Current Events (NEWS)

Littledragon

Above The Law
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/5455104


BAGHDAD, Iraq - In the sixth U.S. airstrike since last month, American jets Sunday hit a position in Fallujah purportedly used by foreign militants, demolishing a house and killing 14 people, hospital and local officials said.

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Interim Iraqi Prime Minister Iyad Allawi gave the go-ahead for the attack, according to his office and the U.S. military.

In previous strikes, the United States said it was targeting safehouses used by Tawhid and Jihad Group, the network of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the Jordanian militant blamed for masterminding car bombings and other attacks in Iraq. The United States has offered a $25 million reward for the capture of Zarqawi, its top target in Iraq.


The latest attack targeted foreign militants’ “fighting positions and trench lines near the remains of a house,” according to a statement by U.S. Brig. Gen. Erv Lessel. About 25 fighters were there just before the attack, he said, citing Iraqi and coalition intelligence sources.

Local residents said the attack destroyed a house filled with civilians.

Allawi 'approves' U.S. strike
Allawi has promised strong cooperation with the Americans in rooting out terrorism and said after a July 5 airstrike in Fallujah that his government had provided the intelligence for the strike. Allawi consulted with U.S. forces Saturday about the strike, his office said.

“The multinational force asked Prime Minister Allawi for permission to launch strikes on some specific places where some terrorists were hiding,” an official in Allawi’s office told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity. “Allawi gave his permission.”

Explosions from the strike about 2 a.m. rocked the city. Scores of people ran to the scene and dug through the wreckage looking for survivors. One witness, who declined to give his name, said the house belonged to a “very poor family.” Angry crowds gathered around the house, chanting “God is great.”
 

yudansha

TheGreatOne
Drunk Filipino man nails wife's mouth shut, then beats her to death: police

MANILA, Philippines (AP) - A drunk farmer nailed his wife's mouth shut and beat her to death, then fell asleep, woke up the next day and prepared breakfast without realizing she was dead, Philippine police said Monday.

Rodolfo Porras, 40, returned home to his house in Negros Occidental province's Manapla town Friday night, got into an argument with his wife Vilma, 40, and then proceeded to beat her, police officer Eliseo Solaban said.

Charges were being prepared against the farmer, who fled on his bicycle.

Solaban said the couple's 12-year-old daughter and 10-year-old son watched, too afraid to call for help, as Porras strangled his wife, slammed her head against a wall, drove nails through her mouth and the backs of her knees, hammered her two hands, poured boiling water on her body and burned her skin with a hot iron.

He then fell asleep, woke up the next morning and prepared breakfast for his family. He only realized he had killed his wife, who was blind from previous beatings, when his son tried to feed her and discovered she was dead, Solaban said.

Porras told his son to inform their relatives and then fled, saying he was going to the market to buy fish, Solaban said.

Two other children were not home at the time. One, 14-year-old Sarah Jane, said her family has endured almost constant beatings from her father.

Neighbours were used to hearing the beatings and did not interfere.


A law criminalizing domestic violence was passed only in March in the Philippines. The women's group Gabriela said from October to December 2003, it recorded an average of 13 women and nine children being seriously beaten in their homes each day, aside from cases of rape and other abuses.

© The Canadian Press, 2004
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
yudansha said:
MANILA, Philippines (AP) - A drunk farmer nailed his wife's mouth shut and beat her to death, then fell asleep, woke up the next day and prepared breakfast without realizing she was dead, Philippine police said Monday.

Rodolfo Porras, 40, returned home to his house in Negros Occidental province's Manapla town Friday night, got into an argument with his wife Vilma, 40, and then proceeded to beat her, police officer Eliseo Solaban said.

Charges were being prepared against the farmer, who fled on his bicycle.

Solaban said the couple's 12-year-old daughter and 10-year-old son watched, too afraid to call for help, as Porras strangled his wife, slammed her head against a wall, drove nails through her mouth and the backs of her knees, hammered her two hands, poured boiling water on her body and burned her skin with a hot iron.

He then fell asleep, woke up the next morning and prepared breakfast for his family. He only realized he had killed his wife, who was blind from previous beatings, when his son tried to feed her and discovered she was dead, Solaban said.

Porras told his son to inform their relatives and then fled, saying he was going to the market to buy fish, Solaban said.

Two other children were not home at the time. One, 14-year-old Sarah Jane, said her family has endured almost constant beatings from her father.

Neighbours were used to hearing the beatings and did not interfere.


A law criminalizing domestic violence was passed only in March in the Philippines. The women's group Gabriela said from October to December 2003, it recorded an average of 13 women and nine children being seriously beaten in their homes each day, aside from cases of rape and other abuses.

© The Canadian Press, 2004


Oh my God what is wrong with some people in the world today?!
 

yudansha

TheGreatOne
And now for some 'good' news...

Who is carrying the torch of your country?

Judo star Nicolas Gill to carry Maple Leaf at Athens opening ceremonies

TORONTO (CP) - Judo veteran Nicolas Gill will carry Canada's flag at the opening of the Summer Olympics in Athens, the Canadian Olympic Committee announced Monday.

s071923A.jpg
Canadian gold medalist Nicolas Gill stands during the medal presentation ceremony for the men's 100 kg judo, at the Commonwealth Games in Manchester, England, in 2002. (AP/Richard Lewis)

Gill, 32, will be competing in his fourth Olympics. The Montreal native is a two-time judo medallist at the Games, winning a bronze in 1992 and a silver in 2000. He has also earned three medals at the world championships.

"It's a big surprise to be carrying the flag," Gill told a news conference via satellite from Belgium, where he's in training. "To carry the Olympic flag will be my best memory from my Olympic career. It's an incredible honour."

The 10-time national champion is coming off knee surgery in November but has shown since he is still a force to be reckoned with, winning gold at a tournament in Germany earlier this month and a bronze last month in an Italian event.

"After Sydney I thought my Olympic career was coming to an end, I didn't think I could survive another four years," said Gill. "When I tore my ACL I thought this is an impossible road to Athens.

"But luckily the doctors did a good job, the physios did a good job, I'm back training now and the results have been very good."

Gill is one of 266 Canadian athletes going to Athens - 134 women and 132 men, plus 77 coaches. Canada sent 311 athletes to the 2000 Olympics in Sydney.

Sport organizations submitted nominees for flag-bearer last month. The final say came down to a vote by a five-member committee of Canadian chef de mission Dave Bedford, assistant chef Natalie Lambert, two athlete representatives and one coaching representative.

There was plenty of competition for the honour, including world champion sprinter Perdita Felicien, Olympic champion wrestler Daniel Igali, young diving star Alexandre Despatie, veteran equestrian Ian Millar, three-time Olympic cyclist Alison Sydor, world trampoline champion Karen Cockburn, and tennis champion Daniel Nestor.

"We have an incredible team," said Gill. "To be picked among all those athletes was a surprise."

Kayaker Caroline Brunet of Lac-Beauport, Que., carried Canada's flag at the opening ceremonies in Sydney, while triathlete Simon Whitfield carried it in the closing ceremonies.

Whitfield won one of Canada's three gold medals in the 2000 Games. Canada also won three silver and eight bronze for a total of 14 medals in Sydney.

© The Canadian Press, 2004
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
yudansha said:
Who is carrying the torch of your country?

Judo star Nicolas Gill to carry Maple Leaf at Athens opening ceremonies

TORONTO (CP) - Judo veteran Nicolas Gill will carry Canada's flag at the opening of the Summer Olympics in Athens, the Canadian Olympic Committee announced Monday.

s071923A.jpg
Canadian gold medalist Nicolas Gill stands during the medal presentation ceremony for the men's 100 kg judo, at the Commonwealth Games in Manchester, England, in 2002. (AP/Richard Lewis)

Gill, 32, will be competing in his fourth Olympics. The Montreal native is a two-time judo medallist at the Games, winning a bronze in 1992 and a silver in 2000. He has also earned three medals at the world championships.

