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Written By Unknown on Kamis, 07 Maret 2013 | 11.01

0.OӓPm?xۇ@ 3H,hfPƘ PPI) zSJ } x ]fh\:E[]_J{hBJA;af=p5W xtľEK+sbq]DѧwrkZq~P@;\ߐ5jlJY%ܾk:$%S.c9\c.S.woϭӫ4~kߜ!G' o7:VҬٕoV*~)ZN"0OA5]L/iT0ݯtE>(asܐQJlhVD)\}ܘ(lbpod0n\MD85RIg(:{p43`P*mAS^LfO)?%> 1?MFQ%vY:cgH;f UBɫ؟``W:=B]eFYw N pגpM7vAhŅ'zP>n[ !ŀx5#k\`SAD4^֡UnU*檻SC5iKSwܸA[N4X뚂u:ź!5'A"Ve>f R_%^7,YRqY>vd{}W^uk}SioU#OsYڶM47"ٶ[YAiNcJu"epw<]L#`BOرy939;lz^{DSc1Ew^8h'Gw@i3.Z^ٗ*/-݂Ԅ3M'3< fd,Ta4<'-Qء圃=v,%dÊQG2bO&]4=1Owfl`L(e{gLrvsa-BM_4Cע&[Dx|1ȲHDX|V+zmΎJ<ǭZ9h@Jy&pVu[ le"(x#"3+_<) ;tigCsxdȃy<1!fY>lC\jr6sw?Mi%|=O̵Z%]k6$0uӡ$it P*/ϡ Rl?H(W~T*Ep26TtZRI0g�eb,̱Z~"94$BqcETA41[X gfK6\0)S#51'<ښ/"zJ<,X,'"\@-:/(Gnp;Hܧll6jA^k9N$bQ,1~>Z*?XK[b<Ѕ\\GLY0R+l;#r2$s07p3h@+h@+{oYI彼7ǫOG7mn;5׮7EB4XxaqNMJsI썜m*7AB洱P6нYLHHJ$CX- z~g=@x,>\Bkň#޶zVe\i \FKSXĘv,l3cڌV+q3\sk7Z/YgzזW]S-X`Gc33f4+QxVq9?y:$vHfgCcL.3nWtmV,1 ̸L2ǘ@zSs%4J梋̸4jgǎ@u:P[Ea@Ʌ%(M:t_XaYِX;T[ve⊭[y;4"[ݢK֧K'Q1f~Bl+uVDMu "Hg-[0+f0Zζo̝O [{;7^o{J>_؛8u]ki' $,03|BӜ8 NbO?KSB_ ?\Rpcxza DtU2@Ѽ5^ xmnͽq~`./NzOFFtt(a}c Jhl4qb\MqEipJ=r§˖$E?B/_9N.zɜoimmBcy;9bje c[h a P8w2p1?4&uS |{U^\9M:nJ?}ȓ. b/䗂bq|0~RຮI3;Vvp4ټfu8vq77VwW&3s%\P|z@=ml)`iȔU#vǒf1=8Hg<]oM׮6?7owoE䰣ndt`dG.k:^!o1eEw~-0&EpgI_/HrA俔{-]* =MgI="O݄J\$qL@nNQYy ԥ!_wC`L%h-^(UЕxo΁ׁdBF|Ss�PS\ŗpa1_m'n縵3r{n\DuޣM`^Z%Fz[<^l\$}LyY肃&3.lCý-vOêb}fڃ'vIpbF~>DRc(FJWЬL;2)th *n #,ڧ&&(l$꭭1Hq[`KmÑ# $0> b!܁WStW1J*3dۜ_ztH:#&2]\ٍk>߃Οu &*]0(PB9?}7Oi0Lamc`7&$dhE~` t/Bk+7B5djqK/|/ɿejl2Fޭ+m~%ϓmh]r}Wl.Uzȋ;JEQ$TT&y.5;yJUJD_>3"6o,KOOߦI<2^EN!"Y :LLp9%B볻RLH6ϧdJϥݾ?w7}:_LF?`6E(`t݊EV̙}&B.pfZMπz*ݢ$qKG>\]-3G=רK.GKrQiu$c pdABOׄJ^l.%f'yǏEE^ejRNwxhXܼob{J>Y[I}}Ը4JV%KkRG<7Sڏ@nY $qh*c!K;3Ev$d> '.]VyDiWqiat7x乛u˓WO(WJc<:MѠUnwG퇃ƣ,KA%sϖCV2ϫݑ>NNSSz$7PV7t 1 2oB e$Q襑6ґX,::I8@ bB[1̇E8l0d>ULI"g Y>hN5覄nJiU(Mud!`4[gqT\W/N9¸A%g6XF,1SvJ^ fKmǝGru,Ա~ " ⁿsчI,Mc"q̌h).H!Q7\{˅(#E2hCl?z1=^́{@] G:vCԏ3ENY ,Kހguf`qKu7Pˉ F"0#EYйv2}H],A'@y[WA+q;ް-'Bo]¬5{S[N2&y;*Za&+{×^[T$<~Vy9AG6J( pv(L]KMz"g%G~yHXVP1蹳W׉~A`D0U;D:?,9\1yϬW1{\[ {TUjj+&β?}xgmٴ?

