Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Somalia: World can use force against the pirates




This photo, supplied by th U.S.Navy, shows the commanding officer of a U.S. Navy guided-missile cruiser monitors the pirated Ukrainian cargo ship Faina in the Indian Ocean off the coast of Somalia Tuesday, Sept. 30, 2008, while one of his helicopters provides aerial surveillance. Several U.S. Navy ships are monitoring the situation. The ship is carrying a cargo of Ukrainian T-72 tanks and related equipment. The hijacked ship was attacked on Sept. 25 and forced to proceed to an anchorage off the Somali Coast. (AP Photo.U.S. Navy,Petty Officer 2nd Class Jason R. Zalasky)


MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP) — Somalia authorized foreign powers on Wednesday to use force against pirates holding a ship loaded with tanks for $20 million ransom, raising the stakes for bandits being watched by the U.S. Navy.

There was no indications, however, that the Americans or anyone else was preparing to take action.

Last week's hijacking of the Ukrainian cargo ship MV Faina — carrying 33 Soviet-made T-72 tanks, rifles and heavy weapons — was the highest profile act of piracy off this Horn of Africa nation this year. Several U.S. ships patrolled nearby and American helicopters buzzed overhead.

Moscow also has sent a warship to protect the few Russian hostages on board, but it was a nearly week away from the coast of central Somalia where the Faina has been anchored since Sept. 25. Most of the 20 crew members are Ukrainian or Latvian, and one Russian has died, apparently of illness.

Spurred by the latest hijacking, at least eight European Union countries offered Wednesday to form a new force to help protect shipping in the increasingly dangerous waters off Somalia, France's defense minister said — a move that eventually could give the Navy crucial support in the area.

A U.N. Security Council resolution in June gave permission to nations to send warships into Somalia's territorial waters to stop "piracy and armed robbery at sea" if such operations were taken in cooperation with the weak Somali government in Mogadishu.

When asked whether the U.S. was pleased that Europeans are getting involved in policing the high seas, State Department spokesman Kurtis Cooper had no comment.

Mohammed Jammer Ali, acting director of the Somali Foreign Ministry, told The Associated Press on Wednesday that he was giving new permission for such actions.

"The international community has permission to fight with the pirates," he said.

Somalia's president, Abdullahi Yusuf, also appealed to foreign powers. "The government has lost patience and now wants to fight pirates with the help of the international community," he said in a radio address.

Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman declined to comment on any possible military operation but said the U.S. remained resolved to keep the Faina's military cargo from falling into the wrong hands — meaning Somali militants with links to al-Qaida.

The U.S. military has conducted airstrikes in Somalia and is known to have sent special forces troops in on the ground to go after key militants there.

Whitman would not give details of any new or existing agreement that the U.S. has with Somalia's U.N.-supported government, which is fighting Islamic insurgents and has little control in much of the country.

The U.S. "works closely with its partners in the region to identify, locate, capture and if necessary kill terrorists where they operate, plan their operations or seek save harbor," Whitman said.

Lt. Col. Almarah Belk, a Pentagon spokeswoman, said if the U.S. was asked to participate in any kind of coalition collaborative efforts, it would not impact U.S. operations in Iraq, Afghanistan or elsewhere around the world. "We have enough DoD forces that it wouldn't impact operations," she said.

Belk said a security task force began patroling off Somalia's coast in August to discourage attacks against commercial vessels.

She said the task force deals with "any kind of drug smuggling or any kind of violent piracy."

Russia has used force to end several hostage sieges on its own territory — sometimes disastrously, as in the 2004 storming of a school in Beslan that resulted in 333 deaths, nearly half of them children.

However, the Russian navy's chief spokesman played down the possibility of the use of force.

"Taking forceful measures, for obvious reasons, is an extreme measure, as this could create a threat to the lives of the international crew of the cargo ship," Capt. Igor Dygalo said.

In a statement, he said the task of the frigate heading to the waters off Somalia was to protect Russian ships and suggested it would mainly prevent further pirate attacks. He said efforts to free the hostages would involve diplomacy.

Ali, the Somali official, said negotiations between the hijacked ship's Ukrainian owners and the pirates were being conducted by satellite telephone. "No other side is involved in negotiations," he said.

At a meeting Deauville, France, French Defense Minister Herve Morin said EU defense ministers had approved planning for an international anti-piracy operation in the Somalia area and called for coordination with NATO, which has warships in the Indian Ocean.

He said Belgium, Cyprus, France, Germany, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Spain and Sweden had offered ships for the force, and British participation also was a possibility. But he added that no real action could be taken before a formal EU meeting Nov. 10.

