Mexico state elections stage battle for presidency

(Reuters) – Mexico’s ruling and main opposition parties wrested ground from each other in elections for governors in a dozen states on Sunday, setting the stage for a tough battle for the presidency in 2012.

Initial results showed President Felipe Calderon’s National Action Party, known as PAN, with surprise gubernatorial wins in three states controlled by the Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, which had been pegged to sweep the vote.

The PRI beat out rival parties and held onto governorships in the remaining nine states, building a base to launch a likely presidential bid by the party’s rising star, State of Mexico Governor Enrique Pena Nieto.

“This election proves the PRI is the leading political force in the country,” the party’s president, Beatriz Paredes, told a news conference.

Mexico’s divided left joined forces with Calderon’s conservatives in awkward alliances to win in PRI strongholds Oaxaca, Puebla and Sinaloa. The PRI, which ruled Mexico for 71 years as a semi-dictatorship, has been in the opposition for a decade after losing to the PAN in 2000.

Elections also were held for mayors and local deputies in nearly half of Mexico’s 31 states on Sunday.

Analysts say local issues determining state votes may not translate to a national win for either party in 2012 but the PRI hopes to capitalize on Calderon’s sinking popularity as the economy sputters and drug violence spins out of control.

Staining Calderon’s legacy, more than 26,000 people have been killed during his time in office, mostly traffickers and police but also civilian bystanders.

“I voted for the PRI because Calderon got us into this war where innocent people are paying the price,” said Jorge Lopez, 46, an unemployed builder in a shantytown full of drug dens and brothels in the northern border city of Ciudad Juarez.

Tit-for-tat murders to control smuggling routes have turned Ciudad Juarez into one of the world’s most violent cities.

Campaigning was blighted by drug gang intimidation as suspected cartel hitmen murdered two candidates.

It was some of the most blatant evidence of traffickers interfering in politics since Calderon came to power in late 2006 and launched a army-lead drug crackdown that has ended up fueling more violence as cartels splinter and feud over turf.

INVESTORS SPOOKED

Investors sold off Mexico’s peso at the start of the week after Rodolfo Torre, the PRI front-runner for governor in the border state of Tamaulipas, and four aides were killed in an ambush by drug hitmen, Mexico’s highest-profile political murder in 16 years.

Egidio Torre replaced his dead brother as candidate and won after casting his own vote under heavy guard.

A mayoral candidate in Tamaulipas, where the Gulf cartel is battling a gang of former enforcers called the Zetas, was also murdered in a likely drug hit aimed at swaying the vote.

Election day was not free of drug violence. In several states there were reports of irregularities and vote-buying. Long lines formed at polling stations in Tamaulipas after some 40 percent of election volunteers quit fearing attacks.

In Chihuahua state there were at least 19 drug murders on Sunday, including the brother of a PAN mayoral candidate in the isolated town of Batopilas, police said. Four bodies were hung from bridges in Chihuahua’s capital.

Along the U.S-Mexico border cartels rule over semi-lawless swaths of territory employing networks of lookouts, from taxi drivers to taco-stand owners. Journalists there increasingly face threats and business owners pay regular extortion fees.

In many areas, the situation is deteriorating despite more than a $1 billion in anti-drug aid from the United States.

As well as being angry at Calderon, some voters blamed local PRI politicians for not doing more to stop the violence.

“The insecurity we are living in here is because of bad PRI governments. I can’t say anything more because it might cost me my life,” said a 55-year-old businessman in Reynosa, a major manufacturing city in Tamaulipas across from McAllen, Texas.

Mexico grapples with endemic corruption within state-level politics and a number of candidates have been accused by rivals of being on drug cartel payrolls.

Mexican media have reported that the sitting PRI governor of Tamaulipas has a bodyguard wanted by the United States on drug charges, while the left-wing mayor of the resort of Cancun is in jail awaiting trial on charges of laundering drug money.

The PRI’s Hector Murguia was elected mayor of Ciudad Juarez, early results showed, despite accusations from rivals and rights groups that he works for the feared Juarez cartel. This week a severed head was dumped outside his house.

(Additional reporting by Julian Cardona in Ciudad Juarez and Robin Emmott in Monterrey; Editing by Catherine Bremer and Bill Trott)

Mexico state elections stage battle for presidency

MEXICO CITY, July 4 (Reuters) – Mexico’s ruling and main opposition parties wrested ground from each other in elections for governors in a dozen states on Sunday, setting the stage for a tough battle for the presidency in 2012.

Initial results showed President Felipe Calderon’s National Action Party, known as PAN, with surprise gubernatorial wins in three states controlled by the Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, which had been pegged to sweep the vote.

The PRI beat out rival parties and held onto governorships in the remaining nine states, building a base to launch a likely presidential bid by the party’s rising star, State of Mexico Governor Enrique Pena Nieto.

“This election proves the PRI is the leading political force in the country,” the party’s president, Beatriz Paredes, told a news conference.

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Factbox on Mexico’s drug war [ID:nN28272853]

Snap analysis on Monday’s killing [ID:nN28222286]

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Mexico’s divided left joined forces with Calderon’s conservatives in awkward alliances to win in PRI strongholds Oaxaca, Puebla and Sinaloa. The PRI, which ruled Mexico for 71 years as a semi-dictatorship, has been in the opposition for a decade after losing to the PAN in 2000.

Elections also were held for mayors and local deputies in nearly half of Mexico’s 31 states on Sunday.

Analysts say local issues determining state votes may not translate to a national win for either party in 2012 but the PRI hopes to capitalize on Calderon’s sinking popularity as the economy sputters and drug violence spins out of control.

Staining Calderon’s legacy, more than 26,000 people have been killed during his time in office, mostly traffickers and police but also civilian bystanders.

