State of emergency declared in Nigeria

Nigeria's president declared a state of emergency Thursday in a troubled southwest state where he said the impeachment of the governor by the local legislature violated the constitution.


Legislators in southwest Ekiti state voted to remove Gov. Ayo Fayose on Monday after finding him guilty of siphoning state funds into personal bank accounts and receiving kickbacks.


"I hereby declare a state of emergency in Ekiti state," President Olusegun Obasanjo said in a national broadcast.

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Tags: siphoning funds | receiving kickbacks | Fayose | Ekiti | violated | troubled | Southwest | president | legislature | Impeachment | guilty | governor | Emergency | Declare | thursday | Olusegun Obasanjo | Nigeria

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U.S. October death toll in Iraq hits 70

Eleven more U.S. troops were slain in combat, the military said Wednesday, putting October on track to be the deadliest month for U.S. forces since the siege of Fallujah nearly two years ago.


On Thursday, a suicide car bomb hit a major police station in the northern city of Mosul, prompting authorities to impose an indefinite curfew throughout the city, police and witnesses said.


The bombing at 7:15 a.m. caused extensive damage to the station and there were casualties, but no specific figures were immediately available, according to police Col. Abdul-Karim al-Jibouri.

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Tags: troops | toll | suicide | Slain | siege | police | Hits | FORCES | Curfew | combat | casualties | Bomb | Mosul | Iraq | Fallujah

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NATO strikes kill 9 Afghan civilians

Airstrikes by NATO helicopters hunting Taliban fighters ripped through three dried mud homes in southern Afghanistan as villagers slept early Wednesday. At least nine civilians were killed, including women and children, said residents and the provincial governor.


On Thursday, a suicide bomber killed two children and wounded seven civilians and several British soldiers in southern Afghanistan, officials said.


NATO's International Security Assistance Force said the attack in the town of Lashkar Gah in Helmand province wounded "a small number" of British soldiers. Squadron Leader Jason Chalk, a force spokesman, said he had no reports of British fatalities.

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Tags: Villagers | suicide | STRIKES | spokesman | Soldiers | Reports | PROVINCE | HELICOPTERS | FIGHTERS | CIVILIANS | Bomber | attack | Taliban | SQUADRON | NATO | leader | jason | chalk | British | afghanistan | afghan

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Feds net 125 nationwide in kid-porn case

A Bible camp counselor and a Boy Scout leader were among 125 people arrested nationwide in an Internet child pornography case in which subscribers purchased photos and videos of children engaged in sex acts with adults, federal authorities said Wednesday.


The case originated in New Jersey, but quickly spread to 22 states. The defendants were charged with either possession or receipt of child pornography. Additional arrests are expected.


Prosecutors said the Web site alerted subscribers that its content was illegal and urged them to be discreet about their purchases.

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Tags: kid-porn | videos | subscribers | PURCHASED | pornography | photos | Net | nationwide | ADULTS | New Jersey | internet | feds | Bible

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State of emergency declared in Nigeria


BASHIR ADIGUN,
Associated Press Writer

Nigeria's president declared a state of emergency Thursday in a troubled southwest state where he said the impeachment of the governor by the local legislature violated the constitution.

Legislators in southwest Ekiti state voted to remove Gov. Ayo Fayose on Monday after finding him guilty of siphoning state funds into personal bank accounts and receiving kickbacks.

"I hereby declare a state of emergency in Ekiti state," President Olusegun Obasanjo said in a national broadcast.

He suspended the state legislature for six months, along with Fayose, his deputy and Friday Aderemi, the former speaker of local parliament who is claiming to be governor.

Obasanjo appointed a retired general to administer the affairs of the state and maintain security there for the next six months.

The removal of Fayose was illegal because some steps in the impeachment process violated Nigeria's constitution, Obasanjo said.

Information Minister Frank Nweke said the legislators' removal of a state chief judge was an action outside their power. The replacement judge set up the impeachment panel that found Fayose guilty of misconduct.

"It is a clear case of usurpation of power," Obasanjo said of the impeachment of Fayose. "It is dangerous for our democracy to allow this flagrant violation."

Troops and police were patrolling the streets of Ado Akiti, the state capital, and guarding key government buildings, residents said.

Meanwhile, rival governments had set up in different neighborhoods. The former speaker of the legislature chose a Cabinet in one part of the city. In another neighborhood, Fayose's deputy held a Cabinet meeting on behalf of the deposed governor.

