Friday, December 31, 2010

Reports: Egypt church blast kills seven

(CNN) -- An explosion outside a church in Egypt killed at least seven people and wounded 24 others early Saturday, the country's interior ministry said.

State-run Nile TV reported that the death toll was 10, with at least 43 people injured in the blast in Alexandria. The station showed tens of firefighters battling a blaze at the scene.

A car parked in front of the Church of Two Saints exploded shortly after midnight, the interior ministry said. Coptic Christians were attending services there at the time of the blast, Nile TV reported.

The car was filled with explosives, Nile TV reported, citing the interior ministry.

A nearby mosque was damaged and eight Muslims were among the injured, the interior ministry said.

Alexandria Gov. Adel Labeeb told Nile TV that samples from the scene had been sent to a government lab as part of an investigation.

"The attack targeted all Egyptians and not just our Coptic brethren," Ladeeb said, according to Egypt's MENA news service.

Egyptian officials are blaming foreign elements for the attack, MENA reported.

Copts, who are adherents of an Egyptian sect of Christianity, make up about 9% of the nation's population. About 90% of Egyptians are Muslims.

CNN's Amir Ahmed and Yousuf Basil contributed to this report.



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Ship sinks off China; 15 missing

Beijing (CNN) -- Fifteen sailors remained missing Saturday after a North-Korean-registered cargo ship sank in the Yellow Sea, killing two, China's state media reported.

It sank in China's Jiangsu Province early Friday after water entered the ship amid strong gales, the Xinhua news agency reported, citing the ministry of transport's rescue center.

The 226-foot-long ship, the Kang Bong, was carrying 20 sailors.

Three of the sailors were rescued after the center sent a ship and two helicopters to the scene. Two bodies were recovered, Xinhua said.

The gale-force winds were making the rescue difficult, the rescue center told Xinhua.



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N. Ireland water supply 'precarious'

Belfast, Northern Ireland (CNN) -- Northern Ireland's water supply is in a "precarious position" after several major water pipes burst, allowing 10 million liters of water to drain from Belfast reservoirs each day, the Northern Ireland Water interim chairman said Friday.

The state-funded water company's response to the "unprecedented situation" was "unacceptable," Padraic White said.

Tens of thousands of homes and businesses have lost their supply after frozen pipes burst in a rapid thaw that followed record low temperatures last week.

Many customers have been without running water since Monday, but some say they haven't had supplies for 10 days.

Pipes at the country's top hospital, the Royal Victoria Hospital in Belfast, were among those that failed, White said.

Water service might not be fully restored until the middle of next week, but even then hundreds of rural homes could still be without water, he said.

The water company's emergency call center was not prepared to handle "a disaster of this magnitude," but communication with customers will be improved, White said. He recommended a full investigation into the company's problems.

Northern Ireland Water has been heavily criticized for its response to the crisis, with some politicians calling for top officials to resign.

Chairman White said company executives were not considering resignations, since their focus at the moment is restoring water service.

The company said Friday that there had been an improvement in the situation in the past 24 hours and that the number of customers without water was down to around 5,000. It added, however, that as many as 24,000 customers could experience intermittent disruption to supplies as repairs continue.

Northern Ireland Water has blamed the problems on a rapid thaw, with a huge number of pipes bursting after a dramatic change in temperature -- from minus-16 to 10 degrees Celsius (3 to 50 degrees Fahrenheit) "within a matter of hours."

Company officials have also complained about a lack of investment in the water infrastructure over the years.

The Republic of Ireland has also experienced problems with its water supplies. The government said Thursday night that most parts of the country would see a resumption of service within two days, but restrictions in the capital, Dublin, were expected to remain in place until January 10.



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New Year ushers Brazil's female leader

(CNN) -- She is coming to power holding the hand of a powerful man. Replacing Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva as president of Brazil on January 1 is 63-year-old Dilma Rousseff, the first woman to govern this South American country of more than 200 million people.

The public expects a lot. Rio de Janeiro resident Ana Claudia de Freitas wants Rousseff to follow in Lula da Silva's footsteps. "Everything Lula did, she has to continue doing," de Freitas said. "She must keep on increasing salaries, improving the lives of workers and the poor."

Lula da Silva ends his two terms in office with an approval rate of more than 80 percent in Brazil. He also is popular in the rest of Latin America. Though he is constitutionally barred from running for a third consecutive term, the 65-year-old former factory worker and union organizer hasn't ruled out running for the presidency again in 2014.

Rousseff, the daughter of a Bulgarian immigrant who is herself a former Marxist guerrilla, has never before held elected office. She makes no secret of her plans to seek Lula da Silva's advice frequently. She was the president's chief of staff and energy minister before getting Lula da Silva's support to replace him.

Reflecting on his two four-year terms in office, Lula da Silva told reporters in November that he was satisfied with his administration's achievements. "I know that we didn't do everything, but we have done much more than what others did over decades and decades," said Lula da Silva.

As president-elect, Rousseff has chosen nine women to join her cabinet, including Tereza Campello as social development minister; Maria do Rosario as special secretary for human rights; and Luiza Helena de Bairros, who will serve as minister for promotion of racial equality. Some key figures from Lula da Silva's administration, including Finance Minister Guido Mantega, will keep their jobs under Rousseff.

Rousseff may find economic conditions more difficult than Lula da Silva did. "The international economy is going to be harsher on Brazil," predicted Mauricio Santoro, an analyst with the Rio-based, independent Getulio Vargas Foundation. "The real -- the Brazilian currency -- is overvalued. Therefore, there's pressure on Brazilian exports and the government will have to make changes."

The new leader's moves are sure to receive international scrutiny. Calling Brazil "an essential partner in the hemisphere and the world," the U.S. State Department said Secretary of State Hillary Clinton would attend the inauguration.

Brazil will host the World Cup in 2014 and the Olympic Games two years later. Meanwhile, the country's infrastructure is in sore need of improvement. Brazil's economy grew more than 7% in 2009, according to government figures. The booming economy and Lula da Silva's investment in social programs are credited with helping 30 million Brazilians escape poverty.

But poverty remains a formidable challenge in Brazil. According to the CIA World Factbook, as many as 26% of Brazilians -- some 50 million people -- lived in poverty in 2008.

Crime is also a big problem.

Rio resident Helena Salerno said she is worried about her safety. "I think that the most critical issue is violence, but we also have other problems like health care and education," said the nurse. "We're in urgent need of development," Salerno told CNN en EspaƱol this week.

Journalists Fabiana Frayssinet and Luciani Gomes in Rio de Janeiro contributed to this report.



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Reports: Egypt church attack kills seven

(CNN) -- A car bomb outside a church in Alexandria, Egypt killed at least seven people and wounded at least 24 others early Saturday, Egyptian state media reported, citing unnamed security officials.

The car bomb exploded at 12:20 a.m. local time (5:20 p.m. ET Friday) in front of the Church of Two Saints, where Coptic Christians were attending services, Egypt's Nile TV reported.