]r8fel3ْm%cˎ-'qnR Ix,_m3;>$ %*CaUjFH4y{l,adzj ]x}kҚ+φqnlh3,O0NoƳy5(w,dC%.?ZƒAv7tPM';U�)1Y3%Pc>ߘ(/ *[+SJ[٭טU٬Tod˜ދMHF9PTzoȍDo7|.F)dv2'a"7n,⊻X2(H I~8EV3 '~lDO[p-#JE[(֪T+v<}Y&i̤yyF\8vq_Ew#_7q~o߽6=~v>7;Mr}rӲ6RY47"k'08"aJo"YիlV6>V?wjգƻJywmp>nY壳WDP3yQm!_z2jʆ&Cj?RG(Dy?cH?^PBc#S [-a_mPpn&1Qbj_\kmI Iˆ2j,+`˧Xy08WPfC `PxIpES;'|0Б0JC/(CsW C5OXxWGb6b'vJMCwj@oS@Ē: GQ'%AВ[Q&TTx^8aO ?@ABى |j郊h*#"P\4L1J| 5L {;gd\frlbh2(!g5nNsG5CdRVfPHg D@3|~x^ݜXNĈ1|O#@^Zl|`)ͼx/Y7:NK!>.XKb K96dIP0+``wz4;~ʠJƒy#e[f@P*0/m*jkɵH!'BZj]?TXwDw~K}tq}L~V[y~8lUp޹\ -%L'LcW\pO#p@8#‚6b|,F.ß[v,vlV@㐰gc_M=p`B@IK/l{\0Y-+@z&J ;#c㦺 uGCH:sJcʌxM 1xIBA&a@ZP.K_칋cSe .A.VĆbW921pM5qDPhh-z ]Ruk^م>x]ҝ'W0^x==\K{E;lK_`'Jel7&q-@uHTkdDZ(ʋ80٨7joR÷ګwX8qrR9.veiw<=Fj[paIwQ9$ @ .*A/#N Q2~KHNzlg^8k+<>b@hńdҒ0ev`lHgJBO5.JLC#8dK $U,aL0^0Rv1.S 4a,=~@۴dCZgSE A23@ADEh6:fbo!t p 6TcR P4#zhs~<S}cʙ.LI5Qstw~wz ČX paEh$q77qbJ6bD~&'BTc`ݭ|}x/t{&(قՇlݽ+~&ҭVA\P߂f;_5羀"fjؔ84Eǐ!ie%fy<_쨹ɏG4aSh~Vt4wv2(xɑv7.G0 ~.K\#i9vNU܂qǰjBGa@b(:F%vj +"t=-!' ƫWFhiZ,Dc"/ 4e":E,;@p@QzGuVUqxo'tFsHhBHraLdѠ0+*`aH^I*^@:IF$) K?X1a}2^x<|ۜFU=խͭcr I@ZhA>&h8nU^!cBÀiw%@`>w>qwM4"QZkckcaMMδVخk;wy͇7_ީ:ۉOԀwV׺<9V[м^_$FӚ8] /DqOAKN=2eԁ#Ìڜ'c[-2]:(SR8ә}ZG<@P;1"#phP%c_N1P }P|,EvEj^@7*zM' !|fNK9Fkb3tiToȫCAX ~{ޭ?Y+O*踠ゎ:n4%:*o/F\E:Uf%СTO׾U2ZXX+p?oUjjMQ]_DIWԀj|w兕;ݷZJv'XKl'xH:EITl"irʎ6L"=\HD;ZX^@F^(+"2x[(+3wk%/hС۴VA-)g+pX.e%t@aa}1a r,@tve057)ڗ št w\OEjJ:qL>5Ѫ RňAqw (:I/4W1Yx_Knj$g:s1ɔapޔqmzzuF#2'ƽ_vnmkoZn|?


