British government congratulates Maldives on ratification of a new constitution and remain committed to supporting the reform process

Wonder if the Maldives dictator will see this as interference with internal affairs of the Maldives!
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President Gayoom hopes to win a seventh term in power |
The President of the Maldives, Maumoon Abdul Gayoom, has ratified a new constitution bringing in key democratic changes after years of autocratic rule.
It paves the way for the first multi-party presidential elections in the Indian Ocean islands.
Mr Gayoom is Asia's longest-serving leader, having held power since 1978 Opponents describe him as a dictator.
The new constitution is the result of four years of argument and debate in the Special Majlis, or assembly.
Its ratification by the country's president brings in a separation of powers and a bill of rights.
They must take place by 10 October - although a date is yet to be set.
Information Minister Mohamed Nasheed told the BBC the Maldives had been catapulted into the ranks of established democracies.
President Gayoom has held power in the coral-fringed atolls since 1978, elected in yes-or-no referendums.
Under him, tourism has made the Maldives the most prosperous country in South Asia but his political opponents have described him as a dictator who has ruled like the Sultans of old.
A reform process began after widespread protests that were sparked by the death of a prisoner in jail in 2003.
President Gayoom has already said he will stand in the forthcoming elections, hoping to win a seventh term in power. Republican Party Becomes Largest Opposition Group In The recently founded Republican Party has become the largest opposition group in the People’s Majlis (parliament) after three more parliamentarians announced they have joined, bringing the total up to nine. At a press conference later on Thursday, party officials announced that MPs Abdullah Jabir, Mohamed Shihab and Mohamed Ibrahim Didi (Mody), have all signed up, along with three former members of the constitutional assembly and a former presidential appointee to parliament. Reports also indicate former justice minister Mohamed Muiz Adnan has registered. Parliament Two out of the three new parliamentarians are former members of the largest opposition Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP), with the other, Jabir, a former member of the government’s Dhivehi Raiyyithunge Party (DRP). As part of a shift apparently triggered by the ratification of the country’s new constitution, Mohamed Waheed, Faisal Naseem and Ali Faiz, all elected members of the constitutional assembly until it was dissolved Thursday morning, have also been recruited to the Republicans. And Dhiyana Saeed, a former presidential appointee and wife of Jabir, has also said she has registered. Former Justice Minister Mohamed Muiz Adnan joined on Thursday afternoon, a reliable source told Minivan News, but Muiz Adnan has not confirmed this. MP Mohamed Aslam and MDP president Mohamed Munnavar – who was divested of his MDP duties in June after failing to appear at the party office – were seen at the Republican Party office on Thursday and are suspected to be signing up, but have not made their decision public. And party officials denied MP Ahmed “Sun Travel” Shiyam had joined, but told the press: “We only want to give their names when we are with them.” Prior to Thursday, both the Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP) – the largest opposition party in terms of membership numbers – and the Republicans had six MPs. Republicans Speaking to Minivan News on Thursday morning, Jabir said he had left the government’s Dhivehi Raiyyithunge Party (DRP) but said he was undecided about whether he would join the Republicans. “I’ll see who is the leader of the Republican Party and what is their agenda. How many members they have, what is their programme. I will make a decision in a few days,” he said. But by late Thursday afternoon, his membership of the Republican Party was made public. While previously unclear about the new party’s aims and values, party officials said on Thursday: “Our party will be issue-based. We have no problems with joining the National Unity Alliance [of opposition groups]. We are working for the national cause - if that is what we need to do, we will do it.” Candidacy Nashid told press the party was undecided on a presidential nominee, saying its national congress would decide, but said the Republicans would hold no primary.“We will have someone that does not need campaigning,” he reiterated Thursday. “We will only select someone who will be easily marketable to the public,” Jabir added, also saying he did not rule out trying for the presidential candidacy himself. Journalists questioned whether selection of a candidate could be a democratic process if the party already had someone in mind, but Nashid said only that congress would make a decision. Challenged by journalists about Gasim’s involvement in the party, Gasim said: “This is not Gasim Ibrahim’s party,” whilst Nashid said the group had received no funds from Gasim. And Mody said, “our priority is not based on businesses.” Since its formation was announced in May, the Republican Party has been widely associated with Gasim. But his move to join the party and make the link public was apparently prompted by the ratification of the constitution, meaning Gasim’s previous role as Speaker of the constitutional assembly was over. Business Gasim, who heads the Villa group of companies and is widely considered the wealthiest man in the country, has indicated he would be open to becoming a presidential candidate. But Information Minister Mohamed Nasheed says Gasim is ineligible for the presidency, due to a regulation in the new constitution which forbids ministers from maintaining an “active involvement” in business. And presidential candidate for the largest