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Who is Hassan Rouhani?

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • Hassan Rouhani holds a doctorate from a UK university
  • He had a long career in Iran’s defense establishment
  • A senior cleric, he was Iran’s chief nuclear negotiator and writes on diplomacy
  • He has made comments in support of Iran’s rebellious Green Movement

(CNN) — Say goodbye to Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

In a few weeks, he will hand over the mantle of presidency to Hassan Rouhani, who stood victorious Saturday after Iran tallied all its votes in the national election.

Rouhani, 65, a cleric and moderate politician, who enjoyed reformist backing, took more than 50% of the vote, according to the interior ministry.

His nearest rival, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, the mayor of Tehran, garnered about 15% of the vote.

Three of the six candidates were much more conservative, and the Iranian public viewed Rouhani as a mild alternative going into the vote.

Hassan Rouhani is Iran’s next president

Hawk or dove?

Rouhani has a reputation for avoiding extreme positions and bridging differences, but he is no pushover. He has a long history of service in the country’s defense establishment.

He is a former commander of the Iranian air defenses, a leader on three war and defense councils, and was national security adviser to the president for 13 years before Ahmadinejad took office.

Rouhani is also a diplomatic and legal intellectual.

He has three law degrees, including a doctorate from a university in Scotland, and as president of Iran’s strategic research center, he regularly publishes essays.

He serves as managing editor for three quarterlies on scientific and strategic research, and foreign policy.

He was also Iran’s chief nuclear negotiator from 2003 to 2005 — during the presidency of Mohammad Khatami , who later became one of the leading figures in Iran’s rebellious “Green Movement,” which erupted into street protests after the re-election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in 2009.

Ahmadinejad’s government violently quashed the protests with the help of elements of a unit of the Revolutionary Guard, which answers to the Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran’s supreme leader.

Rouhani has expressed support for the Green Movement. “These were protests that were natural and popular,” he has said. “They should have been addressed.”

After Green supporters chanted for him at a rally, security forces arrested members of his campaign.

Relationship with Khamenei

Rouhani’s relationship with Khamenei has the potential to be complex.

He has represented the supreme leader on Iran’s security council since 1989.

But he has purportedly also scrutinized him for being too rigid toward the international community, said Abbas Milani, who runs a research program on Iran at Stanford University.

In a book about his experience as Iran’s nuclear negotiator during Khatami’s presidency, Rouhani criticizes Ayatollah Khamenei, according to Milani.

“If you read in between the lines, he places a lot of blame on Khamenei. He says in is his book, that if it was up to him, he and his team would have come up with a solution that would not lead up to Iran’s case being deferred to the U.N.– saying ‘we could have done this, and some people in Iran and some in the West torpedoed it,” Milani said.

A televised presidential debate turned into an animated political clash, which touched on Iran’s nuclear program. Exchanges grew so heated that the candidates were later accused of having revealed national secrets during the debate.

Rouhani was warned that he may be barred from running in the elections because of confidential material he revealed about Iran’s nuclear program during the two-hour-long debate.

It wasn’t his first testy moment with Iran’s state-run media. He has openly accused it of censorship and publishing lies.

Many believe Rouhani was not Khamenei’s favorite candidate.

Saeed Jalili, Iran’s current chief nuclear negotiator, stands more in line with the supreme leader’s ultraconservative Islamist views than the moderate president-elect.

But Khamenei has said he is not playing favorites and would not let on whom he voted for.

And Khamenei and his Guardian Council had to approve all candidates before the race began. Out of 680 who applied to run, only eight were allowed to do so. Two later dropped out.

Ultimately, the supreme leader approved Rouhani’s candidacy after rejecting the candidacy of a former president, Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani.

Rafsanjani endorsed Rouhani during his campaign.

Rouhani is a senior cleric and also a member of the Assembly of Experts, which is responsible for appointing or removing the supreme leader. As Khamenei ages and the appointment of a successor becomes necessary, Rouhani will likely have influence on the choice.

Ahmadinejad contrast

Though Ahmadinejad was touted as a hardliner when he entered office, since his re-election, conservative politicians close to the supreme leader have assailed him for being too liberal, and he has often been at odds with Khamenei.

His domestic opponents have been subject to similar caustic accusations his Western foreign opponents have become accustomed to.

