War documentary spurs rescue mission and sequel

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) – Steven Barber’s indie World War Two documentary “Return to Tarawa: The Leon Cooper Story” is having a payoff.

Not only did the investigative piece play to stalwart ratings on Discovery’s Military Channel, but it might have played a role in getting Congress to authorize a recovery effort on the far-off atoll of the film’s title to search for remains of Marines missing in action during World War II.

According to Barber, the imminent recovery mission will be “‘CSI’-style,” using what he calls “the largest forensic anthropology lab in the world,” while his own company, Vanilla Fire Prods., goes along to document the effort.

The working title of the follow-up is “Tarawa: The Un-Recovered.” Barber is scouting for a narrator to follow in the footsteps of Ed Harris, who voiced the original documentary.

In the original film shot in 2008, Barber and a film crew went out to the atoll of Tarawa in the island nation of Kiribati accompanied by the 88-year-old Cooper, who had been a 22-year-old Higgins Boat commander in the 1943 Battle of Tarawa during which 1,113 Marines were killed in a three-day span.

While on the island, Barber heard rumors of lost Marines whose remains were never repatriated. After the broadcast on the Military Channel, Barber and Cooper received hundreds of e-mails from families seemingly corroborating the rumors.

Barber is now doing interviews in Hawaii for the documentary and then will embed for a month with forensic specialists as they begin excavations on Tarawa. “The possibility of finding Marines from the battle is very high,” he said.

UPDATE 1-Germany likely closer to 2 pct 2010 growth- FinMin

KIEL, Germany, June 20 (Reuters) – German economic growth may come closer to 2 percent in 2010 than previously expected, Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said on Sunday, but will hardly top 1.5 percent on average over the coming years.

In late January, the government forecast gross domestic product in Europe’s largest economy would expand by 1.4 percent in 2010, though some economists have said a figure as high as 3 percent is possible.

“Perhaps we will come closer to the 2 percent figure than we even dared hope just a couple of weeks ago,” Schaeuble said during a speech at an award ceremony in Kiel.

Earlier this month, policymakers including Schaeuble had said the German economy should grow faster than expected, with the recovery gathering pace markedly during the current quarter.

Yet in a separate interview with German weekly magazine WirtschaftsWoche, Schaeuble said growth would not reach much beyond 1.5 percent in the next few years, partly due to demographic trends.

Some policymakers and research institutes have expressed concern that the austerity measures being launched by European governments to head off a spread of the debt crisis begun in Greece will hamper economic growth.

United States President Barack Obama last week said public finance problems should be addressed “in the medium term” — a warning that clamping down budgets should not be done at the expense of recovery. Schaeuble defended the Germany’s decision to launch its biggest austerity drive since World War Two saying economic growth alone would not enable the country to consolidate its ballooning deficit.

“The U.S. is allowed to think that they can solve their exorbitant household deficits through strong growth. I don’t think so but I don’t want to give them any advice,” he said.

“There is no way we could do this in Germany, because we will hardly be able to reach beyond 1.5 percent sustainable economic growth on average over the next few years, partly because of our demographic development.”

Schaeuble said it was his duty to address the causes of the crisis, one of them being public deficits — a realisation the U.S. was “currently repressing a little”.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Saturday said Europe would push for a swift exit from fiscal stimulus programmes and a focus on budget consolidation at the G20 meeting next week.

“European participants are of the opinion that this is urgently necessary to prevent such crises from happening again in the future,” Merkel said in her weekly podcast. (Additional reporting and writing by Sarah Marsh; Editing by Jon Loades-Carter)

BoE to freeze interest rates to numb fiscal pain

(Reuters) – The Bank of England looks set to keep interest rates at a record low on Thursday — and probably for the rest of this year — as it seeks to bolster Britain’s fragile recovery and offset painful government spending cuts.

Although inflation has jumped to almost double the central bank’s 2 percent target, most members of the bank’s monetary policy committee reckon these price pressures will be short-lived.

For now, the risks to the recovery from the biggest fiscal squeeze in a generation and a slowdown in the euro zone, Britain’s biggest trading partner, are likely to hold sway.

Britain’s new coalition government will publish its first budget on June 22. It is likely to contain a mix of spending cuts and tax rises that could have a profound impact on both growth and inflation.

“The BoE will not want to take action before it knows what scale of fiscal tightening will be delivered in the budget,” said Marc Ostwald, an economist at Monument Securities. “The implications of the euro zone debt crisis also argue against doing anything precipitous.”

All 61 analysts polled by Reuters reckon UK interest rates will stay at 0.5 percent when the BoE ends its two-day policy meeting at 1100 GMT and most do not expect any tightening until early 2011.

Minutes to the BoE’s latest policy meeting show some members are worried inflation may not subside as quickly as expected. But while April’s rise in inflation to 3.7 percent surprised most analysts, bond markets show investors are betting on an increasingly benign inflation outlook.

STRONG HEADWINDS

Despite unprecedented monetary stimulus — including the injection of 200 billion pounds ($288.8 billion) into the economy in the form of quantitative easing — Britain’s recovery from its deepest recession since World War Two has been relatively muted.

The economy grew 0.3 percent in the first three months of this year, slower than the 0.4 percent achieved in the last quarter of 2009 and weaker than the BoE had initially forecast.

There are fears that mass lay-offs in the public-sector, which employs a fifth of Britain’s workforce, could prompt a renewed weakening in the second half of the year.

Finance minister George Osborne has pledged to cut the country’s budget deficit, currently at almost 11 percent of GDP, at a “significantly accelerated” pace, starting with 6 billion pounds of cuts this year.

With the euro zone suffering similar spending cuts, hopes of an export-led recovery also look misplaced.

“Relative muted recovery following deep recession, the looming major fiscal squeeze and the risk to UK economic activity coming from the euro zone debt crisis make a strong case for the BoE to keep its finger off the interest rate trigger,” said Howard Archer, an economist at IHS Global Insight.

(Editing by Toby Chopra)

Germany shocked by Israeli flotilla action

May 31 (Reuters) – Germany, one of Israel’s most loyal allies, expressed shock at the deadly interception of an aid flotilla bound for the blockaded Gaza Strip and questioned whether the action by Israeli commandos was proportionate.

Two members of the Bundestag lower house of parliament were among five Germans on board the ships stormed by Israeli commandos, the foreign ministry said.

“The German government is shocked by events in the international waters by Gaza,” government spokesman Ulrich Wilhelm told a regular news conference, adding the government was seeking further clarification about the incident.

“Every German government supports unconditionally Israel’s right to self defence,” said Wilhelm. But he added that Israeli actions should to correspond to what he described as the “basic principle” of proportionality.

“A first look does not speak in favour of this basic principle being adhered to,” he said. Berlin would await further details before judging the incident, he added.

