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Ne felejtsd, hogy a canadai katonak Tim Hurtons nelkul csatazni sem hajlandok:confused: Tavaj lattam egy riportot ahol az afganisztanba meno katonaholgyek meg macis pokrocot is vittek . Mit varsz a civilektol? Egyebkent ha melozni voltak ott, talan a munkahely is tehett volna ertuk valamit. Most van vita , legalabb is itt, hogy a tax fizetok szamlajara fizessek e mentest, vagy mindenki sajat maga alja a koltsegeket. Te mit gondolsz?
 

Spanky

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Ne felejtsd, hogy a canadai katonak Tim Hurtons nelkul csatazni sem hajlandok:confused: Tavaj lattam egy riportot ahol az afganisztanba meno katonaholgyek meg macis pokrocot is vittek . Mit varsz a civilektol? Egyebkent ha melozni voltak ott, talan a munkahely is tehett volna ertuk valamit. Most van vita , legalabb is itt, hogy a tax fizetok szamlajara fizessek e mentest, vagy mindenki sajat maga alja a koltsegeket. Te mit gondolsz?

Nezd, az biztos hogy ezert az adofizetok fognak perkalni es talan??? ez igy is helyes, DE amikor valaki olyan hulye, hogy egy olyan helyre megy ahol a politikai helyzet nem eppen a legnyugalmasabbak koze tartozik a vilagon es utana szidja Kanadat, mert nem mentik ki otet onnan ahova sajat maga valasztasabol utazot, egy kicsit elkepeszto.
Szerintem oruljenek hogy luk van a segukon es lejmra viszahozak oket, akkor mikor tisztaba voltak vele, hogy hova mennek.

Neztem a hirekben, egy not aki 6 gyereket kuldott Lebanonba, nyari taborba. Nem vicc Gyurikam, NYARI TABORBA!!! :shock:
Most meg itt szapulja a kanadai kormanyt.
Az eszem megalt.

Szomoru iranyba haladunk, mikor a sajat hulyesegunkert nem valaljuk a feleloseget. Mindig kell egy bunbakot keresni ahelyet, hogy a tukorbe neznenek.

Na jo van, kiduhongtem maga. :mad:
Megyek a tengerpartra napoztatni a selyhajom.
Ott garantalom, hogy nem lessz beloves, habar ebben nem olyan biztos a parom. ;) :cici: :mrgreen:
 