Some of Ahmadinejad’s associates have faced heavy repression, and hardliners attempted to link the president to the largest embezzlement case in the country’s history. Ahmadinejad has hurled allegations of corruption back at them.

Rouhani is more likely to at least speak more diplomatically to internal and external challengers.

And unlike Ahmadinejad, when addressing United States politicians and citizens, he may not need a translator.

CNN’s Reza Sayah, Azadeh Ansari, Tara Kangarlou, Mitra Mobasherat and Laura Smith-Spark contributed to this report

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Who is Hassan Rouhani?

London’s top 10 most-loved mobile apps

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They’re in your pocket, your purse or at the bottom of your laptop bag whenever you need them. They’re built in East London, near trendy Shoreditch or the lovable eyesore known as Silicon Roundabout. (Not to be an eyesore for much longer it seems!) They connect you to the world, empower your inner photographer and help you get home at night after you’ve had a few.

Combining form and function, here are 10 of London’s most loved mobile apps listed below for your downloading pleasure.

Hailo

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“My favourite app has got to be Hailo!” says mobile app development agency Fueled‘s London-based designer Rob Palmer. “I use it all the time, its uptake has been amazing, especially the tie in of using modern technology to enhance a traditional service; the design and UI is on point and overall for me, it is just a perfect app!”

With over $50 million in funding, Hailo is revolutionizing the way Londoners hail taxis. Actually, it’s not just Londoners. Hailo, which claims to have the largest app-based taxi network in the world, enables customers to order a licensed cab in 11 cities around the world including New York, Tokyo and Dublin.

Founded by three experienced entrepreneurs and three London cabbies, Hailo takes a 10% cut of every booking for connecting drivers with passengers in just two taps. And my favorite part? There’s no need to pull out your wallet, Hailo bills your credit card and emails you a receipt seconds after you’ve shut the door.

➤ Hailo

The Daily Spank

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The Daily Spank may not be the most useful app on this list but it earns extra kudos for inspiring this post. I’ve been spanking photos and bragging about my 10-day winning streak to a lot of people who probably think I’m talking dirty. Actually, The Daily Spank is a delightful, photo-sharing app meant to inspire you to be creative each day with a visual prompt like “Take a Photo of Something Juicy” and “Take a Photo of Something That Starts with S”. The app’s co-founder Malcolm Scovil had the idea for the app while at Burning Man; apparently someone was trading chocolate chip cookies for rear end spanks, neurons clicked and sometime later The Daily Spank was born.

➤ The Daily Spank

CityMapper

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Unsure if you want to take a Hailo, a bus, walk or cycle to your destination? With a statement we can all understand, CityMapper is on a mission to ”save Londoners from London!” The highly rated app is loved by both locals and ex-pats who swear by its easy to use interface to get them where they need to go.

The app combines its own algorithms and TfL’s Journey Planner to offer every realistic traveling option between 2 points in London including buses, tubes, cabs, cycle hires and trains. Location search is built off of the Foursquare API and you can personalize the app with Favourites, MyPlaces and a very useful “Get Me Home” feature. Know you just want to take the bus? Try BusMapper by the same team.

➤ CityMapper

Mixcloud

 London’s top 10 most loved mobile apps

Fresh from the digital decks, streaming radio and instant dance party machine Mixcloud just dropped its latest iPhone app, which has seen more than 1 million downloads in just a few days. The new version is tremendously better than the previous, and the company is expecting that 1 million digit to quickly turn into 10.

The complete re-build of the app features a new design, a personalized feed and discovery tab, in-app notifications, all the usual suspects in the sharing category and a revamped search system. Not on iPhone? Check out the mobile website at http://m.mixcloud.com and if you’re up to be an Android beta tester, get involved. Also, check out TNW on Mixcloud!

➤ MixCloud

SlickFlick

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Just when you thought there couldn’t be one more angle to the photo-sharing app world of fun, SlickFlick came along to let sticker-loving storytellers connect over things like the band One Direction, games like Minecraft, vampire shows and teenage romance. Young fans seem to like the neutrality of the platform and the lack of censorship versus Facebook. To monetize, SlickFlick partners with character centric games and toys designers to create story themes so users that are already fans of those games and toys can create fan fiction.