"It's a big surprise to be carrying the flag," Gill told a news conference via satellite from Belgium, where he's in training. "To carry the Olympic flag will be my best memory from my Olympic career. It's an incredible honour."

The 10-time national champion is coming off knee surgery in November but has shown since he is still a force to be reckoned with, winning gold at a tournament in Germany earlier this month and a bronze last month in an Italian event.

"After Sydney I thought my Olympic career was coming to an end, I didn't think I could survive another four years," said Gill. "When I tore my ACL I thought this is an impossible road to Athens.

"But luckily the doctors did a good job, the physios did a good job, I'm back training now and the results have been very good."

Gill is one of 266 Canadian athletes going to Athens - 134 women and 132 men, plus 77 coaches. Canada sent 311 athletes to the 2000 Olympics in Sydney.

Sport organizations submitted nominees for flag-bearer last month. The final say came down to a vote by a five-member committee of Canadian chef de mission Dave Bedford, assistant chef Natalie Lambert, two athlete representatives and one coaching representative.

There was plenty of competition for the honour, including world champion sprinter Perdita Felicien, Olympic champion wrestler Daniel Igali, young diving star Alexandre Despatie, veteran equestrian Ian Millar, three-time Olympic cyclist Alison Sydor, world trampoline champion Karen Cockburn, and tennis champion Daniel Nestor.

"We have an incredible team," said Gill. "To be picked among all those athletes was a surprise."

Kayaker Caroline Brunet of Lac-Beauport, Que., carried Canada's flag at the opening ceremonies in Sydney, while triathlete Simon Whitfield carried it in the closing ceremonies.

Whitfield won one of Canada's three gold medals in the 2000 Games. Canada also won three silver and eight bronze for a total of 14 medals in Sydney.

© The Canadian Press, 2004


Cool news, I was watching the Judo Olympic qualifyer Saturday morning before Jiu-Jitsu practice.
 

yudansha

TheGreatOne
Many don't get it! Using too much antibiotics increases risk of resistant bacteria!

Antibiotic use in kids down, but resistance feared in preschoolers: study

TORONTO (CP) - Antibiotic use among children is decreasing overall, but prescriptions of one class of the bacteria-killers have risen dramatically for children under five, raising fears that drug-resistant strains could soon develop among Canadian preschoolers, research suggests.

And in one of two studies published Tuesday in the Canadian Medical Association Journal, the researchers found that the decision to prescribe an antibiotic often depends not only on whether a doctor is a general practitioner or a pediatrician, but also on the income level of parents and whether a child is male or female.

Anita Kozyrskyj, an epidemiologist at the University of Manitoba and lead author of the studies, said the good news is that overall antibiotic use in children under age 19 dropped by one-third between 1995 and early 2002. The drop is likely in response to guidelines issued to doctors to use the drugs less, especially for colds and other respiratory tract infections caused by viruses, which cannot be cured by antibiotics.

But the bad news is that the number of prescriptions for a class of antibiotics known as broad-spectrum macrolides - azithromycin and clarithromycin - soared more than 12-fold during the same period to treat common childhood illnesses, such as acute ear infections, among preschoolers.

"These patterns of use may be breeding a new crisis in antibiotic resistance," Kozyrskyj and her colleagues write in the CMAJ. They said findings from the seven-year study, which looked at drug dispensing records for 325,000 Manitoba children per year, can be extrapolated to youngsters across Canada, since prescription patterns are similar in other provinces.

"And the concern with these studies, and this has been shown in the United States, is that overuse of these drugs has been connected to antibiotic resistance," Kozyrskyj said from Winnipeg. "Of particular concern is that it's been reported in day-care centres.

"These are the kids who would use these drugs to treat ear infections, and it's the same population where we're starting to see resistance to macrolides."

U.S. community-based studies have shown that as more children in day-care centres were treated with broad-spectrum macrolides, doctors began to see increased resistance to the drugs, she said.

"Not only do you see resistance in the children who are taking the antibiotic, but it spreads to the children who are not," said Kozyrskyj, explaining that mutated forms of bacteria develop that are untouched by those particular antibiotics.

"So you could end up in a situation where those antibiotics are not effective in that population of children, and then you don't have an antibiotic that would work."

The study also found that children from low-income families were more likely to be prescribed an antibiotic than higher-income kids, often for virus-caused respiratory tract illnesses, for which the drug is ineffective. While studies show lower-income children often have poorer health, Kozyrskyj said many of these kids didn't need the drugs.

"It's the same implication as with the day care," she said. "We know that low-income children live in certain parts of our cities, they live in certain neighbourhoods, they play together. And so the concern is - although we don't have evidence at this time - that these children would be at greater risk of antibiotic resistance."

In a complementary study of 20,000 Manitoba children and 1,200 physicians from 1996 to 2000, the researchers found that when children went to the doctor for a respiratory illness caused by a virus, 45 per cent of physicians prescribed antibiotics, contrary to Canadian Pediatric Society guidelines.

In part, the doctor's specialty and training appeared to play a role, Kozyrskyj said.

"There was an increased likelihood of receiving an antibiotic prescription for viral respiratory tract infection if the physician was a GP versus a pediatrician," she said. "So GPs were more likely to prescribe antibiotics for virus respiratory tract infections, more often than a pediatrician."

As well, doctors who trained outside Canada or the United States were also more likely to prescribe an antibiotic, as was the case if a child's parent had a low income. Boys were also given antibiotics for respiratory illnesses more often than girls were, although the researchers don't know why.

"It puts them (boys) at increased risk" for drug-resistance, Kozyrskyj added.

SHERYL UBELACKER; © The Canadian Press, 2004
 

Serena

Administrator
You're absolutely correct, yudansha--many people still don't understand the concept that antibiotics do nothing for a virus and is just increases drug resistance, where their system builds up a tolerance to antibiotics. And what I find disturbing is that many doctors will prescribe it anyway, at the insistence of the parents, because it's easier and faster than trying to educate them and help them understand. I still see this happening.

Good article, yudansha--thanks. :)
 

yudansha

TheGreatOne
That's right. You're welcome.

But you see, Serena, I don't mean any offense by this but it's only the North American doctors who do this (prescribing antibiotics right and left at the request of the patient ... patients shouldn't be healing themselves; doctors should!). In Europe, doctors are taught not to prescribe antibiotics unless they are ABSOLUTELY necessary. It seems like the patients think they know what is best for them, and now that they know the term antibiotic, they think it's the only and the best way to go and pay no attention to the great possibility of such dreadful consequence.
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
yudansha said:
Antibiotic use in kids down, but resistance feared in preschoolers: study

TORONTO (CP) - Antibiotic use among children is decreasing overall, but prescriptions of one class of the bacteria-killers have risen dramatically for children under five, raising fears that drug-resistant strains could soon develop among Canadian preschoolers, research suggests.

And in one of two studies published Tuesday in the Canadian Medical Association Journal, the researchers found that the decision to prescribe an antibiotic often depends not only on whether a doctor is a general practitioner or a pediatrician, but also on the income level of parents and whether a child is male or female.

Anita Kozyrskyj, an epidemiologist at the University of Manitoba and lead author of the studies, said the good news is that overall antibiotic use in children under age 19 dropped by one-third between 1995 and early 2002. The drop is likely in response to guidelines issued to doctors to use the drugs less, especially for colds and other respiratory tract infections caused by viruses, which cannot be cured by antibiotics.