At least 10 pro-Palestinian activists were killed on the ships. Israeli officials said marines were met with knives and staves when they boarded the ships, and a military spokesman said two pistols were found on the captured vessels.

A spokesman for the German foreign ministry said a key point would be whether weapons had been found on the ships.

Due in part to the legacy of the Holocaust, German politicians have been among Israel’s biggest supporters since World War Two and have traditionally been reluctant to criticise the Israeli government. (Reporting by Brian Rohan and Madeline Chambers; editing by Peter Graff)

Taiwan snubs Japan’s request to expand air zone

Taiwan rejected on Saturday Japan’s request to use its airspace, putting another strain on relations that have become more lukewarm over territorial issues and Taipei’s stronger ties with China.

Japan last week asked Taiwan if it could fly over all of Taiwan’s westernmost island of Yonaguni, but the foreign ministry said no.

U.S. officials had given part of the airspace over Yonaguni to Taiwan after World War Two, and Taiwan uses the east coast of the island to conduct sensitive military activities.

Japan communicated its request “inadequately” to Taiwan, which wants to keep its existing air space intact, the foreign ministry said in a statement.

“If they are upset, too bad, unless they go to Washington and kick us around,” said Alexander Huang, strategic studies professor at Tamkang University in Taipei. “We listen to Washington, but not Tokyo.”

The snub will further chill once close but informal Taipei-Tokyo relations that have become more distant since Taiwan President Ma Ying-jeou took office in 2008 and courted stronger ties with China.

Japan and Taiwan also dispute the eight uninhabited East China Sea islands known as the Senkakus, which are rich in fisheries and possibly undersea natural gas reserves. The issue flared in 2008, when a Taiwan fishing boat collided with a Japanese coastguard vessel and sank.

(Reporting by Ralph Jennings; Editing by Paul Tait)

Heirs of Nazi victim to sell restituted Klimt

A painting by Gustav Klimt recently returned to the heirs of a Jewish woman killed in the Holocaust will go on sale at Christie’s in London in June and is expected to fetch 14-18 million pounds ($20-26 million).

“Frauenbildnis (Portrait of Ria Munk III),” painted in 1917-18, is the third and final work in a series of three portraits commissioned by the Munk family of their daughter Ria.

She committed suicide in 1911 after a love affair ended unhappily, and her mother Aranka, sister of Klimt’s chief patron Serena Lederer, employed the artist to paint a death-bed portrait of her.

According to the auctioneer, the first two efforts were rejected by the Munks. The second version was subsequently altered and is widely believed to be “Die Tanzerin” now in the Neue Galerie in New York.

Last year, the Austrian city of Linz recommended that the work up for sale be transferred from its Lentos gallery to Aranka Munk’s descendants.

It cited the findings of an independent expert, Sophie Lillie, who confirmed the painting had been seized from Munk by the Nazis after she was deported to a concentration camp where she died in 1941.

Vienna lawyer Alfred Noll applied in 2007 for the return of the painting, which made its way into Linz’s collection from an art dealer after World War Two.

The painting is the latest high-profile restitution case involving works by Klimt.

A court order forced Austria to give back five Klimt paintings in 2006 to Maria Altmann of California, a descendant of a family from whom the works were seized by the Nazis in 1938 and later given to the Belvedere art museum in Vienna.

Ronald S. Lauder paid a reported $135 million for one of that group — a portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer. The deal was brokered by Christie’s, which went on to auction the remaining four works for a combined $192.7 million.

(Reporting by Mike Collett-White; Editing by Patricia Reaney)

CORRECTED – SCENARIOS-North Korea again at centre of regional tension

North Korea warned it would close the last road link across the increasingly tense peninsula if the South goes ahead with a threat to broadcast anti-Pyongyang propaganda into its hermit neighbour.

Tensions are mounting after the South blamed the North for torpedoing one of its warships, killing 46 sailors.

Following is a look at what may have motivated the North to raise the stakes by sinking the South Korean corvette Cheonan and how it may react to the hard line from the conservative South Korean government of President Lee Myung-bak:

REVENGE

One popularly ascribed motive for the March 26 sinking of the Cheonan was payback for a humiliating defeat in a naval clash in November near their disputed maritime border. The South’s navy was operating under new rules of engagement imposed after Lee took office, to strike fast and strike to win decisively.

The humiliation may have been all the greater because the North, and its self proclaimed “invincible” army, got pounded when it may not even have been looking for a fight in the first place. “It’s a case of getting beaten up when they weren’t even being very cocky,” an expert on the North’s propaganda said.

By most accounts, Kim Jong-il would have to have agreed to the torpedo attack. What may have come as a surprise was that the South was able to come up with evidence — some remains of the torpedo — to prove the North’s involvement.

LEADER UNDER PRESSURE

Some experts say that the attack seems to have been disproportionate to the North’s losses in the November skirmish, especially as most North Koreans would have had no idea the clash had even taken place, and certainly not that it lost.

One explanation is that the reclusive Kim, known at home as the “Dear Leader”, is struggling to secure the succession of his youngest son to head the family dynasty that has run the North since its founding after World War Two.

As a result, he needs to display his strength, especially to the military elite that he has nurtured and put at the top of society’s hierarchy.

Kim himself looks in poor health after an apparent stroke nearly two years ago. His government also reportedly faced rare public unrest after a disastrous change in the value of the currency late last year forced the closure of private markets, which help make up for the state’s inability to supply its own people with enough food.

Dictatorships undergoing internal political turmoil tend to manifest disproportionately belligerent behaviour to the outside world, said Victor Cha, a U.S. expert who had been involved in negotiations with the North.

EXTORTION

North Korea has often staged provocative incidents as a way to get back to the negotiating table with the South and regional powers to extract economic and political concessions.

If this was the motive, then it backfired. Whatever inclination there may have been to bring the six regional powers back together to formulate a massive package of aid to the North in return for Pyongyang’s promise to dismantle its nuclear arms programme all but disappeared with the sinking of the Cheonan.

Kim Jong-il’s interest may have been more in separate talks with the United States to discuss a permanent peace treaty to replace the armistice that ended fighting in the 1950-53 Korean War, than with the group hosted by China and also involved South Korea, Japan and Russia.

Some analysts and defectors from the North say the leaders in Pyongyang have a genuine fear of an invasion by the United States launched from the soil of its ally, South Korea. There is also huge mileage for domestic propaganda purposes in telling its public that it was negotiating with the United States on equal footing. Staging a deadly attack in the waters near a naval border it had disputed gives the North’s military an excuse to demand talks on ending a truce.

PEACE TREATY

This is a variation on the above scenario, with the difference that the North is looking for a security framework instead of aid. The Cheonan sinking is the latest in a series of incidents along the disputed maritime border in the Yellow Sea, including an exchange of artillery fire in January.

Kim Jong-il may be hoping to goad the United States into taking more seriously his demands to agree finally a peace treaty to end formally the 1950-53 Korean War. Washington has been reluctant to be lured into those talks, arguing the North must first give up its efforts to build nuclear weapons.

