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  • Car bomb targeting NATO aid team kills 4 Afghans

    Abdul Malik / Reuters

    Smoke rises in the sky from a suicide car bomb explosion in Lashkar Gah, Helmand province, Afghanistan, on Jan. 26, 2012. Four Afghan civilians were killed and 31 people wounded, said Dawood Ahmadi, a spokesman for the provincial governor.

    Abdul Khaleq / AP

    A damaged car is seen at the scene of a suicide attack in Lashkar Gah on Jan. 26, 2012.

    The Associated Press reports from KABUL, Afghanistan:

    A suicide car bomber targeting a NATO-sponsored reconstruction team killed four Afghan civilians, including a child, and wounded 31 on Thursday in southern Afghanistan, officials said.

    The bomber detonated his explosives-laden vehicle as a convoy of the NATO team passed by in Lashkar Gah, capital of Helmand province, Daud Ahmadi, a spokesman for the provincial governor, said. Three civilian international members of the aid team — two men and one woman — were among the wounded. Read the full story.

    Qais Usyan / AFP - Getty Images

    More than ten years after the beginning of the war, Afghanistan faces external pressure to reform as well as ongoing internal conflicts.

  • Australia's Gillard dragged away from Aboriginal rights protest

    Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard is rushed to a car by security after some 200 rowdy protesters surrounded a restaurant where she was speaking in Canberra, Australia. Msnbc.com's Dara Brown reports.

    CANBERRA -- Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard was dragged away by security guards Thursday after she was trapped in a restaurant by rowdy protesters demonstrating for indigenous rights following a ceremony to mark Australia's national day.

    Some 200 supporters of Aboriginal rights surrounded a Canberra restaurant and banged on its windows while Gillard and opposition leader Tony Abbott were inside officiating at an award ceremony.


    The protesters were marching at the nearby Aboriginal Tent Embassy to mark 40 years since its establishment and rushed the restaurant in response to comments by Abbott earlier in the day, The Australian newspaper reported.

    "Look, I can understand why the Tent Embassy was established all those years ago. I think a lot has changed for the better since then," Abbott said earlier Thursday.

    "I think the indigenous people of Australia can be very proud of the respect in which they are held by every Australian and yes, I think a lot has changed since then and I think it probably is time to move on from that," he said.

    Lukas Coch / EPA

    Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard is escorted by police and bodyguards out of a restaurant after aboriginal Tent Embassy protesters tried to get into the building in Canberra, Australia, on Thursday.

    The newspaper reported that according to protesters, his remarks were interpreted as a call to take down the Tent Embassy, a ramshackle collection of tents and temporary shelters in the national capital that is a center point of protests against Australia Day.

    Invasion Day
    Australia Day marks the arrival of the first fleet of British colonists in Sydney on Jan. 26, 1788. Many Aborigines call it Invasion Day because the land was settled without a treaty with traditional owners.

    Around 50 police escorted the political leaders from a side door to a car. Gillard stumbled, losing a shoe. Her personal security guard wrapped his arms around her and supported her to the waiting car, shielding her from the angry crowd.

    Darkinjung Aboriginal Land Council Leader Sean Gordon told The Sydney Morning Herald that Abbott's comments had been read out to the crowd, which had been rallying peacefully until then.

    "It was like waving a red flag at a bull," he said.

    David Crosling / AP, file

    The Aboriginal Tent Embassy, set up in 1972, sits on the lawn of the Old Parliament House building in Canberra.

    Protesters chanted "shame" and "racist" outside the restaurant.

    One of the Tent Embassy's founders, Michael Anderson, said after the incident that Abbott's remarks were "madness," the Herald reported.

    "What he said amounts to inciting racial riots," he said.

    Gillard was unharmed and hosted another Australia Day function at her official residence in Canberra later Thursday.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Death toll rises, families await word on missing in Rio buildings collapse

     

    Felipe Dana / AP

    Rescue workers search for victims Wednesday after a building collapses in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

    Updated at 3:40 p.m. EST Thursday:

    RIO DE JANEIRO -- Rescuers pulled at least six bodies from the rubble of three buildings that suddenly collapsed, the Rio de Janeiro morgue said Thursday.

    At least 16 people remained missing as smoke from small fires drifted above the wreckage, The Associated Press reported.

    Authorities speculated that illegal construction work damaged the structure of a 20-story building and caused it to crumble, bringing down two other office buildings alongside at about 8:30 p.m. Wednesday.

    Rescue crews, aided by specially trained dogs, dug through tons of brick and twisted metal.

    "We have hopes of finding people alive," said Moises Torres, a spokesman with the Fire Department.

    According to the institution responsible for approving construction in Rio, unauthorized construction projects were under way in the building. The head of the accident prevention unit of Rio's Regional Council of Engineering, Luiz Cosenza, told the Globo television network that illegal projects could have led to the collapse.

    "Two projects were happening in the building," said Cosenza. "They were illegal works; they were not registered with the council."

    He didn't provide details but said the work was not being supervised by any registered professional.

    Hoping for news
    A janitor finishing up the day's work was among six injured extracted by rescue crews from the heap of bricks, metal and glass. An accountant closing the books for the month and a computer technician installing software were among the missing. Their friends or relatives took shelter from the scorching sun in a nearby building, hoping for news.

    Francisco Adir was trying to get information about a friend, Flavio Porrozi, 23, who had been attending a computer course in the largest of the three buildings.

    "We think he's alive. At 3 a.m. he managed to call his girlfriend and say, 'Hello, love,' before his phone went dead," Adir said. "The rescuers haven't given us any information, but the family is hanging all their hopes on that phone call."

    Five of the six bodies pulled out have been identified in the city morgue, and Porrozi is not among them.

    As the hours ticked by, relatives of the missing tried to keep despair at bay.

    "We last heard from him at 8 p.m. when he called his wife to say he wouldn't be much longer," said Luis Cesar Vasconcelos, whose brother, computer technician Luis Leandro Vasconcelos, remained trapped in the debris. "Since then, there's been no sign of him, but the family is hopeful to the end."

    The state's governor, Sergio Cabral, issued a statement saying the government was doing all it could to support the families of the victims.

    "We're still living a moment of shock," he said. "There is still hope of finding survivors, and in a last instance, of rescuing bodies."

    Rescue crews are searching for victims in Rio de Janeiro's downtown district after a building collapsed leaving at least three people dead and dozens missing. Msnbc.com's Dara Brown reports.

    Updated at 1:40 p.m. EST Thursday:

    RIO DE JANEIRO -- Three bodies were pulled from the rubble of three collapsed buildings on Thursday, an official with the Rio de Janeiro Fire Department said. Another 21 people were still missing after the buildings went down in the city's historic center, The Associated Press reported.

    Mayor Eduardo Paes said a structural problem may have caused a building of about 20 stories to collapse at about 8:30 p.m., and that apparently caused the collapse of two smaller buildings nearby. Officials were still investigating the causes, however.

    In addition to the dead and missing, at least six other people were treated for injuries caused by the accident, which left rubble and thick dust strewn over a wide area near Rio's famed Teatro Municipal and the Fine Arts Museum.

    One of those pulled out alive was Marcelo Moreira, a janitor in an eight-story building that fell.

    "He stayed behind to finish a little bit of work," said Rosalvo Alves, the building's main doorman, who had spent the night in a local hospital with his friend. "We shut down at 8. I left, and he was supposed to come too. Now this; he's hurt, our jobs are gone, everything is gone."

    Alves worked in the building for 38 years, and said he had never noticed any problems.

    Original post:

    RIO DE JANEIRO -- Two downtown buildings collapsed Wednesday, leaving at least two dead inside the wreckage.

    Rescue crews pulled four people alive from the debris, officials said.

    One building was 20 stories tall; the other, 10, Reuters reported.

    A loud explosion preceded the collapse, witnesses said.

    There was a strong smell of gas in the area, officials said. However, a gas leak likely didn't cause the blast, Rio's mayor said. 

    Rubble was strewn across a wide area, covering cars and motorcycles, The Associated Press reported. Television showed at least two people on the roof of a neighboring building where they apparently awaited help from firefighters.


    "It was like an earthquake. First some pieces of the buildings started to fall down. People started to run. And then it all fell down at once," a witness who identified himself as Gilbert told Reuters.

    As many as 11 people could be trapped in the wreckage, cable broadcaster Gloominess said. City authorities are assessing the risk of collapse of a damaged adjoining building, local news services reported, without giving the source of the information.