opposition Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP) Mohamed Nasheed (Anni) said there were “many articles that are against business interests” in the constitution. He then launched a public attack on politicians with business interests at a televised MDP rally Thursday night. “One of the major aims in this constitution was to separate personal business interests from the state…Of course he can transfer [his businesses], but it’s not what’s written on paper, it’s what you believe in. What you believe in will not change,” Anni told Minivan News. But presidential candidate for the Social Liberal Party Ibrahim Ismail (Ibra), who was chair of the constitutional drafting committee, says he does not believe the clause would block Gasim from running. Gasim told Minivan News:“I know what the constitution says. I headed the amendments. I know what is necessary to be done. Thasmeen [Ali, now Gayoom’s running mate] divested his business. If I will be in such a position, I would be prepared to do so.” |
Pakistan moves to impeach Musharraf | |||
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Pakistan's ruling coalition has announced it will begin impeachment proceedings against Pervez Musharraf, the Pakistani president. Asif Ali Zardari, the leader of Pakistan's ruling coalition, made the announcement at a news conference in Islamabad, the capital, on Thursday afternoon. "We have good news for democracy," Zardari said. "The coalition believes it is imperative to move for impeachment against General Musharraf." Zardari said Musharraf had failed to get a vote of confidence from the new government, following its election in February. "The economic policies pursued by President Musharraf during the past eight years have brought Pakistan to the brink of critical economic impasse," he said. "His policies have weakened the federation and eroded the trust of the nation in national institutions." In his speech to the press, Zardari warned Musharraf against dismissing parliament in a bid to avoid the impeachment proceedings. Agreement reached The coalition had previously been split by the twin issues of what to do about Musharraf and how to carry out their pledge to reinstate senior judges sacked by him under emergency rule last year. But officials said an agreement was reached on Wednesday night, when Nawaz Sharif, leader of the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) party, assured Zardari that he could count on the support of former PML-N members who currently belong to a pro-Musharraf party. There was no immediate response from the president's office but Kamal Hyder, Al Jazeera's correspondent in Islamabad, said there was still a little way to go before the president was censured. "Many people across the country believe it's not going to be that simple and the process of impeachment will be a complex one," he said. "The president still has a few tricks up his sleeve." Impeaching a president would require a two-thirds majority in both houses of parliament and Musharraf loyalists maintain the coalition would struggle to muster enough support. Earlier in the day, as the deal to impeach Musharraf emerged, the president cancelled his trip to the Beijing Olympics. |
Coup leaders vow Mauritania vote | |||
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Leaders of a military coup in Mauritania have vowed to hold "free and transparent" presidential elections "in the shortest time possible". The coup leaders made the statement on Thursday after their actions drew widespread condemnation and calls for Sidi Mohamed Ould Cheikh Abdallahi, the ousted president, to be returned to power. The statement promised: "These elections, which will be held in the shortest possible period, will be free and transparent and will bring for the future a continued and harmonious functioning of all the constitutional powers." The military council now running the country also pledged to respect treaties and other international commitments binding Mauritania, Africa's newest oil producer. Bloodless coup Military convoys rolled through the capital on Wednesday, surrounding the presidential palace, the prime minister's office and the state broadcaster. "There is no sight of any military presence in the street except in front of the presidential palace and the radio station," Mohamed Vall, Al Jazeera's correspondent in Nouakchott, the Mauritanian capital, said. Leaders seized Officers seized Abdallahi, along with the country's interior minister and Yahya Ould Ahmed Waghf, the prime minister, in a bloodless coup led by General Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz. Abdel Aziz is the leader of the presidential guard who was fired by Abdallahi shortly beforehand. Abdallahi himself won elections last year after a 2005 coup, also instigated by Ould Abdel Aziz, which ended years of military rule. The coup triggered international condemnation, with the US urging the release of Mauritania's leaders and the EU threatening to cut off aid. Condoleezza Rice, the US secretary of state, called on the military to release the president and prime minister "and to restore the legitimate, constitutional, democratically elected government immediately". Deep regret Ban Ki-moon, the UN secretary-general, said he "deeply regrets the overthrow of the government of President Sidi Ould Cheikh Abdallahi," and called for "the restoration of constitutional order", his spokeswoman said. The African Union called for maintaining "constitutional legality" and said Ramtane Lamamra, its peace and security commissioner, would go to Mauritania. Condemnation also came from regional powerhouses South Africa and Nigeria. Mauritania has been facing a political crisis for months, with 48 members of parliament walking out on the ruling party less than two weeks after a vote of no confidence in the government prompted a cabinet reshuffle. |
President George W. Bush meets with Thailand's Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej Wednesday in Bangkok.