“I voted for the PRI because Calderon got us into this war where innocent people are paying the price,” said Jorge Lopez, 46, an unemployed builder in a shantytown full of drug dens and brothels in the northern border city of Ciudad Juarez.

Tit-for-tat murders to control smuggling routes have turned Ciudad Juarez into one of the world’s most violent cities.

Campaigning was blighted by drug gang intimidation as suspected cartel hitmen murdered two candidates.

It was some of the most blatant evidence of traffickers interfering in politics since Calderon came to power in late 2006 and launched a army-lead drug crackdown that has ended up fueling more violence as cartels splinter and feud over turf.

INVESTORS SPOOKED

Investors sold off Mexico’s peso at the start of the week after Rodolfo Torre, the PRI front-runner for governor in the border state of Tamaulipas, and four aides were killed in an ambush by drug hitmen, Mexico’s highest-profile political murder in 16 years. [ID:nN28512369]

Egidio Torre replaced his dead brother as candidate and won after casting his own vote under heavy guard.

A mayoral candidate in Tamaulipas, where the Gulf cartel is battling a gang of former enforcers called the Zetas, was also murdered in a likely drug hit aimed at swaying the vote.

Election day was not free of drug violence. In several states there were reports of irregularities and vote-buying. Long lines formed at polling stations in Tamaulipas after some 40 percent of election volunteers quit fearing attacks.

In Chihuahua state there were at least 19 drug murders on Sunday, including the brother of a PAN mayoral candidate in the isolated town of Batopilas, police said. Four bodies were hung from bridges in Chihuahua’s capital.

Along the U.S-Mexico border cartels rule over semi-lawless swaths of territory employing networks of lookouts, from taxi drivers to taco-stand owners. Journalists there increasingly face threats and business owners pay regular extortion fees.

In many areas, the situation is deteriorating despite more than a $1 billion in anti-drug aid from the United States.

As well as being angry at Calderon, some voters blamed local PRI politicians for not doing more to stop the violence.

“The insecurity we are living in here is because of bad PRI governments. I can’t say anything more because it might cost me my life,” said a 55-year-old businessman in Reynosa, a major manufacturing city in Tamaulipas across from McAllen, Texas.

Mexico grapples with endemic corruption within state-level politics and a number of candidates have been accused by rivals of being on drug cartel payrolls.

Mexican media have reported that the sitting PRI governor of Tamaulipas has a bodyguard wanted by the United States on drug charges, while the left-wing mayor of the resort of Cancun is in jail awaiting trial on charges of laundering drug money.

The PRI’s Hector Murguia was elected mayor of Ciudad Juarez, early results showed, despite accusations from rivals and rights groups that he works for the feared Juarez cartel. This week a severed head was dumped outside his house. (Additional reporting by Julian Cardona in Ciudad Juarez and Robin Emmott in Monterrey; Editing by Catherine Bremer and Bill Trott)

Santos wins Colombia vote, heads to runoff

(Reuters) – Former Colombian Defense Minister Juan Manuel Santos took a big lead in the first round of a presidential election, but looked headed for a June runoff against rival Antanas Mockus, initial results said on Sunday.

World

Santos, an ally of President Alvaro Uribe, led with 46.8 percent of votes, while Mockus, a former Bogota mayor, had 21.38 percent with about 52 percent of polling stations counted, according to electoral authorities.

Neither candidate appeared likely to win the more than 50 percent votes to clinch outright victory.

A staunch Washington ally, Uribe steps down in August still popular after two terms dominated by his war against drug-trafficking rebels, and his pro-business approach that attracted foreign investment especially in oil and mining.

Santos, a U.S.- and British-educated economist, led early campaigning, but Mockus, the son of Lithuanian immigrants who is also a former university professor, surged with a Green Party campaign against graft and “politics as usual.”

Both front-runners say they will keep Uribe’s tough security and pro-market economic policies applauded by investors, and analysts see little long-term impact on the peso or local TES bonds whoever wins.

Polls show Colombians now more concerned with joblessness, education and healthcare than guerrilla violence, and many become weary of the scandals over human rights and corruption that blemished Uribe’s second term.

Alliances will be key in a second round. As head of Uribe’s U Party, Santos will seek out the Conservative and Cambio Radical parties. Mockus, whose Green Party, has few seats in Congress, claims the moderate middle ground.

The next leader inherits better security and investment but also a slow economic recovery, a wide deficit, double-digit unemployment and a trade dispute with Venezuela, where socialist President Hugo Chavez is riled over U.S. influence.

(Reporting by Bogota newsroom; Editing by Peter Cooney)

One in four Oz adults finds partner online

Sydney, April 19 (ANI): A survey has found that online dating is fast becoming popular in Australia, with one in four adults admitting to using the Internet to find a partner.

RSVP.com (owned by Fairfax Media, the publisher of the Herald) commissioned Nielsen to conduct the first comprehensive survey of online dating habits.

The Nielsen poll showed that 37 percent, many of whom are presumed to be in a relationship, said they would never go online to meet someone, while 38 percent said they are considering using online dating.

The poll also found that of the adults who had used dating sites, 33.6 percent reported a short-term relationship, 16.2 percent said they had a long-term relationship, 8.9 percent said they had married or were in a defacto relationship, and 2.7 per cent had children.

The initial results suggest that online dating is now part of the mainstream.

The survey showed that:

Of those who had used online dating, 62 percent had dated someone they met online, and that men were slightly more likely than women to use online dating services.

Most of those polled (72 percent) were seeking a serious relationship, but many were looking for friendship or just sex.

Nielsen polled 3057 people online in November and 3764 in January, with the data weighted to the general population.

The full results of the survey will be released later this year but NSW and Victorian data so far shows that while there were fewer NSW online daters (57.5 percent had tried online dating, compared with 64 percent in Victoria), they appeared to be more successful.