    "I ran down the stairs desperate to escape. Just when I left the building it collapsed. I escaped by the skin of my teeth - it's the work of God," Nelson Tomes, 38, an air conditioning technician, told iG news service.

    Tomes, who was on the 10th floor of one of the buildings, said he rushed to the stairwell after he heard a "huge noise."

    TV images showed cars covered with concrete and steel rods. Light, the electricity distribution company serving the city, cut power to the area to avert the possibility of fires after the gas smell was detected, the TV broadcasters said.

    Rio de Janeiro is struggling to address concerns over poor infrastructure as it prepares to co-host the soccer World Cup in 2014 and the Olympic Games two years later.

    The incident comes months after an explosion apparently caused by a gas leak ripped through a restaurant in downtown Rio, killing three people and igniting concerns over the state of the city's infrastructure.

    Vanderlei Almeida / AFP - Getty Images

    Firefighters look for victims amid the rubble of a building that collapsed Wednesday in downtown Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

     

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

  • Dow sees more negative publicity from London Olympics sponsorship

    A member of the body that oversees sustainability issues for the London Olympics has resigned in protest over a sponsorship deal with Dow Chemical, an act reflecting the company's latest setback in trying to generate goodwill as a Games partner.

    Meredith Alexander, who sat on the Commission for a Sustainable London 2012, said she had decided to quit the independent body because she "didn't want to be party to a defense of Dow," the American company's ties to the 1984 Bhopal gas disaster, which killed 25,000 in India.

    "People should be free to enjoy London 2012 without this toxic legacy on their conscience," she said in a statement released by rights group Amnesty International. "It is appalling that 27 years on, the site has still not been cleaned up and thousands upon thousands of people are still suffering."

    Related: Complete Olympics coverage

    Dow has denied any responsibility for the pesticide plant accident. The former owner, Union Carbide, settled its liabilities with the Indian government by paying $470 million. Dow merged with the Union Carbide Corp. in 2001.

    Almost all publicity resulting from Dow becoming one of the 11 major games sponsors has been negative, the BBC reported.

    Dow in 2010 signed on as one of 11 Worldwide Olympic Partners in a multimillion-dollar deal lasting until 2020, the BBC said. However, almost every story written about Dow associates the company's name with Bhopal, one of the world's worst industrial disasters.

    Rights groups, athletes and Indian and British politicians have spoken out against Dow and signed petitions against Dow's participation.

    Related: From al-Qaida to Occupy, UK preps for Olympics security

    The company paid 7 million pounds (nearly $11 million) for fabric panels to wrap around the London Olympic stadium, but to assuage public protest, Dow agreed not to put its logo on the decoration, the BBC said.

    But the world's second-largest chemical manufacturer isn't giving up, George Hamilton, vice president for Dow Olympic Operations, told the BBC.

    Dow wants to talk about what chemistry brings to the world in terms of supplying solutions in the field of water transportation, agriculture and energy, he said.

    Dow materials are in the urethane foam in the track, polymer fibers in the super-fast hockey pitches, materials in stadium walls, floors and roofs, and insulation technology in the broadcast and electrical cables, the BBC said.

    Additionally, Dow is looking ahead to the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi, Russia, and the Youth Olympic Games in Nanjing, China, and to the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, the BBC said.

    "We're well known in the U.S. and Western Europe, but our profile is not that high in growth economies like Brazil, China and India," Hamilton told the BBC.

    This article includes reporting from Reuters and msnbc.com staff.

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  • Rights groups hail Ecuador's crackdown on lesbian 'torture clinics'

    Women’s rights groups are claiming victory in their efforts to get the government of Ecuador to shut down underground clinics that they say used torture techniques to try to “cure” lesbians.

    Fundacion Causana, Taller de Comunicacion Mujer and Artikulacion Esporadika, a coalition of Ecuadorian women’s rights activists, started an online campaign on Change.org after working with women who had escaped what they call “torture clinics.” Many of the women cited physical and psychological abuse, including verbal threats, shackling, days without food or water, sexual abuse, and physical torture in efforts to make them “straight.”

    “After years of campaigning about the practice of torture rehab clinics that claim to cure homosexuality, the Ecuadorian government has committed to deconstructing the belief that homosexuality is a sickness,” Fundacion Causana representative Karen Barba said in a press release issued by Change.org on Tuesday. “Using Change.org, we were able to achieve victory in closing down ex-gay torture clinics.”

    The online petition to close the clinics drew more than 100,000 signatures from across the world.

    Earlier this week, President Rafael Correa also appointed Carina Vance, a lesbian and a gay-rights activist, as the new health minister. Vance is former executive director of Fundacion Causana.

    Vance succeeds Minister of Health Dr. David Chirriboga, who before stepping down last week announced the government would investigate and close all such clinics in the country, launch a national advertising and awareness campaign against homophobia, and develop a crisis hotline for victims, according to Change.org.

    “The Ministry of Public Health, the governing body of Ecuador’s health sector, is committed to strengthening the measures and institutions that contribute to the eradication of abusive practices such as the supposed treatment of homosexuality,” Chirriboga was quoted as saying. “The Ecuadorian government rejects such practices as criminal and in direct conflict with the individual freedoms granted to all our citizens.”

    Thirty so-called reparative therapy clinics were shut down by Correa's government in September after pressure from activists, including Vance, who will continue the campaign against remaining clinics as health minister.

    A story on cnn.com on Thursday highlighted stories of alleged abuse by women who visited the clinics. The woman told CNN that her family contacted a center that promised to “cure” her of her homosexuality when she was 23. 

    The woman, now 28, said she was kept in handcuffs for more than three months in a “therapeutic” center called Puente a la Vida, or Bridge of Life. Concha says she endured all kinds of demeaning and abusive treatment during the 18 months she was held there, according to CNN.

    The clinic has since been shut down. CNN said efforts to reach its former director for a comment were unsuccessful.

    Under Vance's leadership as health minister, three raids have already taken place in the Quito area, and dozens of women have been rescued, CNN reported.

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  • Wounded British servicemen row across Atlantic

    A group of British servicemen completed an epic voyage across the Atlantic on Wednesday, landing in Barbados to enthusiastic cheers.

    The six-man row2recovery team included four men who lost limbs serving in Iraq or Afghanistan. The men took 51 days to cross from the Canary Islands, battling a number of setbacks, including a broken rudder and lack of fresh water.

    See their arrival below:

    It's taken 51 days to row 3,000 miles across the Atlantic, and they've suffered setback after setback. But finally, they did it. A team of injured British servicemen completed their epic row across the Atlantic. ITN's Nina Nanar reports.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

     

  • Wikileaks founder gets talk show on Russian TV

    Andrew Winning / Reuters

    WikiLeaks' founder Julian Assange shown arriving at the High Court in London on Nov. 2, 2011.

    A new talk show hosted by Julian Assange, detained Internet activist and founder of the whistleblowing website Wikileaks, will air next month on Russian TV.

    In a statement on his website, Assange said he will host a series of interview programs with "key political players, thinkers and revolutionaries."  The show will appear on Russia Today (RT), a Kremlin-financed English-language satellite news network.

    The program, called "The World Tomorrow," will be taped at the house north of London where Assange has been under house arrest since December 2010. He is awaiting a court decision in Britain on his extradition to Sweden to face sexual assault allegations.

    "We liked a lot of the WikiLeaks revelations. It was very much in sync with what Russia Today has been reporting about the Arab Spring, and about the duplicitous policies of the US and its allies all along," Peter Lavelle, a senior journalist with RT told the Christian Science Monitor.

    "I think the Russian government will be pleased [to see Assange working on RT]. It's a soft power coup for Russia," Lavelle said.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

     

  • 33 whales stranded again off New Zealand, to be killed

    AP

    In this Tuesday photo provided by Project Jonah, stranded pilot whales are helped by volunteers at Farewell Spit on New Zealand's South Island.

    Some 33 long-finned pilot whales that were refloated Wednesday off a New Zealand beach with the help of volunteers became stranded again Thursday and will have to be euthanized, officials told TVNZ.

    “Unfortunately the stranded whales are now also further along the Spit and on the extreme boundary of our ability to reach them for another rescue attempt,” Kimberly Muncaster, CEO of the marine-mammal rescue group Project Jonah, told the TV station.

    "The Department of Conservation has decided they will have to be put down."

    John Mason, a Department of Conservation official, said the whales were physically deteriorating and in distress.