➤ SlickFlick

DePop

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DePop is an app to sell almost anything you can take a picture of; popularcategories include tech, fashion, literature and old vinyl. Combining the peer-to-peer marketplace functionality of a Craiglist or Gumtree with the mobile functionality and convenience of Instagram, the app lets you snap a photo of something you don’t want anymore and sell it to strangers using PayPal. The app has some pretty hot competition as it’s playing in the same space as the newly launched, socially powered selling platform Bondsy out of New York City.

DePop

Shazam

 London’s top 10 most loved mobile apps

An oldie, but a goodie, Shazam is the original music identification app. Ever sat in a cafe and listened to a song you totally dig but have no idea what the track is called or who the singer is? Simply hold up Shazam somewhere near the speaker and tap, and in 30 seconds or less you’ll get the name of the artist, song, social profiles and ability to buy it in iTunes just like that. While the company was founded in 1999, and it’s been a hot minute since we’ve heard anything from the music startup, this past month they released their app for Windows Phone 8 and a brand new iPad app.

Shazam

Daatch

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Simply put, Daatch is Grindr for lesbians. I first met founder Robyn Exton while she was learning to code at General Assembly London [one of my former employers]. Since then, Robyn has built an app and networked herself successfully through the London startup scene catching the attention of more than a few social network tycoons and landing herself a spot in the Wayra accelerator program’s recent cadre.

➤ Daatch

Yplan

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Yplan? Exactly. This mobile app has got you covered with its smart and curated list of tonight’s events. Live in both New York and London, Yplan lets you purchase tickets to various concerts, theater performances, comedy shows and lots more. The app is designed for spontaneous individuals who are on the go and looking for something to do in London. The team even has Stephen Fry on record praising the app — he says: “YPlan – now that’s a seriously good app. Last minute events of all kinds booked in seconds. Damned smart.”

Yplan

Zeebox

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Dubbed the “TV sidekick”, Zeebox is a free iPad app riding the 2nd Screen phenomenon. The app combines a UK TV guide with social features, displaying a list of all the current and upcoming shows you can watch and which of your friends are watching that particular show. Earlier this year, the startup launched an automated advertising platform called SpotSynch that will show users targeted digital advertisements simultaneously with specific TV programs and commercials.

Zeebox

Lutebox

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Last and certainly not least when it comes to changing it up is Lutebox, a mobile app that lets you snap a photo and share it with a voice message. Pivoting from video chat to social shopping to photo-sharing with voicemail, Lutebox founder Ali Ahmed, the former entrepreneur-in-residence at Groupon, may have finally landed on a business plan. ”The app is really simple,” explains TCIO’s Pasa Mustafa. “It’s 3 clicks to share a photo with a voice message and mobile is all about simple friendly and efficient UI.”

Lutebox

Now you know what’s on our phones… what made in London apps do you love? Share them in the comments!

Full disclosure: This post was written thanks to Help Me Write, a London made consumer tech product I’m working on with the Makeshift team. Thanks to everyone who voted.

Images via Shutterstock.

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London’s top 10 most-loved mobile apps

Mara Group und JS Group schließen sich mit Ghani Group und der Egi Community zusammen, um die erste Anlage zur Herstellung von Floatglas in Nigera zu…

Port Harcourt, Nigeria (ots/PRNewswire) – Mit einer Zielproduktion von 500 Tonnen pro Tag wird die neue Anlage bedeutend dazu beitragen, Abhilfe beim Mangel von im Inland hergestellten Floatglas zu

schaffen

Egi MJG Float Glass, ein Joint Venture zwischen der Egi Community (ber die Egi People’s Assembly), Mara Group, JS Group und Ghani Group, gibt die Grundsteinlegung fr ihre erste Anlage zur Herstellung von Floatglas in Nigeria bekannt. Angesichts der wachsenden Nachfrage auf dem gesamten Kontinent knnte diese Anlage die erste von mehreren darstellen, die vom Joint Venture gebaut und betrieben werden. Damit wird der Grundstein fr eine Glasherstellungsbranche in Westafrika gelegt.

(Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20130531/618246-a )

(Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20130531/618246-b )

(Photo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20130531/618246-c )

Egi MJG Float Glass bringt internationale Konzerne aus sich ergnzenden Branchen und mit lokaler Expertise zusammen. Die Mara Group ist ein in mehreren Branchen aktiver Mischkonzern mit Betrieben in 19 afrikanischen Lndern, der von Ashish J. Thakkar gegrndet wurde. Die JS Group ist ein Industriekonglomerat, das vorrangig in sich entwickelnde Volkswirtschaften in Asien, dem Nahen Osten und Afrika investiert. Ghani Group ist ein fhrender Glashersteller mit Anlagen in den VAE und Pakistan mit einer Gesamtproduktionskapazitt von ber 300.000 Tonnen.

Aktuell fehlen in Nigeria inlndische Hersteller von Floatgas und das Land ist usserst abhngig von Importen aus Europa, Sdamerika und China. Gleichzeitig steigt die inlndische Nachfrage aufgrund der boomenden Wohnungsbranche. Derzeit wird der Bedarf auf 360.000 Tonnen pro Jahr geschtzt.

In der Fertigungssttte in Rivers State sollen 500 Tonnen Floatglas pro Jahr fr eine Vielzahl von Anwendungen wie beispielsweise fr architektonische Lsungen bis hin zur Automobilindustrie hergestellt werden. Die wichtigsten Grundlagen und Rohstoffe wie Land, Erdgas und Quarzsand stehen im Gebiet ausreichend zur Verfgung. Die Gesamtinvestitionen in das Projekt belaufen sich auf 110 Millionen $ whrend der ersten Phase und weitere 100 Millionen $ whrend der zweiten Ausbauphase.

Whrend der bahnbrechenden Zeremonie erklrte Prashant Manek, der Leiter der Mara Group: “Dieses Projekt ist ein erster Schritt zur Unabhngigkeit von Nigeria bei der Glasherstellung. Aufgrund des strategischen guten Standorts und der lokal verfgbaren Rohstoffe sind wir usserst zuversichtlich, dass wir in der Lage sein werden, eine erstklassige, wirtschaftlich wettbewerbsfhige Anlage aufbauen zu knnen.”

Ali Siddiqui, CEO der JS Group erklrte: “Seit dem Jahr 2000 verzeichnet die weltweite Floatglasbranche ein starkes Wachstum. Die Branche weist im Besonderen in Westafrika ein bedeutendes Potenzial auf und dieses Projekt ist eine strategische Investition in die Baumaterialbranche in Nigeria.”

Peter Scully, CEO von MJG EGI Float Glass fgte hinzu: “Diese neue Anlage ist nicht nur eine strategische Geschftsmglichkeit. Sie wird auch einen positiven Einfluss in Hinblick auf Arbeitspltze und die Umlagerung von Profiten in der Community haben.”

Das fr die Glasherstellungsanlage Rivers State vorgesehene Land gehrt der lokalen Egi Community. Die Community untersttzt das Projekt in Hinblick auf die erwarteten Vorteile fr das Gebiet mit voller Kraft und sie ist auch ein wichtiger Anteilseigner der Anlage.

Chief Oris U. Onyiri, President-General der Egi People’s Assembly erklrte abschliessend: “Wir sind sehr erfreut ber den Bau dieser Anlage, die dadurch entstehenden Arbeitspltze und den Wandel, der dadurch in unsere Community kommt. Es erfreut uns sehr und gibt uns Sicherheit, dass wir mit weltweit so angesehenen Unternehmen zusammenarbeiten.”

Kontakt:
Sabina Lindstedt
Leiterin der Kommunikationsabteilung, Mara Group
+971-567-798-974
sl@mara.com
 

Photo: 
http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20130531/618246-a



http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20130531/618246-b



http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20130531/618246-c
 
 

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Mara Group und JS Group schließen sich mit Ghani Group und der Egi Community zusammen, um die erste Anlage zur Herstellung von Floatglas in Nigera zu…

U.N. adopts first global arms trade pact


U.N. approves arms trade pact

By Matt Smith, CNN

April 2, 2013 — Updated 2331 GMT (0731 HKT)

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • The Arms Trade Treaty will regulate transfers of heavy weapons and small arms
  • Iran, Syria and North Korea voted against the treaty at the United Nations
  • The United States and European Union praise the treaty; the NRA opposes it

(CNN) — The U.N. General Assembly voted to adopt the world body’s first treaty to regulate the global arms trade Tuesday, a move Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called “a victory for the world’s people.”