A nearby mosque was damaged and eight Muslims were among the injured, according to Egypt's MENA news service.

Egyptian officials are blaming foreign elements for the attack, MENA reported.



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Hostages freed in failed bank heist

Read more on this story from CNN affiliates KTRK and KPRC

(CNN) -- A hostage situation at a Texas bank ended Friday afternoon with all hostages safe and suspects in custody, said Lt. Onesimo Lopez of the Pearland Police Department.

Lopez said that two armed men had taken an undisclosed number of employees and customers hostage during the bank robbery Friday morning in suburban Houston.

The first suspect was taken into custody in the early stages of the robbery when there was an exchange of gunfire, detectives told CNN affiliate KPRC. The second suspect was taken into custody at the end of the standoff, police said.

Some hostages were released earlier in standoff, and two were released at the end of the event, Lopez said.

About four hours after the situation began, police used a "flash-bang" diversionary device in the Chase Bank branch, Lopez told reporters.

Once the faceoff ended, police escorted from the building three persons who had been hiding in a closet throughout the foiled bank robbery, Lopez said.

A bank manager was physically assaulted by a robber, but the manager's injuries weren't serious, according to authorities and a statement by Chase spokeswoman Mary Jane Rogers.

"We are working with employees and customers who were at the scene to provide any assistance they or their families need. Our branch manager, who was injured during the robbery attempt, was treated at the hospital and has been released," Rogers said.

"We are very relieved that the situation at our Pearland, Texas, branch was resolved and thank the FBI and police for their tremendous courage and help," she said.

After more than two hours into the standoff, the gunmen began releasing some of the hostages, police told CNN affiliate KPRC Friday afternoon.

At 11 a.m. (12 p.m. ET) Friday, a passer-by made a 911 call saying he saw masked men entering a Chase bank, Lopez said in a separate interview with CNN.

"They were wearing masks and they were moving quickly, which is what prompted the 911 call," Lopez said. An officer happened to be in the area and responded within minutes, he said.

"From what I was told there was a possible exchange of gunfire," Lopez added. "We don't know who exactly was firing, and our officer was not injured, and we're not sure if the suspects were injured."

Pearland is about 16 miles southeast of Houston.

CNN's Jason Hanna, Maria White and Michael Ryan contributed to this report.



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At least 4 die in bomb blast in Nigeria

(CNN) -- At least four people were killed and another 13 wounded Friday in a bomb blast at an army barracks in Abuja, Nigeria, the deputy police commissioner said.

Deputy Police Commissioner Olusola Amore said three of the dead and six of the wounded were women. Police bomb experts were on the scene, he said.

Yushau Shaib, a spokesman for the National Emergency Management Agency, said that the blast took place in the Sani Abacha barracks' recreation area, where people had gathered to celebrate the new year. The area was evacuated and civil defense and fire services were on the scene, Shaib said.

Earlier, a police source who asked to remain anonymous because he was not authorized to speak to the media, said that at least 11 people had been killed.

Shortly after the barracks blast, another explosion occurred at a church about 5 kilometers away, but the source had no confirmation on casualties.



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6 in 10 Greeks don't pay income taxes

Athens, Greece (CNN) -- More than 5 million Greeks did not pay income taxes for 2008, according to public documents released by the struggling nation's finance ministry.

More than six in 10 taxpayers earn less than 12,000 euros per year and are not required to pay income taxes under the Greek tax system, the press office of the Greek Ministry of Finance said Thursday.

However, there is wide speculation that many Greeks are not accurately reporting their income.

Most workers and professionals earned more than 12,000 euros in salary in 2008, according to the data provided by the Finance Ministry this month. The average salaried income was 19,234 euros for taxpayers and professionals earned 29,569 euros on average for the year. Farmers, ranchers and fisherman made 11,500 euros per year on average, but those workers only accounted for 390,000 people in the workforce.

The Finance Ministry's operations have been under scrutiny since the European Union and the International Monetary Fund agreed to bailout the struggling economy of the Mediterranean nation in May.

When asked if taxpayers are accurately representing their income bracket, the finance ministry said that "Greeks are paying the taxes assessed, though some are failing to declare all their earned income by operating in the shadow economy (e.g. by failing to issue a receipt)."

"Over the past year, the Ministry of Finance has undertaken many far-reaching initiatives to reduce tax fraud and increase compliance," which include tougher laws, improved computer systems and reorganization of the tax collections system, said Diomidis Spinellis, a general secretary with the Finance Ministry.

Finance Ministry Secretary General Dimitris Georgakopoulos told Greek press this fall that there would not be an overhaul of the Greek tax system or any new tax measures put in place.

"I don't believe that new taxes will be imposed, and more taxes cannot be imposed because then the market will be suffocated even more, beyond the difficulty today, and the result will not be the anticipated one" he said, according to Athens Times.

In May, as the EU-IMF bailout was being negotiated, the Finance Ministry released the names of more than 150 doctors in Athens being investigated for tax evasion.

Later in the month, a number of tax administration improvement measures were announced, including the replacement of directors in tax offices and the launch of an internal inquiry into cases of bribery, forged documentation, smuggling and other illegal activities.

In addition, the Finance Ministry announced that 234 of its employees were being investigated for not filing their taxes for 2007 and 2008.

During their investigation, the ministry also announced that its employees' financial records were being examined to crosscheck income statements and real estate holdings.

Greeks earning less than 12,000 euros per year are obligated to pay real estate taxes and are not completely exempt from all taxes under the system.

Citizens in the lower income bracket also contribute "to the national purse through the hefty value added tax, which is paid on all purchases of goods and services, as well as property tax on levied on purchasers and holders of real estate," the ministry's press office said.

As part of the bailout agreement with the EU and IMF, austerity measures will cut Greek pensions, except those in the lowest income bracket. The agreement, however, did not address any issues with the tax fraud investigation and how it may affect these new austerity measures.

Most of the austerity measures that are part of the bailout plan will, and have, affected the lower-income workers who do actually earn less than 12,000 euros per year, spurring many of the protests across Greece.

"The Greek context is one in which there's been a lot of tax evasion," said Mitchell Orenstein, professor of European studies at Johns Hopkins University,

"It seems to me that people who can't hide their income -- public workers, teachers -- are the ones who are going to pay the price. That's the downside of the austerity program," he added.

Journalist Elinda Labropoulou contributed to this report.



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Haiti cholera death toll more than 3,000

(CNN) -- In the 10 weeks since an epidemic erupted in Haiti, cholera has killed more than 3,000 people -- partly because the distribution of health supplies remains a logistical nightmare.

A global medical aid agency battling the disease added Friday that another aspect of the problem has been a lack of access to untainted drinking water.

The death toll soared to 3,333 and another 140,000 people have fallen sick, Haiti's Ministry of Health reported Friday, publishing the most recent data available through December 26.

The Pan American Health Organization said an adequate supply of medicine was steadily streaming in, but distributing those supplies "remains a complex logistic operation, sometimes made worse by an unstable security situation."

