Obama: Israel's East Jerusalem Housing Plan 'Not Helpful' to Peace Efforts

Obama: Israel's East Jerusalem Housing Plan 'Not Helpful' to Peace Efforts

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US - ISRAEL - PALESTINIANS: U.S. President Barack Obama has criticized Israel's plan to build homes for Jews in disputed east Jerusalem as "not helpful" to Israeli-Arab peace efforts. In an interview Wednesday with U.S. television network Fox News, Mr. Obama said the United States and Israel disagree about how to move Israeli-Palestinian peace talks forward. But, he denied any crisis in U.S.-Israeli relations and said the American and Israeli people have a "special bond that is not going to go away." Israel announced the plan for 1,600 homes in east Jerusalem last week, triggering condemnations from senior U.S. officials.

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RUSSIA - US: U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is in Moscow for talks with Russian leaders on clinching a new treaty to cut the nuclear arsenals of the two powers. Clinton arrived in Moscow early Thursday ahead of meetings with her Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov later in the day and with President Dmitri Medvedev on Friday. Russian and U.S. officials have spent almost a year trying to negotiate a new agreement to replace their 1991 Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, or START, which expired last December. U.S. President Barack Obama and President Medvedev agreed last year to further reduce their nations' stockpiles of nuclear weapons under a new treaty.

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CHINA - US: The U.S. ambassador to China says current disputes about trade and foreign policy should not keep the two sides from cooperating on a number of issues. Jon Huntsman expressed U.S. concerns about a host of issues to a group of students at Beijing's Tsinghua University Thursday, such as the dispute over China's valuation of its currency. Washington has accused China of keeping the yuan artificially low so its exports will be cheaper on the international market, a charge Beijing denies. Huntsman called on China to show more "flexibility" on the exchange rate, and insisted that other trading partners beside the U.S. have made similar complaints.

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CHINA - AUSTRALIA - RIO TINTO: Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd says "the world will be watching" China's prosecution of four executives of Anglo-Australian mining giant Rio Tinto on charges of corporate espionage and bribery. Canberra said Wednesday the four executives, including Chinese-born Australian Stern Hu, will go on trial Monday in Shanghai. Hu and his three Chinese colleagues were arrested last July during negotiations about iron ore prices between Rio Tinto and China's steel industry association. They were suspected of obtaining inside information that helped Rio Tinto during the talks.

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NORTH KOREA - CURRENCY: News reports from South Korea say North Korea's former finance director has been executed over last year's disastrous currency reform scheme. Yonahp news agency says it has learned that Pak Nam-gi was put to death at a shooting range in Pyongyang last week. The regime revalued the nation's currency last November in order to reassert control of its centrally-planned economy. But prices rose sharply because of the already limited supply of goods in the state-run distribution system, and ground North Korea's emerging market-based economy to a halt.

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BURMA - US - RIGHTS: A Burmese-born U.S. human rights activist has been deported from his native land, weeks after he was sentenced to prison on fraud and forgery charges. A spokesman for the U.S. Embassy in Rangoon says Kyaw Zaw Lwin, also known as Nyi Nyi Aung, boarded a flight out of the country Thursday. His aunt says he is flying to Thailand. He was arrested last September after arriving in the country to visit his ailing mother. A court sentenced him to three years in prison last month for possessing a fake national identity card and undeclared foreign currency, and violating immigration laws.

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GUATEMALA - PORTILLO: A Guatemalan court says former president Alfonso Portillo will be extradited to the United States, where he is wanted on money laundering charges. The court ruled in favor of the U.S. extradition request on Wednesday. Mr. Portillo also faces corruption charges in Guatemala. Mr. Portillo was indicted in New York last month. Authorities accuse him of embezzling more than a million dollars between 2000 and 2004 from donations from Taiwan that were intended for school library books. The prosecutor in New York alleges Mr. Portillo laundered the money through bank accounts in the United States and Europe.

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CUBA - PROTEST: Authorities in Cuba have broken up a protest march involving the wives and mothers of jailed dissidents who took to the streets to demand the release of their loved ones. Police Wednesday moved in to detain some 30 women from the opposition group "Ladies in White" during the march through the capital, Havana. As the women walked down the street carrying flowers, hundreds of government supporters crowded around them, shouting insults along with "Long Live Fidel." Female officers later forced the marchers onto a bus, which drove off to an unknown location.

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