"America stands in firm opposition to China's detention of political dissidents, human rights advocates, and religious activists," Bush said.
"We speak out for a free press, freedom of assembly, and labor rights not to antagonize China's leaders, but because trusting its people with greater freedom is the only way for China to develop its full potential," he said. "And we press for openness and justice not to impose our beliefs but to allow the Chinese people to express theirs."
Despite the harsh critique, Bush praised what has become a "constructive relationship" between the United States and China in trade and diplomacy. He also said that the association "has placed America in a better position to be honest and direct on other issues."
Bush spoke at the Queen Sirikit National Convention Center in Bangkok.
The trip to Asia is Bush's last as president, and he took the opportunity to shine a light on the well-publicized crackdowns on political dissenters in the "people's republic" -- a communist country that has emerged as a symbol of soaring capitalistic growth.
"I have spoken clearly, candidly, and consistently with China's leaders about our deep concerns over religious freedom and human rights," he said. "And I have met repeatedly with Chinese dissidents and religious believers. The United States believes the people of China deserve the fundamental liberty that is the natural right of all human beings."
China cracked down on protests this year in Tibet. Some demonstrators advocated autonomy and greater religious freedom there while others sought outright independence from China.
On Wednesday, four Tibet activists unfurled Tibetan flags and pro-independence banners near National Stadium in Beijing, a main Olympic venue.
Two men in the group scaled electric poles to display the banners, police said, according to the state-run Xinhua news agency. Police took away "four foreigners" -- three men and a woman, it said.
Students for a Free Tibet, a Tibet activist group, issued a statement saying those involved in the demonstration were from the United States and Britain.
According to the group, one of the signs read, "One World, One Dream: Free Tibet" in English, while the second read, "Tibet Will Be Free" in English and "Free Tibet" in Chinese.
The group said the signs were on display for about an hour, but police said it was about 12 minutes. The demonstrators entered China on tourist visas, police said, according to Xinhua.
Meanwhile, the government's reaction to people protesting in northwestern China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, home to a Sunni Muslim ethnic minority, also has generated concerns. The Uygur people in that region are supposed to enjoy autonomy, guaranteed by China's constitution, but some seek independence.
Millions of Han Chinese, the country's dominant ethnic group, have migrated into Xinjiang over the past 60 years, prompting complaints that they dominate local politics, culture and commerce at the Uygurs' expense.
In the Xinjiang city of Kashgar, Chinese paramilitary police beat two Japanese journalists Monday night, hours after a deadly attack that killed 16 police officers, journalist groups said.
China has also been widely criticized for its policies toward Sudan. It has been perceived as backing the African regime and widely accused of gross human rights abuses in a crackdown against citizens in the Darfur region after a rebellion in 2003. The United States has condemned the campaign of killing in Darfur as genocide.
Team Darfur, a group of athletes committed to raising awareness about Darfur, complained that former speedskating gold medalist Joey Cheek had his visa revoked by the Chinese Embassy.
White House spokeswoman Dana Perino, speaking to reporters en route to Thailand, said, "We were disturbed to learn that the Chinese had refused his visa. We are taking the matter very seriously." Watch a report on the revoking of the activist's visa »
She said U.S. diplomats are asking the Chinese to reconsider their actions and emphasized that the administration hopes China changes its mind.
In Thursday's speech, Bush also focused on other issues, including the economic strides in China -- which endured "rampant" poverty three decades ago.
Beijing is "sprinting into the modern era -- covered in skyscrapers, filled with cars, home to international businesses, and hosting the Olympic Games," Bush said.
He said the "growth sparked by China's free market reforms is good for the Chinese people" and that "China's new purchasing power is also good for the world, because it provides an enormous market for exports from across the globe."
Bush urged China to adhere to the "rules of the international economic system" and "act responsibly on issues such as energy, the environment and African development."
