четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

California sues EPA over greenhouse gas regulations: ; Officials say state's more aggressive law would require emissions be cut by one-third

SACRAMENTO, Calif. - California sued the federal government inits struggle to set the country's first greenhouse gas limits oncars, trucks and SUVs, asking the Environmental Protection Agency toreview its decision to deny the state a waiver that would allow itand 16 other states to regulate emissions.

Dismissing California's arguments that it faced unique threatsfrom climate change, EPA Administrator Stephen L. Johnson said lastmonth the federal government had a national plan to raise fueleconomy standards. California officials on Wednesday provided newdata in an attempt to show their program is superior to the federalplan.

"I think we are coming back strong not …

CDC hopes to say goodbye to syphilis

CDC hopes to say goodbye to syphilis

The number of syphilis cases in the United States has been at its lowest since it began to ravage many African American households in 1941. The debilitating disease noted for affecting African American communities in poor urban and rural Southern communities could soon be non-existent

Those encouraging statistics are from the National Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) - HIV, STD and TB Prevention that launched the "National Plan to Eliminate Syphilis," using five strategic stages to decrease the number of cases.

The current national goal is for 90 percent of the counties in the U.S. to be syphilis-free and to reduce …

Finance ministry says turmoil will hurt growth

Germany will likely cut its economic growth forecasts as turmoil on global financial markets risks causing the world economy to stagnate, one of the country's deputy finance ministers said Wednesday.

Deputy Minister Joerg Asmussen said the government's official growth forecasts would be affected by the financial crisis and that "anything but a downward revision would be unrealistic."

Asmussen cited revised figures from the International Monetary Fund, released Wednesday, that show decreased growth estimates for the U.S., Eurozone countries and the world economy in the near future.

Asmussen said the IMF numbers showed "there are …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Tseng wins Women's British Open

CARNOUSTIE, Scotland - Yani Tseng won the Women's British Openfor the second straight year, beating Brittany Lang by four strokesSunday and becoming the youngest woman to capture a fifth majortitle.

The 22-year-old top-ranked Taiwanese shot a 3-under 69 to finishat 16-under 272. She trailed third-round leader Caroline Masson ofGermany by two strokes entering the final round. Masson closed witha 78 to finish tied for fifth.

"It's very special to win here at …

[ NFL INSIDER ]

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Brazil favored in U-20 semifinal vs. Mexico

MEDELLIN, Colombia (AP) — Brazil defender Danilio says his team is still improving, which is sure to get Mexico's attention as the two prepare to meet in one of Wednesday semifinals of the Under-20 World Cup.

Brazil's victory over Spain on penalties in the quarterfinals — after a 2-2 draw through extra time — was regarded by many as the best match of the tournament, featuring end-to-end attacking, dominant possession and two of the best young keepers in the world.

If Brazil gets better, that's bad news for Mexico and a warning to France and Portugal, which meet in the other semifinal. The winners face off in the final on Saturday in Colombia's capital Bogota where a Latin …

Europa League Draw List

Draw for the playoff round of the Europa League (first leg scheduled for Aug. 19, second leg Aug. 26):

Paris Saint-Germain (France) vs. Maccabi Tel Aviv (Israel)

Bayer Leverkusen (Germany) vs. Tavriya Simferopol (Ukraine)

CSKA Moscow (Russia) vs. Anorthosis Famagusta (Cyprus)

Hajduk Split (Croatia) vs. Unirea Urziceni (Romania)

Feyenoord (Netherlands) vs. Ghent (Belgium)

Genk (Belgium) vs. FC Porto (Portugal)

Debreceni (Hungary) vs. Litex Lovech (Bulgaria)

Aris (Greece) vs. Austria Vienna (Austria)

Galatasaray (Turkey) vs. Karpaty Lviv (Ukraine)

Palermo (Italy) vs. …

SEXISM: Harper government's ideal woman: barefoot in the kitchen

National child care: gone.

Court Challenges Program: gone.

Equality as the goal of Status of Women Canada: gone.

Two sexist attacks on a female Liberal MP.

Complaints made about the number of female journalists in the Parliamentary Press Gallery.

Signs the Harper government will use the tax system to try to drive women back into the home and keep them there.

