigation, speculated about his political future in one of the recorded conversations.

    When the informant asked Jefferson about his political plans, he responded: "I'm gonna get your deal out of the way ... and I probably won't last long after that."

    "As for the $100,000, the government says Jefferson got the money in a leather briefcase last July 30 at the Ritz-Carlton hotel in Arlington. The plan was for the lawmaker to use the cash to bribe a high-ranking Nigerian official - the name is blacked out in the court document - to ensure the success of a business deal in that country, the affidavit said. All but $10,000 was recovered on Aug. 3 when the FBI searched Jefferson's home in Washington." They searched his Washington home. "The money was stuffed in his freezer, wrapped in $10,000 packs and concealed in food containers and aluminum foil."

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    Presidential Jet: Heading for a replay?

    The Minister of Information and National Orientation, Mr. Kwamena Bartels, in what looks like a first major public outing, has raised some issues that must engage national attention.

    The secrecy shrouding the leasing/purchase arrangement regarding a Gulf stream GIII aircraft for the presidency at a time when general concerns were that the country had more important needs to spend its limited resources on seemed long to have been resolved. This was because, in spite of several pronouncements from governmental circles about possible wrongdoing in the transaction leading to the acquisition of the jet, the rest seem based on suspicions.

    But it becomes more bizarre when a minister of state, and more grievously one for Information and National Orientation, would state publicly, over five years after his government has been in power, that he has discovered the said aircraft has a capacity suggesting it could carry only eleven passengers.
    The minister states further that since as far as he was concerned the jet could not carry a president, security, press and business people, it was therefore not really a presidential jet because “it was quite clear that it was not meant for that; indeed its capacity has given credence to the rumors that it was really meant as an end of service benefit for the former president, Rawlings.

    It was disheartening to hear Ghana’s new minister of information, who has been given additional responsibility of orienting citizens, start jumping into conclusions based on what he himself also claims to be rumors.

    The minister did not end there but went on to give out some misinformation on a post- September 11 valuation, which, values do not need expertise in the aviation industry to conclude and cannot be the basis for any reasonable comparison with pre- September 11 values.

    Secondly, it does not need any expertise in finance or business to know that generally things bought on hire purchase or credit cost more than cash purchases. The second process of acquisition also gives some breather to the buyer in terms of liquidity pressure.

    Surprisingly, even after giving out the types of jets the aircraft was being offered for as down payment, he finds the value to be that of a security concern.

    Interestingly, Mr. Bartels still insists that there was an element of fraud on the state regarding the acquisition of the aircraft since it should have been acquired less than 50 % of what was paid for it and that people would be dragged in to answer for it.

    The Chronicle believes that if for over five years the New Patriotic Party government failed to uncover any malfeasance, failed to utilize the jet while it depreciated in value, and although it have been in a position to lay hands on all information related to the transaction, for which a committee chaired by no mean a personality than the former Senior Minister, Mr. J.H Mensah, they should stop wasting our ears, and either shape up or shut up! At least on this presidential jet matter!

    So far as The Chronicle is concerned, if government officials do not approach issues of national importance with open, unprejudiced minds, they would understand what has gone on and not grope in the dark forever.

    But above all, The Chronicle finds it curious that in castigating the National Democratic Congress government for handling the presidential jet transaction in a non- transparent manner, the Information minister is telling us the jet had been traded off and flown out already, even without parliamentary approval.



    Source:
    Chronicle

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    May 22, 2006

    One family's rise, a century of power

    When Bruno Roti Sr. died in 1957, 3,000 people lined the streets to pay their respects.

    Fourteen cars overflowed with flowers.

    The wail of a 12-piece marching band filled the streets of the neighborhood that Roti Sr. had called home for nearly five decades, since leaving his small village of Simbario in southern Italy in 1909.

    Nearly 100 men wearing black sashes across their chests escorted the hearse through the neighborhood today known as Chinatown. They were members of an organization Roti founded -- the Society of St. Rocco di Simbario.

     

    It was a funeral fit for a cardinal. Or a mayor.

    According to his death certificate, Bruno Roti Sr., dead at 76, was a beer distributor.

    To people in his tightly knit Italian neighborhood, Roti Sr. was their leader. Years after Roti's death, his godson, in a recorded interview he gave in 1980 for the "Italians in Chicago" project run by the history department at the University of Illinois at Chicago, recalled him as a man who showed immigrants a "clean, decent, respectable way of life.''

    To Chicago Police, though, Roti Sr. was "The Bomber," "The Mustache," "a big man in the Chicago crime setup." In the early part of the century, he was part of the Black Hand, police said -- the name given to loose-knit gangs of extortionists who preyed on fellow Italian immigrants for money. The Black Hand gangs would be taken over in the 1920s by Al Capone's gang.

    "Roti was close to Al Capone and was visited by Capone on many occasions,'' according to an FBI report prepared nine years after his death.

    The FBI identified Roti Sr. as the leader of what would become the Chicago Outfit's 26th Street/Chinatown crew, a key cog in organized crime here. His descendants would build upon his legacy, extending the family's influence over public office and organized labor.

    A neighborhood grocer

     

     

    Bruno Roti Sr. visited Chicago in 1901, then returned eight years later for good, according to the passenger manifest of the ship -- named La Bretagne -- that brought him to America when he was 28.

    Roti passed through Ellis Island in the spring of 1909 on his way to Chicago to join his two brothers and his pregnant wife's siblings. Wife Marianna Bertucci Roti and the couple's two sons stayed behind in Simbario, joining Roti in Chicago seven months later, according to his petitions for citizenship.

     

     

     

     

    Roti Sr. became a grocer, operating a store in the 2100 block of South Wentworth, according to a Chicago city directory from 1917.

    Chicago -- booming with hundreds of thousands of immigrants -- was a brutal place, with gangland killings, immigrants preying upon each other, rampant vice.

    Roti Sr. himself was arrested twice in murder investigations.

    The first time, in 1920, he was picked up with four others in the slaying of labor leader Maurice "Moss'' Enright, according to newspaper accounts. Enright was trying to take over the city's street sweeper union. Police suspected Roti had disposed of the sawed-off shotgun that was used to kill Enright. But he was never charged.

    As Prohibition-era violence raged, Roti Sr. was charged in a killing in 1931, according to newspaper accounts. At the time, he was 51 and the father of 10 children. One of his sons, then 10 years old, was Fred Bruno Roti, who would grow up to be a powerful Chicago alderman -- and, according to the FBI, a "made" member of the mob.

    The victim was Johnny Genero, a gangster who was driving to his mother's house with another man when his car was trapped by another car at 29th and Normal. Genero was shot in the head. He died instantly. His companion wasn't harmed.

    Police arrested Roti Sr., described in newspaper reports as a saloonkeeper, and four others, including James Belcastro. Belcastro, nicknamed "King of the Bombers,'' had been arrested more than 150 times. Among his alleged crimes: the 1928 murder of a political candidate and the operation of a bomb factory. He wasn't convicted in either case.

    Belcastro was often referred in newspaper stories as Chicago's "Public Enemy No. 4,'' and as a "pineapple thrower'' -- a flip reference to persistent allegations he threw bombs at homes or businesses. The Chicago Daily News decreed he was "head of the bombmaking division of Capone Inc.''

    A few weeks after Genero's murder, prosecutors dropped all charges against Roti, Belcastro and the others. No one was ever convicted of Genero's murder.

    When Belcastro would be arrested, Roti Sr.'s wife sometimes put up her family's home to bail Belcastro out of jail. Or her brother Bruno Bertucci would. In fact, the Rotis and Bertuccis often put up their homes to bail people out of jail, among them Bruno Roti Sr. himself, according to Cook County property deeds.

    Rejected, twice, for citizenship

     

     

    Roti applied twice during Prohibition to become an American citizen. The first time, he was rejected for "ignorance,'' the second for not having "five years good character.''

    Finally, 36 years after he moved to America, Roti was granted citizenship in 1945, a few months after World War II ended. One of his character witnesses was John Budinger, the alderman of the 1st Ward, the hand-picked successor of Michael "Hinky Dink'' Kenna, the infamously corrupt alderman who'd served during Prohibition.

    Chicago's 1st Ward -- which included the Loop and Near South Side -- had long been ruled by the mob, which had a hand in everything from gambling to politics to development. Eleven years after Bruno Roti Sr.'s death, his son Fred became the 1st Ward alderman, a job he eventually gave up when he got caught taking bribes.

    Son-in-law takes over

     

     

    When Bruno Roti Sr. died, his criminal empire went to Frank "Skid'' Caruso, who had married Roti's daughter Catherine in 1934, according to FBI reports.

    According to an FBI report dated Feb. 25, 1966, "His 'clout' comes from the fact he is the son-in-law of BRUNO ROTI referred to as 'MUSTACHE.'

    "It has previously been reported that CARUSO is the leader of rackets and organized crime in that area and gets a piece of all action taking place there," the report said, referring to Chinatown.

    Another FBI report, from Oct. 20, 1969, said: "CARUSO characterized as formerly a 'baggage thief' and was nothing until he married into the Bruno Roti family."

    Caruso was a onetime patronage worker for the city street department. He served in the Army during World War II, was wounded in France and received a Purple Heart -- a fact his son Bruno proudly noted during a deposition six years ago.

    Taking over from his father-in-law, Caruso concentrated on illegal gambling, including "juice loans" -- illegal, high-interest loans often made to gamblers. A craps game Caruso ran in Chinatown in 1962 was "one of the biggest and best in the entire Chicago area,'' an informant told the FBI.

    "Bruno Roti had considerable wealth and property and cash in that area and this wealth is still somewhat controlled by [Caruso] in view of his leadership capacity concerning gambling and criminal matters," according to the 1969 FBI report.

    On the city payroll

     

     

    Over the years, many of "Skid" Caruso's relatives held city patronage jobs, usually in the Streets and Sanitation Department. Two of his three sons, two of his brothers, his sister's husband and five of his wife's brothers all had city jobs at some point. Today, he has grandchildren, nieces and nephews -- more than 30 relatives in all, including Carusos, Rotis and other family members -- on the city payroll.

    Caruso's older brother, Joe "Shoes" Caruso, made headlines in 1959, when a reporter found him working at a liquor distributorship when he was supposed to be at his city job -- using a hand broom to sweep two city blocks in Chinatown. "Shoes" Caruso didn't bat an eye at getting caught.

    "I've been through all this before,'' he told the Chicago Tribune in 1959. "It's always the same -- a lot of wind, and nothing ever happens. Wait and see. There still will be payrollers after all of us are dead and gone.''

    Thirty-two years later, "Skid'' Caruso's oldest son, Peter, and other relatives got caught up in a similar scandal involving city workers assigned to sweep streets with brooms. Once again, city officials found they weren't working eight hours a day.

    "Skid" Caruso's gambling associates also landed city jobs, thanks to Caruso's brother-in-law, Frank Roti, according to an FBI report filed shortly after Roti's funeral in 1966. "Frank Roti held a city job most of his life and was responsible for hiring many individuals who assisted Caruso in racket operations," the FBI said.

    Why 'Skid?'

     

     

    The FBI had two versions of how "Skid" Caruso got his nickname, according to its files. One said it was due to his "association with the Skid Row element." The other said it was a shortened version of "Machine Gun Skid," which he was called in his younger days, when he "committed numerous acts of terrorism,'' according to an Oct. 20, 1966, FBI report.

    Caruso was arrested at least 10 times, mostly on gambling charges, but never convicted, according to his FBI file. In 1965, Chicago Police arrested him on gambling charges, but the case was dropped after prosecutors discovered that evidence had been "lost or misplaced," according to the FBI.

    "I know the system must be working if my father never did a day in jail ... for organized crime," his son Bruno Caruso said in a 2000 deposition.

    "Skid'' Caruso's gambling crew included his brother, Morris "Mutt'' Caruso, and their sister's husband, Dominick Scalfaro, who were arrested in separate gambling cases in the 1960s. "Mutt'' Caruso's case was dismissed. Scalfaro was convicted, but the case was dismissed on appeal.

    Caruso died in 1983 at 71. Fourteen years later, his grandson and namesake, Frank Caruso, was charged with beating Lenard Clark, a black teenager who had come into the Carusos' neighborhood. Frank Caruso was convicted of aggravated battery and sentenced to eight years in prison.

    His trial brought the close-knit family even closer together, as relatives defended the young man, arguing that reporters unfairly portrayed him as a racist.

    Caruso's father, Frank "Toots" Caruso, wrote to the judge, asking for leniency. He described Sunday gatherings at the home of his mother, Catherine Roti Caruso, Bruno Roti Sr.'s daughter and matriarch of the family. The elder Caruso wrote that his son "speaks to his Nana with reverence. I have let him know that she is 87-years-old and any day could be her last. We all eat at Nana's house every Sunday. She cooks for 21 people, but her granddaughters serve and clean up afterward. Frank's job is to set the table the third Sunday of every month."

    The grandmother is now 94 years old. She still lives in the Chinatown home where she raised her family, right next door to the home of her late younger brother, Fred Roti, who, as alderman, would take the family farther in politics than any other family member.

    A power at City Hall

     

     

    Roti became 1st Ward alderman in 1968. He soon became one of the most powerful, well-liked and respected members of the City Council. Roti was also a "made member" of the mob, according to the FBI -- a fact not made public until after his death in 1999.

    Roti's political career abruptly ended in 1991, when he was charged with taking bribes to fix zoning and court cases. Two years later, he was found guilty and sentenced to four years in prison.

    The charges resulted from a federal probe that loosened the mob's political grip over the 1st Ward, including the area controlled by the 26th Street Crew long run by Roti's brother-in-law, "Skid'' Caruso.

    "The 26th Street/Chinatown Crew historically was supposedly aligned with the 1st Ward, which was operated and controlled under organized crime auspices . . . and historically has had influence within the city of Chicago government for contracts, jobs with Streets and Sanitation, city contracts for hauling, trucking companies and so on," former FBI Agent John O'Rourke, an expert on the Chicago Outfit, said in a July 1997 deposition in a labor case.

    Federal authorities attacked the mob's hold on Chicago politics with the help of Robert Cooley, a Chicago cop-turned-mob-lawyer who secretly recorded conversations with politicians and judges. Federal agents also hid a listening device in a booth at the old Counsellor's Row, a restaurant and 1st Ward mob hangout that was across from City Hall.

    The investigation found that the powerhouse in Chicago's mob politics was Pat Marcy, who held the unassuming title of secretary of the 1st Ward Democratic Organization but whose power was vast. Marcy took bribes and doled out city contracts and jobs, fixed criminal and civil cases, and bribed politicians and judges, according to testimony at Roti's trial. Roti was alderman, but he answered to Marcy.

    'Nobody gets hurt'

     

     

    Roti reveled in his reputation as the mob's voice on the City Council. During Roti's re-election campaigns, the joke around City Hall was "Vote for Roti, and Nobody Gets Hurt.'' And Roti shared in the laugh.

    He was elected alderman in 1968 and held the job until he resigned in 1991, when he was indicted. He'd been a state senator from 1950 to 1956. When he left the Senate, he was a patronage worker in the city's Sewer Department.

    Over the years, Roti often was asked about his many relatives working for the city. "So I have some relatives on the payroll," Roti said in 1981. "They're doing an excellent job."

    That comment came a year after his son -- city employee Bruno F. Roti -- was indicted in a police motor-pool scandal, charged with billing the city for work done on Bruno Roti's own car. He pleaded guilty, was sentenced to a work-release program for six months and fined $5,000.

    Ald. Roti also faced criticism that he helped steer the city's trucking business to his nephews -- including Fred Bruno Barbara, who would make a fortune off city business.

    When Roti died, his family and friends jammed the streets of Chinatown for a funeral procession similar to his father's 42 years earlier. His longtime friend, Ald. Bernard Stone (50th), made sure everyone knew the role Roti played in Chicago history.

    "Our skyline should say 'Roti' on it,'' Stone said at the funeral. "If not for Fred Roti, half the buildings in the Loop would never have been built."

    Roti, his father Bruno Roti Sr. and brother-in-law Frank "Skid" Caruso are buried together at Mount Carmel Cemetery in Hillside. Roti Sr. is interred in a stone mausoleum -- one of the most ornate, intricately carved edifices in the cemetery. It towers over the graves of his relatives. To the right is the grave of Ald. Fred Roti; to the left, "Skid'' Caruso. Other relatives are buried nearby.

    At Christmas, fresh wreaths decorated each grave. A large one with a red bow was hanging on Roti Sr.'s mausoleum.

    Nearly 50 years after his death, Bruno Roti Sr. hasn't been forgotten.

    Source-Suntimes.com

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    Scams begin to target users of MySpace

    With its easy sharing of jokes, gossip, photos and videos within a virtual community of young people, the Web site MySpace.com has rocketed to second place in worldwide popularity, with an estimated 78 million users.

    But the site also has brought concerns about teens meeting strangers online. And now there's a new worry: a "phishing" scam that experts say could compromise teens' -- or their parents' -- financial information.

    As with other phishing scams, in which con artists create realistic-looking Web sites using the names of well-known banks or other corporations, the MySpace scam tricks people into going to a copycat page and signing on. Once the user gets on the site, their computer can be infected with software that can later capture keystrokes typed while visiting legitimate banking or shopping sites, said Hiep Dang, director of threat research for Aluria Software, a division of EarthLink and a member of the Digital Knights fraud prevention group.

    Looking for credit card numbers

     

     

    Scam artists can use computer programs to sort through the captured keystroke information, looking for sequences that appear to be credit card numbers, PINs or passwords. Other scams involve MySpace profiles that are completely fake and lead to links that can infect your computer, Dang said.

    Todd Davis, CEO of LifeLock, a company that sells identity theft prevention services, says such scams can cause years of hassles for victims. Stolen identities are sold on the Internet for as little as $20.

    MySpace has recently been in the news because of concerns that younger users may be unwittingly exchanging personal information with older strangers. Earlier this month, a 27-year-old Naperville man was charged with felony indecent solicitation of a child and a misdemeanor charge of distribution of harmful material after allegedly trying to arrange a sexual tryst with a 14-year-old local girl he met on MySpace.

    MySpace spokeswoman Dani Dudeck declined to comment. The site cautions users to omit information that would make it easy for a stranger to find them and urges people to report identity theft, cyberbullying, inappropriate content and other types of abuse.

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    Feds foreclose on mortgage scam

    Dariusz "Derek" Przybylek believed he was hatching a lucrative mortgage ripoff when he met with two men last year at a Skokie restaurant, according to federal authorities.