He said the United States and China are embarking on "a new strategic economic dialogue," saying they will "discuss ways to ensure long-term growth and widely shared prosperity in both our economies, as well as issues like currency exchange rates and intellectual property rights."
Bush cited two areas of diplomatic cooperation -- the six-party talks on North Korea's nuclear program and the easing of tensions along the Taiwan Strait.Mauritanian military stages coup | |||||
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The sacked commander of Mauritania's presidential guards has taken control of the presidential palace in Nouakchott, the capital. Officers seized Sidi Mohamed Ould Cheikh Abdallahi, the president, on Wednesday, along with the country's interior minister and Yahya Ould Ahmed Waghf, Mauritania's prime minister in what appears to be a bloodless coup. "What is going on in Mauritania is a coup d’etat organised by rebels who were sacked by the president on Wednesday morning," Abdullah Mamadouba, the official spokesman for the Mauritanian presidency, told Al Jazeera. "It is a coup against the constitutional legitimacy in Mauritania." Earlier local radio announced the president's order sacking General Mohammad al-Abdul Aziz, the head of the presidential guard and General Mohammad al-Ghazwani, the army chief-of-staff. "The two generals have now turned the military against the president to overthrow him through this coup," Mamadouba told Al Jazeera. Later the coup leaders released a statement under the auspices of a new 'Mauritanian state council', headed by Ould Abdul Aziz, canceling the presidential decree that had sacked him and al-Ghazwani. President Abdallahi's daughter confirmed her father was being held by the army. "The security agents of the BASEP [the presidential security battalion] came to our home around 9.20am (09:20 GMT) and took away my father," she was quoted by the Reuters news agency as saying. Bloodless coup Army units surrounded the presidential palace in the capital and the international airport was closed. Both Mauritanian television and radio went off air, with army units surrounding their main buildings.
"Mauritanians are very worried about the future of their newborn democracy," he added, referring to Abdallahi's win in elections last year, which saw him take over from the country's military rulers. He also confirmed that there had been as yet no violence. "Life is remaining as it was - businesses and schools are still open. Life is as it was," he said. Later witnesses reported police fired tear gas to disperse a group of at least 50 supporters of the president who had gathered in central Nouakchott. The African Union condemned the coup, calling for "the restoration of constitutional legality", in a statement issued from its headquarters in Addis Ababa, the Ethiopian capital. The EU also criticised the coup, saying it condemned "any attempt to overthrow a democratically elected institution or government by force". Political crisis Abdallahi took over from the country's military rulers that had held power since toppling Maaouya Ould Sid Ahmed Taya, then president, in a bloodless coup in 2005. "The crisis has been building for the last three months ... and we know that since the elections about a year and a half ago ... that civilian rule was promised, which was surprising as it doesn't happen very often in the Arab world," Mohamed Vall, an Al Jazeera correspondent, said. "The Mauritanian people received the news very happily and they thought this to be the end of a dictatorship of 23 years but ... there were critics that did not believe the military would easily let go of power and stay on the margins." Abdallahi replaced one government in May following criticism over the government's response to soaring food prices and to attacks over the last year carried out by al-Qaeda's north African arm. But the new government resigned last month in the face of a proposed no-confidence vote and a new one was formed. |
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Cheering, flag-waving crowds in the Chinese capital, Beijing, have been watching the Olympic torch on the final leg of its global relay.
Over three days more than 800 torch bearers will carry the flame to city landmarks ahead of Friday's Games.
One of China's best-known sportsmen, basketball star Yao Ming, carried the torch through Tiananmen Square.
Earlier, four activists from the UK and the US were arrested after unfurling banners close to the Olympic stadium.
The torch has travelled 140,000km (87,000 miles) through six continents since it left Greece on 24 March.
Overseas, the relay was marked by protests over China's human rights record and its policies in Tibet.
On Tuesday, the flame passed through Sichuan province, which was devastated by an earthquake in May.
A minute's silence was held in Guang'an city, honouring almost 70,000 people who were killed in the quake.