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Written By Unknown on Rabu, 06 Maret 2013 | 11.01

}r۸!M "!I0Dh]w Mc9g{On4[9Sg]gqbx,ٷۍ>E&jaݿt6Zk Gc\s(V\vsqn]ggW'.ޫ볗kl"h~x%񯵭5}X8+4_ hRLYʁR%Pԓ:JO0OاY"51HHn|1H-_k0|9=u{f񍜺H46q<8K'ʚA5LrQJ5lJC&,4S&We`q8`C Xg~dQ@p"d2FU?a>5D?l6σrhg`)0 !ŀ"樈 ,4lsc"N Lɐ$X:4Cac ]Ybcˇxóc)&f#>l<.0ٿx9S韇)ߍ"am4KtٕtDI@Ni,V5xlR1!SGQ$+3V I1;5\M@`6N&zUY{fhw]?lw|L? g|w_lrQa^Ct, ]B~>7-,KjB�ge=+a Յ'8fNK(J¯zR޻eɴHJXSp) $n0ج)qA2dIp˶VgjO?m77boj~/#ۭ9;9.K` y PXxjIdBKk?Vu8H1hWv}:8cO"d45$Mh<*g$R-ObΞ+0*G}x"XK#3֯Zh.fz.`bT 7-h-| jx/


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Written By Unknown on Senin, 04 Maret 2013 | 11.01

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Written By Unknown on Minggu, 03 Maret 2013 | 11.01

}[wȎ{Y{w%ʤdٲ;Y,r|%U"KbżEJG9n~P$E%vD$ܫwmD P@gTJ_kV\c"CGdlob|3P;p$kMhg}] n}0ۡ7olyA <)' ca'b؁'{l]g^5+=sc%@P o2|qeu/b/jL"[7WR#9$a~B%a,?[/fƒI';FXNy7ṅ:xT8O,JG{0Ԙ`zփZOuѰ9~l=L<cs>WL&RzpMKP%JDx|KR//3$c1.d)H;R54IkFFX=ifjn7u7񽵜 ̞.xGF::,UoOdXa{;o^m7-io/%p8mO.+UXh2ׯD0VDO`pUE W(: 4 l6vò_Y|x~z6<0t;F?g/L:dq_k5="p@QaV+%gS鈐)7n+yasu0L2] ؄+(%8C


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Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 02 Maret 2013 | 11.01

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West to send Syrian rebels aid, not arms

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 01 Maret 2013 | 11.01

ROME (Reuters) - Western powers pledged aid for Syrian rebels on Thursday but stopped short of offering them weapons, disappointing opponents of President Bashar al-Assad clamoring for more arms.

More than 70,000 Syrians have been killed in a fierce conflict that began with peaceful anti-Assad protests nearly two years ago.

Washington has given $385 million in humanitarian aid for Syria but U.S. President Barack Obama has so far refused to give arms, arguing it is difficult to prevent them from falling into the hands of militants who could use them on Western targets.

The United States said it would for the first time give non-lethal aid to the rebels and would more than double its support to Syria's civilian opposition, casting it as a way to bolster the rebels' popular support.

The help will include medical supplies, food for rebel fighters and $60 million to help the civil opposition provide basic services like security, education and sanitation.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry announced the new steps after a meeting of 11 mostly European and Arab nations within the "Friends of Syria" group.

The European Union, acting on a decision this month to send direct aid to the rebels, said it had amended sanctions on Syria to permit the supply of armored vehicles, non-lethal military equipment and technical aid, provided they were intended to protect civilians.

If the provision of non-lethal assistance goes smoothly, it could conceivably offer a model for providing weaponry should Western governments ultimately decide to do so.

