Tag Archives: 부산중구출장샵

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The 14-date tour will open Sept

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The 14-date tour will open Sept. 29 in Atlantic City, N.J., 부산중구출장샵 and wrap up Nov. 2 in Miami. It will be Lopez’s first concert tour. She will perform songs from her Spanish-language album, “Como Ama una Mujer (How a Woman Loves),” which was mainly produced by Anthony.

Lopez, 39, is set to release her new CD, “Brave,” on Oct. 9.

The couple married in 2004.

Other stops on the tour, produced by Live Nation, include Uncasville, Conn.; Washington; New York; Toronto; Chicago; San Jose, Calif.; Los Angeles; Anaheim, Calif.; San Diego; Las Vegas; Dallas; and Houston.


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Talib Kweli is one of hip hop’s most respected figures who are on the Rock the Bells bill, chosen, said promoter Chang Weisberg, for their artistic integrity and their cultural contributions

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Rapper Talib Kweli was performing at the Rock the Bells hip-hop festival when suddenly he saw a bottle of urine hurtling through the air. It disgusted him so much he stopped mid song to chastise the unknown culprit among the mass of hipster kids in the audience at Randall’s Island in Manhattan.

Minutes later, he was freestyling about it to the song he did with rapper/producer Kanye West, “Get ‘Em High.” I know you love me so much that you don’t want to leave me, he said, but please use the Port-o-Potty; or something to that effect.

Talib Kweli is one of hip hop’s most respected figures who are on the Rock the Bells bill, chosen, said promoter Chang Weisberg, for their artistic integrity and their cultural contributions.

“I try to write songs that directly relate to people’s lives in a social way,” he told The ShowBuzz. “That’s what I always try to do. It’s not about preaching and saying you should do this, you should do that. It’s about replicating a vivid and accurate picture of what people are going through. And providing the balance that that you don’t hear on a lot of popular songs. Because sometimes people celebrate a certain lifestyle and you don’t hear about the downside.”

Kweli’s past hits have certainly illuminated the dark side. “Get By” off his album “Quality” talks about the reality of living in the hood where crack and crime are prominent, but the first single off “Ear Drum,” focuses on Kweli’s other major 부산중구출장샵 muses: women.

“Girls and love is one of my chief inspirations — they’re just so inspirational,” he said. “You could write about women forever … that’s why it’s the first single, it’s hot outside, women are walking around.”

The album, which deals with religious and social themes, also features unique collaborations. Norah Jones sings the refrain on “Soon a New Day” and Justin Timberlake is featured on the bonus track. It’s an interesting partnership that wouldn’t have made sense only a few years ago when Timberlake was still singing with ‘N Sync.

“There’s a lot of things that’s different,” Kweli said. “Not to say that — people just become what they are inside, they should as artists. I feel like Justin’s done that. I hope I have done that as an artist. I think he’s very talented, and I learned a lot about being instrumental, sonically, about writing. Learned a lot.”

Kweli said he is also working on Blacksmith TV, but is not sure if it will be a reality show or a documentary. He just wants to show how the artists on his label such as rappers Strong Arm Steady and Jean Grae function as artists. He can also be seen on 15 of Rock the Bells’ dates. Look for “Ear Drum” in stores Aug. 21.


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In the third incident, two Afghan men were caught in the crossfire between insurgents and NATO forces

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Also Tuesday, U.S. artillery fired non-lethal smoke rounds to disperse Taliban fighters in Marjah – the first time cannons have been used in the fight to drive the militants from their logistical and opium poppy-smuggling base. Commanders refused a Marine request to fire deadly high-explosive rounds because the unit on the ground could not be sure civilians weren’t at risk.

The linkup between the two Marine rifle companies and their Afghan army partners will enable the U.S. to expand its control in Marjah, situated in Helmand province 380 miles (610 kilometers) southwest of Kabul.

Special Report: Afghanistan

Lima Company of the 3rd Battalion, 6th Marines moved through fields of hidden bombs and bobby traps and braved heavy sniper fire to join up with the same battalion’s Kilo Company, which was airdropped into the town in the first hours of the operation Saturday.