    Little did he know that one man was a government informant and the other was an undercover Secret Service agent.

    In an elaborate investigation, the government secretly recorded Przybylek discussing a scheme to obtain an inflated mortgage on a house at 1054 N. Lorel in the South Austin neighborhood, officials said. The government borrowed the house for the sting.

    After a 14-month probe, Przybylek, 36, of Highland Park, and licensed appraiser Erwin R. Espe, 68, of Wilmette, were charged last month with fraud and released on bond. Neither man returned calls seeking comment.

    Russell C. Collett, assistant special agent in charge of the Secret Service's office in Chicago, said the government is looking for new ways to attack mortgage fraud -- one of the fastest-growing forms of crime in the country. Reported losses exceeded $1 billion last year, according to the FBI.

    "This was a one-of-a-kind investigation from a Secret Service standpoint," Collett said. "Criminals have become creative, so law enforcement has to be even more creative."

    Buyer recruited

     

     

    The investigation began with an informant telling the Secret Service that Przybylek was looking for people to participate in mortgage fraud, according to an affidavit by Secret Service agent Christopher Lane. The informant had been convicted in Wisconsin of fraud involving vehicle titles.

    The Secret Service borrowed the single-family house on Lorel from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, which took over the property after the owner defaulted on a HUD mortgage. The house was falling apart with a gutted kitchen, no electricity or water, doors that did not lock properly, stained carpet, decaying siding and an attic without internal walls or a ceiling. The Secret Service obtained a legitimate appraisal showing the house was worth about $105,000 last year.

    Posing as the owner of the home, an undercover Secret Service agent met with Przybylek and agreed to sell the property at an inflated price, the affidavit said.

    In return, the agent said he wanted to make a $25,000 profit from the scheme because he could make at least a $5,000 profit on a legitimate sale. Przybylek agreed, adding that he would keep the rest of the profit, the affidavit said.

    Przybylek arranged for Espe to give a bogus appraisal, the affidavit said. Przybylek also allegedly recruited a buyer who obtained a $257,800 mortgage.

    The plan was for the buyer to make a couple of payments, then disappear and leave the mortgage in default, authorities said. The buyer was not identified in court documents.

    Arrested at closing

     

     

    In November, Espe met the undercover Secret Service agent at the house. Espe said his job was to "play with the paperwork," the affidavit said. He appraised the property at $257,800 in March, saying the house had "new electrical, plumbing was upgraded," and the hardwood floors were refinished.

    The undercover Secret Service agent inspected the house and discovered new windows and new siding. But no other work was done, including the electrical upgrades, plumbing and floor restoration mentioned in the appraisal, the affidavit said.

    Przybylek arranged for an attorney to represent the undercover Secret Service agent, the affidavit said. The attorney was not identified in court records.

    Przybylek was arrested last month at the closing on the property, records show.

    Collett would not comment on whether the unidentified buyer and the attorney also are in trouble with the law, but he said more people could face charges in the continuing investigation.

    Collett said he hopes the case will make scammers more fearful of carrying out mortgage fraud.

    "They won't know whether the person next to them at the closing table is a federal agent or not," he said. "If these criminals start to think, 'Who am I dealing with?' they will be less likely to commit the fraud in the future."

    Source-Chicago Suntimes

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    May 21, 2006

    Smugglers Feed Illegal African Migration

    DAKAR, Senegal - Africans migrating to Europe can turn
    to professional smugglers and even earn a free ticket
    by recruiting other passengers.


    As Europe works harder to stop them, smugglers are
    taking on more importance. West African migrants used
    to fly there or travel across the Sahara Desert. Now
    they increasingly are taking to the sea, and they need
    help ranging from getting a forged visa to finding a
    fisherman who will cram his open boat with dozens of
    people and head for the Canary Islands, the Spanish
    gateway to the prosperous     European Union.

    Costs range from a few hundred dollars for the boat
    trip to thousands for a package that includes airline
    tickets and fake visas.

    Senegal, with its thriving port at Dakar, good
    communications and relatively stable government, is
    becoming a smuggler's hub.

    Most smugglers see themselves as businessmen intent on
    delivering a good service so as to attract more
    customers, said Jorgen Carling, an expert on African
    migration to Europe at the Oslo-based International
    Peace Research Institute.

    Known to English-speaking West Africans as "connection
    men," and to French-speakers as "passeurs," many are
    acquaintances or even relatives of their clients. But
    Carling said he has documented smugglers placing
    passengers with no knowledge of sailing at the helm of
    overloaded boats.

    David Kyle, a sociologist at the University of
    California, Davis who writes about the global traffic
    in people, says migrant-smuggling could mask a more
    sinister side — feeding the prostitution market in
    Europe.

    "One of the biggest dangers of the growth of migrant
    smuggling is it gives human-traffickers a place to
    hide," he said.

    Antonio Mazzitelli, Dakar-based head of West Africa
    programs for the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime, calls
    for prosecuting more smugglers — Senegal only this
    year passed the necessary legislation — as well as
    tougher border controls and greater efforts to educate
    Africans about the risks of illegal crossings.

    But he acknowledges that many Africans see a trip to
    Europe as "almost the only opportunity they have to
    make their future." In the long term, he says, the
    solution is economic development of the migrants'
    impoverished home countries.

    Smuggling networks aren't the only option for would-be
    migrants. Aruna Dia, 29, earned a free ticket to
    Europe by recruiting other passengers.

    Dia said he simply called villages in Senegal where he
    knew people and told them to come. Twenty-two
    responded and he housed them in the Mauritanian port
    of Nouadhibou until their departure for Europe.

    The voyage was a disaster. Dia said the boat sank and
    most of its 65 passengers perished. He blames himself
    and says he won't try again.

    Source- VOA

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    May 19, 2006

    Volta Lake Disaster cmt continues sitting

    Accra May 18, GNA- A human rights activist on Thursday, prayed the nine member Justice Mensah Committee of Inquiry on the April 8 Volta Lake Disaster to widen its scope in investigating circumstances surrounding eviction of the settlers.

    Nana Oye Lithur, Coordinator of Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative (CHRI), Africa Office also requested for a moratorium on all forced evictions pending the drawing of sustainable resettlement plan. Taking her turn at the committee's sitting in Accra, Nana Oye noted that forced eviction of the settlers constituted violation of human rights under the constitution since most of the evictees did not have access to shelter, food and medical facilities.

    Nana Oye declared that under the constitution and international convention, govern ment had the obligation to look for suitable place for the evictees. She further requested an alternative package plan that would consider the settlers' sources of livelihood, stressing, "That all regulations on water transportation be enforced to avoid similar accidents on the lake."

    Nana Oye said in February and April this year, CHRI had information on the plight of the evictees and therefore, sent a fact-finding team to Mancheri Island.

    She said after the team had returned to Accra, CHRI contacted the Director of Game and Wildlife in Accra to ascertain more information surrounding the eviction and was informed that the eviction had been on the drawing board for a long time.

    According to Nana Oye, the Director of Game and Wildlife denied that personnel of the Department forced the people onto the boat. She said CHRI organised a press conference to express its worry on the boat disaster and forced eviction.

    "Two days after our return from Mancheri Island we heard about the eviction," she added.

    Nana Oye explained that until Professor Christopher Ameyaw Akumfi, Minister for Ports, Harbours and Railway went to the area there was no official statement on the incident.

    "As a human rights organisation our prime concern was the obvious lack of rapid response by relevant organisations such as National Disaster Management Organisation (NADMO) and the District Assembly." Nana Oye said after conducting its own investigations, CHRI catalogued the facts and monitored the media.

    Tendering documents and a Compact Disc (CD) on the boat disaster, she admitted that there were discrepancies over the number of deaths recorded during the incident.

    Mrs Mawusi Agyemfra, Programme Officer, Centre on Housing Rights, a non-governmental organisation told the committee about how the organisation became interested on issues of the re-settlers. According Mrs Agyemfra, the NGO was informed about the evictions in 2001 and therefore, contacted the Ministry of Lands, Forestry and Mines to suspend the eviction, which it obliged.

    She recalled that some of the evictees narrated how personnel of the Game and Wildlife Department manhandled them.

    Mrs Agyemfra said during the eviction exercise most of the people did not only lost their lives but monies and properties. She therefore, called for the demarcation of national parks and stool lands saying some chiefs in the surrounding villages were not certain about demarcation in the area.

    Mr James Annan, a 67-year-old boat manufacturer, told the committee that to halt disasters, steel boat should be used on the lake. He stressed the need for the stumps in the lake to be removed. Mr Annan pledged his commitment to commence manufacturing of steel boat for use on the lake and appealed to the government for assistance. About 65 witnesses have so far testified before the committee chaired by Mr Justice Kofi Essel Mensah.

    In April this year, personnel of the Wildlife Department under the Forestry Commission allegedly evicted illegal settlers on the Dudzome Forest Reserve. It was alleged that the illegal settlers numbering over 150 were forced on a 70-passenger boat that capsized on the lake killing some of the evictees.

    Hearing continues on Friday, May 19.
    Source:
    GNA
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    Professor Samuel Akainyah Appointed Special Envoy!

    Former vice-president, Albert Gore is quoted to have said that, “Professor Akainyah may be a Ghanaian native son, but he is America's adopted son and a gift to the world.” Belinda McKwartin.

     

    At an emergency meeting held in Chicago, on May 15 2006, The Ghana National Council of Metropolitan Chicago unanimously elected Professor Samuel Akainyah as its Special Envoy in the United States.  This meeting was a follow-up from Professor Akainyah’s visit to The Council a week ago when he availed his services to the Ghanaian community for fund raising efforts to acquire a Cultural Center.

     

    The rare visit to its monthly meeting by Chicago's renowned artist, philanthropist, Professor and Art gallery owner, Samuel Akainyah, gave the Ghanaian community here a boost to its long awaited acquisition of “Ghana House”

     

    In his speech to the council, Professor Akainyah traced the history of the inception of the Ghana House idea and outlined the purpose of his visit to the council:

     

    a)      to ask for the opportunity to chair and spearhead a fundraising effort to benefit the “Ghana House” Project and
    b)      to suggest a name change of the “Ghana House” Project to Ghana Cultural Center, with a goal for educational, social, diplomatic, and business utility rather than the “Ghana House” which has a narrower meaning.

     

    He added that his objective was to bring Corporate America to be part of the effort for The Ghana Cultural Center project.

     

    He asked for approval from the council to invite Angela Bassett, a noted movie actress, to be involved in the 200 Year Abolition of Slavery Act Anniversary celebrations in Ghana. This, he said might lead Angela to understand the story of Yaa Asantewaa, which was one of the early struggles against the British colonial rule.  He stated she could illicit Hollywood’s attention to descend on Ghana and make a movie out of the story.

     

     In an answer to a question about his political affiliations, Professor Akainyah emphasized that he was not interested in politics. His aim is to help his country; through civic and charitable initiatives, not political affiliation.

     

    During his short speech to The Ghana National Council’s Central Committee, Professor Akainyah listed a number of scholarship programs for Ghanaian students, home and abroad, and also tourism potentials for Ghana.

     

    Professor Akainyah presented some of his art work, which included the official art work he executed for the U.S National Democratic Convention in Chicago to The Ghana National Council.

     

    In her introductory remarks Ms. Belinda McKwartin said, “Professor Samuel Akainyah, I believe you do not need to be introduced to the Ghanaian community, especially The Ghana National Central Committee because of your previous associations and assistance to the community, but it is important to remind ourselves and also to introduce you to the new members.”
     
    Professor Akainyah, is an artist, he trained in Diplomacy and International Law, a businessman and an author.  He has two book publications and is currently working on his third book.  Prof. Akainyah studied at The Art Institute of Chicago and The University of Chicago.  His reputation as an artist and sole owner of the largest artist owned gallery in the country is chiseled.  His patrons include reporters, executives, bankers, businessmen and women, television news anchors, and politicians.  Some of his famed clients are Samuel Jackson, Michael Jordan, Angela Bassett, Bryant Gumbel and Bill Kurtis.

     

    In November 2005, he presented a colossal work titled “From Whence We Came” to President J.A Kufuor on behalf of the country of Ghana. The 11 feet by 9 feet painting valued at $80,000.00 was his gift to Ghana. 

     

    He was listed as one of the 50 Influential Blacks in Chicago in the January 2006 issue of N’DIGO.  His knowledge of influentials in the Chicago area, including Mayor Daley, will serve the interests of The Ghana National Council and the Ghanaian Community in general.  Mayor Daley referred to him as a national figure in the arts and a Chicago icon.
    Recently, when the GNC was looking for a place to build Ghana House, our application was scorned on, but the presence of this great man immediately led the Alder lady, Arenda Troutman, to grant him immediate audience and favorable consideration of the application.

     

    Professor Akainyah, who likes to be called Sam, is a humble and a hardworking person who has served The Ghana National Council and its Affiliate Organizations in many ways.  Indeed, he was among the framers of The Fante Benevolent Society's constitution.

     

    Sam has given and negotiated jobs to many Ghanaian immigrants in the Chicago area.  He is among the first Ghanaians to donate $1000.00 to The Ghana National Council for the Ghana House project many years ago. He donated $1500.00 to the GNC so that we could have a live band for our Independence Anniversary celebrations some years ago.

     

    He has underwritten receptions for all the Ghanaian ambassadors since Dr. Bafour Senkyire, Koby Koomson, Allan Kyerematin and Fritz Poku; Mayor’s Mensah and Amarteifio.  Professor Akainyah is a true nationalist and Patriot.

     

    Due to Professor Akainyah’s tremendous philanthropist contributions to the city of Chicago and the State of Illinois, The Cook County Board of Commissioners, headed by John H. Stroger, Jr., proclaimed February 15 1999 as Samuel Akainyah day in the city of Chicago, its outlying suburbs and the entire County of Cook.

     

    In the same year, Sam was elected as the Official Artist of the National Democratic Convention in Chicago, the first artist in the three hundred years of America’s democracy to achieve such an honor.

     

    He has helped many Ghanaians in diverse ways without generating attention for himself. Recently he mobilized fifty African Americans to the Motherland and is in the process of taking 100 businessmen and women, executives of corporations and his clients in December.

     

    She concluded by saying, “With the above good things done by this great man, you agree with me that he is the kind of person you want in your camp.”

     

    The president of the Ghana National Council of metropolitan Chicago, Mr. Reuben Hadzide thanked Professor Akainyah for his generous gesture and promised that the council will work with him and others to achieve its goals.

     

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    May 15, 2006

    Sen. Clinton Apologizes for Work Ethic Remark

    NEW YORK (May 15) - After telling an audience that young people today "think work is a four-letter word," Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton said she apologized to her daughter.
    Senator Clinton
    "I said, 'I'm sorry, I didn't mean to convey the impression that you don't work hard,"' Clinton said Sunday in a commencement address at Long Island University. "I just want to set the bar high, because we are in a competition for the future."

    Clinton spoke to more than 2,000 graduates days after she criticized young people at a gathering of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce in Washington. In those remarks, she said young people have a sense of entitlement after growing up in a "culture that has a premium on instant gratification."

    The senator said that her daughter, Chelsea, phoned to complain after learning about the comments.

    "She called and she said, 'Mom, I do work hard and my friends work hard,"' Clinton said Sunday.

    New York's junior senator, who is up for re-election this year, also told the graduates she plans to introduce a bill that would help college students manage and repay their loans. The proposal would limit loan payments to a certain percentage of their incomes, she said.
    Source-aol.com
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    The Utilities And Us

    We must not kid ourselves: We are not getting good services from our utility (water and electricity) suppliers. We can even rope in our telephone service providers, especially the mobile phone companies too. Between them (Water/Electricity/Telephone or WET for short) Ghanaians are being treated most shabbily indeed.

    Ghana Water Company Limited (GWCL) is not living up to its billing. Many urban and rural areas do not have regular flow of pipe borne water. In many parts of the national capital, Accra, residents hardly have running water. A couple of months ago, when ADM sent a sample of GWCL pipe borne water in its part of the national capital to a reputable lab for analysis, it was declared unfit for human drinking.

    The Electricity Company of Ghana (ECG) must be familiar to readers of ADM editorials, so we will not belabour our gripe concerning the company's inefficiencies and incompetence that are now impinging most negatively on the country's economy.

    The mobile phone companies are improving their services but are yet to give the customer value for money, especially in terms of connectivity. This is particularly extreme between GT's "One Touch" and Areeba where sometimes out of frustration, one gives up trying to call from 020 to 0244 or vice versa after several attempts.

    Ours is not to criticize for the sake of merely picking a quarrel, but to point out that we have big problems in the WET sector and those entrusted with the responsibility of running the business of the sector must rise up to the challenge or make way for those with better ideas.

    We will conclude with this conundrum as an example of the inefficiencies and incompetence we referred to above: The ECG has over a trillion cedis in uncollected revenues. It is bedeviled by illegal connections and parts of its assets (poles and pylons) have been encroached upon.

    Question: Who do they expect to clear all of that mess for them?

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    Editors choice:Timeline: Ghana

    A chronology of key events:

    1482 - Portuguese set up trading settlement.

     

     Accra, the capital, is renowned for its beaches, nightlife
    1877: Becomes capital of Britain's Gold Coast colony
    Population: 1 million
    1874 - British proclaim coastal area a crown colony.

    1925 - First legislative council elections take place.

    1957 March - Ghana becomes independent with Kwame Nkrumah as prime minister. Independence leader Kwame Nkrumah

    1960 - Ghana proclaimed a republic; Nkrumah elected president.

    1964 - Ghana becomes a one-party state.

    1966 - Nkrumah overthrown in military coup; Russian and Chinese technicians expelled.

    1969 - New constitution facilitates transfer of power to civilian government led by Kofi Busia.

    1972 - Busia ousted in military coup led by Colonel Ignatius Acheampong.

    1978 - Acheampong forced to resign; General Frederick Akuffo takes over.

    Rawlings era

    1979 - Akuffo deposed in coup led by Flight Lieutenant Jerry Rawlings. Acheampong and Akuffo tried and executed on charges of corruption.

     

     Independence leader Kwame Nkrumah, ousted in 1966
    1979 September - Rawlings hands over power to an elected president, Hilla Limann.

    1981 - Limann ousted in military coup led by Rawlings after two years of weak government and economic stagnation.

    1983 - Rawlings adopts conservative economic policies, abolishing subsidies and price controls, privatising many state enterprises and devaluing the currency.

    1992 - Referendum approves new constitution introducing a multiparty system. Rawlings elected president.

    1994 - One thousand people are killed and a further 150,000 are displaced in the Northern Region following ethnic clashes between the Konkomba and the Nanumba over land ownership.