    The whales were part of a larger pod of 99 whales that beached on Monday at Farewell Spit in Golden Bay on the South Island.

    Volunteers have refloated surviving whales twice only to have them restrand. Each time, more whales died.

    A total of 82 whales will now have died since the stranding on Monday, according to TVNZ.

    Pilot whales grow to about 20 feet, and large strandings are common during the New Zealand summer. Experts describe Farewell Spit as a whale trap due to the way its shallow waters seem to confuse whales and diminish their ability to navigate.

    Read the full story on TVNZ.

    The Associated Press contributed to this story.

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  • Report: US seeks greater military presence in Philippines

    Philippine officials are in talks with the Obama administration about expanding the U.S. military presence in the archipelago as part of the strategy to counter China in the Pacific.

    Report of the talks first appeared on the Washington Post website on Wednesday, which said the negotiations are in the early stages but that both governments "are favorably inclined toward a deal."

    Additional talks are scheduled on Thursday and Friday in Washington, the Post reported, with higher level meetings set for March.

    "We can point to other countries: Australia, Japan, Singapore," an unnamed senior Philippine official involved in the talks told the Post. “We’re not the only one doing this, and for good reason. We all want to see a peaceful and stable region. Nobody wants to have to face China or confront China.”

    Other recent agreements related to Obama’s China strategy include basing Marines in Australia as well as Navy ships in Singapore.

    China's ministry of defense warned earlier this month that the United States needs to be "careful in its words and actions" about rethinking its defense posture across Asia in response to China's rise.

    US to keep 11 aircraft carriers to show sea power

    China has been expanding its naval might in the Pacific, adding submarines and an aircraft carrier, and it has also increased its missile and surveillance capabilities.

    Subic Bay Naval Base in the Philippines was one of the largest U.S. military installations in the Pacific until it closed in 1991.

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  • Egyptians see remarkable year not living up to its potential

    On the first anniversary of the uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak's regime, hundreds of thousands poured into the revolution's symbolic center, Cairo's Tahrir Square. NBC's Ayman Mohyeldin reports.

    Jeff J Mitchell / Getty Images

    Temporary monuments are erected in Tahrir Square on Wednesday as thousands of Egyptians gather to mark the one year anniversary of the uprising that toppled President Hosni Mubarak.

     

    They are scenes reminiscent of Egypt's 18-day revolution that toppled the 30-year rule of Hosni Mubarak.

    Men and women, young and old, Muslim and Christian, rich and poor, secular and conservative … all back in the symbolic heart of Egypt’s revolution, Tahrir Square. They are also in cities all across the country.

    But the unity seen during Egypt's revolution in 2011 has been replaced by widening differences over where the country stands one year later.

    The difference revolves around the transition to democracy. Is it on the right path? Led by the right people? Genuine or simply cosmetic? Actions versus promises. Accomplishments versus rhetoric.


    Wednesday marked the one-year anniversary of the beginning of the uprising that ousted Mubarak.

    Some gathered in the square to celebrate that revolution. They said the past year had been one of transformation. They cited a newly elected lower house of parliament, new individual freedoms and an explosion of political parties running the gamut.

    Those gathered Wednesday celebrated the accomplishments of the revolution. Those accomplishments cannot simply be dismissed. The pace of reform may be slow, but change has been tangible.

    Those here commemorating the revolution argued change has been cosmetic. One regime has simply been replaced by another.

    "We have changed the driver in the car, but you have not changed the car or its direction," one protester told me. "Only when the direction of the car changes will the revolution be considered successful," he added.

    Related: Obama wants to boost Egypt aid quickly

    Those commemorating the revolution said the anniversary should serve as a reminder of what Egyptians can accomplish when they are united. The past year has not lived up to its potential. They cited thousands of civilians in military trials as evidence that the ruling military council -- all appointed by Mubarak coincidentally -- has resorted to the same draconian measures as its predecessor. They said that in the past year, not a single senior officer of the internal security forces or minister has been convicted in the killings of around 800 protesters. So for them, Wednesday was about renewing demonstrations against the ruling military council.

    The military council said it's holding the ship steady on the course to democracy. And while it has changed the timetable to elections a few times, it has done so only when events on the ground rapidly deteriorated and protests flared up. On one hand that showed it had been responsive to public sentiments and street protests; but on the other hand, it continued to act unilaterally when it came to fundamental issues concerning the process of reform. It retained exclusive power over the security services and the judiciary. It has refused to delegate powers and authority to the military-appointed prime minister or the newly elected lower house of parliament. At the same time, the military has issued a declaration of constitutional principles that many interpret as an attempt to retain powers after a new government is directly elected.

    Related: Huge crowd in Cairo

    And of course… there are the new democratic realities that have emerged in post-revolution Egypt. New political parties, but not necessarily new political voices. The loudest so far has been that of the Muslim Brotherhood and the ultra-conservative Salafist movement. Between the two of them, they overwhelmingly won the majority of seats in parliament. Will their mandate from the people be seen as a direct order to challenge the military? Some argue the Islamists are content with the democratic process undertaken by the military because it has paved their way to power. They fear the two have cut backroom deals. The military will move the democratic process at a pace and under conditions favorable to Islamist parties at the expense of the lesser and weaker secular and liberal forces. In exchange, the Islamists will not mobilize their massive street support against the military or hold them accountable for past misdoings going forward.

    So whether Egyptians celebrate, commemorate or reinvigorate their January 25 Revolution, one thing is for certain, it has been a remarkable year in the history of this country.

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  • American writer still being held in Somalia; US rescue for him?

    facebook.com/

    Michael Scott Moore

    Lost in the coverage of the Navy SEAL rescue mission in Somalia is the fact that another American was kidnapped there four days ago and is being held for ransom.

    It’s also not clear if President Obama’s vow on Tuesday to protect U.S. citizens would extend to a rescue operation on his behalf.

    Michael Scott Moore, an American writer who started his career tracking the surfing world and who was in Somalia to report about piracy, was kidnapped on Saturday.

    In a statement released by the White House after the overnight rescue of American Jessica Buchanan and Poul Hagen Thisted of Denmark, Obama on Wednesday vowed: "The United States will not tolerate the abduction of our people, and will spare no effort to secure the safety of our citizens and to bring their captors to justice."

    Asked Wednesday about Moore at a press briefing, a State Department spokeswoman had few details to share.

    "We are aware of news reports that a U.S. citizen has been kidnapped in northern Somalia and we are concerned about the individual’s safety and well-being," said Victoria Nuland. "We have been in contact with the individual’s family and we are working with contacts in Kenya and Somalia to ascertain further information."

    "This is not a new problem, unfortunately, which is why we have to be vigilant and have to be prepared to do the kinds of operations like we saw last night," she added.

    A man described as one of Moore's captors told somaliareport.com on Sunday that his group was working on how much to demand for his release.

    "If they try or there is an attack by any Western people," he said, " the second plan will be to move on board the MV Albedo," a hijacked ship being used to hold other foreign hostages.

    Moore had been reporting for the German magazine Der Spiegel when he was abducted on a road as he was heading to an airport. He was kidnapped in the same area as Buchanan but is being held by different captors, somaliareport.com reported.

    Moore holds dual U.S. and German citizenship. He now lives in Berlin but grew up in Southern California and started his writing career covering the surfing world.

    NBC News associate producer Catherine Chomiak contributed to this report.

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  • Obama wants to boost aid to Egypt quickly

    DAVOS, Switzerland -- President Barack Obama plans to accelerate the pace of American aid to Egypt by redirecting non-urgent aid slated for other countries, a top U.S. diplomat said Wednesday.

    Speaking on the sidelines of the annual World Economic Forum, Undersecretary of State Robert Hormats said Washington wants to provide more immediate benefits to the most populous Arab nation, which earlier this month conducted its first democratic elections in decades.

    Besides redirecting some foreign aid, funding in the pipeline for long-term programs in Egypt would be shifted to quick-impact projects, Hormats said.

    Related: Huge crowd gathers in Cairo

    Congress approved $1.3 billion in military aid to Egypt for the current fiscal year, but with conditions attached. It also approved $250 million in economic aid, as well as an "enterprise fund" of up to $60 million.

    It was unclear whether the total amount of U.S. aid to Egypt would be increased.

    "Whether it's an increase or whether it's reprioritizing existing assistance, we're still working this out," Hormats said.

    Also, he said, the White House had not made any decisions and that he was providing Washington's "broad thinking" on the subject.

