Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark hasn’t officially opened yet, but people are already shelling out up to $275 a ticket to see it—and considering its opening has already been pushed back five times, many news organizations “skirted Broadway protocol” and reviewed the show today, since its last official opening…
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Continue reading …A Los Angeles teen has confessed to killing his mother, dismembering her, and storing the body parts in a freezer, police say. Moises Meraz-Espinoza allegedly kept the remains stored for a week before walking into a police station and turning himself in, ABC News reports.
Continue reading …Amr Moussa, a career diplomat, has style, charisma and the common touch, say those who know him Amr Moussa , the former Egyptian foreign minister and current secretary general of the Arab League , knows public opinion appreciates his style and charisma, and since the start of the upheaval in Cairo he has made it increasingly clear that he wishes to play a part in a possible political transition. In an interview broadcast by the news channel Al-Arabiya, he went so far as to offer his services to the cause. Moussa, 74, is a typical high-ranking Egyptian official. He started as a career diplomat at a time when his country was still the undisputed leader of the Arab world. He was appointed ambassador to India in 1983, then moved to the UN, taking over from Ahmed Asmat Abdel Meghid, who had just been appointed foreign minister by President Hosni Mubarak. The same pattern was repeated in 1991 when Mubarak gave him Meghid’s job at the head of the Egyptian diplomatic service, one of the most efficient in the region. Ten years later, Moussa took over from Meghid at the head of the Arab League. During his time at the foreign ministry, in a plush building on the banks of the Nile, Moussa earned considerable respect. Under his guidance Egypt brought its policy back into line with other Arab nations, after being ostracised following the Camp David accords in 1978 and the subsequent signature of a separate peace treaty with Israel. Moussa combines the unique experience of normalised relations (at least until October 1994 when Israel and Jordan signed a peace treaty) with a degree of criticism regarding Israeli policy, which has contributed to his popularity. He tried (unsuccessfully) to make Egypt one of the arbitrators of the 1993 Oslo Accords [on settlement of the Israeli-Palestinian dispute], alongside the US. When Mubarak decided to put him in charge of the Arab League, which is headquartered in Cairo not far from the foreign ministry, some Egyptian commentators concluded that the president was trying to sideline a public figure who was becoming uncomfortably popular. Certainly the League is a much less attractive post, paralysed as it is by the countless divisions within the Arab world and sometimes even in competition with the powerful Organisation of the Islamic Conference (set up by Saudi Arabia for precisely that purpose). “Moussa combines several assets,” says an Arab diplomat who knows him well. “He has the experience, a very solid international address book and bags of charisma. He also has the common touch, much more than someone like Mohamed ElBaradei, who is typically upper middle class.” Moussa was born in 1936, the same year as the new vice president, Omar Suleiman, so he can hardly embody the future. But he could well play a key role in the coming transition. This article originally appeared in Le Monde Egypt guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …At least 297 people have been killed in Egypt’s uprising, and that estimate is expected to rise significantly in the days ahead, Human Rights Watch announced yesterday, after touring Egypt’s hospitals and morgues. The lion’s share of those deaths—232—occurred in Cairo, the Huffington Post reports, with smaller tolls…
Continue reading …Colonels from North and South Korea held talks inside the heavily guarded Demilitarized Zone today in the rivals’ first official dialogue since the North’s deadly artillery barrage of a South Korean island in November. In the border village of Panmunjom, the two sides worked to set a date and logistics…
Continue reading …As countries like Tunisia and Egypt ask themselves what’s next, one country in the region has fashioned itself as a role model for successful democracy. The reason? Turkey appears – so far – to have successfully married its secular institutions with a majority Muslim society. Al Jazeera’s Anita McNaught has more from Istanbul.
Continue reading …China pumped up its interest rates for the third time in four months today, in a desperate attempt to rein in inflation. One-year deposit rates rose to 3%, and the one-year lending rate to 6.06%, the New York Times reports, and analysts expect still more increases down the road.
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