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Divided Greece hurtles towards new elections
05/17 | 02:47 GMT

©AFP / Louisa Gouliamaki
People walk past of the Greek parliament on May 16, 2012. After inconclusive elections and fruitless political horse-trading, debt-laden Greece will finally name a government Thursday, but only to hold the fort until fresh polls next month.

©AFP / Louisa Gouliamaki
There are no guarantees the re-run vote will produce a viable government in Greece
ATHENS (AFP) - After inconclusive elections and fruitless political horse-trading, debt-laden Greece will finally name a government Thursday, but only to hold the fort until fresh polls next month.
A caretaker government of technocrats and retired politicians, headed by a senior judge, will have the sole task of organising a fresh election on June 17, some six weeks after the last polls.
Panagiotis Pikrammenos
, the head of Greece's top administrative court, was the compromise choice after ten days of talks between political leaders failed to produce a coalition government.
Aside from being aptly named to head the fragmented country, Pikrammenos -- "embittered" in Greek -- takes over with Greece once again at the crossroads.
A growing segment of the population has had enough of austerity after two years of salary and pension sacrifices which have failed to bring the promised economic benefits within sight.

©AFP / Aris Messinis
Newly appointed caretaker Prime Minister Panagiotis Pikrammenos (R) is welcomed by Lucas Papademos
But officials from the European Union and the International Monetary Fund, which are all that stands between Greece and a disorderly debt default -- and a possible exit from the euro currency zone -- have warned daily that no new loans will be released if progress on pledged reforms falters.
"It is clear to all that our homeland is going through difficult times. We must safeguard its prestige and assure a smooth transition," said Pikrammenos, whose cabinet is to be sworn in at 0700 GMT on Thursday, after accepting the mandate from President Carolos Papoulias.
The new parliament will convene an hour later, but given the brevity of its mission, its 300 deputies will remain unpaid for the duration of their term.
Greece and the world's financial markets had been anxiously awaiting the date for new polls amid growing fears the cash-strapped nation could be forced out of the 17-member eurozone.
"The country is on a knife's edge," said the Hellenic Federation of Enterprises, one of Greece's main business lobby groups.
In a sign of the growing paralysis feared by creditors and investors alike, the agency overseeing state asset sales -- another condition for EU-IMF funds -- on Wednesday suspended its operations until a fully fledged government is in place.
"T
©AFP
Greece will go to the polls for second elections. Duration: 00:46
he board of directors decided that, in the course of the current period, and until the formation of a government as a result of the forthcoming elections, it will not take any decisions which commit the fund," the Hellenic Republic asset development fund said.
It added that observers from the EU and the eurozone had "expressed their concern" about this decision.
Tough austerity measures included in a 240-billion euro ($300 billion) EU-IMF deal for Greece saw voters on May 6 desert the main Pasok and New Democracy parties which had supported the bailout, and the strings attached to it.
But there is no guarantee that the re-run vote will produce a viable government and left-wing Syriza, which has threatened to tear up the EU-IMF deal, is tipped to win after surging into second place in the May election.
German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble has insisted once again that it is not possible to renegotiate the EU-IMF deal, the second in two years aimed at averting bankruptcy.

©AFP Graphic
Greece: key data
"Greece must be ready to accept the (EU-IMF) aid... Those who win the elections will have to decide if they accept the conditions or not," he said on Wednesday.
European Commission head Jose Manuel Barroso made the same point.
"There is no way of changing the commitments taken by Greece and also by the other 16 euro area member states," he said.
"In these elections Greeks will vote on whether Greece should stay in the eurozone or not," outgoing finance minister Philippos Sachinidis said.
British Prime Minister David Cameron will on Thursday renew his call for eurozone leaders to take decisive action or face the break up of the single currency over the Greek debt crisis.
The euro sank to a four-month low against the dollar Wednesday amid the ongoing concerns that debt-wracked Greece will leave the euro, spreading financial contagion throughout the eurozone.
In New York the euro was changing hands at $1.2715 around 2100 GMT, down from $1.2728 at the same time Tuesday, after plunging to $1.2681 during the day.
A poll released on Wednesday, before the party talks collapsed, showed that 59 percent of those questioned would have preferred the formation of a coalition government, while 32 percent favoured new elections.
The VPRC poll for online magazine epikaira.gr also found that 69 percent of respondents were unhappy with the result of the last election, which put seven parties in parliament including a neo-Nazi group.
The radical leftist Syriza party still tops the list with 20.3 percent of the vote, building on the 16.78-percent result gained two weeks ago.
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Bayern Munich keen to be part of 'golden generation'
05/17 | 01:14 GMT

©AFP/File / Christof Stache
Bayern Munich's Philipp Lahm, seen here in action during their UEFA Champions League second leg semi-final match against Real Madrid at the Santiago Bernabeu stadium in Madrid, on April 25. Lahm says his side must beat Chelsea in Saturday's final if they want to be considered part of the club's "golden generation."