    The United States wants to be seen as doing more to assist a hoped-for democratic evolution in Egypt, where the military still holds ultimate power on the first anniversary of protests that ousted President Hosni Mubarak, Hormats said.

    Photos: One year on, Egyptians fill Tahrir Square again

    In his State of the Union address Tuesday, Obama said the United States had a "huge stake in the outcome" of the revolutions that have swept the Arab world but offered no concrete proposals for additional assistance.

    Retuers contributed to this report.

    Get instant updates from NBC News correspondent Ayman Mohyeldin on Twitter:

  • US: American's weak health led to Somali rescue

    The Navy SEALs caught the kidnappers by surprise and rescued Jessica Buchanan and Poul Thisted in Somalia. NBC's Jim Miklaszewski reports.

    WASHINGTON -- As two aid workers freed by a Navy SEAL team flew out of Somalia to be reunited with family, details emerged Wednesday about the rescue operation that the Pentagon says left nine captors dead.

    Vice President Joe Biden told NBC's "TODAY" show that the U.S. decided to stage the rescue because of concerns that the health of American Jessica Buchanan "was beginning to decline."

    "We wanted to act," Biden said.


    Buchanan, 32, and Dane Poul Thisted, 60, were kidnapped on Oct. 25, and then held for ransom. They both work for the nonprofit Danish Demining Group and had just finished training Somalis on how to clear mines when they were captured.

    A Pentagon spokesperson in Washington characterized the captors as "criminal suspects," adding that the U.S. military has no firm indication they were connected to piracy or to any terror group, NBC News reported.

    The first official recognition of the rescue operation came Tuesday night in Washington from President Barack Obama himself. 

    Danish Refugee Council

    Poul Hagen Thisted

    As the president entered the House chambers to give his State of the Union Speech, he pointed to Defense Secretary Leon Panetta standing in the crowd and said, "Leon. Good job tonight. Good job tonight."

    The president made no mention of the hostage rescue, but finished his speech with a reference to the killing of Osama bin Laden last May in a similar operation to the one conducted by Navy SEALs Tuesday night. 

    Immediately after the speech, Obama telephoned Buchanan's father from the Capitol to tell him that she was safe and "on her way home," according to the White House.

    According to the U.S. officials, two teams of Navy SEALs landed by helicopter near the compound where the two hostages were being held. 

    STORY: Second American, a writer, held in Somalia; rescue next?

    As the SEALs approached the compound on foot gunfire broke out, the U.S. officials said.

    Pentagon officials said the Americans originally intended to capture alive and detain the kidnappers. Instead, for reasons that have not been explained publicly, they killed all nine of them.

    Tuesday's rescue was carried out by the same SEAL unit that killed Osama bin Laden, two U.S. officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss the operation. The unit is the Naval Special Warfare Development Group, also known as SEAL Team 6. The members of the unit who carried out the rescue operation were not the same personnel as those who killed bin Laden, the officials said.

    STORY: Overnight Navy SEAL rescue frees hostages

    Panetta's press secretary, George Little, said the kidnappers were heavily armed, with explosives "nearby." He said neither the two hostages nor any members of the U.S. assault team were injured.

    An official for the group the finances the Danish Demining Group said Buchanan and Thisted were flown to Djibouti and would soon be moved to a "safe haven."

    The Danish Refugee Council official, Mary Ann Olsen, added that Buchanan, who reportedly was running low on some medication, did not need to be hospitalized.

    "One of the first things Poul and Jessica were able to do was to call their families and say they were freed," Olsen said. "They will be reunited with their families as quickly as possible," Olsen said.

    Buchanan lived in neighboring Kenya before Somalia, and worked at a school in Nairobi called the Rosslyn Academy from 2007-09, said Rob Beyer, the dean of students.

    She graduated in 2006 from Valley Forge Christian College, a small suburban Philadelphia school.

    This article includes reporting by NBC Pentagon correspondent Jim Miklaszewski and The Associated Press.

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  • Al-Qaida to Occupy: UK preps Olympics security

    Justin Tallis / AFP - Getty Images

    British Home Secretary Theresa May speaks at the Olympic and Paralympic Security Conference at The Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) in London Wednesday.

    LONDON -- A range of security challenges threaten London’s 2012 Olympics from Islamic extremist and right-wing terrorists to cybercriminals and “encampment style protests,” Home Secretary Theresa May said Wednesday.

    The British government has strengthened its policies toward Occupy-style protests ahead of the games, May told a conference on security in London.

     


    May also called on organizers to ban tents and related equipment from games venues, and advocated a “rapid follow-up action by the police … using all available powers to remove encampments and equipment” if protesters did get through. 

    Anti-capitalists protesters have been camped outside London's St Paul's Cathedral since October as part of the international movement inspired by the Occupy Wall Street protest.

    “I have stressed to the police that they must act swiftly in support of London 2012 organizers … should the receive a complaint (of an Occupy-style protest),” she said at a conference organized by defense think tank RUSI.

    Attractive target
    Four billion around the world were expected to watch the Olympics on television, making it an attractive target for terrorists and protesters.

    Scotland Yard and the Royal marines teamed up in a show of strength against terrorists who might target the Olympics, practiced high speed drills using helicopters and boats on the River Thames.

    Despite the May’s comments, the police “had no plans whatsoever” to stop legal protests, Commander Richard Morris of London's Metropolitan Police said.

    The threat of “aggressive camping” was one of the new and evolving threats to Olympic security, Professor Michael Clarke, RUSI’s director-general said.

    The games will see the U.K.’s largest peacetime security operation and involve tens of thousands of security officials, with 13,500 military personnel, 12,000 police and 10,000 private contractors. 

    Assistant Commissioner Chris Allison of the UK Metropolitan Police will head up the security effort for the 2012 Olympics in London. He says the games will be the UK's largest peacetime security operation in the nation's history.

    Al-Qaida and related jihadi groups, right-wing extremists and Northern Irish militants are also a threat, Robert Raine, the director of Olympic safety and security for the Home Office, said.

    Dow Chemical sees more bad Olympics publicity

    The issue of security is particularly relevant one to Olympics organizers. The decision to award the Olympics to London was announced on July 6, 2005.  Just a day later, London suffered its worst peacetime attack when four suicide bombers killed 52 commuters.

    The U.K.’s alert level is expected to be raised to “severe” during the games, meaning that an attack is considered to be highly likely, officials said.

  • Official: Miracle to find cruise ship survivors

    Recovery efforts at the site of the cruise ship disaster off the coast of Italy has entered a new phase Tuesday, with crews ready to remove oil from the wreckage. NBC's Michelle Kosinski reports.

    Updated at 11:15 a.m. ET: GIGLIO, Italy -- The official overseeing the search effort of the capsized Costa Concordia has acknowledged it would take a miracle to find any survivors from the Jan. 13 cruise ship grounding.

    Franco Gabrielli, head of the national civil protection agency, told reporters Wednesday that recovery operations would nevertheless continue until the ship, which is half-submerged off the Tuscan island of Giglio, was searched as much as possible.

    Operations continued Wednesday as crews set off more explosions on the submerged third floor deck to allow easier access for divers. On Tuesday, the body of a woman was found on the deck.

    Rescuers have found 16 bodies. At least six of the bodies remain unidentified, and are presumed to be among some of the 17 passengers and crew still unaccounted for.

    The Concordia ran aground and capsized off the island of Giglio on Jan. 13 after the captain veered from his planned course and gashed the ship's hull on a reef, forcing the panicked evacuation of 4,200 passengers and crew.

    Citing Italian civil protection officials, NBC News reports that a woman was identified Wednesday, but no name has been released yet. Officials also said that bodies may have floated away in recent days and that it may take more time to find victims of the accident.  Divers are now limited to searching for 20 minutes at a time as a result of poor conditions.

    On Tuesday, the U.S. ambassador to Italy David Thorne was at Giglio's port with relatives of two missing Americans, Gerald and Barbara Heil of Minnesota. The Heil's children posted on their blog Monday that they are still waiting for word about their parents. The Heils are the only Americans missing in the wreck.

    The search and rescue operation will continue in tandem with the fuel removal operation.

    Workers kept up preparations to remove a half-million gallons of fuel from the ship before it leaks into the Tuscan sea. Pumping is expected to begin Saturday, and according to officials, tests will begin Wednesday.

    Spokesman Martin Schuttevaer said "based on what we have seen the position of the tanks are in line with what we expected."