Much of the justification for his iron rule, and extreme poverty that faces most of his population, is that it is the only way to keep a belligerent United States at bay. A peace treaty would not only allow him to stop raiding his depleted treasury to pay for one of the world’s largest standing armies, some analysts say it would also open the way to international financial aid for his broken economy.

The peninsula remains in a technical state of war because the Korean War ended in a truce, not a peace treaty. If Kim keeps making the Yellow Sea border — drawn unilaterally by the U.S.-led United Nations Command at the end of the war — a combat zone, maybe that would eventually lead to peace treaty talks. After all, previous instances of North Korean misbehaviour resulted in negotiations that led to benefits.

ARMS SALES DEMO

North Korea depended heavily on exports of missile and artillery parts for a large part of its income before U.N. sanctions last year for testing a nuclear device sharply cut off its trade. It may have wanted to demonstrate its capabilities in submarine and torpedo warfare.

(Editing by Jonathan Thatcher and Bill Tarrant)

SCENARIOS – North Korea again at centre of regional tension

North Korea warned it would close the last road link across the increasing tense peninsula if the South goes ahead with a threat to broadcast anti-Pyongyang propaganda into its hermit neighbour.

Tensions are mounting after the South blamed the North for torpedoing one of its warships, killing 46 sailors.

Following is a look at what may have motivated the North to raise the stakes by sinking a South Korean battleship and how it may react to the hard line from the conservative South Korean government of President Lee Myung-bak:

REVENGE

One popularly ascribed motive for the March 26 outh Korean corvette Cheonan was payback for a humiliating beating in a naval clash in November near their disputed maritime border. The South’s navy was operating under new rules of engagement imposed after Lee took office, to strike fast and strike to win decisively.

The humiliation may have been all the greater because the North, and its self proclaimed “invincible” army, got pounded when it may not even have been looking for a fight in the first place. “It’s a case of getting beaten up when they weren’t even being very cocky,” an expert on the North’s propaganda said.

By most accounts, Kim Jong-il would have to have agreed to the torpedo attack. What may have come as a surprise was that the South was able to come up with evidence — some remains of the remains of the torpedo — to prove the North’s involvement.

LEADER UNDER PRESSURE

Some experts say that the attack seems to have been disproportionate to the North’s losses in the November skirmish, especially as most North Koreans would have had no idea the clash had even taken place, and certainly not that it lost.

One explanation is that the reclusive Kim, known at home as the “ear Leader” is struggling to secure the succession of his youngest son to head the family dynasty that has run the North since its founding after World War Two.

As a result, he needs to display his strength, especially to the military elite that he has nurtured as leader and put at the top of society’s hierarchy.

Kim himself looks in poor health after an apparent stroke nearly two years ago. His government also reportedly faced rare public unrest after a disastrous change in the value of the currency late last year forced the closure of private markets, which help make up for the state’s inability to supply its own people with enough food.

Dictatorships undergoing internal political turmoil tend to manifest disproportionately belligerent behaviour to the outside world, said Victor Cha, a U.S. expert who had been involved in negotiations with the North.

EXTORTION

North Korea has often staged provocative incidents as a way to get back to the negotiating table with the South and regional powers to extract economic and political concessions.

If this was the motive, then it backfired. Whatever inclination there may have been to bring the six regional powers back together to formulate a massive package of aid to the North in return for Pyongyang’s promise to dismantle its nuclear arms programme all but disappeared with the sinking of the Cheonan.

Kim Jong-il’s interest may have been more in separate talks with the United States to discuss a permanent peace treaty to replace the armistice that ended fighting in the 1950-53 Korean War, than with the the group hosted by China and also involved South Korea, Japan and Russia.

Some analysts and defectors from the North say the leaders in Pyongyang have a genuine fear of an invasion by the United States launched from the soils of its ally, South Korea. There is also huge mileage for domestic propaganda purposes in tellings its public that it was negotiating with the United States on equal footing. Staging a deadly attack in the waters near a naval border it had disputed gives the North’s military an excuse to demand talks on ending a truce.

PEACE TREATY

This a variation on the above scenario, with the difference that the North is looking for a security framwework instead of aid. The Cheonan sinking is the latest in a series of incidents along the disputed maritime border in the Yellow Sea, including an exchange of artillery fire in January.

Kim Jong-il may be hoping to goad the United States into taking more seriously his demands to finally agree a peace treaty to formally end the 1950-53 Korean War. Washington has been reluctant to be lured into those talks, arguing the North must first give up its efforts to build nuclear weapons.

Much of the justification for his iron rule, and extreme poverty that faces most of his population, is that it is the only way to keep a beligerent United States at bay. A peace treaty would not only allow him to stop raiding his depleted treasury to pay for one of the world’s largest standing armies, some analysts say it would also open the way to international financial aid for his broken economy.

The peninsula remains in a technical state of war because the Korean War ended in a truce, not a peace treaty. If Kim keeps making the Yellow Sea border — drawn unilaterally by the U.S.-led United Nations Command at the end of the war — a combat zone, maybe that would eventually lead to peace treaty talks. After all, previous instances of North Korean misbehaviour resulted in negotiations that led to benefits.

ARMS SALES DEMO

North Korea depended heavily on exports of missile and artillery parts for a large part of its income before a U.N. sanctions last year for testing a nuclear device sharply cut off its trade. It may have wanted to demonstrate its capabilities in submarine and torpedo warfare. (Editing by Jonathan Thatcher and Bill Tarrant)

Russian court throws out Stalin libel claim

A Russian court on Monday threw out a libel case brought by Stalin’s grandson against a radio station over its claim that the dictator sanctioned the execution of children as young as 12 during the 1930s purges.

The case comes amid emotional debate over Stalin’s legacy as Russia celebrates the 65th anniversary of victory over Nazi Germany in World War Two.

“The suit has been rejected,” the judge at Moscow’s Presnensky District Court said.

Representatives of liberal radio station Ekho Moskvy had produced material from Russia’s historical archives to back up the claim made on air that Stalin issued orders sanctioning the shooting of children deemed “enemies of the people”.

Yevgeny Dzhugashvili lost another defamation suit last October over his grandfather’s memory. A Moscow judge then rejected his claim that the newspaper Novaya Gazeta had smeared Stalin in an article that said he personally ordered the deaths of Soviet citizens.

Historians say millions of Soviet citizens were executed or died in the forced collectivisation of farms and in labour camps during Stalin’s rule from the 1920s until his death in 1953.

Stalin was discredited by his successors, but praise for his leadership has become more common in recent years.

Opinion polls show many Russians think he was a talented manager and a tough wartime leader who defeated a strong enemy. Stalin was voted Russia’s third most important historical figure of all time in a nationwide television show.

