Showing posts with label leader. Show all posts
Showing posts with label leader. Show all posts

Thursday, 26 August 2010

Watch North Korean leader, Kim Jong-il, 'visiting China with his son'

North Korean leader, Kim Jong-il, 'visiting China with his son'

Speculation is growing that North Korea's leader, Kim Jong-il, is preparing to hand over power to his youngest son, Kim Jong-un, after reports that the two have travelled to China to win support for the change.

The reported visit comes weeks before a rare meeting of the North Korean Workers' party is expected to set in motion Kim Jong-un's accession in the world's only communist dynasty.

The South Korean broadcaster YTV and other media said the two were on their way to China, North Korea's only remaining ally, today. It would be Kim Jong-il's second visit this year.

Yonhap news agency quoted a senior official in Seoul as saying that "signs have been detected" that Kim had begun the journey on his special armoured train. "We are still trying to grasp the exact destination and purpose of the visit."

Kim is said to be afraid of flying, partly because travelling by plane makes him an easier target for assassination attempts.

Analysts believe the trip could be designed to introduce Jong-un to senior Chinese officials, and possibly to request aid and lay the groundwork for the resumption of six-party talks on Pyongyang's nuclear weapons programme.

The visit comes a day after the former US president Jimmy Carter arrived in Pyongyang to seek the release of an American who has been sentenced to eight years in prison for entering the country illegally.

There was no word today on the progress of Carter's mercy mission, although reports suggested that the 85-year-old would return to the US with Aijalon Gomes, a 31-year-old an English teacher and Christian missionary, by Friday.

Carter, who arrived yesterday on a private jet accompanied by his wife, Rosalynn, is also expected to use the visit to engage in unofficial diplomacy with the regime, although the Obama administration has been quick to stress that he is on a private humanitarian visit.
Coppied by http://article.wn.com/view/2010/08/26/North_Korean_leader_Kim_Jongil_visiting_China_with_his_son/?section=TopStoriesWorldwide&template=worldnews/index.txt

Tuesday, 20 July 2010

We see this Suriname elects former coup leader

Watches this Suriname elects former coup leader


Suriname has elected Desi Bouterse, a former coup leader and convicted drug trafficking, as its new president.

Bouterse, who won a parliamentary vote on Monday, seized power in the small South American republic, twice before through military takeovers.

He was convicted in the Netherlands of cocaine smuggling in 1999and has been accused of human rights violations.

Thirty-six of Suriname's 50 members of parliament voted in favour of Bouterse on Monday, giving him the necessary two-thirds majority.

The vote followed an inconclusive one in May, when the new president's Mega Combination coalition won only 23 seats.

One of the country's richest and most popular politicians, Bouterse signed deals with several rival factions seeking cabinet posts in his new government ahead of the election.

Murder trial

The former military ruler is currently on trial for the murder of 15 political opponents in 1982.

When Al Jazeera spoke with Eddie Duncan, the brother of one of the victims, during parliamentary elections in May, he blamed Bouterse for the killing.

"[Bouterse] is a murderer. He thinks if he wins these elections, the court won't prosecute him"

Eddie Duncan, brother of slain politician

"[Bouterse] is a murderer. He thinks if he wins these elections, the court won't prosecute him," he said.

Bouterse rejects the claims, insisting that he is being persecuted by elites for defending the poor.

"Just look at Mandela. He fought for the poor and they locked him up for 27 years," he said.

Bouterse first seized control of Suriname in a coup in 1980, five years after it gained independence from the Netherlands.

He stepped down under international pressure in 1987, then briefly seized power again three years later.

In 1999, Bouterse was convicted in absentia by a Netherlands court for cocaine trafficking.

Coppied by http://english.aljazeera.net/news/americas/2010/07/20107205116955850.htm