Lt. Gordon Emmanuel, a platoon commander in Kilo Company, said the Marines landed without encountering Taliban fire but came under sustained attack as they fanned out from the landing zone.

“When it is daytime, there is nonstop contact until the sun goes down … every day,” Emmanuel said.

A Taliban spokesman, however, claimed that insurgents retain control of the town and that coalition forces who “descended from helicopters in limited areas of Marjah” were now “under siege.”

Spokesman Tariq Ghazniwal extended an invitation by e-mail to foreign journalists to visit Marjah, saying the trip would “show who have the upper hand in the area.”

About 15,000 NATO and Afghan troops are taking part in the big offensive around Marjah, which has an estimated 80,000 inhabitants and was the largest southern town under Taliban control. NATO hopes to rush in aid and public services as soon as the town is secured to try to win the loyalty of the population.

NATO said a service member taking part in the Marjah operation was killed by a roadside bomb Tuesday – the third confirmed death among international forces since the attack on the town began. An American and a Briton were killed on Saturday.

NATO did not identify the latest victim by nationality. Afghan military spokesman Lt. Mohammad Esah said Tuesday one Afghan soldier died in the offensive. But he did not say when.

U.S. officials said Taliban resistance in Marjah seemed more disorganized Tuesday than in previous days, when small teams of insurgents swarmed around Marine and Afghan army positions firing rifles, machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades.

“We’re not seeing coordinated attacks like we did originally. We’re still getting small-arms fire, but it’s sporadic, and hit-and-run tactics,” said Marine spokesman Capt. Abraham Sipe. “As a whole, while there is still resistance, it is of a disorganized nature.”

Nevertheless, Taliban have not given up. Insurgent snipers hiding in haystacks in poppy fields exchanged fire with Marines and Afghan troops as they swept south.

Insurgents tried but failed to shoot down an Osprey aircraft with rocket-propelled grenades as Cobra attack helicopters fired missiles at Taliban positions, including a machine gun bunker.

Marines and Afghan soldiers continued house-to-house searches, removing bombs and booby-traps as they moved through town. Inside some compounds Tuesday, squads found small doses of heroin, a Taliban photo album with fighters posing with AK-47s, and large propaganda wall paintings of insurgents shooting down helicopters.

Residents said they were scared to be seen with NATO forces. As Marines searched his compound, one man, Wali Mohammad, warned an AP reporter, “Don’t take pictures or the Taliban will come back to kill me.”

Mohammad said he strongly suspected insurgents would return to the area as soon as the Marines moved on. He said Taliban fighters had targeted U.S. and Afghan troops, firing from his neighbors’ houses.

“When they come, we try to tell them not to use our house, but they have guns so they do what they want,” the poppy farmer said.

Three more Afghan civilians were killed in the assault, NATO forces said, highlighting the toll on the population from an offensive aimed at making civilians safer.

The deaths – in three separate incidents – come after two U.S. missiles struck a house on the outskirts of Marjah on Sunday, killing 12 people, half of them children. Afghan officials said three Taliban fighters were in the house at the time.

The commander of U.S. forces was quick to apologize, reports CBS News correspondent Mandy Clark.

“When President Karzai approved this operation he gave us very specific guidance, which was to protect the people of Afghanistan, and this operation was done with this in mind,” said Gen. Stanley McChrystal.

NATO first said the missiles went 300 yards (meters) off target and hit the house. On Tuesday, however, British Maj. Gen. Nick Carter, commander of NATO forces in the south, told reporters in London via a video link that the rockets hit the intended target.

As the NATO offensive aims to break the Taliban influence in southern Afghanistan, the militant group received another blow with the news of its top military commander’s arrest in Pakistan.

Taliban’s Top Military Commander Captured

Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, the group’s No. 2 leader behind Afghan Taliban founder Mullah Mohammad Omar and a close associate of Osama bin Laden, was captured in the port city of Karachi, U.S. and Pakistani officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the information. The arrest appeared to have occurred as many as 10 days ago, and it was unclear if it had any effect on the Marjah battle.

