Friday, 21 June 2013

Jewish Man Is Killed at Western Wall in Jerusalem

JERUSALEM — An Israeli security guard shot and killed a Jewish man at the back of the Western Wall plaza early Friday after apparently suspecting him of being a Palestinian militant about to carry out an attack, the police said.

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Tensions often run high at the holy site where throngs of Jewish worshipers regularly pray before the huge beige stones, a remnant of the retaining wall of the Temple Mount revered by Jews as the site where their ancient temples once stood.

On the plateau above the wall, Muslims pray at Al Aksa Mosque, the third holiest site in Islam. The mosque compound, known to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary, is in Jerusalem’s Old City, a fiercely contested area captured by Israel from Jordan in the 1967 war, and Israeli-Palestinian clashes erupt there from time to time.

Micky Rosenfeld, a spokesman for the police, said that based on the initial testimony of the security guard, the shooting victim, a man in his 40s who was not immediately identified, had shouted “Allahu akbar,” or “God is great,” and had his hand in his pocket at the time he was shot, near a public restroom at the back of the plaza. The guard, from a private firm contracted to secure the entrances to the plaza, fired several shots at the man who was pronounced dead at the scene.

Part of the plaza remained cordoned off hours after the early-morning shooting while police investigated the incident, and the body had not yet been removed.

The Western Wall plaza has recently been in the news as the focal point of a struggle between Jewish women demanding the right to pray in a style traditionally limited to men and the strictly Orthodox forces who oppose them.


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Israeli Police Say Man Shot Dead at Western Wall

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JERUSALEM — Israeli police say a guard has shot a Jewish man dead at a key Jerusalem holy site.

Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld says a private security guard at the Western Wall "fired a number of shots" at a man who appeared suspicious. The guard told police the man, an Israeli, had his hands in his pockets and shouted in Arabic just before the guard opened fire, Rosenfeld said. The man, in his 40s, died at the scene.

Rosenfeld said police cordoned off the area after the shooting and are investigating Friday's incident.

The Western Wall, a remnant of the biblical Jewish Temples, is the holiest site where Jews can pray. The site and the area around it has in the past been a flashpoint for violence between Israelis and Palestinians.


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Thursday, 20 June 2013

Marijuana Crops in California Threaten Forests and Wildlife

Jim Wilson/The New York Times

Marijuana crops on private land in Humboldt County, Calif. Some medical marijuana growers follow state rules, but others do not.

ARCATA, Calif. — It took the death of a small, rare member of the weasel family to focus the attention of Northern California’s marijuana-growers on the impact that their huge and expanding activities were having on the environment.

The animal, a Pacific fisher, had been poisoned by an anticoagulant in rat poisons like d-Con. Since then, six other poisoned fishers have been found. Two endangered spotted owls tested positive. Mourad W. Gabriel, a scientist at the University of California, Davis, concluded that the contamination began when marijuana growers in deep forests spread d-Con to protect their plants from wood rats.

That news has helped growers acknowledge, reluctantly, what their antagonists in law enforcement have long maintained: like industrial logging before it, the booming business of marijuana is a threat to forests whose looming dark redwoods preside over vibrant ecosystems.

Hilltops have been leveled to make room for the crop. Bulldozers start landslides on erosion-prone mountainsides. Road and dam construction clogs some streams with dislodged soil. Others are bled dry by diversions. Little water is left for salmon whose populations have been decimated by logging.

And local and state jurisdictions’ ability to deal with the problem has been hobbled by, among other things, the drug’s murky legal status. It is approved by the state for medical uses but still illegal under federal law, leading to a patchwork of growers. Some operate within state rules, while others operate totally outside the law.

The environmental damage may not be as extensive as that caused by the 19th-century diking of the Humboldt estuary here, or 20th-century clear-cut logging, but the romantic outlaw drug has become a destructive juggernaut, experts agree.

“In my career I’ve never seen anything like this,” said Stormer Feiler, a scientist with California’s North Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board. “Since 2007 the amount of unregulated activities has exploded.” He added, “They are grading the mountaintops now, so it affects the whole watershed below.”

Scott Bauer, of the state Department of Fish and Wildlife, said, “I went out on a site yesterday where there was an active water diversion providing water to 15 different groups of people or individuals,” many of them growers. “The stream is going to dry up this year.”

While it is hard to find data on such an industry, Anthony Silvaggio, a sociology lecturer at Humboldt State University, pointed to anecdotal evidence in a Google Earth virtual “flyover” he made of the industrial farm plots and the damage they cause. The video was later enhanced and distributed by Mother Jones magazine.

Brad Job’s territory as a federal Bureau of Land Management officer includes public lands favored, he said, by Mexican drug cartels whose environmental practices are the most destructive. “The watershed was already lying on the ground bleeding,” Mr. Job said. “The people who divert water in the summer are kicking it in the stomach.”

That water is crucial to restoring local runs of imperiled Coho salmon, Chinook salmon and steelhead, which swam up Eel River tributaries by the tens of thousands before the logging era. Scott Greacen, executive director of Friends of the Eel River, said, “It’s not weed that drove the Coho to the brink of extinction, but it may kick it over the edge.” By various estimates, each plant needs at least one gallon and as much as six gallons of water during a season.

The idea that the counterculture’s crop of choice is a bad for the environment has gone down hard here. Marijuana is an economic staple, particularly in Humboldt County’s rural southern end, called SoHum. Jennifer Budwig, the vice president of a local bank, estimated last year that marijuana infused more than $415 million into the county’s annual economic activity, one-quarter of the total.

For the professed hippies who moved here decades ago, marijuana farming combines defiance of society’s strictures, shared communal values and a steady income. “Marijuana has had a framework that started in the 1930s with jazz musicians,” said Gregg Gold, a psychology professor at Humboldt State University. “It’s a cultural icon of resistance to authority.”

“In 2013,” he added, “you’re asking that we reframe it in people’s minds as just another agribusiness. That’s a huge shift.”

It is a thriving agribusiness. Derek Roy, a special agent enforcing endangered species protections for the National Marine Fisheries Service, said, “These grow sites continue to get larger and larger.” Things took off after 1996, when California decriminalized the use of medical marijuana, Mr. Roy said.


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Game 7: Heat 95, Spurs 88: Frantic to the Finish: Heat Repeat as Champions

Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images

LeBron James of the Miami Heat drives to the basket against the San Antonio Spurs during Game 7 of the N.B.A. Finals.

Off the Dribble

Keep up with the latest news, on the court and off, with The Times's basketball blog.

The Miami Heat beat the San Antonio Spurs, 95-88, in the decisive Game 7 in Miami and repeated as N.B.A. champions.

LeBron James scored 37 points and added a second straight title to his two Olympic gold medals and four most-valuable-player-awards.


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Oil Wealth Reduced, Russia Needs to Lure Foreign Capital

ST. PETERSBURG, Russia — For more than a dozen years, it has been impossible to miss Russia’s soaring, often ostentatious, energy wealth — the flashiness of Moscow, the 250-foot yachts and the hundred-million-dollar penthouse apartments for the children. And the riches have hardly been confined to the private sector. Last year, when Vladimir V. Putin wanted to shore up support ahead of Election Day, the salaries of government workers jumped; military pay actually doubled.

Those heady days seem to be running out, however. The great gush of oil and gas wealth that has fueled Mr. Putin’s power and popularity and has raised living standards across Russia is leveling off. Foreign investors, wary of endemic corruption and an expanding government role in the economy, are hanging back, depriving the economy of essential capital.