    Officials have identified an initial six tanks that will be tapped, located in a relatively easy-to-reach area of the ship. Gabrielli told reporters Tuesday that once the tanks are emptied, 50 percent of the fuel aboard the ship will have been extracted.

    The pumping will continue 24 hours a day barring rough seas or technical glitches in this initial phase, he said.

    Survivors of the Costa Concordia are realizing the limits of their legal claims, as they signed away their rights when they bought their tickets. NBC's Kerry Sanders reports on what travelers should know.

    The wife of the captain accused of grounding the Costa Concordia cruise ship said in an interview published Tuesday she was outraged over the way her husband had been portrayed by the media.

    Captain Francesco Schettino, who is charged with multiple manslaughter and with abandoning ship before the evacuation of passengers and crew was complete, has told prosecutors he had been instructed to perform the maneuver by operator Costa Cruises.

    "My husband is at the center of an unprecedented media storm," his wife, Fabiola Rossi, told French magazine Paris Match. "I cannot think of any other naval or air tragedy in which the responsible party was treated with such violence ... This is a man hunt, people are looking for a scapegoat, a monster."

    Schettino has been branded a coward in Italian newspapers, after a recording of his conversation with a coast guard agent during the disaster was leaked to the press and widely circulated on the Web.

    Asked if she was angry about his treatment, she said "wouldn't you be?"

    He is "someone determined, firm and lucid. He is able to analyze situations, to understand and manage them. At home he is organized and meticulous, and otherwise he is a friendly and funny person who earns people's esteem," Rossi added in a version of the interview published on Paris Match's website.

    In the recording with the coast guard, Schettino sounds bewildered and out of control as he is ordered back onto the ship and threatened with arrest.

    Schettino's lawyer, who says his client admits partial responsibility for the disaster, is seeking to widen the investigation to include third parties with whom he was in contact, notably from ship owners, Costa Cruises.

    The company, a unit the world's largest cruise ship operator Carnival Corp, has suspended Schettino and declared itself an injured party in the case. It has said "unfortunate human error" by Schettino caused the disaster.

    Giglio and its waters are part of a protected seven-island marine park, favored by VIPs and known for its clear waters and porpoises, dolphins and whales.

    The disaster prompted the U.N. cultural organization to ask the Italian government to restrict access of large cruise ships to Venice, which is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. UNESCO charged that the liners cause water tides that erode building foundations, pollute the waterways and are an eyesore.

    DigitalGlobe

    The Costa Concordia, carrying more than 4,200 passengers, ran aground Jan. 13 off the coast of Italy. At least 15 people died in the accident, and rescuers continue to search for others missing.

    Related stories:

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

     

  • French president Sarkozy's rap-producer son hospitalized in Ukraine

    The son of French President Nicolas Sarkozy has been hospitalized in the Black Sea city of Odessa, the French Embassy said Wednesday.

    Pierre Sarkozy, a rap producer in his twenties, has been taken to a hospital after feeling ill, French Embassy spokesman Emmanuel Berard told The Associated Press. He did not provide any more details.

    Soeren Stache / EPA, file

    Pierre Sarkozy attends the Laurel show at the Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week in Berlin, Germany, 19 January.



    Sarkozy, also known as DJ Mosey, was in Odessa to perform at an elite club called Tchaikovsky on Tuesday, said a worker at the club, who declined to give his name. But Sarkozy never showed up and the show was canceled, the worker said.

    Pierre Sarkozy is the French president's oldest son by his first wife, Marie-Dominique Culioli.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

  • Report: Amanda Knox 'loves Italy' and might return

    Amanda Knox, left, is comforted by her sister, Deanna Knox, during a news conference shortly after her return to the US on Oct. 4, 2011, in Seattle.

    Amanda Knox "loves Italy" and would like to return despite having spent four years in a prison there before a murder conviction was overturned last year, her lawyer reportedly said.

    The 24-year-old may go back to Italy as early as September because her parents are charged with slandering the Perugia police, according to an ABC News report, citing the Italian news service ANSA.


    Carlo Dalla Vedova, one of Knox's lawyers, told ANSA that Knox "loves Italy and likes Perugia" and would like to return to the country "as a tourist, but if necessary she will return to testify in the trials against her parents," ABC News said.

    Knox's mother and father face a prison sentence if found guilty of slandering police officers in a 2009 interview with London's Sunday Times newspaper in which they alleged their daughter was physically abused and threatened while being questioned.

    Knox spent four years of a 26-year sentence in a Perugia prison on charges that she killed her British roommate Meredith Kercher.

    Her then-boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito was also convicted. A third person, Rudy Guede, was convicted of taking part in the murder in a separate trial.

    The Italian appeals court that overturned the murder conviction of American student Amanda Knox is now explaining its ruling in a newly-released report. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.

    Knox and Sollecito were cleared of the murder last year, but Knox was convicted of a separate charge of slandering her former boss by saying he was involved in the murder.

    STORY: Amanda Knox hires attorney for possible book deal

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News

    Msnbc.com staff contributed to this report.

  • Marco Longari / AFP - Getty Images

    Palestinian Fatah leader Marwan Barghouti flashes the V-sign for victory as he is escorted by Israeli police into Jerusalem's Magistrate Court to testify as part of a US civil lawsuit against the Palestinian leadership on Jan. 25, 2012.

    Palestinian leader Marwan Barghouti demands 1967 borders

    Marwan Barghouti, who was sentenced to life imprisonment in 2002 for his involvement in anti-Israeli attacks during the second intifada, said in a rare court appearance Wednesday that the Middle East conflict will end only when Israel withdraws to the pre-1967 lines and a Palestinian state is established, Agence France Presse reports.

    "I call on the great Palestinian people to embrace unity and cohesion and to establish a national unity government and also to embrace popular, peaceful resistance to end the occupation," he said.

    Barghouti is a senior member of the Fatah party of Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas and remains one of its most popular figures, according to recent polling data cited by The Associated Press. With Abbas having said he is retiring and Barghouti behind bars, Fatah faces a struggle for survival as it prepares for an electoral showdown with the Islamic militant movement Hamas.


  • American hostage in Somalia rescued by US Navy SEALs in overnight raid

    The Navy SEALs caught the kidnappers by surprise, rescuing Jessica Buchanan and Poul Thisted in Somalia. NBC's Jim Miklaszewski reports.

    Updated at 7:15 p.m. ET: Navy SEAL Team 6, the unit that killed Osama bin Laden, also rescued an American and a Dane held hostage in Somalia, U.S. officials said, but the same service members were not involved in both missions, U.S. officials said. Wednesday.

    Updated at 12:30 p.m. ET: The Navy SEALs that rescued the American and Danish hostages in Somalia on Tuesday were not the same individuals who killed Osama bin Laden, U.S. officials told NBC News, contradicting an earlier news service report.

    Published at 1:15 a.m. ET: In a daring nighttime raid Tuesday, U.S. Navy SEALs rescued two hostages, including one American, who were being held by kidnappers in Somalia, U.S. officials tell NBC News.

    American Jessica Buchanan, 32, and a 60-year-old Dane, Poul Thisted, were working for a Danish relief organization in northern Somalia when they were kidnapped last October. U.S. officials described their kidnappers as heavily armed common criminals with no known ties to any organized militant group.


    According to the U.S. officials, two teams of Navy SEALs landed by helicopter near the compound where the two hostages were being held. 

    As the SEALS approached the compound on foot gunfire broke out, the U.S. officials said, and several of the militants were reportedly killed. There is no word that any of the Americans were wounded.

    Danish Refugee Council

    Poul Hagen Thisted, a Danish national who was taken hostage in Somalia alongside American Jessica Buchanan in October 2011. The pair were freed by a U.S. Navy SEALS raid.

    The SEALs gathered up Buchanan and Thisted, loaded them onto the helicopters and flew them to safety at an undisclosed location. The two hostages were not injured during the rescue operation and are reported to be in relatively good condition.

    The two had been working for the Danish Refugee Council on a demining project in northern Somalia. The humanitarian group has been providing relief to some 450,000 refugees in the Somalia-Kenya border region.

    News reports at the time said the two were kidnapped Oct. 25 along with a Somali colleague when their three-car convoy was stopped on the way to an airport. A self-proclaimed Somali pirate said they had been kidnapped for ransom by pirates stymied by Western nations' efforts to stop the seizure of ships off the coast. The fate of the Somali colleague was unclear.    