The aid offered for now did not appear to entirely satisfy the Syrian National Council opposition, a fractious Cairo-based group that has struggled to gain traction inside Syria, especially among disparate rebel forces.

"Many sides ... focus (more) on the length of the rebel fighter's beard than they do on the blood of the children being killed," Syrian National Coalition President Moaz Alkhatib said at an appearance with Kerry and Italian Foreign Minister Giulio Terzi.

A rebel commander in Aleppo, Syria's second city left devastated by several months of heavy fighting, said the lack of arms was the main obstacle to victory for his forces.

"We hope ... that weapons will flow and things will change but we are not waiting for them - we are going ahead with our fighting plans on the ground," the commander, Abdel-Jabbar Oqaidi, told Reuters by Skype.

He estimated that four fifths of the city was now under rebel control and the insurgents had taken over Aleppo's historic Umayyad mosque and the Palace of Justice. The claim could not immediately be verified.

A picture posted on the Internet showed what activists said was a rebel fighter prostrate in prayer in the Umayyad mosque's courtyard, its blackened archways still bearing signs of a fire which damaged the 13th century complex last year.

The rebels were still fighting for control of three airports in the Aleppo region, Oqaidi said.

DISAPPOINTMENT

In what analysts described as a sign of disappointment at the West's reluctance to send arms, Syria's political opposition postponed talks to choose the leader of a provisional government, two opposition sources told Reuters in Beirut.

Opposition leaders hoped a Saturday meeting in Istanbul would elect a prime minister to operate in rebel-controlled areas of Syria, threatened by a slide into chaos as the conflict between Assad's forces and insurgents nears its second anniversary.

While one source said the meeting might happen later in the week, a second source said it had been put off because the three most likely candidates for prime minister had reservations about taking the role without more concrete international support.

"The opposition has been increasingly signaling that it is tired of waiting and no one serious will agree to be head of a government without real political and logistical support," said Syrian political commentator Hassan Bali, who lives in Germany.

Bali said the United States and other members of the core "Friends of Syria" nations appeared intent "on raising the ante against Assad but are not sure how."

A final communiqué said participants would "coordinate their efforts closely so as to best empower the Syrian people and support the Supreme Military Command of the (rebel) Free Syrian Army in its efforts to help them exercise self-defense".

Kerry said the United States would for the first time provide assistance - in the form of medical supplies and the standard U.S. military ration known as Meals Ready to Eat, or MREs - to the fighters.

A U.S. official told reporters it would give the aid only to carefully vetted fighters, adding that the United States was worried that "extremists" opposed to democracy, human rights and tolerance were gaining ground in the country.

"Those members of the opposition who support our shared values ... need to set an example of a Syria where daily life is governed neither by the brutality of the Assad regime nor by the agenda of al Qaeda affiliated extremists," the official said.

REBELS WANT ANTI-TANK, ANTI-AIRCRAFT WEAPONS

The continued U.S. refusal to send weapons may compound the frustration that prompted the coalition to say last week it would shun the Rome talks. It attended only under U.S. pressure.

Many in the coalition say Western reluctance to arm rebels only plays into the hands of Islamist militants now widely seen as the most effective forces in the struggle to topple Assad.

With fighting raging on largely sectarian lines, French President Francois Hollande said at a Moscow summit that new partners were needed to broker talks on ending the crisis, winning guarded support from Russian President Vladimir Putin.

"We think that this dialogue must find a new form so that it speaks to all parties," said Hollande, giving few details of his proposal.

Putin said Russia - one of Assad's staunchest allies - would look at Hollande's proposal, "which I think we could consider with all our partners and try to carry out."

Russia has said Assad's departure must not be a precondition for talks and a political solution, while the West has sided with Syria's opposition in demanding his removal from power.

Kerry's offer of medical aid and food rations fell far short of rebel demands for sophisticated anti-tank and anti-aircraft weapons to help turn the tables against Assad's mostly Russian-supplied forces.

It also stopped short of providing other forms of non-lethal assistance such as bullet-proof vests, armored personnel vehicles and military training to the insurgents.

Last week the European Union opened the way for direct aid to Syrian rebels, but did not lift an arms embargo on Syria.

Kerry said the U.S. role should not be judged in isolation but in the context of what other nations will do.