But the bad news is that the number of prescriptions for a class of antibiotics known as broad-spectrum macrolides - azithromycin and clarithromycin - soared more than 12-fold during the same period to treat common childhood illnesses, such as acute ear infections, among preschoolers.

"These patterns of use may be breeding a new crisis in antibiotic resistance," Kozyrskyj and her colleagues write in the CMAJ. They said findings from the seven-year study, which looked at drug dispensing records for 325,000 Manitoba children per year, can be extrapolated to youngsters across Canada, since prescription patterns are similar in other provinces.

"And the concern with these studies, and this has been shown in the United States, is that overuse of these drugs has been connected to antibiotic resistance," Kozyrskyj said from Winnipeg. "Of particular concern is that it's been reported in day-care centres.

"These are the kids who would use these drugs to treat ear infections, and it's the same population where we're starting to see resistance to macrolides."

U.S. community-based studies have shown that as more children in day-care centres were treated with broad-spectrum macrolides, doctors began to see increased resistance to the drugs, she said.

"Not only do you see resistance in the children who are taking the antibiotic, but it spreads to the children who are not," said Kozyrskyj, explaining that mutated forms of bacteria develop that are untouched by those particular antibiotics.

"So you could end up in a situation where those antibiotics are not effective in that population of children, and then you don't have an antibiotic that would work."

The study also found that children from low-income families were more likely to be prescribed an antibiotic than higher-income kids, often for virus-caused respiratory tract illnesses, for which the drug is ineffective. While studies show lower-income children often have poorer health, Kozyrskyj said many of these kids didn't need the drugs.

"It's the same implication as with the day care," she said. "We know that low-income children live in certain parts of our cities, they live in certain neighbourhoods, they play together. And so the concern is - although we don't have evidence at this time - that these children would be at greater risk of antibiotic resistance."

In a complementary study of 20,000 Manitoba children and 1,200 physicians from 1996 to 2000, the researchers found that when children went to the doctor for a respiratory illness caused by a virus, 45 per cent of physicians prescribed antibiotics, contrary to Canadian Pediatric Society guidelines.

In part, the doctor's specialty and training appeared to play a role, Kozyrskyj said.

"There was an increased likelihood of receiving an antibiotic prescription for viral respiratory tract infection if the physician was a GP versus a pediatrician," she said. "So GPs were more likely to prescribe antibiotics for virus respiratory tract infections, more often than a pediatrician."

As well, doctors who trained outside Canada or the United States were also more likely to prescribe an antibiotic, as was the case if a child's parent had a low income. Boys were also given antibiotics for respiratory illnesses more often than girls were, although the researchers don't know why.

"It puts them (boys) at increased risk" for drug-resistance, Kozyrskyj added.

SHERYL UBELACKER; © The Canadian Press, 2004


You'd think people would have learned by now...
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
http://www.cnn.com/2004/WORLD/meast/07/20/iraq.philippines/index.html


CNN) -- The wife of a Filipino hostage freed in Iraq says she is overjoyed by the truck driver's release but will never allow him to return to the Middle East.

Angelo de la Cruz, 46, was released Tuesday -- one day after the Philippine government completed the withdrawal of its 51-member humanitarian contingent from Iraq in compliance with kidnappers' demands.

De la Cruz was turned over to officials at the United Arab Emirates Embassy in Baghdad before he was transferred to the Philippine Embassy. He will be flown to Abu Dhabi for a medical evaluation, a UAE government statement said.

"I am very, very happy. His health is okay ... His family is waiting for him," a tearful Arsenia de la Cruz told reporters at her country's embassy in Amman, minutes after talking by telephone to her husband in Baghdad.

Mrs. de la Cruz had been staying in the Jordanian capital, awaiting word on her husband.

"I would not let him go back to the Middle East another time," The Associated Press quoted her as saying.

Earlier Tuesday, the Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo said on national television she had also spoken to the former hostage.

"I'm happy to announce that our long national vigil involving Angelo [de] la Cruz is over. I thank the Lord Almighty for his blessings," Arroyo said.

"His health is good, his spirits high and he sends best wishes to every Filipino for their thoughts and prayers."

Initial reports on de la Cruz's condition appeared promising. "He's here. He's with us. He's fine," a UAE Embassy official said before the transfer.

Kidnappers had threatened to behead the father of eight children, who was taken hostage on July 7, if the Philippines did not withdraw its forces from Iraq.

The Arabic-language news network Al-Jazeera read a statement from the kidnappers last week, saying they would free de la Cruz when "the last Filipino leaves Iraq on a date that doesn't go beyond the end of this month."

The Philippine contingent was originally scheduled to leave Iraq by August 20 but brought the withdrawal forward by a month to ensure the hostage's safety.


De la Cruz is surrounded by reporters as he enters the Philippines Embassy in Baghdad.
On Monday, Philippine Foreign Secretary Delia Albert said: "The remaining 34 members of the Philippine Humanitarian Contingent in Iraq today concluded turning over their humanitarian and civic projects, and paid their farewell call on the commander of the Polish sector."

Manila recalled the leader of its forces in Iraq, Brig. Gen. Jovito Talparan, along with 10 others, on Friday.

Ahead of the pullout, Iraqi's Interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi said he had spoken to Arroyo and urged her to "reconsider" withdrawing forces because "we cannot give up to terrorism."

U.S. officials also expressed dismay at Manila's decision, saying it could spark further abductions by terrorists
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
http://www.cnn.com/2004/WORLD/meast/07/19/iraq.egyptian/index.html

BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- An Egyptian driver freed on Monday after being held hostage for two weeks in Iraq says militants threatened him by holding a sword over his head.

The kidnappers last week threatened to behead Muhammad al-Gharabawi, who was taken hostage on July 6 while delivering petrol to U.S. forces, unless his Saudi employer pulled all its employees out of Iraq.

Three days after the transport company said it met that demand, Gharabawi, in his 50s, was freed and later taken to the Egyptian Embassy in Baghdad.

"I was never mistreated," he told reporters at the embassy on Monday in his native Arabic.

"Only in the beginning when they held a sword over my head and were threatening me. The threat was major. They never beat me. They treated me according to Islamic law."

All the abductors were Iraqis, Gharabawi said.

He added that he had been in touch with the abductors and tried to negotiate before they dropped communication with him entirely.

In a statement the hostage-takers, who claimed to be the "legitimate Iraqi resistance," had declared anyone who collaborated with the U.S.-led coalition in Iraq "won't be treated kindly, for they are seen as traitors working with the infidel occupiers."

His family received the news on Monday with joy. "We are partying downstairs," his son Essam told The Associated Press when reached by telephone in their home in the Nile Delta town of Zagazig, 60 kilometers (40 miles) northeast of Cairo.

Al-Gharabawi's wife said she had spoken to her husband soon after his release.

He said only "Thank God and I am coming home, God willing," she told AP. "Thank God. Thank God."

The family said it did not know when Al-Gharabawi would be coming home, but planned to slaughter a lamb or cow in celebration when he did.

Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit thanked all those who worked for Al-Gharabawi's release.

"We hope this is the end of such regrettable events that innocent civilians are subjected to," he said in a statement.

Meanwhile Monday, the last Philippine peacekeeping troops left Iraq, meeting a demand by militants holding a Filipino hostage but defying opposition from its allies. (Full story)

But there was no word on kidnapped truck driver Angelo de la Cruz, last seen in a video shown by Arabic language TV channel Al-Jazeera on Thursday in which he said he would be coming home.

Several foreign hostages have been seized in Iraq since April. Most have been freed, but an American man, a South Korean, an Italian and possibly a Bulgarian have been executed.
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
http://www.cnn.com/2004/WORLD/meast/07/20/iraq.main/index.html

BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- A council member in the southern Iraqi city of Basra was shot and killed early Tuesday, a British military spokesman said.