With Somalia impoverished by decades of conflict, piracy by Somali gangs has emerged as a lucrative racket that brings in millions of dollars in ransoms and the pirates rarely harm their hostages. A Malaysian shipping company confirmed it paid Somali pirates a ransom this week to free two of its freighters.

Most pirate attacks occur just north Somalia in the Gulf of Aden, one of the world's busiest shipping lanes. But recently pirates have been targeting the Indian Ocean waters off eastern Somalia.

Some 62 ships have been attacked in those areas this year. A total of 26 were hijacked, and 12 remain in the hands of the pirates along with more than 200 crew members. The Navy says two other pirated cargo ships are anchored in the same area as the Faina.

The dangerous cargo on the Faina has drawn worldwide attention. While few believe the pirates would be able to unload the tanks, the Faina's other military cargo or a huge ransom could worsen conflict in Somalia, where all major civil institutions have crumbled and hunger and drought ravage the population.

Associated Press writers Elizabeth A. Kennedy in Nairobi, Kenya; Barbara Surk in Dubai, United Arab Emirates; Jamey Keaten in Deauville, France; Vladimir Isachenkov and Steve Gutterman in Moscow; and Pauline Jelinek and Christine Simmons in Washington contributed to this report.

Loney, Manny power Dodgers past Cubs 7-2 in opener

Fans arrive outside Wrigley Field before the National League divisional series baseball game between the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Chicago Cubs on Wednesday, Oct. 1, 2008, in Chicago. Fans arrive outside Wrigley Field before the National League divisional series baseball game between the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Chicago Cubs on Wednesday, Oct. 1, 2008, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)
By Rick Gano AP Sports Writer / October 1, 2008
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CHICAGO—Manny Ramirez and Joe Torre brought their winning postseason ways to the Los Angeles Dodgers -- and Wrigley Field. James Loney hit a go-ahead grand slam off a wild Ryan Dempster, Ramirez and Russell Martin homered and the new-look Dodgers beat the Chicago Cubs 7-2 in their NL playoff opener Wednesday night.

The Cubs entered the postseason with the best record in league, hoping for a fast start 100 years after their last World Series championship.

But Ramirez and Torre, winners of six World Series crowns in the AL, wound up on top in their first playoff game together. Ramirez's homer was his 25th in the postseason, extending his own record.

"We get a sense of what he's been doing all these years," Loney said.

It was a good omen for the Dodgers. The last time they started a postseason series with a victory was 1988 -- the Kirk Gibson game in the World Series.

The Cubs will try to get even in Game 2 on Thursday night when they send mercurial right-hander Carlos Zambrano against Chad Billingsley.

"Let's hope we get better," Cubs manager Lou Piniella said. "Let's put this one behind us and go get them tomorrow."

Torre made his 13th straight postseason managerial appearance -- the previous 12 were with the Yankees -- and extended his record for postseason wins to 77 in a matchup with Piniella, another veteran skipper.

The Cubs took a 2-0 lead on Mark DeRosa's homer in the second inning off Derek Lowe, but the Dodgers rebounded against Dempster, who had trouble finding the strike zone all night.

Dempster walked the bases loaded in the fifth, and Loney delivered for the Dodgers.

After swinging and missing the first two pitches, he sent a 1-2 pitch over the wall in center for the grand slam that gave the Dodgers a 4-2 lead and silenced a Wrigley Field crowd that was cheering loudly for Dempster to get out of the jam he created.

"Invariably, when you keep putting people on, they're going to score, and they scored there quickly with that grand slam," Piniella said.

When Matt Kemp followed with a double, Piniella had seen enough and brought in Sean Marshall from the bullpen. Marshall gave up Ramirez's solo shot in the seventh that made it 5-2.

The Dodgers padded the lead in the eighth when Blake DeWitt doubled and reached third on an error by Cubs' center fielder Jim Edmonds, scoring on Casey Blake's single off Jeff Samardzija. Martin homered off Jason Marquis in the top of the ninth.

On the first day of spring training, Dempster said he thought the Cubs would win the World Series this year. Now, they're in a hole already.

U.S. Senate expected to approve bailout package

Steven Edwards and Sheldon Alberts , Canwest News Service

Published: Wednesday, October 01, 2008

WASHINGTON - Backers of a $700-billion financial bailout package were hopeful Wednesday an expected thumbs-up by the U.S. Senate would give the measure momentum for overall congressional approval.

The new version of the plan adds tax breaks and a higher limit for insured bank deposits in a bid to set the groundwork for a joint bill that would be sent to President George W. Bush by the end of the week. The House of Representatives rejected an earlier version of the plan on Monday.