The Haitian government is estimating there will be at least 400,000 cholera cases in the first 12 months of the epidemic, a period ending next October -- with half of those cases occurring by mid-January. Cholera has spread to all of Haiti's 10 departments or provinces.

Of the total cholera cases reported, 83,166 patients have been hospitalized, the Health Ministry said. The overall fatality rate was 2.2%, but is considerably higher in some rural areas.

More than 12,000 aid agencies operate in the impoverished Caribbean nation and this week, the president of the international council for Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF or Doctors Without Borders) called the cholera epidemic response inadequate.

"The country is small and accessible and, following last January's earthquake, it hosts one of the largest and best-funded international aid deployments in the world," wrote Unni Karunakara in an opinion piece distributed to journalists.

Haiti, then, should be an unlikely place for the relief system's failure, but he questioned why the death toll has been so high.

Sylvain Groulx, head of Haiti's MSF mission, said many Haitians are forced to either buy bottled water or fetch it from bore wells, which can be contaminated with the cholera bacteria.

Karunakara said he visited Port-au-Prince lately and found that nearly a year after the devastating earthquake, little has been done to improve sanitation, "allowing cholera to spread at a dizzying pace."

"We began chlorinating the water ourselves. There is still just one operational waste management site in Port-au-Prince, a city of 3 million people," he said.

Even before the quake, only 12% of the Haitian population of 9.8 million received treated tap water and only 17% had access to adequate sanitation, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

On top of that, Haitians were unsure how to respond to the disease when it first surfaced in October -- there had not been a cholera outbreak in Haiti for decades.

In the first weeks, hospitalized people in Artibonite province, the heart of the outbreak, said in interviews that two-thirds of them had been drinking untreated water from rivers or canals and did not routinely use chlorine to sanitize drinking water. Nearly four out of five defecated in the open.

Symptoms of cholera, an acute, bacterial illness caused by drinking tainted water, range from mild or even nonexistent to profuse diarrhea and vomiting. It's not difficult to deal with the disease but if left untreated, death from dehydration can come within a matter of hours.

Post-election unrest in early December hampered prompt cholera response because of blocked roads, traffic disruptions, insecurity and fuel shortages. There is no way to quantify the toll exacted by the instability, Groulx said, but it had an impact.

He said, however, that MSF was seeing fewer sick people coming into cholera treatment centers. That doesn't mean the epidemic is close to being over, he said, but it's a "little ray of hope."



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Christians consider future in Iraq

Baghdad (CNN) -- Some Christians in Iraq's capital were considering leaving, following a wave of bombings targeting members of their religion that left two dead and 16 others wounded.

"I am 60 years old and I gave a lot to this country, but this tough situation is like a message asking me to leave my country," said Kiyour Kizarab, the male head of a Christian family whose house was targeted Thursday in central Baghdad. "If these attacks will continue, and the government can't stop them, then I don't think we will have a future here."

The strikes appeared to be coordinated because they all took place within an hour, an Interior Ministry official said. Explosives were left outside and in the gardens of 14 homes in six neighborhoods across Iraq's sprawling capital.

Among the homes targeted by improvised explosive devices was one Muslim dwelling that was picked because it had a Christmas tree inside, the male head of the family, Ibrahim Sharba, told CNN.

The assaults mirrored the early-morning bombings of Christian homes in Baghdad on November 10.

There were two explosions in the east, in New Baghdad; two in Yarmouk; six in the central Baghdad district of Karrada; two in the southern region of Dora; and one each in al-Saydia and Al-Ameriya, the official said.

The violence is the latest targeting the Christian minority in Iraq, which has a predominantly Muslim population.

One of the deadliest attacks came October 31, when militants stormed the Sayidat al-Nejat Cathedral, or Our Lady of Salvation Church, in Baghdad. Some 70 people died and 75 others, including 51 congregants and two priests, were wounded.

The violence has prompted a "slow but steady exodus" of thousands of Christians from Baghdad and Mosul, the U.N. refugee agency said recently.

Before the 2003 U.S.-led invasion, Christians were estimated to number 1.4 million in Iraq, but the violence and persecution that followed drove nearly half of them out.

The U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights said Baghdad and Mosul Christians have headed to other destinations in Iraq, including the Kurdish region and the Nineveh Plains, which have a strong Christian presence.

"We have heard many accounts of people fleeing their homes after receiving direct threats. Some were able to take only a few belongings with them," the agency said in a statement. "Churches and NGOs [nongovernmental organizations] are warning us to expect more people fleeing in the coming weeks."

U.N. offices in Syria, Jordan and Lebanon are reporting a growing number of Iraqi Christian arrivals.

Many Christians in Iraq said they toned down their Christmas celebrations this year because of threats by militants in recent weeks.

CNN's Jomana Karadsheh and Mohammed Tawfeeq contributed to this report.



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Sudan delegation to leave Darfur talks

Khartoum, Sudan (CNN) -- A Sudanese government delegation plans to leave peace talks with rebels from the country's western Darfur region Friday, the country's official news agency reported.

The presidential advisor in charge of the talks for the government, however, said the departure does not mean the government is withdrawing from the talks, which have been taking place in Doha, Qatar.

"This does not mean that we are not willing to look over the final draft of the peace deal produced by these negotiators over the coming hours or days," the Sudan News Agency quoted the advisor, Ghazi Salaheldin, as saying. "That can happen without the presence of the government delegation in Doha."

If a draft document emerges from the talks, "it will be the foundation for a conference in Darfur. We do not want peace to be blocked," Salaheldin said, according to the Sudan News Agency.

The Sudanese president, Omar al-Bashir, said this week that his negotiators would leave if an agreement was not reached by Thursday.

Al-Bashir, who is wanted by the International Criminal Court for war crimes in the western Darfur region, said he would not deal with rebels bearing arms after the talks ended in Doha.

"These (rebel) movements are enjoying the negotiation process and their residency in foreign hotels while the people of Darfur are suffering the flames of war," al-Bashir said. "We will not negotiate with anyone who carries a gun and claims to lead an armed group that represents the will of the people."

The anti-government Justice and Equality Movement, a rebel movement in Darfur, called al-Bashir's statement a declaration of war.

"What the president said yesterday has blocked the way ahead on the road to a political solution," said a statement from Ahmed Hussein Adam, a spokesman for the group. "It is a declaration of war and a limiting of any future chance for peace."

Fighting erupted in Darfur in 2003 between rebel groups and al-Bashir's Arab-dominated government in Khartoum. More than 300,000 people have been killed in this desolate region, where hopes for peace have gone up and down over the last few months.

Negotiators had previously set a December 31 deadline for agreement in the peace talks, which have so far not made much progress.

The deadline was ahead of a key referendum on independence for Southern Sudan that begins January 9. North and South, dominated by non-Arab Christians and animists, have fought one of Africa's longest-running civil wars.

The Darfur conflict is separate from the North-South divide, but independence for the South could help embolden rebels in Darfur.