Fayose has remained in hiding since being ousted. Deputy Gov. Abodun Olujimi was also fired by the legislature for alleged complicity in the crimes.

The stream of allegations and office shuffling add to growing uncertainty about the stability of Africa's most populous country ahead of crucial general elections due in April 2007.

Thirty-one of Nigeria's 36 state governors are being investigated for corruption, according to the country's financial crimes agency. Nigeria is regularly rated among the most corrupt countries in the world by Berlin-based anti-graft watchdog Transparency International.

Obasanjo himself has been accused of misusing state funds by his vice president, who plans to run for the presidency when Obasanjo's final term runs out next year. The relationship disintegrated after a failed move by Obasanjo's supporters to amend the constitution so he could run again; Vice President Atiku Abubakar opposed the proposed change.

The president has accused his deputy of corruption and Abubakar's membership of the ruling party has been suspended.

Nigeria is Africa's largest oil producer and the fifth-largest supplier of oil to the United States. Much of the oil proceeds never reach the poor in the regions where the crude is pumped.

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U.S. October death toll in Iraq hits 70


STEVEN R. HURST,
Associated Press Writer

Eleven more U.S. troops were slain in combat, the military said Wednesday, putting October on track to be the deadliest month for U.S. forces since the siege of Fallujah nearly two years ago.

On Thursday, a suicide car bomb hit a major police station in the northern city of Mosul, prompting authorities to impose an indefinite curfew throughout the city, police and witnesses said.

The bombing at 7:15 a.m. caused extensive damage to the station and there were casualties, but no specific figures were immediately available, according to police Col. Abdul-Karim al-Jibouri.

Police seeking to reinforce the curfew fired in the air, sending motorists and pedestrians scurrying for cover.

Meanwhile, the military says the sharp increase in U.S. casualties — 70 so far this month — is tied to Ramadan and a security crackdown that has left American forces more vulnerable to attack in Baghdad and its suburbs. Muslim tenets hold that fighting a foreign occupation force during Islam's holy month puts a believer especially close to God.

As the death toll climbed for both U.S. forces and Iraqi civilians, who are being killed at a rate of 43 a day, the country's Shiite-dominated government remained under intense U.S. pressure to shut down Shiite militias.

Some members of the armed groups have fractured into uncontrolled, roaming death squads out for revenge against Sunni Arabs, the Muslim minority in Iraq who were politically and socially dominant until the fall of Saddam Hussein.

There have been growing signs in recent days of mounting strain between Washington and the wobbly government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, who felt compelled during a conversation with President Bush this week to seek his assurances that the Americans were not going to dump him.

Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari on Wednesday blamed American officials who ran Iraq before its own government took nominal control for bringing the country to the present state of chaos.

"Had our friends listened to us, we would not be where we are today," Zebari said in an interview with The Associated Press.

Asked which friends he was referring to, Zebari said:

"The Americans, the Coalition (Provision Authority), the British. OK? Because they didn't listen to us. The did exactly what they wanted to do. ... Had they listened to us, we would have been someplace else (by now), really."

It was an unusually harsh statement from Zebari, a Kurd, whose ethnic group owes much to the U.S. intervention in Iraq and for its virtual autonomy in the north of the country.

A report in Britain's Financial Times on Wednesday said the White House is now pressuring Iraqi authorities to give amnesty to Sunni insurgents. That would be a surprising change for the Bush administration, which has resisted amnesty because it could potentially include fighters who have killed American troops.

At the State Department, spokesman Tom Casey said a decision on amnesty would be left to the Iraqi government.

"I wouldn't describe our position as pressuring them to do this now or at any particular moment except at a point when they feel their national reconciliation process has gone through its appropriate steps and they're ready to move forward with it," Casey said.

Soon after taking office in May, al-Maliki proposed an amnesty for insurgents who put down their arms. But no insurgents took up the offer, and the proposal bogged down amid differences over who would be eligible. Al-Maliki said those "with blood on their hands" — either Iraqis' or American soldiers' — would not be covered.

Despite the climbing death toll, the U.S. military claims it is making progress in taming runaway violence in the capital as it engages insurgents, militias and sectarian death squads, rounds up suspects and uncovers weapons caches and masses of stockpiled explosives.

The latest American death took place Wednesday, when a soldier was killed after his patrol was attacked with small-arms fire south of Baghdad. Ten Americans were killed on Tuesday — nine soldiers and a Marine — the highest single-day combat death toll for U.S. forces since Jan. 5, when 11 service members were killed across Iraq. There have been days with a higher number of U.S. deaths, but not solely from combat.