     

     Ex-president Jerry Rawlings was questioned about human rights
    1994 June - Seven ethnic groups involved in violence in Northern Region sign peace agreement.

    1995 - Government imposes curfew in Northern Region as renewed ethnic violence results in a further 100 deaths.

    1996 - Jerry Rawlings re-elected president.

    Kufuor elected

    2000 - December - John Kufuor beats Vice-President John Atta Mills in the presidential election.

    2001 February - Petrol prices rise by 60% following the government's decision to remove fuel subsidies.

    2001 April - Ghana accepts debt relief under a scheme designed by the World Bank and the IMF.

    2001 May - National day of mourning after football stadium stampede leaves 126 dead. Inquiry blames police for overreacting to crowd trouble.

    2001 June - Government scraps public holiday celebrating Rawling's military coup in an effort to wipe out the legacy of his rule.

     

     Cape Coast, once a centre of the slave trade
    2001 June - Floods hit Accra, causing 10 deaths and forcing 100,000 to flee their homes.

    2002 April - State of emergency is declared in the north after a tribal chief and more than 30 others are killed in clan violence. State of emergency is lifted in August 2004.

    2002 May - President Kufuor inaugurates reconciliation commission to look into human rights violations during military rule.

    2003 October - Government approves merger of two gold-mining firms, creating new gold-mining giant.

    2004 February - Former President Jerry Rawlings testifies at commission investigating human rights offences during the early years of his rule. Jerry Rawlings, former president

    2004 October - Group of current and former military personnel detained on suspicion of planning to destabilise government ahead of elections.

    2004 December - Presidential poll: Incumbent John Kufuor wins a second term.

    2005 April-May - Thousands of Togolese refugees arrive, fleeing political violence in their home country.

    2006 April - A boat capsizes on Lake Volta reservoir; more than 100 passengers are feared drowned.

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    EU Promises 'Bold' Iran Nuclear Offer

    European Union foreign policy chief Javier Solana says the EU will offer Iran generous incentives to convince Tehran to give up its nuclear program.

    Arriving in Brussels Monday for a meeting of EU foreign ministers to discuss Iran, Solana said the "bold package" will cover issues relating to nuclear, economic and - possibly - security matters.

    He did not offer details of the package, which - among other things - is expected to include promises to help Iran develop a civilian nuclear program.

    Sunday, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Tehran would reject any European offer that requires an end to Iran's nuclear activities. Tehran denies Western accusations that Iran is trying to obtain nuclear weapons.

    As a signatory of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, Iran has the right to build a civilian nuclear program, but must submit to inspections by the International Atomic Energy Agency.

    The United States Sunday brushed off calls for direct talks with Iran over its suspect nuclear program, saying the United Nations is the preferred forum for those discussions.

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    US Senate Reaches Deal to Discuss Immigration Bill

    The U.S. Senate will revive discussion on its version of an immigration bill after Republican and Democratic leaders reached an agreement Thursday.

    The Senate bill could provide millions of illegal immigrants a path to U.S. citizenship.

    Senate leaders broke a weeks-long stalemate on the issue after agreeing on who would sit on a committee that would confer with the U.S. House of Representatives about any differences in their versions of the bill.  A compromise bill resulting from the negotiations would be sent to President Bush for his signature.

    The House version of the bill, passed last December, would make illegal immigration to the United States a felony and calls for building a fence along 1,000 kilometers of the border with Mexico. 

    President Bush has said he favors a comprehensive immigration policy that includes a guest worker program.

    Hundreds of thousands of demonstrators have rallied across the country in recent weeks to demand more rights for illegal immigrants and to generally emphasize the importance of immigrants to the nation's economy and culture.

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    Bush to Address Nation on Immigration

    President Bush is preparing to address the American people on the controversial issue of illegal immigration. Mr. Bush will make a nationally broadcast speech Monday, highlighting the need for new immigration laws.

    The president will talk about an issue that has divided America: how to stem the tide of illegal immigration, and what to do about the estimated 12 million undocumented aliens in the United States.

    Some in Washington say the illegal immigrants are criminals and border security is the only answer. Others say there is no way to deport so many people, many of whom have already put down roots in communities across the nation, and steps should be taken to give them some sort of legal status.

    President Bush has been urging a middle ground. In his speech Monday he is expected to urge members of Congress to adopt a comprehensive approach that secures America's borders, while presenting illegal immigrants already in the country with a way to remain as guest workers.

    White House officials say the president has been looking at some new ideas and one is to bring in National Guard units to help with border security.

    The National Guard is the only branch of the military organized on the state level.

    Guard members usually serve on a part time basis, and their traditional role has been to help their states cope with emergencies. But in recent years, Guard units have been called up for extended duty in the war on terrorism.

    A few Guard members are already working to support the Border Patrol in some parts of the country, and White House National Security Advisor Steven Hadley says that support role could be expanded.

    He spoke on CNN's Late Edition program.

    "The notion of using the National Guard to support the Border Patrol is not a new one. This is something that is already being done. It is not a militarization of the border," he said. "It is about assisting the civilian Border Patrol."

    Hadley said several lawmakers are enthusiastic about the idea of deploying thousands of National Guard troops along the border with Mexico. Among them is the top Republican in the Senate, Majority Leader Bill Frist. He also appeared on CNN.

    "I think that is the least we can do," said Frist. "Securing our borders is a federal responsibility. We need to act. We have failed miserably in the past."

    But Senator Patrick Leahy, the senior Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, says he is concerned the Guard is already overextended with its commitments in Iraq. He told CNN more border agents should be in place, and the Guard should not be used.

    "We are stretching them pretty thin now and we are going to make Border Patrol out of them? What I wish they had done was when we asked them two years why don't you fund the Border Patrol positions that the Congress has provided? You know what we got from Homeland Security for an answer? Nothing at all," concluded Leahy.

    But Senator Leahy praised President Bush for advocating a comprehensive approach to the problem. Senate leaders say they hope to have an immigration reform bill acceptable to the White House completed in the next few weeks.

    They acknowledge the most difficult part of the legislative process will still lie ahead: reconciling their version of the legislation with the tough border security bill that cleared the House of Representatives late last year.

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    Nigerians Collect Bodies, Bury Dead After Pipeline Blast

    Nigerians are giving mass burials to as many as 200 people killed in a pipeline explosion.

    Rescue workers were still uncovering charred bodies Saturday, several kilometers away from the site of the massive blast near the commercial capital, Lagos.

    Authorities say vandals were siphoning oil from the pipeline in the waterside village of Ilado Friday when a spark triggered the blast. They say flames quickly ignited hundreds of oil cans nearby.

    Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo ordered a full investigation into the blast Saturday, and also ordered police to increase security near oil pipelines.

    The Lagos police commissioner, Emmanuel Adebayo, estimates that between 150 and 200 people were killed, their bodies burned beyond recognition. Authorities are burying the victims in mass graves to prevent contamination.

    Theft of gasoline and crude oil from pipelines is common in Nigeria, where the vast majority of people live in poverty despite the nation's oil wealth.

    A Lagos-based journalist, Paul Okolo, tells VOA it is common for people to siphon fuel from burst or tapped pipes.

    In one of the worst oil pipeline explosions in the country, more than one thousand people were killed in 1998 in the southern Delta region.

    Some information for this report AP, AFP and Reuters.

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    US Military Plans Joint Exercise in West Africa

    Senior military officers from the United States and officials of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) have been meeting in Abuja, Nigeria to draw up details for a joint military exercise, called a multilateral command post exercise.
     
    The goal of the command post exercise is to enhance the peacekeeping and intervention capacity of the standby military force in West Africa, one of the world's poorest and most unstable regions.
     
    The United States is hoping to improve the operational efficiency and competence of the nations in West Africa so they can respond more quickly to situations that require military intervention.
     
    One of the U.S. officials at the Abuja meeting, Scott Fisher, who is a political-military adviser at the State Department, provides an insight into the training program, scheduled for Accra, Ghana.

    "It will involve a subordinate battalion responding to a force commander and his staff and they will be in receipt of a mandate, in this case from ECOWAS, that would say we have this sort of issue here and that will be the scenario and we provide you the military, the mandate from the political masters in West Africa to take this course of action," he said.

    The U.S. military curently enjoys cooperation with a number of countries in West Africa, and Africa's growing oil industry, concentrated in West Africa's Gulf of Guinea, has also led to an increased U.S. military presence in the region.

    Fisher says the U.S. intentions go beyond safeguarding its energy interests in the region.

    "We understand in the United States, and I think everybody in Africa understands, that in the absence of security, you cannot get the other benefits that you seek: economic development, good governance and better health situation," he added.  "All of that is dependent upon the security situation.  So there is really a longer term issue that is not only focused on the Gulf of Guinea and energy. This is focused on how does West Africa become a partner in a different number of ways with the world community."

    The Economic Community of West African States created a standby military force in 2004 to intervene in any situation that could threaten the security of the region.  However, because of a lack of resources, the force is yet to become operational.

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    Yoweri Museveni sworn in third Time

    Torrential rain did little to dispel the carnival atmosphere among thousands of  supporters of Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni who was sworn in for a third term Thursday in Kampala's Kololo Independence Square.  Dressed in the bright yellow colors of the National Resistance Movement, the crowd greeted the arrival of the president with tumultuous adulation.

    With his wife, Janet, herself a newly elected member of parliament, at his side, Mr. Museveni made a grand entrance waving to the crowd from a black BMW SUV. He then took center stage for his third inauguration as president.

    "I, President Yoweri Museveni, swear in the name of almighty God that I will be faithful and bear full allegiance to the Republic of Uganda, and that I will preserve, protect and defend the constitution, so help me God," he said.

    His critics say that it was only because of a change in the constitution, that Mr. Museveni's party rushed through last July, that he is allowed to serve a third term.

    And leaders of the Forum for Democratic Change, Uganda's opposition party, say it was only because of fraud in the February elections that Mr. Museveni won a third term.  The opposition, citing its claims of fraud, boycotted the inauguration.

    But many of Africa's most prominent leaders attended the ceremony, including Presidents Mwai Kibaki of Kenya, Thabo Mbeki of South Africa, Omar Guelleh from Djibouti, Paul Kagame of Rwanda, Jakaya Kikwete of Tanzania, Abdullahi Yusuf of Somalia, Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi and Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe.

    Mr. Mugabe has many critics among Western leaders, but he was warmly received by the collective dignitaries as he took his seat next to Benjamin Odoki, Uganda's chief justice.

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    Fighting in Mogadishu

    Fighting has eased in Somalia's main city Mogadishu as local clan elders and Islamic leaders call for talks between the warring parties.

    Since last Sunday, street clashes between Islamic militias and an alliance of warlords have killed more than 140 people - mostly civilians. Thousands more have fled the city.

    The battles have drawn criticism from politicians and clan leaders, who called for a meeting with both sides Sunday.

    Somalia's interim president Abdullah Yusuf Ahmed recently warned that representatives of the armed groups may be excluded from his Cabinet.

    Many Somalis say the recent violence is the worst in years and is being fueled by outside countries. U.N. arms monitors recently said weapons are flowing "like a river" into Somalia, despite an international arms embargo.

    Locals say anti-American sentiment in Mogadishu has grown over allegations that the United States is secretly supporting the warlord alliance. American officials have declined to comment on any relationship, but have said that they support the alliance's goal of rooting out terrorism.

    Warlords accuse the Islamic militias of having ties to al Qaida. The Islamic militias accuse the warlords of being pawns of the United States.

    Somalia has been lawless for some 15 years, and U.S. officials have long viewed the country as a possible terrorist haven.

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    Karl Rove Indicted

    Special Prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald spent more than half a day Friday at the offices of Patton Boggs, the law firm representing Karl Rove.

    During the course of that meeting, Fitzgerald served attorneys for former Deputy White House Chief of Staff Karl Rove with an indictment charging the embattled White House official with perjury and lying to investigators related to his role in the CIA leak case, and instructed one of the attorneys to tell Rove that he has 24 hours to get his affairs in order, high level sources with direct knowledge of the meeting said Saturday morning.

    Robert Luskin, Rove's attorney, did not return a call for comment. Sources said Fitzgerald was in Washington, DC, Friday and met with Luskin for about 15 hours to go over the charges against Rove, which include perjury and lying to investigators about how and when Rove discovered that Valerie Plame Wilson was a covert CIA operative and whether he shared that information with reporters, sources with direct knowledge of the meeting said.

    It was still unknown Saturday whether Fitzgerald charged Rove with a more serious obstruction of justice charge. Sources close to the case said Friday that it appeared very likely that an obstruction charge against Rove would be included with charges of perjury and lying to investigators.

    An announcement by Fitzgerald is expected to come this week, sources close to the case said. However, the day and time is unknown. Randall Samborn, a spokesman for the special prosecutor was unavailable for comment. In the past, Samborn said he could not comment on the case.

    The grand jury hearing evidence in the Plame Wilson case met Friday on other matters while Fitzgerald spent the entire day at Luskin's office. The meeting was a closely guarded secret and seems to have taken place without the knowledge of the media.

    As TruthOut reported Friday evening, Rove told President Bush and Chief of Staff Joshua Bolten, as well as a few other high level administration officials, that he will be indicted in the CIA leak case and will immediately resign his White House job when the special counsel publicly announces the charges against him, according to sources.

    Details of Rove's discussions with the president and Bolten have spread through the corridors of the White House, where low-level staffers and senior officials were trying to determine how the indictment would impact an administration that has been mired in a number of high-profile political scandals for nearly a year, said a half-dozen White House aides and two senior officials who work at the Republican National Committee.

    Speaking on condition of anonymity Friday night, sources confirmed Rove's indictment was imminent. These individuals requested anonymity saying they were not authorized to speak publicly about Rove's situation. A spokesman in the White House press office said they would not comment on "wildly speculative rumors."

    Rove's announcement to President Bush and Bolten comes more than a month after he alerted the new chief of staff to a meeting his attorney had with Special Prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald in which Fitzgerald told Luskin that his case against Rove would soon be coming to a close and that he was leaning toward charging Rove with perjury, obstruction of justice and lying to investigators, according to sources close to the investigation.

    A few weeks after he spoke with Fitzgerald, Luskin arranged for Rove to return to the grand jury for a fifth time to testify in hopes of fending off an indictment related to Rove's role in the CIA leak, sources said.

    That meeting was followed almost immediately by an announcement by newly-appointed White House Chief of Staff Joshua Bolten of changes in the responsibilities of some White House officials, including Rove, who was stripped of his policy duties and would no longer hold the title of deputy White House chief of staff.

    The White House said Rove would focus on the November elections and his change in status in no way reflected his fifth appearance before the grand jury or the possibility of an indictment.

    But since Rove testified two weeks ago, the White House has been coordinating a response to what is sure to be the biggest political scandal it has faced thus far: the loss of a key political operative who has been instrumental in shaping White House policy on a wide range of domestic issues.

    Rove testified that he first found out about Plame Wilson from reading a newspaper report in July 2003 and only after the story was published did he share damaging information about her CIA status with other reporters.

    However, evidence has surfaced during the course of the two-year-old investigation that shows Rove spoke with at least two reporters about Plame Wilson prior to the publication of the column.

    The explanation Rove provided to the grand jury - that he was dealing with more urgent White House matters and therefore forgot - has not convinced Fitzgerald that Rove has been entirely truthful in his testimony and resulted in the indictment.

    Some White House staffers said it's the uncertainty of Rove's status in the leak case that has made it difficult for the administration's domestic policy agenda and that the announcement of an indictment and Rove's subsequent resignation, while serious, would allow the administration to move forward on a wide range of issues.

    "We need to start fresh and we can't do that with the uncertainty of Karl's case hanging over our heads," said one White House aide. "There's no doubt that it will be front page news if and when (an indictment) happens. But eventually it will become old news quickly. The key issue here is that the president or Mr. Bolten respond to the charges immediately, make a statement and then move on to other important policy issues and keep that as the main focus going forward."

    Jason Leopold spent two years covering California's electricity crisis as Los Angeles bureau chief of Dow Jones Newswires. Jason has spent the last year cultivating sources close to the CIA leak investigation, and is a regular contributor to t r u t h o u t. He is the author of the new book NEWS JUNKIE. Visit www.newsjunkiebook.com for a preview.
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    May 13, 2006

    High school fever for 'American Idol' finalist Katharine McPhee

    "McPhever" mania reached a fevered pitch Friday when "American Idol" finalist Katharine McPhee returned to her old high school.

    Teenage boys screamed out marriage proposals. Cheerleaders chanted "Go Katharine Go!"

    Even Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa showed up to the packed gymnasium at Notre Dame High School to honor the statuesque McPhee, one of three contestants left on Fox's mega-hit talent contest. The ultimate champ will be announced May 24.

    "You make me feel like a winner, regardless of what happens," she told the high-energy crowd.

    The 22-year-old brunette - wearing skintight jeans, a black T-shirt and hoop earrings - raced around the gym for an hour singing snippets of songs, breaking out in dance and bear-hugging former teachers.

    A sea of posters filled the room, from "Vote for Katharine - Catch the McPheever" to "She's McPhine," "She's McPheerless" and "McPhee is Our Favorite."

    "I think she's gorgeous," said 17-year-old senior Nick Generales.

    Footage of her visit will be shown next week on "American Idol," along with hometown segments featuring fellow finalists Elliott Yamin and Taylor Hicks.

    McPhee, the first Los Angeles native to make it big on "Idol," seemed overwhelmed by the frenzy.

    "I'm more nervous now than on the show," she said, just before launching into a soulful rendition of "God Bless the Child" - the tune she sang at her original "Idol" audition.

    When later asked by a student what she looked for in a guy, the singer smiled and said, "Ask the faculty. They know everyone I've dated at this school ... But I like someone nice, cool, normal."

    Then she pointed to two teachers she once had crushes on.

    As for fame and the future, McPhee reflected on her past as a singing star in high school and said she missed being in musical theater productions.

    "I will definitely go back to that," she said.

    A question from an aspiring singer prompted a bit of advice. McPhee said wannabe "Idol" contestants should pick their songs ahead of time and "remember to breathe."

    Ninth-grader Amanda Dodge, 15, echoed other students in her support of McPhee.

    "I think it's amazing she's here," she said. "Even though she's moving on to a whole new world, it's great to see her recognize everyone who brought her to where she is today."

    Dodge dismissed controversy over this week's "Idol" - in which McPhee landed in the bottom two, but favored Chris Daughtry was voted off. Some Daughtry fans have said their votes may have been mistakenly credited to another contestant.