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Italy to ban plastic bags in New Year

Rome (CNN) -- Italy is a nation known as much for its food as for the ubiquitous plastic bag, given out freely with every purchase around the country and often left to litter streets or landfills. A new ban coming into effect January 1, however, may change that.

The Italian Environment Ministry is banning shopkeepers from handing out plastic bags in order to help the environment. Even though the January 1 date is firm, the ministry says shopkeepers will be allowed to use up their existing stock of plastic bags without penalties.

"It is a great innovation," Environment Minister Stefania Prestigiacomo said of the ban. It "marks a step forward of fundamental importance in the fight against pollution, making us all more responsible for using and recycling. For the law to give positive results, it is necessary that all the commercial entrepreneurs, large or small, and citizens get involved and experiment with alternatives to plastic bags."

The environmental group Legambiente estimates each Italian consumes about 300 plastic bags a year, and that 180,000 tons of gasoline would be saved if everyone used just 10 bio-degradable bags a year for their shopping.

The tendency for shops and merchants to give out plastic bags for everything is a recent one. Paper bags -- or no bags at all -- were the norm just 30 or 40 years ago, when ladies would carry their own shopping carts or net sacks to the store.

Some shopkeepers interviewed Friday in central Rome complained they hadn't been told officially about the ban. A fishmonger said he learned of it only through the media and doesn't know whether he'll face a fine.

"I have no idea as to what could replace the plastic bags for me," he said. "How am I going to sell fish, which is often wet and is smelly in a paper bag?"

A grocery seller at a market said he has already started using some cloth bags with the stall's name for some of his clients, he said, adding he also learned about the ban through the media.

A woman who runs three clothing shops said there is still a lot of confusion about the ban.

"How they will go around checking?" she said. "No one has officially told me anything. I know what I know from newspapers. In one of my shops I've switched to cloth bags for over a year, but in another one I have plastic bags enough to last me until the summer. Supposedly as long as I can prove that I placed the order for those bags earlier this year, I'll be OK."

Similar bans have been enacted elsewhere around the world.

Mexico City last year banned shops from giving out plastic bags that are not bio-degradable. France also imposed a similar law.

China has adopted a strict limit on them, reducing litter and eliminating the use of 40 billion bags, the World Watch Institute said, citing government estimates. Although compliance has been spotty, violation of the law carries a possible fine of 10,000 yuan ($1,463), World Watch said.

In Tanzania, selling the bags carries a maximum six-month jail sentence and a fine of 1.5 million shilling ($1,137).

Mumbai, India, outlawed the bags in 2000 and cities in Australia, South Africa and Taiwan have imposed bans or surcharges. Ireland reported cutting use of the bags by 90 percent after imposing a fee on each one.



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France advises citizens to leave Ivory Coast

(CNN) -- The French government has renewed its call for citizens -- especially those with children -- to leave Ivory Coast as soon as possible, the French Foreign Ministry said Friday.

France last week had already warned of dangers in the West African nation and said its citizens should leave the country, if possible.

"Although foreigners have not so far been directly threatened, the French authorities renew their advisory to defer plans for trips to Ivory Coast, and to all the French who can... to temporarily leave Ivory Coast until the situation normalizes," the foreign ministry said in a statement Friday.

The United States and United Kingdom also have warned their citizens of possible violence in Ivory Coast, where tensions are mounting amid a political stalemate after a disputed presidential election in November.

World leaders have urged self-declared President Laurent Gbagbo to cede power in favor of Alassane Ouattara, who is considered the rightful winner of last month's poll.

But Gbagbo has declined to step down.

The U.S. State Department has ordered non-emergency personnel and family members to leave Ivory Coast week. It also warned U.S. citizens against traveling there.

The U.K. Foreign Office also had advised British citizens to avoid travel to Ivory Coast and, for those already there, to leave the country unless they "have a pressing reason to remain."

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said Thursday that he was "deeply alarmed" to learn of a call by supporters of Gbagbo to attack the U.N.-protected Golf Hotel in Abidjan, where Ouattara has his headquarters.

More than 15,000 refugees have fled for neighboring Liberia amid the political standoff, according to the U.N. High Commissioner on Refugees.



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Australian PM tours flood devastation

(CNN) -- The flooding in the Australian state of Queensland will cost "hundreds and hundreds of millions of dollars," Prime Minister Julia Gillard said Friday as she toured the devastation.

Towns across the northeastern state have been flooded since monsoon rains a week ago caused rivers to spill their banks and reach record levels.

The flooding has moved farther south, and the mining town of Emerald and coastal city of Rockhampton could face their worst flooding in decades this weekend.

"This is a natural disaster across Queensland that is going to occasion, between levels of government, literally hundreds and hundreds of millions of dollars in expenditure," Gillard said.

Gillard went with Queensland Premier Anna Bligh through the sugar-producing town of Bundaberg, where flood waters -- which peaked Thursday at 7.92 meters (26 feet) -- were expected to start subsiding Friday.

"We now have three major river systems in flood, we have 17 evacuation centers active, we have more than 1,000 people in those evacuation centers and many more thousands staying with relatives and friends because they can't get back into their own homes," Bligh said.

Defense forces set up temporary accomodation outside Emerald to cope with what Bligh said would be a "very large group of people who will become homeless."

Many areas of Rockhampton are already flooded, but Bureau of Meteorology hydrologist Jeff Perkins said the city's worst flooding in 50 years is still likely next week.

The Rockhampton airport said it was ceasing normal domestic services Saturday afternoon because of flooding that is expected to cut off the runway from the rest of the city. The Fitzroy River, it said, will reach 9 meters (29.5 feet) by Sunday and 9.4 meters (30.8 feet) by Tuesday.

Some Rockhampton residents lost their composure when speaking to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation about the floods.

"The flood of just two weeks ago -- we get nothing, there's no emergency assistance, so we beg the state government to help us," said one man, before breaking down and walking away.

Another woman said through tears, "I've got all my animals inside the house now."



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Annie Lennox named in UK honors list

London, England (CNN) -- Singer Annie Lennox was honored by Queen Elizabeth II on Friday for her charity work, receiving an award for her role as an ambassador with Oxfam.

The former member of the Eurythmics, famous for songs such as "Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)" and solo hits including "Walking on Broken Glass," was honored for her work fighting AIDS and poverty in Africa.

Lennox is one of 997 people on the 2011 New Year Honors List, which is released every Dec. 31 and recognizes outstanding achievement and service.

Other big names on the list include actors David Suchet, known for his portrayal of Agatha Christie's detective Hercule Poirot, and Sheila Hancock, a famous face on British stage and screen. Both received a CBE, which stands for Commander of the Order of the British Empire, the highest honor below a knight or dame.

A CBE also went to Trevor Horn, the record producer behind some of pop music's biggest hits from the 1970s to the present day. His extensive discography ranges from "Video Killed the Radio Star" by the Buggles, "Relax" by Frankie Goes to Hollywood, and Band Aid's "Do They Know it's Christmas?" to Seal's "Kiss from a Rose" and albums from Charlotte Church and John Legend.