When Conservative candidates come calling in the next federal election, Canadian women should demand to know what their party's policy is on women's equality.

Foreign Affairs Minister Peter MacKay still insists he never shouted, "You already have her!" when Ottawa Liberal MP David …

Tom Lantos, only Holocaust survivor in Congress, has died after bout with cancer

Rep. Tom Lantos, the chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee and the only Holocaust survivor to serve in Congress, has died, spokeswoman Lynne Weill said Monday.

Lantos,80, a Democrat, disclosed last month that he had been diagnosed with cancer of the esophagus.

He said at the time that he would serve out his 14th term but would not seek re-election in his northern California district, which includes part of San Francisco.

The timing of the diagnosis was a particular blow because Lantos had assumed his committee chairmanship just a year earlier, when …

Caption Only [Color Photo: Richard A. Chapman, Sun-Times / REZKO PAL'S TAX...]

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Composting supermarket residuals

Sainsbury's, a leading British supermarket, recently contracted Alpheco Ltd. to compost produce trimmings and bakery residuals from its two Ipswich stores. Previously, fruit, vegetables, bread and pastries unfit for sale or gifting to charities, were compacted with plastic and cardboard in 30 cubic meter rol(offs and then landfilled. When Alpheco - seeking a regular supply of organics for use in the development of its containerized composting system -- offered to compost the organics, the idea was welcomed by the supermarket, provided it cost Sainsbury's no more than landfilling.

"Taking a systems approach, we opted for 120 liter wheelie bins," says Neil Winship of Alpheco. "They …

Iran defiant amid appeals for European sanctions

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Iran has closed out naval war games in the Persian Gulf much the way they began last month: striking a tone of military defiance while Western powers rallied behind tougher oil and financial sanctions as a crippling tool against Tehran's nuclear program.

The standoff atmosphere — less than a week after Iran warned it could block one of the world's key oil tanker sea lanes in response to economic pressures — appeared to deepen further with an Iranian general suggesting a U.S. aircraft carrier is not welcome to return to the Gulf.

In Paris, meanwhile, France's foreign minister said there is "no doubt" that Iran is moving toward a nuclear weapon …

Oshana steps up IBF ladder

Anwar Oshana had all this going for him as he entered the ringWednesday to box Bruce Rumbolz at the Inland Exposition Center inWestmont: two capable fists, a large and vocal contingent of Syrianimmigrants in the audience and a truckload of confidence.

"I can become a world champion, that's how good I can be,"Oshana said. "I can be as good as I want to be."

In an exhausting and entertaining 12-round brawl matchingunbeaten super middleweights, Oshana (16-0) scored a unanimousdecision over Rumbolz (17-1-1) to claim the International BoxingFederation's Great Lakes Region championship."These people helped me," a weary Oshana said of the hundreds ofrollicking fans who chanted "Anwar! Anwar!" from start to finish.Oshana, a Chicagoan who trains out of the Windy City Gym, neededthe assistance. Rumbolz, who fights out of Downstate Sterling,withstood a steady pounding and staggered Oshana with a rightuppercut in the sixth round. But Oshana was the aggressor anddelivered crunching lefts in each of the next four rounds. For muchof the fight, he backed Rumbolz to the ropes.In the 11th round, Oshana dropped Rumbolz to the squattingposition with an overhand right. He did the same in the 12th round.The judges scored the fight 119-107, 117-110 and 116-110.The victory puts Oshana in line for an IBF Intercontinentaltitle fight against John Jarvis. He'll need that to qualify for aworld championship fight."I'm looking forward to bigger and better things," Oshana said.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Former Qantas worker sentenced for jihad book

An Australian court sentenced a former Qantas Airways baggage handler wanted on terrorism-related charges in Lebanon to 12 years in prison Friday for publishing a do-it-yourself jihad book on the Internet.

A New South Wales state Supreme Court jury found Belal Khazaal, 39, guilty of making a document that could assist terrorism. The September 2003 book is not linked with a known attack.

The Lebanon-born Sydney resident denied the charge and said the book was never intended to incite terrorist acts.

The 110-page book contained instructions on how to perform terrorist acts such as detonating bombs, shooting down planes from the ground, and assassinating senior U.S. and Australian government officials, including then-President George W. Bush.