Hazem Ainachi was coordinator of the Basra Provincial Council. He previously was the deputy governor of Basra.

Two others were killed and one wounded in the attack.

Elections for local governor had been scheduled for Tuesday but were postponed after the shooting, according to The Associated Press.

"Many threats have been directed to the eight council members nominated to the post," council head Abdul Bari Faiyek told the AP. He said another councilman escaped an assassination attempt Monday, the news service reported.

Kidnappers' demands met
A Filipino truck driver taken hostage this month has been freed after the Manila government fulfilled his kidnappers' demands, Philippine and United Arab Emirates officials said.

Angelo de la Cruz, 46, was released Tuesday, a day after the Philippine government completed the withdrawal of its 51-member humanitarian contingent in compliance with kidnappers' demands. The Philippine contingent originally was scheduled to leave Iraq by August 20.

De la Cruz was first turned over to officials at the United Arab Emirates Embassy in Baghdad before he was transferred to the Philippine Embassy. He will be flown to Abu Dhabi for a medical evaluation, said a statement from the United Arab Emirates. (Full story)

Marine says he was captured
A U.S. Marine translator once reported captured in Iraq denied Monday that he had deserted and urged fellow Marines there to "keep their heads up and their spirits high."

Cpl. Wassef Ali Hassoun, 24, disappeared June 19 from a Marine camp outside Fallujah and emerged July 7 at the home of relatives in Lebanon.

When first reported missing, Hassoun was listed as a deserter. But that status was changed to "captured" after the release of a videotape June 27 showing the Marine blindfolded, with a sword being held over his head.

"I did not desert my post," Hassoun told reporters Monday. "I was captured and held against my will by anti-coalition forces for 19 days.

"This was a very difficult and challenging time for me."

Hassoun made his brief statement at the Marine Corps base at Quantico, Virginia, where he has been undergoing "repatriation" -- a series of examinations and debriefings given to former military captives.

Hassoun asked to make the statement because he was "concerned with some of the information that has been out there," Marine Corps spokesman Lt. Col. Dave Lapan said.

An investigation into Hassoun's disappearance is under way, but the Navy's Criminal Investigative Service has not yet questioned him, Lapan said.

Egyptian says he was beaten early in captivity
Egyptian truck driver Muhammad al-Gharabawi, who had been held hostage in Iraq for about two weeks, was released Monday and taken to the Egyptian Embassy in Baghdad.

Al-Gharabawi, in his 50s, was freed after the Saudi company that he worked for met his captors' demands that it pull all its workers from Iraq.

"In the early days they hit me with weapons, they kicked me and shoved me," he told reporters. "They hit me, and I don't know if my truck burned or not. God knows."

But after the first few days, he said, "I was never mistreated."

The Arabic-language TV network Al-Jazeera had reported that al-Gharabawi was taken hostage while delivering petroleum products to U.S. forces. But speaking to reporters Monday, he said that was inaccurate, taking pains to distance himself from Americans.

"I want to send a message that all the news about me dealing with Americans is wrong. I was carrying diesel from Saudi Arabia to Iraq. All security personnel with me were Iraqis; there were no Americans with me, and I wasn't delivering to Americans. I was delivering to Arabs, and my security were 100 percent Iraqis."

Other developments

Eight people plus a bomber were killed in a suicide truck bombing Monday near a police station in southern Baghdad, Iraqi officials said. The blast left a crater about 10 feet (3 meters) deep. At least 60 others were wounded, officials said.


In an attack Monday in the northern city of Mosul, Laith Hussein Ali, a member of the Turkmen National Front, was assassinated in a drive-by shooting, a local police colonel said. The Turkmen National Front is an ethnic umbrella group for a number of Turkmen political parties and Turkmen groups.


Iraq's interim government announced Monday that 43 ambassadors have been appointed to represent the nation around the world. Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari did not release the names of the new ambassadors. But he did voice frustration that the United Nations has not yet carried out its pledge to help Iraq hold a national conference that would begin laying groundwork for elections early next year.


A British Puma helicopter crashed Monday at Basra International Airport, killing one crew member, the British Ministry of Defense said. Two other crew members aboard were not injured. An investigation is under way, the ministry said.


U.S. soldiers and Iraqi National Guard personnel arrested 13 suspected insurgents and confiscated munitions Tuesday in northern Iraq, the U.S.-led multinational forces said.
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
http://www.cnn.com/2004/US/West/07/20/wildfires.ap/index.html

SANTA CLARITA, California (AP) -- Firefighters battled Monday to save hundreds of homes threatened by a stubborn wildfire that broke out over the weekend in tinder-dry brush and raced over hillsides and through canyons in northern Los Angeles County.

Although no houses have been lost, nearly 1,600 homes have been evacuated since the fire began Saturday. It was ignited when a red-tailed hawk flew into a power line, was electrocuted and its flaming body fell into brush.

The wildfire had spread across about 6,000 acres by Monday evening and was 45 percent contained. Helicopters dropped water to slow the flames as bulldozers and hand crews working in 90-degree heat labored to cut a line around the fire.

"It looks a lot worse than it actually is," said Martin Esparza, a U.S. Forest Service spokesman. "The winds have started mellowing out and the temperatures have started to drop just a bit."

The fire was one of several burning across more than 40,000 acres of California, from eastern San Diego County to Yosemite National Park.

One of the largest of the others, 90 miles east of Los Angeles in Riverside County, has destroyed four mobile homes, 14 outbuildings and more than a dozen vehicles. It was expected to be fully contained by Tuesday morning.

That fire was started by a target shooter, who was given a citation and may have to pay costs of fighting the fire, said Jim Boano, a spokesman for the California Department of Forestry.

About 15 miles west of downtown Modesto, a wildfire burning out of control along the San Joaquin River spread to 1,000 acres Monday, and was threatening several homes. The fire burned through dense brush into a restored habitat area for the endangered riparian brush rabbit, said Stanislaus County fire Deputy Chief Jim Weigand.

Elsewhere, firefighters made steady progress against a fire about 45 miles north of Los Angeles that has burned more than 17,000 acres since it started July 12.

The fire, which was about 90 percent contained Monday evening, has destroyed three homes. It was expected to be contained by Friday.

In Yosemite National Park, a lightning-sparked wildfire that has closed a number of trails was being allowed to grow on one front but was otherwise mostly contained, park officials said. The blaze has burned across more than 3,800 acres.

In Nevada, officials said a ferocious wildland fire that destroyed 15 homes in Carson City was traced to an illegal campfire. That fire was nearly contained Monday.

In Alaska, an evacuation alert was issued Monday for about 80 homes north of Fairbanks after winds pushed a 473,000-acre fire within 31/2 miles of the area, fire managers said.

Alaska has been having one of its worst wildfire seasons in years, with 3.6 million acres already burned. However, most of the state's 107 fires are in Alaska's remote and unpopulated forests, and many are being allowed to burn.

vert.firefighter.ap.jpg
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
http://www.cnn.com/2004/WORLD/africa/07/19/guinea.big.diamond.ap/index.html

CONAKRY, Guinea (AP) -- There's lucky: Finding a diamond when you're a young miner sweating it out in the west African forests of Guinea. And there's too lucky: finding a 182-carat stone that everyone -- starting with the government of Guinea -- wants a piece of.

Result: the stone -- four times the size of the famous Hope diamond -- was tucked away Monday deep in the vaults of Guinea's Central Bank. No pictures, please.

And the 25-year-old miner who found it, if not exactly in hiding, was making himself scarce. No interviews, please.

State radio in impoverished, mineral-rich Guinea announced the find last week. Guinea mining industry officials confirmed Monday that the newly dug-up stone -- though not flawless -- was a fortune in the rough.