"What we are doing ... is part of a whole," he said. "I am absolutely confident ... that the totality of this effort is going to have an impact of the ability of the Syrian opposition to accomplish its goals."

(Additional reporting by Mariam Karouny; Writing by Alistair Lyon; Editing by Roger Atwood and Tom Pfeiffer)


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Van Rompuy tells Britain: leaving EU "not free"

LONDON (Reuters) - One of Europe's most powerful officials cautioned Prime Minister David Cameron on Thursday that leaving the European Union could cost Britain dear and that the bloc's other leaders do not want to renegotiate Europe's founding treaties.

European Council President Herman Van Rompuy said Britain had a chance to play a leading role in building the European economy now the euro zone had the "artillery" of economic tools to get itself out of the worst crisis in its history.

But Van Rompuy laced his speech in London's financial district with a clear warning to Cameron: Europe will not countenance any attempt by Britain to win an a-la-carte membership, picking and choosing which of the European Union's rules it will follow and which to reject.

"Leaving the club altogether, as a few advocate, is legally possible," he said. "We have an 'exit clause'.

"But it's not a matter of just walking out. It would be legally and politically a most complicated and unpractical affair. Just think of a divorce after 40 years of marriage."

"Leaving is an act of free will and perfectly legitimate but it doesn't come for free," he said in a speech to bankers and politicians at the Guildhall, an 800-year-old institution that is a symbol of British merchant power in the City of London.

Cameron has promised to try to claw back powers from the EU and put any new settlement to voters in an in-out referendum by the end of 2017, heightening fears that Britain could leave the club it joined 40 years ago, in 1973.

"The wish to redefine your country's relationship with the Union has not gone unnoticed," said Van Rompuy, a former premier of EU founding member Belgium. "I cannot speak on behalf of the other presidents and prime ministers, but I presume they neither particularly like it, nor particularly fear it."

TREATY CHANGES?

Cameron, a Conservative who says he wants Britain to stay inside the world's biggest economic bloc, warned in a speech on January 23 that the European public was disillusioned with the EU and that Britain needed a new settlement.

British opponents of the European Union say it is a doomed project which has been imposed on European populations by an arrogant elite and that Britain should seek to go it alone.

Van Rompuy said Europe's leaders could not afford complacency and that bold reforms were needed to strengthen the euro zone, but that the integration ahead did not require further treaty changes.

"I see no impending need to open the EU treaties," he said, adding that Britain's ambivalent relations with Europe were undermining its negotiating position.

"How do you convince a room full of people when you keep your hand on the door handle?"

Van Rompuy's insistence on no treaty change undermined Cameron's strategy for getting Britain a new type of EU membership, said former EU Commissioner Peter Mandelson.

"The prime minister has made great play of radical treaty change - which he believes is necessary, which will provide the vehicle for the repatriation of powers that he wants. President Van Rompuy seemed to shoot that fox," Mandelson told Reuters.

"If there is not going to be such a new treaty, I don't know what the alternative vehicle will be for what the prime minister wants: you cannot have a unilateral negotiation."

Van Rompuy said a club producing one fifth of global gross domestic product gave its members a clout they would not have alone. But he dodged a direct question on whether a provisional EU deal to cap pay bonuses would damage the City of London, a major contributor to Britain's economy.

He said the 2008 global financial crisis had exposed the weakness of the European common currency project and kept open the chance of further "aftershocks".

"Talk of imminent break-up has vanished. It is finally sinking in that the euro is here to stay, and that this is due to deep political determination," he said. "Even if there may be turbulence ahead, we have the artillery we need."

(Writing by Guy Faulconbridge; Editing by Hugh Lawson and Alastair Macdonald)


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Hungary PM seen picking his "right hand" to head central bank

BUDAPEST (Reuters) - Prime Minister Viktor Orban is expected to nominate the man he calls his "right hand" to head Hungary's central bank on Friday, a move that could prompt cheap money being pumped into the economy ahead of elections in 2014.

Orban, who has often been at loggerheads with the European Union, banks and the International Monetary Fund, is widely seen as appointing Economy Minister Gyorgy Matolcsy, one of his closest allies, to replace hawkish Governor Andras Simor, whose six-year mandate is expiring.

