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G8 to tackle Syria, NKorea, Iran, Afghanistan, Myanmar
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) May 15, 2012


Leaders of the Group of Eight will discuss the bloodshed in Syria, nuclear ambitions of Iran and North Korea, peace for Afghanistan, reforms in Myanmar, food in Africa and the eurozone crisis.

Following is a breakdown of the key global issues to be tackled at the G8 summit in Camp David, Maryland, by the leaders of the United States, Russia, Canada, Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Japan:

--SYRIA

The leaders will press for Syria to abide by a widely-violated month-long ceasefire as well as implement a six-point peace plan brokered by UN and Arab League envoy Kofi Annan.

However, Russia has continued putting the onus on the opposition to stop the violence, while the other powers have demanded President Bashar al-Assad take the first steps to shore up the ceasefire.

Moscow -- which along with China is a long-standing Assad ally -- has drawn international criticism for vetoing two UN Security Council resolutions against Assad's regime.

The G8 may discuss next steps in the event the ceasefire and peace plan collapse.

-- IRAN

G8 nations are likely to push for a peaceful and negotiated solution to Iran's showdown with the West over its suspect nuclear program, ahead of a new round of talks next week between six world powers and Iran.

Delegates from the United States, China, Russia, France, Germany and Britain are due to meet in Baghdad on May 23, after gathering last month in Istanbul in what marked a revival of talks stalled for more than a year.

All but China are G8 powers.

G8 foreign ministers last month "urged Iran to enter into a sustained process of constructive and serious dialogue without precondition on the basis of reciprocity and a step-by-step approach" to ease fears over its nuclear program.

The West fears Iran's program masks a drive to build an atomic bomb, while Iran insists it is exclusively focused on generating energy and conducting medical research.

-- NORTH KOREA

The G8, which last month condemned North Korea over its defiant rocket launch, are likely to tackle concerns that Pyongyang may go ahead with a third nuclear weapons test.

G8 members the United States, Russia and Japan are also partners in the stalled six-party nuclear disarmament talks that also involve China, South Korea and North Korea.

-- AFGHANISTAN

The G8 said it plans "to further mobilize commitment to sustainable levels of non-security assistance to Afghanistan" after NATO-led forces hand over security duties to their Afghan counterparts in 2014.

-- MYANMAR

The G8 aims to support further efforts toward democratic reform and national reconciliation in Myanmar. The G8 are considering easing sanctions to support reform and eventually end the country's international isolation.

They will likely keep pressing Myanmar to enact further reforms, release all remaining political prisoners, end all violence in ethnic minority areas, provide humanitarian access to conflict zones and cut military ties with North Korea.

-- EUROZONE

The leaders will discuss efforts to prevent the eurozone crisis from spreading not only within Europe but to the rest of the world, amid new fears over Greek political chaos and Spanish banking health.

New French President Francois Hollande says he wants to renegotiate the European Union's fiscal pact in order to complement its austerity rules with more targeted investment in jobs and growth. Obama supports both growth and economic stability in Europe

-- AFRICAN FOOD SECURITY

US President Barack Obama has invited President Yayi Boni of Benin, Prime Minister Meles Zenawi of Ethiopia, President John Mills of Ghana, and President Jakaya Kikwete of Tanzania to discuss progress toward food security in Africa.

The leader of Benin also chairs the African Union.

The G8 believes that in addition to public assistance for agriculture, the private sector must draw on its resources to ensure lasting gains in ensuring affordable food for all.

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Sri Lankan police find weapons cache
Colombo, Sri Lanka (UPI) May 14, 2012 - Sri Lankan police have uncovered thousands of pounds of C-4 explosive in what is believed to the largest find of weapons since the end of the island nation's civil war in 2009.

Police and security forces acted on a tip off from a member of the public and found nearly 14,000 pounds of C-4 in the small farming town of Puthukudiyiruppu near the coast in Mullaitivu District, a report in the Sri Lankan Times newspaper said.

The C-4 was sorted into packets of 110 and 55 pounds, the report said.

Also among the haul of weapons were 127 rocket-propelled grenades, 40 hand grenades, 123 anti-personnel mines, six claymore mines, six torpedo bombs, seven sulfur bottles and seven gas masks.

Mullaitivu District -- within the majority Tamil area -- is one of 25 Sri Lankan administrative districts and is the second most northerly one. It was under the control of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, often called the Tamil Tigers, for most of the war which lasted around 25 years.

Few other details were reported by the Times.

But a report by the BBC said one defense analyst was skeptical, asking how such a large amount of weaponry could have remained undetected for so long. Another analyst said he believed the report was true because it was found buried nearly 20 feet in the ground, a tactic of guerrilla groups, the BBC said.

C-4 is often referred to as a plastic explosive because of its modeling clay texture that allows it to be molded around objects and fitted into cracks in buildings and vehicles

C-4 has been popular with guerrilla groups because its natural state is stable, which allows it to be carried long distance over rough terrain. To explode it requires a shock such as that of a detonator cap.

The protracted civil war between the majority Sinhalese federal army and the Tamil rebels ended in 2009.

The United Nations estimates around 100,000 people were killed, including up to 7,000 in the final, particularly brutal, year of fighting the Tamil Tigers.

The Tigers were struggling for a separate homeland for Tamils in the northeast of the island nation, which lies several miles off the southern tip of the Indian subcontinent.

A legacy of the war is a preponderance of land mines, mostly in the northern Tamil areas, that aid agencies and the federal government of Sri Lanka have been clearing.

When the government's National Mine Action Center was set up in 2010, it estimated that around 1,740 square miles in the north were suspected of having land mines.

However, clearance could take more than a decade, the Mine Action Project of the U.N. Development Program in Sri Lanka said in February.

At the end of last year, the Action Project said around 48 square miles of land remained to be cleared in the island's north.

The largest remaining area is nearly 13 square miles in Mannar District, followed by Mullaitivu District with around 11 square miles.



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Putin to visit China after skipping US: report
Moscow (AFP) May 11, 2012
Russia's newly sworn-in President Vladimir Putin will make what could be his first foreign trip to China next month after deciding to skip the G8 summit in the US, a diplomatic source said on Friday. Putin's June 5-7 visit will include talks with Chinese President Hu Jintao and attendance at the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation summit, the source told Russian news agencies. Putin, sworn ... read more


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