Moscow authorities floated a plan to place information stands describing Stalin’s role in the war around the capital on May 9 for the 65th anniversary of World War Two. After a public outcry, the plans were scaled back and his image was only used close to the entrances of city museums.

The Kremlin has angered Stalin apologists in recent weeks by releasing documents relating to the Soviet killing of thousands of Polish officers in Russia’s Katyn Forest.

(Writing by Conor Humphries; editing by Andrew Roche)

FA Cup winners and runners-up since 1946

REUTERS – Results of English FA Cup finals since

the competition restarted in the 1945-46 season after World War

Two:

Season Winners Runners-up Score

1945-46 Derby County Charlton Athletic 4-1 aet

1946-47 Charlton Athletic Burnley 1-0 aet

1947-48 Manchester United Blackpool 4-2

1948-49 Wolverhampton Wan. Leicester City 3-1

1949-50 Arsenal Liverpool 2-0

1950-51 Newcastle United Blackpool 2-0

1951-52 Newcastle United Arsenal 1-0

1952-53 Blackpool Bolton Wanderers 4-3

1953-54 West Bromwich Albion Preston North End 3-2

1954-55 Newcastle United Manchester City 3-1

1955-56 Manchester City Birmingham City 3-1

1956-57 Aston Villa Manchester United 2-1

1957-58 Bolton Wanderers Manchester United 2-0

1958-59 Nottingham Forest Luton Town 2-1

1959-60 Wolverhampton Wan. Blackburn Rovers 3-0

1960-61 Tottenham Hotspur Leicester City 2-0

1961-62 Tottenham Hotspur Burnley 3-1

1962-63 Manchester United Leicester City 3-1

1963-64 West Ham United Preston North End 3-2

1964-65 Liverpool Leeds United 2-1 aet

1965-66 Everton Sheffield Wednesday 3-2

1966-67 Tottenham Hotspur Chelsea 2-1

1967-68 West Bromwich Albion Everton 1-0 aet

1968-69 Manchester City Leicester City 1-0

1969-70 Chelsea Leeds United 2-1 aet

(replay at Old Trafford after 2-2 draw)

1970-71 Arsenal Liverpool 2-1 aet

1971-72 Leeds United Arsenal 1-0

1972-73 Sunderland Leeds United 1-0

1973-74 Liverpool Newcastle United 3-0

1974-75 West Ham United Fulham 2-0

1975-76 Southampton Manchester United 1-0

1976-77 Manchester United Liverpool 2-1

1977-78 Ipswich Town Arsenal 1-0

1978-79 Arsenal Manchester United 3-2

1979-80 West Ham United Arsenal 1-0

1980-81 Tottenham Hotspur Manchester City 3-2

(replay at Wembley Stadium after 1-1 draw)

1981-82 Tottenham Hotspur Queens Park Rangers 1-0

(replay at Wembley Stadium after 1-1 draw)

1982-83 Manchester United Brighton & Hove Albion 4-0

(replay at Wembley Stadium after 2-2 draw)

1983-84 Everton Watford 2-0

1984-85 Manchester United Everton 1-0 aet

1985-86 Liverpool Everton 3-1

1986-87 Coventry City Tottenham Hotspur 3-2 aet

1987-88 Wimbledon Liverpool 1-0

1988-89 Liverpool Everton 3-2 aet

1989-90 Manchester United Crystal Palace 1-0

(replay at Wembley Stadium after 3-3 draw)

1990-91 Tottenham Hotspur Nottingham Forest 2-1 aet

1991-92 Liverpool Sunderland 2-0

1992-93 Arsenal Sheffield Wednesday 2-1 aet

(replay at Wembley Stadium after 1-1 draw)

1993-94 Manchester United Chelsea 4-0

1994-95 Everton Manchester United 1-0

1995-96 Manchester United Liverpool 1-0

1996-97 Chelsea Middlesbrough 2-0

1997-98 Arsenal Newcastle United 2-0

1998-99 Manchester United Newcastle United 2-0

1999-2000 Chelsea Aston Villa 1-0

2000-01 Liverpool Arsenal 2-1

2001-02 Arsenal Chelsea 2-0

2002-03 Arsenal Southampton 1-0

2003-04 Manchester United Millwall 3-0

2004-05 Arsenal Manchester United 0-0 aet

(Arsenal won 5-4 on penalties)

2005-06 Liverpool West Ham United 3-3 aet

(Liverpool won 3-1 on penalties)

2006-07 Chelsea Manchester United 1-0 aet

2007-08 Portsmouth Cardiff City 1-0

2008-09 Chelsea Everton 2-1

2009-10 Chelsea Portsmouth 1-0

FA cup winners since the competition began in 1871-72:

11 – Manchester United

10 – Arsenal

8 – Tottenham Hotspur

7 – Aston Villa, Liverpool

6 – Chelsea, Blackburn Rovers, Newcastle United

5 – Everton, The Wanderers, West Bromwich Albion

4 – Bolton Wanderers, Manchester City, Sheffield United,

Wolverhampton Wanderers

3 – Sheffield Wednesday, West Ham United

2 – Bury, Nottingham Forest, Old Etonians, Preston North

End, Sunderland, Portsmouth

1 – Barnsley, Blackburn Olympic, Blackpool, Bradford City,

Burnley, Cardiff City, Charlton Athletic, Clapham Rovers,

Coventry City, Derby County, Huddersfield Town, Ipswich Town,

Leeds United, Notts County, Old Carthusians, Oxford University,

Royal Engineers, Southampton, Wimbledon

(Editing by Neil Maidment; to query or comment on this story

email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

UK’s parties in race for power-sharing deal

Britain’s Liberal Democrats said talks to form a new government had entered a decisive phase on Tuesday, after Labour PM Gordon Brown’s dramatic announcement he would step aside to ease a centre-left coalition.

Brown’s statement late on Monday disrupted efforts by the centre-right Conservatives to broker a power-sharing deal with the Liberal Democrats after the country’s first election producing no clear winner since 1974.

It is unclear which way the Liberal Democrats will turn. With markets and voters keen for an end to the political uncertainty, Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg said the talks had entered a “critical and final phase”.

“I am as impatient as anbody else to get on with this, to resolve matters one way or another,” he told reporters.

Conservative leader David Cameron said it was “decision time” for the Liberal Democrats, who came third in Thursday’s election behind the Conservatives and left leaning Labour.

As formal talks between Labour and the Lib Dems resumed at the Houses of Parliament, a Labour source said: “It is a very finely balanced decision, but we are clearly back in the game.”

Britain is emerging from its worst recession since World War Two with a record budget deficit that analysts believe will only be cut effectively by a strong government.

By 0920 GMT, the FTSE 100 index of leading shares was down 1.6 percent, sterling was jittery and UK gilt futures fell more than half a point in early trade as the uncertainty weighed on the market.

“The market wants a conclusion to this and whilst we are without a conclusion the market will remain nervous,” said one London-based gilts trader.