The torch had been scheduled to visit Sichuan in mid-June, but the area's relay leg was postponed because of the quake, which left around five million people homelessRwanda accuses France over genocide | |||||
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Rwanda has accused France of having an active, direct role in the African country's 1994 genocide in which 800,000 people were killed. A report commissioned by the Rwandan government named 33 senior French military and political figures, among them Dominique de Villepin, the former prime minister, and Francois Mitterrand the late former president, who it said should be prosecuted. It also accused French troops of directly taking part in the slaughter. "The French support was of a political, military, diplomatic and logistic nature," the report said. "Considering the gravity of the alleged facts, the Rwandan government asks competent authorities to undertake all necessary actions to bring the accused French political and military leaders to answer for their acts before justice." Andrew Tusabe, the acting charge d'affaires for the Rwandan embassy in Washington, told Al Jazeera the report exposed French complicity at the highest levels. "If you go to the report you will see for yourself how communication was done from the top leadership in Paris to the embassy in Kigali and how different people who had a role in the genocide were housed at the embassy residence," he said. 'Protected genocidal forces' Tharcisse Karugarama, Rwanda's justice minister, said the report also highlighted "the role played by France in the aftermath to protect the genocidal forces and make it very difficult for them to be apprehended and brought to justice". The report accused the French of helping to train the Hutus, the ethnic group blamed for the slaughter of 800,000 people, and for forcing hundreds of thousands more to flee their homes. "This should be clear that this report will not go lie down, put in store somewhere. This report will be used. It will help in bringing to justice, making very serious attempts to bring to justice people who were involved in committing genocide in this country," Tharcisse said. Along with Mitterrand and de Villepin, others listed include Alain Juppe, a former foreign minister who is also a senior figure in the party of Nicolas Sarkozy, the French president, and Edouard Balladur, a former prime minister. Another suspect is Hubert Vedrine who, like Balladur, is a senior politician.
The original statement had declared that "France assumes full responsibility for its actions in Rwanda in 1994, especially those of its armed forces". It also stressed its support for the International Criminal Court, but said the Rwandan inquiry had no "independence or impartiality" because its stated remit was to "gather evidence of the involvement of the French state" in the genocide. The inquiry also had "no legitimacy nor competence" to conduct interviews on French soil because it had broken off diplomatic relations with France in November 2006. Paul Kagame, the Rwandan president, cut ties with France in November 2006 in protest at a French judge's call for him to stand trial over the death of his predecessor, Juvenal Habyarimana, in April 1994 - an event widely seen as unleashing the genocide. That call prompted street protests in Kigali. Relations soured further after the Rwandan commission later heard accounts from victims who said they were raped by French soldiers after seeking refuge with them during the genocide. 'Not payback' Tusabe, the acting charge d'affaires in Washington, rejected accusations that the Rwanda report was simply payback for the French judge's ruling. Rwanda set up the commission in April 2006 to investigate France's role in the genocide before the judge issued indictments in November, he told Al Jazeera. "This report, now that it's out, it shows all of the individuals in the France government that were involved in the genocide." Ties between the two nations have improved in recent months after Kagame met Sarkozy at a European Union-Africa summit in Lisbon in December 2007 but the latest report is bound to strain relations once again. |
Bush: N Korea not in the clear yet | |||||
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The US president has expressed renewed concern over North Korea's nuclear programme. Speaking in Seoul on Wednesday after meeting his South Korean counterpart, Lee Myung-bak, George Bush called for verification of a nuclear declaration Pyongyang submitted in June. Bush said North Korea had made good progress but had much to do before the US could remove it from Washington's blacklist of state sponsors of terrorism. He said North Korea must first agree to international terms for verifying efforts to dismantle its bomb-making plutonium nuclear programme as detailed in the declaration delivered in June. He also said that it was premature to drop Pyongyang from his "axis of evil", adding that it had "a lot to do" before removal from the US blacklist. "They got to show a verification regime that we can trust," he said. China concerns Speaking at a joint news conference in Seoul with Lee on Wednesday, Bush also urged China to allow free expression and worship. The president, who will be attending the opening ceremony of the Olympic games in Beijing on Friday, said Chinese leaders "ought to welcome people being able to express their minds, and to the extent that people aren't able to do that and people aren't able to worship freely, is a mistake".