Fashion designer Katherine Hamnett, famous for her 1980s slogan T-shirts with phrases such as "Choose Life" and "Stay Alive in 85," also received a CBE.

The co-founders of Lush Cosmetics, Margaret and Mark Constantine, received OBEs, which stands for Order of the British Empire, the next-highest honor. Their business began in a shed in their garden and has since grown to become a well known brand with more than 600 stores in 43 countries.

Far from being big names, 74% of the recipients are local heroes, honored for outstanding work in their communities.

They include a beekeeper, a driving instructor for people with special needs, an equine physiotherapist, and a woman who has coached girl's athletics for 60 years.

The bridgemaster at London's Tower Bridge, Erick Sutherns, received an MBE, or Member of the Order of the British Empire. An MBE also went to John Mackay, who has worked as a postman for 44 years in Caithness, described as one of the most challenging delivery routes in the Highlands of Scotland.

A founding member of the first gay men's soccer team in Britain also received an MBE. Aslie Pitter was recognized for making an enormous impact in tackling homophobia through sports in his role at the club.

Golfer Graeme McDowell, the 2010 U.S. Open winner and member of the victorious European Ryder Cup Team, received an MBE. Former World Cup-winning rugby player Mike Catt, now a rugby coach, received an OBE.

Among those receiving the highest honor of a knighthood was Martin Broughton, chairman of British Airways, recognized as an outstanding business leader with a strong track record of service to the wider community.

Women make up 45% of the total recipients on this year's list. They will receive their awards from the queen at ceremonies scheduled throughout the coming year.



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Thursday, December 30, 2010

Yemen frees insurgents under deal

(CNN) -- Yemen is releasing hundreds of jailed insurgents after the president's directive to free 500 detainees, the country's embassy in Washington announced Thursday.

President Ali Abdul Allah Saleh's move is a critical part of the February peace agreement between the government and the Houthi rebels in northern Yemen, who have fought for years.

Mohammed Albasha, the embassy spokesman, said in a statement that the nation of Qatar brokered the prisoner release, which has been called a "critical component" of the peace agreement. Qatar oversees the cease-fire.

In return for the move, the Houthis will surrender weapons seized during fighting.

"This is an essential step towards building sustainable peace and reconciliation in Sa'adah, a northwestern province of Yemen," Albasha said.

Many Yemenis thought another war between the Houthis and the government would erupt in January, but the moves ease tensions and allay fears of more fighting.

One Yemeni government official, who asked not to be named because he was not authorized to speak to the media on the matter, called the development "a good step and it's a very important step."

Dozens of the released Houthis have already arrived in Sa'adah and the weapons surrender has also begun, the official said.

The Houthis, in an e-mail statement, said Yemeni authorities released 428 of their members and the freed people were received by their comrades. In exchange for the release, the Houthis said they surrendered 10 military vehicles. The group cited the efforts of the Qatari mediators.

The rebels are supporters of slain Shiite cleric Hussein al-Houthi, and they began a revolt in 2004.

The antagonism is believed to be both separatist -- over who will have power in the area -- and sectarian -- over whether Shiite Islam will dominate, even though most Yemenis are Sunnis.

Conditions of the cease-fire, which went into effect in February, include clearing mines, not interfering with elected local officials, releasing civilians and military personnel, abiding by Yemeni law, returning looted items, and ending cross-border attacks on the country's northern neighbor, Saudi Arabia.

CNN's Barbara Starr and Mohammed Jamjoom contributed to this report



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Morales: Ending fuel subsidy cuts Bolivia's losses

La Paz, Bolivia (CNN) -- Bolivian President Evo Morales on Thursday defended his decision to end fuel subsidies, a move that caused gasoline and diesel prices to spike and has led to protests in major cities since it was announced over the weekend.

The country's subsidies led to an artificially low price for diesel and gasoline, which resulted in widespread smuggling of those products to neighboring countries, where smugglers sold it for a profit, Morales told CNN en EspaƱol. "There's a tremendous amount of smuggling (to Peru and Brazil) and the state loses."

For example, Bolivia will spend $660 million this year importing fuel, of which $380 million will have been subsidized by the government, he said. Of that, he said, $150 million will have been siphoned out of the country through contraband sales of the gasoline and diesel in neighboring countries, where the price is higher. "For a small country like Bolivia, that's a lot of change," he said.

Morales' remarks came a day after he attempted to explain the move in a nationally televised address.

Though the initial price shock may seem high, the average Bolivian will benefit from the move, he said. Money saved under the new policy will be plowed back into the economy, with 20 percent increases in the minimum wage and spending in education, health, and security, he said.

"Our policies are always to favor the poor people," said Morales, the nation's first indigenous president. For those people who will not be helped by the salary increases, he said, "the only way (to help them) is to create new jobs."

He acknowledged that transportation costs in some areas have doubled since Sunday, when his government announced he was ending the subsidies, but blamed unscrupulous Bolivians for the increases.

"Evidently, there are some people in transportation who take advantage of this situation and increase their fares by 100 percent," said the president. Government studies indicate that public transportation fares should have increased by no more than 30 percent, he said.

In El Alto, hundreds of people -- most of them young -- gathered outside government buildings, breaking windows and dismantling a protective fence in front of one. In the afternoon, demonstrators broke windows at the mayor's office, pelted cars whose drivers dared drive in the area, and set parked cars afire.

In Santa Cruz, hundreds of demonstrators broke into one government building and hauled files from the offices to the street, where they set them ablaze. In some areas, demonstrators blocked traffic for brief periods until they were dispersed by police. Once the police had left, they would do it again, according to a reporter for ATB Bolivia.

Asked about protests in the streets of major cities like La Paz, the capital, Morales questioned the use of the word "massive" to describe them. "The information I have is some 5,000 Bolivians" have demonstrated. He suggested that his opposition was mobilizing the protests for political gain.

"This will stabilize," he said. "I have a lot of faith."

Morales also said his government will seek to counter the impact of the price increases by investing $300,000 per rural municipality across Bolivia to spur economic growth through the creation of infrastructure projects with an emphasis on irrigation.

Gasoline prices rose by as much as 73 percent and diesel by 83 percent Monday. Subsidies had kept the price of gasoline at about 50 cents per liter ($1.88 per gallon). By comparison, neighboring Peru sells gasoline at $1 per liter and Brazil at $1.58 per liter.

The president of the Confederation of Private Business People, Daniel Sanchez Solis, disputed Morales' assertion that the business sector had orchestrated the demonstrations. "He's badly informed," Sanchez told CNNE. "He is attacking the private sector, which is the sector that has shown responsibility."

For example, he said, the Association of Banks, which is a member of his organization, calmed rumors Wednesday of an imminent financial crisis that could have led to a run on the nation's banks.

Sanchez added that the vast majority of employees in the country will not be affected by Morales' 20 percent wage increase, and he worried aloud that the move would result instead in higher inflation.

"The invisible hand of the market has returned to the country," he said. "The free market."