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BEIRUT, Lebanon -- Israeli warplanes struck a minibus carrying people fleeing the fighting Sunday in southern Lebanon, killing three people, Lebanese security officials said, and two people were killed as about 90 Hezbollah rockets fell on northern Israel.
Syria, one of Hezbollah's main backers, said it will press for a cease-fire to end the fighting — but only in the framework of a broader Middle East peace initiative that would include the return of the Golan Heights. Israel was unlikely to accept such terms but the remarks were the first indication of Syria's willingness to be involved in international efforts to defuse the Lebanese crisis.
Israel said it would accept a NATO-led international force to keep the peace along the border.
The top U.N. humanitarian official, touring Beirut, said billions of dollars will be needed to repair damage from the 12-day offensive, which began July 12 when Hezbollah guerrillas captured two Israeli soldiers and killed three others in a cross-border raid.
A member of the U.N. observer team in south Lebanon was wounded by guerrilla fire and a Lebanese photographer became the first journalist to die in the fighting when an Israeli missile hit near her taxi in southern Lebanon.
Israeli troops continued to hold a Lebanese border village that they battled into on Saturday, but did not appear to be advancing, Lebanese security officials said. Its warplanes and artillery, meanwhile, battered areas across the south.
In talking about a cease-fire, Damascus warned that it will not stand by if the Israelis step up their offensive in Lebanon.
"Syria and Spain are working to achieve a cease-fire, a prisoners' swap and to start a peace process as one package," Syrian Information Minister Mohsen Bilal was quoted as saying by the Spanish daily newspaper ABC.
Bilal said Damascus would cooperate only within a broader peace initiative that would include a return of the Golan Heights, captured by Israel in 1967.
Asked about the comments from Syria, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations John Bolton said, "It's hard to see."
"Syria doesn't need dialogue to know what they need to do," Bolton told "Fox News Sunday." "They need to lean on Hezbollah to get them to release the two captured Israeli soldiers and stop the launch of rockets against innocent Israeli civilians.
Israeli Defense Minister Amir Peretz told the Cabinet that the current offensive is not an invasion of Lebanon, but rather a series of limited raids. He also said that Israel would accept a temporary international force, preferably headed by NATO, deployed along the Lebanese border to keep Hezbollah guerrillas away from Israel, according to officials in his office.
Asked about such an international force, Lebanese Prime Minister Fuad Saniora told CNN "it's very early to talk about this matter."
Israel hit the southern port of Sidon for the first time, destroying a religious complex linked to Hezbollah and wounding four people. More than 35,000 people streaming north from the heart of the war zone had swamped the city, which is teetering under the weight of refugees.
Israel also bombed a textile factory in the border town of al-Manara, killing one person and wounding two, Mayor Ali Rahal told The Associated Press.
The stricken minibus was carrying 16 people fleeing the village of Tairi, heading through the mountains for the southern port city of Tyre. A missile hit the bus near the village of Yaatar, killing three and wounding the rest, security officials said.
On Saturday, the Israeli military told residents to evacuate Taire and 12 other nearby villages.
An 8-year-old boy was killed in a strike on a village in the mountains above Tyre, and another missile hit a vehicle outside the Najem hospital, wounding eight, a hospital official said.
Hezbollah said three of its guerrillas were killed in fighting.
At least four other people were killed by strikes in the south, Lebanese TV said, but the deaths were not confirmed by security officials. About 45 people were wounded in Israeli air raids that targeted villages and towns around Tyre, security and hospital officials said.
The deaths brought to at least 380 the official death toll provided by Lebanese authorities. Israel's death toll stands at 36, with 17 people killed by Hezbollah rockets and 19 soldiers killed in fighting.
Saniora told CNN that one-third of the dead are under age 12.
A photographer working for a Lebanese magazine was killed when an Israeli missile exploded near her taxi, security officials said on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media. Layal Nejim, 23, worked for the Lebanese magazine Al-Jaras, the officials said. Her driver survived.
A U.N. observer was wounded by Hezbollah gunfire during fighting with Israeli troops in south Lebanon, said U.N. spokesman Milos Strugar. The Italian chiefs of staff office identified the wounded U.N. official as Italian Capt. Roberto Punzo, adding he was flown by helicopter to a hospital in Haifa and that his life was not in danger.
He was the second member of the U.N. monitoring team injured in the fighting.
Israeli warplanes and helicopters bombed Nabi Sheet, near the eastern Bekaa Valley town of Baalbek, wounding five people, witnesses said. Strikes in Baalbek leveled an agricultural compound belonging to Hezbollah and also targeted a factory producing prefabricated houses near the highway to Damascus, witnesses said.
Two civilians died in early morning air raids on border villages, witnesses said. A 15-year-old boy was killed at Meis al-Jabal, and a man was killed at Blida.
Hezbollah rockets badly damaged a house and slammed into a major road in Haifa, Israel's third-largest city, killing two people and wounding five. The militants' rockets wounded at least 13 others.
In all, about 90 Hezbollah rockets fell Sunday across northern Israel. A similar number has hit the region almost daily since the Israeli offensive began.
Peretz said the campaign would continue as Israel tries to push Hezbollah guerrillas away from the border.
"The army's ground operation in Lebanon is focused on limited entrances, and we are not talking about an invasion of Lebanon. We are beginning to see the army's successes opposite Hezbollah," he told the Cabinet, according to a participant.
Peretz also met with German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier, one of a series of diplomatic meetings aimed at ending the fighting. French Foreign Minister Philippe Douste-Blazy was also on the schedule, and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice was headed to the region as well.
"The goal is to create a situation in which we have as broad a space for diplomatic movement as possible," Peretz said after meeting Steinmeier. "The goals we set for ourselves will be achieved. We certainly see a combination of a military operation that is fulfilling its role plus broad international activity to complete the process."
In Iran, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Israel had "pushed the button of its own destruction" by attacking Iranian-backed Hezbollah guerrillas in Lebanon.
He didn't elaborate, but suggested Islamic nations and others could somehow isolate Israel and its main backers led by the United States.
U.N. humanitarian chief Jan Egeland, meanwhile, inspected the destruction from Israeli air raids on south Beirut and he stressed need for a halt to the hostilities.
"It's terrible, I see a lot of children wounded, homeless, suffering. This is a war where civilians pay a disproportionate price in Lebanon and northern Israel. I hadn't believed it would be block by block leveled to the ground," he said.
He said the "disproportionate response by Israel is a violation of international humanitarian law."
On Monday, the United Nations will make an international appeal for "more than $100 million" in aid for Lebanon, Egeland said.
Egeland also planned to travel to Israel to coordinate opening aid corridors. The number of displaced people has grown to 600,000, according to the World Health Organization.
Hours after he left, three heavy blasts were heard and smoke rose over the southern neighborhood of Dahiyah.
Some 35,000 refugees have swamped Sidon, which says it has yet to receive any aid shipments. The refugees were stretching already-tight supplies of fuel, food and medicines for Sidon's 100,000 people.
The Israeli military has said humanitarian aid could enter Lebanon through Beirut's port and determined a coastal route to Tripoli as a land corridor. But it did not define a safe passage route to the south — where the bombardment is heaviest.
Aid supplies arrived Friday and Saturday on ships carrying Europeans evacuees. The exodus of foreigners continues, with tens of thousands — including 7,500 Americans — taken out by sea the past week.