In many respects, analysts say, the same iron fist that Mr. Putin wielded to public approval in the early years of his presidency could be the biggest obstacle to a badly needed economic restructuring, and potentially even turn public opinion against him.

Russia’s economy, the world’s eighth largest, slowed to a near standstill in the first months of this year, and the Kremlin is now preparing to dip into its $171 billion rainy day fund in a bid to spur growth. But the problems for Russia’s economy run deeper than its overwhelming dependence on oil and gas revenues, which now account for more than half the federal budget.

Despite the conspicuous consumption of oligarchs and the growing middle class in Moscow, most of Russia’s goods-producing economy has been languishing for decades. Many provincial cities and towns have grown shabby, the factories that sustained them decrepit. Young people have moved away.

With flattening revenues, the government badly needs to attract foreign capital, but the Kremlin’s recent move to tighten its grip on the oil industry through Rosneft, the national oil company, is just the latest warning flag to potential investors.

“The fundamental problem in this economy is still the politics of the country,” said Bernard Sucher, the former head of Merrill Lynch in Russia, who serves on the board of Aton, an investment company.

“The way power is organized in this country dooms the economy to underperformance,” he said. “The state is too big, it’s involved in too many areas of activity, and involving itself in too many more areas of activity, and by its nature discourages private investment.”

As Russia’s senior political officials, business leaders and foreign investors convened here in St. Petersburg on Thursday at an economic forum that serves as an annual gathering of the country’s top financial minds, the task facing Mr. Putin was how to create sustainable growth in a country where commodities, taken together, now account for 80 percent of exports.

Some experts at the forum said they were confounded by Russia’s contradictory problems: low growth and high inflation. “Financial policy is weird,” said Yu Yongding, a senior fellow at the Institute of World Economics and Politics in Beijing. He was on a panel with Elvira Nabiullina, an aide to Mr. Putin who has been tapped to lead Russia’s central bank, and Russia’s economic development minister, Andrei Belousov.

“Where is your industry?” Mr. Yu asked. “You can produce super excellent jet fighters, but what else?”

Energy prices, while still relatively high, are expected to flatten or decline in the years ahead. Gazprom, the Russian energy behemoth, has been cutting prices and renegotiating contracts, under pressure from cash-poor clients in Europe and rising competition globally, caused in part by market shifts like development of American shale gas.

Discounts to customers cost Gazprom $4.2 billion, or about 7 percent of pretax earnings, according to Renaissance Capital, an investment bank. Oil revenues are also projected to decline long-term as production grows more costly and new technology curbs demand.


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Documents Detail Restrictions on N.S.A. Surveillance

WASHINGTON — Since the disclosure of National Security Agency surveillance documents by the British newspaper The Guardian began this month, President Obama, top intelligence officials and members of Congress have repeatedly assured Americans that they are not the target of the N.S.A.’s sweeping electronic collection system.

“Nobody is listening to your telephone calls,” Mr. Obama said when the news broke.

But as experts on American intelligence knew, that was not the whole story. It left out what N.S.A. officials have long called “incidental” collection of Americans’ calls and e-mails — the routine capture of Americans’ communications in the process of targeting foreign communications.

On Thursday, in the latest release of documents supplied by Edward J. Snowden, the former N.S.A. contractor now believed to be hiding in Hong Kong, The Guardian published two documents setting out the detailed rules governing the agency’s intercepts. Dated 2009 and signed by Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr., they advise N.S.A. eavesdroppers on how to judge whether a target is a foreigner overseas, and therefore fair game, and what to do when they pick up Americans at home or abroad.

They show, for example, that N.S.A. officers who intercept an American online or on the phone — say, while monitoring the phone or e-mail of a foreign diplomat or a suspected terrorist — can preserve the recording or transcript if they believe the contents include “foreign intelligence information” or evidence of a possible crime. They can likewise preserve the intercept if it contains information on a “threat of serious harm to life or property” or sheds light on technical issues like encryption or vulnerability to cyberattacks.

And while N.S.A. analysts usually have to delete Americans’ names from the reports they write, there are numerous exceptions, including cases where there is evidence that the American in the intercept is working for a terrorist group, foreign country or foreign corporation.

The documents, classified “Secret,” describe the procedures for eavesdropping under Section 702 of the FISA Amendments Act, including an N.S.A. program called Prism that mines Internet communications using services including Gmail and Facebook. They are likely to add fuel for both sides of the debate over the proper limits of the government’s surveillance programs.

They offer a glimpse of a rule-bound intelligence bureaucracy that is highly sensitive to the distinction between foreigners and “U.S. persons,” which technically include not only American citizens and legal residents but American companies and nonprofit organizations as well. The two sets of rules, each nine pages long, belie the image of a rogue intelligence agency recklessly violating Americans’ privacy.

But the very existence of the rules suggests that Americans routinely fall into the agency’s global net, even if they are not the intended target of the eavesdropping. And since a major focus of American intelligence since 2001 has been the terrorist threat to the United States, calls and e-mails in and out of the country draw particular attention.

In addition, current and former N.S.A. officials acknowledge that “incidental” collection of Americans’ communications occurs more often today than in the past because of the proliferation of cellphones and e-mail, which can make it harder to determine a person’s identity and location.

A senior American intelligence official said that while the possibility of incidental collection of Americans’ calls and e-mails had always been acknowledged, the N.S.A.’s goal is to focus on foreigners. “The point we’ve been making is this is not a tool for listening to Americans,” the official said.

Another American official noted that the default procedure when an American is incidentally picked up is to stop listening and destroy the record, and that exceptions are made mostly for threats to security.

“If there’s a terrorist attack planned or a threat of a cyberattack, I think Americans want us to pay attention to it,” the official said. Both officials agreed to discuss the classified rules on condition of anonymity.

But Jameel Jaffer, deputy legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union, said the detailed rules only underscored the intrusion on American privacy from the agency’s eavesdropping.

“From the beginning the concern was that the government would sweep up Americans’ communications in the course of surveillance directed at people outside the country,” Mr. Jaffer said. “These documents suggest that it’s even worse than we thought.”

He noted a clause about restrictions on the intercept of attorney-client communications but said it allowed wide latitude for sharing such communications inside the government.

“The exceptions swallow the rule,” Mr. Jaffer said.

William C. Banks, an expert on national security law at Syracuse University College of Law, said many of the issues raised by the leaked documents were thoroughly discussed when the FISA Amendments Act was passed in 2008 and renewed last year. But he said there appeared to be little reason for the rules to be secret.

“I can’t imagine there’s great harm to national security from these rules being out,” Professor Banks said. “If this helps us learn more about what the government’s doing, that’s probably a good thing.”

F.B.I. agents and American prosecutors are believed to be building a criminal leak case against Mr. Snowden, who turns 30 on Friday. Officials in Iceland say Mr. Snowden’s representatives have contacted them to explore the possibility that he might be granted asylum there.


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Global Market Turmoil Shows Reach of Fed Beyond U.S.

Michael Appleton for The New York Times

Traders at the New York Stock Exchange on Thursday, a day when the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index fell 2.5 percent.

Tumbling stock, bond and commodity prices around the world are demonstrating just how reliant the global economy has become on the monetary policies of the Federal Reserve.

In the weeks since the Fed’s chairman, Ben S. Bernanke, first indicated that the central bank might start to pare back its support for the economy, markets in Asia, Europe and Latin America have fallen even more sharply than those in the United States, threatening economic growth in many countries.