"I am hopeful . . . we'll see a strong vote in support of this plan, and bipartisanship shown in the Senate today will spark the House of Representatives to do the same," said Democrat Harry Reid, the Senate majority leader, ahead of the vote scheduled for 7:30 p.m. ET.

'I am hopeful . . . we'll see a strong vote in support of this plan,' Senate majority leader Harry Reid said Wednesday before the vote.

'I am hopeful . . . we'll see a strong vote in support of this plan,' Senate majority leader Harry Reid said Wednesday before the vote.

Brendan Hoffman/Getty Images
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Bush described the Senate plan as "different" and "improved" as he addressed reporters after meeting with Gen. David McKiernan, NATO Forces commander in Afghanistan. But Bush did not take questions.

The House rejection of the bill rocked global markets, but U.S. officials say the bailout is vital to restoring confidence in the financial system, where clogged credit markets are already slowing the day-to-day running of the economy.

U.S. presidential hopefuls John McCain and Barack Obama, both senators, were returning from the campaign trail Wednesday to cast their votes after urging approval.

"If the financial rescue bill fails in Congress yet again, the present (credit) crisis will turn into a disaster," McCain said in a campaign event speech in Independence, Mo.

"In the case of this bill, I am confident there are enough people of goodwill in both parties to help see America through this crisis."

Obama warned from a campaign stop in Reno, Nev., that without action, "millions of jobs could be lost (and) a long and painful recession could follow."

But he also sought to ride the wave of anger over the bailout, saying "there will be a time to punish those who set this fire."

Despite the general political optimism about the new plan, market reaction was mixed, with the Dow Jones index and Toronto's stock exchange ending Wednesday slightly down. In Europe, key indices in Britain and France edged slightly upwards, while Germany's slipped. Earlier, Japan's Nikkei Index ended up one per cent, and Australia's main index closed up four per cent.

Analysts say that many of the House members who opposed the bill Monday were reacting to the flood of calls that poured into House and Senate offices last week from voters decrying the proposed bailout as a boondoggle favouring Wall Street fat cats - while doing little for Main Street.

Significantly, every House member faces voters Nov. 4, and of 41 incumbent members Congressional Quarterly considers to be most vulnerable to defeat, only nine supported the bill, which collapsed 228-205.

There was expected to be less resistance in the Senate because only a third of the members must this year face the electorate.

But there is also a sense on Capitol Hill that public sentiment has reluctantly swung in favour of federal action after Monday's stock market nosedive provoked a fear that severe economic hardship really was beckoning. "Calls to members offices have changed from being 90 per cent 'don't do this' - they're (now) 50-50," Republican House minority whip Roy Blunt said on NBC.

"In some offices, they're 90 per cent 'you have to do something.' This may be the best thing out there."

For the legislators themselves, Monday's stock market decline served as a wake-up call, with one senator saying: "We sort of have to get hit in the face with it."

The Senate vote was slated for after sundown in observance of Rosh Hashanah, which marks the Jewish New Year.

While Congress had also been closed Tuesday for the holiday, Reid and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell announced the revised plan the same night.

The White House said Wednesday Bush, who has warned of "painful and lasting" consequences for the U.S. should Congress fail to agree to a rescue plan, would be lobbying senators to pass the revised version. The measure will require 60 votes to pass instead of a simple majority in the 100-member Senate - an arrangement Senate leaders agreed to so that it could be brought to a vote quickly.

Architects of the measure had needed to strike a delicate balance between introducing elements that attracted new support without alienating legislators who favoured the make-up of the original package.

The added tax provisions, as well as the increase to the insured bank deposit limit, was expected to make the revised measure more palatable to House Republicans, who outnumbered Democrats in their opposition to Monday's bill.

Bank and credit union deposits are currently insured in the U.S. to $100,000, but the bill proposes the limit be increased for a year to $250,000 - a move that small businesses will welcome because of their frequent need to carry higher balances than households.

Tax breaks in the Senate bill are directed at renewable energy industries, but it also includes tax incentives for other businesses, and provides a one-year fix to the Alternative Minimum Tax that aims to exempt millions of Americans from higher income taxes.

"Senators and Representatives can now know that a 'yes' vote on the financial rescue plan is now a vote to rescue America's working families from the financial crisis, with the right tax relief at just the right time," Max Baucus, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, said in a statement.

The bill retains the central component of the original plan that gives Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson the power to buy up "toxic" mortgage-related assets that are at the heart of the credit market lethargy. Supporters have argued these assets could potentially reap a profit for the government when they are sold off.

The Senate bill also retains restrictions on "golden parachute" payoffs for the CEOs of troubled firms benefiting from the government bailout.

Among changes being considered in an eventual revised House plan is an extension of unemployment pay and a $1,000 tax credit for less affluent homeowners.