© The Associated Press 2006​
 
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Meagan Fitzpatrick, CanWest News Service

Published: Monday, July 24, 2006 Another 1,500 evacuees from Lebanon are to arrive in Canada today, according to the latest figures provided by Canadian government officials on Monday afternoon.

At least four planes, possibly five, are due to land at Montreal’s Pierre Trudeau Airport before the day’s end.
An additional 1,187 evacuees left Beirut today on ships headed for Cyprus and Turkey. That brings the total number of people that the government has helped flee the violence in Lebanon to just over 7,900. The vast majority of them are Canadian citizens, but approximately 20 per cent of them are not.
Embassy officials on the ground in Beirut are changing their approach and no longer contacting Canadians by phone who have registered because they have found many they have called over the past few days have already left. Instead, they are trying to spread the message that those Canadians who want to leave should go to the transit centre in Beirut by 9 a.m. on Tuesday. Those who do not make it by then will not be left behind, however, government officials reiterated that the evacuation effort will continue until everyone who wants to leave has made it out.
Canadians trapped in the southern part of the country, which has virtually been cut off because of the destruction wrought by bombs, are being told to go to the port of Tyre on Wednesday morning to board a ship chartered by the Canadian government. It is considered an "extremely dangerous" rescue operation according to the Canadian ambassador in Lebanon, Louis de Lorimier.
Government officials refused to put a pricetag on the massive evacuation effort to date, saying only that a close eye is being kept on the expenses but it’s too early to release any figures.
"We’re not in a position to say how much this is all going to cost because we’re not finished the operation yet," said one government official.
The government of Canada is footing the bill for getting trapped Canadians out by chartered ships and planes, and overtime and travel expenses for government staff traveling to and from the region will also be part of the final total.
Foreign Affairs Minister Peter MacKay visited the government operations centre in Ottawa on Monday for meetings and to talk to staff both at home and overseas. "I think he buoyed spirits and told everyone to work hard and keep up the good work," said a government official.
Fleeing the Fighting
Figures from Foreign Affairs concerning the evacuation effort in Lebanon:
Canadians removed yesterday: 2,488.
Canadian-chartered ships departing Beirut yesterday: Five, three bound for Cyprus, two for Turkey.
Canadians who have left since effort started: About 6,700.
Canadians returned to Canada to date: 2,500.
Canadians registered with embassy in Lebanon (as of July 19): 39,000.
Canadians believed in Lebanon when conflict began: Between 40,000 and 50,000.
Number of Canadians estimated to be stranded in the south, where fighting is heaviest: 2,000 to 3,000.
© CanWest News Service 2006​
 

Spanky

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Seattle Muslim shoots 6 at Jewish Centre

One of the women listed in satisfactory condition is 20 weeks pregnant and was shot in the arm.

Phuong Cat Le, Brad Wong and Amy Rolph, Seattle Post-Intelligencer; with files from Jonathan Fowlie, Chantal Eustace and Emily Chung.

Published: Saturday, July 29, 2006

SEATTLE -- Six people were shot -- one fatally -- Friday afternoon at the Jewish Federation of Greater Seattle by a man who told a witness he was upset about "what was going on in Israel."
Seattle police spokesman Rich Pruitt said there was one shooter, who was apprehended without incident outside the Jewish Federation building at Third Avenue and Virginia Street.
"We believe it's a lone individual acting out his antagonism," said David Gomez, who heads the FBI's counterterrorism efforts in Seattle.
Vancouver's Jewish community was "in a state of shock and disbelief" at the violence targeted at its sister community in Seattle, said Michael Elterman, chairman of the Canada-Israel Committee for the Pacific Region.
"I think we are going to become far more vigilant than we have been, realizing it has hit very close to home," Elterman said, adding that security around Jewish institutions in Vancouver will most certainly be beefed up.
U.S. authorities did not release any details about the alleged gunman and would not discuss possible motives.
"There's nothing to indicate that it's terrorism-related," Gomez said. "But we're monitoring the entire situation."
The gunman forced his way through the security door at the federation after an employee had punched in her security code, Marla Meislin-Dietrich, a database coordinator for the center, told The Associated Press. "He said 'I am a Muslim American, angry at Israel,' before opening fire on everyone," Meislin-Dietrich said. "He was randomly shooting at everyone."
The Jewish Federation of Greater Seattle is a fund raising and fund allocation organization.
"Seattle Fire Department spokeswoman Helen Fitzpatrick confirmed one person had died.
Harborview Medical Center spokeswoman Pamela Steele said five victims were taken to her facility, all women ranging in age from their 20s to 40s. Each suffered gunshot wounds to the abdomen, knee, groin or arm. Three were in critical condition and still in the operating room at press time Friday. Two were in satisfactory condition.
One of the women listed in satisfactory condition is 20 weeks pregnant and was shot in the arm. Doctors believe she will be okay.
Elterman said while the level of violence in Seattle was unusual, Jewish institutions around the world have been on alert since the recent conflict between Hezbollah and Israel began. "We do see an increase in threats and in nasty phone calls whenever Israel is at war," he said.
But threats are not going to stop a rally in support of Israel from going ahead in Vancouver on Monday, said Adam Carroll, Director, Pacific Region Canada-Israel Committee.
"We can't be terrorized or intimidated. We're going to be sowing our solidarity and support with Israel and that's not going to change," he said.
Mira Oreck, acting regional director of the Canadian Jewish Congress, Pacific region, said the kind of violence seen in Seattle came without warning. "We are extremely saddened and frankly outraged by the event," she said.
U.S. authorities received a 911 call at 4:03 p.m. with reports of shots fired at the Jewish Federation and a possible hostage situation, Assistant Seattle Police Chief Nick Metz said at an early evening news conference.
 