While leading market measures in the United States have declined 4 percent over the last month, an index of the world’s stock markets has slumped more than 6 percent.

“The Fed isn’t just the U.S.’s central bank. It’s the world’s central bank,” said Mark Frey, the chief strategist at the Cambridge Mercantile Group.

The selling picked up in markets around the world on Thursday, a day after Mr. Bernanke’s latest comments on the Fed’s plan to wind down the stimulus. While the reason for the shift by the Fed is good — a strengthening of the recovery in the United States — investors are nervous that the global economy may not be ready.

The prospect of slowing economic growth and rising interest rates set off waves of volatile selling on markets around the world. In the United States, the benchmark Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index fell 2.5 percent on Thursday, its steepest one-day decline since November 2011. Treasury prices also slumped, driving yields, which move in the opposite direction, to touch their highest levels in nearly two years.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury — a benchmark for mortgages and other consumer rates — rose as high as 2.47 percent before settling at 2.42 percent. Gold, once a favorite of investors, slid to two-and-a-half-year lows.

The damage was more pronounced in a wide array of markets outside the United States, like Philippine government bonds and the Norwegian currency. Stock indexes in China, Europe and Mexico fell more than 3 percent.

Investors were also rattled by reports that Chinese banks had become reluctant to lend to one another. And Europe’s debt woes came into focus again after the International Monetary Fund said it was considering suspending aid to Greece. But traders and investors cited the Fed’s changing policies as the main driver behind the big flows of money around the world.

“The trigger was clearly what is going on with the Fed,” said Ashish Goyal, the investment director at Eastspring Investments in Singapore.

The heavy selling is a sharp reversal after years when low interest rates in the United States encouraged investors to put their money into foreign countries. For investors in once-attractive foreign markets, the fear is that those markets may be on even less firm economic footing than the United States’, and consequently less able to absorb the decline in lending that comes along with rising interest rates.

“When the U.S. embarks upon policies that are appropriate for its own domestic circumstances, it can impose policies on the rest of the world that aren’t necessarily appropriate to them,” said Darren Williams, the senior European economist at AllianceBernstein in London.

Interest rates are a vital determinant and indicator of economic activity. To try to encourage borrowing and bolster the economy after the financial crisis, the Fed has pushed rates down by cutting the interest rates it offers banks and by buying more than $2 trillion of bonds. The extent of the intervention has put markets on a hair trigger for any hint of a change from the Fed.

Mr. Bernanke has indicated that the Fed will pare its bond purchases only very slowly and may increase them again if there are signs the economy is being hurt. That has some analysts calling this week’s market turmoil a panicked overreaction. For the year, the S.& P. 500 index is still up 11.4 percent.

But there are significant concerns that the Fed may not be able to control the convulsions in the markets that Mr. Bernanke has already set off with his comments.

“It’s a very significant moment,” said Sebastian Galy, a foreign exchange strategist at Société Générale. “It’s the end of an extremely aggressive phase of monetary policy globally.”

Peter Eavis contributed reporting.


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Nearing the One-Year Mark, Morsi Is Besieged by Critics in Egypt

Tara Todras-Whitehill for The New York Times

Protesters in Cairo, unhappy with President Mohamed Morsi, have occupied the offices of his new culture minister, preventing him from entering.

CAIRO — Across Egypt, angry crowds have barred President Mohamed Morsi’s appointees from their offices, millions have signed petitions calling for his ouster and work crews have fortified the headquarters of the Muslim Brotherhood, from which he hails, to prevent attacks that the police have repeatedly failed to stop.

Tara Todras-Whitehill for The New York Times

Egyptians waited for bread at a bakery in Cairo. “The whole country is sinking, and it is people like us who feel it the most,” a resident of the neighborhood said.

As the one-year anniversary of Mr. Morsi’s inauguration as Egypt’s first freely elected president approaches, he faces widespread discontent from a swath of society and stinging grass-roots campaigns that have undermined his ability to wield power and address the country’s most pressing problems.

“If I were a ruler, I would be very concerned about this, because the street is out of your control,” said Emad Shahin, a political science professor at the American University in Cairo. “It is out of everyone’s control.”

Mr. Morsi inherited a dysfunctional state, one worn down by decades of Hosni Mubarak’s authoritarian system, which marginalized the masses and empowered and enriched an elite few. But during his year in office, life has grown only harder. Now as the summer heat arrives and the holy month of Ramadan approaches, power cuts, gas shortages and rising food costs have made the crisis a profoundly personal matter for many citizens.

“The whole country is sinking, and it is people like us who feel it the most,” said Emad Mohammed, who reupholsters chairs in the poor Cairo neighborhood of Deir al-Malak. He said that all of his costs had risen and that drivers charged more for deliveries because buying gas means waiting in hourlong lines.

All of this has left Mr. Morsi with few allies beyond the Muslim Brotherhood. This week the country’s top Muslim cleric rebuffed those who called anti-Morsi protests un-Islamic and declared it religiously permissible to protest peacefully against one’s leaders, and the patriarch of Egypt’s Coptic Church publicly criticized Mr. Morsi’s performance.

And the situation may soon grow even worse for the president. Egypt’s disparate and disorganized opposition is calling for mass protests on June 30. Many worry that demonstrations could inflame the country’s intensely polarized politics and ignite new unrest, further weakening the nation.

Mr. Morsi and his allies argue that he still has electoral legitimacy and that the opposition has rebuffed his efforts to reach out, leaving him no choice but to rely on Brotherhood members for support and top posts. They also say post-revolution difficulties are no surprise.

“When it comes to our current performance, we had hoped to do better, but the challenges are great and we believe that nobody could have performed better,” said Murad Ali, a spokesman for Mr. Morsi’s Freedom and Justice Party.

Egypt’s economy has been declining since the revolution, with unrest chasing away investors and tourists. Foreign currency reserves are half of what they were under Mr. Mubarak. The country’s stock exchange hit an 11-month low last week, Reuters reported, and the Egyptian pound has fallen by 10 percent since last year.

Analysts describe the government as stuck in a downward spiral: its weakness prevents it from taking decisive measures, which allows the situation to get worse, which causes more discontent.

For months, the government has been negotiating a $4.8 billion loan on fairly easy terms from the International Monetary Fund. The thinking is that if the I.M.F. approved a loan, that could give the government the credibility it needs to unlock billions more dollars in aid and loans. But if a deal is reached, it will probably mean reducing subsidies for energy — a step many fear will incite the public.

Ragui Assaad, an economist at the University of Minnesota who studies Egypt, said such a deal had been possible in other countries — but only when there had been a strong government.

“There are ways to do it, but you need a credible government so that when you say people will be compensated, they believe you,” he said.

But it is just that — credibility — that Mr. Morsi is struggling to regain as protesters challenge his authority across the country.

His newly appointed culture minister has not entered his office in two weeks since demonstrators who accuse him of trying to “Brotherhoodize” the ministry occupied the building.


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Czech Premier Candidate Seen as Honest but Inexperienced

PRAGUE — Miroslava Nemcova, the governing party’s candidate to become the next prime minister of the Czech Republic, is a former bookshop owner who has never held a ministerial position, but has a reputation for moral rectitude and can restore confidence in the scandal-hit nation, analysts said Thursday.

Ms. Nemcova, 60, currently the speaker of the House in the country’s lower house of Parliament, was nominated Wednesday by the center-right Civic Democrats to replace the departing prime minister, Petr Necas, who resigned on Monday amid a corruption scandal.