©AFP/File / Christof Stache
Philipp Lahm played in Bayern team that lost at the hands of Jose Mourinho's Inter Milan in the 2010 final in Madrid
BERLIN (AFP) - Bayern Munich captain Philipp Lahm says his side must beat Chelsea in Saturday's Champions League final if they want to be considered part of the club's "golden generation."
Bayern host Chelsea at Munich's Allianz Arena with the Bavarian giants bidding to lift the trophy for the first time since 2001, having reached two of the last three finals.
Lahm played in the Bayern team that lost 2-0 at the hands of Jose Mourinho's Inter Milan in the 2010 final in Madrid.
Current club president Uli Hoeness and chairman Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, meanwhile, were part of the Bayern team that won consecutive titles in 1974, 1975 and 1976.
Lahm will lead Munich out on Saturday eager to make history by lifting the Champions League trophy for the second time and claiming the club's fifth overall European Cup title.

©AFP/DPA/File / Peter Kneffel
Bayern are bidding to become the first team since Inter at San Siro in 1965 to win the European title on home soil
"You need an international title if you want to become a golden generation," said the 28-year-old.
"You want to lift the cup when you are in a final. And of course it is nice to be the first one to lift it. I don't have many more years at the top level."
Bayern have been licking their wounds since they were hammered 5-2 by Borussia Dortmund in last Saturday's German Cup final and Hoeness has warned that FA Cup winners Chelsea are a dangerous side.
"Chelsea are a team with their backs against the wall, because of their up-and-down season in the league," he said.
"If they lose the final, they will not be in the Champions League next season and we all know what that means for a team like Chelsea.

©AFP/DPA/File / Marc Mueller
Bayern host Chelsea at Allianz Arena with the Bavarian giants bidding to lift the trophy for the first time since 2001
"Anyone who thinks we have already won this match is certainly wrong."
Bayern are bidding to become the first team since Inter at San Siro in 1965 to win the European title on home soil and two years after defeat in Madrid, Lahm says the team has grown.
"We have many players who were playing for us in 2010," said Lahm.
"We have developed, we have much more experience. The belief in winning the title is much bigger than two years ago."
Having been a ball boy in 1997 when the Champions League final was last played in Munich, Lahm admitted he never dreamed he would one day captain Bayern in a European final.
"At the time, I definitely wasn't dreaming that I would one day be competing for the trophy, it was simply too far away," Lahm told Munich-based newspaper Sueddeutsche Zeitung.
The Germany and Bayern captain was 13 years old when Dortmund claimed the trophy with a 3-1 win over Juventus on May 28, 1997 at Munich's Olympic Stadium, which was Bayern's previous home stadium.
Despite the occasion, Lahm admitted he was underwhelmed by the experience.
"It was nothing special. The same group (of ball boys) had been together the whole season for every home Bayern Munich game. We wore the same kit and there was no special briefing," he said.
Munich's 69,000-seater Allianz Arena, Bayern's home ground since 2005, will be sold out on Saturday, but the final will also be screened at the Olympic Stadium as the club received more than a million ticket applications.

Sports
Bayern Munich keen to be part of 'golden ...Protesters march in Chicago ahead of NATO summit
05/16 | 23:13 GMT

©AFP
Protesters chanting "Fight! Fight! Fight! Housing is a human right!" marched through downtown Chicago Wednesday, using the upcoming NATO summit to draw attention to the US foreclosure crisis. Thousands of protesters are expected to descend upon the city as the leaders of 50 countries gather at the NATO summit on Sunday and Monday. Duration: 00:34
©AFP
Protesters chanting "Fight! Fight! Fight! Housing is a human right!" marched through downtown Chicago Wednesday, using the upcoming NATO summit to draw attention to the US foreclosure crisis. Thousands of protesters are expected to descend upon the city as the leaders of 50 countries gather at the NATO summit on Sunday and Monday.

Video Gallery
Protesters march in Chicago ahead of NATO ...Forbes names Jennifer Lopez 'most powerful' star
05/16 | 20:55 GMT

©AFP/Getty Images/File / Kevin Winter
Jennifer Lopez, pictured on May 14, is the world's most powerful celebrity, according to Forbes magazine Wednesday in a rankings based on a combination of earnings, press coverage and Internet presence.