    "At the end of the day, it's who the people want, and they wanted her, so I think that's fair," Dodge said.

    McPhee's 23-year-old sister Adriana, another tall Notre Dame alum, said she was thrilled for her sister, adding she hoped McPhee makes the final cut. To do her part, she voted for two hours for her little sis.

    "I feel guilty if I'm not voting!"

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    Bush Considers Using Military for Border Security

    WASHINGTON (May 13) - President Bush, trying to build momentum for an overhaul of the nation's immigration laws, is considering plans to shore up the Mexican border with National Guard troops paid for by the federal government, according to senior administration officials.

     
     
    Hermin Ramos of Oaxaca, Mexico, looks over the U.S.-Mexico border fence near Smuggler's Gulch west of the San Ysidro Port of Entry in San Diego.
    Denis Poroy, AP
    Hermin Ramos of Oaxaca, Mexico, looks over the U.S.-Mexico border fence near Smuggler's Gulch west of the San Ysidro Port of Entry in San Diego.

    Watch Video: Border Patrol Controversy

    More Coverage:
    · Legal Immigrants Face Many Citizenship Hurdles
    · Dueling Protests Mirror Immigration Divide
    · U.S. May Expand Fences on Mexico Border
    · Passage of Immigration Bill Seems All but Assured

    Talk About It: Post Thoughts
     
     

    One defense official said military leaders believe the number of troops required could range from 3,500 to 10,000, depending on the final plan. Another administration official cautioned that the 10,000 figure was too high.  

    The officials insisted on anonymity since no decision has been announced.  

    The president was expected to reveal his plans in an address Monday at 8 p.m. EDT. It will be the first time he has used the Oval Office for a domestic policy speech - a gesture intended to underscore the importance he places on the divisive immigration issue.  

    The key questions Friday were exactly how many National Guard troops might be deployed, for how long and at what cost to taxpayers - as well as the problem of possible disruption of upcoming deployments to Iraq and elsewhere overseas.  

    Border stata governors were split.  

    Using those troops for border security is "maybe not the right way to go," said California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, the Republican former movie star, though he agreed the federal government is obliged to secure the borders. He noted that many of the Guard troops are returning from long duty in Iraq, and "I think that we should let them go ... back to work again."  

    New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson also opposed the plan, saying National Guard troops could be needed for emergencies such as wildfires or hurricanes. Richardson, chairman of the Democratic Governors Association, said in a statement the Bush administration has not consulted directly with the governors who deal with border issues. "This would dramatically impact our states and we should be included in the discussion and planning," he said.  

    The governors of Texas and Arizona favor positioning National Guard troops on the border.  

    But Texas Democratic Reps. Silvestre Reyes and Solomon Ortiz - both senior members of the Armed Services Committee - sent a letter to Bush urging him to consider a number of issues before deploying the troops, including whether another mission is in the best interest of "our over-stretched military."  

    As discussions among the White House, the Pentagon and the states continued on how the military could be used to secure the southern border, defense officials said states want the federal government to pick up what will be a significant tab for the increased security. Officials had no estimates on that cost.  

    Bush's speech Monday night is intended to build support for broad immigration overhaul by taking substantive steps to secure the border.  

    "We need to beef up those (border) operations and the cost will be substantial," Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, said in an interview. "People are just not going to accept comprehensive immigration reform unless they are assured the government is going to secure the border. People have lost confidence in the federal government because they simply haven't addressed this in a dramatic and effective way."  

    Paul McHale, assistant secretary of defense for homeland defense, asked officials earlier this week to offer options for the use of military resources and troops - particularly the National Guard - along the border with Mexico, according to defense officials familiar with the discussions.  

    Cornyn said state officials are also looking for more unmanned aircraft, ground sensors, surveillance cameras and military training to help with border patrols.  

    Defense officials said the National Guard may be used only until significant additions to the existing civilian border patrols can be fully funded and completed.  

    Currently there are about 100 National Guard troops involved in counter-drug operations, including some along the border, said Guard Bureau spokesman Jack Harrison. He said there are also between 10-15 Guard members - mostly engineers - helping border patrol agents with vehicle and heavy equipment support.  

    The discussions this week underscored the importance of the border and immigrations issues, yet were tentative enough to reflect worries about drawing the nation's armed forces into a politically sensitive domestic role.  

    Southern lawmakers met with White House strategist Karl Rove earlier in the week for a discussion that included making greater use of National Guard troops to shore up border control. And on Capitol Hill, the Senate is poised to pass legislation this month that would call for additional border security, a new guest worker program and provisions opening the way to eventual citizenship for many of the estimated 11 million to 12 million illegal immigrants in the country.  

    Currently, the military plays a very limited role along the borders, but some active duty forces have been used in the past to help battle drug traffickers.  

    The National Guard is generally under the control of the state governors, but Guard units can be federalized by the president, such as those sent to the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. Active duty military may not be used for law enforcement unless the president authorizes it.  

    In addition, under federal law, in certain circumstances the states can maintain control of their Guard units but arrange to have the costs picked up by the federal government. That allows the Guard to continue to perform law enforcement activities.  

    Officials wrangled over the use of the active military during Hurricane Katrina, with some suggesting that troops be used for law enforcement to quell violence and looters in New Orleans. There were also suggestions that Bush federalize the National Guard there, but state officials opposed that proposal. In the end, neither move was made.  

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    Florida Trappers Hunt Killer Alligator

    SUNRISE, Fla. (May 12) - Trappers using pig lungs as bait scoured canals and other areas Friday as they tried to find an alligator that killed a woman out for a jog.

    Yovy Suarez Jimenez's dismembered body was found in a canal Wednesday by construction workers. The 28-year-old Davie resident had left Tuesday night and did not return.

    Dr. Joshua Perper, Broward County's medical examiner, concluded Thursday that "the alligator attacked the woman while she was on land" and then dragged her body into a canal.

    He added that she "died of traumatic injuries sustained by an alligator attack, a mixture of blood loss and shock, and in my opinion died very fast."

    Suarez's mother told WFOR-TV she last spoke to her daughter by phone Tuesday night when she was sitting under a bridge by a canal.

    Witnesses saw a woman matching Suarez's description dangling her feet over the water's edge, but no one saw an attack, said Officer Jorge Pino, a spokesman for the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.

    Authorities killed an alligator caught Thursday night but determined it did not kill Jimenez. Its stomach contained only tennis balls and a football, said Dani Moschella, a commission spokeswoman.

    Suarez's death is the 18th confirmed fatal alligator attack in Florida since 1948, commission spokesman Willie Puz said. Nine other deaths are unconfirmed.

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    Medicare drug coverage deadline nears

    Only a few days remain to sign up for Medicare’s prescription drug coverage. As Monday’s May 15 open-enrollment deadline nears, it’s important for beneficiaries to look into signing up to avoid penalties.

    The percentage of people in Medicare who have prescription drug coverage has risen from 75 percent to an estimated 88 percent in the past few months. Experts are predicting it will rise even higher, to 90 percent.

    An estimated 5 million to 6 million beneficiaries remain with no drug coverage, and a substantial portion of them may qualify for extra financial help with the Part D prescription drug benefit’s premiums, deductibles, co-payments and “doughnut hole” because of low income and assets. These same people may also qualify for similar help with Parts A and B — Medicare’s coverage for hospital and doctor visits.

    There has been a low rate of sign-up for the Part D low-income subsidy. Traditionally, far fewer of those who qualify for government assistance programs ever sign up for them and Medicare’s low-income assistance program for the prescription drug benefit is no exception. This is one tradition the Medicare Rx Access Network of Alabama is trying to break. Beneficiaries who qualify for the low-income subsidy are not, in essence, subject to the late-enrollment penalty, so our member organizations in will be working hard over the next few weeks to reach out to these people.

    While some beneficiaries may be tempted to wait until the last minute to look into enrolling, they could encounter frustrations by delaying. Internet connections and telephone lines are likely to become especially busy in the last-minute rush to sign up. Most beneficiaries who wait until after May 15 to enroll will have to wait until next year for their drug coverage to begin. Also, they may be subject to having their monthly premiums permanently increased by 7 percent of the national average premium, which is $25 for 2006.

    Even Medicare beneficiaries who are healthy now and don’t take any prescription drugs at all should look into Medicare’s drug coverage because it is insurance and, as such, protects them for a time when their health condition may deteriorate and they may need medications, said former U.S. Sen. John Breaux, honorary chairman of the Medicare Rx Education Network.

    Help is available. Medicare beneficiaries still trying to make a decision about signing up for prescription coverage through Medicare can contact counselors at state, federal and local organizations that help beneficiaries compare plans. There are 6,000 counselors now working Medicare’s helpline (1-800-MEDICARE, or 1-800-633-4227), and one-one-one counseling also is available by calling the State Health Insurance Assistance Program at 1-800-243-5463.

    The Social Security Administration can also provide assistance for those who may qualify financially for extra help. Medicare beneficiaries interested in applying for extra help or those who have previously applied and wish to check their status, may call 1-800-772-1213 to contact their local Social Security office.

    “Signing up for a Medicare prescription drug plan is an individual choice,” said Breaux. “I believe in that as much as I believe in the plan choices that the benefit offers. To make a truly informed decision, beneficiaries should look into all the new benefit’s options. With only a few days remaining to sign up for Medicare’s prescription–drug coverage without penalty, I encourage beneficiaries to do just that, and to do it quickly.”
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    200 Feared Dead in Nigeria Oil Blast

    A ruptured pipeline exploded Friday in southwestern Nigeria as villagers rushed to collect oil gushing from it and a local TV station said up to 200 people were feared dead.

    Firefighters were on the scene of the explosion at Ilado, a village about 25 miles east of Nigeria's main city of Lagos, and Red Cross workers were helping survivors.

    "There was a big fire and quite a number of people died," Red Cross spokeswoman Okon Umoh said without elaborating.

    The blast came as villagers flocked to the ruptured conduit to scoop up fuel that was gushing out. Up to 200 may have perished in the explosion, according to Nigeria's Channels Television.

    Nigeria is Africa's leading oil producer, the world's seventh-biggest exporter and fifth-biggest source of U.S. oil imports.

    Thieves often steal heavily subsidized fuel from pipelines for personal use or to sell across borders where prices are higher.

    In 1998, more than 1,000 villagers died when a ruptured gasoline pipeline exploded as they scavenged fuel.

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    More worker visas could help solve immigration problem

    The millions who marched peacefully for fair immigration laws are taking a break, for now. Their mission is not over. What's next? The issue will continue to be driven to closure by fundamental concepts of fairness, the U.S. economy and by new, little-known leaders. Hopefully, fair immigration laws will follow.

     

     

    Some have written to me claiming we shouldn't give anything to people who come here illegally. But let's look at what's really going on. Large wealthy neighbor to the north needs lots of labor to sustain its businesses and their customers; poor neighbors to the south need jobs desperately to make a living. Question: Live in Third World conditions or make the walk across the border to make a better living and feed your family? Answer: You walk. Anyone would.

    Those who say we shouldn't give help to lawbreakers are kidding themselves. They'd do the same thing. And why, by the way, do we have to make them lawbreakers in the first place? Why does Congress create such an artificially low number of worker visas, thus creating to so many "lawbreakers"? Congress should stop setting such low numbers of visas in the face of overwhelming evidence that we need the labor and that it hasn't done a bit to harm the country. To the contrary, it has made us more competitive in so many ways.

    Recently, while in Phoenix, I saw Latinos raking rocks in the roadway in 90 degree heat for probably $6 to $7 an hour. I thought, "who's kidding who" in believing that there is a line of citizens waiting to rake rocks in the desert. But say they do. Commercials run on Phoenix TV saying "They're taking our jobs." No doubt you might get some American takers if you increase pay to $15 to $20 an hour, but who wants to pay more for housing or other goods?

    The Minutemen and right wingers talk a good game but they're also the first to howl about the high price of things. Fortunately, most Americans, like me, are "middle of the road" and go to work, raise kids, pay the bills, go to ball games, do some charity and take out the garbage. We "call 'em as we see 'em."

    Calling this one as I see it, there's a lot of need for general, low-skilled labor in our country. Americans aren't going to do that kind of work for the amount employers are willing to pay, and they want the cost of things to remain affordable. What's the answer then? It's actually quite simple. Increase the number of visas for laborers willing to work for those wages. That should do it. It's ironic that the fundamentalists will dig in and cause millions to march in order to solve a problem, a practical one, that otherwise could be solved with a stroke of the pen by increasing the number of worker visas.

    How did these marches come about anyway? Who started them? In Chicago, the starting place of the nationwide marches, most point to Spanish-language radio personalities and some key community organizations such as Casa Aztlan; the Federation of Mexican Organizations; the Coalition of Immigrant and Refugee Rights, and the Little Village Chamber of Commerce. Maybe not household names, yet they are makers of history. It was their call to action, to march, that catalyzed people to peacefully pursue justice.

    Like most major issues, problems and challenges that have confronted the United States, the answers do not begin in the hallowed halls of Congress; they come from ordinary people, events and, ultimately, pressure. Congress never gets out in front of anything; it reacts. It should react to millions of people marching for justice, to the tens of millions of Americans who are "middle of the road" and want goods and services, conveniently, at reasonable costs; not goods that will spike in price because you have to pay an American teenager $20 an hour, or more, to cut your grass, clean your house, wash your car, clean your hotel room, package your chicken, bus your table and so forth.

    Congress, it's time to act! No, it's time to react! The marchers and ordinary Americans (look at the poll numbers of Americans in support of worker visas) have spoken. President Bush is on board. Raise the worker visa limits to accommodate what's been going on in the streets and neighborhoods of America for decades. But just react already.

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    How does Obama-O'Brien 2008 sound?

    Democratic Sen. Barack Obama has repeatedly said he doesn't plan to run for president in two years. Yet the freshman senator from Illinois says that if he did, he's already picked a late-night talk show host to appear on the ticket with him.

    "I was thinking about you as my running mate," Obama quipped to the host of NBC's "Late Night With Conan O'Brien" on Friday, after being asked again if he plans to launch a presidential bid.

    Obama, 44, who in his first year in Congress has rocketed from a locally known politician to a national celebrity, gets asked about running for president at most of his speaking engagements. His usual answer is that he's flattered by the suggestion but still has a lot to learn about Washington.

    O'Brien's query was met with wild applause inside the Chicago Theatre during a taping of O'Brien's show, which aired Friday night.

    The talk show host recently had a brush with politics. He ran a mock ad campaign endorsing the re-election of Finnish President Tarja Halonen--because of her strong resemblance to him--and met with her in February at the presidential palace in Helsinki.

    But don't go printing the campaign buttons yet.

    "It would be the worst thing you ever did," O'Brien told Obama. "You'd think it was funny and then like a day later you'd go, 'God, I'm an idiot!"'

    On "Late Night," which taped in Chicago this week instead of New York, a relaxed Obama talked about everything from his hard-to-pronounce name to how his wife makes fun of his ears.

    "She talks about my ears a lot, that's an old standard, how big they are," he said.

    He also poked fun at President Bush, whose diction is often the target of O'Brien and his talk-show counterparts. Obama joked that Bush calls him "Rac" instead of Barack Obama (buh-RAHK' oh-BAH'-muh).

    "I can't tell whether he's trying to give me a nickname, or whether he just can't pronounce my name," Obama said.

     

    Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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    FBI reaches out to 2 fired aides

    A federal investigation into Gov. Blagojevich's hiring practices is heating up, with the FBI reaching out to two state workers who allegedly helped give politically connected people "special and favorable treatment" for state jobs, sources told the Chicago Sun-Times.

    The FBI's recent contacts with Dawn DeFraties and Michael Casey came to light Friday as Blagojevich's chief of staff and top lawyer announced the two were fired last month, about three years after they were placed in charge of helping handle personnel matters.

    During a press conference called after the Chicago Sun-Times inquired about the two, Blagojevich general counsel William Quinlan said DeFraties and Casey "manipulated the grading system" for job applications.

    DeFraties and Casey are fighting their April 4 firings through the state Civil Service Commission, which is scheduled to begin hearing the matter next week. Evidence in the case, their lawyer said, will show that higher-level Blagojevich staffers sought preferential treatment for job applicants referred by the governor's office, lawmakers or others with clout.

    "I don't know what wrongdoing may have been done in the governor's office, but I intend to find out and find out why my clients are being blamed for their actions," said attorney Carl Draper, who added that DeFraties and Casey actually were working to make the system for handling job applications more fair and had nothing to do with grading applications.

    The state alleges that grades assigned to 28 job applicants were allegedly handled inappropriately, and nine of those people were hired or promoted. They are now being investigated to see if those who got jobs should keep them, be fired or transferred into other positions.

    In one instance, an applicant with alleged political sponsorship "had been graded on at least four different occasions and each time received a reject grade" but still was hired, according to a document in the case and other state records.

    The DeFraties-Casey case is unusual on several levels: The governor's office is employing two former federal prosecutors to help investigate the matter; another outside law firm -- not staff lawyers for the attorney general's office -- will represent the state before the Civil Service Commission; and normally confidential "investigatory notes" from a recently completed, yearlong state inspector general's office probe are being included as evidence.

    "Due to the serious nature of the inspector general's findings, the investigative file also was referred to the U.S. Attorney's office," said John Harris, Blagojevich's chief of staff. "As our independent inquiry continues, I want to make it clear that this administration will not tolerate any misconduct in the personnel hiring process."

    'Special applications'

     

     

    The state alleges that DeFraties, a former deputy director in the state's personnel bureau, and Casey, her assistant, allowed "special applications" of people with political sponsors to have "an advantage over other applicants for state jobs." The special applicants could fax -- rather than mail -- job documents, thereby putting them ahead in line, the state's complaint alleges.

    "Further, 'special applications' that received a grade of less than 'A' were not entered into the database like other applicants' grades, but were returned to the sponsor of the applicant with an explanation of the reasons why the applicant did not receive an 'A,'" the complaint states. "The applicant was then permitted to 'fix' or 'correct' the deficiencies in the application, bring it into conformity with standards sufficient to receive an 'A' grade and resubmit it for grading."

    The alleged wrongdoing came to light when Donna Simmons, a consultant paid $107,450 by the administration, noticed it and reported it to DeFraties' boss, former Central Management Services Department General Counsel Ed Wynn.

    Wynn said Friday he "did the right thing" and referred the allegations to the inspector general's office, which handled the matter from there.

    The inspector general's notes, copies of which were obtained by the Sun-Times, raise questions about four applicants who were applying for jobs covered under the state's Rutan consent decree, which bans politics as a factor in the hiring of most state jobs.