The Arms Trade Treaty will regulate the transfers of tanks, heavy artillery, combat aircraft, missiles, warships and small arms. Ban said the pact will make it harder for weapons to reach black markets and fall into the hands of “warlords, pirates, terrorists, criminals and their like.”

“It will be a powerful new tool in our efforts to prevent grave human rights abuses or violations of international humanitarian law,” he said in a statement on the 154-3 vote. “And it will provide much-needed momentum for other global disarmament and non-proliferation efforts.”

Iran, Syria and North Korea were the only votes against the treaty, which will take effect when 50 member states ratify it.

“The international community can claim full ownership of this treaty, which will make trade in conventional arms more responsible and transparent, thus reducing human suffering and tangibly contributing to international peace, security and stability,” Catherine Ashton, the European Union’s foreign policy chief, said in a written statement.

And U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said the pact “can strengthen global security while protecting the sovereign right of states to conduct legitimate arms trade.”

The National Rifle Association, the American gun lobby, has vowed to oppose the treaty’s ratification in the U.S. Senate. The NRA says the treaty is “designed to severely restrict or even outright ban the right to sell, purchase, carry or own a firearm in America.”

Senators voted 53-46 to attach an anti-treaty amendment authored by Sen. Jim Inhofe, R-Oklahoma, to the chamber’s budget resolution for 2014. But Kerry said the treaty “applies only to international trade, and reaffirms the sovereign right of any state to regulate arms within its territory.”

“As the United States has required from the outset of these negotiations, nothing in this treaty could ever infringe on the rights of American citizens under our domestic law or the Constitution, including the Second Amendment,” he said.

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U.N. adopts first global arms trade pact

U.N. overwhelmingly approves global arms trade treaty

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) – The 193-nation U.N. General Assembly on Tuesday overwhelmingly approved the first treaty on the global arms trade, which seeks to regulate the $70 billion business in conventional arms and keep weapons out of the hands of human rights abusers.

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U.N. overwhelmingly approves global arms trade treaty

The GPS-Enabled DJI Phantom Quadcopter Makes The AR.Drone Look Like A Toy

Back in 2010, our own John Biggs rightly described Parrot’s AR.Drone as ” the coolest thing [he had] seen in a long, long time.” Since then, Parrot has launched the AR.Drone 2.0 and while it’s still a very cool gadget, quadcopters have come a very long way since 2010. Last month, the folks at DJI, who mostly specialize in developing unmanned aerial systems for commercial use, sent me one of their consumer-oriented and GPS-enabled DJI Phantoms. Most quadcopters are aimed at hobbyists and take a good amount of assembly and at least some experience with flying remote-controlled aircraft. The Phantom, which has a list price of $849 but currently retails for about $680, comes mostly pre-assembled and is extremely easy to fly, thanks to its built-in compass and GPS module. Thanks to having GPS built-in, the drone always knows where it is in relation to you.

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The GPS-Enabled DJI Phantom Quadcopter Makes The AR.Drone Look Like A Toy

Silicon Milkroundabout Spins Out From Songkick To Staff Startups With Talent By Way Of Events

Silicon Milkroundabout, the London-based networking event started as an informal side-project by two of the founders of the live music alert service Songkick, is growing up. Three years on from its first oversubscribed meet-up in a pub, it is now spinning out into a standalone startup of its own, led by Pete Smith, the co-founder of Songkick who until now had been the company’s COO. The move speaks to a couple of things going on in London — and as a journalist living here covering tech news, I think both are awesome as they are each barometers of exciting things going on, and more exciting things to come.

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Silicon Milkroundabout Spins Out From Songkick To Staff Startups With Talent By Way Of Events

Nations tackle spread of assault rifles

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • 193 nations meet in New York this week to discuss an arms treaty
  • The United Nations wants the trade of conventional weapons regulated
  • ‘Small arms’ include AK-47′s, hand grenades and rocket propelled grenades
  • The nations could not come to an agreement in July 2012

(CNN) — While the spread of assault rifles is fueling heated discourse in the United States, nations around the world are grappling with a similar debate involving weapons — particularly automatic rifles.

