Abidjan residents begin to return to normal life days after capture of rogue leader, amid reports of continued violence in Yopougon The long queue zigzagging outside a reopened bakery on Wednesday hinted at a city rediscovering itself. It was one of several signs that Abidjan, the commercial capital of Ivory Coast, could be returning to something like normality two days after the capture of its rogue president, Laurent Gbagbo. Just down the street, formerly the scene of fierce combat, hundreds of people milled around fruit and vegetable stalls. A minibus pulled up and women stepped out carrying crates of eggs. At nearby restaurants, people smiled and waved at passing French military patrols. Some petrol stations reopened, communal taxis were operating and water and electricity, cut off by 10 days of fighting, were restored to most neighbourhoods, residents said. The UN Children’s Fund, Unicef, was able to deliver supplies such as medicine, soap and blankets to the city for the first time in weeks. But people were forced to step over the detritus of battle and several burnt bodies could still be seen in grasslands – one, a young man, clutching a bunch of fruit. “Life is gradually returning to normal, shops have reopened as well as pharmacies,” Mariam Kone, in the southern district of Koumassi, told Reuters. “At night, though, there is still shooting by those who have weapons. They are not happy at all that Gbagbo’s gone.” There were reports of continued violence in Yopougon, a pro-Gbagbo stronghold. “There’s a lot of submachine gunfire and we don’t know who is doing the shooting,” Stella Gogo, a resident, told Reuters. Amnesty International reported that on Tuesday armed men, some wearing military uniforms, carried out house-to-house searches in real or perceived pro-Gbagbo neighbourhoods. One witness told the rights group how a policeman from Gbagbo’s ethnic group was taken from his house and shot dead at point-blank range. Footage has emerged showing forces loyal to Gbagbo’s rival, Alassane Ouattara, walking through the front gate of Gbagbo’s presidential residence carrying firearms. Many are dressed in camouflage and wearing helmets, and some are crouched in shooting position. After orders from a commander, fighters enter the property by shooting at the lock and forcing their way inside. The footage, shot by a pro-Ouattara fighter and obtained by Associated Press, shows fighters putting a camouflage flak jacket on Gbagbo. He and his wife are then escorted to a car with a tank sitting nearby. On a visit to the residence on Wednesday, the Guardian observed burned-out armoured vehicles, wrecked cars and discarded uniforms. The front entrance was battered. A sign for Gbagbo’s elite republican guard lay lopsided. French soldiers fired teargas to deter would-be looters. In one part of the compound, a building that contained a prison cell was littered with grenades, newspapers and upturned beds, while outside a guitar rested on a fridge beside two neatly packed leather suitcases. A pristine picture of Gbagbo was on the wall. Outside, curiously, amid discarded sofas and mattresses, was a blackboard on which was chalked: “Beyonce, I love you.” Philippe Mangou, Gbagbo’s ex-army chief of staff, called on all soldiers to report to their base to serve under Ouattara’s army, the Republican Forces of Ivory Coast. Ouattara said Gbagbo had been moved out of the Golf hotel, where he was taken after his capture on Monday. He said Gbagbo would be kept in a villa and his rights as a former head of state would be respected. “Gbagbo is in a residence under surveillance somewhere in Ivory Coast,” Ouattara said. “There will be charges [against Gbagbo] on a national level and an international level. Reconciliation cannot happen without justice.” He said he had phoned South Africa’s president, Jacob Zuma, for advice about setting up a credible and independent truth and reconciliation committee. Ouattara repeated his call against violence, and said all minors being held should be released immediately. “We need to secure the country, notably Abidjan,” he said. “It is important for the country to emerge from this crisis on top.” Ivory Coast Laurent Gbagbo Alassane Ouattara David Smith guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Live stream is now over. Open thread on the speech below….
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Rep. John Boehner said in a presser leading up to President Obama’s deficit speech that he fully supports Paul Ryan’s budget proposal, especially the medicare destruction element of his plan. With the entire GOP leadership by his side, all of them are now attached to Ryan’s “Path to Destruction” budget proposal. Boehner: I fully support Paul Ryan’s budget including his efforts on Medicare. This should be turned into an endless amount of commercials for the upcoming 2012 election. Earlier today it was reported that the GOP is are squirming over Ryan’s plan: Some Republicans are already squirming over a vote that provides a ready-made campaign ad for their opponents: Rep. Paul Ryan’s fiscal 2012 budget, which will restructure Medicare, alter Medicaid funding and slash $6 trillion from federal spending over 10 years. Whether they’re new lawmakers in formerly Democratic seats or House veterans who represent districts with large elderly populations dependent on Medicare, a significant number of Republicans realize that embracing the Ryan plan may be one of the most treacherous votes of the year. So rather than taking a strong stand, they’re hedging during the leadup to the roll call. Rep. Tim Murphy, a fifth-term Republican who represents a western Pennsylvania district south of Pittsburgh with roughly 17 percent of residents older than 65, is still undecided. Susan Mosychuk, Murphy’s chief of staff, said it’s a “high-profile vote” that they are “still taking a look at.” Even Tea Party queen Michele Bachmann hasn’t signed off on the crazy Ryan plan. How crazy is that? Dave Johnson: Republican Budget SO Loony Even The Nuts Think It’s Nuts! Even Bachmann! Saving the best for last, from the above-cited House GOP faces risky vote on Medicare, Medicaid , Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.), who is considering a presidential bid, said the plan “merits our full attention,” but didn’t go further. Whoa, even Rep. Michelle Bachmann thinks it’s nuts! When Michelle Bachman thinks something is nuts, you are waaaayyyy past nuts and into full-on, screaming, idiotic, crazy, frothing, hallucinating, straight-jacket-wrapped, padded-cell, chasing-with-a-net budget lunacy . Boehner has now rubber stamped Ryan’s budget and Deathcare proposals. Why do they want to hurt grandma so?