Sanchez said he was not opposed to raising the price of petroleum products, but he criticized what he said was Morales' failure to consult with other sectors prior to acting. "Why not build among all of us a productive policy?" he asked. "We want to build a country. We want to participate."

CNN's Rafael Romo contributed to this report.



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No injuries in Argentina bomb blast

(CNN) -- A bomb exploded at the Greek Embassy in Buenos Aires, Argentina, early Thursday, the state-run Telam news agency reported, citing federal police. No one was injured in the blast.

The explosion happened about 2 a.m. (midnight Wednesday ET), police said, according to Telam. The bomb was left at the entrance to the embassy. The blast broke some windows on the embassy building and other properties on the block, the news agency reported.

The Greek Foreign Ministry said in a statement the blast caused minor damage to the building's facade. Embassy personnel were not in the building at the time, it said.

"According to the initial findings of the investigation being carried out by the Argentine police, the explosion was caused by a Molotov thrown by unidentified persons," the ministry statement said. "It is to be noted that last week the Foreign Ministry instructed all its missions abroad to take increased security measures."

The blast at the Greek Embassy coincided with a bomb blast at one of the main courthouse buildings in Athens, Greece. It was not known whether the explosions were linked.



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Bombing wave targets Iraqi Christians

Baghdad (CNN) -- At least two people were killed and 14 others were wounded Thursday in a wave of bombings targeting Christian homes in Baghdad, an Interior Ministry official said.

The strikes appeared to be a coordinated because they all took place within an hour, the official said. Explosives were left outside and in the gardens of at least six dwellings across Iraq's sprawling capital.

It's not clear whether all of the casualties were Christians, but the assaults mirror the early morning bombings of Christian homes in Baghdad November 10.

In the east, in New Baghdad, at least two people were killed and three others were wounded. In central Baghdad, in the Karrada district, three people were wounded. There were two explosions in the gardens of homes in western Baghdad. In Yarmouk, a man was wounded in a blast and in Ameriya, two people were wounded.

In the southern region, in Dora, three people were wounded when a bomb went off in a garden.

In the southwestern Baghdad neighborhood of Saydiya, a bomb detonated after the doorbell was rung and residents opened the door. Two people were wounded in that attack.

The violence is the latest targeting the Christian minority in Iraq, which has a predominantly Muslim population.

Strikes in Baghdad and in Mosul in the north have generated great fear in the Christian community and have caused many people to leave their homes for other parts of Iraq or other countries.



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14 civilians killed in Afghan mine blast

Kabul, Afghanistan (CNN) -- At least 14 civilians died when a mini-bus struck a road mine in southern Afghanistan on Thursday, a provincial official said.

The incident occurred in the Nahr-e-Saraj district in Helmand province, where fighting between militants and troops occurs frequently.

President Hamid Karzai swiftly condemned the incident.

Daud Ahmadi, the Helmand governor's spokesman, said four people were injured, and NATO's International Security Assistance Force said Afghan and international troops provided medical assistance and evacuated the wounded.

Women and children were among the casualties, Ahmadi said.

ISAF said more than 10 Afghan civilians were killed and several others, "in an explosion triggered by insurgents in a crowded area."

Stiff condemnations were also issued by the United States, the United Nations, and ISAF.

"The planting of improvised explosive devices on roadways either targeting civilian transport or indiscriminately affecting civilians is against international humanitarian law. There can be no justification for such action," said Staffan de Mistura, the U.N. secretary-general's special representative for Afghanistan.



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Khodorkovsky handed new sentence

Moscow (CNN) -- A judge in Moscow sentenced Mikhail Khodorkovsky, the former head of the Russia's Yukos oil company, and his business partner to 14 years in prison on corruption charges Thursday.

The sentence effectively adds six years behind bars for Khodorkovsky, since the judge set the sentence to begin in 2003 when he was initially imprisoned on other charges. Instead of a release in 2011, he will now be freed in 2017.

Khodorkovsky and partner Platon Lebedev were accused of stealing billions of dollars' worth of oil from Yukos production subsidiaries from 1998 to 2003. Khodorkovsky has already been convicted of underpaying taxes on the oil and is serving an eight-year sentence for fraud and tax evasion.

"The verdict is illegal, we will of course appeal it," said Khodorkovsky's lawyer, Yuri Schmidt. "It was delivered under pressure from the executive branch which is still headed by Mr. Putin." He added the verdict came under pressure from "people who are interested in keeping Mr. Khodorkovsky in prison."

Russia was hit with international criticism after the former oil tycoon was convicted of money laundering and embezzlement earlier this month. The United States, in particular, called it a case of selective prosecution.

Khodorkovsky had expressed a desire to run for office at one time and funded opposition political parties. He has said the trial was part of a Kremlin campaign to destroy him and take the company he built from privatization deals of the 1990s.

The Kremlin has denied any role.

"Allegations about some kind of selective prosecution in Russia are groundless," the Russian Foreign Ministry said in response to the criticism. "Russian courts deal with thousands of cases where entrepreneurs are prosecuted."

Khodorkovsky's son, Pavel, told CNN after the conviction that his father will appeal the verdict.

Pavel Khodorkovsky said that he had been expecting a guilty verdict for his father, but also "had hoped that President (Dmitry) Medvedev's rhetoric about judicial system reform would actually bear some fruit."

"However, today, I realize that the judge is completely subservient and is a slave to the political will of Mr. (Russian Prime Minister Vladimir) Putin and other bureaucrats in the Kremlin," the younger Khodorkovsky said.

The Yukos oil company was once Russia's largest oil producer. It was later broken up and absorbed by the state.

Khodorkovsky previously told the Moscow court that its decision will have an impact far beyond him and Lebedev.

"There is much more than just the fates of two people in your hands," Khodorkovsky said. "Right here and right now, the fate of every citizen of our country is being decided."

In October, prosecutors asked for a 14-year prison sentence but said it should include the eight-year term that Khodorkovsky is already serving, which will end in October 2011.

The former oil magnate was previously incarcerated in a work camp near the town of Krasnokamensk, 6,500 kilometers (4,000 miles) from his native Moscow, but when the new charges were brought against the two men, both were moved to Moscow last year to stand trial.

The court also ordered Khodorkovsky and Lebedev to pay about $600 million in back taxes.

Few doubt that Khodorkovsky's prosecution has taken on a symbolism far beyond his own innocence or guilt. Critics say the embezzlement charges against him are absurd; analysts say Russia itself, and its commitment to the rule of law, is on trial.

"This verdict will be a verdict on whether Russia is a law-governed state, or whether it ever aspires to become one," said Masha Lipman of the Carnegie Endowment, "because currently it is not a law-governed state and the trial of Khodorkovsky and his partner Lebedev is the most striking example of it."

In his final address at his trial, Khodorkovsky made a last impassioned appeal.

"For me, as for anybody, it is hard to live in jail, and I do not want to die there. But if I have to, I will not hesitate. The things I believe in are worth dying for," he said.

CNN's Maxim Tkachenko contributed to this report.