Ms. Nemcova, a popular and modest figure who is known for a free-market economic outlook, would be the first woman to serve as the country’s prime minister. The Czech news media on Thursday were already calling her the Iron Lady, the nickname of former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher of Britain. But analysts said Ms. Nemcova was a far more conciliatory person, who had seldom sought out power or influence.

Jindrich Sidlo, a commentator at Hospodarske noviny, a leading economic newspaper, said Ms. Nemcova had limited experience in foreign policy and the day-to-day thrust of policy making and was chosen primarily because she had never been tainted by scandal.

“She is the best choice because she is not connected with any scandal during her entire political career,” he said. “The only scandal attributed to her is that she once lent her son an office car, and that is hardly a big deal.”

Last week, after a series of nationwide raids, prosecutors charged seven people — including the prime minister’s chief of staff and the current and former heads of military intelligence — in the most extensive anticorruption crackdown since the overthrow of Communism in 1989.

The prime minister’s chief of staff, Jana Nagyova, a close confidante, was charged with abuse of power and bribery after prosecutors said she ordered a military intelligence agency to spy on three people, including Mr. Necas’s wife. Prosecutors said she had also offered posts in state-owned companies to three rebellious members of Parliament in return for their agreeing to leave their parliamentary seats. Ms. Nagyova, through her lawyer, has denied some of the accusations, saying she acted in good faith.

Ms. Nemcova, a native of Vysocina, in the southeastern, predominantly agricultural part of the country, has been speaker of the House since 2010. She is a longstanding member of the Civic Democrats, the party that presided over the country’s transition to a market economy in the aftermath of Communism. She became a lawmaker in 1998 and is viewed as dutiful party loyalist. She is the mother of one adult son.

Her appointment is far from assured, as she needs the approval of President Milos Zeman, who has the power to appoint the prime minister. She also needs the support of the Civic Democrats’ coalition partners and would be subject to a vote of confidence in Parliament.

If there is no agreement on a new government, early elections will be called. The next parliamentary elections are scheduled for June 2014.

“When there is a big crisis, one has to rise to the occasion,” she said Wednesday in an interview with the online version of the newspaper Mlada fronta DNES.

Ms. Nemcova is the country’s fourth most trusted politician, according to a poll by the Public Opinion Research Center, a polling institute. The poll, in which 1,049 people were interviewed by phone, had a margin of sampling error of three percentage points. The most trusted politician, according to the poll, was Karel Schwarzenberg, the pipe-smoking foreign minister, whose conservative TOP09 Party was in coalition with the Civic Democratic Party and whose support is deemed vital for her to ascend to the top job.

Mr. Schwarzenberg was quoted Thursday in Mlada fronta DNES as praising Ms. Nemcova as a “wonderful lady.” But he said that her nomination also showed that the governing party did not have many qualified candidates for the job.

Mr. Sidlo, of Hospodarske Noviny, said that her reputation for incorruptibility was her best asset at a time of public outcry over graft and lawlessness. She has not been linked to special interests or lobbyists. But he cautioned that she had a low profile and was largely untested.


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Amsterdam Journal: The Dutch Prize Their Pedal Power, but a Sea of Bikes Swamps Their Capital

Pavel Prokopchik for The New York Times

Amsterdam is trying to keep its hordes of bikes under control. In a city of 800,000, there are 880,000 bicycles, the government estimates, four times the number of cars.

AMSTERDAM — About 6:30 weekday mornings, throngs of bicycles, with a smattering of motor scooters and pedestrians, pour off the ferries that carry bikers and other passengers free of charge across the IJ (pronounced “eye”) harbor, clogging the streets and causing traffic jams down behind Amsterdam’s main train station.

“In the afternoon it’s even more,” moaned Erwin Schoof, a metalworker in his 20s who lives in the canal-laced center of town and battles the chaos daily to cross to his job.

Willem van Heijningen, a railway official responsible for bikes around the station, said, “It’s not a war zone, but it’s the next thing to it.”

This clogged stream of cyclists is just one of many in a city as renowned for bikes as Los Angeles is for automobiles or Venice for gondolas. Cyclists young and old pedal through narrow lanes and along canals. Mothers and fathers balance toddlers in spacious wooden boxes affixed to their bikes, ferrying them to school or day care. Carpenters carry tools and supplies in similar contraptions and electricians their cables. Few wear helmets. Increasingly, some are saying what was simply unthinkable just a few years ago: There are too many bikes.

While cities like New York struggle to get people onto bikes, Amsterdam is trying to keep its hordes of bikes under control. In a city of 800,000, there are 880,000 bicycles, the government estimates, four times the number of cars. In the past two decades, travel by bike has grown by 40 percent so that now about 32 percent of all trips within the city are by bike, compared with 22 percent by car.

Applauding this accomplishment, a Danish urban planning consultancy, Copenhagenize Design, which publishes an annual list of the 20 most bike-friendly cities, placed Amsterdam in first place this year, as it has frequently in the past. (The list consists mostly of European cities, though Tokyo; Nagoya, Japan; and Rio de Janeiro made the cut. Montreal is the only North American city included.)

But most Amsterdamers say it is not so much the traffic jams like those at the morning ferry that annoy them most, but the problem of where to park their bikes once they get to where they’re going, in a city with almost more water than paved surfaces.

“Just look at this place!” said Xem Smit, 22, who for the past year has struggled to maintain order at a municipal bike parking lot in the heart of town, waving a hand at bikes chained to lampposts, benches, trees and almost any other permanent object across a tree-lined square between the stock market and the big De Bijenkorf department store.

“I hear complaints all the time,” Mr. Smit said. “It’s not bike friendly — no!” His tiny, fenced-in parking lot has space officially for 140 bikes, but he routinely crams in more. “My record is 152,” he said.

Mr. Smit’s problem is largely what keeps Thomas Koorn, of Amsterdam’s Transport and Traffic Department, awake at night. “We have a real parking issue,” he said in a conference room overlooking the IJ. Over the next two decades, Mr. Koorn said, the city will invest $135 million to improve the biking infrastructure, including the creation of 38,000 bike parking racks “in the hot spots.”

“We don’t think there’s a crisis; we want to keep it attractive,” Mr. Koorn said. He paused, then added, “You cannot imagine if all this traffic were cars.”

Part of the problem is that many Amsterdamers are not satisfied with just one bike, and often do not care where they leave those they have. “I have three,” said Timo Klein, 23, an economics student, picking one of his out from a scattering of dozens of bikes on the central Dam Square, some still usable, others clearly wrecks. “If one breaks down, I don’t have to use public transportation,” like buses or trams, which in the city’s narrow, clogged roadways are slower than bikes.

With so many bikes around, one of the more powerful lobbies in town is the Fietsersbond, or Cyclists’ Union, with its 4,000 local members. Musing over why Amsterdamers are so keen on bikes, Michèl Post, a union official, attributed it to the country’s density.


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Obama to Pick Bush-Era Justice Dept. Official to Lead F.B.I.

WASHINGTON — President Obama on Friday plans to announce the nomination of James B. Comey, a senior Justice Department official under President George W. Bush, to become the next director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, according to a White House official.

The Senate, which will not be in session in August, is bracing for a significant fight over nominations in July, and it is not clear whether the administration has allotted enough time for the Senate to confirm him by Sept. 3, when Robert S. Mueller III, the F.B.I. director, is mandated to leave his post.

F.B.I. officials in Washington had expressed concern that if Mr. Obama did not nominate a new director by the beginning of June, the bureau would probably have an interim director for some time.