    Among the names mentioned in the notes is Scott Flood, the son of Sam Flood, who has held multiple administrative posts in the Blagojevich administration and is currently director of the Natural Resources Department. Scott Flood, a state employee since 1999, also has had multiple jobs and is currently working in a $61,788-a-year post in his father's department. He could not be reached for comment.

    Jeffrey C. Nevins, an electronics technician for the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum, allegedly was hired after getting four "reject" grades. He declined to comment.

    In a March 31 letter to a Blagojevich agency director who dismissed Casey, Draper alleged that "the Office of the Governor was involved in violations of personnel practices and was seeking favored treatment of persons whose applications were forwarded by Mr. Cini or his staff."

    "Mr. Cini" refers to Joseph Cini, who runs Blagojevich's Office of Intergovernmental Affairs, which oversees personnel matters.

    Outside law firm on the case

     

     

    Blagojevich late last year acknowledged that Cini was involved in the federal hiring probe that included subpoenas seeking information from state agencies, including transportation, corrections and child welfare.

    The law firm of Schiff Hardin was involved in the state's investigation of DeFraties and Casey and will continue to examine the applications they allegedly handled to see if more action is warranted. The governor's office inked a $70,000 contract with the firm that began on Sept. 19, 2005. Ronald S. Safer, who now heads the firm's white-collar criminal defense group, and former Judge Patricia Brown Holmes, also a former federal prosecutor, are assigned to the case.

    Blagojevich spokeswoman Abby Ottenhoff responded to Draper's remarks about Cini by saying that his clients "are under a lot of scrutiny now. It's not surprising they would say all sorts of things to shift the blame."

    "The inspector general," she added, "reviewed all the circumstances and allegations surrounding the grade manipulation, and the IG's recommendation to us is to terminate these individuals. The U.S. attorney now has the information and can look into it further, and we continue to do our own review of this particular case."

    Federal officials declined to comment on the investigation.


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    CAF Champions League Draw

    Group A
    • Hearts of Oak (Ghana)
    • Enyimba (Nigeria)
    • Asec Mimosas (Cote D'Ivoire)
    • Orlando Pirates (South Africa)
    Group B
    • Kotoko (Ghana)
    • El Ahly (Egypt) -- Defending champions
    • CS Sfaxien (Tunisia)
    • JS Kabylie (Algeria)
    The first round of matches for the group stage of the Champions League will be played within the weekend of 26-28 May.

    The top two teams qualifying for the semi-finals to be played on a knockout basis beginning from 29 September.

    The first leg final is fixed for between 27-29 October with the return leg a fortnight later.

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    Ghana's World Cup Squad Named

    Accra, May 12 - Ratomir Djukovic, Ghana's Black Stars trainer on Thursday named three local-based players among 23 selected squad, four days ahead of FIFA's submission deadline.

    The trio, Accra Hearts of Oak's Dan Quaye, King Faisal's Habib Mohammed and Kumasi Asante Kotoko's Shilla Illiasu are among the four local-based players named by the Serbian.

    Officials of the Ghana Football Association (GFA) approved the list late Thursday night and are due to announce it on Friday at a Press briefing, scheduled for the Teachers Hall in Accra.

    Djukovic's inclusion of the three contradicts the previous criticism that local-based players are often used as training horses as against their foreign counterparts.

    Ashantigold's goalkeeper Owu is the fourth Ghana-based player in the squad, which begins its campaign against Italy in Hannover on June 12.

    Apart from Owu, who remains a regular to the Stars team, the three have often tasted action only at international friendly matches, where their services had only come in handy in the absence of some of the foreign-based players.

    The Coach, who made history last October by giving the Ghanaians a first Mundial appearance, would keep faith with goalkeeper Sammy Adjei, who remained the team's number one throughout the qualifiers.

    The Coach maintained only 10 players of the team that played at the last Nations Cup in Egypt, where the Stars bowed out at the group stage. He would however, enjoy the luxury of parading the three influential players he missed to injury at the Egypt tourney- Asamoah Gyan, Sulley Ali Muntari and Michael Essien.

    Derek Boateng and Razak Pimpong are among the few players that gained a last minute consideration into the squad.

    Dujkovic kept faith with midfielder Haminu Dramani even though he has not played for his Serbian club Red Star Belgrade for more than six months.

    The exclusion of strikers Isaac Boakye of the German side Arminia Bielefeld and Ibrahim Salou of the Belgian Cup finalist Zulte Waregem did not come as a surprise as both players are nursing injuries.

    President Kuffuor will host the Black Stars on 16 May before they leave for their camping base in Austria, a day later.

    Ghana plays Czech Republic and United States of America (USA) as well at the group stage.

    All 32 participating countries are mandated by the World governing body to submit their squad by Monday, May 15.

    The list is as follows:
    Goalkeepers: Sammy Adjei, George Owu and Richard Kingston.

    Defenders: John Painstil, Samuel Osei Kuffour, John Mensah, Addoquaye Pappoe, Sheila Illiasu, Dan Quaye, Issah Ahmed, Habib Mohammed and Hans Adu Sarpei.

    Midfielders- Michael Essien, Sulley Ali Muntari, Derek Boateng, Stephen Appiah, Eric Addo, Otto Addo, Haminu Dramani

    Strikers: Asamoah Gyan, Mathew Amoah, Razak Pimpong Alex Techie-Mensah

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    Bono to visit Ghana again

    Rock activist Bono will begin a ten-day tour of Africa next week to examine the achievements of his Make Poverty History campaign.

    The U2 frontman plans to visit Lesotho, Rwanda, Tanzania, Nigeria, Mali and Ghana, kicking off on Tuesday.

    The With Or Without You singer will scrutinise the effect of his campaign to make G8 companies cancel debts accrued by low income countries, in order to divert funds towards tackling poverty.

    Jamie Drummond, executive director of Bono's advocacy group Debt Aids Trade Africa (DATA), says: "We're going to look at foreign assistance working on the ground in Africa and see what is working and what is not.

    "Effective aid backing good African leadership can get results, so let's do more of it. Why would you not do more of it?

    "The timing of this is extremely important, not just because you can see all the results on the ground, but because at this very moment top policymakers in all of the G8 countries are looking at whether they can afford to keep their promises - whether in Germany, Canada, Italy, or France, and above all in the US Congress."

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    Ministerial 'Reshuffle' Continues

    ... Bintim, Boafo, Ohene 'Recycled'
    ... Edumadze, Agyepong, Osei-Ameyaw Fired
    ... Minister for Culture and Chieftaincy created
    Accra, May 13, GNA - Further to the Ministerial reshuffle announced on April 27, 2006, His Excellency the President has made the following nominations and additional changes to the portfolios of ministers and deputy ministers.

    This completes the restructuring and reorganisation of the President's ministerial team. They are

    Ministers of State

    • Aviation: Ms Gloria Akuffo
    • Culture and Chieftaincy: Mr Sampson K. Boafo
    • Office of the President: Charles Bintim, Mr K. Adjei Darko and Ms Elizabeth Ohene.

    Regional Ministers

    • Ashanti: Mr E.A. Owusu-Ansah
    • Brong Ahafo: Mr I. Baffour Awuah
    • Central: Nana Ato Arthur
    • Eastern: Mr Yaw Barimah
    • Greater Accra: Sheik I.C. Quaye
    • Northern: Alhaji Mustapha Ali Idris
    • Upper East: Mr Boniface Agambila
    • Upper West: Mr Ambrose Derry
    • Volta: Kofi Dzamesi
    • Western Mr A. Evans Amoah

    Deputy Ministers

    • Office of the President: Mrs M. Bampoe Addo
    • Attorney General and Justice: Mr K. Osei Prempeh
    • Communication: Dr Aggrey Ntim
    • Defence: William Ofori Boafo
    • Education, Science and Sports: Mr K. Amporfo Twumasi, Mr O.B. Amoah and Mrs A. Baiden Amissah
    • Energy: Mr K. T. Hammond
    • Finance and Economic Planning: A. A. Osei, Dr Y. Djan-Baffour
    • Fisheries: Mr Daniel Dugan
    • Food and Agriculture: Mr Clement Eledi and Ms Anna Nyamekye
    • Foreign Affairs, Regional Integration and NEPAD: Mr A. Osei-Adjei and Shirley Ayorkor Botchewey
    • Health: Dr Gladys Norley Ashitey and Mr S. Owusu-Agyei
    • Information and National Orientation: Mrs Oboshie Sai-Cofie
    • Interior: Mr Agyeman Manu
    • Lands, Forestry and Mines: Mr A. Adjei-Yeboah and Ms Rita Tanliddi
    • Local Government, Rural Development and Environment: Mr Kofi Poku Adusei and Mr A. Dwuma Odoom
    • Manpower Development, Youth and Employment: Mrs A. F. Osei-Opare and Dr C.Y. Brempong-Yeboah
    • Tourism and Diaspora Relations: Mr Joe Baidoe-Ansah
    • Trade, Industry and Private Sector and PSI: Gifty Ohene-Konadu and Mr K. Asiedu Afram
    • Water Resources, Works and Housing: Ms Cecilia A. Dapaah and Mr Christopher Addae
    • Port and Railways: Ms Sophia Horner-Sam.

    Deputy Regional Ministers

    • Ashanti, Mr L. Akwasi Prempeh
    • Brong Ahafo, Mr A. Kwadwo Kwakye
    • Eastern Ms Suzie Mensah
    • Greater Accra, Ms Theresa A. Tagoe
    • Northern: Mr Issah Ketekewu
    • Upper East Mr A. Awudu Yeremiah
    • Upper West, Mr George Hikah Benson
    • Volta: Mr Joseph Kwaku Nyan.
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    Clear skies spread across much of nation

     Forecasters predicted rain Saturday for the eastern third of the country, while mostly clear skies and dry weather were expected elsewhere.

    Rain was expected in the Great Lakes, Ohio Valley, Northeast, New England and the Southeast, as a low-pressure system that hovered over the Great Lakes moves southward.

    A slight chance of severe weather was forecast for the Southeast.

    Mostly clear skies were forecast for the West, with low coastal clouds expected in California.

    Temperatures in the 90s and 100s were expected in the Southwest and Southern Plains.

    Temperatures in the 40s and 50s were forecast for the Upper Midwest, and 50s and 60s for the Northeast.

    Temperatures in the Lower 48 states Friday ranged from a low of 17 degrees at Grand Lake, Colorado, to a high of 108 degrees at Needles, California.

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    U.S. has second worst newborn death rate in modern world, report says

    An estimated 2 million babies die within their first 24 hours each year worldwide and the United States has the second worst newborn mortality rate in the developed world, according to a new report.

    American babies are three times more likely to die in their first month as children born in Japan, and newborn mortality is 2.5 times higher in the United States than in Finland, Iceland or Norway, Save the Children researchers found.

    Only Latvia, with six deaths per 1,000 live births, has a higher death rate for newborns than the United States, which is tied near the bottom of industrialized nations with Hungary, Malta, Poland and Slovakia with five deaths per 1,000 births.

    "The United States has more neonatologists and neonatal intensive care beds per person than Australia, Canada and the United Kingdom, but its newborn rate is higher than any of those countries," said the annual State of the World's Mothers report.

    The report, which analyzed data from governments, research institutions and international agencies, found higher newborn death rates among U.S. minorities and disadvantaged groups. For African-Americans, the mortality rate is nearly double that of the United States as a whole, with 9.3 deaths per 1,000 births.

    Sub-Saharan Africa remains the worst place in the world to be a mother or child, with Scandinavian nations again taking the top spots in the rankings by the Connecticut-based humanitarian group.

    Sweden heads the list, with Niger last. (10 worst and best)

    The "Mothers' Index" in the report ranks 125 nations according to 10 gauges of well-being -- six for mothers and four for children -- including objective measures such as lifetime mortality risk for mothers and infant mortality rate and subjective measures such as the political status of women.

    Charles MacCormack, president and CEO of Save the Children, said the report card "illustrates the direct line between the status of mothers and the status of their children."

    "In countries where mothers do well, children do well," he said in a written statement accompanying the report.

    But each year, according to the report, more than a half-million women die as a result of pregnancy and childbirth difficulties, 2 million babies die within their first 24 hours, 2 million more die within their first month and 3 million are stillborn.

    An unhealthy start

    As Americans celebrate Mother's Day on Sunday, "5,000 mothers will mourn the loss of the newborn they bear that very day in the developing world," said Anne Tinker, director of Save the Children's Saving Newborn Lives initiative.

    "All children, no matter where they are born, deserve a healthy start in life," Melinda Gates wrote in a foreword to the report, which was funded in part by the foundation she runs with her husband, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates.

    MacCormack said "significant progress" had been made in reducing deaths in children under age 5 in recent years, but "we have made little progress in reducing mortality rates for babies during the first month of life."

    Causes of death in the developing world were dramatically different from those in the developed world, the report said. In industrialized nations deaths were most likely to result from babies being born too small or too early, while in the developing world about half of newborn deaths were from infection, tetanus and diarrhea.

    The newborn mortality rate in the United States has fallen in recent decades, the report said, but continues to affect minorities disproportionately.

    Only 17 percent of all U.S. births were to African-American families, but 33 percent of all low-birthweight babies were African-American, according to the report.

    The research also found that poorer mothers with less education were at a significantly higher risk of early delivery. The study added that in general lower educational attainment was associated with higher newborn mortality.

    Tinker said some nations ranked high in part because they offer free health services for pregnant women and babies, while the United States suffers from disparities in access to health care.

    "We can do better here, but what's really important is that we do something" in the developing world, she said.

    The report said almost all newborn and maternal deaths take place in developing nations -- 99 percent and 98 percent, respectively. The newborn mortality rates were particularly high in countries with a recent history of armed conflict, including Liberia and Sierra Leone.

    But the report also concluded that political will was more important than national wealth. A "newborn scorecard" ranking 78 developing nations found that some relatively impoverished countries -- including Colombia, Mexico, Nicaragua and Vietnam -- fare better than others.

    Ranking at the bottom of the scorecard were Liberia, Afghanistan, Angola and Iraq -- countries where armed conflict and cultural practices impede newborn survival.

    "It's tragic that millions of newborns die every year, especially when these deaths are so easily preventable," Gates wrote. "Three out of four newborn deaths could be avoided with simple, low-cost tools that already exist, such as antibiotics for pneumonia, sterile blades to cut umbilical cords and knit caps to keep babies warm."

    'The good news'

    The Mothers' Index -- which excluded some nations that lacked sufficient data -- highlights huge disparities between the nations at the top and the bottom of the list.

    Compared with mothers in the top 10 countries, a mother in the bottom 10 was found to be more than 750 times more likely to die in pregnancy or childbirth.

    In top-ranked Sweden, skilled personnel are present at nearly all births, but in bottom-ranked Niger, such help is available for only 16 percent of women in labor.

    "The good news," said MacCormack, "is that we know what it takes to help these moms and children survive and thrive."

    The report highlights the three areas it says have the most influence on child well-being: female education, presence of a trained attendant at birth and use of family planning services.

    Educated women, the report said, are more likely to marry and give birth later in life, to seek health care and to encourage education for their children, including girls.

    The report said that family planning and increased contraception use leads to lower maternal and infant death rates. Many women and children in developing nations, it said, die as a result of births that come at the wrong time -- too close together, too early or too late in the mother's life.

     
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    Education law leaves children behind

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Not a single state will have a highly qualified teacher in every core class this school year as promised by President Bush's education law. Nine states along with the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico face penalties.

    The Department of Education on Friday ordered every state to explain how it will have 100 percent of its core teachers qualified -- belatedly -- in the 2006-07 school year.

    In the meantime, some states face the loss of federal aid because they didn't make enough effort to comply on time, officials said.

    They are Alaska, Delaware, Idaho, Iowa, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, North Carolina and Washington, plus the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico.

    "At some point there was, I suspect, a little bit of notion that 'This too shall pass,' " said Henry Johnson, the assistant secretary over elementary and secondary education. "Well, the day of reckoning is here, and it's not going to pass."

    Department officials would not say how much aid could be withheld from states to force compliance. But Johnson said, "In some cases, we're talking about large amounts of money."

    States often fell short because they did not report accurate or complete data about the quality of the teacher corps, said Rene Islas, who oversees the department's review.

    The 4-year-old No Child Left Behind law says teachers must have a bachelor's degree, a state license and proven competency in every subject they teach by this year. The first federal order of its kind, it applies to teachers of math, history and any other core class.

    In grading the states, the department found that 29 have made substantial progress. They must improve, but they do not face looming sanctions.

    Twelve other states are still under review and haven't been rated: Colorado, Connecticut, Indiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Missouri, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Virginia, West Virginia and Wisconsin.

    No matter which category they are in, all the states must submit a new plan of action.

    Most states give themselves good grades on teacher quality; 33 states say 90 percent to 99 percent of their classes are taught by highly qualified teachers. Most of the rest put their numbers a tier below, in a range of 70 percent to 89 percent.

    "I know the states have made great efforts in trying to meet all the prongs of the highly qualified teacher requirement," said Scott Palmer, a consultant for the Council of Chief State School Officers. "I've got to believe there are some that are very close."

    As for the ones that aren't, Palmer said he hopes the department will recognize the ways states are trying to improve teacher effectiveness, even beyond the basics the law requires.

    States were notified Friday. The department plans to follow up in coming days.

    What the agency wants to see most, Johnson said, is what states are doing to get experienced teachers into classrooms with large numbers of poor and minority children.

    That no state complied with the law on time -- four years after Bush signed it with great fanfare -- is due in part to the enormity of the challenge.

    Some teachers, particularly in small or rural areas, handle many subjects and have not met the law's details in each one. Many schools struggle just to find teachers in math, science or special education. And turnover is common, often blamed on salary and stress.

    Although the federal term is "highly qualified," the definition is widely regarded as more of a minimum qualification, because it requires teachers to know what they teach.

    Phyllis McClure, who supports the law and tracks it for the Citizens' Commission on Civil Rights, said the department is right to demand accurate data and results from the states.

    "They don't like having to do all this," said McClure, a supporter of the law. "I must say that they have become used to getting their way with the federal government."

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    'Life and death every day' for Iraq medics

    BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- "Don't let me die! Please, don't let me die," the U.S. soldier said repeatedly as medics carried him to the trauma room.

    His glazed eyes focused on an Army chaplain kneeling over him. There was blood everywhere.

    A roadside bomb that exploded next to his patrol vehicle sent shards of metal into his body and catapulted him from the vehicle.