Almost 20 percent of NSW online daters had a serious long-term relationship, compared with 16.6 percent in Victoria, and 8.5 percent had married, compared with 5 percent in Victoria.

Almost a third of both Victorian and NSW online daters made a good friend whom they remained in contact with.

Asked what kind of relationship they were seeking (multiple responses were accepted), 72.7 percent nationwide said a serious, long-term relationship, 39 percent friendship, 18.5 percent marriage and 27 percent casual relationships.

Of those who had used online dating, almost half had a profile and were monitoring it. Another 19 percent had a profile but didn”t check it often and 31percent had removed a profile.

The Fairfax Digital group-marketing director, Lija Jarvis, said when she began working on RSVP four years ago, online dating was still something that was vaguely embarrassing.

“That stigma has definitely dropped because people are advocating for it, talking with their friends, sharing stories with families,” the Sydney Morning Herald quoted her as saying.

Since RSVP began tracking marriages in 2003 more than 8000 members have contacted them to report they had married someone they met online.

The poll showed that the biggest group dating online were those had been single for five or more years (38.4 percent), followed by those who had been single for one to two years (26.7 percent).

Those who had been single for less than six months (17.6 percent) and those who had been single for seven to 12 months (16.5 per cent) also used online dating services.

The most popular dating websites among those polled were RSVP (54 percent), Adult Match Maker (21 percent), eHarmony (20 percent) and Oasis Active (19 percent). (ANI)

One in four Oz adults finds partner online

Sydney, April 19 (ANI): A survey has found that online dating is fast becoming popular in Australia, with one in four adults admitting to using the Internet to find a partner.

RSVP.com (owned by Fairfax Media, the publisher of the Herald) commissioned Nielsen to conduct the first comprehensive survey of online dating habits.

The Nielsen poll showed that 37 percent, many of whom are presumed to be in a relationship, said they would never go online to meet someone, while 38 percent said they are considering using online dating.

The poll also found that of the adults who had used dating sites, 33.6 percent reported a short-term relationship, 16.2 percent said they had a long-term relationship, 8.9 percent said they had married or were in a defacto relationship, and 2.7 per cent had children.

The initial results suggest that online dating is now part of the mainstream.

The survey showed that:

Of those who had used online dating, 62 percent had dated someone they met online, and that men were slightly more likely than women to use online dating services.

Most of those polled (72 percent) were seeking a serious relationship, but many were looking for friendship or just sex.

Nielsen polled 3057 people online in November and 3764 in January, with the data weighted to the general population.

The full results of the survey will be released later this year but NSW and Victorian data so far shows that while there were fewer NSW online daters (57.5 percent had tried online dating, compared with 64 percent in Victoria), they appeared to be more successful.

Almost 20 percent of NSW online daters had a serious long-term relationship, compared with 16.6 percent in Victoria, and 8.5 percent had married, compared with 5 percent in Victoria.

Almost a third of both Victorian and NSW online daters made a good friend whom they remained in contact with.

Asked what kind of relationship they were seeking (multiple responses were accepted), 72.7 percent nationwide said a serious, long-term relationship, 39 percent friendship, 18.5 percent marriage and 27 percent casual relationships.

Of those who had used online dating, almost half had a profile and were monitoring it. Another 19 percent had a profile but didn”t check it often and 31percent had removed a profile.

The Fairfax Digital group-marketing director, Lija Jarvis, said when she began working on RSVP four years ago, online dating was still something that was vaguely embarrassing.

“That stigma has definitely dropped because people are advocating for it, talking with their friends, sharing stories with families,” the Sydney Morning Herald quoted her as saying.

Since RSVP began tracking marriages in 2003 more than 8000 members have contacted them to report they had married someone they met online.

The poll showed that the biggest group dating online were those had been single for five or more years (38.4 percent), followed by those who had been single for one to two years (26.7 percent).

Those who had been single for less than six months (17.6 percent) and those who had been single for seven to 12 months (16.5 per cent) also used online dating services.

The most popular dating websites among those polled were RSVP (54 percent), Adult Match Maker (21 percent), eHarmony (20 percent) and Oasis Active (19 percent). (ANI)

First GM bananas harvested

Researchers say the first genetically modified (GM) bananas to be harvested in Australia are showing positive early results.

The crop was planted last year in the South Johnstone area, south of Cairns in far north Queensland, and the first fruit has now been harvested.

It is part of a trial to try to increase the vitamin and mineral content of bananas for consumption in East Africa.

Professor James Dale from the Queensland University of Technology says the initial results are exciting.

“This first planting is demonstrating that at least one of the combinations of genes we’re putting is working really well for pro vitamin A, and we’re concentrating on that,” he said.

“But we’ve still got a lot of fruit to assess. The next lot will be particularly around iron and the accumulation of iron in the fruit.”

A week on, Maliki pulls ahead in Iraq race

(Reuters) – Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki pulled ahead on Sunday in early results of an election Iraqis hoped would end years of sectarian strife, but a divided vote suggested long and fraught talks to form a government are ahead.

World

Early results showed Maliki’s State of Law bloc ahead in seven of 18 provinces, with the Iraqiya list headed by former Prime Minister Iyad Allawi in second place, leading in five.

The Iraqi National Alliance (INA), Maliki’s main competitor among Iraq’s Shi’ite majority, trailed close behind, the last of three blocs leading a divided vote that reflects a nation fragmented by decades of sectarian and ethnic conflict.

The outcome of Iraq’s first parliamentary poll since 2005 will shape its future as nascent stability is tested by the coming U.S. troop withdrawal and political struggles undermining Iraq’s efforts to re-establish itself on the world stage.