The offensive is the biggest joint operation since the 2001 U.S.-led invasion of Afghanistan and is a major test of a retooled NATO strategy to focus on protecting civilians, rather than killing insurgents.

But in two incidents confirmed Tuesday, Afghan men came toward NATO forces and ignored shouts and hand signals to stop, NATO said. Troops opened fire and killed them. In the third incident, two Afghan men were caught in the crossfire between insurgents and NATO forces. Both were wounded and one died despite being given medical care, NATO said.

NATO has confirmed 15 civilian deaths, but an Afghan human rights group said Tuesday that it counted 19 civilians killed since the operation began. Four were caught in the crossfire when they left their homes.

“Their neighbors tell us that the bodies are outside and they want someone to pick them up. They say they’re scared if they go outside they will also be shot dead,” said Ajmal Samadi, director of Afghanistan Rights Monitor. It was unclear whether NATO or insurgent forces were to blame for the deaths, he said.

Elsewhere in Helmand province, 경기도출장샵 NATO and Afghan forces killed more than 10 militants while pursuing a Taliban commander in Washir district, west of the Marjah area.


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Fox was the only network to receive a “failing” grade for its 6 percent of LGBT-inclusive programming

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ABC has the best representation of gays among the five major networks according to a new report. The Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD) said that Fox scored the lowest in their ratings.

“While we have made great strides in the ten years since Ellen DeGeneres came out on television, this report shows where work still needs to be done,” GLAAD President Neil G. Giuliano said in a statement.

“Fox appreciates all the work that GLAAD has done to improve the visibility of LGBT characters and issues, and their positive recognition of our efforts in that regard,” a Fox spokesperson told TheShowBuzz in a statement. “We are committed to recognizing diversity across our entire schedule, take these issues seriously, acknowledge we have work to do, and will strive to enhance the representation of LGBT characters on our air.”

GLAAD said they examined all 4,693 hours of prime-time programming on ABC, 경기도출장샵 CBS, The CW, FOX, and NBC from June 1, 2006 through May 31, 2007 for any on-screen major or minor representation of lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgendered people.

ABC received a grade of “good” with 15 percent of its prime-time programming inclusive of LGBT representation. The CW had a rating of “fair” at 12 percent, CBS came in at No. 3 with a “fair” rating of 9 percent, followed by NBC with a “fair” rating at 7 percent.

Fox was the only network to receive a “failing” grade for its 6 percent of LGBT-inclusive programming.


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ABC has the best representation of gays among the five major networks according to a new report

Tags : 

ABC has the best representation of gays among the five major networks according to a new report. The Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD) said that Fox scored the lowest in their ratings.

“While we have made great strides in the ten years since Ellen DeGeneres came out on television, this report shows where work still needs to be done,” GLAAD President Neil G. Giuliano said in a statement.

“Fox appreciates all the work that GLAAD has done to improve the visibility of LGBT characters and issues, and their positive recognition of our efforts in that regard,” a Fox spokesperson told TheShowBuzz in a statement. “We are committed to recognizing diversity across our entire schedule, take these issues seriously, acknowledge we have work to do, and will strive to enhance the representation of LGBT characters on our air.”

GLAAD said they examined all 4,693 hours of prime-time programming on ABC, CBS, The CW, FOX, and NBC from June 1, 2006 through May 31, 부산중구출장샵 2007 for any on-screen major or minor representation of lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgendered people.

ABC received a grade of “good” with 15 percent of its prime-time programming inclusive of LGBT representation. The CW had a rating of “fair” at 12 percent, CBS came in at No. 3 with a “fair” rating of 9 percent, followed by NBC with a “fair” rating at 7 percent.

Fox was the only network to receive a “failing” grade for its 6 percent of LGBT-inclusive programming.


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9

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The 14-date tour will open Sept. 29 in Atlantic City, N.J., and wrap up Nov. 2 in Miami. It will be Lopez’s first concert tour. She will perform songs from her Spanish-language album, “Como Ama una Mujer (How a Woman Loves),” which was mainly produced by Anthony.