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Walmart Leaves Germany: Blame Smiles, Love or Plastic Bags

A világ legnagyobb szupermarketlánca a Wal-Mart egyszerûen megbukott a legnagyobb európai piacon, ahol 1997 óta próbálkozott. A 95 áruházból a hajrára már csak 85 maradt, azt meg megette a Metro.

Walmart Leaves Germany: Blame Smiles, Love or Plastic Bags

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Regardless of whether you are a Walmart basher or activating optimistically for Walmart leadership in environmental and sustainable philosophy, the news on Friday in Germany is of interest: Walmart has ended its long battle to survive in Germany's $370 billion retail market. So did the Germans' preference for shops run by local businessmen and stocked with organically grown food kill Walmart? Nice angle for TreeHuggers, but the fact is: probably not.

Competitors, like the low-cost chains Aldi and Lidl, continue to grow and succeed in Germany. In fact, the competition from a surge of low-cost chains is attributed with keeping average food costs as much as 40% lower in Germany than in France or Great Britain. Walmart entered the German market in 1997, at the outset of the upswing in discount retailers, taking over 95 stores and initiating a price war. Since then, that number has dropped to 85 stores which will now be taken over by a mega-competitor (Metro) happy to grab the supercenters at a discount price. So what is behind Walmart's struggle in Germany?

The main factor being cited by many analysts is the cultural philosophy. Walmart tried to relocate the American model: service with a smile from the bag-packer at the end of the band, employees chanting W-A-L-M-A-R-T to raise morale and an ethics code which included banning sexual relations between employees. The latter was overturned about a year ago by the German courts, which supported the German custom by which man and wife can often be found across the hall from each other in the same firm after romance blossomed in the workplace. And clerks ordered by supervisors to smile at customers are reported to have discovered their smiles often interpreted as invitations to unwanted social interaction in a country where smiles are exchanged between friends, but not between strangers. And raising morale? Well, in Germany that is the job of the works' council, a group of employees quite akin to a union, which ensures employee concerns are represented during management meetings on the one hand, and organizes employee activities such as the company soccer competition or discounted access to mind and body classes.
Where does this leave practical TreeHuggers looking for lessons in environmental sustainability which Walmart might take away from this experience? First, Germans do tend to shop frequently and locally. Although more and more often, local might mean the discount market chain rather than the friendly neighborhood grocer, the fact remains that Germans did not drive the extra miles to save a few euro cents. Second, Germans prefer to bag groceries themselves into reusable carriers, or at least to pay a small fee for the avoidable sin of needing a plastic bag. These are cultural misunderstandings as well, but one could say the cultural philosophy of Walmart could not survive in the context of a German culture with a Happy Planet Index significantly higher than America's.

But that is the "public interest" story. It remains a cold hard fact of the discount retailing world that critical mass was never reached. Blame the German building code, as some analyst do, which significantly reduces Walmart's ability to expand quickly. Blame the takeover of existing stores which were scattered and not particularly well located, in contrast with competition which has sprung up on every corner (Aldi has 550 retail locations competing with Walmart's stores). In the face of the analysis that will surely issue from the respected business commentors, it will be hard to draw conclusions that Walmart's exit from Germany is due to rejection of globalization, unsustainable business culture, or even disinclination towards buying American goods. Okay. But we hope that if Walmart regroups to return to the German market, they will do it with a message of sustainability leadership that German TreeHuggers will be happy to hear.
 
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Matthew Fisher, CanWest News Service