Maliki, who many Iraqis credit for improving security, won almost twice as many votes as the INA in southern Basra, ground zero for a wave of new investment into Iraq’s rich oil sector.

Allawi’s Iraqiya, a secularist, cross-sectarian list, was a distance third in Basra, but initial results showed him sweeping western Anbar, a stronghold for minority Sunnis whose long political dominance ended with Saddam Hussein’s ouster in 2003.

Allawi, a secular Shi’ite, also galvanized support among Sunni Arab voters in northern Nineveh, still gripped by a tenacious Sunni Islamist insurgency.

The early results represent more than 3 million votes of about 12 million cast. Final results are not expected for weeks.

Anxious politicians have criticized Iraq’s Independent High Electoral Commission (IHEC) for delaying results for days, heightening tension and drawing attention to charges of fraud.

Maliki, in an address to the National Security Council on national television, acknowledged that the March 7 vote had some problems but said that no election had “zero violations.”

“There was manipulation,” he said. “But it does not change the results.”

Allawi’s Iraqiya list has put forward a long list of complaints about fraud, including ballots found in the garbage and more than 200,000 soldiers who were unable to vote because their names did not appear on official rosters.

IHEC officials say almost 2,000 complaints were logged, far less than in provincial elections last year. The United Nations, which has been coaching IHEC before and after the vote, has downplayed the complaints.

HARD-BOILED POLITICS

Even before a complete national picture emerges, political maneuvering has already kicked into high gear. While Maliki may have fared well, no bloc is expected to win an outright majority and Maliki would likely be forced to ally with other groups.

Both Allawi and the INA have held meetings with minority Kurds, who may prove kingmakers of the day, and Arab politicians are reaching across party lines to explore possible alliances.

While it is too early to say who the ruling coalition may include, a strong showing for Maliki could weaken demands from resentful rivals that he be barred from a second term.

Abdul Hadi al-Hasani, a senior State of Law politician, said State of Law was considering alliance with Kurds and with the INA. Neither had it ruled out allying with Allawi, he said.

Allawi has been a fierce critic of Maliki, especially when the prime minister supported a ban of hundreds of candidates suspected of ties to Saddam’s Baath party, including a senior Sunni candidate on Allawi’s list.

Even such animosity may not be an obstacle to alliance in the hard-boiled politics that has characterized post-2003 Iraq.

Yahya al-Kubaisy, a researcher at the Iraq Institute for Strategic Studies, warned that a government excluding Iraqiya risked further alienating Sunnis. “If this happens we must expect a return of violence to Iraq,” he said.

A list including two powerful Kurdish parties, Iraqi President Jalal Talabani’s Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) and Kurdish President Masoud Barzani’s Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), are sure to try to extract concessions on the disputed oil city of Kirkuk, which they claim as their own.

The parties dominated Kurdish provinces, but they faced an unprecedented challenge from the reform-minded Goran group.

Khaled Suleiman, an analyst in northern Iraq, said that despite the new fissure in Kurdish politics, Kurdish parties would speak with a single voice in Baghdad, “especially on issues related to Kurdish destiny.”

The presidency may be another bargaining chip.

Kurds have reacted angrily to assertions from some Arab politicians, including Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi, a Sunni Arab, that Iraq’s next president should be an Arab.

They have again put forward Talabani, an elder statesmen and perhaps the most widely embraced Kurdish politician.

“We further believe that the people of Kurdistan, as a major component of Iraq, must be represented,” a statement from the office of the Kurdistan president said.

(Additional reporting by Aseel Kami, Waleed Ibrahim, Suadad al-Salhy and Sherko Raouf in Sulaimaniya; Writing by Missy Ryan and Jim Loney; Editing by Matthew Jones)

Analysts view: Early results from Iraq’s election

(Reuters) – Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki’s State of Law coalition pulled ahead in early results released from Iraq’s March 7 national polls.

World

Maliki’s bloc is trailed by former Prime Minister Iyad Allawi’s Iraqiya list, a cross-sectarian, secularist group that fared well in Sunni areas, and the Iraqi National Alliance (INA), a rival to Maliki for the Shi’ite vote that is dominated by the Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council (ISCI).

The vote remains fragmented, and no single bloc is expected to win a majority, which suggests a long and fractious road to forming a government lies ahead.

In northern Iraq, the ruling Kurdish alliance dominated largely autonomous Kurdistan and was running slightly behind in the disputed city of Kirkuk. But Goran, a Kurdish reform movement, was eating away at the alliance’s hegemony.

Below are initial assessments from Iraqi and foreign analysts on what the initial results mean for Iraq.

TOBY DODGE, ANALYST, QUEEN MARY, UNIVERSITY OF LONDON

“It now appears to be all about the coalition. If Maliki is strong enough to build the group that can keep him in power and if so, on what ideological basis; sectarianism or some form on nationalism?

“Given his behavior during the campaign, I would bet on sectarianism and some form of alliance with all or elements of the Iraqi National Alliance (INA).”

WAYNE WHITE, SCHOLAR AT THE MIDDLE EAST INSTITUTE

“A sizeable Allawi win in the north and west could generate even more robust efforts to disqualify him and others running on the Iraqiya slate following the election.

“Although the margin is very slim at present with around a third of the votes still to be tallied, an Iraqiya win in Kirkuk, probably would trigger much greater tension there as Kurds press even harder to have the city placed under Kurdish domination once and for all.

“A very narrow triumph on the part of either Iraqiya or the Kurds in Kirkuk almost certainly would spawn a wave of fraud accusations on the part of the losers.”

REIDAR VISSER, IRAQ EXPERT, WWW.HISTORAE.ORG

“Maliki’s lead is convincing in Baghdad and areas to the south, but he is not performing well at all in the Sunni-dominated areas north of Baghdad. Iraq could end up with a situation where the party of the prime minister only has 1-2 percent in key areas like Anbar and Mosul.