Justice Megan Latham said Friday that Khazaal had also been convicted in absentia by Lebanese military courts in 2003 and 2005 on terrorism-related charges.

The charges involved possession of explosives and being part of a terrorist group that plotted against Lebanon. Latham provided the court with scant details of the alleged crimes.

He was sentenced to prison terms of 10 years in 2003 and 15 years in 2005, Latham said.

The judge said she did not take the Lebanese convictions into account when setting a sentence.

She said she found it "unsurprising" that the jury rejected his defense that he never intended to encourage terrorism.

"It beggars belief that a person of average intelligence who has devoted themselves to the study of Islam over some years would fail to recognize the nature of the material," she said.

"It advocated widespread and indiscriminate loss of life, serious injury and serious property damage within the countries identified as enemies of Islam," she added.

Latham sentenced Khazaal to 12 years in prison with no chance of parole for nine years.

The book, written in Arabic, was titled "Provisions of the Rules of Jihad: Short Judicial Rulings and Organizational Instructions for Fighters and Mujahideen Against Infidels." Khazaal compiled the book from a range of Internet sources, his lawyer, George Thomas, told the court at an earlier sentencing hearing.

He faced a maximum possible sentence of 15 years in prison under Australian counterterrorism laws enacted a year after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks in the United States.

Lebanon and Australia have an extradition treaty. Australian authorities usually insist that criminals serve any Australian sentence before they are considered for extradition.

The Attorney-General's Department declined Friday to say whether Lebanon had asked for Khazaal's extradition.

"As a matter of long-standing policy, the Australian government does not disclose whether or not an extradition request has been made or received until a person is arrested or brought before a court in relation to the request," it said in a statement.

Children fighting for Earth's future // Kids' groups take environmental action

GRANTS PASS, Ore. They're turning off lights, pedaling theirbikes instead of asking mom to drive, pushing their parents torecycle, planting trees and cleaning streams.

Fearful for their future - and unimpressed by their elders'efforts - children are putting their ideals into action, working tosave the Earth by starting with their own neighborhoods.

The seeds of the children's crusade were sown on April 22, 1990,in the media blitz that accompanied the 20th anniversary of EarthDay.

Since then, dozens of children's organizations have sproutedacross the nation. Their names tell the tale: Kids for Saving Earth,Kids for a Clean Environment, Kids in Nature's Defense.

Fifteen children's environmental groups claiming a total of 1million members have joined in the CO2 Challenge Kids Coalition,which is working to cut carbon dioxide emissions by 1 million tons ayear.

And in a suburb of Minneapolis, the parents of 11-year-oldClinton Hill, who died of a brain tumor, carry on his dream of anational organization. Kids for Saving Earth is the biggest of thechildren's environmental groups. Its color newsletter is distributedaround the nation by its main sponsor, Target stores.

"In a year and a half's time, we have 13,000 clubs with 400,000kids," said Tessa Hill, Clinton's mother and president of the group.

After being turned away at the White House, Clinton's friendJohn Hegstrand, 13, of Plymouth, Minn., handed 100,000 pledges forthe CO2 Challenge to Sen. Albert Gore Jr. (D-Tenn.), who organized aspecial hearing this year for children to talk about global warming.

"Kids have a lot of power," John said. "We affect the way ourparents think. The more that we know, the more that people becomeaware."

Being ignored by the White House led 12-year-old Melissa Poe ofNashville, Tenn., to start Kids for a Clean Environment with hermother. With help from Wal-Mart stores, the group produces anewsletter that claims a readership of 2 million.

Melissa had written a letter to President Bush asking him tohelp stop pollution. When she didn't get a response, she arrangedfor her letter to be reproduced on billboards, first in her hometownand later in Washington, D.C.

She said she was ashamed of Bush for not doing more afterdeclaring himself the environmental president.

"I don't think it's fair," she said. "The adults won't have tolive in this world, and the kids will. We don't want to grow up in aworld where we can't breathe and we can't go outside and enjoy a niceday in the park."

Kids aren't networking yet via their Nintendos, but they arelinking up around the globe on computer bulletin boards with the helpof adults such as Marshall Gilmore, a lawyer in Salem, Ore. With hisfamily, he started the Earth Kids Organization.