Mr. Comey is best known for his role in a 2004 incident in which, as the acting United States attorney general, he refused to acquiesce to aides to Mr. Bush, who wanted Mr. Comey to reauthorize a controversial National Security Agency surveillance program.

The program was ultimately reauthorized, but under a different legal framework. As part of Mr. Comey’s confirmation, he is expected to be questioned about his views on that program and the ones that have been disclosed in recent weeks.

“He has worked tirelessly to strengthen our nation’s legal framework,” a White House official said. “In moments of debate and decision, he asks the tough questions and insists on rigorous standards. Jim knows what it takes to investigate and enforce the laws of the United States, protect our citizens, and has always done so with the utmost integrity.”


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Palestinian Prime Minister Offers Resignation After 2 Weeks in Office

JERUSALEM — The new prime minister of the Palestinian Authority, Rami Hamdallah, submitted his resignation on Thursday after only two weeks in office, a signal of continuing internal political disarray amid already complicated American efforts to restart the peace process with Israel.

Abbas Momani/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

The new prime minister of the Palestinian Authority, Rami Hamdallah, lasted only two weeks in office.

It was not immediately clear if the president of the authority, Mahmoud Abbas, would accept the resignation, and experts said it was primarily a domestic issue that would not directly impinge on Mr. Abbas’s ability to make decisions regarding Secretary of State John Kerry’s peace mission.

But analysts also said the image of chronic political instability could undercut crucial international support for the Palestinians, both financial and political, at a time when they are supposed to be pushing for statehood.

“We see that there is a state of confusion,” said Zakaria al-Qaq, an expert in national security at Al Quds University in East Jerusalem. “This cabinet was still receiving congratulations. Now, I think, it is facing the harsh realities.”

“Image is very important,” added Mr. Qaq, suggesting that the lack of political clarity or of a cohesive Palestinian government could even give Mr. Kerry cause — or a pretext — to delay his so far unsuccessful efforts.

Mr. Kerry is expected back in the Middle East later this month for a fifth visit in his quest to revive peace talks. Differences within the Israeli government over the Palestinian question have been on stark display in the past two weeks, adding to a sense that Mr. Kerry’s mission was approaching a decisive point. Any breakthrough between the Israeli and Palestinian sides has so far remained elusive, with each pointing the finger at the other.

International confidence in the Palestinian Authority was already shaken when the previous prime minister, Salam Fayyad, an internationally respected economist, resigned in April. Mr. Fayyad remained in office as a caretaker while Mr. Abbas worked to find a replacement.

Mr. Hamdallah, who was sworn in on June 6, was formerly the president of a large West Bank university with no previous experience in government. A Palestinian official said Mr. Hamdallah had submitted his resignation because of a conflict over his authority and responsibilities.

Palestinian insiders said Mr. Hamdallah’s problem seemed to lie in his relations with the two deputy prime ministers whom Mr. Abbas appointed at the same time. Both men are viewed as close to the president: Mohammad Mustafa, the former chairman of the Palestine Investment Fund, who was given special responsibility for the economy; and Ziad Abu Amr, a legislator and former foreign minister.

“The troika did not work in the Soviet Union,” Mr. Qaq said, “and it won’t work in Palestine.”

Ghassan Khatib, vice president of Bir Zeit University in the West Bank and a former Palestinian government spokesman, said Mr. Fayyad’s resignation and replacement was accepted by the outside world.

“But,” he added, “to have this resignation so soon is very bad for stability and consequently for the ability of the Palestinian Authority to continue getting the necessary financial and political support for the peace process in the international arena.”


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Tobacco Creates New East-West Divide in Europe

LONDON — New rules to be discussed by European Union ministers on Friday would ban menthol and slim cigarettes, a move designed to improve Europeans’ health but one that has divided it broadly along Cold War lines.

Led by Poland, which also happens to be one of Europe’s biggest tobacco producers, a bloc of former Communist countries is fighting a rear-guard action against the measures, hoping at least to save slim cigarettes that are popular with many, often female, smokers.

The concern of the rule drafters is that slim cigarettes add an allure that attracts young women to smoking and that menthol cigarettes make it easier for young people of both genders to start, and get hooked on, smoking.

But Poland, which is by far the biggest of the ex-Communist nations that have joined the European Union, stands to lose tobacco industry jobs from the proposed law. Some Polish politicians also worry about seeming highhanded to their sizable population of smokers, an estimated one-third of the population.

“It’s about freedom to a large extent,” said Roza Grafin von Thun und Hohenstein, a center-right Polish member of the European Parliament who is known as Roza Thun.

Ms. Thun said she supported the health impulses behind the draft legislation, but after listening to objections from voters at a meeting in Krakow she decided the rules should be relaxed. “People said, ‘When are you going to prohibit us from drinking wine or vodka, or stop us using white sugar? Maybe you will also tell us to go to bed early because going to bed late is also unhealthy.’ ”

The proposed rules would also require that pictures of smoking-related medical problems and written health warnings cover 75 percent of the front and the back of cigarette packets. This provision, though, might be scaled back after haggling among the European health ministers who will be debating the rules in Brussels.

Poland is hoping to garner support at Friday’s meeting from a group of countries including the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Romania, Hungary and Bulgaria.

Even their backing would probably not be enough to block the measures under the E.U.'s complex voting system. But talks among ministers could produce a compromise, perhaps phasing in the proposals. Any new regulations would require the approval of the European Parliament before becoming law.

Tobacco has been a fraught issue for the European Union’s executive arm, the European Commission, which has run public health campaigns to cut smoking but only recently removed direct agricultural subsidies for growing tobacco.

In December, the commission came up with the proposed tobacco rules. They are supported by Ireland, which currently holds the European Union’s rotating presidency and argues that the legislation would save lives and money.

“Approximately 700,000 Europeans die every single year of tobacco-related causes,” Ireland’s health minister, James Reilly, said in a speech earlier this year. “Smoking is the largest avoidable health risk in Europe, causing more problems than alcohol, drug abuse and obesity.”

The public health care cost attached to smoking in Europe is an estimated 25.3 billion euros, or $33.4 billion, each year, Mr. Reilly said. He cited recent studies showing that 70 percent of smokers in Europe began their habit before age 18.

A particular worry behind the proposal is that thinner or menthol-flavored cigarettes look and taste less harmful than others, giving people a misleading impression that they are safer.

In Poland, menthol cigarettes make up 18 percent of Poland’s cigarette consumption, with slim cigarettes adding an additional 14 percent, according to the Polish government.

Slim cigarettes are popular among young women who associated them “with elegant, slim, women,” Ms. Thun said.

“I think we should not be too dogmatic,” she said. “We are dealing with human beings, their addictions and their habit. We should help the younger generation not to smoke, but I think we won’t achieve anything with a hard line.”

One of the fears is that if menthol cigarettes or slims are banned, counterfeit versions will flood across Poland’s borders with Ukraine and Belarus, two countries outside the European Union, creating a huge new illegal market.

Premyslaw Noworyta, director of the association that represents Polish tobacco growers, said the industry supported 60,000 jobs, many in areas with little alternative employment. Only Italy grows more tobacco in Europe than Poland.

“For us tobacco growers, this is a catastrophe,” Mr. Noworyta said, adding that demand would simply switch to the black market.

A study by the firm Roland Berger, commissioned by the tobacco company Philip Morris International, predicted that if the legislation passed, the European Union would lose 70,000 to 175,000 jobs and that the black market would thrive.