    He, like so many of the gravely wounded soldiers in Iraq, was rushed to the 10th Combat Support Hospital, where minutes or seconds can mean life or death. (Watch the suffering and hope inside a Baghdad military hospital -- 3:33)

    "Am I going to live?" he asked, in a pleading, rhythmic voice.

    "Hell, yes, you are," replied Capt. David Steinbruner, one of the doctors.

    Moments earlier, the soldier asked the medics to keep his leg from falling off the gurney as they hurried him into the emergency room. The blast tore the flesh from the bone. His left hand was just as bad -- a "near amputation," according to one of the doctors.

    Less than 5 feet away, a friend and fellow soldier lay dead, his body placed in a black body bag and zipped up. (Read a behind-the-scenes report on this story)

    "It's life and death, every day," said Lt. Col. Bob Mazur, another doctor.

    These men and women -- doctors, medics and nurses, many of them just 20 or 21 years old -- have saved the lives of numerous servicemen and women who in any previous war may have come home in flag-draped coffins.

    CNN has withheld the names of the wounded soldiers for privacy concerns.

    In Iraq, roughly 17,500 U.S. troops have been wounded, and nearly 2,500 have been killed. The survival rate is significantly higher than in previous wars, and much credit goes to those working to save lives in places such as the 10th Combat Support Hospital.

    "If you look at the overall death rate ... the case fatality rate is cut in half from Vietnam to now. And again I think that's due to better training, tactical combat casualty training," said Col. John Holcomb, the senior surgeon at the hospital.

    At least eight doctors and nurses worked on the soldier with the shredded leg -- their arms and clothes drenched in his blood. His femur protruded from his upper thigh.

    A nurse clutched one of his hands.

    Outside in the hall sat the clothes of these wounded men -- or their "battle rattle," as it's called. Flak jackets lay blown in half, boots drenched in blood.

    Down the hall, a private first class who was driving the vehicle was put gingerly on a bed. He was in better shape than his comrades despite bad burns on his hands and metal in his neck. Still filled with adrenaline, he breathlessly relived the attack for the nurse.

    "It just exploded. On the left side or under the vehicle -- I'm not sure. Everything was on fire," he said. "I got out through the gunner's position and got one more out."

    As the doctors and nurses work, the captain of the wounded soldiers' unit sat, head in hands, torn up. At times, he spoke to his commanding officer, a major, in an inaudible tone. Single tears ran down his cheeks.

    The private called his wife and explained what happened, followed by a short smile. "I'm fine, I'm going to be OK. That's fine, fine; you just go ahead and pray. Pray."

    Steinbruner took the phone and spoke soothingly: "He's going to be fine -- you hang in there now." He turned, shaking his head: "She's totally in shock."

    'Don't die on me'

    Back in the main trauma room, the soldier with the torn leg hung on, fighting with every breath. He remained conscious. Steinbruner suggested putting him under anesthesia completely.

    "He's a sick boy. We need to put him down. He's totally with it. He said, 'Please, don't let me die.'"

    "Just breathe deep -- there we go, nice and deep. ... You're a healthy guy," Steinbruner told the soldier.

    "I'm not going to die -- am I?"

    "Look, I promise -- I wouldn't lie to you," Steinbruner said.

    Serving as both doctor and impromptu commanding officer, Steinbruner added, "Don't you dare try to die on me. I didn't give you permission."

    Through a condensed face mask, the soldier wheezed and coughed, "Am I gonna lose the f------ leg?"

    "I don't know," Steinbruner replied. "We'll try to save it if we can, OK? I just don't know. I can't give you an answer on that."

    The near dozen doctors, medics and nurses stopped the blood from pouring out of him and prepared to send him to surgery in an attempt to save his leg and hand.

    "Thank you, sir," Steinbruner said to the senior surgeon, Holcomb, while taking off his blood-drenched gloves and tossing them in the trash.

    The surgery was a success. The soldier survived and kept his leg for the time being. Once close to death, he is now being treated at a U.S. military facility in Germany.

    "He asked me if he's going to lose his leg, and I said, 'I don't know,' " Steinbruner said minutes after working to save the soldier's life. "I never lie to them. I'll say to them, 'I just don't know.' It was tough. It's tough."

    He paused in thought. "That's the kind of thing we face out there. ... I mean ... I think there were several killed out there as well."

    He paused again and said, "I'm now going to go take care of his buddy." And then he walked away and went back to work.

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    Surgeons separate conjoined twins

    After nearly seven hours of surgery to untangle their livers, reposition their hearts and divide a shared intestine, Mayo Clinic surgeons on Friday separated 5-month-old twins born joined at the chest and abdomen.

    Abbigail and Isabelle Carlsen spent their first five months looking eye to eye, often bumping legs and arms and touching each other in the face.vert.conjoined.operation.ap.jpg

    That changed at 4:28 p.m. when the last tissue connecting the girls was cut "for the first time, completely separating the two young twins," said Mayo Clinic spokesman Lee Aase.

    "The family is elated," he said, saying that they were happy to have separate babies.

    The girls' livers were intertwined and they also were joined at the diaphragm and the pancreas, and shared part of an intestine.

    Doctors said that the surgery was complicated but that there was a 90 percent to 95 percent chance that both girls would survive.

    A medical team of about 30 people took part in the operation. The girls' parents, Amy and Jesse Carlsen of Fargo, N.D., helped take them to the operating room shortly after sunrise.

    The separation surgery was like one major surgery after another.

    Conjoined twins occur once in every 70,000 to 100,000 live births, according to the John Hopkins Children Center. Since the mid-1990s, there have been about 250 surgical separations in which one or both twins survived, according to the American Pediatric Surgical Association.

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    May 12, 2006

    Chicago-Ghanaian Professor gives boost to Cultural center for Ghanaians

     
    Former vice-president, Albert Gore is quoted to have said that “Professor Akainyah may be a Ghanaian native son, but he is America’s adopted son and a gift to the world.”
     

    The Ghanaian community had a boost to its long awaited acquisition of Ghana House by a rare visit to its monthly meeting by Chicago's renowned artist, Professor and Art gallery owner, Professor Samuel Akainyah, on Sunday May 7 2006 at the St. Anselm Missionary, 61st and Michigan Avenue, Chicago, IL. Professor Akainyah offered his services to lead the Ghana National Council in its efforts to acquire the long dream of Ghanaians in Chicago, Ghana House or Ghanan Community Center , which he prefer to call Ghana Cultural Center.
    During his presentation to the Ghana National Central committee,Professor Akainyah listed a number of scholarship programs for Ghanaian students and also tourism potentials for Ghana.
    Professor Akainyah donated some of his art work to the council.
     In her introductory remarks Ms. Belinda McKwartin said " Professor Samuel Akainyah, I believe you do not need to be introduced to the Ghanaian community, especially the Ghana National Central Committee because of your previous associations and assistance to the community, but it is important to remind ourselves and also let those who are new know you.   

     

    Professor Akainyah, is an artist, he trained in diplomacy and international Law, a businessman and an author. He has two book publications and currently working on his third book. Dr. Akainyah trained at the Art Institute of Chicago and the University of Chicago.  His reputation as an artist and sole owner of the largest artist owned gallery in the country. His patrons include reporters, executives, bankers, businessmen and women, television news anchors, and politicians.  Some of his famed clients are Samuel Jackson, Michael Jordan, Angela Bassett, Bryant Gamble and Bill Curtis. In November 2005, he presented a colossal work titled “From Whence We Came” to President J.A Kufour on behalf of the country of Ghana. The 11 feet by 9 feet painting is valued at $80,000.00 He was listed as one of the 50 most influential blacks in Chicago in the January 2006 issue of N’Digo.  His knowledge of celebrities in the Chicago area, including Mayor Daley will serve the interests of the Ghana National Council and the Ghanaian Community in general.  Mayor Daley referred to him as “a national figure in the arts and a Chicago icon.”

    Recently when the GNC was looking for a place to build Ghana House, our application was just scorn on, but the presence of this great man immediately led to the alder lady, Arenda Trottman, granting him immediate audience and favorable consideration of the application.
    Professor Akainyah, who likes to be called Sam, is a humble and hardworking person, who have served the Ghana National Council and its Affiliate Organizations  in many ways .Indeed he was among the framers of the Fante Benevolent Society's constitution.
     
    Sam has given and negotiated jobs to many Ghanaian immigrants in Chicago here. He is among the first Ghanaians to donate $1000.00 to the Ghana National Council for the Ghana House project many years ago. He donated $1500.00 to the GNC so that we can have live band for our independence anniversary celebrations some years ago.

     

    Frequently he has underwritten receptions for all Ghana’s ambassadors since Dr. Bafour Sakyire, Koomson,Kyeremanteng and Poku; Mayor’s Mensah and Amarteifio. Professor Akainyah is a true nationalist and Patriot.

     

    Due to Professor Akainyah’s tremendous philanthropist contributions to the city of Chicago and the State of Illinois, the Cook County Board of commissioners headed by John H. Stroger Jr. proclaimed February 15 1999 as Samuel Akainyah day in the  entire county of Cook.

    In the same year, Sam was elected as the official artist of the Democratic National convention in Chicago, the first artist in the three hundred years to achieve the honor in the United States history. Former vice-president, Albert Gore is quoted to have said that “Professor Akainyah may be a Ghanaian native son, but he is America’s adopted son and a gift to the world.”

    He has helped many Ghanaians in diverse ways without generating attention to himself.
    Recently he mobilized fifty African Americans to the motherland and in the process of taking 100 businessmen and women, executives of corporations and his clients in December.

    With the above good things done by this great man, you agree with me that he is the kind of person you want in your camp. I could continue on and on but time would not allow me.

    Ladies and gentlemen, I present to you, Professor Samuel Akainyah!"

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    May 11, 2006

    Accountants should not endanger the good image of GES – Onyinah

    Obuasi, May 10, GNA - Accountants and other accounting personnel in the Ghana Education Service (GES) have been told to ensure that the performance of their duties do not in anyway endanger the image of the service.

     

     

    Mr Joseph K Onyinah, the Obuasi Municipal Director of Education, said this at a two-day workshop organized by the Ashanti Regional Association of GES Accountants for over 50 accounting personnel.

     


    They were drawn from institutions and district education offices in the Amansie West, Amansie East, Amansie Central, Adansi North, Adansi North, Adansi South districts and Obuasi Municipal at Obuasi.

     


    Mr Onyinah said the proper keeping of financial and other accounting records of an organization "go a long way to enhance the image of the organization", adding, "that is why the good image of the GES is in the hands of the accounting personnel".

     


    He said accountants played a major role in the effective planning and development of education since they advised management on planning, budgeting and effective utilization of funds.

     


    Closing the workshop, Mr Emmanuel Kofi Essuman, the Regional GES Accountant, stressed on early submission of financial returns.

     


    He said though they were expected to give feedback on all government monies released to the Service, some of the accountants failed to submit returns as expected.

     


    Mr Patrick Appiah Kodua, a participant, called for regular organization of such workshops so that they could improve upon their performance.

     

     

    Source: GNA

     


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    Treat children as Human beings and not as property- Activist

    Wa, May 9, GNA- Madam Otiko Djaba, Chief Executive of MIIDAN Educational Trust, a child right Non-governmental Organization based in the Upper West Region on Tuesday appealed to parents and society not to see children as property, but as human beings that would grow up to take up the development mantle in future.

     

    She further appealed to the media and the public to continue to generate awareness programmes on the plight of children in the country for them to attract proper attention and care in society.

     


    Ms. Djaba made these appeals at Wa during the first in the series of training of field facilitators for forty (40) communities in the Wa East, Wa West and Wa Municipal Assemblies.

     


    The Child Rights programmes, which began in the Sissala East and West Districts some years back have now been extended to 40 Communities of the three Assemblies to sensitise children and their parents on their rights and responsibilities in society.

     


    She said the days when children were relegated to the background in society were over and it was incumbent on society to re-adjust to the new trends in development of the child worldwide.

     


    Ms. Djaba expressed concern that children in the rural areas were often neglected in terms of basic amenities such as food, shelter, education and health care and called on various organizations engaged in the upliftment of children to collaborate effectively to achieve that in order to reduce illiteracy, ignorance and diseases.

     


    "There is the need for society to, for once, recognize the rights of children and give them the chance to exhibit their God-given talents in society."

     


    Mrs. Clare Der, Regional Coordinator of Ghana National Commission on Children, one of the Resource persons said the programme, which was in line with her Commission's plan to eliminate street children in society was laudable and commended PLAN Ghana for sponsoring the programme
    through MIIDAN.

     


    She said the training programme would also assist the facilitators and teachers in various communities to become conscious of the rights and responsibilities of children in society.

     

     

    Source: GNA

     

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    Ghana Is Heading Towards A Civil War – Kofi Wayo

    The maverick Politician, Mr. Charles Kofi Wayo, who claims to be bracing up to float his new political party, United Republican Party (URP), has urged Ghanaians not to renew the mandate of every political party after its first tenure of office, but to continue to change them until the needs of the masses are met.

     

    Alleging that the New Patriotic Party (NPP), was hatching plans to rig the next general elections to enable them hang on to power, he said it was unfortunate that the affairs of the nation was handed over to what he described as vampires, non God-fearing people, social murderers and others.


    According to him since the assumption of the NPP government, it had consistently imposed untold economic hardships on the suffering masses.
    “Our country has been handed over to vampires, social murderers, non God-fearing people and others, who are not concerned about the plight of the people.
    They are only interested in satisfying themselves’, he said. Wayo, who made this observation in a chat with this paper last Saturday when he stormed Ga Mantse Agbona to give moral support to the Ga-Dangmes during their first anniversary celebration of March for justice, said the NPP had killed the spirit of the people and the spirit of the land.
    Explaining, he said the government had sold Ghana to foreign investors, and thereby making Ghanaians in their own land slaves to foreigners. “Our independence has been rendered meaningless. After fifty years, we have not achieved anything except poverty. I believe that Kwame Nkrumah and others would be weeping in their graves”, he lamented.
    Stating that he saw the nation heading towards civil war, the former leading member of People’s National Convention (PNC) said the NPP administration was more vicious than the administration of Mr. Jerry John Rawlings.
    He alleged, “These people believe that they have degrees which are license to destroy the people. They have planned to rig the next election to hang on to power because they have committed crimes against humanity. They are corrupt”.
    Kofi Wayo, again claimed that the government does not care about the citizenry, and stated that the housing scheme introduced by the government to the teachers was just ‘azaa’, adding, “We need to keep changing governments until we see the best.”
    Asked about his comments on the reports of Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ) which cleared President John Agyekum Kufuor over his alleged involvement in the acquisition of the Airport Hospitality, now dubbed “Hotel Kufuor”, Mr. Wayo, described the report as ‘window dressing’, pointing out that there was no way the acting Commissioner of CHRAJ would indict Mr. Kufuor.
    “If Mr. Kufuor is cleared then I am Eskimo. It means the man has not been cleared. The woman has not got the moral courage to indict the president.
    There is more to that report,” he said, asking, “Why is it that CHRAJ refused to extent the same facilities to Mad. Gizzelle Yajzi, the principal witness, just as they did to Alexandria Anane,” he asked rhetorically.
    Wayo, popularly known as ‘’Chuck’, pointed out that there was the need to have a parliamentary inquiry into the matter. On the recent increase in minimum wages, the critic said, he does not see the relevance of the increase for the simple reason that it does not commensurate the fuel price hikes.
    He said the cabinet reshuffle was meaningless to him. He said; “I don’t care about their reshuffle because it does not change the lifestyle of the people. It does not bring developments to our people. It does not bring water and light to the people.
    They are there for what they can ‘chop’. They are not there for the nation. The masses are suffering but they don’t care,” he claimed.
    Asked about why he plans to float a new party, he asserted that, “I just want to help people. I don’t need money. I want the right things to be done. In fact because Ghanaians are getting more civilized, I hope they will vote for the URP.” The party, which would be outdoored in a couple of months, has ‘Let us make a better Ghana’.
    Source: Chronicle

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    Pastor, Accomplice Grabbed Over ¢204m Fraud

    A Pastor who embezzled ¢204 million belonging to an NGO in Techiman and bolted to Cote d’Ivoire with his accomplice has been arrested.

     

     

    Pastor Isaac Nii-tan Cofie of Ghana Mennonite Church and his accomplice, Victoria Tiwaah, were arrested in Cote d’Ivoire by the Ivorian Police through the assistance of Interpol and later handed over to the Ghanaian police.

     

     

    According to the Deputy Director General of the CID, Mr Patrick Ampewuah, Isaac used a false KNUST certificate and was employed as a Credit officer by the Ecumenical Church Loan Fund (ECLOF), an NGO that advances loans to women groups and fishermen, and sent to Techiman to man a new office there.

     

     

    He said after seven months in Techiman, he was transferred to Accra because information reaching the ECLOF executive indicated that he had teamed up with the cashier, Victoria, and they were misconducting themselves.

     

     

    Mr Ampewuah said Isaac refused to go on transfer to Accra and rather resigned, and when the accounts of the Techiman branch were audited, it was detected that Isaac and Victoria had falsified receipts and succeeded in embezzling funds to the tune of ¢204 million, which were loan repayments from clients.

     

     

    He said the case was reported to the Techiman police in September last year and Isaac was arrested but Victoria managed to escape.

     

     

    He said in February this year, he was put before court at Techiman and granted bail but he later jumped bail.

     

    The deputy director said later the police had information that the two were in Abidjan, so the Ivorian police were alerted and they managed to arrest them and hand them over in Abidjan to the Ghanaian police, who brought them down to Accra.

     

     

    Mr Ampewuah said Isaac used part of the money to buy two vehicles, one of which had been seized by the police, who are yet to trace the other one.

     

     

    He said investigations further revealed that Isaac stole the certificate of a graduate from the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST) and inserted his name on it and used it to secure the employment.

     

     

    Source: Graphic

     

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    Sunday school teacher jailed 10 years for defilement

    Kumasi, May 11, GNA - A 23-year-old labourer who claimed to be a Sunday school teacher of the Church of Pentecost branch at Asafo in Kumasi, has been sentenced to 10 years imprisonment by a Kumasi Circuit court for having anal sex with an eight-year-old girl.

    Akwasi Emmanuel who was convicted on his own plea, caused uncontrollable laughter at the court when after admitting the offence, confessed that it was the devil who tempted him into the act, ostensibly to earn the sympathy of the court.

    Police Chief Inspector Mathew Asante, prosecuting told the court presided over by Mr Ernest Yao Obimpeh that the victim who lived with her senior brother at Amakom in Kumasi did not return home on the night of March 17 this year.