North Korea expects the US to remove it from the terrorism blacklist earliest by next weekend, and subsequently relax some economic sanctions, as part of a six-party denuclearisation pact. Last month Pyongyang pledged to fulfil its commitment on scrapping its nuclear programme during the highest-level diplomatic contact with the US in four years, and urged Washington to drop its "hostile policy". But Bush said he still had concerns about the North. "I told the president [Lee] I'm concerned about North Korea's human rights record. I'm concerned about uranium enrichment activities as well as nuclear testing and proliferation and ballistic missile programmes," he said. "The best way to approach and answer the concerns is strong verification measures. That's where we are in the six-party talks." The US also accuses the North of operating a secret highly-enriched uranium weapons programme, a charge it denies. "The North Korean leader has yet to fully verify ... a highly enriched uranium programme and there are still more steps to be done on the plutonium programme," Bush said. "In order to get off the 'axis of evil' list, then the North Korean leader is going to have to make certain decisions." |
China detains pro-Tibet activists | |||||||
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Four foreign pro-Tibet activists have been detained by Chinese police after unfurling banners from huge lampposts outside the Olympic stadium in Beijing. Shortly before the relay began on Wednesday morning, two protesters managed to climb to the top of lampposts near the National Stadium and tie banners banner reading "Tibet will be free" and another with the motto "`One World, One Dream" - the slogan of the Beijing Olympics - along with "Free Tibet". The two men were from Students for a Free Tibet, said Lhadon Tethong, the New York-based group's executive director. 'Critical message'
"It's absolutely critical that ... a message is sent to the Chinese government to meaningfully address and end violence and repression in Tibet or they will never be truly accepted by the international community." The group identified the protesters as Britons Iain Thom, 24, and Lucy Marion, 23, and Americans Phill Bartell, 34, and Tirian Mink, 32. The National stadium, also known the Bird's Nest, will host the Olympics opening ceremony on Friday and is ringed with metal fences and tight security, including China's latest anti-aircraft missiles.
Tibet has been an extremely sensitive topic since protests against almost 50 years of Chinese rule turned violent in the region's capital of Lhasa in March. Many Tibetans say they were an independent nation before communist troops invaded in 1950, while Beijing says Tibet has been part of its territory for centuries. Similar demonstrations were sparked in Tibetan communities throughout western China and a massive crackdown by Chinese security forces ensued. The uprising brought criticism from abroad and the Olympics torch relay provided a lightning rod for protests around the world. |
Ronaldinho wants a place in history | ||
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One of the games' biggest stars, the two-time Fifa Player of the Year can't wait to get on the field and try to lead Brazil to its first Olympic title in football. "What motivates me the most is the chance to make history in Brazilian football and win this first gold medal,'' Ronaldinho said, two days before Brazil's debut against Belgium. "We all know that if we win this medal we will make history. It's an unprecedented title,'' Ronaldinho said. "It's a very important competition, just as important to us the World Cup and other big tournaments.'' The Olympic gold medal has eluded Brazil so far. It is the only significant title the five-time World Cup champions have never won. The Brazilians won the silver medal twice, at the 1984 Los Angeles Games and the 1988 Seoul Games, and bronze at the 1996 Atlanta Games. "Very few players have an opportunity to participate in two Olympics, and I'm glad I'm having this chance to win what we let slip away in the past,'' said Ronaldinho, who was on the Brazilian Olympic team eliminated by Cameroon in the quarterfinals of the 2000 Sydney Games. Brazil did not qualify for the 2004 Athens Games. Fresh start It will be the playmakers' first tournament since transferring from FC Barcelona to AC Milan in a move that could revamp his career following a disappointing season in European football. He hasn't played in an official competition in more than four months. "Every time a professional player changes teams and plays in an important competition, it's a new start,'' Ronaldinho said. "I'm very happy with these opportunities and I'm motivated to do my best. "It's a special moment in my career and I hope I'll be able to do my best here,'' he said. "I'm feeling well and I'm in good physical condition.'' Ronaldinho and his Brazilians teammates practiced at Shenyang Olympic Sport Center Stadium on Tuesday. Ronaldinho, Brazil's captain, is set to start against Belgium, but coach Dunga will not be able to count on defender Thiago Silva, who is nursing a right leg muscle injury sustained in the team's 2-0 win over Vietnam in a warm-up match on Friday. Silva and Ronaldinho are the only two over-23 players summoned by Dunga, who could not get clubs to release the nation's other top stars such as Kaka and Robinho. The 28-year-old Ronaldinho got to play only because he negotiated his release before transferring to Milan. Brazil is in Group C, along with host China and New Zealand. It will play New Zealand on August 10 and China on August 13. "We need a good start to put us on the right track for the rest of the Olympics,'' Ronaldinho said. The Olympic football tournament begins two days before Friday's opening ceremony in Beijing to accommodate its lengthy schedule. | ||
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President Maumoon Abdul Gayoom and First Lady Madam Nasreena being welcomed on arrival at the BMIC by the President of Sri Lanka. President Gayoom is in Sri Lanka to participate in the 15th SAARC Summit.