    STORY: Second American, a writer, held in Somalia; rescue next?

    The first indication of the rescue operation came Tuesday night in Washington from President Barack Obama himself. 

    As the president entered the House chambers to give his State of the Union Speech, he pointed to Defense Secretary Leon Panetta standing in the crowd and said, "Leon. Good job tonight. Good job tonight."

    The president made no mention of the hostage rescue, but finished his speech with a reference to the killing of Osama bin Laden last May in a similar operation to the one conducted by Navy SEALs Tuesday night. 

    U.S. military forces launched a dramatic raid in Somalia that freed an American and a Dane held hostage. NBC's Jim Miklaszewski reports.

    Updated at 5:57 a.m. ET: In a statement sent to NBC News and other media, Obama says that he authorized the operation to rescue Buchanan.

    "Thanks to the extraordinary courage and capabilities of our Special Operations Forces, yesterday Jessica Buchanan was rescued and she is on her way home," he says. "As Commander-in-Chief, I could not be prouder of the troops who carried out this mission, and the dedicated professionals who supported their efforts."

    Obama, who spoke to Buchanan's father Tuesday night, says she was "selflessly serving her fellow human beings when she was taken hostage by criminals and pirates who showed no regard for her health and well-being."

    He says he told her father that "all Americans have Jessica in our thoughts and prayers, and give thanks that she will soon be reunited with her family."

    "The United States will not tolerate the abduction of our people, and will spare no effort to secure the safety of our citizens and to bring their captors to justice," Obama adds. "This is yet another message to the world that the United States of America will stand strongly against any threats to our people."

    Updated at 6:50 a.m. ET: A statement from U.S. Africa Command says U.S. forces had received "actionable intelligence" about Buchanan and Thisted and decided to take action.

    "During the course of the operation, the rescue force patrolled to the location and confirmed the presence of Mrs. Buchanan and Mr. Thisted guarded by nine captors," the statement says. "All nine captors were killed during the assault."

    General Carter F. Ham, of U.S. Africa Command, says in the statement that the raid, which took place near Gadaado, was "boldly conducted by some of our nation's most courageous, competent, and committed special operations forces."

    "Thanks to them a fellow American and her Danish co-worker are safe and will soon be home with their families," he adds.

    Updated at 6:55 a.m. ET: A statement from Panetta says he is "grateful to report that there was no loss of life or injuries to our personnel."

    He says the rescue -- "undertaken in a hostile environment" -- showed the "superb skills of courageous service members who risked their lives to save others." 

    "They are heroes and continue to inspire all of us by their bravery and service to our nation," he says.

    Updated at 10:35 a.m. ET: Pentagon officials told NBC News that they are characterizing the people who took Buchanan and Thisted hostage as "criminal suspects,"  rather than pirates. They said the U.S. military has no firm information about whether the captors were connected to pirates or an Islamic militant group like al-Shabaab.

    See more of Jim Miklaszewski's reporting on the SEALs raid tonight on NBC's Nightly News with Brian Williams.

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  • Mick Jagger backs out of Davos event: I was 'political football'

    Mick Jagger has backed out of an event to promote Britain at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, saying that he did not want to be involved in party politics.

    The Rolling Stones singer had been due to attend a tea party hosted by Prime Minister David Cameron to promote Britain at the annual meeting of political and economic elites in the Swiss Alps. Model Lily Cole and World Wide Web pioneer Sir Tim Berners-Lee were also set to attend.

    But Jagger said Tuesday he was "being used as a political football," saying that British newspaper articles claiming he is backing the Conservative Cameron were "inaccurate."

    He added that he was interested in economics and world events but has "always eschewed party politics." He said he has gone to the forum in Davos as a guest since he thought that would be stimulating, but will now cut short his visit.

    Jagger arrived in Zurich on Tuesday morning but said he would leave Switzerland on Wednesday, a spokesperson for the singer told the Guardian newspaper.

    The withdrawal was seen as an embarrassment for the conservative government in Britain, according to the Guardian. Some news coverage said Jagger had finally "come out" as a "closet Tory" (conservative).

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Huge crowd gathers in Cairo to mark Egypt uprising, some call for new military rulers to go

    Mahmud Hams / AFP - Getty Images

    Protesters in Tahrir Square hold up an obelisk with the names of those killed during last year's uprising.

    Updated at 9:55 a.m. ET: Reuters reports tens of thousands of people massed in Cairo's Tahrir Square to mark the anniversary of the uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak from power in Egypt, saying some witness estimates put the crowd at 150,000 or more.

    One group of mostly youths stood near a street where protesters clashed in November and December with police and the army, chanting "Down with military rule" and "Revolution until victory, revolution in all of Egypt's streets."


    Supporters of the once banned Muslim Brotherhood and other Islamists also formed groups to celebrate. "I'm very happy with the anniversary of January 25. We never dreamed of this. The revolution's victory was reaped with the elected parliament," says Khaled Mohamed, 41, a member of the Brotherhood whose Freedom and Justice Party (FJP) secured the biggest bloc in parliament after the first free vote in decades.

     

    Andre Pain / EPA

    Protesters carried a giant Syrian national flag next to Egyptian ones as they are gathered to celebrate the uprising.

    Updated at 4:45 a.m. ET: NBC News correspondent Ayman Mohyeldin posts a picture of people gathered in Cairo's Tahrir Square in a message on Twitter, saying there is "incredible showing of people already" amid "scenes reminiscent' of Jan. 25 last year, when the uprising that toppled President Hosni Mubarak began.

    Updated 3 a.m. ET:Tens of thousands are now expected at the protests in Cairo's Tahrir Square later this morning, the BBC is reporting. It says authorities have built huge concrete barricades around Tahrir Square in order to control the crowds.

    Website Ahram Online has posted a map showing the main paths expected to be taken by demonstrators as they converge on the center of the city.

    Thousands of Egyptians gather in Cairo to mark the beginning of the revolt that led to the ousting of former Egyptian leader Hosni Mubarak. NBC's Ayman Mohyeldin reports.

    Published 5 p.m. ET:CAIRO-- Egyptians head to Tahrir Square on Wednesday to mark the first anniversary of the uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak with some seeking a new revolt against army rule and others celebrating the changes already achieved.

    It is a year since protesters inspired by an uprising in Tunisia took to the streets in Egypt and the January 25 anniversary has exposed divisions in the Arab world's most populous country over the pace of democratic change.

    Concerned the generals are obstructing reform to protect their interests, the pro-democracy activists behind the "January 25 revolution" plan marches to Tahrir Square to demand the military council that replaced Mubarak hand power to civilians immediately.

    But well-organized Islamist parties which dominated Egypt's most democratic election since army officers overthrew the king in 1952 are among those who oppose a new uprising.

    Mohamed Omar / EPA

    An Egyptian protester holds a banner on the morning of the first anniversary of the uprising in Tahrir square, Cairo, Egypt, Jan. 25. Demonstrators gathered in the square to mark the anniversary.

    Signs of friction were on show as hundreds of people began to congregate in Tahrir Square late on Tuesday, pitching tents in winter rain and hanging the national flag from buildings.

    "The military council is Mubarak," said Amr al-Zamlout, a 31-year-old protester clutching a sign declaring "there is no change" and stating his aim was to topple the army rulers.

    Mohamed Othman, an accountant, stopped to put forward a different view based on the idea that Egypt needs stability for economic recovery, not more protests.

    "The council will leave power in any case. Sure the revolution is incomplete but it doesn't mean we should obstruct life," he said. His criticism quickly drew a crowd and touched off an argument.

    Grocery stores were unusually busy as shoppers stocked up, reflecting concern at the prospect of a repeat of last year when protests went on for 18 days before Mubarak was forced to step down on February 11.

    Protests against the military council turned violent in November and December.

    White House praise
    The United States, a close ally of Egypt under Mubarak, praised "several historic milestones in its transition to democracy" this week, including the convening of parliament.

    "While many challenges remain, Egypt has come a long way in the past year, and we hope that all Egyptians will commemorate this anniversary with the spirit of peace and unity that prevailed last January," a White House statement said.

    Headed by Field Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi, the military council has said it will cede power to an elected president by the end of June, thus completing a democratic transition.

    Yet pro-democracy activists doubt their intentions, pointing to a surge in military trials and the use of violence against protesters as signs of autocratic ways familiar from the Mubarak era.