"It's a quite brilliant diamond, of good enough quality despite having numerous veins. One thing is certain -- it's worth millions of dollars," a top official with the Aredor mining company, Guinea's biggest diamond operation, told The Associated Press.

The Guinea gem is 4 inches by 1.2 inches high -- roughly the size and shape of your average computer mouse.

The Hope diamond, by contrast, is 45.52 carats.

The largest diamond ever found, the Cullinan, was a gaudy bowling-ball size beauty at 3,106 carats in the rough.

Freelance discoveries of big diamonds in west and central Africa typically touch off fierce, fast-buck feeding frenzies, pitting the finders and first-round buyers against would-be moneymakers higher up the food chain.

Finders, terrified, have been known to flee into the bush rather than dare bring their find to market.

In Congo in 2000, the government confiscated a 265-carat stone and jailed its local buyer for a month, freeing both only after massive public protests. That stone eventually went at auction in Israel for an industry-estimated, unconfirmed $13 million to $20 million.

Industry officials and diplomats in Guinea on Monday would discuss the find only on condition of anonymity.

The miner, who was not identified, struck his shovel on the stone at a dig in southeast Guinea, bordering Ivory Coast and Liberia.

Authorities gave few other details of the diamond's first hours and days in the light. It was clear, however, that the rock's time with its discoverer was brief.

By Monday, the gem was in the capital, Conakry, behind steel doors at the guarded Central Bank.

The young miner had no choice, a Western diplomat said -- he might have been killed if he hadn't turned it over to the authorities.

An Associated Press reporter, visiting the area of the find, was unable to locate the young miner.

Diamonds, along with aluminum ore and gold, are among the top exports of Guinea, a resource-rich but virtually undeveloped country whose people live on less than $1 a day.

The Aredor mining company, using heavy equipment in high-dollar operations, turns up an average of 30,000 carats each year.

Small-scale miners like the 25-year-old, with no more overhead than the cost of a spade, produce 300 to 400 carats a year here.

The 182-carat stone came from a site owned by the government, and leased to miners.

Miners are believed to slip many smaller finds into their pockets, taking the stones out for smuggling and avoiding the government and any cuts it would take.

Especially since it was found on government land, the gem's discoverer may have believed bypassing Guinea's officials too risky in this case, experts said.

Authorities were to inspect the stone later this week and offer an official estimate. The finder -- if luck holds -- would likely receive an undetermined percentage of that, industry officials said.

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Littledragon

Above The Law
9/11: The Iran Factor
The final report of the 9-11 Commission reveals troubling new evidence that Tehran was closer to Al Qaeda than Iraq was
The 9/11 report says Iranian government officials may have facilitated terror attacks by helping Al Qaeda members to travel with 'clean' passports

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/5457389/site/newsweek/

July 26 issue - The Iranian frontier with Afghanistan is a wild and desolate area of goat farmers and mud-brick huts, the perfect place for illicit opium—and terrorists—to cross the border. But the region is hardly a no man's land. U.S. intelligence believes that in faraway Tehran, the hard-line Islamist clerics who now exercise near total control over Iran directed their border guards to help jihadists coming from Afghanistan. And sometime between October 2000 and February 2001, according to the forthcoming final report of the 9-11 Commission, eight to 10 of the "muscle" hijackers of the September 11 plot were among those who benefited from this Iranian good-fellowship.

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That conclusion—the strongest evidence yet of a relationship between Iran and Al Qaeda—is one of the most surprising findings to emerge in the commission's report, which is due out this week. According to a December 2001 memo buried in the files of the National Security Agency, obtained by the commission, Iranian officials instructed their border inspectors not to place Iranian or Afghan stamps in the passports of Saudi terrorists traveling from Osama bin Laden's training camps through Iran. Such "clean" passports undoubtedly helped the 9/11 terrorists pass into the United States without raising alarms among U.S. Customs and visa officials, sources familiar with the report told NEWSWEEK.

The 9-11 Commission report emphasizes there is no evidence suggesting that Iranian officials had advance knowledge of the September 11 plot. Still, the report raises new, sharper questions about whether the Bush administration was focused on the right enemy when it decided to remove Saddam Hussein. The NSA memo adds to a large accumulation of intelligence indicating that Iran has had more suspicious ties to Al Qaeda than Iraq did. Among those who once had a base in Iran: Abu Mussab al-Zarqawi, allegedly the No. 1 terrorist in Iraq today. Meanwhile the commission found there was no "collaborative, operational" relationship between Iraq and Al Qaeda.

The 9-11 report will likely encourage some administration hawks who have long sought a harder U.S. line against Iran, the "Axis of Evil" member that has gotten the least attention. But Bush administration officials insist that the Iranian link to Al Qaeda was never clear. They also point to a change of attitude by Tehran since 9/11. Iranian officials claim they have "expelled or repatriated" large numbers of bin Laden followers, and last Saturday the country's intelligence chief, Ali Yunesi, announced new arrests. Yet other Qaeda suspects—like bin Laden's son Saad and Saif Al-Adel, once Al Qaeda's security chief, along with eight others—are believed to still be in Iran, possibly under some kind of protective custody to be used as leverage in future U.S.-Iran talks. According to separate intelligence reports, Qaeda suspects also continue to hide across the border from Afghanistan. "We just don't have good intelligence about what is going on in Iran," said one senior U.S. intelligence official. That's especially true since the Iraqi National Congress allegedly told Iranian officials after the Iraq invasion that U.S. intelligence was listening to their conversations. U.S. officials say that resulted in a devastating loss of monitoring capability.

All these unanswered questions make the 500-plus-page 9-11 Commission report—which was intended as a history of the September 11 plot—more relevant than ever to the future war on terror. Exhaustively researched, the report is described as "a thumping good read" and a blistering critique of the performance of the CIA, the FBI, the Federal Aviation Administration and a host of other agencies. To correct such failures, the report recommends the creation of a national-intelligence director who would serve as an "intelligence czar" with budgetary authority over the entire U.S. intelligence community. But some administration and intel officials are already deriding the plan as bureaucratic box-drawing.

The 9-11 report is destined to be picked apart by partisans seeking political ammunition against either the Clinton or Bush administrations. The report criticizes both for failing to respond to the bombing of the USS Cole off the coast of Yemen in October 2000, especially in light of multiple intelligence briefings strongly pointing to Qaeda complicity. Among the other new disclosures: Bill Clinton also got a strong warning that bin Laden wanted to hijack planes. On Dec. 4, 1998, Clinton was presented with a President's Daily Brief (PDB) with the eye-catching title "Bin Laden Preparing to Hijack U.S. Aircraft and other attacks," NEWSWEEK has learned. The PDB, which has just been declassified, was prompted by a British intelligence report that the son of the Egyptian "blind sheik" Omar Abdel-Rahman—who had been convicted of a plot to blow up New York City landmarks—proposed to hijack airplanes and ransom the passengers in exchange for his father's release. Clinton officials say they acted aggressively, placing New York City airports on maximum alert, but no evidence ever turned up establishing that the plot was real.

Curiously, the same information turned up 20 months later, in the Aug. 6, 2001, PDB presented to President George W. Bush, "Bin Laden Determined to Strike in U.S." One White House official suggested that the existence of the earlier PDB was evidence that President Bush was never properly informed by the outgoing Clintonites about the full depth of the Qaeda threat. "This was never briefed to us," said the official about the 1998 PDB. Clinton officials dismiss this, saying the timing of the declassification is likely an effort to blunt criticism that Bush bears primary responsibility for failing to avert 9/11.

Grimly, what the new 9-11 report makes clear is that nearly three years into the war on terror, America is still not close to understanding the enemy. And Washington seems less able to force Tehran to change its ways, especially since Bush has removed one of the chief threats to the mullah regime, Saddam Hussein, and is now bogged down in Iraq. As one intel official said before the Iraq war: "The Iranians are tickled by our focus on Iraq."