“The de-Baathification campaign has clearly reduced his ability to rise above sectarianism and act as a national leader. Allawi is doing better in Shi’ite areas than Maliki is doing in Sunni areas, but the problem is that he may get a smaller total number of deputies and therefore will need more coalition partners to form a government.”

DAVID MACK, FORMER U.S. AMBASSADOR AND SCHOLAR AT THE MIDDLE

EAST INSTITUTE

“If Maliki does in fact get the plurality of the vote, he will need coalition partners to form a government, and he will need a cross-sectarian coalition to form a government that will have a good chance of bringing long-term stability to Iraq.”

AQIL ABDUL HUSSEIN, PROFESSOR AT BASRA UNIVERSITY

“The results (in Basra, where Maliki has a large lead) were to a large extent predictable. They reflect the feelings of Basra residents, who have taken note of progress and security improvements over the past two years.

“I believe this election, and even quarrelling over the results, is a healthy experience and a step forward for Iraq’s democratic experience.”

DAVID NEWTON, FORMER U.S. AMBASSADOR TO IRAQ

“It probably means that (Maliki) gets first shot at forming a government. It remains to be seen which direction he will go. If he goes toward (ISCI) it will be taken very badly by the Sunnis.

“I think it’s going to be another wild ride to see which way it goes. Iraqis seem to be able to solve things at 10 minutes after midnight after giving us quite a ride along the way.”

KHALED SULEIMAN, POLITICAL ANALYST IN NORTHERN IRAQ

“The victory of the Kurdish alliance over Goran and the opposition parties was an expected result.

“It’s hoped that in coming days Kurds will close ranks especially on issues related to Kurdish destiny such as recovering Kirkuk and the issue of Peshmerga (Kurdish forces).

“Kurds will have political weight. No government can be formed without Kurds. They are the fundamental part of Iraqi politics.”

(Reporting by Aref Mohammed in Basra, Sherko Raouf in Sulaimaniya, Shamal Aqrawi in Arbil, Jim Loney in Baghdad; compiled by Missy Ryan; Editing by Samia Nakhoul)

Uribe allies win Colombia Congress vote

(Reuters) – Colombian President Alvaro Uribe’s governing party and allies won a majority in Sunday’s congressional elections in a test of the country’s political pulse before a May presidential vote to succeed the U.S. ally.

World

Uribe’s U Party and Conservative Party secured most seats in the Senate, according to partial tallies. But tight results between the allies may split the coalition if candidates from both parties run in the presidential election on May 30.

The conservative leader remains popular after taking the fight to FARC guerrillas and drug traffickers. Colombia’s war has ebbed and investment this year should reach $10 billion from $2 billion when Uribe first came to power in 2002.

The solid showing by Uribe’s U Party on Sunday benefits Juan Manuel Santos, a former defense minister who is ahead in opinion polls and says he is the candidate to continue Uribe’s fight against rebels from the FARC, or Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia.

But Santos does not have the support to avoid a second round in June, and the close result in Congress could convince Conservatives to ignore a Santos proposal for a unity candidate and run their own presidential bid in the first round in May.

“The U Party, the party of President Uribe, has won,” Santos said in a speech to supporters. “These results consolidate us once again.”

Uribe’s U Party won 27 seats in the 102-seat Senate, the Conservative Party won 24 and the opposition Liberal Party 18 seats, according to initial results from election officials.

The U Party and the Conservative Party together also won the most votes for the 166-seat lower house of parliament, according to preliminary tallies on the electoral agency Website. Full results were still trickling in.

Uribe’s alliance, made up of his U Party, the Conservative Party, Cambio Radical Party and a group of smaller parties, held a majority of 68 seats in the Senate and a 107-seat majority in the lower house before Sunday’s vote.

“Former defense minister Juan Manuel Santos seems to be the best positioned candidate,” Goldman Sachs analyst Alberto Ramos said. “The fact that Mr Santos’ party was the most voted might facilitate a political alliance in Congress with other parties that supported the Uribe administration.”

SPLINTER IN ALLIANCE

But Cambio Radical has already distanced itself from the government and its own candidate, veteran lawmaker German Vargas Lleras, is campaigning for the presidency.

The Conservative Party — a key alliance member — also held its internal election on Sunday to decide a presidential candidate, which could splinter the coalition if the winner decides to face Santos rather than support him.

The two favorites are Noemi Sanin, a former defense minister who promises to run on her party’s ticket, and Andres Felipe Arias, an Uribe ally who had said he would consider a unity candidate with the U Party.

But a strong Conservative showing could prompt him to run in the first round. Arias was edging ahead of Sanin in the ballot, according to partial results.

Colombia’s election race heated up in February when a court ruled Uribe could not run for a third term. But any candidate to replace him likely will adhere to his popular security and investment policies in Latin America’s No. 4 oil producer.

Investors see any successful candidate offering continuity and see little impact on Colombia’s peso currency or local TES bonds. The peso has appreciated 24 percent against the dollar over the last 12 months.

Guerrillas often dominated past elections with bombings, kidnappings and attacks. But Sunday’s vote went ahead with little violence, a sign of the success of Uribe’s U.S.-financed campaign against Latin America’s oldest insurgency.

The next government will need a majority in Congress to push through health reforms and changes to the pension and tax systems and rigid financial transfers to regional administrations — matters key to tackling Colombia’s fiscal deficit.

During Uribe’s second term, the Congress was caught up in a scandal tying dozens of lawmakers to paramilitaries who smuggled drugs and massacred peasants in the name of counter-insurgency before disarming under his government.

The PIN Party, an alliance that included relatives of former lawmakers jailed in the scandal, on Sunday won eight seats and became the fourth largest force in the Senate.

