Friday, October 15, 2004

American warplanes bombed several suspected Freedom Fighter hideouts in Fallujah on Friday, the first day of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, as peace talks there collapsed.

Israel withdrew tanks and ground forces from populated areas in the northern Gaza Strip on Friday, wrapping up its bloodiest offensive in the area in more than four years of fighting.

About 70,000 people are thought to have died since March in Sudan's conflict-torn Darfur region, the UN says.
Israel could one day become a "pariah state" like apartheid-era South Africa. It also looks set to collide with a European Union that is growing in power and influence. These are some of the possible outcomes if the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is not resolved, reports a confidential, but leaked to the media, 25-page ten-year forecast written by the Israeli Foreign Ministry's Center for Public Research. The report, which contains no recommendations and was written in August of 2004, says it's important to improve relations with Europe since a European Union growing in power and influence would mean that Israel's main political partner, the United States, would probably diminish in international stature.

Ramadan
For the next month, from sunrise to sunset each day, Safiyyah Osman will not have one bite of food or one sip of water. Like Muslims across the world, she will observe the holy month of Ramadan by fasting every day. Yet Safiyyah is only 11 years old. "It does get a bit hard, but I just ignore it and get through it," said Safiyyah, who lives in Willingboro. "When I get hungry, I just go into a different room and say something to myself. I say a little prayer." Ramadan is an Islamic celebration marking the time that God revealed the Muslim holy book, the Quran, to the prophet Muhammad. The month-long holiday begins with the sighting of the crescent moon and is expected to start today. During Ramadan, Muslims fast to reflect on their lives and their relationship to God. Children are not expected to observe the fast until they reach puberty, yet many start younger, beginning with just a few days of fasting to practice and eventually abstaining the entire month.

Thursday, October 14, 2004

Two explosions on Thursday rocked Baghdad's fortified Green Zone compound, which houses government offices and the US embassy.

Pakistani commandos on Thursday raided a house near the Afghan border where two Chinese engineers were being held hostage, rescuing one and killing all five kidnappers, officials said.

Israeli air strikes killed five Palestinians in Gaza Thursday after Hamas militants renewed threats to rain rockets on nearby Israel despite a massive 16-day-old army offensive aimed at crushing them.

Team America: World Police
By now you have heard that some conservatives are up in arms about Team America: World Police, the new film by "South Park" masterminds Trey Parker and Matt Stone. You might have also heard dismissive liberals who also are peeved by its anti-leftist content. The only people not at risk of being offended by Team America are those comfortably familiar with the sort of over-the-top satire the filmmakers excel in.

Wednesday, October 13, 2004

Canada.com - 5 hours ago
Roadside bombings killed 4 American soldiers in Baghdad, the US command said Wednesday, as US and Iraqi troops stepped up pressure on Sunni insurgents before this week's start of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan

Channel News Asia - 2 hours ago
TEMPE, United States: President George W. Bush and Democratic rival John Kerry geared up for their final televised debate, hoping to break open a race for the White House virtually deadlocked three weeks before the election

SeattlePI.com - 10:40 PT
France and Germany spoke out Wednesday against a U.S. proposal to put NATO in charge of the military and reconstruction efforts in Afghanistan, but U.S. and other officials said the alliance would go ahead and develop options for merging the missions

CBC News (www.cbc.ca)- 15:06 EDT
Israel on Wednesday backed away from an accusation that the United Nations allowed a vehicle to be used to transport a rocket for Palestinian militants. Israel released a surveillance picture on Oct. 4 which it said showed a rocket being loaded into a UN truck.



"After a thorough review of the material, the nature of the object loaded on the vehicle cannot be determined with certainty. Thus, the determination that the object loaded was a Qassam rocket was too unequivocal and made in haste," an Israeli army statement said.

The UN said the object in the picture was a stretcher.

Monday, October 11, 2004

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The U.S. presidential campaign between George W. Bush and John Kerry has prompted a frenzy of gossip and conspiracy theories among Internet bloggers, hybrid online sites that blend news, gossip and opinion.

As Bush and the Massachusetts Senator slug it out in a neck-and-neck race ahead of the November 2 election, partisan bloggers have flooded the Internet with alternative views about both candidates, which they hope will help sway voters.

Experts say much of the gossip on the Internet is as loony as supermarket tabloid stories claiming Elvis Presley lives, but that it still has a role to play in the campaign.

"Blogs probably pretty accurately reflect the level of polarization and paranoia and frustration among everyday Americans that the entire campaign reflects," said Vanity Fair media critic Michael Wolff, characterizing the new form of overtly-biased journalism as "the voice of the mob."

After Tuesday's debate between Vice President Dick Cheney and Kerry's running mate Sen. John Edwards, blogs quickly refuted Cheney's claim that he never met Edwards, posting a picture of the two together within moments of his statement.

And ahead of Friday's second debate between Bush and Kerry, the Internet was abuzz with gossip that the president wore a listening device during last week's debate allowing an unseen puppet master to whisper cues and tips in his ear.

The Bush campaign said that rumor -- likening the president to Milli Vanilli, the infamous singing duet unveiled as frauds for lip-syncing -- was totally false.

"It's a laughable, left-wing conspiracy theory," said Bush campaign spokesman Scott Stanzel.

Online magazine Salon.com on Friday examined the morass of "evidence" offered on myriad blogs and concluded, "As for whether we really do have a Milli Vanilli president, the answer at this point has to be, God only knows."

Driving the latest incendiary blogging is a picture posted on the Internet of Bush during the debate in Florida. Shot from behind, the image shows what appears to be a bulge beneath the president's suit jacket below his shoulder blades.

Robert Thompson, pop culture professor at Syracuse University, called the accusation "the biggest conspiracy theory" of the campaign to date. "Until there's a credible source I'm not sure I buy it," he said.

A recent Pew Internet and American Life Project found more than two million Americans have their own blog. Most have few readers but some garner thousands of hits daily as the American public becomes increasingly distrustful of mainstream media.

Bush isn't alone in being targeted. Conservative bloggers accused Kerry of using a cheat sheet during the first debate and have also issued critiques of his Vietnam war record.

Self-styled Internet commentators scored a victory recently when they questioned the authenticity of documents used by television network CBS to challenge Bush's military service in the National Guard during the Vietnam era. CBS admitted it had been duped into using questionable documents for the report.

Many bloggers have been so partisan that they have even raised money for the candidate of their choice -- something that has led most media watchers to take much of what appears on the sites with more than a grain of salt. (Additional reporting by Michele Gershberg in New York and Adam Entous in Washington)