    He said the absence of her sister alarmed his brother, Samuel Tetteh, a taxi driver and complainant in the case, when he returned from work that night and therefore; thinking that her little sister was missing mounted a search for her but to no avail.

    The prosecution said after reporting the case to the Asokwa police, the girl returned the next morning but looked dull and tired. Police Chief Inspector Asante said when her senior brother quizzed about where she had been the previous night; the victim confessed that she was one of the crowds that listened to the accused who was engaged in an open-air preaching at Asafo.

    He said the victim was reported to have followed the accused on his request to a certain house at Asafo where the accused asked her to sit on a wooden bench in front of the house while he entered to collect something for her.

    Police Chief Inspector Asante said the victim who was then very tired, slept on the bench in no time but woke up in the middle of the night only to find the accused lying beside her and both of them were half-naked.

    The prosecution said to her horror and amazement, she also experienced a sharp pain in her anus, probably by the ordeal and she started wailing in pain and pleaded with the accused to stop to which he obliged fearing that the victim's cries might attract attention. He the accused was arrested and after a medical report had proved the act was prosecuted.
    Source:
    GNA
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    Twins assault their father

    Agbozume (V/R), May 10, GNA - Twin brothers who allegedly assaulted their septuagenarian father for not allowing them to take roofing sheets off his building to fix their damaged building have appeared put before an Agbozume Magistrates Court charged with assault and causing harm. Atsu and Etse Atsideka, both 29, pleaded not guilty and were each granted bail in the sum of five million cedis with one surety. Their father, Amedome Atsideka, was also charged for causing harm by slashing the forearms of his sons with a cutlass during the assault on him.

    He pleaded guilty but the presiding judge, Group Captain Martin Obeng-Ntim (rtd), returned a plea of not guilty for him. Amedome explained to the court that he had to use the cutlass to free himself from his sons who confessed to the crowded court that they smoked Indian hemp.

    The old man was also granted bail in the sum of five million cedis with one surety.

    Inspector Francis Agbafe of Anlo-Afiadenyigba Police post told the court that the two brothers lived at Atiteti, near Afiadenyigba on the same compound with their father and had the habit of harassing him and beating him sometimes.

    He said in the evening of February 25, this year, the brothers had the roof of their building ripped off in a storm. Inspector Agbafe said the twins approached their father and demanded that he allowed them to remove roofing sheets over his building to fix their damaged roof.

    He said the old man refused and this did not go down with the brothers, who in an apparent show of dissatisfaction beat him up. The court heard that during the assault on their father, Etse spew out smoke believed to be of marijuana on the face of their father. Inspector Agbafe said during the assault on him, the old man reached for a cutlass and slashed the forearms of the two brothers in order to free himself.

    The old man showed to the court lacerations at his back, which he said, were marks of the beatings he received from his sons. The two brothers also had bandage on their arms when they appeared in court.
    Source:
    GNA
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    New artificial knees made to fit women better

    You probably haven't noticed, but one of the many differences between men and women is the shape of their knees.

    And now a company that makes implants for knee-replacement surgeries has designed a system customized to fit women.

    The Gender Solutions High-Flex Knee, made by Zimmer Inc., "fits the anatomy of the female better," said Dr. Aaron Rosenberg of Rush University Medical Center, a paid consultant to Zimmer who helped design the artificial knee.

    Knee replacement surgery is intended for patients who have lost cartilage in their knees, typically from arthritis or injuries. Bone rubs painfully on bone, limiting mobility.

    The artificial knee consists of metal and plastic implants attached to the top of the shin bone, the bottom of the thigh bone and the inside of the knee cap. More than 400,000 Americans had knee replacements in 2003, and 63 percent were women.

    Women have 63% of surgeries

     

     

    Shin bones and knee caps are similar in men and women, but not thigh bones. A woman's femur tends to be long and narrow while a man's is short and wider, said Dr. David Manning, a University of Chicago orthopedic surgeon.

    Standard knee implants don't quite fit right in roughly 20 percent of women, Manning said.

    That might explain why women who have knee replacements report slightly lower satisfaction rates than men, Rosenberg said.

    There have been no clinical trials yet for the Gender Solutions Knee, and it was implanted for the first time Tuesday at Pennsylvania Hospital. Zimmer said the knee will be widely available by fall.

    Zimmer is the leading manufacturer of artificial knees, and the new knee could be a selling advantage. But a leading competitor scoffed.

    Stryker Orthopaedics said its Triathlon Knee System, introduced in 2004, comes in different lengths and widths to fit women, group product manager Oren Gelman said.

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    Daley, Olympic Committee explore 2016 bid

    Calling Chicago a "city on the move," U.S. Olympic Committee Chairman Peter Ueberroth talked turkey with Mayor Daley on Wednesday about what it would take for the city to win the right to host the 2016 Summer Olympic Games.

    "Take a look at all of the factors that somebody would [consider] if they were moving here or doing business here. They like what they see," Ueberroth said.

    "Is Chicago getting cleaner than it used to be? Yes. Is it on the move educationally? ... This isn't the mayor. ... This is everybody: private sector, public sector, Republicans and Democrats. Chicago is going in the right direction, and we're impressed by that."

    After a two-hour meeting with Ueberroth and other USOC officials, Daley stressed that Chicago is at the "very, very early stages" of the process and "a long way" from deciding whether to make a formal bid.

    On Wednesday, the mayor named longtime friend Patrick Ryan, executive chairman of Aon Corp., to head the exploratory committee that will help determine whether Chicago will make a formal bid and, if so, at what cost.

    "It was a frank discussion -- and there's where it begins. You don't sign a contract immediately. This is a whole process. You have to have vision. You have to have a commitment. You have to have the passion. You have to have the business community. You have to have everyone behind you. It isn't a Mayor Daley show. This is the Olympics," Daley said.

    Chicago is the third stop on a USOC tour that also includes Houston, Philadelphia, San Francisco and Los Angeles.

    The USOC plans to do local polling to gauge support in each of the interested cities, then decide later this year whether to submit a U.S. bid. The selection of a U.S. city must be made and a bid submitted to the International Olympic Committee by March 31, 2007.

    Strong business community

     

     

    Ueberroth said "20 or 30" factors will impact the decision, but it all starts with a "strong mayor."

    That's a question that looms large in Chicago, where nobody knows whether Daley, the leading Olympic cheerleader, will be around to see the Olympic effort through to its fruition.

    "A strong mayor is important, in our view ... and the international view looks on. We need 60 votes. We have to keep focusing on that. ... Either you win or you lose. And we want to win," Ueberroth said.

    Another prerequisite is a "strong and committed" business community willing to finance upfront bidding costs that must be "100 percent privately financed," Ueberroth said.

    Pressed on whether a private sector that helped build Millennium Park was prepared to front $30 million to $50 million in upfront bidding costs, Ryan said, "Well, A, we haven't been given a number. And B, the history of the private sector in Chicago is one of supporting vision that has a well-established path to success. Funding the leadership and vision of Mayor Daley has worked extremely well, and we'll be examining that."

    Chicagoland Chamber of Commerce President Jerry Roper was more hesitant.

    "There's a lot of detail that needs to be worked out before anyone is going to sign on the dotted line. We need a full chart that takes us through the next several years of what needs to be accomplished and the kind of money that's needed to back that up," he said.

    Building another stadium

     

     

    Yet another hurdle is an 80,000- to 100,000-seat stadium capable of housing track and field events and the opening and closing ceremonies, which Ueberroth said must be either built or "totally committed" to by the IOC deadline next spring.

    That demand might make a Chicago Olympics a nonstarter on the heels of the controversial $606 million renovation of Soldier Field. Daley said this week he won't use public money to build another stadium "unless you can use it" after the Olympic Games are over.

    "That's gonna be a difficult one. This city just built a stadium. So, it's going to be a hard sell," Roper said.

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    Two on County Board don't want Todd Stroger

    Setting the stage for a possible donnybrook for the Cook County Board presidency, one hopeful delivered a blistering attack Wednesday on Ald. Todd Stroger, who has been positioning himself to succeed his ailing father.

    Cook County Commissioner Bobbie Steele blasted the younger Stroger as someone who follows orders to "sit down, be quiet and not do anything" -- a style that won't work as board president.

    Instead, Steele said, if someone has to replace board President John Stroger -- temporarily or permanently -- she's the better candidate.

    "I'm definitely interested," Steele said. "And I'm being encouraged by a lot of people."

    Another commissioner, Earlean Collins, agreed that Todd Stroger isn't the best choice for board president, but quickly added that Steele isn't, either.

    Collins said Circuit Court Clerk Dorothy Brown is her choice to replace John Stroger because appointing Todd Stroger "would be like throwing him into the lion's den" with what is often an anti-Stroger majority on the board.

    Since John Stroger suffered a stroke in March, he has not been seen publicly but remains the Democratic nominee for November.

    'The president is running'

     

     

    Would-be replacements have resisted stepping forward -- out of respect to the elder Stroger -- but that's changing now that Todd Stroger has fueled talk that he'll be the one to replace his father.

    Last week, he told the Chicago Sun-Times he has what it takes to fill his father's shoes. And this week, he said his mother, Yonnie, wants John Stroger to retire.

    But the alderman wouldn't respond to criticism Wednesday.

    "Besides that," he said, "I'm not running anyway. The president is running."

    County Board Finance Committee Chairman John Daley said he's adhering to the Stroger family's earlier proclamation that they'd make a decision in July about the president's future.

    But now, with talk that a decision might come sooner, "it's very awkward," Daley said.

    "There are going to be other candidates, and Todd seems well-cognizant of that."

    John Stroger's health has caused many to talk about the way Democratic power brokers Michael Madigan, William Lipinski and Thomas Hynes have each ushered their children into powerful political positions. Some say Stroger should also be allowed to anoint his son.

    But the opportunity to run a $3 billion government and thousands of jobs in it is tempting many, including Steele -- viewed as one of John Stroger's strongest board allies.

    The South Side Democrat also has more than $400,000 in her political campaign fund.

    In an interview last week, she said she's not sure what Todd Stroger's "competency is."

    'Highly inappropriate'

     

     

    "I just don't want to see Todd used as a pawn just because some people want to see him there for their own reasons," she said, referring to many of the county workers dependent upon John Stroger for their jobs.

    But Collins said Steele is "as old as I am," and the county needs new, younger leadership familiar with how the county works.

    Like many critics, Collins cited Todd Stroger's inexperience in managing such a large operation.

    Todd Stroger has been 8th Ward alderman for the last five years and was a member of the state Legislature for nine years before that.

    Still, another John Stroger ally, Commissioner Roberto Maldonado, said "there are many qualified candidates in Cook County.

    "But it would be highly inappropriate, at this time, for anybody to be positioning themselves for this office," he said.

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    African American Enstooled As A Chief In Ghana….his story

    Prior to March, 2005, a Ghanaian friend told me of a school in the North Country – very remote- which needed printers. The school, he said, had an old computer and it would help if they could get a printer for the students. I agreed to buy/ship two printers. When attempting to ship them, however, I learned that it would cost about twice as much as the printers themselves (about $500.00), and worse it would take at least two to three months to arrive, presumably in good condition.

    In March 2005, my wife decided to accompany me to Ghana because she had never been to Africa, wanted to visit the country, and see some of what I do*, as well as visit some important tourist sites. We brought the printers with us.

    When we arrived at the Kpandai Secondary School, word had apparently preceded us and we were informed that the area had declared a holiday in our honor and a ceremony was held. We were told of the difficulties of the school…that it was lacking dormitory space for some of the girls and boys…that the government had no money to build……that the school (we learned later) placed in the top 10% of schools in Ghana. Touched that they would declare a holiday for us, we decided to share some of our modest resources and agreed to build the dormitory to house about 168 students; and pay for bedding (double-deckers) for both boys and girls.

    The holiday involved a ceremony and they asked me to formally present the two printers! If you have never had a village turn out and dance for you, it is impossible to describe the feelings. It was at the ceremony that the Headmaster announced our pledge to build the dormitories. Joy, great pleasure and warm feelings abounded! My wife also announced that her college** was willing to arrange for a top student to study in her college in the US if the student would agree to return to Ghana upon completion. Word got passed around of our pledge, by other Ghanaian friends who were visiting Kpandai with us. One thing lead to another and talk surfaced to offer me a chief designation. Another friend, also on the trip, is quite influential in his home village, Naga, and asked if I would accept Chief (Naga Koma Naaga) …no strings/commitment attached.

    I accepted the installation in Naga in March, 2006.

    Work is still underway to complete the dormitories in Kpandai, and my wife and I are eagerly awaiting news that the dormitories have been completed and the students are occupying them. We want to return to see the new dorms.

    We began our visit to Naga from Accra early in the morning by SUV. My daughter and I, and my good friend George Agana and his brother Joseph (who would photograph and record the ceremony) were passengers, along with our driver. It took fifteen hours to arrive in Navrongo. We spent an overnight in Navrongo, because there are no rooms available in Naga. In the morning, we were all led to Naga. (One cannot drive directly to Naga. It is necessary to first go north to Navrongo and drive south to Naga.)

    While overnight in Navrongo, a representative of the Chiefs and a member of the royal family, Dr. Charles Awini, who is the Chief Surgeon for the Police Hospital in Accra, and his brother, met with me to give an overview of the ceremony; to say that the elementary school students were expecting us, and that the Chiefs were also expecting me.

    Appropriate gifts were brought for the Chiefs.

    When we arrived at the Naga village, we were greeted by the village interpreter, some teachers, and representatives of the Chiefs.

    Before the ceremony in the Palace, we were given a tour of some of the elementary schools in the area. Children were expecting us and many classes gave us a warm greeting, such as, “Welcome Mr. Scott, How are you, sir?” We toured many of the classrooms and spoke with as many students as possible. They were learning very useful and (sometimes) difficult subjects, such as elementary algebra; of course, English, and religion. Many of their notebooks were quite legible and neat. The equipment was old as were many of the booklets, however the government had recently shipped some new textbooks and several classes were using them.

    The Installation Ceremony was (how can I know?) not long or short…with introductions back and forth between me and the Chiefs and speeches by one of the Chiefs; and I was invited to say something back to them. (I had been coached by Dr. Awini to ‘say something from the heart’ and not to read from a prepared text). I quickly learned how to pronounce their greeting and the Chiefs and villagers were both surprised and pleased.

    It was very hot (I love hot weather) but when they placed the very heavy, thick Ceremonial Smock over my head I thought I might fall down! I didn’t.

    During the Ceremony the tradition called for the Chiefs to present me with a goat, which I was pleased to accept. Unfortunately, although Princess Amber wanted to bring home the goat, I knew that the airline would not cooperate and so I later gave the goat to my good friend, who has family and roots in Naga.

    Toward the end of the ceremony dancers came to perform for me and it was a quite lively time. Tradition calls for placing paper money on the heads of the dancers. I learned how to do this somewhat.

    The excitement, which I could feel from the moment we arrived, continued to build throughout the visit. The climax was an almost motion picture image of large friendly crowds, five or six deep, around our SUV, looking, smiling and reaching to shake Princess Amber’s hand and the hand of the new Naga Koma Naaga.

    I had several meetings back in Accra, following the Ceremony, with Naga representatives (Dr. Awini and his brother and a colleague from the Police Hospital. The purpose was to initiate discussions as to how we might bring investment money to the region, especially money for agriculture and housing.

    I left an outline for consideration.

    My firm does not have investment funds. We are brokers (i.e., and receive commission for bringing parties together).

    The money we sent to build the dormitories and bedding in Kpandai came out of our own bank account.

    If our friends in Ghana are able to work with me it might be possible to find the needed money to grow both important and appealing areas of Northern Ghana.

    Jim Scott Managing Partner Jensco International

    Source:
    ghananewsreel
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    Chicago-Crisis Intervention

    WHO TO CALL...
    CDHS Emergency Response Teams are
    on duty 24/7 to assist with non-life threatening situations.


    3-1-1
    Call 3-1-1 for shelter, food, relocation, and social services
    in situations that don’t pose an immediate life threat.

    9-1-1
    Call 9-1-1 for police, medical and fire emergencies
    that present an immediate threat to life.


    People in need of immediate shelter, food or relocation can call 311. 911 is the number to call for police, fire and medical emergencies. If someone is concerned about a relative, friend or neighbor and can’t make contact with the person, they can call 311 and request a well-being check.

    Calls of this nature are forwarded immediately to the Chicago Department of Human Services. Staff are on duty around the clock to accept the calls. CDHS responds to every request and takes whatever action necessary to stabilize the situation.

    Well-Being Checks by CDHS teams

    Well-Being Checks

    "I’m worried about my grandmother. She is 81 years old and lives alone. I have been trying to call her all day but get no response...that is not like her. My baby is sick so I can’t leave home to check on her in person. What should I do?"

    CDHS teams make home visits to check on someone when there is reason for concern and a family member or friend is not able to get to them. Trained outreach workers conduct well-being checks. When they arrive at the home they make an initial assessment of the situation. They evaluate housing conditions, safety hazards, health and abuse issues and other potential problems. If necessary, CDHS workers call in other social services or medical professionals. Requests for well-being checks peak during periods of severe winter or summer weather.


    CDHS outreach teams respond to shelter request.

    Shelter Requests


    "I’ve been living with a friend because I have no money for rent. Tonight he told me that I have to get out. I have no family to turn to and don’t know anyone who can take me in. I need some place to spend the night."

    CDHS outreach teams respond to shelter requests around the clock. If the need is immediate, the caller may be asked to go to their local police station or hospital emergency room where they can wait safely for the team. CDHS workers conduct an initial assessment and find appropriate, temporary shelter for the individual or family. CDHS follows up with the client to get them into permanent, supportive housing as quickly as possible.

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    Chicago-Mammography Screening Services

    What You Should Know

    • There are close to 2 million women living with breast cancer today. It is the most commonly diagnosed cancer in women.

       

    • A screening mammogram, a safe x-ray picture of the breast, can reveal changes in the breast before they can be felt by a woman or her health care provider. Precancerous changes in the breast can also be detected.

       

       

    • The Chicago Department of Public Health (CDPH) offers mammography screening services at five locations.
      Englewood
      641 W. 63rd St.
      (312) 747-7831
      Uptown
      845 W. Wilson
      (312) 744-1938
      Lower West Side
      1713 S. Ashland
      (312) 746-5157
      West Town
      2418 W. Division
      (312) 744-0943
      Roseland
      200 E. 115th St.
      (312) 747-9500

       

    • All sites are fully accredited by the American College of Radiology (ACR) and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

       

       

    • A baseline mammogram (first mammogram) should be done between the ages of 35 and 40 for all women; every 1 to 2 years between ages 40 and 49; and, every year after age 50.