BEIRUT, Lebanon -- The long-awaited first substantive diplomatic moves Saturday in New York to end the Israel-Hezbollah conflict have not managed to slow the ferocious pace of combat between the belligerents.
After a bloody early morning raid on the southern port city of Tyre by Israeli naval commandos, attacking what was later described as a Hezbollah headquarters, Israel warned everyone in Lebanon's third largest city, Sidon, to evacuate immediately or risk being trapped in the fighting to come.
Despite renewed claims from Israeli commanders Saturday that it had seriously degraded Hezbollah's ability to launch rockets, it fired about 170 missiles at northern Israel, including 130 during a 60-minute span. Three Palestinians known as Israeli Arabs died when one of the rockets struck the village of Arab al-Aramshe. More than 50 Israelis were wounded by the rocket barrage.
An Israeli combat engineer was also killed by a Hezbollah mortar in fighting just inside Lebanon.
The Israeli threat to bomb Sidon, which is on the Mediterranean Sea about 40 kilometres north of Tyre, was delivered in Arabic-language pamphlets that were dropped by aircraft. The warning came as a surprise to most Lebanese. A mainly Sunni city of 100,000 now crammed with tens of thousands of Shia civilians displaced by the fighting further south, it has largely escaped the attention of Israeli warplanes and was not thought to be a launching site for Hezbollah rockets or harbouring Hezbollah operatives.
The 75-minute commando raid by the Israeli equivalent of U.S. Navy Seals began with Israeli warplanes pummeling multiple targets in Tyre as an apparent diversionary tactic. As this happened, the commandos were inserted by helicopter into a citrus grove near the sea.
From there they raced on foot to an apartment building where they engaged in a prolonged, close range gun battle with a Hezbollah cell at the entrance and on the second floor that left several pools of blood and thousands of spent shell casings.
The commandos exited under the protective fire of attack helicopters which destroyed a Lebanese army armoured personnel carrier and an anti-aircraft gun that had been firing at them.
An eyewitness told AP that the Israelis wore beards similar to those that almost every Hezbollah fighter sports.
An Israeli general promised that more such raids would be carried out in the next few days of a war that is now in its 26th day.
Israel claimed to have killed at least seven Hezbollah gunmen during the raid, which it called a success because it eliminated what had been a key command centre for launching rockets. Two sailors had been seriously wounded in the attack.
The operation had been conducted using commandos rather than bombs and missiles fired from aircraft to avoid harming families that lived on other floors of the building, the Israeli media was told at a briefing.
The Hezbollah version of the battle was that the Israelis had been repulsed and that an Israeli had died in the gunfight. Lebanon said a civilian and one of its soldiers, who apparently joined the fight on Hezbollah's side for the first time, had been killed. Two other Lebanese civilians were also reportedly killed Saturday by Israel gunfire elsewhere in Tyre.
 
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Meagan Fitzpatrick, CanWest News Service

Published: Friday, August 11, 2006
OTTAWA - Delays at Canada’s airports are down to a minimum today despite the strict security measures implemented yesterday that banned all liquids and gels from carry-on luggage.
That’s according to Jacques Duchesneau, CEO of the Canadian Air Transport Security Authority, who said passengers are only waiting an added 10 to 15 minutes to go through security screening points, and there are no flight delays, he said at a news conference.
“So far, so good,” Duchesneau said of how operations are running today. Extra staff were brought in and lots of signage was put up at airports to remind travelers of the new regulations, he said.
“These measures are in place to stay, for now,” said Duchesenau when asked how long liquids and gels would be prohibited in carry-on luggage. Those wondering if electronics such as laptops and iPods will be banned in the future can rest easy for the time being.
They are still allowed in carry-on luggage but Duchesneau would prefer if people packed them in their checked baggage to help speed up security checks.
People need not worry about letting their valuable electronic equipment out of their sight he said, because airport employees have been thoroughly scrutinized. They have undergone background checks and Canada is also in the process of implementing a biometric screening system for the 150,000 airport employees across the country.
He explained that CATSA, the government agency in charge of aviation security, tries to find the “proper balance” between passenger security and passenger convenience.
“We’re not in the business of annoying passengers. On the contrary, we want to make it easy for them to board the plane but we cannot dodge the responsibility that we have which is the security of passengers,” said Duchesneau.
He defended Canada’s response to the alleged terror plot uncovered in Britain yesterday and denied the suggestion that Canada is being re-active instead of pro-active. He said Canada is constantly assessing security threats and adapting security measures accordingly. He added that there is currently no direct threat to people boarding planes in Canada.
“We need to make sure that we go with the flow of information that we have and we take the right measures,” he said. “Now there’s a new group of people in the UK using liquid as a weapon of choice so Canada, the US, had to adapt to that situation and that’s why the measures were put in place yesterday,” he said.
He advised Canadians traveling in the next few days to pack light and only bring on board what they need such as their wallet and passport. “Try to put everything in the checked baggage. That would make it much easier for them, much easier for us and for all the traveling public,” he said.
For a full list of what is allowed and what is banned from carry-on luggage travellers can check www.tc.gc.ca
 
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Jocelyn Gecker, The Associated Press

Published: Thursday, August 17, 2006
BANGKOK, Thailand -- From inside his dingy hotel, the suspect in the killing of JonBenet Ramsey told The Associated Press in an exclusive interview Thursday he loved the six-year-old and is “very sorry for what happened” in the basement of her Colorado home nearly a decade ago.