The head of the French financial markets watchdog said the uncertainty was likely to hit Britain’s markets, but London should not rely on EU help in any financial crisis.

“The English are very certainly going to be targeted given the political difficulties they have. Help yourself and heaven will help you,” Jean-Pierre Jouyet, who was European affairs minister from 2007-2008, told Europe 1 radio.

BIDDING WAR

The Conservatives emerged as the largest party in parliament but fell 20 seats short of an outright majority, leading to a bidding war to win the support of the Liberal Democrats.

They quickly began talks with the centre-left Liberal Democrats, or Lib Dems, on a government alliance. However, the smaller party wanted concessions on areas including reform of the voting system to make it more proportional.

The Conservatives responded to Brown’s statement by offering the Lib Dems a place in a coalition and a referendum on limited electoral reform that falls short of their demand.

“That’s our last offer in that area,” Conservative finance spokesman George Osborne told the BBC. “But I’m very willing to discuss with the Liberal Democrats how we create that strong, secure government and deal with this massive economic problem.”

Sensing a hesitancy on the part of the Lib Dems, Brown said on Monday he would step down by the time Labour holds its annual party meeting in September.

Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg had said during the campaign that he was reluctant to work with Brown and the prime minister’s departure could smooth the path to a deal.

Clegg, 43, finds himself in a difficult situation. His party has more in common with Labour in terms of policy, but the two parties combined would be unable to command a majority and would need to enlist the support of smaller parties in a potentially more unstable “rainbow coalition”.

An alliance with the Conservatives would offer a more stable formation, with a strong majority but a more difficult political compromise. Activists on one Lib Dem website were leaning towards a deal with the Conservatives, rather than Labour.

“How can anyone with any gumption call for stable government and then propose allying with a party which is going to spend the next four months in a bitter leadership contest?” said one blogger on Liberal Democrat Voice.

Britain is unfamiliar with coalition negotiations and the talks cannot drag on for weeks as they do in some of its continental European neighbours.

Parliament is due to resume sitting on May 18 and the new government will present its programme on May 25.

(Additional reporting by Crispian Balmer in Paris; Sumeet Desai, Kylie MacLellan, Jodie Ginsberg and Tim Castle; Editing by Janet McBride)

Car bomb explodes near Russian military base

A car bomb exploded near a military base in Russia’s southern Dagestan region on Sunday, killing the driver of the car, a local official said.

The blast occurred about 100 meters (yards) from a military base in the town of Kaspiysk in the mainly Muslim region of Dagestan, said a spokesman for border guard troops.

“According to provisional information no one died except the driver of the car,” said the spokesman, adding that police were investigating reports the bomb was detonated by a suicide bomber.

Dagestan as well as neighbouring Chechnya and Ingushetia are at the centre of an Islamist insurgency. Militants say they want a sharia-based, pan-Caucasus state independent of Russia, a struggle whose foundations were laid over 250 years ago.

Police have been particularly on high alert for possible attacks on Sunday as Russians celebrated of the 65th anniversary of the Soviet victory in World War Two.

The latest explosion completely destroyed the car, a white Lada, a witness at the scene told Reuters.

In a separate attack, a bomb disposal expert was killed overnight when he came across an explosive device near apartments housing the families of military officials in Kaspiysk, a police spokesman said.

Insurgents from Chechnya have often staged attacks on Victory Day, a holiday associated with the mass deportation of ethnic Chechens by Stalin during the war.

More than 40 people are killed when a bomb tore through a military parade in Kaspiysk on Victory Day in 2002.

Sappers on Sunday neutralised two large bombs in a park in the centre of Makhachkala, Dagestan’s administrative centre, a spokesman for the Federal Security Service said.

(Writing by Conor Humphries; Editing by Maria Golovnina)

EU works on mechanism to stop Greek crisis spreading

European Union officials were working out the details of a financial support mechanism on Saturday to prevent Greece’s debt turmoil spreading to Portugal and Spain, ready for approval by EU finance ministers on Sunday.

The leaders of the 16 countries that use the single currency said on Friday after talks with the European Central Bank and the executive European Commission that they would take whatever steps were needed to protect the stability of the euro area.

Both Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi and French President Nicolas Sarkozy cancelled trips to Moscow to mark the anniversary of the end of World War Two in order to continue consultations over the crisis, though German Chancellor Angela Merkel said she would still go.

Financial markets have been pounding euro zone countries with high deficits or debts as well as low economic growth, threatening to force Portugal, Spain and Ireland into a position where, like Greece, they would need to seek financial aid.

The euro zone leaders, who have been accused of heightening market uncertainty with a lack of action, agreed to accelerate budget cuts and ensure deficit targets are met this year.

But they also decided, under pressure from the markets, to ask all 27 EU countries to agree a financial mechanism to ring-fence the Greek crisis before markets open on Monday.

“WORST CRISIS”

“The euro zone is going through the worst crisis since its creation,” Sarkozy said after Friday’s euro zone summit in Brussels.

“The leaders have decided to put in place a European intervention mechanism to preserve the stability of the euro zone. The decisions taken will have immediate application, from the point that financial markets open on Monday morning.”

“If the domino effect begins, no economy is safe,” Finnish Prime Minister Matti Vanhanen told the Finnish broadcaster YLE on Saturday.

Euro zone sources said late on Friday that the mechanism could be funded by bonds issued by the European Commission with guarantees from euro zone states.

No details have been disclosed so far, but the sources said EU law provided a legal basis for such a mechanism.

The treaty governing the EU says that if a member of the 27-nation bloc is in difficulties caused by circumstances beyond its control, EU ministers may grant it financial assistance.

“Two mechanisms have been agreed — one based on article 122.2 of the Treaty saying the council can help a member state with serious difficulties,” one of the sources said.

“The other will enable the European Commission to go on the markets and get money with an explicit guarantee of the member states and an implicit guarantee of the ECB (European Central Bank,” the source added.

A second source said: “The details of this mechanism will be agreed by Sunday and the idea is to trigger both on Sunday.”

EMERGENCY LOANS

Friday’s EU summit approved $110 billion euros ($147 billion) in emergency EU/IMF loans to Greece over three years to help it over a budget crisis in exchange for austerity measures so sharp that they have already sparked violent protest.

There was some sign that popular anger might be subsiding as a new survey indicated that more than half of Greeks would rather back the EU/IMF deal than risk bankruptcy by going it alone, and were willing to make more sacrifices.

But fears that the loans might not be enough to prevent a Greek default and avert a broader economic crisis kept world stocks near a three-month low, despite strong U.S. jobs data.

Group of Seven finance ministers discussed the situation in a conference call on Friday after U.S. Federal Reserve officials expressed concern, and agreed to monitor the markets.

Earlier on Friday, the German parliament approved its share of the rescue, the largest contribution by a euro zone country.