       

    • The American Cancer Society recommends professional breast physical examinations for women between 20 and 39 years of age every three years; women between the ages of 40 and 49 should have an exam every year. (All women should practice monthly breast self-examinations.)
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    City Hosts Additional Landlord Training Classes

    Program Helps Property Owners Become Better Landlords

    The Department of Buildings announced today a series of additional landlord training classes to be held in South Side neighborhoods during the month of May in an effort to help ensure neighborhood buildings there are safe and well-maintained.

    The free class is designed to teach building owners, landlords, building managers and residents how to:

    • keep criminal activity out of their buildings
    • practice preventive building and crime maintenance
    • screen and evict tenants properly
    • become a part of CAPS (Chicago Alternative Policing Strategy)
    • access City services
    "Our Landlord Training class is a great way to learn more about your rights and responsibilities when renting an apartment or house," said Department of Buildings Commissioner John Knight. "The class provides information on: crisis resolution; the eviction process; contract clauses and leases; warning signs of illegal activity; and City services." The class lasts approximately two hours and will be offered at the following locations:
    • Saturday, May 6: 9:30 a.m. at the West Englewood Public Library, 1745 W. 63rd St.
    • Thursday, May 11: 6 p.m. at the Chicago Lawn Police District headquarters at 3420 W. 63rd St.
    • Saturday, May 13: 9:30 a.m. at the West Englewood Public Library, 1745 W. 63rd St.
    • Thursday, May 18: 6pm at the McKinley Park Public Library, at 1915 W. 35th St.

    The four classes are in addition to the 60 regular classes held annually at various locations throughout the city. For more information call 312/744-3430 or www.cityofchicago.org/buildings

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    Chicago-Loop Tour Train

     

    The Loop Tour Train, Chicago’s popular tour around the historic downtown Loop neighborhood, rides the rails beginning May 6 through September 30. This free, ticketed 40-minute tour departs every Saturday at 11:00 a.m., 11:40 a.m., 12:20 p.m., and 1:00 p.m. from the Randolph and Wabash Chicago Transit Authority elevated train station.

     

     

     

    Tickets are free and available at the Chicago Office of Tourism Visitor Information Center in the Chicago Cultural Center, 77 E. Randolph Street at Michigan Avenue. Loop Tour Train tickets are available on the day of the tour only, and are issued on a first come, first served basis when the Chicago Cultural Center opens at 9:00 a.m. on Saturdays.

     

     

     

    The Loop Tour Train is Chicago’s only free tour of the Loop aboard the elevated train or ‘L’. Chicago Architecture Foundation docents present the history of the 130-year-old downtown area and ‘L’ system on this 40-minute tour. The train circles the Loop three times, while riders view the beauty of the façades and windows that are hidden amid the caverns of the city.

     

     

     

    The Loop Tour Train is wheelchair accessible. Guests requiring assistance should make arrangements when obtaining tickets at the Chicago Cultural Center. All tour passengers should arrive at the ‘L’ station 15 minutes prior to the scheduled departure time.

     

     

     

    Presented by the Chicago Office of Tourism, the Loop Tour Train is a partnership with the Chicago Architecture Foundation and the Chicago Transit Authority. For more information on the Loop Tour Train call, 312.744.2400 or visit www.cityofchicago.org/ExploringChicago.

     

     

     

    For more information on Chicago events and activities, to request a Chicago travel planning kit or to book hotel rooms at special rates and weekend packages including Immersion Weekends, call toll free, 1.877.CHICAGO (1.877.244.2246) or visit www.877CHICAGO.com. For those calling from outside the United States, Mexico and Canada, please call 1.312.201.8847. The TTY toll-free number for the hearing impaired is 1.866.710.0294. Chicago tourism information is also available on the Internet at www.cityofchicago.org/ExploringChicago.

     

     

     

    Visitors to Chicago and Chicagoans planning to entertain out-of-town guests can receive additional information, including brochures and maps on Chicago’s exciting events and attractions by stopping at one of the Visitor Information Centers. The centers are located at Chicago Water Works, 163 E. Pearson Street at Michigan Avenue, and the Chicago Cultural Center, 77 E. Randolph Street.

     

     

     

     

     

     

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    May 10, 2006

    5 very cool things to do for Mom's Day

    Whether you're searching for something to do for your mom, or you're a mom yourself, here are some ideas sure to make a mom smile:

     

    1 - A GIFT TO REMEMBER

    For the mother who has everything, Shutterfly's photo books deliver infinite emotional bang for the buck. They cost as little as $29.99, but look as though they required plenty of money and time. Upload your favorite digital photos to the Web site, choose an album cover and arrange your pictures. Write your captions, and presto! A themed memory book guaranteed to make Mom cry. In a good way. At www.shutterfly.com.

     

    2 - GARDEN IN A CITY

    Smell the flowers with Mom at the nation's first urban garden show, which kicks off Saturday. Stroll through 40 landscaped city gardens created for city lots, yards, parkways, decks, balconies, containers, windows and rooftops. Try a hands-on gardening workshop or watch a cooking demonstration in a state of the art outdoor kitchen. Hours are 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday-Saturday; 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday. Admission is $10 weekdays and $12 on weekends; $7 for seniors, groups and kids 12-17; children under 11 are free. Look for the huge white tents in Grant Park at the lakefront and Monroe. Need a gift? Garden-related items for sale on site.

     

    3 - KEEP A MOM-TO-BE IN STYLE

    It's always a first Mother's Day for someone -- so spoil your favorite mom-to-be with maternity style. The Jessica Scott maternity line is not only chic but also is produced using environmentally friendly fabrics. Check out the line's Blazer Sharp jacket ($95, at right), a gorgeous empire-waisted number that looks equally great over jeans or a skirt. Pregnant moms will love "A Nightie to Remember" ($95), a fit-for-a-goddess nightgown that not only features a sexy side slit but also allows for easy nursing access. Jessica Scott styles have hidden stretch panels and bounce-back stretchable fabrics that let the pregnant one transition easily into a post-baby "Hot Mom." Find these looks at Kickin', 2142 W. Roscoe.

     

    4 - PAMPER HER (IT NEVER GETS OLD)

    Give her time at the spa. Really, you can't go wrong here. A few Mother's Day treats being offered: Toujours, 5224 N. Clark, will offer a special Chocolate & Strawberry Facial in May, using cocoa powder and crushed strawberries for $90. Also, the Red Door Spa, 919 N. Michigan, has multiple spa packages, including the extra fancy Divine Decadence package, for $491, includes massage, facial, manicure and pedicure, hair cut and style, lunch and complimentary skin products. Whoa.

     

    5 - FEEL GOOD TOGETHER

    Grab your mom, or your daughter, and join thousands of moms at the Y-Me Race run or walk event Sunday in beautiful Grant Park. Run a 5K, or participate in the one- or three-mile walk and raise money for breast cancer victim and family support programs. Pre-register on-line at www.y-me.org; day-of registration begins at 7:30 a.m. and the race starts at 9. Call (877) 963-7223 for more info.

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    17 killed in city Bush called example of success

    BAGHDAD, Iraq -- A suicide truck bomber attacked a crowded market in Tal Afar late Tuesday, killing at least 17 people and wounding 35 in a city cited by President Bush as a success story in battling insurgents.

    The bombing occurred after incoming Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki said he had almost finished assembling a Cabinet, the final step in establishing a national unity government. U.S. officials had predicted insurgents would step up attacks to try to block the new administration.

    U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad said al-Maliki would soon launch a four-part plan to restore order by securing Baghdad, Basra and eight other cities, promoting reconciliation, building public confidence in the police and army and disbanding sectarian militias.

    The truck bomber struck about 8:30 p.m. as shoppers in Tal Afar were scurrying to finish their purchases before closing, according to police Col. Abdul-Karim Mohammed, who gave the casualty figures.

    500 Iraqis dead from vehicle bombs

     

     

    The director of the city hospital, Saleh Qado, said that U.S. Army medics provided emergency treatment at the scene before loading the injured into ambulances.

    Lt. Col. Ali Rasheed of the Interior Ministry said the main target may have been a police station within the market area of the city, 260 miles northwest of Baghdad.

    At least 500 Iraqis have been killed by vehicle bombs in 2006, out of a total of at least 3,525 Iraqis killed in war-related violence this year.

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    Chicago kids hear Liberian leader's tale of hope

    As the first elected female president of an African nation, Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf would have been an inspiration to students at an Armour Square school if she hadn't said a word Tuesday and merely posed for pictures.

    Instead, she told a story of hope and dreams against incredible odds that should serve as an inspiration to students at Hale Williams Multiplex, 2710 S. Dearborn.

    The story was about the children of Liberia and their struggle to do in a war-ravaged nation what Chicago kids take for granted: go to school to learn and grow and follow their dreams.

     

     

     

    "Because our country has been at war for such a long time, they couldn't go to school like you do. They found themselves so many times having to run with their mothers because the bombs were falling. ... Many of them had to ... live in other places for safety. ... Many of them had to depend on their mothers [to] rummage food ... sometimes one meal a day -- if that at all," said Johnson-Sirleaf, who is known among Liberian children as "Ma Ellen."

    But despite the hardship and hunger, those same children "shared the greatest faith" -- not only in their own survival, but in the future of their nation, the Liberian president said. She found that out first-hand during countless talks with children in slums and villages and cities along the campaign trail.

    'Their future is bright'

     

     

    "I spoke to them and hugged them. [I said], 'What do you want? What do you want for your country? What do you want for yourself? You have suffered so much. You have seen your future taken away from you. What can we do for you?' " Johnson-Sirleaf said.

    "The answer was the same: When I was in the most remote village or in the city, they would say to me, 'We want to go to school. We want to learn. We want to be somebody.' Isn't that wonderful?"

    At a school assembly attended by Mayor Daley and his wife, Maggie, Johnson-Sirleaf said her challenge is to give Liberian children an opportunity "to do what you are doing."

    "To go to school, to be able to sit in a classroom, to have a copy book and a pencil, to have a good teacher [who] can work with them and help them and teach them so that their future is bright," said Johnson-Sirleaf.

    Book program helps schools

     

     

    "It's not easy. Our country is poor. It will take a while for us to be able to do for them what we know we have to do. But we also know that, because of them, we have to work hard. We have to be there for them. We have to get those schools built. We have to get those books and find those teachers so that their future is as bright as your future."

    Johnson-Sirleaf is getting a helping hand thanks to the generosity of Chicagoans -- and a new partnership between the Liberian Education Trust and the Chicago Public Schools.

    In exchange for a 10 percent discount on their own book purchases, Chicagoans are asked to purchase one or more pairs of popular elementary school books from Borders stores in Hyde Park, Beverly and on State Street.

    The books are distributed to some of the neediest elementary school libraries in Chicago and in Liberia.

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    Todd Stroger: Mom wants Dad out

    Yonnie Stroger will have a lot to say about whether her husband remains on the Democratic ticket after suffering a serious stroke -- and she has her mind made up: She wants Cook County Board President John Stroger to retire.

    That's according to her son, Ald. Todd Stroger (8th), the front-runner to replace his father. He described his mom as "the caretaker" and said she has "more pull than she had before," when John Stroger reportedly overruled his wife and decided to seek another term.

    This time, Yonnie Stroger is likely to prevail over her determined husband. And she is pushing hard for retirement, the alderman said.

    "She thinks he's served his time well. He's done a lot of things and that it's probably time to rest," Todd Stroger said Tuesday.

    "Just being a good wife, she would probably think that he's done a lot and been through a lot and his health is the main concern. I would think that she'd want him to just get back to 100 percent and not even worry about outside influences. It's all health. She's just worried about his health. He's not a young man anymore. She doesn't want to lose him to this."

    'We'll pose the question to him'

     

     

    As a protective husband, Todd Stroger said, he can understand how his mother feels. If the shoe were on the other foot, he would do the same thing.

    "If I thought my spouse had been injured and needed time to recover and had done a lot in her life, I would tell her that I think it's time to stop," he said.

    Todd Stroger has said previously that his father would decide in July whether to remain on the Democratic ticket. But the timetable has been moved up.

    "He will be making a decision fairly soon. My plan is to talk to my mother and the doctors and see if they think he should be making those types of decisions. If they think it's fine, we'll pose the question to him," Todd Stroger said.

    "I'll say, 'Dad, is your interest in running for president still there or do you want to retire and rest up?' "

    John Stroger, 76, suffered what his doctors described as a "serious" stroke the week before the March 21 primary. The condition cast a pall over the campaign of challenger Forrest Claypool, but seemed to galvanize party leaders in general and black elected officials in particular around John Stroger's candidacy.

    Their support carried the veteran Democratic warhorse to victory with 53.5 percent of the Democratic primary vote.

    Last week, Todd Stroger told the Chicago Sun-Times that he's qualified to succeed his father -- and confident of victory -- if the stroke prevents John Stroger from remaining on the Democratic ticket.

    The next day, black politicians started lining up behind the South Side alderman as a replacement for his ailing father. If it's OK for white politicians like Mike Madigan, Tom Hynes and Bill Lipinski to take care of, or be succeeded by, their children, the same standard should apply to African Americans, they said.

    On Tuesday, Todd Stroger took that argument one step further.

    As a loyal Democrat, Todd Stroger said, his father supported Lisa Madigan for attorney general and Dan Hynes for state comptroller because he thought they were "intelligent, capable people." And the former state representative compared his qualifications to those of Lisa Madigan, Dan Hynes and Dan Lipinski.

    "I would put my experience up against theirs at any time. It's probably twice that of any of them," he said.

    Dad back him? 'I would hope so'

     

     

    Once again, Todd Stroger stressed that he and his father have not discussed the all-important succession issue. But the alderman said he has little doubt how his father would feel about the idea of being replaced by his son.

    "He'll think it's the nature of anyone in any business to want to move up. He would think that I've been through a lot of things and that this wouldn't be a bad move," he said.

    Pressed on whether his dad would think he deserved to be County Board president, Todd Stroger said, "I would hope so after the work that I've done and working with him, working in the state, the city, the ward organization and, in a way, working with the county through the state process."

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    May 09, 2006

    Sex-for-aid scandal: Military calls for enquiry

    The Military High Command on Monday demanded an investigation into reports of sex-for-aid scandal among UN peacekeepers in Liberia, including Ghanaian soldiers.

     

     

    “The Military High Command is concerned about the report and its ramifications on the international image of Ghana in general and the Ghana Armed Forces in particular as far as United Nations International Peacekeeping Operations are concerned,” the Ghana Armed Forces said in a statement signed by Colonel E.W.B. Nibo, Director of Public Relations.

     

     

    “(The Military High Command) has subsequently directed the contingent commander of the Ghanaian troops in Liberia to investigate the matter and submit a report to it immediately.”

     

     

    The High Command appealed to the media to handle the issue with circumspection until the Ghana Armed Forces availed itself of the report from the mission area.

     

     

    The earlier story:

     

     

    Young girls in Liberia are still being sexually exploited by UN peacekeeping force, aid workers and teachers despite pledges to stamp out such abuse.

     

     

    Soldiers from the Ghanaian UN peacekeeping force are among those who allegedly demand sex from girls, some as young as eight.

     

     

    The most visible signs of abuse are close to garrisons of UN peacekeeping soldiers.

     

     

    In one village a 17-year-old girl said that most of her teenage friends were having sex with Ghanaian soldiers from the nearby base. Like many of them she has a baby fathered by a Ghanaian soldier. (BBC Link: Aid scandal hits Liberia's weakest )

     

     

    The UN's Humanitarian Co-ordinator in Liberia, Jordan Ryan, said that specific allegations would be investigated.

     

     

    "Unfortunately not all international NGOs have taken it seriously. But it is a clear priority. We have never done enough until there's a zero case load. Has enough been done? Not yet. Are we working on it? You bet we are."

     

     

    Save the Children says such abuse is becoming more common as people displaced by the civil war return to their villages.

     

     

    The United Nations promised to put safeguards in place after sexual abuse in the refugee camps of West Africa was first revealed four years ago.

     

     

    But a study by Save the Children, which involved speaking to more than 300 people in camps for people displaced by the war, found that abuse was still widespread.

     

     

    The report said that all of the respondents clearly stated that more than half of the girls in their locations were affected.

     

     

    Girls from the age of eight to 18 years were being sold for sex, "commonly referred to as 'man business'," the report noted.

     

    One 20-year-old woman told the BBC that she had been forced to have sex with a worker for the World Food Programme (WFP).

     

     

    "This young man had been doing it to most of my friends. And the children too don't have strong minds. They will have sex with him to get the food," Konah Brown said.

     

     

    But government officials and teachers are also contributing to the abuse, Save the Children says.

     

     

    Teachers have demanded sex in lieu of school fees, or even just to give good grades the report found.

     

     

    "This cannot continue. It must be tackled," said Jasmine Whitbread, Save the Children's UK Chief Executive.

     

     

    "Men who use positions of power to take advantage of vulnerable children must be reported and fired.

     

     

    "More must be done to support children and their families to make a living without turning to this kind of desperation."

     

     

    The WFP's Greg Barrow said the organisation would be taking the latest allegations with "the greatest seriousness" and was already taking steps to investigate them.

     

     

    "The key here is to find what link in this chain of delivering food, and getting it to the people who need it, is perhaps abusing this position," he told the BBC.

     

     

    The UN's Humanitarian Co-ordinator in Liberia, Jordan Ryan, also said specific allegations would be investigated.

     

     

    "Unfortunately not all international NGOs have taken it seriously. But it is a clear priority," he said.

     

     

    "We have never done enough until there's a zero case load. Has enough been done? Not yet. Are we working on it? You bet we are."

     

     

    Source: MyJoyonline

     

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    Neighbor charged in R.I. killing

    Baby sitter's boyfriend abducted girl, police say

    WOONSOCKET, R.I. -- To 8-year-old Savannah Smith, he was just a guy who lived across the street, her baby sitter's friend. She accepted a ride from Joshua Davis, 20, on Sunday and was never seen alive again, authorities say.

    Police dogs found Savannah's body early yesterday in a wooded lot in Cranston. Davis, who authorities said led police to the site, was charged with premeditated murder in the death of the playful young girl.

    Woonsocket police had conducted a frenzied search for the girl late Sunday night, though it was an unexpected tip that led them to Davis: A young cousin of Savannah's told them the two had driven off.

    ''There was no need. It was only a little kid," said Rene