John Mark Karr, a 41-year-old teacher arrested Wednesday, was escorted back to his hotel room Thursday to collect his belongings. Dressed in a baggy turquoise polo shirt and khaki trousers, he appeared ashen and stuttered occasionally as he spoke in a quiet voice.
“It’s very important for me that everyone knows that I love her very much and that her death was unintentional and that it was an accident,” said Karr, a clean-cut, slight man with steely blue eyes and brown hair.
Earlier in the day, Karr spoke briefly with reporters after a news conference by U.S. and Thai authorities that was mobbed by media, some of whom had camped out since sunrise waiting for him to emerge from Bangkok’s Immigration Detention Centre.
“I was with JonBenet when she died,” he told reporters.
Asked if he was innocent, he said: “No.”
He declined to disclose the nature of his supposed relationship to the Ramsey family, or how he may have known JonBenet.
Asked to recount the details of how JonBenet died, Karr told the AP: “It would take several hours to describe - to describe that,” he said haltingly.
“There’s no way I could be brief about it. It’s a very involved series of events,” said Karr, who speaks with a thick Southern accent.
“It’s very painful for me to talk about.”
JonBenet’s body was found beaten and strangled in the basement of her family’s home the day after Christmas 1996 - a gruesome murder that became one of the highest-profile unsolved mysteries in the United States.
Karr will be taken within the week to Colorado, where he will face charges of first-degree murder, kidnapping and child sexual assault, said Ann Hurst of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, one of several officials who accompanied the suspect to his hotel.
No evidence against Karr has been made public beyond his own admission. U.S. and Thai officials did not directly answer a question at the news conference about whether there was DNA evidence linking him to the crime.
Karr said he had written letters to JonBenet’s mother, Patsy, before she died of cancer in June to express his remorse and it was his understanding that she had read them.
One of the officers who cleaned out Karr’s room said he appeared to be an avid writer and had several CDs on which he had saved his writings that were done on a computer.
The Blooms hotel, in a neighbourhood filled with seedy massage parlours, rents rooms for as short a time as three hours and offers longer-term stays starting at the equivalent of $190 Cdn a month. Karr was staying on the top floor of the nine-storey hotel in a small single room.
U.S. and Thai police moved into rooms down the hall from Karr about 10 days before the arrest to survey Karr’s movements and await the arrival of a U.S. arrest warrant, said Thai police official Lt.-Gen. Suwat Tumrongsiskul.
As Karr was bundled into a police vehicle, he said JonBenet’s death was “not what it seems to be,” though he declined to elaborate.
“In every way,” he added.
“It’s not at all what it seems to be.”
© The Associated Press​
 
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Sixth Canadian arrested in alleged Tamil terror plot


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Adrian Humphreys, CanWest News TORONTO - Two more men have been arrested in Canada as part of a widening U.S. anti-terrorism probe against the Tamil Tigers, including another with apparent links to the University of Waterloo's engineering program.

The arrests bring to six the number of Canadians of Tamil descent in custody in the probe.
Ramanan Mylvaganam, 29, of Waterloo, Ont was quietly arrested on Tuesday at dinner time and made a secret appearance in a Brampton courtroom Wednesday morning.
Piratheepan Nadarajah, 30, was arrested Wednesday night and is to appear in court this morning.
Three men - Sathajhan Sarachandran, Sahilal Sabaratnam, and Thiruthanikan Thanigasalam - were arrested in New York after a meeting to buy anti-aircraft missiles, machine guns and other military weapons, the FBI says in court documents.
A fourth man tried to attend the meeting to buy the missiles and other military gear but was stopped at the border crossing to Buffalo, the FBI says.
Nadarajah, who has not been publicly named by U.S. authorities, is believed to be the suspect who accompanied the men on their trip to New York but was unable to enter the United States. Officials were unable to confirm that Wednesday night.
''There is a fourth person who was part of the missile deal who was turned away at the border,'' said Steve Siegal, a spokesman for the FBI. ''All of the accused seem to be extremely well educated - doctors, engineers, people with advanced degrees. If they would have spent their time and energy for the good of mankind instead of the other, they would have been very successful,'' he said.
A man with the name Ramanan Mylvaganam is listed as a former engineering student and executive of the Tamil Student Association at the University of Waterloo. It could not be confirmed last night that this is the same person arrested on Tuesday evening.
Mylvaganam allegedly worked with Suresh Sriskandarajah, 26, who graduated with an electrical engineering degree in June from the respected Waterloo university, to purchase submarine and warship design software from a company in Britain and night-vision equipment from a firm in British Columbia, the National Post has learned.
Sriskandarajah was arrested near Toronto Monday at the urgent request of the U.S. government.
Sworn complaints by an FBI agent outlining the alleged role of Mylvaganam remain sealed in a New York court. Sources say, however, he is the unnamed man who is accused of using his status as an engineering student to divert suspicion from their purchases that were destined to aid in the Tamil Tigers' violent struggle for an independent homeland.
Documents filed in a U.S. court say Sriskandarajah, who is identified as going by the nickname ''Waterloo Suresh'' and a co-accused tried to deceive the B.C. firm by claiming the equipment was for ''a fourth-year design project project we are doing at our university.''
Prosecutors in New York want both men extradited to the U.S. to face charges of providing material support to a foreign terrorist organization.
 
