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Burhanuddin Rabbani buried in Kabul

Afghanistan president Hamid Karzai calls for peace as politicians and foreign ambassadors gather for funeral of former president A surging crowd of mourners on Friday kissed the coffin of former Afghan president Burhanuddin Rabbani , killed by a suicide bomber claiming to carry a peace message from the Taliban, and railed against neighbouring Pakistan for allegedly fomenting conflict in their country. The outpouring of anger at a hilltop cemetery exposed the divisions and suspicion that plague Afghanistan after years of war, and followed a stately funeral ceremony at the palace of President Hamid Karzai, who hailed Rabbani as a tireless advocate for reconciliation. “It is our responsibility to act against those who are enemies of peace,” said Karzai, urging Afghans to shun despair over the death of Rabbani in an attack at his home on Tuesday, and instead escalate efforts to bring an end to the fighting that the US-led coalition seeks to exit by the end of 2014. One by one, lawmakers and foreign envoys stepped up to pay tribute before Rabbani’s casket, draped in a red, black and green national flag. A military band played the national anthem. Then the coffin was carried by uniformed servicemen with caps and white gloves, marching stiffly. A procession of vehicles, some bearing large portraits of Rabbani, showing him dignified in robes and with a long white beard, drove up a hill overlooking Kabul, the capital. There, the observances turned unruly. Gunfire erupted briefly, possibly because guards were jittery about the possibility of an attack. Supporters of the former president’s political faction, chanting and distraught, reached to touch the coffin. “Death to the foreign puppets,” they shouted. “Pakistan is our enemy.” The suicide attacker who killed Rabbani had a bomb in his turban, and gained entry to the former president’s home by convincing officials, including Karzai’s advisers, that he represented the Taliban leadership, based in the Pakistani city of Quetta, and wanted to discuss reconciliation. In Washington on Thursday, US Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, accused Pakistan’s powerful intelligence agency of backing extremists in planning and executing an assault on the US embassy in Afghanistan last week and a truck bomb attack that wounded 77 American soldiers days earlier . Mullen insisted that the Haqqani insurgent network “acts as a veritable arm” of Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence agency, or ISI, undermining the uneasy US-Pakistan relationship forged in the terror fight and endangering American troops in the nearly 10-year-old war in Afghanistan. “Death to the ISI,” shouted mourners at Rabbani’s funeral. Pakistan rejected the American claims that it is supporting extremist attacks on US troops. Some analysts believe Pakistan seeks to bolster its influence in Afghanistan as a way to counter the regional influence of India, its longtime rival. Pakistani foreign minister Hina Rabbani Khar warned the US that it risked losing Pakistan as an ally and could not afford to alienate the Pakistani government or its people. “If they are choosing to do so, it will be at their own cost,” Khar told Geo TV on Thursday from New York, where she was attending a UN general assembly meeting. “Anything which is said about an ally, about a partner publicly to recriminate it, to humiliate it is not acceptable.” Khar’s comments were first aired in Pakistan on Friday. Pakistan’s prime minister, Yousuf Raza Gilani, responded to the US criticism by saying Washington was in a tough spot. “They can’t live with us. They can’t live without us,” Gilani told reporters on Friday in the southern city of Karachi. “So, I would say to them that if they can’t live without us, they should increase contacts with us to remove misunderstandings.” Rabbani’s mourners, many belonging to a political faction that opposes Karzai, gathered around the coffin as it was lowered into the ground and also lashed out at the Afghan government as well as the United States, which backs the Afghan president. The 70-year-old Rabbani was the leader of Afghanistan’s Northern Alliance, which helped overthrow Taliban rule during the US-led invasion in 2001. His death deepens rifts between the country’s ethnic minorities, especially between those who made up the Northern Alliance – including Tajiks like Rabbani – and the majority Pashtun, who make up the backbone of the Taliban. Karzai, who is Pashtun, had appointed Rabbani to Afghanistan’s High Peace Council, which was seeking to reconcile the country’s warring factions. It has made little headway since it was formed a year ago, but it is backed by many in the international community as helping move toward a settlement. US ambassador Ryan Crocker was among those attending the funeral ceremony at the presidential palace. Iran’s state media said Ali Akbar Velayati, a former Iranian foreign minister and confidant of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, led the Iranian delegation. “Today we are witnessing one of the biggest and saddest events of this important political time in the history of the world,” said Salahuddin Rabbani, the former president’s son. He urged the Afghan government to aggressively investigate the killing. Also, Nato forces said two service members died following a bomb attack in eastern Afghanistan on Friday. The deaths bring to 436 the number of international troops killed so far this year in Afghanistan. Afghanistan Hamid Karzai Taliban guardian.co.uk

