Daily Report
Kyrgyzstan: opposition leader survives attack
More than a year after Kyrgyzstan's "Tulip Revolution," the supposed democratic renewal isn't looking too good, is it? President Kurmanbek Bakiyev, so recently a revolutionary leader, now warns against "lawlessness and anarchy" like a good despot. But is he Washington's son of a bitch now? Or are the neocons planning yet another revolution, deeming him insufficiently compliant? From Reuters, April 14:
Imam calls for peace after Delhi mosque blast
From Gulf News, United Arab Emirates, via TMCNet, April 15:
New Delhi: Delhi was put under red alert after two low-intensity blasts rocked the historic Jama Masjid yesterday.
Librarians previal in Patriot Act challenge
A glimmer of hope. From AP, April 12:
STAMFORD, Conn. -- Federal prosecutors said Wednesday they will no longer seek to enforce a gag order on Connecticut librarians who received an FBI demand for records about library patrons under the Patriot Act.
China: more anti-pollution protests
This wave of peasant protest is the first glimmer of real opposition in China since Tiananmen Square. Yet it is getting little media coverage, and the outside world is largely ignoring it. The protests have been sweeping the industrial heartland along the South China Sea coast for months, and some have been incredibly violent—almost paramilitary in their level of organization and militancy, if not weaponry. But is there any leadership or coordination? Or are the protests all still "spontaneous"? From Reuters, via Environmental News Network, April 13:
Greece: anarchists steal security cameras
From UPI, April 3:
HANIA, Greece — The director of the Mediterranean Architecture Center in Hania on the Greek island of Crete is incensed that all the center's security cameras have been stolen.
Pakistan: army patrols strife-torn Karachi
And this is the "stable" country and chief US ally in the region. Interesting how Pakistan's internal conflicts have spun out of control since the US established it as a staging ground for destabilzing and then policing neighboring Afghanistan. From AFP, April 13:
KARACHI: The Pakistan government sent its army to Karachi on Thursday after unrest broke out ahead of funerals for Sunni Muslim leaders who were among 57 people killed in a suicide blast two days ago, officials said.
Afghanistan: rocket attack on schoolyard kills 7 kids
The Taliban denies it. So who did do it? AP, April 12:
ASADABAD, Afghanistan — A rocket exploded Tuesday in a schoolyard in eastern Afghanistan, killing seven students and wounding 34 other people in an attack possibly aimed at a nearby U.S. military base, officials said.
Iran could have a-bomb in 16 days ...or ten years
From Bloomberg, April 12:
Iran Could Produce Nuclear Bomb in 16 Days, U.S. Says
Iran, defying United Nations Security Council demands to halt its nuclear program, may be capable of making a nuclear bomb within 16 days, a U.S. State Department official said.

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