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Sudan threatens to end Darfur talks

Khartoum, Sudan (CNN) -- Sudan threatened to withdraw from peace talks with rebels in the western Darfur region unless an agreement was struck by Thursday.

"If we reach an agreement tomorrow then God be praised but if we don't then we will withdraw our negotiating team," President Omar al-Bashir said at a rally Wednesday in Nyala, the capital of South Darfur state.

Al-Bashir, who is wanted by the International Criminal Court for war crimes in the western Darfur region, said he would not deal with rebels bearing arms after the talks ended in Doha, Qatar.

"These (rebel) movements are enjoying the negotiation process and their residency in foreign hotels while the people of Darfur are suffering the flames of war," al-Bashir said. "We will not negotiate with anyone who carries a gun and claims to lead an armed group that represents the will of the people."

The anti-government Justice and Equality Movement called al-Bashir's statement a declaration of war.

"What the president said yesterday has blocked the way ahead on the road to a political solution," said a statement from Ahmed Hussein Adam, a spokesman for the group. "It is a declaration of war and a limiting of any future chance for peace."

Fighting erupted in 2003 between rebel groups and al-Bashir's Arab-dominated government in Khartoum. More than 300,000 people have been killed in this desolate region, where hopes for peace have gone up and down over the last few months.

Negotiators had previously set a December 31 deadline for agreement in the peace talks, which have so far not made much progress.

The deadline was ahead of a key referendum on independence for Southern Sudan that begins January 9. North and South, dominated by non-Arab Christians and animists, have fought one of Africa's longest-running civil wars.

The Darfur conflict is separate from the North-South divide, but independence for the South could help embolden rebels in Darfur.



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French model who fought anorexia dies

Paris (CNN) -- A former fashion model who posed in a provocative ad campaigning against anorexia has died in France, her acting teacher said.

Isabelle Caro gained attention when she posed nude for the 2007 ad, which was featured on a billboard. The huge photo shows her gaunt body, with her back to the camera and her ribs visible, above the words "No Anorexia."

News of her death was reported in European news outlets on Wednesday and Thursday, but Caro died last month, her acting teacher, Daniele Gouzard-Dubreuil Prevot, said.

What is anorexia?

She said she did not know how Caro died and said Caro's father told her that Caro died on November 17 and was buried on November 24.

Vincent Bigler, a Swiss singer, said he received an e-mail from Caro in September.

"Isabelle told me she had been hospitalized for 15 days with acute respiratory disease," he said.

He has not spoken with Caro's family and said he learned of her death through Facebook and from mutual friends.

One boy's battle with anorexia

Caro's agent, Sylvie Fabregon, said she learned of Caro's death through the news media.

In January, Caro released an autobiography called "The Little Girl Who Did Not Want to Get Fat."



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Envoy: Ivory Coast on 'brink of genocide'

(CNN) -- Ivory Coast is "on the brink of genocide" following disputed presidential elections that triggered violence resulting in more than 170 deaths, the nation's new ambassador to the United Nations warned.

World leaders have urged self-declared President Laurent Gbagbo to cede power in favor of Alassane Ouattara, who is considered the rightful winner of the November presidential runoff election.

Youssoufou Bamba, Ouattara's newly appointed ambassador, said Ouattara is concerned about the human rights violations following the elections.

"As you know, there is a massive violation of human rights ... 172 people killed only because they want to demonstrate, they want to speak out, they want to defend the will of the people," the ambassador told United Nations officials Wednesday. "We think it's unacceptable. Thus, one of the messages I try to get across during the conversations I have conducted so far, is to tell we are on the brink of genocide."

Tension in Ivory Coast increased Wednesday after a key Gbagbo ally urged supporters to attack a U.N.-protected hotel in Abidjan, where Ouattara has his headquarters.

Youth and employment minister Charles Ble Goude said on state television RTI that supporters should "liberate this place with your bare hands" after January 1st.

In the broadcast, the minister said Ouattara supporters were calling for international intervention in the political standoff.

The international community -- including the United States, the United Nations, the African Union and the European Union -- recognize Ouattara as the president-elect of Ivory Coast. The endorsement is based on the results of a November runoff election certified by the country's Independent Electoral Commission and international observers.

Earlier Wednesday, Presidents Yayi Boni of Benin, Ernest Bai Koroma of Sierra Leone and Pedro Pires of Cape Verde met with President Goodluck Jonathan of Nigeria, who chairs the Economic Community of West African State (ECOWAS), a spokesman for the group told CNN.

Details of their talks were not immediately available.

The three presidents traveled to Ivory Coast earlier this week, but failed to persuade Gbagbo to step down. ECOWAS has threatened military intervention.

The political stalemate has led to violence, with scores of people dying in the aftermath of the vote. The U.S. State Department has ordered the departure of family members and non-emergency personnel at the U.S. Embassy in Abidjan.

Also Wednesday, a one-time aide to former U.S. President Bill Clinton resigned as Gbagbo's attorney, saying in a letter to Ivory Coast Ambassador Charles Koffee that efforts to arrange a phone call between Gbagbo and U.S. President Barack Obama had been thwarted by unidentified officials in Gbagbo's government.

Lanny Davis, who served as special counsel to Clinton, said he had urged Gbagbo to invite "an independent international investigation of his claims of electoral fraud and violence, and to respect the results of that review, as a path to the peaceful and mediated resolution of this crisis."

The proposed phone call from Obama, which Davis said was being arranged by a senior State Department official, would have presented Gbagbo "with options for a peaceful resolution, that would avoid further bloodshed and be in the best interests of his country and the people of the Ivory Coast," according to the letter by Davis. "Unfortunately, as you know, the decision was made in Abidjan not to allow President Obama's call to be put through to Mr. Gbagbo, despite my repeated objections to that decision," Davis wrote in the letter. "Nor have I been able to reach Mr. Gbagbo directly myself to offer him this advice, despite repeated requests, as recently as the last twenty-four hours."

Davis' letter said he would continue pushing for a peaceful resolution.

Earlier, French Foreign Ministry spokesman Bernard Valero told reporters in Paris that only ambassadors sent with the approval of Ouattara would be recognized by European Union countries.

U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon on Wednesday accepted the credentials of Bamba, the U.N. ambassador appointed by Ouattara.

Gbagbo's government has threatened to expel ambassadors of countries that recognize Ouattara's appointees, according to spokesman Ahoua Don Melo.

More than 15,000 refugees have fled for neighboring Liberia amid the standoff, according to the U.N. High Commissioner on Refugees.

CNN's Moni Basu, Alanne Orjoux, Jill Dougherty, Elise Labott and Richard Roth, and journalist Eric Agnero contributed to this report.



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Australia evacuates flooded townships

(CNN) -- Thirteen townships in Australia's flooded Queensland state were evacuated Thursday as forecasters warned it may be weeks before river levels start to drop.

All 130 residents of Condamine, about 185 miles inland from Brisbane, were evacuated because the town was inundated with water, Queensland Emergency Services Minister Neil Roberts told CNN.