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Burhanuddin Rabbani buried in Kabul

Afghanistan president Hamid Karzai calls for peace as politicians and foreign ambassadors gather for funeral of former president A surging crowd of mourners on Friday kissed the coffin of former Afghan president Burhanuddin Rabbani , killed by a suicide bomber claiming to carry a peace message from the Taliban, and railed against neighbouring Pakistan for allegedly fomenting conflict in their country. The outpouring of anger at a hilltop cemetery exposed the divisions and suspicion that plague Afghanistan after years of war, and followed a stately funeral ceremony at the palace of President Hamid Karzai, who hailed Rabbani as a tireless advocate for reconciliation. “It is our responsibility to act against those who are enemies of peace,” said Karzai, urging Afghans to shun despair over the death of Rabbani in an attack at his home on Tuesday, and instead escalate efforts to bring an end to the fighting that the US-led coalition seeks to exit by the end of 2014. One by one, lawmakers and foreign envoys stepped up to pay tribute before Rabbani’s casket, draped in a red, black and green national flag. A military band played the national anthem. Then the coffin was carried by uniformed servicemen with caps and white gloves, marching stiffly. A procession of vehicles, some bearing large portraits of Rabbani, showing him dignified in robes and with a long white beard, drove up a hill overlooking Kabul, the capital. There, the observances turned unruly. Gunfire erupted briefly, possibly because guards were jittery about the possibility of an attack. Supporters of the former president’s political faction, chanting and distraught, reached to touch the coffin. “Death to the foreign puppets,” they shouted. “Pakistan is our enemy.” The suicide attacker who killed Rabbani had a bomb in his turban, and gained entry to the former president’s home by convincing officials, including Karzai’s advisers, that he represented the Taliban leadership, based in the Pakistani city of Quetta, and wanted to discuss reconciliation. In Washington on Thursday, US Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, accused Pakistan’s powerful intelligence agency of backing extremists in planning and executing an assault on the US embassy in Afghanistan last week and a truck bomb attack that wounded 77 American soldiers days earlier . Mullen insisted that the Haqqani insurgent network “acts as a veritable arm” of Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence agency, or ISI, undermining the uneasy US-Pakistan relationship forged in the terror fight and endangering American troops in the nearly 10-year-old war in Afghanistan. “Death to the ISI,” shouted mourners at Rabbani’s funeral. Pakistan rejected the American claims that it is supporting extremist attacks on US troops. Some analysts believe Pakistan seeks to bolster its influence in Afghanistan as a way to counter the regional influence of India, its longtime rival. Pakistani foreign minister Hina Rabbani Khar warned the US that it risked losing Pakistan as an ally and could not afford to alienate the Pakistani government or its people. “If they are choosing to do so, it will be at their own cost,” Khar told Geo TV on Thursday from New York, where she was attending a UN general assembly meeting. “Anything which is said about an ally, about a partner publicly to recriminate it, to humiliate it is not acceptable.” Khar’s comments were first aired in Pakistan on Friday. Pakistan’s prime minister, Yousuf Raza Gilani, responded to the US criticism by saying Washington was in a tough spot. “They can’t live with us. They can’t live without us,” Gilani told reporters on Friday in the southern city of Karachi. “So, I would say to them that if they can’t live without us, they should increase contacts with us to remove misunderstandings.” Rabbani’s mourners, many belonging to a political faction that opposes Karzai, gathered around the coffin as it was lowered into the ground and also lashed out at the Afghan government as well as the United States, which backs the Afghan president. The 70-year-old Rabbani was the leader of Afghanistan’s Northern Alliance, which helped overthrow Taliban rule during the US-led invasion in 2001. His death deepens rifts between the country’s ethnic minorities, especially between those who made up the Northern Alliance – including Tajiks like Rabbani – and the majority Pashtun, who make up the backbone of the Taliban. Karzai, who is Pashtun, had appointed Rabbani to Afghanistan’s High Peace Council, which was seeking to reconcile the country’s warring factions. It has made little headway since it was formed a year ago, but it is backed by many in the international community as helping move toward a settlement. US ambassador Ryan Crocker was among those attending the funeral ceremony at the presidential palace. Iran’s state media said Ali Akbar Velayati, a former Iranian foreign minister and confidant of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, led the Iranian delegation. “Today we are witnessing one of the biggest and saddest events of this important political time in the history of the world,” said Salahuddin Rabbani, the former president’s son. He urged the Afghan government to aggressively investigate the killing. Also, Nato forces said two service members died following a bomb attack in eastern Afghanistan on Friday. The deaths bring to 436 the number of international troops killed so far this year in Afghanistan. Afghanistan Hamid Karzai Taliban guardian.co.uk