Combat weapons are flowing with relative ease worldwide, intensifying bloody power struggles between brutal regimes and opposition groups, and leaving innocent civilians dead.

This week, 193 nations will gather at the United Nations in New York City to negotiate a global treaty to limit their trade across international borders, a resolution supported by the United States.

Agreement on the Arms Trade Treaty is not a sure thing. In July 2012, representatives left the negotiation table without one.

An international rights group came out in support of the treaty Tuesday and issued a report depicting how the arms flow in some countries escalates tensions into bloody violence.

Small arms abound

An AK-47 may look like a big gun to most people, but in conflict regions, they are referred to as ‘small arms.’ The term includes most handheld weapons such as hand grenades and rocket-propelled grenade launchers.

They are easier to transport and use than a tank or artillery. They are also cheaper to buy, and they have spread rapidly, according to the United Nations, which refers to them as the “weapons of choice.”

“The illicit circulation of small arms, light weapons and their ammunition destabilizes communities, and impacts security and development in all regions of the world,” the U.N. said.

In many parts of the world, automatic assault rifles make their way at a dizzying pace into the hands of gangs, rebels, pirates and terrorists.

“They can all multiply their force through the use of unlawfully acquired firepower,” the U.N. said in a statement.

Widespread proliferation of such handy weapons fuel armed conflict, crime and violations of human rights, according to U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

Ivory Coast’s arms race

Weapons buildups by factions within countries can drive nations to war with themselves, Amnesty International said in its report on the bloody conflict in the African nation of the Ivory Coast in 2010 — 2011.

In populations divided by deep ethnic, religious or political tensions, easy access to arms can stoke distrust and paranoia, Amnesty said. This can put peace farther out of reach and deepen divisions.

The country’s military split in 2002, dividing the nation politically into two sides — north and south.

Then-president Laurent Gbagbo began stockpiling arms to raise his level of power over that of his opponents, Amnesty said. His purchases included small arms and heavier weaponry such as tanks, warplanes and drones.

Despite a voluntary moratorium on arms imports, the rights group said, Gbagbo bought weapons from various continents, including Asia and the Middle East. Chinese, Bulgarian and Ukrainian weapons flowed into the nation.

“Those arms transfers were highly irresponsible, as they took place in the context of a fragile cease-fire,” Amnesty said.

The purchases fueled fear among Gbagbo’s opposition, which also armed up.

The opposition had Polish, Chinese and Russian small arms, Amnesty said, escalating weapons buildup of both sides.

In 2004, the U.N. attempted to stem the flow of weapons with an international embargo — to no avail.

Escalation to armed conflict

In November 2010, Gbagbo lost in a presidential election to rival Alassane Ouattara, but refused to cede power.

The government’s weapons came out. Soldiers gunned down opposition protesters in the streets, and Ouattara and his loyalists started an armed campaign to oust Gbagbo.

Hundreds died; many more were wounded, and hundreds of thousands fled to neighboring countries. Many women and girls were raped, according to the report.

The United Nations intervened militarily and Ouattara’s troops took power by force in April 2011.

Both sides committed atrocities, Amnesty said, including the summary killings of “men and boys who were singled out based on their ethnicity or political affiliation.”

Widespread weapons problematic

Abuses still go on, due in part to the high number of weapons still in the country.

They “continue to fuel grave human rights abuses and violent crime in the country,” Amnesty said.

Amnesty supports the U.N.’s efforts and expressed hope the world’s nations will agree on an Arms Trade Treaty.

Ban wants the treaty to cover all conventional weapons, “from small arms to tanks to combat aircraft.”

The treaty has been in the works since 2006, when the U.N. General Assembly requested all countries to submit their views on a binding arms trade treaty. That year, the United States, under the George Bush administration, voted against the resolution that started the process. But the Obama administration later reversed that decision.

The U.N. estimates that in 2010, more than 27 million people were still internally displaced due to armed conflict.

Md. poised to be 18th state to ban death penalty

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(AP) — It’s been eight years since Maryland executed a convicted killer, but that could be the last time if the General Assembly, as expected, gives final passage this week to a bill to abolish capital punishment.