Lopez, 39, is set to release her new CD, “Brave,” on Oct. 9.

The couple married in 2004.

Other stops on the tour, produced by Live Nation, include Uncasville, 부산중구출장샵 Conn.; Washington; New York; Toronto; Chicago; San Jose, Calif.; Los Angeles; Anaheim, Calif.; San Diego; Las Vegas; Dallas; and Houston.


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“We recognize that this is an exceptional case and have acted quickly to resolve it.” The spokesman said the conviction is no longer relevant and has been taken out of the Police National Computer database

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So John Crawford, 70, wants his criminal record cleaned up for good, so that he doesn’t have to disclose his conviction when he seeks volunteer work, and because of a deeply held belief that he should not be punished for his sexual orientation.

“I came into this world without a criminal record and I’d like to leave this world without one,” said Crawford, a retired butler. “The police beat me and beat me and forced me to confess to being gay, but I know in my heart I did nothing wrong.”

Crawford’s bid to clean up his record is backed by gay organizations looking to help others who were convicted under Britain’s once draconian anti-homosexuality laws, which began to be eased in 1967 as social values changed and sex acts between consenting adults began to be decriminalized.

“These laws were homophobic in the first place, that’s why they were rescinded, but the laws are still penalizing people,” said Deborah Gold, director of Galop, a gay rights group that has helped Crawford. “We’ve always had a regular trickle of people asking about it, how to get their records cleaned up.”

She said Crawford suffered horrific treatment from the police and should not have to disclose his criminal conviction when seeking employment or volunteer work.

His lawyers wrote to Justice Secretary Jack Straw last week asking that the law be changed so that Crawford and others in his position would not have to disclose their convictions during the job interview process.

If no action is taken by March 12, attorneys will seek a formal judicial review because the policy is not compatible with the European Convention on Human Rights, said lawyer Anna Mazzola.

“John Crawford wants to do it, to change the law for other people,” she said. “Others are in exactly the same position. The justice secretary has the power to do this, without going through Parliament.”

Mazzola’s firm has also filed a freedom of information request for data about the number of people convicted of consensual sexual offenses that would now be legal.

“I think there are quite a lot,” she said.

Crawford’s legal campaign has already been productive. In response to a letter from his lawyers, police have removed the record of his conviction from the criminal database, meaning it will not turn up during a computerized criminal records search.

“We are very sympathetic to Mr. Crawford’s concerns,” said a Hampshire police spokesman, who asked not to be identified under department policy. “We recognize that this is an exceptional case and have acted quickly to resolve it.”

The spokesman said the conviction is no longer relevant and has been taken out of the Police National Computer database. The special ruling applies only to Crawford, however, not to other gay or bisexual men with similar offenses in their past.

This welcome decision removes one substantial obstacle Crawford faces in his retirement as he pursues voluntary positions, such as hospital work where he would be helping to feed ill people.

He is not satisfied, 경기도출장샵 however, because he is still legally required to reveal the 1959 episode when asked if he has ever been convicted of any criminal offense. This happens frequently on questionnaires when applying for volunteer work with vulnerable persons.

“I think it’s ridiculous,” Crawford said.

His lingering anger comes in part from the humiliation he suffered at the hands of police officers in 1959. He said they abused him physically and harassed him with vulgar taunts, then coerced him into pleading guilty by threatening to continue beating him if he did not cooperate.

As a result of that plea, he said he was saddled with a conviction that would not have been possible otherwise, especially since he was not accused of having sex in public.

“I wanted to plead not guilty, and the case would have been thrown out and I wouldn’t be talking about it now,” Crawford said. “Until the police drop it completely, I won’t be happy. I’ve got to be able to put my hand on my heart and say to the world, I haven’t got a criminal record, and I can’t say that now.”


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The high-speed Thalys train suspended dozens of trains from Paris to the Netherlands and Germany for two days

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Investigations into one the worst accidents on the Belgian rails were likely to focus on whether human error was responsible or if it could have been influenced by the persistently freezing temperatures that have iced up the European capital.