There's a computer in his home office dedicated to the K-12Network, allowing kids to stay in touch with group chapters as faraway as Ukraine. Kids punch in their accomplishments, such asstenciling storm drains with warn ings that dumping oil will hurt fish in nearby rivers.

The message that "The power is yours!" booms though thesuperhero cartoon "Captain Planet and the Planeteers," the brainchildof environmentalist and broadcasting magnate Ted Turner. In only itssecond year, it has an audience of 2 million.

When it comes to heroes, no one reaches more children than theTeenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, and their message is bright green.Since CBS started broadcasting the cartoon in 1990, environmental"Turtle Tips," based on consultations with a UCLA professor, havebeen sandwiched between the show's two segments so children will besure to see them, said Judy Price, vice president for children'sprogramming at CBS.

Last fall, Paul D. Hart Research Associates of Washington, D.C.,conducted a poll for the World Wildlife Fund of 880 kids around thecountry ranging in age from 11 to 18.

"We clearly found that children not only care about theenvironment . . . but they are the ones who influence their parentsand their households to be more considerate of the environment," saidanalyst Debbie Klingender. "They may not have the money tocontribute to environmental groups, but they are working on the homefront."

Crossborder fire from US-led coalition in Afghanistan kills 4 Pakistanis, army says

The army said Thursday that four Pakistani civilians died when U.S.-led forces in Afghanistan fired across the border at associates of a man they consider the Taliban's most dangerous commander, the Pak.

The incident on Wednesday could add to concern in Pakistan that its cooperation in the U.S.-led war on terror has fanned Islamic militancy manifesting itself in a wave of suicide bombings.

A spokesman for American-led coalition forces in Afghanistan confirmed the crossborder fire and acknowledged that they notified Pakistani authorities only afterward.

Pakistan's army, which has received billions of dollars from Washington to fight al-Qaida and the Taliban on its side of the mountainous frontier, said the incident was an accident.

Spokesman Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas said five artillery shells fired by coalition forces strayed into Pakistan's North Waziristan tribal region. One shell hit a home in the village of Kangrai, killing two women and two children, Abbas said.

Pakistan lodged a "strong" protest with coalition forces over the incident but thought it was inadvertent, Abbas said.

"They were engaging militants, but five shells landed over here," he told The Associated Press.

However, a U.S. coalition spokesman in Afghanistan said later that the attack was intended.

Troops used "precision-guided munitions" to strike a compound about 1.5 kilometers (1 mile) inside the Pakistani border, said Maj. Chris Belcher, a spokesman in Kabul.

"We received reliable intelligence indicating senior Haqqani Network members were in the compound at the time of the strike," he said, a reference to Siraj Haqqani, a prominent Afghan militant.

On Wednesday, a coalition statement accused Haqqani of organizing a suicide attack that killed two NATO soldiers and wounded dozens of civilians at an Afghan government office on March 3. It said Haqqani "has become the most dangerous Taliban leader in Afghanistan."

Belcher said troops had fired across the border in response to an "imminent threat" but provided no details. He said the Pakistani government was notified immediately after the strike.

Abbas was not immediately available to comment on the discrepancy between his account and that of the U.S. military. Foreign Ministry spokesman Mohammed Sadiq declined to comment and referred the matter to the army.

Pakistan has been a close U.S. ally ever since President Pervez Musharraf dropped support for the Taliban and joined the war on terror after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks in the United States.

Officials on both sides say military-to-military relations are excellent and their cooperation close. Musharraf has sought to convince skeptical Pakistanis that they are fighting to preserve their own country, not just for America's sake.

But with violence escalating in both Afghanistan and Pakistan, many Pakistanis hope parties opposed to Musharraf who are set to form a new government will scale back military activities and seek dialogue with militant groups, whose influence has been growing.

Regular strikes by U.S.-led or NATO forces within Pakistani territory, particularly those which have caused civilian casualties, draw particular condemnation.

Some incidents may be due to the poor demarcation of the long, rugged border. In June last year, a rocket fired during a battle between U.S.-led NATO forces and insurgents in Afghanistan struck a home in North Waziristan, killing 10 civilians.