Violence and kidnapping from the war has dropped sharply, but a report by the national ombudsman said illegal armed groups had still been a risk to voting in a third of Colombia’s more than 1,000 municipalities.

(Editing by Cynthia Osterman and Stacey Joyce)

Skin transplant raises hope for vitiligo patients

Washington, Mar 10 (ANI): Doctors at Henry Ford Hospital have shown that skin transplant surgery is safe and effective for treating vitiligo.

In their study, Henry Ford researchers followed 23 patients for up to six months after surgery and found that the treated area regained on average 52 percent of its natural skin color. In eight patients with a specific type of vitiligo, the treated area regained on average 74 percent of its natural skin color.

The surgery involves using skin cells taken from normally-pigmented areas of the body and transferring them to the damaged area of skin. It is performed under local anesthesia.

“This surgery offers hope to vitiligo patients,” says Iltefat Hamzavi, M.D. a senior staff physician in Henry Ford”s Department of Dermatology and the study”s senior author and principal investigator. “The results achieved in our study were of obvious significance to our patients.”

The study has been presented at the 68th annual American Academy of Dermatology meeting in Miami.

While the initial results are preliminary and the procedure is still investigational, Dr. Hamzavi says Henry Ford hopes to offer the surgery as part of its treatment portfolio this fall. He says for some patients the surgery is more effective than standard treatments like light therapy and topical medications. (ANI)

Uncertainty surrounds Afghan presidential vote count, says analysis

Kabul, Aug.26 (ANI): Continuing uncertainty surrounds the forthcoming results of the second presidential elections in Afghanistan, with claims and counter claims being projected by key candidates.

However, notwithstanding Finance Minister Omar Zakhilwol’s claim that incumbent President Hamid Karzai will win the elections by an overwhelming vote of 68 percent, an analysis has revealed that ethnicity will be a major factor in determining how the people of Afghanistan will vote.

According to the analysis, people in the southern parts of Afghanistan are unlikely to vote for a non-Pushtun leader. Karzai is a Pushtun by birth and also has the backing of powerful warlords like Uzbek leader Abdur Rashid Dostum, Mohammad Mohaqiq and Ismail Khan.

Current counting trends suggest that Karzai’s lead over his two prominent rivals-former Foreign Minister Abdullah Abdullah and former Finance Minister Ashraf Ghani is very narrow, but that is to be expected with only ten percent of the results in.

With the Afghan Electoral Commission revealing that it has received 225 complaints of electoral fraud so far, of which 35 are of a serious nature, Karzai’s rivals have threatened to launch violent reprisals.

Karzai is reported have a two percent lead over Abdullah Abdullah. The initial results from the Afghan Electoral Commission gave Karzai 40.6 percent vote against Abdullah’s 38.6 vote. Afghan election authorities are due to release more results from presidential polls on a daily basis from Wednesday. It could be up to two weeks before final results are released, and a candidate needs more than 50 percent of the votes to avoid a run-off.

As far the United States is concerned, the analysis says that Washington could be in for trying time for a couple of reasons. Firstly, it has been quite critical of Karzai and now its silence on allegations of electoral fraud is being seen in certain quarters as equally bewildering.

Simultaneously, there is also a realization that there is no alternative to Karzai and that a regime change in Kabul is practically unworkable.

The fourth reality is that the global war on terrorism in Afghanistan is not going Washington’s way. The commanders on the ground want more troops and more equipment, even as the foreign troop death toll continues to mount. (ANI)

Hand-held devices that can detect presence of aerosols in air above oceans

Washington, June 30 (ANI): A team of scientists is developing hand-held devices that can detect the presence of aerosols in air above oceans by measuring how light scatters as it strikes the particles.

The portable photometers have been developed by Alexander Smirnov, an AERONET (Aerosol Robotic Network) project scientist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland, and his team.

Aerosols, the tiny atmospheric particles that can have an outsized impact on the climate, are just as likely to be found in the air above the oceans as they are over land.

Yet, aerosols are scarcely measured over the oceans.

Now, Smirnov, who is leading a new effort called the Maritime Aerosol Network (MAN), will send researchers with portable photometers on oceanographic research cruises.

The hand-held devices can detect the presence of aerosols in air by measuring how light scatters as it strikes the particles.

Taking the measurements is relatively easy.

Several times a day, a researcher stands on a ship’s deck when the sun is fully visible, points the instrument at the sun, and pushes a button. The photometer performs a series of scans within a few seconds.

Smirnov has arranged to have the have handheld photometers carried aboard more than 50 vessels, both commercial and research, from 12 countries since November 2006.

Initial results show that data from the portable photometers correspond well with permanent AERONET stations on select islands.

The initial efforts have produced a tantalizing observation.

“Aerosol concentrations over the oceans at the high latitudes are not as high as satellite measurements suggest they should be,” said Smirnov. “We need to figure out why we’re seeing this difference,” he added. (ANI)

Cottonseed-based drug may help treat severe brain cancer

Washington, May 29 (ANI): Researchers at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) say that an experimental drug derived from cottonseeds appears to be efficacious in treating the recurrence of glioblastoma multiforme, which is considered to be the most lethal brain cancer.

The researchers came to this conclusion following the results of a Phase II clinical trial of AT-101, a pill manufactured from a potent compound in cottonseeds that overcomes the abnormal growth patterns of tumour cells.

Glioblastomas are more common in adults, and are considered fast-growing brain tumours that are very difficult to treat.

Research leader Dr. John Fiveash, an associate professor in the UAB Department of Radiation Oncology, said that the cottonseed-based agent was found to halt the cancer’s progression in many of the 56 patients.

He revealed that despite undergoing other treatments, including surgery, chemotherapy and radiation, the trial patients’ brain cancer had begun to grow again prior to starting AT-101 treatments.