October is now on track to be the deadliest month for American forces in Iraq since November 2004, when military offenses primarily in the then-insurgent stronghold of Fallujah, 40 miles west of Baghdad, left 137 troops dead, 126 of them in combat.

"It breaks my heart because behind every casualty is somebody with tears in their eyes," Bush told ABC News in an interview. "I think the hardest part of the presidency is to meet with families who've lost their loved one."

With Iraq becoming an increasing issue in the Nov. 7 midterm elections in the United States, White House spokesman Tony Snow was asked if the rising toll would cause Bush to alter course.

"No, his strategy is to win," Snow said. "The president understands not only the difficulty of it, but he grieves for the people who have served with valor. But as everybody says correctly, we've got to win. And that comes at a cost."

The spiking American death toll has compounded a period of intense violence among Iraqis. If current trends continue, October will be the deadliest month for Iraqis since the AP began tracking deaths in April 2005. So far this month, 775 Iraqis have been killed in war-related violence, an average of 43 a day.

That compares to an average daily death toll of about 27 since April 2005. The AP count includes civilians, government officials and police and security forces, and is considered a minimum based on AP reporting. The actual number is likely higher, as many killings go unreported.

Just north of Baghdad, in the city of Balad for example, at least 95 people died in a five-day sectarian slaughter that began Friday.

On Wednesday, key tribal, religious and government officials brokered a 20-day truce in the region, hoping to work through Sunni and Shiite grievances during the cooling off period. Balad is a majority Shiite town, but is surrounded by territory that is mainly populated by Sunnis.

___

AP News Research Center in New York contributed to this report, as did AP correspondents Christopher Bodeen, Hamza Hendawi and Qassim Abdul-Zahra.

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NATO strikes kill 9 Afghan civilians


KATHY GANNON,

Associated Press Writer

Airstrikes by NATO helicopters hunting Taliban fighters ripped through three dried mud homes in southern Afghanistan as villagers slept early Wednesday. At least nine civilians were killed, including women and children, said residents and the provincial governor.

On Thursday, a suicide bomber killed two children and wounded seven civilians and several British soldiers in southern Afghanistan, officials said.

NATO's International Security Assistance Force said the attack in the town of Lashkar Gah in Helmand province wounded "a small number" of British soldiers. Squadron Leader Jason Chalk, a force spokesman, said he had no reports of British fatalities.

Ghulam Muhiddin, the spokesman for Helmand's governor, said the attacker targeted the vehicle of a British aid organization. Chalk said he didn't have any immediate information on what kind of vehicle was attacked.

The bomber, who was on foot, killed two children — a boy and a girl both younger than 8 — and wounded seven civilians, Muhiddin said.

Meanwhile, shellshocked, angry villagers in Ashogho condemned the attack, which set back NATO's hopes of winning local support for their tough counterinsurgency campaign. The airstrikes came at about the same time a rocket struck a house in a village to the west, reportedly killing 13 people.

"I am not Taliban! We are not Taliban!" Gulab Shah shouted by the rubble of the ruined houses in Ashogho.

Kandahar provincial Gov. Asadullah Khalid said it appeared that no Taliban fighters were in the village at the time of the airstrikes, which left giant pieces of mud packed with straw scattered along Ashogho's narrow lane.

Bibi Farida, a 6-year-old whose red hair was matted with dirt, fidgeted and bit down on her scarf as she remembered the assault. Her voice was barely a whisper. "I cried. I just cried."

The 2 a.m. raid in the Zhari district of Kandahar province was only half a mile from the scene of September's Operation Medusa, one of the most ferocious battles between Western forces and insurgents since the ouster of the Taliban regime in 2001.

NATO's International Security Assistance Force said in a statement that Wednesday's operation in Kandahar was believed to have caused several civilian casualties. The alliance said the operation was meant to detain people involved in roadside bomb attacks in Panjwayi district, which borders Zhari.

NATO said it regretted any civilian casualties and that it makes every effort to minimize the risk of collateral damage.

Khalid, who traveled Wednesday to Ashogho, about 15 miles west of Kandahar city, said nine people were killed, including women and children, and 11 wounded. Residents said 13 were killed, including four women, and 15 wounded. The governor stuck with his figures when contacted late Wednesday by The Associated Press.

Since late 2001, there have been numerous incidents of civilians killed in military operations against Taliban and al-Qaida fighters, although U.S.-led coalition and NATO forces say they go to extreme lengths to avoid civilian casualties. The international troops accuse insurgents of blending in with local populations while attacking foreign and Afghan soldiers. Many other civilians have been killed in Taliban attacks, including scores in recent suicide bombings.