The report also projected a drop in tax revenue in the European Union of 2.2 billion to 5 billion euros.

“Particularly strong effects will occur in countries with large tobacco sectors, such as Germany, France and Poland,” the report said. “Countries with high demand for slim or menthol cigarettes, such as Bulgaria or Poland, will experience disproportionate losses.”

Konrad Niklewicz, an analyst for the Civic Institute, a Polish research body linked to the Civic Platform political party, said the issue had touched a public nerve. “People tend to say, ‘Once again the eurocrats in Brussels have come up with another strange idea which is hitting our Polish tobacco industry.’ ”

But Mr. Niklewicz, who is also a former government spokesman, took pains to add that the legislation was unlikely to shake Poles’ underlying faith in the European Union.

“Historically, we are the biggest beneficiaries of E.U. funding,” he said, “so I can assure you that Poles will love the E.U. for many years to come.”


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Facebook Starts a Short-Video Service

MENLO PARK, Calif. — If “60 Minutes” were being dreamed up today, its producers might very well have ditched the idea and gone with “6 Seconds” instead.

That’s the maximum length of the videos on Vine, a mobile application owned by Twitter that has grown like one of those creeping plants, to close to 20 million users since it sprouted five months ago.

On Thursday, Facebook introduced its own short-video service, built into Instagram, the popular photo-sharing app that Facebook bought last year. The new feature, which is available now, allows users to record up to 15 seconds of video, enhance it with filters and post it immediately.

“We’ve worked a ton on making it fast, simple and beautiful,” said Kevin Systrom, co-founder of Instagram, at a news conference at Facebook’s Silicon Valley headquarters. “What we did to photos we just did for video.”

The move underscores how video has increasingly become critical to companies like Facebook, which is seeking ways to keep its 1.1 billion users entertained and engaged — particularly on their mobile devices. Video also represents a lucrative and fast-growing area of online advertising, with revenue in the United States expected to top $4 billion this year, according to the research firm eMarketer.

“Sharing video is inherently mobile,” said Gene Munster, an analyst with Piper Jaffray. And Facebook needed to get into the game, he said, adding that they have to “check that box to remain relevant to their users.”

Although neither Vine nor Facebook’s service are currently offering advertising, it would be easy to sprinkle a sponsor’s video ad into the legions of user-generated videos, much as both services do now with text ads in their users’ feeds.

Jan Rezab, chief executive of the research firm Socialbakers, said that online viewers had a high tendency to engage with video ads, especially if they were deftly inserted into a stream of other content.

“You could actually monetize Vines and the Vine channel by introducing sponsored Vines. Every 10th Vine could be a sponsored Vine,” he said. Facebook could do something similar.

If the short-video format proves to be more than a passing fad, a great deal of advertising revenue could be at stake. YouTube, Google’s longer-format video service, brings in billions of dollars a year in advertising.

Facebook already gets about 30 percent of its advertising revenue from mobile, according to its last quarterly earnings report. If the company could figure out how to aim the video content that individual customers want, it could significantly increase the revenue it is able to make from mobile advertising.

Video holds a promise that goes beyond what static images and nuggets of text can offer. It tends to engage even the most distracted users, particularly when the snippets are easily digestible.

Vine-length videos are ideal when scrolling through a Twitter feed on a smartphone, Mr. Rezab said. Videos tend to be funny, and “you don’t have to hit the play button. The sound kicks in as you’re scrolling over it.”

“The six seconds is just magical,” Mr. Rezab said.

That sense of ease and simplicity was what the Vine team was striving for when it built the app, said Michael Sippey, Twitter’s vice president of product, in an interview.

“We wanted to make mobile video without a start or stop button,” he said. “If you give people simple tools to tell stories, they’ll tell really great stories.”

Some will be funny or trivial, but others will record momentous events, he said, such as this week’s Vine of the protests in Brazil.

The Instagram team sought much the same thing, although it added other features, such as the ability to delete portions of a 15-second video and rerecord them. It also included an image stabilization feature to reduce the choppiness that often comes with hand-held recording.

The simplicity of both apps — press your finger to the screen to record, lift it to stop and click to publish — makes it nearly as easy to share a video as it is to post a photograph. And the form seems aptly suited to modern vanities and attention spans — people peek at their smartphones in line at the grocery store but may also feel moved to document the visit.

Vine has caught the fancy of everyone from the White House, which recently filmed President Obama pedaling a stationary water filtration bicycle, to marketers like Burberry, which this week compressed its entire runway show of men’s fashions into a six-second blur.

Vine, which is operated as a separate service, has drawn new users to the Twitter microblogging platform, Mr. Sippey said. However, “we think that they are potentially separate networks. You may love my tweets but hate my Vines.”


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Group Keeps Watch on Iran and Possible Sanction Violations

Jennifer S. Altman for The New York Times

United Against Nuclear Iran, a private advocacy group, keeps a long-distance technological eye on compliance with sanctions from Midtown Manhattan.

Inside a nondescript Midtown Manhattan office, a couple of computer analysts spend their days peering intently at large screens of satellite mapping surveillance data, watching dozens of little blips moving like snails. Each one, they said, represents a ship controlled by Iran or its trading partners.

They said they are looking for suspicious behavior.

The analysts work for United Against Nuclear Iran, a privately financed advocacy group founded by former American diplomats that has become an annoying thorn to Iran, which regards it as a vigilante extension of a hostile American foreign policy. The group’s latest effort is its maritime monitoring system, which it says provides a new level of scrutiny of compliance with the sanctions imposed on Iran by the West because of Iran’s disputed nuclear energy program.

Although the economic and trade sanctions, including a European oil embargo, have deeply hurt Iran, the country has been somewhat successful in finding ways to evade them, the group says. A litany of clever tactics for cloaking commerce on the high seas has included reflagging, renaming or clandestinely acquiring ships, engaging in secretive ship-to-ship transfers to mask the origins of oil or other contraband, temporarily disabling onboard satellite transponders to hide their true locations or simply transmitting false destinations.

“Iran thrives on deception and disguise,” said Mark D. Wallace, the chief executive of United Against Nuclear Iran, who would like to see a maritime blockade of the country.

Mr. Wallace said the Iran presidential election on Friday, in which a cleric and former nuclear negotiator, Hassan Rowhani, was elected on a campaign promoting better relations with the outside world, had done nothing to alter his group’s view. “The regime has shown that it plans more of the same,” he said in a statement on the group’s Web site. “The world’s response should therefore remain the same — the continued isolation of Iran, and comprehensive sanctions.”

Short of a blockade, he said in an interview, the maritime monitoring system, which has been in operation for about five months, has at least given Iran a new reason to worry.

“It’s a technology-based advocacy tool,” he said. “This technology and our monitoring allows us to expose sanctions-avoidance schemes.”

Martin House, the monitoring system’s director and lead analyst, said it used publicly available satellite transmissions from ship transponders, including data on speed, identity, direction and destination, and correlated the information with other navigational data and computer algorithms. He said the system created vessel behavior profiles that could identify questionable activities even if the transponders were temporarily turned off.

Several times, Mr. Wallace and his aides said, the system had exposed possible sanctions violations that the group had then publicized, forcing the Iranians or their partners to change plans.

In April, for example, an Iranian tanker named Daisy, flying under a Tanzanian flag, had to abandon a planned voyage to Malta, which has pledged compliance with the sanctions. Warned by Mr. Wallace’s group that Daisy was a blacklisted vessel, the Maltese government informed the ship that it was not welcome, he said.