The trial-monitored patients took only AT-101 daily for three out of four weeks.

“After getting this drug some of these patients went many months without any new growth in their tumours. We are able to do that with a well-tolerated oral medication, and that is a major benefit,” Fiveash said.

He believes that the drug would likely work best in combination with radiation and chemotherapy to boost the cancer-fighting properties of those treatments.

Fiveash and his colleagues are also trying to determine which patients are most likely to benefit from AT-101.

The initial results of the drug trial would be presented on May 30, during the poster discussion of central nervous system tumours at the American Society for Clinical Oncology annual meeting in Orlando, Florida. (ANI)

Gene therapy promises safe muscular dystrophy treatment

Washington, April 16 (ANI): Researchers from the University of Florida (UF), Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, and The Ohio State University have safely transferred a gene to produce a protein necessary for healthy muscle fibre growth into three teenagers with limb-girdle muscular dystrophy.

“We think this is an important milestone in establishing the successful use of gene therapy in muscular dystrophy,” said Dr. Jerry Mendell, director of the Center for Gene Therapy in The Research Institute at Nationwide Children’s Hospital and the lead author of the study.

“This trial sets the stage for moving forward with treatment for this group of diseases and we are very pleased with these promising initial results. In subsequent steps we plan to deliver the gene through the circulation in hopes of reaching multiple muscles. We also want to extend the trials over longer time periods to be sure of the body’s reaction,” added the professor of Pediatrics and Pathology at The Ohio State University College of Medicine.

The researchers point out that limb-girdle muscular dystrophy actually describes more than 19 disorders that occur because patients have a faulty alpha-sarcoglycan gene. In each of the disorders, the muscle fails to produce a protein essential for muscle fibres to thrive.

The disease, which can hit both children or adults, causes their muscles to get weaker throughout their lifetimes.

During the trial, the researchers evaluated the safety of a modified adeno-associated virus – an apparently harmless virus known as AAV that already exists in most people – as a vector to deliver the alpha-SG gene to muscle tissue.

“The safety data is accumulating because this is the same type of vector that we and other research groups have successfully used in gene therapy trials for other diseases,” said Dr. Barry Byrne, a UF pediatric cardiologist who is a member of the UF Genetics Institute and director of the Powell Gene Therapy Center.

“In this effort, although proof of safety was the main endpoint, the added benefit was that this was an effective gene transfer. Even though we were dealing with a small area of muscle, the effect was long-lasting, and that has never been observed before,” Byrne added.

The researchers administered the subjects a dose of the gene on one side of the body and that of saline on the opposite side.

Neither the researchers nor the patients knew which of the foot muscles received the actual treatment until the end of the experiment.

The team evaluated the volunteers at set intervals through 180 days, and measured the therapy’s effectiveness by assessing alpha-SG protein expression in the muscle, which was four to five times higher than in the muscles that received only the saline.

According to the researchers, the subjects did not encounter any adverse health events, and the transferred genes continued to produce the needed protein for at least six months after treatment.

Given that muscle-fibre size was actually found to increase in the treated areas, the researchers surmise that it may be possible to combat the so-called “dystrophic process” that causes muscles to waste away during the course of the disease.

The researchers say that beyond muscular dystrophy, their finding shows that muscle tissue can be an effective avenue to deliver therapeutic genes for a variety of muscle disorders, including some that are resistant to treatment, such as inclusion body myositis, and in conditions where muscle is atrophied, such as in cancer and aging.

“These exciting results demonstrate the feasibility of gene therapy to treat limb-girdle muscular dystrophy,” said Jane Larkindale, portfolio director with Muscular Dystrophy Association Venture Philanthropy, a program that moves basic research into treatment development.

“The lack of adverse events seen in this trial not only supports gene therapy for this disease, but it also supports such therapies for many other diseases,” the researcher added.

A research article on this breakthrough has been published in the Annals of Neurology. (ANI)

Indonesia president eyes allies, but coalition may take weeks

By Karima Anjani and Sunanda Creagh

JAKARTA (Reuters) – Indonesia’s president may tap an Islamist party with a tough stance on graft for his coalition, as well as other groups ahead of presidential elections in July, aiming for a stable and united alliance to improve governance.

Coalition-building by President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono’s Democrat Party could take days or even weeks, and will ultimately dictate the pace of reform in Southeast Asia’s biggest economy.

Party leaders have already held a flurry of talks in recent days in a rush to start building powerful pacts.

Fewer than one million votes from 170 million registered voters have been counted by the general election commission so far, with initial results based on quick counts from sample polling stations.

While the Democrat Party won the most votes, at around 20 percent, it was less than the nearly 30 percent that some opinion polls had predicted. That has forced the Democrats into coalition talks before the more important presidential vote that Yudhoyono, Indonesia’s most popular party leader, is tipped to win.

“What we see now is merely discussion” said Anies Baswedan, a political analyst and rector of Paramadina University in Jakarta.

As Indonesia feels the effect of a global economic downturn, attention will focus on who Yudhoyono, 59, picks as political allies, because of the impact on cabinet posts and policy-making.

Indonesia needs to woo billions of dollars of investment to address its creaking infrastructure, create jobs, and achieve a faster pace of growth, which is set to slow to 3-4 percent this year, from 6.1 percent in 2008. Endemic graft, red tape and legal uncertainty still deter investors and needs to be addressed.

Yudhoyono, a reform-minded ex-general, won Indonesia’s first direct presidential election in 2004 on promises to crack down on corruption, boost economic growth and create jobs.

But because his party won a small share of the seats in 2004, he had to offer some cabinet posts to political allies, a move which thwarted reform and slowed down decision-making.