Continue reading …This week marks the 150th anniversary of the start of the Civil War. But there's another “civil war” of sorts on the horizon, this one between the ultra-liberal wing of the Democratic Party, which has thus far steadfastly refused to accept cuts to entitlement programs in the name of fiscal solvency, and the party's more moderate members (which include, amazingly, President Barack Obama and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi) who recognize that such cuts are all-but-inevitable. But true to form, most of the media, fond of labeling GOP infighting a civil war, has yet to brand Democrats' budget feud with that label. This despite the increasing uneasiness of liberal legislators and organizations who are worried the president has already caved to conservatives on the budget battle. In fact, some groups have gone beyond simply complaining about the apparent embrace of the Bowles-Simpson deficit reduction plan by the president (and key congressional Democrats, including Reps. Nancy Pelosi and Chris Van Hollen). The Progressive Chance Campaign Committee (PCCC) sent an email to its members on Tuesday encouraging them to withhold financial contributions to Obama's reelection campaign if his eventual plan includes any cuts to Medicare or Medicaid,
Continue reading …Federal Protective Service requests a German Burg Crono 2.0 tub costing more than Russian average annual wage It’s sweaty work being a bodyguard to Dmitry Medvedev – or so it seems after members of the president’s security detail ordered a £6,500 luxury bathtub. In Russia’s latest scandal over free-spending bureaucrats, the Federal Protective Service (FSO) asked for a German Burg Crono 2.0 mineral-cast tub costing more than the country’s average annual wage. The request could embarrass Medvedev, who has tried to forge an image as a crusader against corruption. Under Russian law, all government procurement orders must be published online. Medvedev tightened the system this year, but there have been a series of outrages over officials’ excessive tastes. This month clerks in Irkutsk ordered 25 fur hats at a cost of 500,000 roubles (£10,000). A spokesman said the “classic chocolate-brown sable ushankas for men” were intended for a “gift fund” rather than to warm the ears of chilly bigwigs in the Siberian town. Things were no better in the impoverished southern republic of Dagestan, where the finance minister, Abdusamad Gamidov, hastily retreated from an order for a £180,000 Audi saloon in February. He had second thoughts after the anti-graft campaigner Alexei Navalny published a blogpost on the subject. “I’m sure that most world presidents get around in more modest automobiles,” Navalny said. In 2009 the federal interior ministry offered to pay up to £87,000 for a hand-carved cherrywood bed with a headboard covered in 24-carat gold. The purchase caused an outcry but did not deter the finance ministry from ordering £50,000 of gilded furniture last summer. (It later said it would spend only half that amount.) Many of the prices named on the zakupki.gov.ru website are thought to be inflated to allow for kickbacks. Medvedev said in October that Russia lost £20bn in bribes every year. A spokesman for the FSO denied the 336,000-rouble bathtub was overpriced, telling a Russian newspaper it was “not some kind of short, sit-up job, like people buy for khrushchevki [Soviet-era apartment blocks].” Dmitry Medvedev Russia Tom Parfitt guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Angelino Alfano is steering through parliament a bill that could halt Silvio Berlusconi’s trial for alleged bribery Silvio Berlusconi has named as his likely successor a Sicilian minister who is poised to steer through parliament a bill that could halt the trial in which Italy’s prime minister is accused of bribing his British lawyer, David Mills. Speaking to foreign correspondents at a dinner on Tuesday night, the 74-year-old Berlusconi said he would not stand at the next general election in 2013 and indicated that Angelino Alfano, his 40-year-old justice minister, was the person to whom he intended entrusting his party. The dinner, attended by the Guardian, was held on an off-the-record basis. But a detailed account of the proceedings was leaked to the Italian news agency Ansa and published early on Wednesday. Additional reports appeared subsequently in the Italian media. According to the body that oversees the judiciary, some 14,000 trials would be halted by the new measure, which was being debated on Wednesday amid raucous scenes in the chamber of deputies, the lower house of parliament. The bill would apply a guillotine to legal proceedings in a court system notorious for delays. Critics maintain it is the latest of several measures expressly crafted to enable the prime minister escape justice. But Berlusconi and his followers have defended it as a contribution to speeding up court proceedings. The government had little difficulty in winning votes on amendments, suggesting the bill will be approved when the final division is held later. As a result, it is unlikely any action will now be taken against builders, officials and property developers suspected of responsibility for deaths in the 2009 L’Aquila earthquake. More than 300 people died, many of them in buildings allegedly constructed with sub-standard materials. An amendment to exclude the L’Aquila investigation from the