In another recent episode, the monitoring system showed that three vessels operated by Medallion Reederei GmbH, a German shipping company, had visited Iranian ports operated by Tidewater Middle East Company, a sanctioned Iranian port management company. After Mr. Wallace wrote to the German shipper expressing concern, its managing director, Falk Holtmann, responded in a letter assuring him he was looking into the port calls and would “not tolerate any breach of international sanctions.”

Other instances of what the group considered suspicious behavior discovered by its monitoring system have included mysterious linkups in the Red Sea between the Iranian bulk-carrier vessel Parisan and other vessels from Iran, Egypt and Turkey; and a curious anchoring of three old tankers near Singapore, nominally owned by a Greek shipper, that Iran may be using to store and transfer embargoed oil. The Greek shipper, Dimitris Cambis, was recently blacklisted by the Treasury Department for helping Iran evade sanctions.

“We’re not the only people in the world with this information,” said Nathan Carleton, a spokesman for United Against Nuclear Iran. “The Treasury and State Departments are following this, too. But there wasn’t anyone analyzing this in total. We really feel like watch people.”

Some maritime experts said the group’s monitoring system could also misidentify innocent activity as suspicious behavior. The transponders that commercial ships are required to use to signal their location, for example, can sometimes appear to be switched off in areas where reception is poor, which is sometimes the case in the Red Sea. A crew can forget to update a ship’s transmission data on destinations or cargo when plans change, but that does not necessarily signal a deliberate deception.


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Extremism Rises Among Myanmar Buddhists Wary of Muslim Minority

Adam Dean for The New York Times

Ashin Wirathu, the spiritual leader of the radical movement, skates a thin line between free speech and incitement, taking advantage of the new freedoms at a fragile time of transition.

TAUNGGYI, Myanmar — After a ritual prayer atoning for past sins, Ashin Wirathu, a Buddhist monk with a rock-star following in Myanmar, sat before an overflowing crowd of thousands of followers and launched into a rant against what he called the “enemy" — the country’s Muslim minority.

“You can be full of kindness and love, but you cannot sleep next to a mad dog,” Ashin Wirathu said, referring to Muslims.

“I call them troublemakers, because they are troublemakers,” Ashin Wirathu told a reporter after his two-hour sermon. “I am proud to be called a radical Buddhist.”

The world has grown accustomed to a gentle image of Buddhism defined by the self-effacing words of the Dalai Lama, the global popularity of Buddhist-inspired meditation and postcard-perfect scenes from Southeast Asia and beyond of crimson-robed, barefoot monks receiving alms from villagers at dawn.

But over the past year, images of rampaging Burmese Buddhists carrying swords and the vituperative sermons of monks like Ashin Wirathu have underlined the rise of extreme Buddhism in Myanmar. Buddhist lynch mobs have killed more than 200 Muslims and forced more than 150,000 people, mostly Muslims, from their homes.

Ashin Wirathu denies any role in the riots. But his critics say that at the very least his anti-Muslim preaching is helping to inspire the violence.

What began last year on the fringes of Burmese society has grown into a nationwide fundamentalist movement whose agenda now includes boycotts of Muslim-made goods. Its message is spreading through regular sermons across the country that draw thousands of people and through widely distributed DVDs of those talks. Buddhist monasteries associated with the movement are also opening community centers and a Sunday school program for 60,000 Buddhist children nationwide.

The hate-filled speeches and violence have endangered Myanmar’s path to democracy, raising questions about the government’s ability to keep the country’s towns and cities safe and its willingness to crack down or prosecute Buddhists in a Buddhist-majority country. The killings have also reverberated in Muslim countries across the region, tarnishing what was almost universally seen abroad as a remarkable and rare peaceful transition from military rule to democracy. In May, Indonesian authorities foiled what they said was a plot to bomb the Myanmar Embassy in Jakarta in retaliation for the assaults on Muslims.

Ashin Wirathu, the spiritual leader of the radical movement, skates a thin line between free speech and incitement, taking advantage of the new freedoms at a fragile time of transition. He was himself jailed for eight years by the now-defunct military junta for inciting hatred. Last year, as part of a release of hundreds of political prisoners, he was freed.

In his recent sermon, he described the reported massacre of schoolchildren and other Muslim inhabitants in the central city of Meiktila in March, documented by a human rights group, as a show of strength.

“If we are weak,” he said, “our land will become Muslim.”

Buddhism would seem to have a secure place in Myanmar. Nine in 10 people are Buddhist, as are nearly all the top leaders in the business world, the government, the military and the police. Estimates of the Muslim minority range from 4 to 8 percent of Myanmar’s roughly 55 million people while the rest are mostly Christian or Hindu.

But Ashin Wirathu, who describes himself as a nationalist, says Buddhism is under siege by Muslims who are having more children than Buddhists and buying up Buddhist-owned land. In part, he is tapping into historical grievances that date to British colonial days when Indians, many of them Muslims, were brought into the country as civil servants and soldiers.

The muscular and nationalist messages he has spread have alarmed Buddhists in other countries.

The Dalai Lama, after the riots in March, said killing in the name of religion was “unthinkable” and urged Myanmar’s Buddhists to contemplate the face of the Buddha for guidance.

Phra Paisal Visalo, a Buddhist scholar and prominent monk in neighboring Thailand, says the notion of “us and them” promoted by Myanmar’s radical monks is anathema to Buddhism. But he lamented that his criticism and that of other leading Buddhists outside the country have had “very little impact.”

Wai Moe contributed reporting from Mandalay and Yangon, and Poypiti Amatatham from Bangkok.


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At the Taliban Office, Waiting for Progress

DOHA, Qatar — The start of peace talks between the United States and the Taliban was delayed on Thursday, with no clear picture of when — or even if — they will restart.

Diplomats were still engaged in discussions about how the Taliban are presenting themselves at their new office here. After Afghan officials angrily announced they would not participate in the talks because the Taliban raised their flag along with a banner reading “Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan,” American officials asked the Qataris to get the Taliban to remove such emblems of legitimacy.

The banner was removed by Wednesday night, and the flag – on a pole in the compound of the Taliban office -- disappeared from view around the same time. But Thursday morning, in better light, it became apparent that their flag was still flying, albeit on a flagpole that had been shortened a couple yards so the flag could not be seen above the wall by the general public.

It could only be seen through gaps in the high wall — which is where Afghan Embassy officials were seen Thursday morning, snapping photographs of the scene.

An Afghan official in Doha refused to comment on whether the Taliban had met the government’s terms in a way that would reinstate the Afghan delegation to talks.

Meanwhile, several of the Taliban delegates were giving telephone interviews Thursday. The Associated Press quoted one of the top representatives, Ahmad Suhail Shaheen, as saying that the Taliban were ready to release their only American prisoner of war, Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, in exchange for senior Taliban prisoners being held at the Guantánamo Bay prison camp in Cuba.

The release of the Guantánamo prisoners has been a central sticking point in moving the peace process forward for roughly 18 months now, according to American and Afghan officials. Taliban officials have made the release a prerequisite both for talks and the release of Sergeant Bergdahl, who has been held by insurgents since 2009.

Speaking from Qatar in a telephone interview with an A.P. reporter in Islamabad, Pakistan, Mr. Shaheen said Sergeant Bergdahl “is as far as I know in good condition.”

The American negotiator who was expected to begin the first round of talks with the Taliban, James Dobbins, remained in Washington on Thursday. And although Secretary of State John Kerry was due here on Saturday, that was for an international conference on Syria, not the Taliban. Officials in Washington said they hoped the talks could move forward as planned in the next few days.