But there have also been several cases where unmanned U.S. drones have fired missiles at suspected militant hideouts in Pakistan's border regions, including a strike in January that killed a senior al-Qaida commander.

The mild condemnation from Pakistani authorities has led many analysts to believe that the drone strikes are carried out with Islamabad's tacit blessing.

___

Associated Press Writer Alisa Tang contributed to this report from Kabul.

Memorial service for Munson planned for December

ATLANTA (AP) — A memorial service for Larry Munson, who was known by University of Georgia fans as the voice of the school's football team, will be held next month.

WBS Radio reports (http://bit.ly/w1U41r) that the service has been tentatively scheduled for Dec. 10 at Sanford Stadium. Officials said the time of the service will be announced later as arrangements are finalized.

Munson, who was Georgia's radio play-by-play announcer for nearly 43 years, died Sunday night at his home in Athens of complications from pneumonia. He was 89.

Families urge action as US drafts Alzheimer's plan

WASHINGTON (AP) — As her mother's Alzheimer's worsened over eight long years, so did Doreen Alfaro's bills: The walker, then the wheelchair, then the hospital bed, then the diapers — and the caregivers hired for more and more hours a day so Alfaro could go to work and her elderly father could get some rest.

Alfaro and her husband sold their California house to raise money for her mother's final at-home care. Six years later, the 58-year-old Alfaro wonders if she eventually develops Alzheimer's, too, "what happens to my care? Where will I go?"

Dementia is poised to become a defining disease of the rapidly aging population — and a budget-busting one for Medicare, Medicaid and families. Now the Obama administration is developing the first National Alzheimer's Plan, to combine research aimed at fighting the mind-destroying disease with help that caregivers need to stay afloat.

"This is a unique opportunity, maybe an opportunity of a lifetime in a sense, to really have an impact on this disease," says Dr. Ronald Petersen of the Mayo Clinic, who chairs a committee that later this month begins advising the government on what that plan should include.

An estimated 5.4 million Americans have Alzheimer's or similar dementias. It's the sixth-leading killer. There is no cure; treatments only temporarily ease some symptoms. Barring a research breakthrough, those numbers will worsen steadily as the baby boomers gray: By 2050, anywhere from 13 million to 16 million Americans are projected to have Alzheimer's, costing a $1 trillion in medical and nursing home expenditures.

But that's not the full toll. Sufferers lose the ability to do the simplest activities of daily life and can survive that way for a decade or more, requiring years of care from family, friends or paid caregivers. Already a recent report finds that nearly 15 million people, mostly family members, are providing more than $200 billion worth of unpaid care.

Thousands of those caregivers have turned out at public meetings since early August — and at a "telephone town meeting" organized by the Alzheimer's Association that drew 32,000 people — pleading for a national Alzheimer's strategy to bring changes.

They want primary care doctors trained to diagnose dementia earlier, describing how years of missed symptoms cost them precious time to make plans or seek treatment. That's a recommendation being echoed Tuesday in an international Alzheimer's report.

They demand to know why the National Institutes of Health spends about six times more on AIDS research than on Alzheimer's, when there are good drugs to battle back the HIV virus but nothing comparable for dementia.

Overwhelmingly, they ask for resources to help Alzheimer's patients live their last years at home without ruining their caregivers' own health and finances.

"Either you're rich and can afford $25 an hour for care at home, or you send him to a facility. We're in the middle of the road," says Shirley Rexrode of suburban San Francisco, whose 85-year-old father, Hsien-Wen Li, was diagnosed with Alzheimer's nearly three years ago.

Adult day care didn't work out — even at $90 a day, the only place with an opening couldn't handle the behaviors of Alzheimer's. Rexrode says her mother, Li's primary caregiver, has suffered some depression from the stress.

"We just have to muddle through, but we don't know how long we can," Rexrode says.

And while Medicare will pay for doctor bills and medications, even getting to the doctor can be a hurdle. When her 89-year-old mother with advanced Alzheimer's developed a urinary tract infection, Susan Lynch couldn't find a doctor willing to come to her parents' home in Fall River, Mass. Lynch flew there from her Gaithersburg, Md., home but couldn't carry her mother down the stairs. A private ambulance service didn't have an opening for weeks. Lynch wound up calling the town ambulance for a costly but Medicare-covered trip to the emergency room.