President Hamid Karzai has repeatedly demanded that NATO and U.S.-led coalition forces take more care when conducting military operations in residential areas to avoid civilian casualties, which undermine his government's already weak standing in parts of the country.

Khalid said Karzai expressed his sympathy after he called the president on his cell phone from the village. "He told them how he hurt for them and how sad he was for their loss," Khalid said.

One of the homes that was attacked had only one wall standing, and looked ready to topple over. A blast ripped a hole through the middle of another.

Shah, whose dirty green baggy pants were hiked up past his ankles, the sign of a deeply conservative man, gestured toward the destroyed homes:

"If the foreign soldiers were so smart that they knew there were Taliban here, why didn't they see the women and children who were sleeping? Why do they want to kill us? How can they help us rebuild if they want to kill us? Maybe they should leave," he shouted.

Khalid said it seemed clear from the villagers that no Taliban fighters were in their village when the bombing occurred.

"It is hard to know when the Taliban are moving around from one place to another, but it seems they weren't here," he said.

He has promised to rebuild the homes.

As he walked away from the angry villagers and climbed into his car, Khalid whispered to himself: "And how are we supposed to bring security to the country with this kind of thing happening?"

Elsewhere Wednesday, a rocket hit a house during a nighttime clash between suspected Taliban insurgents and NATO and Afghan security forces in the farming village of Tajikai in Helmand province's Grishk district, 135 miles west of Kandahar city, police said.

Abdul Rehman, a resident contacted by phone, said the rocket was fired from an aircraft and that the attack killed 13 villagers inside the home. He said relatives of the dead told him all those inside the dried mud house — five women, five children, three men — were killed, including the house's owner, Nabi Khel.

The rocket attack came after Afghan police called in NATO air support during the clash, which began late Tuesday and left one Taliban militant killed and three police wounded, said provincial police chief Ghulam Nabi Malakhel.

"A civilian home was hit by a rocket, but it's unsure which side fired it," Malakhel said. "There were some civilian casualties."

NATO said in a statement that its aircraft and helicopters had fired on a "positively identified" compound where the suspected Taliban were firing rocket-propelled grenades and automatic weapons.

"Initial bomb damage from an observer on the ground confirmed a direct hit on the compound," the statement said.

Squadron Leader Jason Chalk, a NATO spokesman, said alliance jets and helicopters fired rockets and dropped bombs on Taliban positions in the area after 2 a.m. Wednesday but could not confirm that they hit a civilian house.

"For the moment, it's impossible to substantiate that claim," Chalk said, adding that the Taliban had been using mortars in the area of the clash. About 100 families live in Tajikai.

Southern Afghanistan this year has faced the deadliest spate in violence in the country since the ouster of the Taliban regime by U.S.-led forces five years ago, as newly deployed NATO troops have battled resurgent militants. In Operation Medusa, NATO reported it had killed more than 500 suspected Taliban fighters.

The tough military action has brought with it a risk of civilian deaths. In May, 17 villagers were killed when coalition warplanes attacked Taliban forces in Kandahar province. The U.S. military, which said dozens of militants also died in the fighting, expressed regret over the deaths.

The worst reported incident of civilian deaths from foreign military action in Afghanistan came in July 2002, when a U.S. airstrike in Uruzgan province killed 46 civilians and wounded 117, many of them celebrating at a wedding party.

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Feds net 125 nationwide in kid-porn case

WAYNE PARRY,
Associated Press Writer

A Bible camp counselor and a Boy Scout leader were among 125 people arrested nationwide in an Internet child pornography case in which subscribers purchased photos and videos of children engaged in sex acts with adults, federal authorities said Wednesday.

The case originated in New Jersey, but quickly spread to 22 states. The defendants were charged with either possession or receipt of child pornography. Additional arrests are expected.

Prosecutors said the Web site alerted subscribers that its content was illegal and urged them to be discreet about their purchases.

"When I say `hard-core' pornography, I am talking about child pornography that includes images of children as young as six months involved in bondage and sodomy," U.S. Attorney Christopher Christie said. "This type of depraved conduct is something a civilized society cannot tolerate."

Christie said none of the defendants appeared in any of the images they obtained from the Web site. He would not identify the Web site or say whether it is still in operation.

Among those arrested were a Bible camp counselor from Vancouver, Wash.; a Boy Scout leader from Mission, Texas; and a pharmaceutical researcher in New Jersey.