Officials said 80 people were injured, 20 of them seriously, and the death toll – 15 men and three women – was not considered final. As darkness fell more than 10 hours later, rescuers were still looking for victims in the wreckage, 부산중구출장샵 said Jos Colpin, the spokesman for the federal prosecutor’s office.

CBS News correspondent Mark Phillips reports that emergency medical workers set up a triage and command center near the scene of the accident to coordinate their effort. People were still thought to be trapped inside the trains several hours after the crash.

The fate of the two drivers was not immediately known, and officials said they were having difficulty identifying some of the victims.

The trains, carrying a total of about 300 passengers, collided in light snow just outside of the station at Buizingen about 9 miles (15 kms) from Brussels around 8:30 a.m. (0730 GMT).

The impact peeled away the front of one train car and threw at least one other off the tracks, severing the limbs of some passengers, witnesses and officials said. One engine was thrust high into the air and snapped overhead power lines.

“When we came out we saw dead bodies lying next to the tracks, some mutilated,” said Patricia Lallemand, 40, who was in a middle car of one train and was unhurt.

Lodewijk De Witte, the governor of the province of Flemish Brabant, told reporters one train “apparently did not heed a stop light.”

One of the front cars appeared to have careened across the tracks, demolishing a small maintenance shed next to the rail line. A high concrete wall around the train yard seemed to have kept debris from hitting nearby houses.

Herman van Rompuy, president of the European Council, expressed his “shock and sorrow” over the accident. King Baudouin and Prime Minister Leterme, who canceled a trip to Kosovo moments after landing in Pristina, visited the crash site.

It was the first serious Belgian train accident since March 28, 2001, when eight people died when a crowded train plowed into an empty train driving on the wrong tracks. The worst European crash in recent history was near the German town of Eschede in 1998 when around 100 people were killed when a cracked wheel hurled a train off the tracks.

Belgian National Railways spokesman Jochen Goovaerts said his agency was awaiting the outcome of the investigation before discussing the cause of Monday’s accident.

Eurostar canceled its service from London to Brussels for Monday and advised passengers the line was likely to remain closed Tuesday. The high-speed Thalys train suspended dozens of trains from Paris to the Netherlands and Germany for two days.

At least four Thalys trains were stopped en route, and the railway operator deployed staffers to stations where they were rerouted to provide assistance to travelers on board, said spokeswoman Patricia Baars.

“It was a nightmare,” Christian Wampach, 47, told The Associated Press after medical workers bandaged his head at a sports complex where the less seriously injured were treated. Badly hurt victims were taken to 14 hospitals in the Brussels area, and the Red Cross appealed for blood donations.

“We were thrown about for about 15 seconds. There were a number of people injured in my car, but I think all the dead were in the first car,” said Wampach, who was in the third car of a Brussels-bound train.

Wira Leire, 20, said he was woken by a loud crashing sound and leapt to his bedroom window to see two cars jackknifed directly in front of his home.

“There were people lying on the ground next to the train, so I grabbed some blankets and ran into the back garden,” he said. “But I but couldn’t climb over the concrete wall, so I just threw the blankets to the rescuers who were already gathering.”


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For his documentary “The Glorius (sic) Mustache Challenge,” Della Valle enlisted several 30-and-under men to wear a mustache for one month, then chronicled their lives

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Those days largely went by the wayside with disco and mood rings. The mustache, the epitome of macho cool in the ’70s, is now often the subject of scorn and ridicule. Few athletes or celebrities wear them unless they are attached to beards. Mustache-wearing TV and 부산중구출장샵 movie characters tend to be evil or goofy.

And corporate America? “There is certainly a level of discrimination in the workplace,” said Aaron Perlut, a St. Louis-based public relations executive and one of the founders of the American Mustache Institute. “That’s one of the things we’d like to see go away.”

Perlut and six of his mustachioed friends started the AMI last year. On Saturday, the group is hosting “‘Stache Bash 2007” at the St. Louis bar owned by former Cardinals reliever — and noted mustache wearer — Al Hrabosky. Up to 500 people are expected, with proceeds going to Challenger Baseball, a program for children with disabilities.