But five German academics filed a legal challenge, reflecting widespread German public opposition, arguing that the aid was not provided for under EU treaties, and would give rise to inflationary policies.

Germany’s highest court on Saturday rejected their request to block the immediate release of a German loan.

Merkel, who initially resisted agreeing to Greek aid due to the opposition at home, told voters in a regional election that euro zone countries would “lead this fight for the stability of the euro together and with resolve”.

She said this did not only mean financial discipline.

“Those who created the excesses on the markets will be asked to pay up — those are in part the banks, those are the hedge funds that must be regulated … those are the short-sellers and we agreed yesterday to implement this more quickly in Europe.”

Silverstone presents F1 circuit for the future

The home of the British Grand Prix, regularly slated by Formula One supremo Bernie Ecclestone, unveiled a revamped circuit on Thursday to take it into a new era.

With Britain’s Prince Andrew cutting a ribbon to open the new Silverstone track and then being driven around by 1996 Formula One champion Damon Hill in a two-seater race car, Silverstone’s owners predicted a bright future for the former World War Two airfield.

The circuit, which hosted the first Formula One championship race in 1950 and last year agreed a 17-year deal for the British Grand Prix, includes MotoGP and world superbikes on its calendar.

“The development of Silverstone really is the crowning glory, and symbolises as a material representation of everything this country has done…in their successes on the track,” declared Hill, president of the British Racing Drivers’ Club that owns the track.

“This is a new circuit for a new generation of people to enjoy motorsport in the way we think they should and we hope it’s also going to offer an incredible challenge to the drivers of the future.”

The new layout, part of a major redevelopment that will have cost the BRDC nearly 40 million pounds ($60.99 million) by the end of next year, includes six new corners and is also longer.

The pits will be relocated and a new Wellington Straight should become the fastest part of the circuit instead of Hanger.

GOOD STUFF

Past and present racers gave the makeover a thumbs up.

“The good thing, mate, is that they kept all the good stuff,” said Red Bull’s Australian Mark Webber. “The quick kink off the new back straight looks very quick.”

Retired grand prix winner Johnny Herbert seconded that: “It is the circuit for the future for sure,” he told Reuters, looking out over a panorama of bare earth that will be transformed into a new pit and paddock complex by next year.

“I think it gives a little added spice to the track that we’ve lost…we’ve still got the historic high speed and I think we definitely have an overtaking opportunity. So I think it’s a better facility overall.

“It’s a circuit that Britain and Europe can be proud of. We’ve got all these new modern tracks around the world that are vastly amazing in what they have actually produced but I think Silverstone is the best in Europe,” he added.

“I think it’s going to be the European fightback.”

Britain’s triple world champion Jackie Stewart, taking a break from accompanying visiting royalty, agreed.

“I think this circuit has always been one of the leading racetracks,” he told Reuters. “I think the new part of it allows the development of Silverstone to really secure the long-term stability of Formula One and motorsports in this country.”

Silverstone had been due to be stripped of the Formula One race this year, with Donington Park securing a long-term deal with Ecclestone until that venture became a casualty of the global financial crisis.

Ecclestone, a Briton who has taken Formula One to extravagant new venues in Abu Dhabi and China in recent years, has in the past likened Silverstone to a dilapidated old house and a country fair masquerading as a world event.

Hill was able to make light of that: “Some people like the country fair atmosphere at Silverstone,” he told Reuters with a smile. “It’s always had that nice British summertime feel.”

This year’s British GP, likely to attract a big crowd with Britain’s world champions Jenson Button and Lewis Hamilton now team mates at McLaren, is on July 11.”

(Editing by Justin Palmer; For any queries on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

Heat on Clegg in UK election debate, no clear win

The two main candidates to lead Britain after a May 6 election sought on Thursday to fend off a surprise challenge from a smaller party in a lively TV debate, but there was no undisputed winner.

Frontrunner David Cameron of the centre-right opposition Conservatives and Prime Minister Gordon Brown of the Labour Party were under pressure to halt the rise of Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg after he outshone them in an earlier debate.

“An awful lot of fire was turned on Clegg, and I think they got him on the ropes, but not on the canvas,” Jon Tonge, politics professor at Liverpool University, told Reuters.

Thursday’s clash, on issues from Afghanistan to Europe and pensions to immigration, was the second of a series of three planned for the campaign — the first time in British history that the main party leaders have taken part in TV debates.

Two snap polls after Thursday’s contest gave conflicting results, though both suggested that the performances were more balanced than a week ago when Clegg was the clear winner.

A YouGov poll for the Sun newspaper put Cameron in first place with 36 percent, Clegg in second with 32 percent, and Brown last with 29 percent. A ComRes poll for ITV News put Clegg ahead with 33 percent, with Brown and Cameron both on 30.

Opinion polls on the election itself, which until a few months ago pointed to a Conservative win, have in recent weeks suggested that no party may win an overall majority. That could hand the balance of power to the previously little-known Clegg.

His star turn in the first debate led to a surge in the popularity of the Liberal Democrats, a previously ignored centrist party presented by Clegg as “real change” from the two big parties, who have alternated in power since World War Two.

“Something really exciting is beginning to happen. People are beginning to believe, beginning to hope, that we can do something different this time,” he said in his closing remarks.

CAMERON COMEBACK

Cameron, who also has campaigned on the theme of change after 13 years of Labour government, mounted a strong fightback. Criticised for being unusually stiff in the first debate, he regained his usual fluency and telegenic style in round two.

He argued that far from being different, the Liberal Democrats had been tainted just like Labour and the Conservatives by a huge scandal last year over legislators’ dubious expense claims that infuriated millions of voters.

“Frankly, Nick, we all had problems with this … Don’t anyone try and put themselves on a pedestal,” he said.

The Conservatives say that if they do not win a clear victory on May 6, squabbling between the parties to form a ruling coalition will delay tough decisions on cutting a worrisome budget deficit and leave Britain weak and divided.

They fear that Labour could hang on to power with support from the Lib Dems. They have tried to halt Clegg’s rise with the slogan “Vote Clegg, Get Brown.”

Cameron’s improved performance will be a huge relief to the Conservatives after a week during which the campaign has been dominated by talk of Clegg’s sudden ascendancy.

Brown, who is the first to admit presentational skills are not his strength, gave the most awkward performance of the three but tried to present himself as the strongest on substance.

“If it is all about style and PR, count me out. If it’s about the big decisions, if it’s about judgment, if it’s about delivering a better future for this country, I’m your man,” he said in his opening statement.

(Writing by Estelle Shirbon; editing by Michael Roddy)

Polish funeral set to go ahead despite ash cloud

The Polish president’s funeral looks set to go ahead as planned on Sunday, at his family’s insistence, despite a cloud of volcanic ash that has shut Europe’s airports and may prevent world leaders attending.