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Adrian Humphreys, CanWest News Service

Published: Friday, August 25, 2006
TORONTO - Money to bribe a U.S. official - traced during an international anti-terrorism probe aimed at the Tamil Tigers - came from Montreal, the FBI said Thursday.
And two of the men arrested in the bribery case are former Montreal residents, adding more Canadian connections to a widening probe that has seen six other men from Canada arrested on charges of aiding a foreign terrorist organization, including money laundering, smuggling equipment and people, and trying to purchase anti-aircraft missiles, machine-guns and other military equipment.
Tens of thousands of dollars from Montreal were earmarked as a bribe for a U.S. federal agent who was posing as a corrupt immigration officer, pretending to allow Tamils to illegally enter the United States, the Federal Bureau of Investigation alleged in a sworn criminal complaint filed in a New York court.
The money's path was tracked as part of a large sting operation mounted by the FBI against alleged operatives of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), commonly called the Tamil Tigers, an organization banned as a terrorist group on both sides of the border.
So far a total of 14 people have been taken into custody in the joint FBI-RCMP probe.
First, three Canadians of Tamil descent were accused in New York City on the weekend of trying to buy military hardware after driving across the Canada-U.S. border to meet with a man they believed was a black-market arms dealer, but who was a federal agent, and a Tamil man, who co-operated with U.S. authorities in their probe.
Three other Canadian residents were arrested this week by the RCMP in Ontario, including an engineering graduate from the University of Waterloo who is accused of arranging student couriers to smuggle equipment into Sri Lanka to further the Tamil Tiger's cause.
A third set of criminal complaints unsealed in a New York court, against three people arrested in Buffalo as part of the FBI's probe, now reveal further Canadian links.
Thileepan Patpanathan and his brother, Sujeepan Patpanathan, moved to Buffalo from Montreal about six months ago, said Rodney O. Personius, a Buffalo lawyer who represented one of the men in court.
They lived in Montreal for about three years, he said.
The Patpanathan brothers are charged along with Logeswaran Krishnamoorthy of knowingly conspiring to bribe a public official to illegally bring other people from Sri Lanka. They were caught in a sting operation using the same Tamil informant.
An agent was introduced to co-conspirators as an officer with the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service who, for a fee, could help smuggle foreigners into the U.S. The man was, in fact, a federal agent and the meetings were recorded, the FBI said.
An offer of $6,000 US per person smuggled was offered, authorities alleged.
The Patpanathan brothers were among the immigrants smuggled into the country, the FBI said. They then allegedly worked with the undercover agent to arrange for others to join them.
When the Patpanathan brothers were facing deportation, a further bribe of $3,000 US was offered to the agent to intervene, according to the FBI.
 
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Jan Ravensbergen and Marissa Larouche-Smart, Montreal Gazette
Published: Tuesday, August 29, 2006 Two of the five people killed in Monday night’s Greyhound bus crash in upstate New York were from Montreal, New York State police confirmed Tuesday.

More than 30 other people were injured in the accident, some seriously.

One of the dead Montrealers was Souleymane Tambadou, 16, of the Ahuntsic district and the second a 34-year-old man, police said. A third victim, a 69-year-old woman, was also from Canada. The latter two’s identities haven’t been disclosed.

The remaining two dead, one of whom was the driver, were New York State residents.

The bus was travelling from New York City to Montreal when it crashed through a guard rail on Interstate 87 and landed upside down after rolling over several times. New York State police said tire failure is a likely cause of the bus crash.

"We are listing tire failure as a possible contributing factor to this accident," said Maj. Richard Smith of the state police department. "There is no indication ... in any way that that bus was exceeding the speed limit," he added.

Road conditions were dry at the time of the crash. Some passengers said they heard a pop that could have been a tire blowing before the bus swerved out of control and flipped over. One report indicated a transport truck was trying to pass the bus and another tractor-trailer when the accident took place. Authorities continue their investigation.

The Montreal-bound bus was reported by Greyhound official Kim Plaskett to have been carrying 52 passengers.

On Tuesday afternoon, a neighbour of the Tambadou family, who did want to be named, said the family is from Senegal.

"The father is in real estate, in Senegal, I think he travels back and forth quite a bit. The mother came here with the children so they can go to school," she said.

Souleymane was apparently the middle child with two younger brothers and an elder brother and sister.

"They are a very nice family. It’s very, very sad," she said when she learned the news.

She recalls the mother being sad for her when her dog died.

"She liked my German Sheppard because it would guard her house, too," she said.

Late Tuesday, one passenger remained in critical condition in an upstate New York hospital, Chris Blake of Champlain Valley Physicians Medical Center said.

Another three also admitted at Champlain Valley are classified in serious condition, she added.