Even if the main American negotiators do show up soon, the Afghans have said they are still unhappy with the terms of the new office’s existence after Taliban delegates there gave a succession of interviews.

President Hamid Karzai had made it clear that his government was only reluctantly agreeing to the idea of a Taliban office in Qatar – and then only to start peace talks so they could be moved to Afghan soil, which the Taliban have rejected. Once the Taliban declared that they viewed the office as a place to give interviews to the press, meet international officials and diplomats, the Afghan government rejected any talks there.

The issue of a banner declaring it the office of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan — the name of the former Taliban regime – only deepened that concern, and a flag suggested it was in effect a Taliban embassy, Afghan officials said.

A statement by the Qatari Ministry of Foreign Affairs, quoted by the Qatar News Agency, said that the office should be known as “the Political Bureau of the Afghan Taliban in Doha and not the political bureau of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan.”


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2 G.O.P. Senators Reach Deal on Border Security Plan

WASHINGTON — Two Senate Republicans reached an agreement on Thursday on a plan to strengthen border security with the bipartisan group of eight senators that drafted an overhaul of the nation’s immigration laws, raising hopes that the new deal could build Republican support for the immigration legislation being debated on the Senate floor.

The deal, according to aides with knowledge of the discussions, will call for what was described as a “border surge” that nearly doubles the current border patrol force to 40,000 agents from 21,000, as well as the completion of 700 miles of fence on the southern border. The additional border agents, an aide said, would cost roughly $30 billion. Details of the agreement were to be announced later Thursday. The expected endorsement of the proposal by several Senate Republicans would be a significant boost to the measure, which backers hope to push through the Senate by the end of next week.

The two Republican senators, Bob Corker of Tennessee and John Hoeven of North Dakota, have been working behind the scenes over the past few days to come up with a provision that would appease hesitant Republicans and help garner broad bipartisan support for the bill. On Wednesday evening they said they were close.

“We’ve had a really good day,” Mr. Corker said Wednesday. “I feel good about where we are.”

The two senators briefed their Republican colleagues at a party lunch, and afterward said they were heartened by the positive response. Their push to strengthen border security, they said, was given a boost by a Congressional Budget Office report released Tuesday that found that the current bill — without any additional border security provisions — would decrease annual illegal immigration by only 25 percent.

“I don’t know what the hell is going to happen,” said Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina, “but we’re on the verge of doing something dramatic on the border, and if it happens it will be due to Hoeven and Corker and a lot of our colleagues.”

Mr. Graham, a member of the bipartisan group that drafted the original legislation, served as the group’s conduit to Mr. Corker and Mr. Hoeven to ensure that their provision was acceptable to both Democrats and Republicans.

The Corker-Hoeven proposal would be an alternative to an amendment introduced by Senator John Cornyn, Republican of Texas. Mr. Cornyn’s plan would create strict goals that would need to be met before more than 11 million undocumented immigrants could start on the path to citizenship and attain legal status, including a 90 percent apprehension rate of illegal crossers at the southern border and a biometric exit system at all airports and seaports.

Democrats consider Mr. Cornyn’s plan a “poison pill” that is logistically hard to achieve and could indefinitely delay citizenship for those covered by the measure.

Originally, Mr. Corker and Mr. Hoeven were considering a provision that would have required a 90 percent effectiveness rate in apprehending or turning back illegal crossers, using a combination of conventional border infrastructure, like fencing and observation towers, and high-tech elements including heat-sensing cameras and drones.

“It has to be measurable, objective metrics so we know the border is secure and so that folks feel that it’s attainable and we can agree that we have a secure border,” Mr. Hoeven said. “We’re trying to come up with something where we can get Republicans and Democrats to agree on.”

Democrats, however, still objected to the 90 percent trigger linking border security to a pathway to citizenship, and on Wednesday, Mr. Corker said they had “come up with a solution.”

According to aides with knowledge of the discussions, the Republicans agreed to make the 90 percent figure a goal rather than a requirement, in exchange for a detailed border security plan that lays out serious assurances of both manpower and resources at the southern border.


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Brazil’s Leftist Ruling Party, Born of Protests, Is Perplexed by Revolt

SÃO PAULO, Brazil — The protests were heating up on the streets of Brazil’s largest city last week, but the mayor was not in his office. He was not even in the city. He had left for Paris to try to land the 2020 World’s Fair — exactly the kind of expensive, international mega-event that demonstrators nationwide have scorned.

A week later, the mayor, Fernando Haddad, 50, was holed up in his apartment as scores of protesters rallied outside and others smashed the windows of his office building, furious that he had refused to meet with them, much less yield to their demand to revoke a contentious bus fare increase.

How such a rising star in the leftist governing party, someone whose name is often mentioned as a future presidential contender, so badly misread the national mood reflects the disconnect between a growing segment of the population and a government that prides itself on popular policies aimed at lifting millions out of poverty.

After rising to prominence on the backs of huge protests to usher in democratic leadership, the governing Workers Party now finds itself perplexed by the revolt in its midst, watching with dismay as political corruption, bad public services and the government’s focus on lifting Brazil’s international stature through events like the 2014 World Cup and the 2016 Olympics inspire outrage.

On Wednesday, tens of thousands protested outside the newly built stadium where Brazil faced off against Mexico in the Confederations Cup, as the police tried to disperse them with tear gas, rubber bullets and pepper spray. In what would normally be a moment of unbridled national pride, demonstrators held up placards demanding schools and hospitals at the “FIFA standard,” challenging the money Brazil is spending on the World Cup instead of on health care or the poorly financed public schools.

Now the authorities across Brazil are bracing for a new round of protests on Thursday, with one newspaper reporting that demonstrations are expected in more than 80 cities throughout the country — from big urban centers like São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro to Manaus in the Amazon and Teresina in the northeast.

“We want the act to be bigger today,” said Tadeu Lemos, 22, a student leader at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, part of an organizing group that drew up various points to continue protesting, including having a voice over expenditures for the World Cup and the Olympics.

Security forces in various cities are preparing for a large turnout. In the capital, Brasília, police said they would cordon off access to buildings like the Congress, a structure that protesters were able to scale one night this week and dance on the roof, providing a shock to political leaders. And in Rio de Janeiro, banks boarded up windows while the authorities placed metal barriers in front of the governor’s palace.

With support for the protests escalating — a new poll by Datafolha found that 77 percent of São Paulo residents approved of them this week, compared with 55 percent the week before — Mayor Haddad and Geraldo Alckmin, the governor from an opposition party, bowed on Wednesday night, announcing that they would cancel the bus and subway fare increases after all. Other cities, including Rio de Janeiro, pledged to do the same.

But while the fare increases might have been the spark that incited the protests, they unleashed a much broader wave of frustration against politicians from an array of parties that the government has openly acknowledged it did not see coming.

“It would be a presumption to think that we understand what is happening,” Gilberto Carvalho, a top aide to President Dilma Rousseff, told senators on Tuesday. “We need to be aware of the complexity of what is occurring.”

The swell of anger is a stunning change from the giddy celebrations that occurred in 2007, when Brazil was chosen by soccer’s governing body to host the World Cup. At the time, dozens of climbers scaled Rio de Janeiro’s Sugar Loaf Mountain, from which they hung an enormous jersey with the words “The 2014 World Cup is Ours.”

William Neuman contributed reporting from São Paulo; and Andrew Downie from Recife.


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