2011年11月6日星期日

Death sentence for Mauritania man guilty of U.S. murder

The trio -- alleged members of Al Qaeda's North African wing -- were Rosetta Stone Software on trial for the slaying of Christopher Leggett, who worked for a charity and was head of a language school when he was killed in the capital.Mauritania is one of a string of West African nations bordering the Sahara desert that has been increasingly targeted by Islamists.The court handed Mohamed Abdallahi Ould Ahmednah the death penalty for murdering the 39-year-old American. Sidi Mohamed Ould Bezeid was jailed for 12 years and Mahmoud Ould Khouna for three years, both for complicity.All three were also convicted of belonging to a terrorist organization and having "attacked Mauritania."Al Qaeda's branch in North Africa (AQIM) had claimed responsibility for the killing, saying Leggett was shot because he was trying to convert Muslims to Christianity.Mauritania is among several countries in the Sahara region where al Qaeda-linked fighters have raised their profiles with a series of attacks and kidnappings.AQIM grew out of the militant Salafist movement in Algeria and has moved south where it is taking advantage of the vast and lawless desert sahel regions of Mauritania, Mali and Niger. BE BOLD George Magnus, senior economic adviser Rosetta Stone languages to UBS in London,guessed that three years was too short a time for Japan toreach the turning point. But 10 years was too long because theageing of the workforce was inexorable. "At some point in the medium term, I do think there's asporting possibility that Japan will start to run tradedeficits and have to start selling debt abroad," said Magnus,the author of a study on the economics of ageing. "And thatprobably is when the crunch will come, because people will wantto see Japan taking material measures to manage its public debtover the longer term." Crucially, no respected economist is arguing that Japanshould think twice about spending right away whatever is neededto put the economy back on its feet. One of the lessons from the recession brought on by thecollapse of investment bank Lehman Brothers in 2008 is that theincrease in the public debt ratio in Japan and other countrieswas not due to fiscal spending to stimulate the economy.Rather, it was more due to the abrupt slowdown in economicgrowth. The government should do the same today, said SebastianMallaby, an economist with the Council on Foreign Relations inNew York. "It should be willing to act aggressively to increase thebudget deficit in order to have the money to rebuild thedamaged areas promptly," he wrote on CFR's website. "Now is notthe time for being cautious or conservative Rosetta Stone language software . Now is the timefor a bold response, and I've got every reason to think thatthey will do that," he added.

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