All these issues have gained new urgency as Bush officials warn of further attacks. Despite recent portrayals of bin Laden as a man hunted and on the run, U.S. counter-terrorism officials now say the threat today from Al Qaeda may be just as serious as in the summer of 2001. The warnings are based on unusually high-quality intelligence emanating from the Afghanistan-Pakistan border near Waziristan, where top Qaeda leaders are said to be hiding. "This is absolutely real," said one senior U.S. counterterrorism official. "We feel very confident that they are trying hard to attack us inside the United States before the election and that some of the operatives are already here." But just as with the 9/11 attacks, officials are at a loss to say what the actual plot is, who the plotters are, how they got here—and who helped them get here.

With Mark Hosenball and Steve Tuttle

© 2004 Newsweek, Inc.

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Littledragon

Above The Law
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/5457437/site/newsweek/

An Afghan Mystery
He vowed to catch bin Laden. Now an ex-Green Beret faces vigilante chargesBy John Barry and Owen Matthews
NewsweekJuly 26 issue - It's an ordinary-looking house, painted green, in a rundown neighborhood on Kabul's outskirts. The landlord says he rented it to an American who told him he was in the rug-export business. This is where Jonathan Keith (Jack) Idema, a onetime Green Beret from Poughkeepsie, N.Y., is accused of running his own private interrogation center. Afghan police raided the house on a tip from U.S. Coalition authorities, freeing seven Afghan captives and arresting Idema, 48, and two other Americans on charges of assault and kidnapping. Afghan officials said their group, which they called Task Force Sabre 7, were freelancers who posed as U.S. officials and allegedly tortured their prisoners to get information.

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Idema's defenders insist he is a true patriot who was hot on the trail of Osama bin Laden. "The United States has put a $25 million bounty on this guy, so why all of a sudden this 'tsk, tsk' when someone goes after him?" says Ken Kelch, a filmmaker and former Special Forces soldier who knows Idema. Other Green Berets, though, are among his worst critics. "Idema is not a member of the SFA and he never will be," says a spokesman for the Special Forces Association, a veterans' organization.

Idema boasts of serving in various roles in nearly every U.S. battle zone in the past 20 years: Central America, Southeast Asia, Eastern Europe, even Haiti. Idema's active-duty military service was quite short; his military records, obtained by NEWSWEEK, show that he spent three years in the U.S. Army's 10th Special Forces Group as a rear-base radio operator until 1978, and then an additional six years in the Reserves. There is no record that he was in combat or overseas with the U.S. military. His criminal record shows a long string of charges including assault and resisting arrest going back to 1988, with convictions on driving offenses and misdemeanors. He started a business making military and paintball gear. To keep that failing enterprise alive, prosecutors alleged, he defrauded suppliers, and ended up sentenced to four years in prison on 55 federal wire-fraud counts. At his sentencing, Idema argued that prosecutors were persecuting him because of the "national- security secrets" he knew.

September 11 gave Idema a new sense of mission. Within weeks he had found his way to northern Afghanistan, where he spent his days in dealings with many foreign reporters (including NEWSWEEK), NGOs and Northern Alliance fighters. He sometimes identified himself to aid workers as a journalist, to journalists as an aid worker. After the Taliban fell he became a well-known figure in Kabul, frequenting the Mustapha Hotel, a favored residence and hangout for the gun-toting Americans who poured into Kabul as civilian security contractors. "He was passionate about getting the bad guys," recalls a former Navy SEAL who works for a private security firm there. "He was always talking about getting bin Laden." That obsession inspired Idema to create Task Force Sabre 7, which he said in e-mails back to the States was getting closer "to the last terrorists."

U.S. officials deny any ties to Idema. As long ago as February 2002, U.S. consular officials in Kabul had been warning newly arrived Americans to steer clear of him, but even so it took until late June before the Coalition authorities began posting wanted posters around Kabul describing Idema as "armed and dangerous," accusing him of "interfering with military ops." (In an e-mail to his lawyer about the poster, Idema wrote, "the charges are a lie.") Kabul's streets are full of Americans brandishing weapons in unmarked SUVs, and Afghan security forces are forbidden to ask them for identification. Some of his supporters are still convinced that he was on some officially authorized operation. "What was his mission?" wonders Jim Maceda, an NBC correspondent who knew Idema in Kabul. "I believe that he believed he had a mission."

Perhaps. But now Jack Idema's mission will be to avoid a conviction in an Afghan court, which could bring him up to 20 years in jail. And if he beats that rap, the Feds are still looking for him back in the States to face charges of "impersonating a peace officer," after police had stopped his car in North Carolina. (His wife, Viktoria Runningwolf, says he's innocent.) Either way, it doesn't look like he'll be collecting that $25 million bounty any time soon.

With Julie Scelfo and Karen Fragala in New York

© 2004 Newsweek, Inc.
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Date: July 20, 2004
Source: http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2004...ain630642.shtml
________________________________________________________________

Life, Music Mix In Prince's Realm

NEW YORK, July 20, 2004

(CBS) Music must uplift as well as entertain, says Prince, explaining why current events figure so prominently in his songs.

In a wide-ranging interview with The Early Show co-anchor Rene Syler, he spoke about the war in Iraq, politics and, of course, his music, which includes his latest project, “Musicology.”

If you're a fan, you know “Musicology” when you hear it - the funk, the mix, the melody is pure Prince.

Some of the songs on “Musicology” make one want to groove like the dancers on the video, but there's another layer here.

After 25 years of making music, this album, in particular one song: “Cinnamon Girl,” looks at exploitation. In the lyrics Prince says:

"Cinnamon Girl, mixed heritage. Never knew the meaning of color lines. 9/11 turned that around when she got accused of this crime. Terror alibi. What's the use when the god of confusion keeps on telling the same lie?"

Why is it important for Prince to address some of the issues that we're facing today?

“Well,” Prince says, “It seems to be the age old problem of prejudice and misunderstanding between so-called races. You know, I wrote a song once about a large ball, black on one side, white on the other. And the other person, about this big, only seeing that one side. That's the way they think the world is.

“Unfortunately, in war there are children dying on both sides," he continues. "So sooner or later, I think, as a people we're going to have to discuss some of these issues. So I just wanted to put my little two cents in.”

Prince started making music in a pre- Sept. 11 world. And he continues on in a post- Sept. 11 world. So the questions are: Is it important to him to use his music to educate? And is that why he draws on current events for some of his music?

Prince replies, “Well, I think music, not only should it be entertaining, but it should try to uplift you in some form or fashion. I mean, I think that's the purpose of music. It's to make light of otherwise dire situations. You take music out of the world it's going to be pretty dark. I think, of course, I would say that, I'm a musician.”

How much of his own experience as an African-American is embedded in the lyrics of his music?

“I almost think that we were taught race,” Prince says. “It wasn't something that we were just born with. We all look different, and we are all varied in our complexions and sizes. And all that's wonderful. That's good, you know? That reflects the way the universe is built. But when we are-- put in boxes, I've always railed against that. So this isn't a new topic for me.”

He's 46 now, but doesn't look anywhere near that. And he exhibits a deepening understanding of what he says, does, and sings about and its influence on society as a whole.

“The simple fact that I'm not alone on the planet." he says. "There are others around me, just by virtue of the children that come to our concerts and things like that. I have a responsibility to them to perform in a manner that I would like my children to be performed in front of. So, that said, I just want to be the best human being I can be so that my faith is going to try to lead me in that direction in all aspects of my life, on stage and off.”