The corrected version of the Constitution document, which had been proofed for grammatical errors and administrative mistakes, was sent back to President Maumoon Abdul Gayoom on Friday evening, the President of the People’s Special Majlis Gasim Ibrahim said on Saturday.
Chewing qat leaves is bad for Yemen's economy and public health, says its government. But, as Stephanie Hancock found, curbing this national pastime is an uphill task.
I had only been in the country a few minutes when I noticed a man with a gigantic growth bulging out of his cheek. The swelling was enormous, it was so bulbous it practically had its own heartbeat.
Qat chewing is a national pastime for the people of Yemen |
Now I have been brought up not to stare but, feeling slightly guilty, I kept sneaking glances at this unfortunate fellow.
What an awful disease, I thought to myself and how nice that other people are not staring at him, unlike me.
I wondered whether the growth might be a tumour, or perhaps some sort of thyroid problem.
I did not want to seem rude but I quietly asked my guide, Ahmed, if perhaps this man was ill.
Ahmed, in his nonchalant manner, turned to look at the man, and gave a small laugh that suggested I was very stupid.
"Ha! That's qat," he said.
And so it was that I discovered the substance that makes Yemen tick.
Qat is a flowering plant that grows all over the Arabian peninsula, and when you chew the leaves it acts as a mild stimulant. The habit is known as qat chewing, but this is a misnomer as the teeth are not actually really involved.
The aim appears to be to stuff as many leaves as you can possibly fit into one cheek, until you resemble a lop-sided hamster, and then sort of suck on the juices.
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After a while a green foamy paste forms at your lips, and at this point, conversation is now impossible. Any important information must be communicated via grunting and pointing.
To say qat is popular in Yemen would be a massive under-statement, practically everybody in this country chews qat, two thirds of men and a third of women.
It is not elitist either, everyone from businessmen to street urchins like to indulge. Apart from a few hard-core fans, most people seem to start up after lunch, and the chewing will often go on late into the night.
Relaxation aid
Some people chew to give them energy to work others use it for relaxation. It is a common sight here to see men flaked out on pavements, gazing absent mindedly into the distance, giving total concentration to the chewing task at hand.
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Qat is an integral part of life here in Yemen, but these days the government is becoming concerned about its effects and this week sounded alarm bells about qat's grip on the country.
The man behind the warning is Yemen's planning minister Abdulkarim al-Arhabi. I went to meet him in his office, where he patiently explained all the many ills qat is responsible for.
For starters, there are the health effects such as mouth cancer, he said, which is on the rise because farmers are using more insecticide.
Farmers are also now choosing to grow water-thirsty qat instead of food crops, he said, because it consistently fetches high prices.
Economic drain
The result is a major drain on water in a country suffering drought and a growing reliance on foreign food imports at a time when staple goods are more expensive than ever.
Then there is the effect on productivity, he added, with all those young people sitting around chewing qat when they could be working.
Critics of the government point out that one in three Yemenis is unemployed and chewing qat is a simple way to pass the day and keeps them away from alcohol and harder drugs.
Later I went for a look round Sanaa's lively qat market, and it is amazing to see how much money changes hands, especially for the high quality blends which can cost up to £10 a bag, and that will only last you one afternoon.
Ahmed |
It made me realise that qat is a big part of the economy here.
My guide Ahmed, whose mood was always intimately linked to the size of the bulge in his cheek, is suspicious of the government's fighting talk over qat. "The government needs qat," he told me with a mouthful of green leaves. "It says it wants to stop it, but it earns lots of money from all the taxes farmers pay.
"Besides," he added, his voice dropping to a gurgled whisper, "when people are chewing qat, they don't ask awkward questions about where Yemen's oil revenues are going."
Nobody knows what would happen if qat was taken away |
And with this he hit the nail firmly on the head. Yemen has recently suffered from riots, when angry young men, unable to find work, rose up against the government.
Poverty and corruption, a faltering economy and unemployment all linked and all related in some way back to qat.
It might be causing problems for this country, but nobody is quite sure what would happen if you took qat away.
As one trader told me as he hawked his goods for sale in the market: "Qat is the key to peace in Yemen. Nobody would be stupid enough to meddle with that."