Several of those arrested nationwide have prior records for molesting or sexually assaulting children, officials said.

One defendant from San Diego told agents at his arrest that he had molested at least eight children over a 30-year period, and boasted of being able to identify particularly vulnerable children, said Christie.

Another defendant from Sacramento, Calif., was found to be in possession of a hand-held video camera with a videotape showing him sexually assaulting an 8-year-old girl, Christie said.

"I'm the father of four young children between the ages of 13 and 3," Christie said. "This is every parent's worst nightmare. It is just deeply disturbing to know there are people like this out there in our neighborhoods."

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Today in history - Oct. 19

Today is Thursday, Oct. 19, the 292nd day of 2006. There are 73 days left in the year.


Today's Highlight in History:


On Oct. 19, 1781, British troops under Lord Cornwallis surrendered at Yorktown, Va., as the American Revolution neared its end.


On this date:


In 1765, the Stamp Act Congress, meeting in New York, drew up a declaration of rights and liberties.

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Today in history - Oct. 19


The Associated Press

Today is Thursday, Oct. 19, the 292nd day of 2006. There are 73 days left in the year.

Today's Highlight in History:

On Oct. 19, 1781, British troops under Lord Cornwallis surrendered at Yorktown, Va., as the American Revolution neared its end.

On this date:

In 1765, the Stamp Act Congress, meeting in New York, drew up a declaration of rights and liberties.

In 1812, French forces under Napoleon Bonaparte began their retreat from Moscow.

In 1864, Confederate Gen. Jubal A. Early attacked Union forces at Cedar Creek, Va.; the Union troops were able to rally and defeat the Confederates.

In 1936, H.R. Ekins of the New York World-Telegram beat out Dorothy Kilgallen of the New York Journal and Leo Kieran of The New York Times in a round-the-world race on commercial flights that lasted 18 1/2 days.

In 1944, the Navy announced that black women would be allowed into Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service (the WAVES).

In 1950, during the Korean Conflict, United Nations forces entered the North Korean capital of Pyongyang.

In 1953, singer Julius LaRosa, a regular on the CBS television program "Arthur Godfrey Time," was fired on the air by Godfrey, who accused him of lacking humility.

In 1960, President Eisenhower imposed an embargo on exports to Cuba covering all commodities except medical supplies and certain food products.

In 1977, the body of West German industrialist Hanns Martin Schleyer, who had been kidnapped by left-wing extremists, was found in Mulhouse, France.

In 1987, the stock market crashed as the Dow Jones Industrial Average plunged 508 points, or 22.6 percent in value.

Ten years ago: President Clinton said in his radio address that states would lose a percentage of federal highway aid if they did not bar young people from drinking and driving. In the Republican radio address, Bob Dole claimed credit for putting Democrats on the defensive over their acceptance of foreign political contributions.

Five years ago: U.S. special forces began operations on the ground in Afghanistan, opening a significant new phase of the assault against the Taliban and al-Qaida. Some 374 people died when their ferry sank off Indonesia while en route to Australia; most of the victims were believed to be asylum-seekers from Afghanistan and Iraq.

One year ago: A defiant Saddam Hussein pleaded innocent to charges of premeditated murder and torture as his trial opened under heavy security in the former headquarters of his Baath Party in Baghdad. The Houston Astros clinched their first World Series berth with a 5-1 win over St. Louis in Game 6 of the National League Championship Series.

Today's Birthdays: Former ambassador to Russia Robert S. Strauss is 88. Author John le Carre is 75. Artist Peter Max is 69. Actor Michael Gambon is 66. Actor John Lithgow is 61. Former National Organization for Women President Patricia Ireland is 61. Singer Jeannie C. Riley is 61. Talk show host Charlie Chase is 54. Rock singer-musician Karl Wallinger (World Party) is 49. Singer Jennifer Holliday is 46. TV host Ty Pennington ("Extreme Makeover: Home Edition") is 42. Rock singer-musician Todd Park Mohr (Big Head Todd and the Monsters) is 41. Actor Jon Favreau is 40. Amy Carter is 39. "South Park" co-creator Trey Parker is 37. Comedian Chris Kattan is 36. Rock singer Pras Michel (The Fugees) is 34. Actor Omar Gooding is 30. Country singer Cyndi Thomson is 30. Actor Benjamin Salisbury is 26.

Thought for Today: "Speech is civilization itself. The word, even the most contradictory word, preserves contact — it is silence which isolates." — Thomas Mann, German author (1875-1955).

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