terms of the bill was voted down by the government majority. Outside, relatives of the victims hurled insults at Berlusconi’s followers as they came in and out of the parliament building. Silvio Berlusconi Italy John Hooper guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …T-Mobile’s just gone official with the new unlimited plans we caught wind of a few days ago, and while they are truly unlimited by numbers, they’re not completely unlimited in functionality. The plans cost $79.99 for Even More customers (buy a subsidized device on contract) and $59.99 for Even More Plus subscribers (bring your own phone commitment-free). Either way this gets you unlimited data, domestic calling, and domestic messaging, with a $5 surcharge for BlackBerry users. Unlike Sprint’s similar offering , once you pass the 2GB bandwidth mark, “data speeds will be reduced for the remainder of that bill cycle,” essentially informing users that throttling will most certainly take place. In all, we’re pleased to see the compromise T-Mo’s put in place for data (whereas most other carriers are simply axing the unlimited option altogether), and we hope some of the competition takes heed. It does sound like a pretty sweet deal for those of you not grandfathered in on unlimited data plans. Still, for those of you interested, we suggest getting a jump on, as the (potentially leaked) press release reveals that these plans might only be available for a limited time. Update : And now it’s all official . Huzzah! Continue reading T-Mobile’s new plans get official: starting at $60 for unlimited everything, throttling included T-Mobile’s new plans get official: starting at $60 for unlimited everything, throttling included originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 12 Apr 2011 18:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Well, this might be a good reason for The Powers That Be to know your exact whereabouts. According to a team of MIT researchers, speeding up data rates on mobile devices could be as easy as tapping the various motion sensors found in run-of-the-mill smartphones. The scientists believe our wireless infrastructure is at the root of bottlenecks, with a handful of weak transmitters clumsily “handing off” data to one another as you move out of range. The solution: use GPS radios, accelerometers, and even gyroscopes to infer where you’re headed, and then choose an access point near where you’re likely to end up. The difference, they report, is dramatic: a 50 percent boost in throughput, along with improved success in choosing the best bit rate. To boot, if a base station is armed with location-based info, it can better predict when the devices connected to it are on the verge of losing contact. That’s all good news, but sadly we doubt any amount of promising science is enough to make the pink lady go away. Researchers use GPS, accelerometers to boost smartphone data rates originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 12 Apr 2011 21:56:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Until now, Samson’s Zoom H4n digital recorder has been a staple in niche music equipment stores like Sam Ash, Musician’s Friend, and Sweetwater, but a no-show in more mainstream retailers. Now the two year-old handheld is on sale at Best Buy, making it much easier to walk into a brick-and-mortar store and handle the thing a bit before deciding to shell out $299. The H4n’s undergone some minor upgrades since its debut , with the current model sporting built-in X/Y stereo condenser mics, a rubberized, shock-proof design, an improved UI, a new digitally controlled mic preamp, and the ability to use internal and external mics for four-channel recording. It comes with a 1GB SDHC card, but you can swap it for one as large as 32GB. Last but not least, there’s a tripod mount, making it easier to pair the device with a DSLR that could use some oomph in the audio department — you know, when you film your next My World 2.0 fan video next week. Continue reading Zoom H4n audio recorder goes mainstream, now available at Best Buy Zoom H4n audio recorder goes mainstream, now available at Best Buy originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 13 Apr 2011 03:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Remember the Razer Switchblade ? It’s that 7-inch multitouch gaming device with a fully tactile and adaptive keyboard. It first stole our attention as a Windows 7 concept on the way to wowing us with a hands-on in January. Well, we’ve now got the first official launch country: China, with the help of Tencent Holdings, China’s largest internet service portal. Unfortunately, we still don’t have final specs on the Oak Trail clamshell, a price, or even a date. Fear not rest of world — China’s just the first market announced in what appears to be an attempt to highlight a new partnership between Intel and Tencent. Today the two companies announced plans to staff a new research center with 60 engineers (expected to grow to 200, eventually) who’ll work together on products and services for tablets and gaming in the Chinese market. Good luck guys, we hear the Chintendo Vii is fiercely competitive. Razer Switchblade headed to China with help from Intel and Tencent originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 13 Apr 2011 05:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
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