Federal health officials, who promise a first draft of the national plan by December, say they're getting the message.

"Folks desperately, desperately want to be able to provide the care themselves," says Donald Moulds, a deputy assistant secretary at the Department of Health and Human Services who oversees the project. "It's very, very hard work. Figuring out better mechanisms for supporting people who are trying to do that work is, one, the right thing to do."

It also may be cheaper for taxpayers. Nursing homes not only are pricier than at-home care, but many families only can afford them through Medicaid, the health care program for the poor. Another key, Moulds says, is better care coordination as Alzheimer's complicates the many other health problems of aging.

But given the budget crisis, the big question is whether any anti-Alzheimer's strategy can come with enough dollars and other incentives attached to spur true change.

"That's a concern, a very real one," says Mayo's Petersen.

The law that requires a national Alzheimer's plan didn't set funding, and Moulds is mum on a possible price tag. Almost complete is an inventory of all Alzheimer's-related research and care reimbursement paid for by the U.S. government, to look for gaps that need filling and possible savings to help pay for them.

Other countries including England and Australia — and 25 U.S. states, by Moulds' count — have developed their own Alzheimer's plans. But the U.S. is taking a special look at France, where President Nicolas Sarkozy in 2008 pledged to invest 1.6 billion euros, about $2.2 billion, over five years for better diagnosis, research and caregiver support and training.

Sarkozy told an international Alzheimer's Association meeting in July that he wants to guarantee "that no French family is left without support."

On Tuesday, a report from the advocacy group Alzheimer's Disease International says every country should have a national dementia strategy that stresses earlier diagnosis. Most of the estimated 36 million people worldwide living with dementia, and as many as half of U.S. patients, haven't been formally diagnosed, the report says. That's in part because of stigma and the belief that nothing can be done, but the report notes that even today's imperfect medications can help, a diagnosis lets families plan ahead, and scientists are working to create treatments that one day may slow the disease.

At meetings around the U.S., families say any Alzheimer's plan must bring better understanding of a disease too often suffered in isolation.

"What I want to see is mainly awareness, awareness of this disease and what it does not only to the individual but also to the network of family and friends that are going to care for the person," says Alfaro, of Aptos, Calif.

"It should be as understood as diabetes, and as treatable," adds Audrey Wiggins of Triangle, Va., whose father has and grandmother died of Alzheimer's.

Increase in China auto output, sales topped 20 percent last year, industry report says

Chinese automobile production and sales climbed more than 20 percent last year, state media reported Sunday, showing continued robust growth in the world's second-largest auto market.

Production totaled 8.88 million vehicles in 2007, up 22.02 percent from the year before, the official Xinhua News Agency reported, citing the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers. Sales rose 21.84 percent to 8.79 million units, the report said.

Passenger sedans, not including sport utility vehicles and minivans, accounted for 53.76 percent of total sales, the report said.

China cruised past Japan in 2006 to snatch the title of the world's No. 2 auto market, with total sales of 7.2 million vehicles _ including trucks and buses _ and production of 7.3 million.

China's domestic passenger car sales continue to be dominated by foreign automakers, with market leader Volkswagen AG of Germany saying it sold 910,491 VW, Audi and Skoda brand cars in China last year, up 28 percent from 2006.

Volkswagen said its sales figures brought its total share of the market in China, including Hong Kong, to 18 percent.

The company has two joint ventures in China _ one with the state-owned China FAW Group, or FAW-Volkswagen Automobile Co., and one with SAIC Motor Corp., or Shanghai Volkswagen Automotive Co.

General Motors Corp., through its passenger car joint venture, Shanghai General Motors Corp., sold 479,427 vehicles in China in 2007, up 16.9 percent, the company said.

Chinese automakers such as Chery Automobile Co., Geely Group, and FAW Group Corp. have struggled to establish themselves against their better equipped foreign rivals and have begun turning to export markets for increased sales.

China exported 413,500 complete finished vehicles _ including cars, buses and trucks _ in the first 10 months of last year, up 64 percent over the same period of 2006, according to Commerce Ministry figures. The bulk of Chinese auto exports go to developing nations such as Russia, Iran and Kazakhstan.