©AFP/Getty Images/File / Kevin Winter
Jennifer Lopez is the world's most powerful celebrity
NEW YORK (AFP) - Jennifer Lopez is the world's most powerful celebrity, according to Forbes magazine Wednesday in a rankings based on a combination of earnings, press coverage and Internet presence.
Lopez headed the 100-strong list, up from 50th last year, while her American Idol colleague Ryan Seacrest was 29th. Lady Gaga, the pop singer, came in at number five, toppled from her top perch last year.
Television presenter Oprah Winfrey was second, followed by teen heartthrob Justin Bieber at third and singer Rihanna at fourth.
Many on the list at www.forbes.com/celebs showed business acumen as well as stage talent, Forbes said. For example, Bieber "is also a serious investor, with stakes in a dozen companies that appeal to his tech savvy, including a chunk of Spotify."
"Numerous celebrities are leveraging their fame to make early-stage investments or launch startups themselves," Forbes said.
The best example was J. Lo, whose acting and singing career appeared to have tanked a few years ago.
Her success as a judge on American Idol, a resurgence in marketing her music, and an attention-grabbing divorce from Marc Anthony, followed by lucrative product endorsement deals, have sent her financial star shooting.
"While she hasn't stormed Silicon Valley just yet, Jennifer Lopez is a state-of-the-art celebrity success story," Forbes said. "With $52 million in earnings over the last 12 months and a massive amount of fame, Lopez lands at number one on our Celebrity 100 list for the first time."
Overall, the earnings power of the top 100 dropped in 2012 to $4.4 billion from $4.5 billion. Winfrey was still the most lucrative star, earning $165 million, although that was well below her $290 million haul last year.

People
Forbes names Jennifer Lopez 'most powerful' ...Rwandan rebels kill 50 in eastern DR Congo: UN
05/16 | 20:02 GMT

©AFP / Phil Moore
A United Nations armoured infantry fighting vehicle leaves a temporary operating base for a patrol in Bunagana, a border town in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Rwandan rebels have killed at least 50 civilians in May in the volatile east of the Democratic Republic of Congo, the United Nations said.

©AFP / Phil Moore
A United Nations armoured infantry fighting vehicle leaves a temporary operating base for a patrol in Bunagana
KINSHASA (AFP) - Rwandan rebels have killed at least 50 civilians in May in the volatile east of the Democratic Republic of Congo, the United Nations said on Wednesday.
Twenty-two of them died in an attack Monday in the village of Kamananga in Sud-Kivu province, the United Nations humanitarian agency OCHA said, blaming the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR) rebel group.
"The FDLR accuse the locals of collaborating with elements" of a local militia, a statement said.
"Since the start of this month, at least 50 people -- including displaced persons -- have been killed by presumed FDLR members under similar conditions," it said.
On May 5, at least 10 people -- including four women working in the fields -- were killed by the presumed rebels in another Sud-Kivu village.
The FDLR is considered one of the main sources of instability in the east of the DR Congo, where several armed groups are still active.

©AFP / Phil Moore
A Congolese refugee walks across the border into Uganda
The rebels have been targeted by the Rwandan army in joint operations with the DR Congo army, which continues to track them.
But the operations were suspended under the orders of President Joseph Kabila on April 11 after several former rebels integrated into the national army defected.
These soldiers, formerly members of the rebel National Council for the Defence of the People (CNDP), mutinied to protest bad conditions, food and pay and to demand the full implementation of the 2009 accords.
Following the defections, the FDLR has multiplied attacks in the region, in what many locals say is a bid to demoralise the Congolese army.
On Wednesday, Human Rights Watch said rebel general Jean Bosco "Terminator" Ntaganda, who is wanted by the International Criminal Court for recruiting child soldiers was again forcing boys into military service.

©AFP / Phil Moore
A soldier from the Democratic Republic of the Congo's Armed Forces (FARDC) walks through the border town of Bunagana
Between April 19 and May 4, troops serving Ntaganda forcibly recruited at least 149 boys and young men aged between 12 and 20 in Nord-Kivu province, the rights group said in a statement.
HRW researchers interviewed witnesses and victims, and said at least seven boys had died in the fighting. At least 48 of those recruited were under 18 years old and of these, 17 were aged 15 or younger.
HRW said one woman its researchers spoke to described how Ntaganda personally worked to recruit young soldiers in her village.
"Since you (villagers) have been with the government, you've gotten nothing. Why not join me?" HRW quoted the woman as saying.
Ntaganda "asked us to give our children, our students, to him to fight. He came to our village himself," she added.
The ICC classes the recruitment of children under 15 a war crime.