Gov. Martin O’Malley, a Democrat, has been pushing for the change since his first year in office. Now the Democratic-controlled legislature seems poised to make Maryland the 18th state in the nation to do away with the death penalty.

A repeal bill has already been approved by the state Senate and it was expected to win final passage from the House of Delegates on Friday.

The House advanced the legislation this week after delegates rejected nearly 20 amendments, mostly from Republicans, aimed at keeping capital punishment for the most heinous crimes.

If passed, life without the possibility of parole would be the most severe sentence in the state.

Supporters of repeal argue that the death penalty is costly, error-prone, racially biased and a poor deterrent of crime. But opponents say it is a necessary tool to punish lawbreakers who commit the most egregious crimes.

Passage would mark a major victory for O’Malley, who has long pushed for banning the death penalty.

Maryland has five men on death row. The measure would not apply to them retroactively, but the legislation makes clear that the governor can commute their sentences to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

The state’s last execution took place in 2005, during the administration of Republican Gov. Robert Ehrlich. He resumed executions after a moratorium had been in place pending a 2003 University of Maryland study, which found significant racial and geographic disparity in how the death penalty was carried out.

Capital punishment was put on hold in Maryland after a December 2006 ruling by Maryland’s highest court that the state’s lethal injection protocols weren’t properly approved by a legislative committee. The committee, whose co-chairs oppose capital punishment, has yet to sign off on protocols.

O’Malley, a Catholic, expressed support for repeal legislation in 2007, but it stalled in a Senate committee.

Maryland has a large Catholic population, and the church opposes the death penalty.

In 2008, lawmakers created a commission to study capital punishment after repeal efforts failed again. The panel recommended a ban later that year, citing racial and jurisdictional disparities in how the death penalty is applied.

In 2009, lawmakers tightened the law to reduce the chances of an innocent person being sent to death row by restricting capital punishment to murder cases with biological evidence such as DNA, videotaped evidence of a murder or a videotaped confession.

According to the Maryland Department of Public Safety & Correctional Services website, Maryland has only executed five inmates since 1976. There were three in the 1990s, and two when Ehrlich was governor.

In contrast, neighboring Virginia has executed 110 inmates since the U.S. Supreme Court restored capital punishment in 1976, according to the Death Penalty Information Center. However, Virginia’s death row population has dwindled to eight from a peak of 57 in 1995, in part because fewer death sentences are being handed down in the state amid an increased acceptance of life without parole as a reasonable alternative.

The center said death sentences have declined by 75 percent and executions by 60 percent nationally since the 1990s.

If passed, Maryland would become the 18th state to ban the death penalty. Connecticut did so last year. Illinois, New Jersey, New Mexico and New York also have abolished it in recent years.

Associated Press

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Md. poised to be 18th state to ban death penalty

Chavez party proposes same legislative chief

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AAA Jan. 5, 2013 1:13 PM ET
Chavez party proposes same legislative chief
By FABIOLA SANCHEZ and IAN JAMES, Associated Press THE ASSOCIATED PRESS STATEMENT OF NEWS VALUES AND PRINCIPLES

A heart-shaped mural shows an image of Venezuela’s President Hugo Chavez hugging a woman, in Caracas, Venezuela, Friday, Jan. 4, 2013. Chavez hasn’t spoken publicly or been seen since his Dec. 11 operation in Cuba, and the latest report from his government Thursday night increased speculation that he is unlikely to attend his Jan. 10 inaugural ceremony. The message above the mural reads in Spanish; “Love is repaid with love.” (AP Photo/Ariana Cubillos)

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(AP) — Allies of President Hugo Chavez are proposing to keep the same National Assembly president — a man who could be in line to step in as a caretaker leader in some circumstances.

Saturday’s session could give clues to the future of the country amid uncertainty about the health of ailing President Hugo Chavez.

Just five days remain until Chavez’s scheduled inauguration on Thursday and government officials are suggesting the swearing-in could be delayed.

Pro-Chavez lawmaker Fernando Soto Rojas said the socialist party wants Diosdado Cabello to remain as legislative leader. He’s a firm loyalist of the president. Chavez’s allies hold a majority of the 165 congressional seats.

Associated Press

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Chavez party proposes same legislative chief