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Strauss-Kahn to face French accuser before judge

Former IMF chief and Tristane Banon, who accuses him of trying to rape her in 2003, must appear at judge’s chambers The former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn and the woman who accuses him of trying to rape her in 2003 have been ordered to appear before a judge as part of an investigation into the case, the Paris prosecutor’s office said on Friday. Tristane Banon, a French writer, says Strauss-Kahn attacked her while she was interviewing him in 2003, when he was a senior figure in the opposition Socialist party. He has derided her version of the events as imaginary and sued her for slander. Strauss-Kahn has already undergone one legal battle this year after being charged with trying to rape a hotel maid in New York. Those charges were dropped, but not before he resigned as head of the International Monetary Fund and lost his chance to run in France’s forthcoming presidential election, in which he was considered a leading contender. He still faces a civil suit in that case. Banon lodged her complaint after Strauss-Kahn’s arrest in New York in May , saying her mother and others had discouraged her from speaking out earlier because Strauss-Kahn was so powerful. The prosecutor’s office is investigating the accusations, but has not yet decided whether to bring charges. It gave no date for the meeting, which is sometimes part of criminal investigations in France, particularly in cases that rest largely on conflicting testimony. Banon and Strauss-Kahn are asked to face each other in a judge’s chambers and recount their stories. They have already spoken to police. Dominique Strauss-Kahn France Europe guardian.co.uk

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Strauss-Kahn to face French accuser before judge

Former IMF chief and Tristane Banon, who accuses him of trying to rape her in 2003, must appear at judge’s chambers The former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn and the woman who accuses him of trying to rape her in 2003 have been ordered to appear before a judge as part of an investigation into the case, the Paris prosecutor’s office said on Friday. Tristane Banon, a French writer, says Strauss-Kahn attacked her while she was interviewing him in 2003, when he was a senior figure in the opposition Socialist party. He has derided her version of the events as imaginary and sued her for slander. Strauss-Kahn has already undergone one legal battle this year after being charged with trying to rape a hotel maid in New York. Those charges were dropped, but not before he resigned as head of the International Monetary Fund and lost his chance to run in France’s forthcoming presidential election, in which he was considered a leading contender. He still faces a civil suit in that case. Banon lodged her complaint after Strauss-Kahn’s arrest in New York in May , saying her mother and others had discouraged her from speaking out earlier because Strauss-Kahn was so powerful. The prosecutor’s office is investigating the accusations, but has not yet decided whether to bring charges. It gave no date for the meeting, which is sometimes part of criminal investigations in France, particularly in cases that rest largely on conflicting testimony. Banon and Strauss-Kahn are asked to face each other in a judge’s chambers and recount their stories. They have already spoken to police. Dominique Strauss-Kahn France Europe guardian.co.uk

