NPR News 2011-03-28 加文本
NPR News 2011-03-28
From NPR News in Washington, I'm Barbara Klein.
Muammar Qaddafi's regime in Tripoli is under heavy bombardment, the biggest attack in the capital since Western operations began last week. NPR's Lourdes Garcia-Navarro tells us it comes after several nights of quiet.
There were several large explosions here in Tripoli, with air strikes hitting locations here. We're not exactly certain where, and then anti-aircraft gunfire rattling into the air. This after several nights of relative quiet here, and no air strikes in Tripoli. We're also hearing that there are air strikes now in the town of Sirte. This is Qaddafi's stronghold. It is well reinforced, and it is what keeps the rebels from advancing into the west. So it is a very key location, and we hear the rebels are massing at the edge of Sirte, and the coalition aircraft are now bombing the city.
NPR's Lourdes Garcia-Navarro in Tripoli.
NATO says it will take command of all military operations in Libya from the US-led force, including ground operations to protect civilians. NATO ambassadors reached agreement today on a plan that expands the mission they previously agreed on to enforce the UN arms embargo and no-fly zone.
In Yemen, Islamist militants are clashing with government forces in a southern town as the political stalemate between anti-government activists and President Ali Abdullah Saleh continues unresolved. Islamist militants seized a weapons factory in the town of Jaar by Abyan province seen as a stronghold of Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula. Western officials are concerned that Yemen's political turmoil may create a vacuum that al-Qaeda will fill.
Japanese officials are apologizing for reports early today that radioactivity at its damaged Fukushima nuclear plant was ten million times higher than normal. Tokyo Electric Power Company says the reading was inaccurate. Still, it slowed work to cool the overheated reactors when emergency workers left the scene. Meanwhile, NPR's Jason Beaubien is in northeast Japan and says the tsunami's devastation has left many Japanese citizens unsure about where they're going to live.
Certainly, people are concerned that they may never be able to return to some of the towns closest to the nuclear plant. Other people are still seemed to be optimistic. Some people even told me that they hope in 10 or 15 days to be able to move to some of the towns that are 20-mile-away zone. It's very much a mixed response on that. One thing that is interesting is that both people themselves and local officials are trying to move people into shelters, keeping them as communities, keeping neighborhoods together, keeping towns together so that all the people from one town are all together in one shelter. So, that is helping people, I think, feel like they still got a sense of community.
NPR's Jason Beaubien in Japan.
This is NPR.
British union leaders are condemning violence by some protesters during yesterday's rally in London. Tens of thousands of mostly peaceful demonstrators protested deep cuts in government programs. But as Larry Miller reports from the British capital, police fought running skirmishes throughout much of the day and into this morning.
Into the middle of the night, police in riot gear fought with around 500 protesters at Trafalgar Square. Their objective was to contain the violence to prevent it spreading further into London's West End theater and tourist center. Earlier in the day, small groups of protesters attacked stores, banks and the upmarket Ritz Hotel. Paint and smoke bombs were thrown; windows were smashed. Scotland Yard commander Bob Broadhurst told Sky News police were also attacked.
"We have had quite a lot of horrible things on police officers, including lightbulbs with ammonia in them, petrol bombs."
There were more than 200 arrests. For NPR News, I'm Larry Miller in London.
Potential Republican contenders for the 2012 presidential race are laying some groundwork. At an Iowa forum last night, Mississippi Governor Haley Barbour accused the Obama administration of being out of touch with the vast majority of Americans.
"This administration too often thinks that we're too stupid to take care of ourselves, that we're not up to it, that we need somebody in Washington to tell us what kind of health insurance policy that we have, to tell us how to do every thing that we do."
Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich said the next presidential election will move the country back to the center-right.
I'm Barbara Klein, NPR News in Washington.