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WAR REPORT
Syria still has heavy arms in urban areas: Annan spokesman
by Staff Writers
Geneva (AFP) April 24, 2012


The Syrian government has not yet removed heavy weapons used to quash anti-regime protests as agreed in a UN ceasefire, UN envoy Kofi Annan's spokesman said Tuesday.

Annan spokesman Ahmad Fawzi said the truce was "extremely fragile" and urged President Bashar al-Assad's government to fully implement its end of the deal.

"This means withdrawal of all heavy armoury from population centres," he told UN broadcaster UNTV.

"They are claiming that this has happened. Satellite imagery however and credible reports show that this has not fully happened, so this is unacceptable."

He said Annan, the UN and Arab League envoy for the crisis, planned to denounce the regime's failure to comply with the ceasefire in an address to a closed session of the UN Security Council later Tuesday.

He also said UN observers on the ground had entered areas like Homs and Hama and found that when they are there "the guns are silent". But when they leave, he said, "credible reports" indicate that fire resumes.

Fawzi's remarks came a day after nearly 60 people were reported killed across Syria despite the cease-fire and the upcoming deployment of 300 UN peace monitors.

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US gave Tunisia $32 mn in military aid: general
Tunis (AFP) April 24, 2012 - The United States has given Tunisia $32 million in military aid since a popular uprising 16 months ago, US Army General Carter F. Ham said Tuesday.

Tunisia and several other Arab nations saw long-standing dictators toppled as a result of the Arab Spring uprisings. In the case of Tunisia, moderate Islamists are now in power.

Ham, who is the commander-in-chief of the US's Africa Command, also said 35 Tunisian troops are undergoing training in the United States, which has trained 4,000 Tunisian soldiers in the past 10 years, the official news agency TAP reported.

Carter, speaking in Tunis, warned of the threat of terrorist groups in Africa and the increase of illegal weapons on the continent.

He said Al-Qaeda in particular was threatening Africa's security and stability and benefitting after coups in Mali and Guinea-Bissau.

Beyond military cooperation, the US announced March 29 its intention of granting $100 million (132 million euros) to Tunisia to help the transitioning democracy pay its debts and focus on boosting its economy.



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WAR REPORT
Nobel laureates press for peace
Chicago (AFP) April 23, 2012
Nobel peace laureates gathered for an annual summit said Monday the work that earned them their prizes is far from over and rallied support for their fight for human rights and global justice. Mikhail Gorbachev, who as president of the Soviet Union helped end the Cold War and open the communist regime to democracy, said the time has come for "a new global order" that must be "more stable, mo ... read more


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