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Strauss-Kahn to face French accuser before judge

Former IMF chief and Tristane Banon, who accuses him of trying to rape her in 2003, must appear at judge’s chambers The former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn and the woman who accuses him of trying to rape her in 2003 have been ordered to appear before a judge as part of an investigation into the case, the Paris prosecutor’s office said on Friday. Tristane Banon, a French writer, says Strauss-Kahn attacked her while she was interviewing him in 2003, when he was a senior figure in the opposition Socialist party. He has derided her version of the events as imaginary and sued her for slander. Strauss-Kahn has already undergone one legal battle this year after being charged with trying to rape a hotel maid in New York. Those charges were dropped, but not before he resigned as head of the International Monetary Fund and lost his chance to run in France’s forthcoming presidential election, in which he was considered a leading contender. He still faces a civil suit in that case. Banon lodged her complaint after Strauss-Kahn’s arrest in New York in May , saying her mother and others had discouraged her from speaking out earlier because Strauss-Kahn was so powerful. The prosecutor’s office is investigating the accusations, but has not yet decided whether to bring charges. It gave no date for the meeting, which is sometimes part of criminal investigations in France, particularly in cases that rest largely on conflicting testimony. Banon and Strauss-Kahn are asked to face each other in a judge’s chambers and recount their stories. They have already spoken to police. Dominique Strauss-Kahn France Europe guardian.co.uk

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Ahmadinejad: It’s Not Too Late to Fix US Ties

Hours after criticizing America so fiercely that US diplomats stormed out of the UN General Assembly, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Thursday that time has not run out for the two countries to repair their bad relationship. (Sept. 23)

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Ahmadinejad: It’s Not Too Late to Fix US Ties

Hours after criticizing America so fiercely that US diplomats stormed out of the UN General Assembly, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Thursday that time has not run out for the two countries to repair their bad relationship. (Sept. 23)

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Ahmadinejad: It’s Not Too Late to Fix US Ties

Hours after criticizing America so fiercely that US diplomats stormed out of the UN General Assembly, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Thursday that time has not run out for the two countries to repair their bad relationship. (Sept. 23)

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CERN scientists discover particle traveling faster than the speed of light, Einstein theory threatened

It ain’t over till the LHC says so , which is why researchers at CERN are opening up their most recent OPERA experiment to the scientific community before officially releasing its findings. Why, you ask? Because the experiment could shatter one of the fundamentals of physics — Einstein’s theory of special relativity , which says nothing in the universe can travel faster than the speed of light. While studying neutrino oscillations — where particles shift from one type of subatomic particle (muon-neutrinos) to another (tau-neutrinos) — scientists clocked a beam of muon-neutrinos outpacing the aforesaid ray of light by 60 nanoseconds. Calling the result “crazy,” lead scientist Antonio Ereditato published the findings online, hoping to attract the attention of others who might shed some light on what it all means . We’re not expecting a conclusive answer any time soon, but budding whiz-kids can get educated in the links below. CERN scientists discover particle traveling faster than the speed of light, Einstein theory threatened originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 23 Sep 2011 06:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Speed Of Light

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Speed Of Light

SOMETHIN FASTER THEN THE SPEED OF LIGHT?! Have Scientists Proved Einstein Theory Wrong Einstein debunked – Speed of light ‘broken’ by scientists – Telegraph StaberzZ says: The speed of light might not be the fastest a particle can travel but global warming is a settled theory? http://t.co/7qxZTikF #AlGore

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