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【Ptt養雞場】 批踢踢實業坊 看板《chicken》 Name :新手 (馬英九) 生日 :07 520日 (青年 5歲) 體: 1638/1638 法: 1414/1414 攻擊力:373 敏捷 :0 知識 :0 快樂 :9028 滿意 :1610 疲勞 :0 氣質 :43 體重 :17.63 病氣 :0 乾淨 :79 食物 :0 大補丸:0 藥品 :12 ●●●●●● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ●● ● ●●● ●● ●● ● ● ● ●●●● ● ● ● ● ● 飽嘟嘟..精力旺盛...很快樂..很滿足.. -- 轉錄幾篇新聞 -- Ukraine leaders spar over troops Ukraine's prime minister has denounced an attempt by his rival, President Viktor Yushchenko, to seize control of the country's interior ministry troops. Viktor Yanukovych said the president's move earlier on Friday, which the interior ministry rejected, meant the "use of force scenario" had begun. The two rivals have been locked in a bitter power struggle for months. They are due to meet later on Friday in an attempt to defuse the crisis, which has seen big street rallies in Kiev. The row over control of the interior ministry troops comes a day after riot police - acting in defiance of the president - seized the offices of sacked prosecutor general Svyatoslav Piskun. They were acting on orders issued by Interior Minister Vasyl Tsushko - an ally of Mr Yanukovych - after President Yushchenko sacked Mr Piskun. Long-running row The crisis has been deepening since April, when Mr Yushchenko dissolved parliament and called a snap election. Mr Yanukovych and his governing coalition had initially rejected the move but later agreed in principle with the president to hold early elections. The president originally said the vote would be held in May, but later moved the date back to 24 June after thousands of protesters from both sides took to the streets. Speaking to a cabinet meeting, the prime minister denounced Mr Yushchenko's attempt to wrest control of the 40,000-strong force. "Taking such decisions without consulting the government is inadmissible," he said. "I think this seriously aggravates the situation." Mr Yanukovych said the presidential decree had violated constitutional provisions placing the troops under the government's control. Mr Yushchenko is head of the army. "What does all this mean?" he asked. "This means that the 'use of force scenario', which we have been discussing constantly, has begun." 'Attempted coup' Mr Yushchenko had dismissed Mr Piskun for refusing to give up his seat in parliament, as required by law. But the prosecutor general said he was sacked because he had resisted a presidential order to take action against three Constitutional Court judges. The judges had refused to step down after being dismissed by President Yushchenko earlier in April. Mr Tsushko described the sacking as "an attempted coup". Mr Yanukovych and his supporters had opposed Mr Yushchenko's call for elections when he dissolved parliament in April. The president had accused the prime minister of trying to usurp his power by illegally luring pro-Western lawmakers over to his coalition to increase his parliamentary majority. The pair have been bitter rivals since Mr Yushchenko successfully overturned a disputed presidential election result in 2004, after mobilising thousands of supporters in central Kiev to protest against Mr Yanukovych's claim of victory. From: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/6691371.stm -- Anti-American cleric reappears in Iraq POSTED: 7:58 a.m. EDT, May 25, 2007 Story Highlights ‧ NEW: Radical cleric calls U.S. "evil," urges militia to stop fighting Iraqi government ‧ Muqtada al-Sadr appears at mosque in Kufa after four-month absence ‧ Bombs, small-arms fire kill six U.S. soldiers ‧ Search goes on for two missing soldiers BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- Radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr took part in Friday prayers in Kufa, a holy Shiite city, after being absent from public view for more than four months, Iraq's state TV al-Iraqiya reported. An aide close to al-Sadr confirmed the appearance by the anti-American cleric, whose movements have been of keen interest to the U.S. military. According to witnesses, al-Sadr received a warm greeting from thousands of supporters gathered at the Kufa mosque. Iraqis could be heard chanting "long live al-Sadr," "Muqtada is our bridge to heaven" as well as anti-American slogans calling for a U.S. troop pullout, witnesses said. Reuters news agency reported that al-Sadr gave a sermon in which he called the United States, Britain and Israel the "evil trio." The Shiite cleric also called on his Mehdi Army militia to stop fighting Iraqi government forces and asked his supporters to protect Sunnis and Christians from attacks, Reuters reported. Al-Sadr was surrounded by heavy security at the mosque, witnesses said. U.S. and Iraqi government officials contend the anti-American cleric and leader of the powerful Mehdi Army slipped out of Iraq before the start of a U.S.- led security crackdown in early February. At that time, Sami al-Askari, a member of parliament and a political adviser to Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, said the militant cleric was in the predominately Shiite nation of Iran. Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesman denied the claims, chalking it up to U.S. "propaganda." U.S. military spokesman Maj. Gen. William Caldwell has characterized al-Sadr as a "very significant part" of the political machinery in Iraq. In fact, one of the key undercurrents of the security plan has been how the Iraqi government will deal with the Mehdi militia. Al-Sadr has been supportive of al-Maliki's government and helped him become prime minister last year. Al-Sadr's first public appearance since February came a day after the prime minister presented to parliament the names of six candidates to head the ministries formerly run by loyalists of the cleric. The al-Sadr ministers left their posts in April after the Iraqi government refused to set a timetable for U.S. troop withdrawal. The move did not affect the presence of 30 al-Sadr bloc lawmakers in parliament, but it did erode the Shiite-led alliance that runs Iraq's government. Search goes on for missing soldiers Thousands of U.S. and Iraqi troops Friday continued their search for two missing U.S. soldiers believed abducted during a May 12 ambush at a military observation post south of Baghdad. Lt. Col Christopher Garver, a U.S. military spokesman, said that since Wednesday two individuals have "confessed to some involvement in the attack." The military said this week four people had been detained for direct involvement in the attack. Garver said 11,000 people have been questioned, 84 individuals have been detained for further questioning, 159 tips were investigated and more than 260 square miles south of Baghdad were searched. The two missing soldiers are Spc. Alex R. Jimenez, 25, of Lawrence, Massachusetts. and Pvt. Byron W. Fouty, 19, of Waterford, Michigan. Insurgents on May 12 attacked a U.S. military observation post in the Mahmoudiya area, south of Baghdad, in a stretch known as the Triangle of Death. Four other American soldiers and an Iraqi soldier were found dead at the scene of the ambush. The body of a third missing soldier, Pfc. Joseph J. Anzack Jr., 20, of Torrance, California, was pulled from the Euphrates River, in Babil province south of Baghdad on Wednesday. Arrests were made for other crimes during the search, the U.S. military said Friday. Suspect said to have ties to Iran The U.S. military said Iraqi and U.S.-led coalition forces detained a "suspected terrorist" in Baghdad on Friday with ties to a training and weapons network in Iran. The person -- detained during raids in Baghdad's Shiite neighborhood of Sadr City -- "is closely linked to a suspected leader in a secret cell terrorist network known for facilitating the transport of weapons and explosively formed penetrators, or EFPs, from Iran to Iraq, as well as bringing militants from Iraq to Iran for terrorist training," according to the military. During the raid, Iraqi forces came under small-arms fire and called in air support, the statement said. The U.S. military has been saying for months that militants are getting the EFPs from Iran's Revolutionary Guards' Quds Force and that Iraqi militants are being trained in Iran. The U.S. military also has said it can't link the Iranian leadership to such activities. Iranian and U.S. officials are scheduled to meet on Monday to discuss Iraqi matters. Six U.S. troop deaths reported Five U.S. soldiers were killed Thursday in separate incidents across Iraq, the military said. The death of a sixth soldier, who died Tuesday, also was announced. An Iraqi interpreter was also killed. Since the start of the war, 3,434 U.S. military personnel have died in Iraq. Seven civilian contractors of the Defense Department have also been killed in the war. The death toll for May is 90. Other developments ‧ Congress sent a $120 billion war spending bill to the White House late Thursday, abandoning a call for most U.S. troops to leave Iraq after an earlier veto by President Bush. The bill replaces the earlier goal of withdrawing U.S. combat troops by March 2008 with a series of political benchmarks for Iraqi leaders to meet to receive continued American support. ‧ Bush on Thursday warned Americans to expect "heavy fighting" this summer during a critical time in his war strategy. He said the developments would occur once U.S. military reinforcements are in place in mid-June. "We can expect more American and Iraqi casualties," Bush said. "We must provide our troops with the funds and resources they need to prevail." ‧ An Iraqi Interior Ministry official said Friday that 22 unidentified bodies were found in Baghdad on Thursday. The latest deaths bring May's total for the Iraqi capital to 547 bodies -- all are thought to be victims of sectarian violence. ‧ A suicide car bomber detonated explosives outside a Muqdadiya police station Friday morning, wounding four Iraqi police officers, a Diyala province security official said. Muqdadiya is about 25 miles (40 kilometers) north of Baquba. Separately, the official said three unidentified, bullet-riddled bodies were found throughout Baquba and are thought to be victims of sectarian violence. ‧ U.S. forces said three individuals were in custody following an early-morning arrest Thursday south of the capital near Rushdi Mullah. In a statement Friday, the military said the detainees were "wanted for attacks against the Iraqi army, local civilians and coalition forces." From: http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/meast/05/25/iraq.main/index.html -- ※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.cc) ◆ From: 140.113.124.58