U.S. President Barack Obama is among dozens of leaders scheduled to travel to Krakow in southern Poland for Sunday’s funeral of President Lech Kaczynski and his wife Maria, killed with 94 others in a plane crash in Russia last Saturday.

Tens of thousands of mourners continued to file past the Kaczynskis’ coffins in Warsaw’s presidential palace on Friday.

Some had been waiting up to 18 hours to view the coffins, a measure of the grief felt by many Poles over the worst single disaster to strike their country since World War Two.

The heads of Poland’s armed forces, its central bank governor and opposition lawmakers also perished when the ageing Tupolev plane crashed in thick fog while trying to land near Smolensk in western Russia.

Warsaw’s picturesque Old Town, where the palace is located, has been transformed into a shrine, festooned with flowers, candles, crucifixes and white and red national flags.

The president’s administration said some 1,500 people were paying their respects to the bodies every hour, while Warsaw authorities said they had already collected 330 tonnes of withered flowers and burned out candles since Saturday.

The uncertainty following the death of key figures from the opposition Law and Justice (PiS) has thrown the established patterns of support for Poland’s parties into confusion.

An opinion poll released late on Friday showed support for Poland’s ruling Civic Platform (PO) had fallen by 11 percentage points, while the number of Poles favouring the conservative PiS, led by Kaczynski’s twin brother Jaroslaw, stood flat at 25 percent.

Backed by PiS, Kaczynski was widely expected to seek another five-year term in a presidential vote originally due this autumn. The vote will now likely be held on June 20.

Public support for Kaczynski, a polarising nationalist and eurosceptic, had dwindled to just 20 percent before his death. Polls showed he would have lost to Bronislaw Komorowski, the candidate of Prime Minister Donald Tusk’s centrist PO.

Komorowski, who is also speaker of parliament, became acting president after Kaczynski’s death. It is unclear who his main rivals will be in the election as the candidate of the main leftist opposition party SLD also died in the crash.

FUNERAL

The funeral plans hit an unexpected snag on Friday when the volcanic ash cloud drifting over Europe from Iceland forced the closure of airports, including in Poland, stranding hundreds of thousands of travellers.

“I wish to say that the (Kaczynski) family’s will is that the date of the funeral should not be postponed under any circumstances,” presidential aide Jacek Sasin told reporters.

Poland’s meteorology institute said in a statement posted on its website on Friday evening that the ash cloud would cover Poland by midnight, and partially disperse by Saturday evening.

As well as Obama, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, French President Nicolas Sarkozy and Britain’s Prince Charles are among dignitaries from an estimated 96 countries expected to attend the funeral.

Krakow’s Balice airport, due to handle most arrivals, shut on Friday because of the ash cloud.

The decision to bury the Kaczynskis at Wawel, usually reserved for Poland’s kings and national heroes, was controversial. Some Poles believe Kaczynski does not deserve such an honour and have staged noisy protests against the move.

Kaczynski and his entourage had been travelling to mark the 70th anniversary of the massacre of some 22,000 Polish officers by Soviet forces in Katyn forest in western Russia — an enduring symbol for Poles of their country’s suffering.

The cause of the crash remains unclear, though Russian officials say the pilot ignored advice from air traffic controllers to divert to another airport because of the fog.

(Additional reporting by Gabriela Baczynska and Pawel Florkiewicz in Warsaw, Amie Ferris-Rotman in Moscow; Editing by Alison Williams)

Nazi camp survivors’ child says must not forget

Susan Schwartz, who was one of the first babies born in the Displaced Persons (DP) camp of Bergen-Belsen, says her generation has a duty to keep the memory of the Holocaust alive as Nazi camp survivors die out.

Schwartz, who was in Germany to attend ceremonies marking the 65th anniversary of the liberation of the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, said her parents proudly bore the numbers tattooed on their arms as a reminder of what they had survived.

“The survivors are going to be gone, so it will be my job, as a survivor’s child, and that of my children to make the story of the Holocaust real,” Schwartz told Reuters in an interview.

An estimated 70,000 died in the Nazi concentration camp at Bergen-Belsen, victims of an ideology of racial superiority.

The vision of horror recorded on film by the British troops who discovered the camp on April 15, 1945, has gone down in history — some 55,000 skeletal figures, ravaged by hunger, thirst and typhoid, barely distinguishable from the thousands of rotting corpses surrounding them.

Schwartz said many of the survivors attending the ceremonies had brought their children and grandchildren to make them aware of what happened during the Holocaust.

“It is so important to remember because we don’t want anything like this to ever happen again,” said Schwartz, who had brought her daughter and was wearing her mother’s wedding ring.

She says her parents never had the chance to say goodbye to their families, who were torn apart and mostly killed during World War Two.

“My mother saw her father at Auschwitz, but he couldn’t recognise her as her head was shaven,” she said. “Her mother and and sister were killed in the gas chambers.”

Schwartz’s parents survived by dint of luck and cunning, seeking to offer their services where help was needed, for example in the kitchens, and sticking with the healthy captives.

A British soldier pushed them together on the day of liberation, she says, and they married a month later.

It was only later that they realised how many had died in the camps, and how many family and friends they had lost. About 13,000 who were liberated died in the following weeks.

Camp survivors were taken to the nearby former military barracks, which was turned into a Displaced Persons (DP) camp and disbanded in the summer of 1950 after most had emigrated.

Schwartz was three years old when her parents emigrated to Toronto, Canada, and doesn’t remember the camp. But she says she felt like she was coming home when she came to visit it with all the other survivors and their families.

“I grew up in a community of Belsen survivors in Toronto,” said Schwartz, who recognised many of the people at the commemoration event. “They didn’t have any family any more so these people became their family.”

Belsen claimed the lives of tens of thousands of Soviet prisoners of war, gypsies and Jews including Anne Frank, whose diary is one of the best-known accounts of the Holocaust.

(Editing by Steve Addison)

Volcanic ash cloud may scupper Polish funeral plan

A volcanic ash cloud that has shut down Europe’s airports threatened on Friday to disrupt a state funeral for Polish President Lech Kaczynski due to be attended by world leaders including U.S. President Barack Obama.

Kaczynski’s family wants Sunday’s funeral in Krakow to go ahead as planned, a presidential aide said. Senior officials were expected to take a final decision later in the day.

Tens of thousands of mourners continued to file past the coffins of Kaczynski and his wife Maria in Warsaw’s presidential palace. Some had been waiting up to 18 hours to view the coffins, a measure of the grief felt by many Poles over the worst single disaster to hit their country since World War Two.

The heads of Poland’s armed forces, its central bank governor and opposition lawmakers were also among the 96 people killed last Saturday when their ageing Tupolev plane crashed in thick fog while trying to land near Smolensk in western Russia.

As well as Obama, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, French President Nicolas Sarkoy, Britain’s Prince Charles and dozens of other heads of state and government and royalty are all scheduled to attend the funeral.