The Prince of 2004 is quite a bit different from the Prince 1979, who was singing songs with some pretty explicit lyrics. About this, Prince says, “I always challenge people to play one of my so-called explicit songs up against an explicit song of today.

“If you take some of the music off these songs of today you've got straight pornography. And one thing, I always tried to keep raw sensuality in my music. It was never done in a spirit of misogyny or meanness.”

It is evident he is not a misogynist because he tends to employ female musicians in his band. Asked why, he answers with laughter, “That’s a good question. They're the better sex? Watch it now. Watch it.”

Seriously, he says, “Female musicians, I think, tend to listen better. And they don't let their ego get in the way of music.”

Prince wraps of the East Coast part of his sold-out U.S. tour Tuesday night with a stop at Nassau Colisseum. The tour continues through September.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Syler was in college when she became a devoted Prince fan. She says she and her buddies partied with “Dreamed Of,” “Raspberry Berets,” and “Little Red Corevettes,” and watched the skies for “Purple Rain.” So she was understandably thrilled when Prince invited her to go on stage with the band and she got to dance with him.

©MMIV, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Date: July 19, 2004
Source: http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?...802&c=1&s=rosen
________________________________________________________________

His Majesty
Prince
by Jody Rosen

July 15, 2004



This past February's forty-sixth annual Grammy Awards ceremony began with a surprise performance by the pop virtuoso who is once again calling himself Prince. The occasion was the twentieth anniversary of the career-making album and film Purple Rain, and it was strange to see Prince thrust into the role of elder statesman--he is 46 years old and looks about 22. At the Grammys, his svelte 5'2" frame was packed into one of the form-fitting toreador-pimp outfits that he has been wearing for a couple of decades; he raced through a medley of old hits, looking every bit as sleek as he had in what the National Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences has decided was his prime. He whirled and strutted and winked; he sang like a soul balladeer and howled his best rock star banshee wail; he played squalling solos on two different guitars: one a classic Fender Telecaster, the other a pointy purple thing, custom-made in the shape of the unpronounceable glyph--a sort of ankh with a few extra jagged bits attached--to which Prince legally changed his name in 1993. He was joined on stage by an actual 22-year-old, the r&b star Beyoncé, who gamely sang along but seemed overwhelmed by the old-timer's outlandish energy and musicianship. When the medley crashed to a close, Beyoncé stood teetering on a pair of stiletto heels, looking like she needed a medic; Prince peeled off his guitar, threw it to the floor, and glowered out at an audience filled with famous musicians as if to say, Anyone else want a piece?

The Grammy appearance kicked off what has been Prince's most high-profile, studiously crowd-pleasing year in a decade. In March he delivered another show-stopping performance and gave a genial speech at his induction to the Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame. He launched a world tour focusing on the big hits he had vowed never again to perform, sat for magazine and television interviews, said flattering things about his audience and generally conducted himself like an entertainer on a promotional junket--par for the course for most pop stars but something new for this self-styled genius-recluse, who just a few years earlier had sued his own fanzine for copyright infringement. Then, in April, came the charm campaign's coup de grâce: a lean new album, Musicology, which, in contrast to his last several records, took dead aim at the pop charts. It entered the Billboard Top 200 at Number 3, Prince's highest-charting release in fifteen years.


If nothing else, this is a major music-business story, a big comeback by a big star who has spent the past ten years baffling his fans and watching his album sales plummet. The trouble began with the infamous name-change, followed by a legal tussle with Warner Bros. records over contractual issues and the ownership of Prince's master recordings. (It was during this imbroglio that Prince began painting the word "Slave" on his face--a bit of a stretch, given that his six-album deal was worth close to $100 million.) In 1996 Warners finally agreed to cut Prince loose, freeing him to distribute his own records (largely through his website) and to sit at home, in a shopping-mall-sized recording studio complex in the Minneapolis suburbs, indulging his musical whims, however inspired or harebrained.

The result was a great outpouring of music--some of it sublime, some terrible--that few people heard. Prince has always made wonderful pop records, guided by, and in spite of, his eccentric muse; but in recent years, he's drifted further from pop and deeper into tedium. By the time he released The Rainbow Children (2001), a messy, inscrutable theme album about his Jehovah's Witness faith, and followed it up with a rock-star folly straight out of This Is Spinal Tap--the four-song, fifty-six-minute instrumental "jazz" epic N.E.W.S. (2003)--it seemed reasonable to assume that Prince had stopped making music for anyone other than himself and his most masochistic diehards (perhaps those poor fanzine editors against whom he'd filed suit).

Which is why the taut, radio-friendly Musicology has struck so many listeners as a delightful surprise. Just twelve songs and forty-seven minutes long, it's a proper album, not another three hour, triple-CD set like Prince's behemoth Emancipation (1996), and it sounds super. It may be the most sharply produced of any record in Prince's catalogue; as usual, the pop-rock tunes, funk workouts and ballads are densely arranged, but every guitar line, harmony vocal and piano chord stands out, in vivid focus. Typical is "Life O' Party," which starts with an a cappella vocal, adds a hammering electronic kick drum and over the course of the song piles on percussion, background vocals, horns, at least five different keyboard lines, rubbery bass guitar, wah-wah, and at the very top of the mix, a triangle, pinging like an elevator bell every four measures. Each part bursts through the stereo speakers with perfect clarity, and they slot together to form a gargantuan groove. As on all of Musicology's songs, Prince plays nearly every instrument.

It's that preposterous one-man-band virtuosity that insures Prince's place in the rock-and-roll pantheon. In terms of sheer musical talent, Prince has no peer. He is both an anomaly in the history of twentieth-century pop music and that history's logical end point--all of the excitement and grandeur and nonsense of rock and roll (and virtually every subgenre) embodied in one preening, doe-eyed, androgynous, biracial, sartorially resplendent, sexually and spiritually obsessed musical polymath. When he emerged from Minneapolis in the late 1970s wearing thigh-high boots and bikini underwear, he seemed like a period curio: a creature sprung from disco-era clubland who played choppy funk on New Wave keyboards. But by the time of Purple Rain, it was clear that Prince was a musician for the ages. He mashed together gospel, soul and funk, gentle folk, hard rock, Tin Pan Alley pop and a dozen other styles, sometimes--often--in the space of a single song. He played guitar like Jimi Hendrix and wrote melodies like the Beatles; in his remarkably nimble voice you could hear echoes of guttural James Brown, silken Al Green and John Lennon, in his hoarsest primal-scream mode. No one before Prince had done so many things so well; twenty-five years later, his successor has yet to arrive.


Musicology is a showpiece for Prince's lavish gifts. As usual, his songwriting is effortlessly sophisticated, balancing pop-tune accessibility with jazz chords, tricky key changes and moments of dissonance that resolve with a satisfying crash into a major chord progression. Prince plays some astonishing lead guitar, and sings superbly throughout, summoning different vocal timbres in nearly every song. In "On the Couch," a ballad, he croons lush blue notes in a feathery falsetto, while a background choir of overdubbed Princes chimes in with low and high harmony parts. He delivers the Teddy Pendergrass-style soul ballad "Call My Name" in a robust baritone; in "Illusion, Coma, Pimp & Circumstance"--the rawest and strangest funk on the album--his voice is nasal and gasping; in "What Do U Want Me 2 Do" he sounds clipped, boyish, bashful.

All this skill and formal polish is familiar from past Prince albums, but Musicology is in certain notable ways a departure. By far, this is Prince's most prudish record. Sex has always been his supreme subject, and unlike so many other musical lotharios, Prince is--or at least was--genuinely kinky. His dionysian streak first emerged on his third album, Dirty Mind (1980), and thereafter Prince made it his project to banish all double-entendres and fill his records with as many fantasies and perversions as possible. He sang about a 32-year-old woman who keeps her 16-year-old brother as a sex slave; he sang plaintively of his desire to be his girlfriend's girlfriend, so he could help her pick out clothes and dress her for a night on the town (and, while they were at it, have some lesbian sex); he wrote what may have been history's first cyber-sex ballad, back in 1996; he sang an ode to the pheromone.