Such a move would ensure Orban's influence on the National Bank of Hungary even beyond next year's elections, as the new governor will stay for six years.

Matolcsy has been the frontrunner for the job. He is the mastermind behind most of Budapest's experimental economic policies - including Europe's biggest bank tax and a huge private pension takeover - that have at times upset the EU, IMF and investors in the past three years.

Orban could yet surprise and nominate someone else - he likes to finalize his decisions at the very last moment - but markets and local media widely expect Matolcsy to swap his current government spot for the top job at the bank.

To replace Matolcsy as economy minister, Orban is expected to nominate Mihaly Varga, another close ally and a former finance minister whom investors see as a market-friendly.

With Matolcsy, a new, looser era could start at the central bank.

"A broad range of measures could enter the policy mix going forward," said Mujtaba Rahman, an analyst at Eurasia Group.

"Not only are we looking at lower interest rates and a weaker equilibrium exchange rate but the use of foreign exchange reserves and even (an asset-buying) type maneuver cannot be ruled out."

Investors would be watching closely to see whether Matolcsy will proceed with caution or launch new measures that some may see as risky to the volatile forint currency.

Facing elections, Orban, whose party has lost about half of its public support since the 2010 vote, needs to show crisis-weary Hungarian voters that the economy is finally moving out of the doldrums, after a recession last year.

"I have an idea what a good central bank governor is like, and how the central bank and the Hungarian economy could perform better if appropriate personal decisions are taken," Orban told private news channel HirTV on Monday without naming his choice.

Besides Simor, one of his vice governors, Ferenc Karvalits will also leave the bank at the end of March. It is not clear at this stage whether Orban will also name his successor on Friday.

Under the law, Orban can also pick a third deputy governor to Matolcsy but in that case in order to comply with the law, parliament will also need to appoint a new external member to the Monetary Council. Then the size of the rate-setting panel would expand to the maximum 9 members allowed by law.

(Editing by Jeremy Gaunt.)


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Cardinals begin long process of picking new pope

VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - With Pope Benedict XVI now officially in retirement, Catholic cardinals from around the world begin on Friday the complex, cryptic and uncertain process of picking the next leader of the world's largest church.

Some details are still unclear, owing to Benedict's break with the tradition that papacies end with a pope's death, so these "princes of the Church" will first hold an informal session before traditional rounds of talks begin on Monday.

No front-runner stands out among the 115 cardinal electors - those aged under 80 - due to enter the Sistine Chapel for the conclave that picks the new pope, so discreetly sizing up potential candidates will be high on the cardinals' agenda.

They will also use the general congregations, the closed-door consultations preceding a conclave, to discuss future challenges such as better Vatican management, the need for improved communication and the continuing sexual abuse crisis.

Benedict ended his difficult eight-year reign on Thursday pledging unconditional obedience to whoever succeeds him to lead the world's 1.2 billion Catholics at one of the most problematic periods in the Church's 2,000-year history.

"The discussion we have in the congregations will be most important for the intellectual preparation" for choosing a pope, said Boston's Cardinal Sean O'Malley, adding the electors were already preparing spiritually for the vote by intense prayer.

"I would imagine each of us has some kind of list of primary candidates, and others secondary," said Cardinal Francis George of Chicago at a media briefing with O'Malley and another American cardinal, Daniel DiNardo of Galveston-Houston.

MOST SECRETIVE ELECTION

Conclaves are among the world's most secretive elections, with no declared candidates, no open campaigning and electors who often do not know more than a few dozen men in the room. Electors are sworn to secrecy about the actual voting itself.

George said cardinals consulted other electors before the conclave to learn more about possible choices, asking "what do you know about this candidate?" or "what kind of person is he?"

O'Malley, at his first conclave and already being mentioned in Italian media as a potential candidate, said he had been "using the Internet a lot" to read up on other cardinals.

Conclaves traditionally begin 15 days after the seat of St. Peter, as the papal office is called, becomes vacant. But that includes time for mourning and funeral ceremonies for a dead pope, so Benedict issued a decree allowing an earlier start.

From Monday, the cardinals will discuss how long they want to hold general congregations before going into the conclave; its name comes from the Latin term "cum clave" - with a key - to show they are locked away until a pope is chosen.