Krakow’s Balice airport, which would handle most arrivals, shut down on Friday along with most other Polish airports because of the volcanic ash cloud spreading from Iceland.

“I wish to say that the (Kaczynski) family’s will is that the date of the funeral should not be postponed under any circumstances,” presidential aide Jacek Sasin told reporters.

Earlier, he said delaying the funeral would be a “last resort”.

The volcano in distant Iceland has been spewing ash into the atmosphere since Wednesday, causing air traffic disruption on a scale not seen since the Sept. 11 attacks in 2001 and leaving hundreds of thousands of travellers stranded across Europe.

Volcanic ash contains tiny particles of glass and pulverised rock that can damage engines and airframes. Experts say the ash could cause problems to air traffic for up to six months if the eruption continues.

CONTROVERSIAL PRESIDENT

Polish authorities had intended to fly the coffins to Krakow for the funeral at the city’s Wawel cathedral after a planned memorial service in Warsaw on Saturday.

The decision to bury the Kaczynskis at Wawel, usually reserved for Poland’s kings and national heroes, was already controversial. Some Poles believe Kaczynski does not deserve such an honour and have staged noisy protests against the move.

Public support for Kaczynski, a polarising nationalist and eurosceptic, had dwindled to just 20 percent before his death. Polls showed he would have lost to Bronislaw Komorowski, the candidate of Prime Minister Donald Tusk’s centrist Civic Platform (PO), in a forthcoming presidential vote.

Komorowski, who is also speaker of parliament, became acting president after Kaczynski’s death. It is unclear who will now be his main rivals in an election likely to take place on June 20.

Kaczynski was the candidate of his twin brother Jaroslaw’s right-wing Law and Justice (PiS). The candidate of the main leftist opposition party SLD also died in the crash.

Kaczynski and his entourage had been travelling to mark the 70th anniversary of the massacre of some 22,000 Polish officers by Soviet forces in Katyn forest when their plane crashed.

The exact cause of the crash remains unclear, though Russian officials say the pilot ignored advice from air traffic controllers to divert to another airport because of the fog.

Some Polish media have speculated that Kaczynski, in his determination not to miss the Katyn event, may have ordered the pilot to try to land the plane against the Russians’ advice.

On Thursday, Polish prosecutors promised to release details of the plane’s cockpit voice recorders which are being analysed.

Russia’s state-run RIA Novosti news agency, citing the Interstate Aviation Committee, said on Friday preliminary findings of the investigation showed the plane touched treetops one kilometre before reaching the landing strip.

(Additional reporting by Chris Borowski, Pawel Florkiewicz in Warsaw, Amie Ferris-Rotman in Moscow)

U.S. student loan change could boost aid work – Clinton

More U.S. graduates are likely to work with aid groups and charities after an overhaul of the country’s student loan program lessens their debt repayment burden, former U.S. President Bill Clinton said.

With U.S. unemployment at 9.7 percent as the country emerges from the worst recession since World War Two, Clinton said graduates could find work with aid groups at home and abroad which would improve their career prospects.

Clinton will meet with more than 1,300 students in Miami for a three-day philanthropic summit, starting on Friday, where pledges of action will be made on education, health, economic empowerment, human rights and peace, environment and energy.

“You get the experience of a lifetime and it’s worth giving up a little income to do it,” he told Reuters in an interview for the third Clinton Global Initiative University. “It won’t hurt their long-term career prospects; it will enhance them.”

“There are jobs available. They don’t pay much but they are richly rewarding and the young people could do them full time for a few years and then for the rest of their lives give what they could in terms of money and time,” he said.

Clinton said that he hoped arrangements could be made for students who already have substantial debt to be able to take humanitarian jobs without risking defaulting on their loans.

Then as soon as the overhaul of the student loan system was implemented “that will never be a problem again and I think that may lead to even more young people going into this kind of work right after they get out of college.”

President Barack Obama recently signed into law changes to cut commercial banks out of student loans and cap graduates’ annual student loan repayments at 10 percent of income.

Clinton’s philanthropic summit for students grew out of his annual Clinton Global Initiative, which has brought together business leaders, humanitarians and celebrities in New York for the past five years to address global challenges.

He created the initiative after growing frustrated while president from 1993 to 2001 at attending conferences that were more talk than action.

“Being a good citizen in the 21st century will require people to involve themselves in NGO (nongovernmental organization) work to try to solve the problems that are left when the private sector produces what it can and the government provides what it can, there are always gaps,” Clinton said.

About 1,650 students were accepted to attend the Clinton Global Initiative University after making or partnering on 950 new commitments for 2010.

Separately universities and national youth organizations have this year made 45 commitments for the summit valued at more than $42 million in education, health, human rights and peace, economic empowerment and environment and energy.

“It ought to be a part of every young person’s education,” said Clinton. “I also want them to believe that they can do things that will make a real difference in other people’s lives even if they don’t have a lot of money.”

(Editing by Mark Egan and Cynthia Osterman)

Iran complains to U.N. over U.S. nuclear “threat”

(Reuters) – Iran complained to the United Nations on Tuesday over what it called a U.S. threat to attack it with atomic weapons, accusing Washington of nuclear blackmail in violation of the U.N. charter.

World

President Barack Obama made clear last week that Iran and North Korea, both involved in nuclear disputes with the West, were excluded from new limits on the use of U.S. atomic weapons.

A letter from Iranian Ambassador Mohammad Khazaee to U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and the Security Council and General Assembly presidents called on the United Nations to “strongly oppose the threat of use of nuclear weapons and to reject it.”

Statements by Obama and other U.S. officials were “tantamount to nuclear blackmail against a non-nuclear-weapon state” and breached U.S. obligations under the U.N. charter to refrain from the threat or use of force, Khazaee said.

“Such remarks by the U.S. officials display once again the reliance of the U.S. government on (a) militarized approach to various issues, to which the threats of use of nuclear weapons are not a solution at all,” he added.

They also posed “a real threat to international peace and security and undermine the credibility” of the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, the envoy said.

Obama is urging other global powers to agree to a fourth round of U.N. sanctions against Iran over its refusal to halt nuclear work that the West suspects is aimed at making bombs, a charge Iran denies.

He pressed the case for sanctions at a 47-nation nuclear summit in Washington on Tuesday, at which he won pledges from world leaders to take joint action to prevent terrorist groups from getting nuclear weapons.

But Khazaee said that Iran, as a victim of weapons of mass destruction — a reference to Iraq’s use of poison gas against it in a 1980-88 war — was firmly committed to a world free from such weapons.

The United States, the only country to have used nuclear weapons — against Japan in World War Two — “continues to illegitimately designate a non-nuclear weapon state as target of its nuclear weapons and contemplates military plans accordingly,” he said.

U.N. members “should not condone or tolerate such nuclear blackmail in (the) 21st century,” the Iranian envoy said.

(Editing by Vicki Allen)