    Tantawi, for two decades Mubarak's defense minister, again defended the military from such accusations during a televised speech on Tuesday. "The nation and the armed forces had one aim: for Egypt to become a democratic state," he said.

    In an apparent attempt to appease reformist demands, the military council has in recent days pardoned some 2,000 people convicted in military courts since Mubarak was toppled. On Tuesday it announced a partial lifting of a state of emergency.

    But it kept a clause saying emergency laws in place since 1981 would still apply in cases of "thuggery," a vague term that triggered calls for clarification from Washington and more criticism from human rights groups.

    The activist movement, a coalition of groups united in calls for deeper and faster reform, have been fighting back in the run-up to the anniversary against what they describe as state efforts to present them as foreign-backed trouble makers.

    The leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, the Islamist group which won nearly half the seats in the parliament, said last week he was against calls for a new revolt against the military.

    "I hope we will go down together to be joyful at what we have accomplished, to guard our Egypt and to complete the demands of the revolution," Mohamed Badie said in an interview with Egypt's Dream TV.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    Reuters contributed to this report.

  • Spanish police arrest suspect in shooting of Conn. jeweler

    A man suspected of killing a jeweler in the tony town of Westport, Conn., last month and stealing $300,000-worth of diamonds has been arrested in Spain, federal authorities said.

    Andrew Robert Levene, 41, was charged Tuesday with shooting and killing Yekutiel Zeevi, 65, at Zeevi’s office in a shopping center on Dec. 8. It was the first murder in Westport, former home of domestic guru Martha Stewart, since 1996.

    According to a federal criminal complaint filed in Washington, D.C., and reported by the Connecticut Post, Levene met with Zeevi in the shop, located in a locked second-floor suite, pretending he was going to purchase several large diamonds he had arranged to buy earlier that month.

    Once inside, he pulled out a gun and shot Zeevi and a business associate, authorities said.

    Levene fled the U.S. on a flight from Philadelphia to the Netherlands and then went on to Spain, authorities allege.  He was arrested by Spanish national police on Monday. 

    U.S. Attorney for Connecticut David Fein said Levene will face federal murder and attempted murder charges.  It was not immediately clear when Levene might be sent back to Connecticut for trial or whether he had an attorney.

    Zeevi's business associate, Ronen Konfino, 48, of New York City, survived the shooting and had been able to help police with their investigation, the Connecticut Post reported.

    Use of a firearm
    Levene was formally charged with one count of federal murder, one count of attempted murder, one count of causing death through the use of a firearm and one count of interference with commerce through robbery, Fein said.

    According to the Post, authorities said that Levene contacted Zeevi's business in early December and asked Zeevi if he could find diamonds between 2 and 3 carats in size and valued between $45,000 and $75,000. On Dec. 7, Zeevi and Konfino met Levene, who examined the diamonds, but told the owner he would have to "sleep on it" before making a purchase, according to the documents.

    The next day, six diamonds with a total value of approximately $300,000 were shown to Levene, who then pulled out a gun and shot both Zeevi and Konfino, according to the documents. Zeevi was pronounced dead after being taken to Norwalk Hospital, where Konfino was also treated and later released.

    Eileen Rosen, a friend of the family, told the Post that she was "thrilled that they found him; this is great news for the family. He was very close with his wife. Nothing can bring him back, her heart will ache forever, but I'm just so thrilled that they found him. Everybody in the community loves him."

    Msnbc.com staff contributed to this report from NBCNewYork.com.

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  • Marine to serve no time in Iraqi killings case

    Chris Carlson / AP

    Marine Corps Staff Sgt. Frank Wuterich, left, arrives with his attorney for a court session at Camp Pendleton in Camp Pendleton, Calif., Tuesday, Jan. 24.,

    Updated at 6:45 p.m. ET:  Prosecutors asked judge Lt. Col. David Jones to give Staff Sgt. Frank Wuterich the maximum sentence of three months confinement, a reduction in rank and forfeiture of two-thirds of his pay.

    They said his knee-jerk reaction of sending the squad to assault nearby homes without positively identifying the threat went against his training and led to the deaths of the 10 women and children.

    "That is a horrific result from that derelict order of shooting first, ask questions later," Lt. Col. Sean Sullivan told the court.

    The judge said he would recommend that Wuterich's rank be reduced to private.

    He said he decided not to dock his pay because he is the divorced father of three young daughters with sole custody.

    Updated at 6:20 p.m. ET:  A Marine sergeant who led a squad that killed 24 unarmed Iraqis will spend no time in confinement.

    Military judge Lt. Col. David Jones said he wanted to send Staff Sgt. Frank Wuterich to the brig, but his hands were tied by a plea agreement that prevents any jail time.

    Jones was not aware of the stipulation until he opened the plea agreement in court after recommending 90 days confinement.

    Wuterich pleaded guilty to negligent dereliction of duty, a charge that carried a maximum sentence of 90 days. But because of the way the military system works, the terms of the deal with prosecutors weren't known to the judge until after he made his sentencing recommendation in court on Tuesday.

    Earlier:
    CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. -- A Marine sergeant whose squad killed 24 unarmed Iraqi civilians in assaults after a bomb killed a fellow Marine has told a judge he never fired his weapon at any women or children that day.

    Staff Sgt. Frank Wuterich addressed a Camp Pendleton, Calif., court during sentencing for negligent dereliction of duty in the 2005 attacks in Haditha, Iraq.


    A plea deal Monday ended a manslaughter case against the Marine from Meriden, Conn. Prosecutors implicated Wuterich in 19 of the 24 deaths.

    Wuterich's statement also addressed surviving members of families who were attacked, saying he knows nothing can ease their pain and that they are the real victims.

    Wuterich said that when he told his squad to shoot first and ask questions later, he did not intend they shoot civilians, but to not hesitate in the face of the enemy.

    "The truth is: I never fired any weapon at any women or children that day," Wuterich said in a statement during his sentencing hearing.

    'Sorrow' for loss of loved ones
    He began by telling the family members of victims, "Words cannot express my sorrow for the loss of your loved one. I know there is nothing I can say to ease your pain. I wish to assure you that on that day, it was never my intention (to) harm you or your families. I know that you are the real victims of Nov. 19, 2005."

    He went on to say he went to Iraq to do his duty, serve his country, and do the best job he could.

    Iraq War veterans to attend State of the Union address

    "When my Marines and I cleared those houses that day, I responded to what I perceived as a threat and my intention was to eliminate that threat in order to keep the rest of my Marines alive," he said. "So when I told my team to shoot first and ask questions later, the intent wasn't that they would shoot civilians, it was that they would not hesitate in the face of the enemy."

    Military prosecutors worked for more than six years to bring Wuterich to trial on manslaughter charges that could have sent him away to prison for life.

    But only weeks after the long-awaited trial started, they offered Wuterich a deal that stopped the proceedings for the squad leader who ordered his men to "shoot first, ask questions later" and resulted in one of the Iraq War's worst attacks on civilians by U.S. troops.

    The 31-year-old Marine, who was originally accused of unpremeditated murder, pleaded guilty Monday to negligent dereliction of duty for leading the squad that killed the civilians.

    Wuterich, who was indicted in 19 of the 24 deaths, now faces no more than three months in confinement.

    It was a stunning outcome for the last defendant in the case once compared with the My Lai massacre in Vietnam. The seven other Marines initially charged were exonerated or had their cases dropped.

    'Insult to all Iraqis'
    "This sentence gives us the proof, the solid proof that the Americans don't respect human rights," Ali Badr, a Haditha resident and relative of one of those killed, told Reuters. "This is an insult to the victims and an insult to all Iraqis."

    One of the survivors, Awis Fahmi Hussein, told The Associated Press in Haditha: "I was expecting that the American judiciary would sentence this person to life in prison and that he would appear and confess in front of the whole world that he committed this crime, so that America could show itself as democratic and fair."

    Military judge Lt. Col. David Jones began hearing arguments from both sides Tuesday at Camp Pendleton, Calif., before making a sentencing recommendation to be considered by the commander of Marine Corps Forces Central Command.

    Legal experts said the case was fraught with errors made by investigators and the prosecution that let it drag on for years. The prosecution was also hampered by squad mates who acknowledged they had lied to investigators initially and later testified in exchange for having their cases dropped, bringing into question their credibility.

    In addition, Wuterich was seen as taking the fall for senior leaders and more seasoned combat veterans, analysts said. It was his first time in combat when he led the squad on Nov. 19, 2005.