Cardinals over 80 cannot join them in the voting, but they are allowed to attend the general congregations and discuss the challenges to the Church with the electors.

Nothing is set yet, but the Vatican seems to be aiming for an election by mid-March so the new pope can be installed in office before Palm Sunday on March 24 and lead Holy Week services culminating in Easter the following Sunday.

HELICOPTER INTO HISTORY

The cardinals will not see a top secret report prepared for Pope Benedict on mismanagement and infighting in the Curia, the Church's bureaucracy. But its three cardinal authors will be in the general congregations to advise electors on its findings.

"Since we don't really know what's in the report, I think we'll depend on the cardinals in the congregations to share with us what they think will be valuable for us to know to make the right decision for the future," O'Malley said.

In an emotional farewell to cardinals on Thursday morning in the Vatican's frescoed Sala Clementina, Benedict appeared to send a strong message to the cardinals and the faithful to unite behind his successor, whoever he turns out to be.

The appeal was significant because for the first time in history, there will be a reigning pope in the Vatican's Apostolic Palace and his retired predecessor living in a small monastery in the Vatican Gardens not far away.

Benedict left the Vatican by helicopter for the papal summer residence of Castel Gandolfo south of Rome to be far from the conclave and not influence it. He will move into the monastery when refurbishing is finished in about two months.

(Editing by Alastair Macdonald)


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Israel, Turkey row over Zionism deepens rift between ex-allies

JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israel's prime minister accused his Turkish counterpart on Thursday of making a "dark and false" statement by calling Zionism a crime against humanity - a comment likely to hit efforts to repair ties between the two former allies.

The Turkish premier's statement, made at a U.N. meeting in Vienna a day earlier, was also condemned by the head of Europe's main rabbinical group who called it a "hateful attack" on Jews.

"Just as with Zionism, anti-Semitism and fascism, it has become impossible not to see Islamophobia as a crime against humanity," Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan said at the U.N. Alliance of Civilisations forum, according to Turkish media reports.

Ties between Israel and mostly Muslim Turkey have been frosty since 2010, when nine Turks were killed by Israeli commandos who stormed their ship carrying aid to Palestinians in Gaza, under a naval blockade.

In recent weeks, there has been a run of reports in the Turkish and Israeli press about efforts to repair relations, including a senior diplomatic meeting earlier this month in Rome and military equipment transfers.

The reports have not been confirmed by either government. No one was immediately available from Turkey's foreign ministry to comment on the new criticism from the rabbis or from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

A statement from the Israeli premier's office said he "strongly condemns (Erdogan's) statement about Zionism and its comparison to Nazism."

The Zionist movement was the main force behind the establishment of the state of Israel.

"This is a dark and false pronouncement the likes of which we thought had passed into history," Netanyahu was quoted as saying.

Pinchas Goldschmidt, chief rabbi of Moscow and the head of the Conference of European Rabbis, said Erdogan's criticism of Zionism amounted to anti-Semitism.

"This is an ignorant and hateful attack on the Jewish people and against a movement with peace at its core, which relegates Prime Minster Erdogan to the level of (Iranian President) Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and, to Soviet leaders who used anti-Zionism as a euphemism for anti-Semitism," Goldschmidt said in an emailed statement.

"The irony of these comments will not be lost on the families of those slaughtered during the Armenian genocide, a crime still not recognized by the Turkish government," he added.

The White House also condemned the remarks.

"We reject Prime Minister Erdogan's characterization of Zionism as a crime against humanity, which is offensive and wrong," White House spokesman Tommy Vietor said in a statement.

"We encourage people of all faiths, cultures, and ideas to denounce hateful actions and to overcome the differences of our times," he said.

Armenians accuse Ottoman Turks of committing an orchestrated campaign of massacres against Christian Armenians during World War One.

Turkey, which was established as a republic after the Ottoman Empire collapsed, denies those killings were genocide and says both sides lost lives in internecine fighting during the chaos of war.

The Conference of European Rabbis is an umbrella group of 700 religious leaders in Europe, where an estimated 1.7 millions Jewish people live. About 17,000 Jews live in Turkey, a country of 76 million people.

(Writing by Ori Lewis and Ayla Jean Yackley in Istanbul; additional reporting by Jeff Mason in Washington; Editing by Andrew Heavens and Lisa Shumaker)


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