He said it was one of 13 townships where residents had to be moved out Thursday. In all, between 1,000 and 2,000 people have been evacuated, he said.

Roberts was in Emerald, an inland city of 15,000 residents that was experiencing some of the worst flooding Thursday. The Fitzroy River there was rising and expected to peak Friday at a record level of 16.2 meters (53.2 feet), according to Jeff Perkins, a supervising hydrologist at Australia's Bureau of Meteorology.

"Emerald is downstream of Fairbairn Dam. We're expecting the dam to peak overnight tonight and Emerald to peak tomorrow," Perkins told CNN.

Rockhampton, a coastal city of 50,000 that is also affected by the Fitzroy River, was expected to see its worst flooding in 50 years next week, Perkins said.

"It's going to be a big flood over next week, up to about 9.4 meters (30.8 feet), which will be similar to the 1954 flood," Perkins said.

Many areas around the Fitzroy River will still be at flood stage in 10-14 days' time, he said.

Elsewhere in Queensland, Australia's northeast state, it was a mixed picture.

The town of Bundaberg peaked Thursday at 7.92 meters (26 feet), Perkins said. That level was expected to stay steady throughout the day but start to fall Friday, he said.

Parts of northern Queensland, however, were starting to recover from the monsoon rains that started about a week ago, creating the flooding problems, Perkins said. The rainfall has since moved south, flooding southern parts of the state, including Emerald and Rockhampton.

Over the entire month of December, Queensland has seen 1.3 meters (4.3 feet) of rain -- most of which fell during the past four or five days, said Tony Auden, a forecaster with the Bureau of Meteorology.

"There's been numerous rainfall records both for individual days and for much of the year, and for the month as well for northern and eastern Queensland," Auden told CNN.

The rain is now easing, but it has left behind flooded rivers that continue to cause the problems, he said.

Eight areas of the state have been declared disaster situations, Queensland Premier Anna Bligh said. She said the flooding was the worst she's ever seen.

"What is unprecedented about what's happening up here at the moment is just the scale and the number of communities affected," she said in an interview Thursday with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. "I've certainly seen flooded towns before in Queensland. We have big storms and we have big river systems. But I've never seen Queensland -- and I think it's without precedent in our recorded history -- with so many places in so many diverse parts of the state each affected so critically all at once."

The government of Queensland said additional police have been sent to many flood-affected areas including Emerald, Rockhampton and Bundaberg.

It asked drivers to be careful when driving over the New Year holiday throughout the state.

More than 100,000 liters (26,400 gallons) of water was being trucked into the town of flooded town of Dalby on Thursday because it was left with only two days' worth of drinking water supply, Roberts' office said.

"This is a proactive measure, initiated before the stocks were exhausted," Roberts said in a statement. "The emergency was caused by the town's water treatment plant being out of action after flood inundation."

Thirty-one of Queensland's 73 communities are now receiving government disaster assistance, Prime Minister Julia Gillard's office announced this week.

Acting Attorney General Brendan O'Connor said the government would continue to monitor the situation in disaster-declared areas across Australia and work with state authorities to provide more assistance.



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Former Israeli president guilty of rape, sexual harassment

(CNN) -- A Tel Aviv district court Thursday found former Israeli president Moshe Katsav guilty of two cases of rape and one case of forceful sexual harassment.

Katsav had agreed in 2007 to plead guilty to lesser charges and pay a fine to avoid jail time, but pulled out of the deal when it came time to enter his plea.

The plea bargain caused a public storm in Israel, mainly because it did not include charges of rape, contrary to what had been suggested in a draft indictment.

Katsav, of the center-right Likud Party, was president of Israel from 2000 to 2007. He was minister of tourism before that. The charges stem from allegations made against him in both jobs.

He resigned the presidency in June 2007 because of the sexual assault allegations.



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4 to be charged over Danish paper 'plot'

(CNN) -- Four men will be charged Thursday in connection with a terror plot against a Danish newspaper that published cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed, the nation's authorities said.

Three men arrested in Copenhagen, Denmark, on Wednesday after arriving from Sweden are believed to be "connected to international terrorists," Denmark's intelligence service said.

One of the men arrested is a Tunisian national while at least two have Swedish citizenship, including one of Lebanese origin. Another man arrested in Denmark, described as a 26-year-old asylum seeker from Iraq, is thought to have provided the alleged plotters with a place to stay in Herlev near Copenhagen.

A fourth man arrested is believed to have visited Afghanistan and Pakistan last year, officials said.

Swedish intelligence sources say a fifth suspect, a 37-year-old Swedish citizen of Tunisian origin, was arrested in Stockholm.

The group was allegedly planning a gun attack on the offices of the Danish newspaper, which published the cartoons in 2005 and reprinted them in 2008.

"Our assessment is that their plan was to try to get access to the Jyllands-Posten building and carry out a Mumbai-style attack," the head of Denmark's intelligence service, Jakob Scharf, said Wednesday. He described the suspects as militant Islamists.

Pakistani terrorists launched gun attacks on hotels and other targets in the Indian city of Mumbai in 2008, killing more than 170 people.

Denmark's Justice Minister Lars Barfoed said the plot constituted "probably the most serious terror attempt in Denmark so far."

The men had been under surveillance for months, and were among 200 radicals identified in a recent Swedish intelligence report, according to intelligence sources in Scandinavia. Sweden raised its terror alert in October. An estimated 300,000 Muslims live in Sweden.

Denmark's intelligence service said the men had rented a car near Stockholm and driven to Denmark with a sub-machine gun, silencer and ammunition, with the intent of carrying out an attack by the New Year. Swedish authorities say the car was followed by security police who knew there were weapons in the car.

Danish intelligence sources say they are not ruling out a connection between the plotters and Islamist extremists in Scandinavia who were in contact with American citizen David Headley. Headley said he had visited Sweden and Denmark last year. Headley was arrested in Chicago in October 2009 as he was about to leave for Pakistan. He later confessed to planning the Mumbai attacks and to carrying out a reconnaissance of the offices of the newspaper with the intent of launching a terror attack. Video of the newspaper's offices was found in his luggage.

According to an interview of Headley by India's National Investigation Agency obtained by CNN, he met with a Moroccan living in Sweden in the summer of 2009. The man, known only as Farid, was an associate of a senior al Qaeda commander, Ilyas Kashmiri, whom Headley had met while in Pakistan.

"Farid told me he was being continuously watched and he was not available for Denmark project," Headley is quoted as telling Indian investigators.

There have been several plots against the newspaper building. Earlier this year, a Belgian of Chechen descent was injured in Copenhagen when a bomb he was carrying blew up in a nearby hotel. He is awaiting trial.

Danish counter-terrorism officials say it's unclear whether Islamic radicalization is growing in Denmark, but believe extremists are more prepared to use violence.

Intelligence analysts point out that the men alleged to have been involved in this latest plot are between ages 26 and 43, and are not the alienated youth often associated with such plots.



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30 Dec, 2010


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Source: http://edition.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/europe/12/30/denmark.terror.plot/index.html?eref=edition
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