    Brian Rooney, an attorney for another former defendant, said cases like Haditha are difficult to prosecute because a military jury is unlikely to question decisions made in combat unless wrongdoing is clear-cut and egregious, like rape.

    "If it's a gray area, fog-of-war, you can't put yourself in a Marine's situation where he's legitimately trying to do the best he can," said Rooney, who represented Lt. Col. Jeffrey Chessani, the highest-ranking Marine charged in the case. "When you're in a town like Haditha or Fallujah, you've got bad guys trying to kill you and trying to do it in very surreptitious ways."

    The Haditha attack is considered among the war's defining moments, further tainting America's reputation when it was already at a low point after the release of photos of prisoner abuse by U.S. soldiers at Abu Ghraib prison.

    Anger lingers in Iraq
    It still fuels anger in Iraq today.

    "We wonder about such a sentence issued against the defendant. We called upon U.S. to be fair in passing sentences. Regrettably, we are disappointed about the issuance of such sentences," said Khalid Salman Rasif, a member of the Provincial Council in Haditha, adding he would contact the lawyer for victims' families for an explanation.

    Kamil al-Dulaimi, a Sunni lawmaker from the Anbar provincial capital of Ramadi, called the plea agreement proof that "Americans still deal with Iraqis without any respect."

    "It's just another barbaric act of Americans against Iraqis," al-Dulaimi told The Associated Press. "They spill the blood of Iraqis and get this worthless sentence for the savage crime against innocent civilians."

    Wuterich, the father of three children, had faced the possibility of life behind bars when he was charged with nine counts of manslaughter, which will be dropped. Along with facing a maximum of three months in confinement, he could also lose two-thirds of his pay and see his rank demoted to private when he's sentenced.

    Khalid Salman, a lawyer for the Haditha victims' relatives, told Reuters he could not believe the sentence and had to check that it was true.

    "This is not a traffic felony," said Salman, who had a cousin killed in the massacre.

    Wuterich, his family and his attorneys declined to comment Monday after he entered the plea. Prosecutors also declined to comment on the plea deal.

    During the trial before a jury of combat Marines who served in Iraq, prosecutors argued he lost control after seeing the body of his friend blown apart by the bomb and led his men on a rampage in which they stormed two nearby homes, blasting their way in with gunfire and grenades. Among the dead was a man in a wheelchair.

    In the deal, Wuterich acknowledged that his orders misled his men to believe they could shoot without hesitation and not follow the rules of engagement that required troops to positively identify their targets before they raided the homes.

    He told the judge that caused "tragic events."

    "I think we all understood what we were doing so I probably just should have said nothing," Wuterich told the judge.

    He said his orders were based on the guidance of his platoon commander at the time, and that the squad did not take any gunfire during the 45-minute raid.

    Many of his squad mates testified that they do not believe to this day that they did anything wrong because they feared insurgents were inside hiding.

    Haditha prompted commanders to demand troops be more careful in distinguishing between civilians and combatants.

    Former Navy officer David Glazier said the case shows such rules are essential to helping the United States prevail in an armed conflict.

    "The reality is that this incident has had significant consequences for the U.S. in Iraq," said Glazier, a professor at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles. "It probably fueled the resistance and so it probably ended up costing additional soldiers and Marines their lives later on."

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

  • US moves embassy staff in Bahrain as anniversary of uprising approaches

    Hasan Jamali / AP

    Bahraini anti-government protesters carry a box of prepared Molotov cocktails during clashes with riot police Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2012, in the eastern village of Ma'ameer.

    MANAMA, Bahrain - As the anniversary of a failed pro-democracy uprising approached in Bahrain, the United States warned Americans in the tiny Gulf kingdom of potential unrest and moved embassy employees to safer locations.

    The travel alert issued late on Monday did not specifically mention the anniversary of the uprising on February 14 last year when protesters, mainly from Bahrain's majority Shiite population, took to the streets of Manama to demand political rights.


    The country is dominated by the ruling Al Khalifa dynasty, a Sunni family closely allied to other Gulf rulers and seen as a bulwark against Shia-dominated Iran's influence in the Arabian peninsula. It is also home to the U.S. 5th Fleet.

    The U.S. State Department said the Bahrain government had recently refused entry to some U.S. citizens at Manama airport and that U.S. embassy employees were being relocated within the country because of the potential for violent demonstrations.

    It also noted what it called "isolated examples" of anti-U.S. sentiment such as flag-burnings during protests and warned that foreigners could become targets.

    "The Department of State strongly urges U.S. citizens to avoid all demonstrations, as even peaceful ones can quickly become unruly, and a foreigner could become a target of harassment or worse," the alert, which runs to April 19, said.

    It warned of spontaneous and sometimes violent anti-government demonstrations by protesters throwing rocks and petrol bombs, lighting trash cans and blocking highways.

    "The Ministry of Interior maintains official checkpoints in some areas and routinely uses tear gas, stun grenades, and other crowd control measures against demonstrators," it said.

    Washington stood behind Bahrain's government during the protests, while removing its support for rulers in Egypt and Tunisia. However, it has made an arms deal contingent on political reform.

    The protest movement was crushed after a month when Saudi troops entered Bahrain to back the government, followed by nearly two months of martial law.

    A rights commission headed by international lawyers said in November that 35 people - including protesters and security personnel - were killed up to June. Activists say deaths among Shiites apparently as a result of the clashes have taken the casualty list to around 60.

    Bahraini employees of some companies say they have been told not to take any holidays in the coming months, in an apparent effort to discourage people from taking part in protests.

    Reuters, The Associated Press and msnbc.com staff contributed to this report.

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  • Danger zone then and now: Strait of Hormuz

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    A U.S Navy helicopter flies over the 21st U.S. escorted convoy on Dec. 21, 1987. The convoy originated in Kuwait and consisted of two tankers and two U.S. guided missile frigates. The so-called Tanker War started properly in 1984 when Iraq attacked Iranian tankers and a vital oil terminal at Kharg island.

    “You are standing into danger! Alter course now!”

    The American warship radio operator repeated the warning, saying we had entered its self-proclaimed  two-mile exclusion zone in the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow channel through which 35 percent of all seaborne oil flows.  Suddenly, while the U.S. Navy was threatening us with lethal force, an Iranian frigate opened fire without warning.

    It was the second-half of 1987 and tensions were as high in the Strait of Hormuz as they are today.  Iran was laying mines in the Gulf and strait to target oil tankers from Iraq, with which it was at war.  I was working for NBC News as a cameraman, filming activity on the strait from a Bell Jet Ranger helicopter.

    We had just passed about half-a-mile away from an unidentified frigate on a parallel course. I suspected it was Iranian and started filming. Seconds later it opened fire on us with its double-barreled 35mm anti-aircraft guns.


    I figured it would be too late to warn NBC’s helicopter pilot, Grant Witham, and still filming, braced myself for being knocked out of the sky.

    It didn’t happen. Witham was still talking to the angry U.S. Navy radio guy who was convinced we had entered his exclusion zone, trying to persuade him we were nowhere near his ship. I interrupted and shouted over the intercom, “Grant, that warship on the starboard side, it just opened fire on us. It must be Iranian!”

    Witham dropped the helicopter like a stone, pulling out just above the water and started a zigzag course away from the Iranian warship, telling the U.S. Navy radio operator we were coming under fire. Amazingly, the American radio operator changed from threatening us to telling us they were headed in our direction to offer help.

    Afterwards, we pieced together what happened. The previous day a BBC News helicopter had flown right over the Iranian warship, which had threatened over maritime radio to shoot it down if it came close again. We didn’t have maritime radio aboard our chopper and the Iranians had no way of communicating through our aircraft frequencies.  So they had radioed us on the marine channel, threatening to shoot at us as we flew close by, but we were oblivious to the danger.

    In the meantime, Witham had been tied up talking to the American ship, which had mistaken us for another helicopter that had intruded into its “zone,” and he was too busy to notice the frigate on our right.

    All of this happened seemingly in less than a few minutes, and demonstrates to me at least, just how tense and dangerous the region can be. One or two small mistakes or misunderstandings can suddenly escalate and the results can be catastrophic.

    None less so than the accidental shooting down of the Iranian Airliner Flight 655 on July 3, 1988, with the loss of all 290 passengers and crew. The USS Aegis Cruiser Vincennes had incorrectly identified the Airbus A300 as an Iranian F-14 Tomcat fighter and targeted the airliner with two missiles with devastating results. (Read a Washington Post story on the incident here)

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