On Friday, Yudhoyono stressed he wanted a committed coalition this time and said it could include the Prosperous Justice Party (PKS), an Islamist party which has done well in some key local elections because of its emphasis on clean, efficient governance, but which could also alienate minorities and moderates.

“It’s difficult because (Yudhoyono) could lose votes, it may cause people to stay away from him as the nationalists aren’t comfortable enough to be partners with PKS,” said Baswedan.

Yudhoyono also appeared to leave the door open to extending an alliance with the Golkar Party, the long-time political vehicle for Suharto, the country’s late autocratic ruler.

ELECTION HITCHES

Thursday’s parliamentary elections, a massive exercise in democracy in the 17,000-island archipelago, went relatively smoothly, but were marred by violence in Papua, east Indonesia, and hitches with voter lists and distribution of ballot papers.

The Democrats almost tripled their vote from 7.5 percent in 2004, as Yudhoyono has delivered strong economic growth and brought relative peace and stability to the world’s most populous Muslim nation, which also has sizeable religious minorities.

In contrast, two main parties from the Suharto era — former President Megawati Sukarnoputri’s PDI-P and Vice President Jusuf Kalla’s Golkar Party — did worse in this election, snaring about 14 percent of the votes.

Those two parties are seen as potential coalition partners, but Megawati also met Prabowo Subianto of the Greater Indonesia Movement (Gerindra).

“We will meet more intensively over the following days. Between us, we share many values, many common attitudes views and many nationalist values,” Prabowo said after meeting Megawati on Saturday.

If Yudhoyono sticks with his current alliance with Golkar and Islamist parties, analysts said this would lead to a slower pace of reform, but they still expect market-friendly policies, particularly if Yudhoyono keeps his respected finance minister, Sri Mulyani Indrawati, and other technocrats in the cabinet.

An alliance with PKS and other Islamic parties would allow Yudhoyono a freer hand to fight graft and cut bureaucracy. But it could also lead to more sharia-style laws or policies similar to a controversial anti-pornography law passed last year, and alienate secular supporters and religious minorities.

(Additional reporting by Muklis Ali and Olivia Rondonuwu; Writing by Sara Webb; Editing by David Fox)

Gene therapy to pave way for safer, effective obesity treatment

London, Mar 10 (ANI): Researchers at the Ohio State University Medical Centre have discovered that a particular gene, BDNF, can pave the way for promising new treatment for obesity that is much safer and effective than other conventional therapies.

For the study, the researchers analysed a potentially long-term treatment that involves injecting a gene directly into one of the critical feeding and weight control centres of the brain.

“Obesity significantly increases the risk for diabetes, cardiovascular disease, stroke and some cancers,” Nature quoted Dr. Matthew During, senior author and professor in Ohio State Medical Center’s department of molecular virology, immunology and medical genetics, as saying.

He added: “Our findings represent a promising new treatment for obesity that could ultimately provide a much safer and more effective approach than some conventional therapies.”

Researchers found that BDNF can result in improved insulin sensitivity, reduced fat mass and weight loss when active in the hypothalamus.

First author Lei Cao, assistant professor in the department of molecular virology, immunology and medical genetics, said that the study involved injecting the BDNF gene in normal mice, diabetic mice and mice fed with a high fat diet, to determine how the gene transfer would affect their weight.

“The gene was active in the overweight mice, but as they lost weight the gene expression was essentially ‘dialed down,’ using a novel RNA interference approach, thus stopping the weight from continuing to decrease and allowing a stable target weight to be reached,” she said.

During indicated that with the initial results showing great promise, the next step is to obtain the necessary FDA approvals to begin studying the therapy in humans at OSU Medical Center and other centers around the country.

The findings are published online in the journal Nature Medicine. (ANI)

Now, a virtual library of medieval manuscripts at the click of a mouse

Washington, Feb 11 (ANI): Researchers have created a virtual library of medieval manuscripts, which anyone can access at the click of a mouse.

Somewhere between 5,000 and 10,000 rare and precious medieval manuscripts have been scanned over the past decade into formats that could be studied over the Internet.

But, the only problem is that scholars don’t know the existence of the webpages where such manuscripts can be found.Searching for medieval manuscripts gets you millions of hits, most of which have nothing to do with manuscripts, and when they do, they usually feature only images of a single page rather than the entire book,” said Matthew Fisher, an assistant professor of English at UCLA (University of California Los Angeles).

“Since finding these great projects is so tough, they’re functionally invisible,” he added.

Fisher set out two years ago to remedy the situation.

With the assistance of two graduate students in English, a computer developer from UCLA’s Center for Digital Humanities and Christopher Baswell, a former UCLA professor of English, Fisher decided to collect links to every manuscript from the eighth to the 15th century that had been fully digitized by any library, archive, institute or private owner anywhere in the world.

In December 2008, the group launched the initial results.

The UCLA-based Catalogue of Digitized Medieval Manuscripts now links to nearly 1,000 manuscripts by 193 authors in 20 languages from 59 libraries around the world, allowing users to flit from England to France to Switzerland to the United States – to name the locations of just a few of the featured repositories – with the click of a mouse.

“Because these manuscripts are so old and fragile, libraries are digitizing them, but you can’t find them,” Fisher said. “We’re completing the step of making them accessible to the world,” he added.

Employing a Web application designed by the Center for Digital Humanities, which promotes the use of computer technology in humanities research and instruction, the Catalogue of Digitized Medieval Manuscripts allows users to search for manuscripts according to their author, title, language and archiving institution.

In its first three weeks of operation, the site had almost 5,000 visitors from Australia, England, France, Italy, Germany, Spain, the Netherlands, Sweden, Switzerland, Austria, Canada and all over the United States.

“We’ll never replace the joy of sitting down with an 800-year-old book, but we will bring the wonder of these manuscripts to people who might never experience them otherwise,” said Fisher. (ANI)