On Musicology, Prince has tamed his lust. There are sexy songs--"Call My Name" and "On the Couch" are make-out tunes par excellence--but the sex is implied in the slow-simmering grooves, not spelled out in the lyrics. The closest Prince comes to talking dirty is when he begs an angry lover to let him back in bed, so he can "go down south"--rather coy words from the creator of "Jack U Off" and "Pussy Control."

In fact, the Prince we encounter on Musicology sounds suspiciously like a married, middle-aged Minnesotan (all of which he is). He's concerned about politics (three songs take swipes at George W. Bush), in love with his wife and, despite the obligatory party tunes, in a subdued, meditative mood. The album ends with one of the most touching songs Prince has written, "Reflection," a loping ballad, nudged along by woodwinds and a high-riding bass, which offers as poignant a picture of mid-life happiness and resignation as you're likely to find in a pop song. Its lyric meanders from tender domestic scenes ("Did we remember to water the plants 2day?...Tell me do U like my hair this way?") to some cryptic lines about death and loss ("It's nice 2 know/That when bodies wear out/We can get another... Eye was just thinking about my mother") to an almost pastoral concluding verse, in which we glimpse Prince strumming a guitar on his front porch at day's end, like a crusty bluesman.

The gentleness of "Reflection" suggests that Prince is aging gracefully, easing into the late afternoon of middle age. But elsewhere on Musicology, we meet a more cantankerous figure. The fact that Prince is no longer a sex fiend comes as a mild surprise; it's a real shock, though, to find Prince, who for years was the embodiment of everything musically new and weird, embracing a schoolmarmish brand of musical traditionalism. Can the man who gave us "Computer Blue" and other masterpieces of robotic-funk really have become a roots-music snob?

It sure sounds like it. Musicology's title track is a shamelessly note-perfect James Brown pastiche, an "old school joint/4 the true funk soldiers" that centers on a rhetorical question: "Don't u miss the feeling/Music gave ya/Back in the day?" With its horn stabs, cracking snare drum and percolating bass line straight out of "Sex Machine," "Musicology" is designed to stoke nostalgia for that allegedly better, nobler musical era, and to set up another question, Prince's big punchline, a dig at hip-hop, delivered with a gruff harrumph over a stop-time: "Take ur pick--turntable or a band?"

As a marketing ploy, Prince's newfound nostalgia makes some sense. For the past several years, r&b has been overrun by earnest young singers, wielding tattered copies of Stevie Wonder's Innervisions and Fender Rhodes electric pianos, who revive, with varying degrees of skill and slavishness, the sound of 1970s soul. After a decade in the commercial wilderness, Prince may have decided that neo-soul was good business. After all, he's capable of disappearing into the studio for an afternoon and churning out a period piece that young stars like D'Angelo, Erykah Badu and Alicia Keys would labor over for weeks.

On Musicology, Prince gestures in the direction of 1970s nostalgia, invoking Earth, Wind and Fire and Sly Stone, recalling the good old days "when we would compare whose afro was the roundest." But the yesteryear he's really wistful for is his own mid-1980s heyday. "Musicology" ends with a cute little audio montage: the sound of a spinning radio dial, picking up snatches of old Prince hits--"Kiss," "Sign 'O' the Times," "Little Red Corvette." The implication is clear: This is the good stuff; this is what you've been missing.

But there's a problem: Those one-bar snippets of Prince classics show up everything on Musicology. In the 1980s Prince moved brazenly from invention to invention. His hit singles offered a virtually unbroken sequence of sonic shocks, each carrying new kinds of weirdness onto the pop charts. The young Prince Rogers Nelson was bored with r&b production clichés--he had a particular aversion to horns--and in response, crafted his signature sound, the jagged keyboard-propelled funk of early hits like "I Wanna Be Your Lover," "Controversy" and "1999." These stark, irrepressibly danceable songs gave a virile edge to ticky-tacky synthesizer pop and established Prince's preference for spartan arrangements--and it is that eerie minimalism, the sound of something stripped out, that even today strikes the ear with such electric force. Think of "When Doves Cry" (1984), the spooky Number 1 hit from Purple Rain, which completely eschews bass; or "Sign 'O' the Times" (1987), which thrusts a chewy bass out front and brings in guitar only for an occasional bluesy accent; or the delicious "Kiss" (1986), a funk song so spare it seems scored for voice and rattling bones.

Musicology contains no such jolts. Prince the minimalist weirdo has become Prince the maximalist craftsman. The new album is a collection of impeccably realized stylistic exercises, with each horn line and gospel piano chord in its proper place, every song burnished to perfection, sounding exactly like it should. Prince has made a good record, and paid himself a poor tribute.

One of the little-discussed leitmotifs in pop music history is the role of competition in producing great music. All the arts have their rivalries, but popular music is a particularly intense contact sport; antagonisms play out on the Billboard charts and MTV and concert stages, with anxiety-of-influence neuroses hanging thick in the strobe-lit air. Consider the mid-1960s rivalries between the Beatles and Beach Boys, or between the Beatles and the Rolling Stones. Rap still thrives on the verbal blood sport of rhyme battles; and the extraordinary sonic richness of today's hit radio is due in large measure to competition between hip-hop producers, who vie to outdo each other with the freshest and most unusual new sounds and rhythms.

Prince has had his own history of rivalries, and on the evidence of Musicology, his competitive impulse is still robust. In the 1980s he was pitted against Michael Jackson in a clash of freaky-eccentric natural-born pop geniuses. Since then, the rivalry has cooled, but on the new record, Prince can't resist getting a dig in. "My voice is getting higher/And Eye ain't never had my nose done," he sings on "Life 'O' the Party," adding, "That's the other guy."

In any case, the real target of Prince's ire these days isn't sad, grotesque Michael Jackson but the rappers and deejays he dismisses in that snide lyric about turntables. Here is a great big snarl of artistic neurosis that Harold Bloom could appreciate. Prince exerted a powerful influence on the first generation of hip-hop MCs and producers, who sampled his records, copped his hauteur, studied his genre-melding and found inspiration in his talent for coaxing beautiful sounds from new machines. Sometime around 1990, the weight of influence shifted, and for years Prince expended a great deal of effort trying to incorporate hip-hop into his sound--hiring producers to punch up his beats, adding a pitiful rapper named Tony M. to his New Power Generation touring band, even attempting, in a few embarrassing instances, to rap himself.

Now, having failed to master hip-hop, Prince rails against it. His argument--that a turntable is no match for a band, that hip-hop isn't real music, etc.--is a case that even the woodsiest classic rock fans stopped making years ago, and should really be beneath the dignity of a guy whose synthesizer-steeped early records make most hip-hop sound as earthy as an Alan Lomax field recording. It's obvious, anyway, that Prince doesn't believe his own rhetoric. He's clearly obsessed with hip-hop; on Musicology, he keeps mentioning rappers--Missy Elliot, Dr. Dre and Eminem pop up out of nowhere, hobgoblins of Prince's subconscious--and it can't have escaped his attention that the best, most interesting, most beguilingly odd--most Princean--pop music is being made by rappers and their producers. Back on Grammy night, Prince watched the coronation of Outkast, the Atlanta hip-hop duo whose monster hit "Hey Ya!" is, in spirit if not in form, a Prince tribute, and is, truth be told, as woolly and irresistible as anything in the master's own songbook. If Prince is spoiling for a fight, is it because, deep down, he knows that his hip-hop followers have stolen his mojo?
 
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