Perlut, 36, has worn a Fu Manchu on and off for years, despite the funny looks and snide comments.

“I’m commonly told I look better without it,” he said. “My wife? She loves me either way. But if it was up to her I wouldn’t have it.”

Co-worker Dan Callahan agreed. He wore one for years “until I decided I looked like G. Gordon Liddy,” he said. Still, he grew back a “painter’s brush” mustache, a thin, narrow, closely-clipped ‘stache.

He acknowledges ridicule from colleagues, friends and family, but urges mustache wearers to keep a stiff – albeit hairy – upper lip.

“The culture, the fashion has moved so far away from it,” Callahan, 51, said. “But you can tell the pendulum is swinging the other way. It almost feels as if there have been people waiting to grow one. We’re here to tell them, ‘it’s safe to go back into the water.”‘

Filmmaker Jay Della Valle wanted to find out. For his documentary “The Glorius (sic) Mustache Challenge,” Della Valle enlisted several 30-and-under men to wear a mustache for one month, then chronicled their lives.

“Certain guys felt embarrassed with girls,” he said. “It was difficult for them to assert themselves if they felt self-conscious at all. Few got to the point where they used it to their advantage.”

Some women liked their man in a mustache, finding it “edgy and showing of a good sense of humor,” Della Valle said. But for the majority, “It reminded them of the Village People, ’70s porn stars and rednecks,” he said, using a derogatory reference relating to certain groups of white southerners in the U.S.

That is exactly the stereotype Perlut and Callahan want to bring to an end with “‘Stache Bash.” The group’s Web site has received nearly 500,000 hits since it was launched in late July.

The American Mustache Institute received mentions on ESPN and inSports Illustrated thanks to its contest seeking the best-ever sports mustache. Not surprisingly, the top contenders typically hail from the era of the Nixon, Ford or Carter administrations — Hrabosky with his menacing Fu Manchu, Oakland A’s reliever Rollie Fingers and his famous handlebar. A surprising write-in contender is former Cardinals and Mets first baseman Keith Hernandez.

Do Perlut and Callahan think the mustache will ever really come back into style?

“I think a lot of it has to do with the fickle nature of the American public,” Perlut said. “Fads go in and fads go out.”

Callahan said, “It’s too bad. Today, the only mustache you see on TV is a milk mustache.”


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Yushchenko has fought bitterly to kick out Russia’s Black Sea fleet, which he sees as a threatening military presence on Ukrainian soil

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Yushchenko made the statements, some of his harshest against President-elect Viktor Yanukovych, at a news conference nine days before he is due hand 부산중구출장샵 over power.

“The victory of Yanukovych is a Kremlin project. It is a policy of deep dependence on Russia,” Yushchenko said.

Yushchenko was the leader of mass street protests in 2004 against Yanukovych’s Kremlin-backed election victory that year. Dubbed the Orange Revolution, those demonstrations urged the Supreme Court to overturn Yanukovych’s fraudulent win and call for a revote, which Yushchenko won.

Since then, Yanukovych has capitalized on Yushchenko’s ineffectual rule, the slow progress of European integration, and the economic meltdown of the past year. He won the presidential ballot Feb. 7 against the heroine of the Orange Revolution, Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko.

Yushchenko saved particular venom for Yanukovych’s plans to give Russia a stake in managing Ukraine’s natural gas pipelines and to extend the lease Russia has on a Black Sea naval base.

“It is painful and demeaning for me to hear these pledges. It discredits us as a nation, as Ukrainians,” Yushchenko told a sparsely attended briefing, appearing dejected but calm.

Yushchenko has fought bitterly to kick out Russia’s Black Sea fleet, which he sees as a threatening military presence on Ukrainian soil. He called Yanukovych’s pledge to allow the fleet to stay a “policy of being colonized.”

In a statement, Yanukovych responded to Yushchenko’s attack with a pledge to pursue a balanced and pragmatic foreign policy.

“I can only say one thing to anyone who expects my presidency to weaken Ukraine — don’t count on it,” Yanukovych said.


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