Blake said she couldn’t disclose their precise injuries. "We saw 37 patients" at the Plattsburgh, N.Y., centre, she said. They were brought in last night beginning "between 9:30 and 10," following the 6:45 p.m. accident, she added.

In total, she said, "there were 20 patients treated and released" at the centre.

Three passengers were taken from the Plattsburgh centre to the Montreal General Hospital.

Jean-Marc Troquet, trauma team leader at the Montreal General Hospital, said five passengers have been transferred to MGH since the crash.

Troquet said the hospital was cooperating with police and could not reveal identities or details on their injuries as long as family members had not been notified.

Two people arrived Monday night and both are in critical condition and remain in intensive care.

Early Tuesday morning, two others arrived and they’re in stable condition, he said. The fifth patient arrived Tuesday afternoon.

The transfers were made because of the hospital’s trauma unit and team of specialists, he said. It did not suggest that patients were Canadian.

"We accept all transfers," Torquet noted. "If you overload a hospital, even with small injuries, it becomes dysfunctional."

All patients were transported by U.S. ambulance from the Champlain Valley Physicians Hospital in Plattsburgh, Troquet said.

Other victims of the crash were sent from the Plattsburgh centre to Fletcher Allen Health Care in Burlington, Vt., another hospital and medical centre, Blake said.

Fletcher Allen official Wanda Keosian said Tuesday that her hospital had received a total of five passengers injured in the crash.

"We have conditions on two and three are being evaluated," she said. Citing hospital policy, Keosian would not disclose the medical status of the two whose conditions have already been categorized.

The patient in critical condition at the Champlain Valley centre is a woman. Blake declined to provide her name or the names of other patients, citing hospital policy.

Generally, she said, injuries treated included "bumps, bruises, spinal issues, neck issues."

In addition to the four passengers admitted to Champlain Valley, a further seven were "still being evaluated in Emergency," Blake said, adding that "two will probably have to be admitted."

The centre brought in "between 50 and 75" extra staff – including physicians, nurses, respiratory therapists, X-ray technicians and others – to cope with the crisis, she said.

It holds disaster-preparedness scenarios "at least once a year." When word of the crash came in, "it was all hands on deck," she said. "Preliminary reports are that it went really well," she added.

A formal review will take place later, Blake said: "We always find ways for improvements."

A dozen translators – for French- and Spanish-speaking passengers – were also brought in, Blake said.

The bus left New York City at 1 p.m. Monday, with stops in Albany and Saratoga Springs.
 
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Australia's 'Crocodile Hunter' killed



Brian Cassey, Associated Press

Published: Monday, September 04, 2006 CAIRNS, Australia -- Steve Irwin, the ebullient Australian TV personality and conservationist known as the Crocodile Hunter, was killed Monday by a stingray barb to the heart during a diving expedition, police and his wildlife park said.

Irwin, 44, was filming an underwater sequence for a television series on remote Batt Reef off the far northeast coast of Australia when he encountered the ray and was stung about 11 a.m., Australia Zoo, Irwin's park, said in a statement.
Crew members aboard Irwin's boat, Croc One, called emergency services in the nearest city, Cairns, and administered cardio pulmonary resuscitation techniques as they rushed the boat to nearby Low Isle to meet a rescue helicopter.
Medical staff pronounced Irwin dead at about midday, the statement said.
"The world has lost a great wildlife icon, a passionate conservationist and one of the proudest dads on the planet," John Stainton, Irwin's friend and producer who was on board Croc One said in the statement.
"He died doing what he loves best and left this world in a happy and peaceful state of mind," he said. "Crocs Rule!"
Queensland state police said Irwin's family - which includes U.S.-born wife Terri - had been notified of his death.
Irwin is famous for his enthusiasm for wildlife and his catchcry "Crikey!" in his television program, Crocodile Hunter, which was first broadcast in Australia in 1992 before it was picked up by the Discovery channel, catapulting him to international celebrity.
Irwin, who made a trademark of hovering dangerously close to untethered crocodiles, often leaping on their backs, talked mile-a-minute in a thick Australian drawl and was almost never seen without his uniform of khaki shorts and shirt and heavy boots.
His ebullience was infectious and Australian officials sought him out for photo opportunities and to promote Australia internationally. Irwin was among guests hand-picked by Prime Minister John Howard to attend a barbecue to honour U.S. President George W. Bush when he visited Canberra, the national capital, in 2003.
The public image was dented in 2004 when Irwin triggered an uproar by holding his baby in one arm while feeding large crocodiles inside a zoo pen. Irwin claimed at the time there was no danger to his son, and authorities declined to charge Irwin with violating safety regulations.
Later that year, he was accused of getting too close to penguins, a seal and humpback whales in Antarctica while making a documentary. Irwin denied any wrongdoing, and an Australian Environment Department investigation recommended no action be taken against him.
He is survived by his wife, from Eugene, Ore., who was Terri Raines before they married in 1992, their daughter Bindi Sue, 8, and son Bob, who will turn 3 in December.
Foreign Minister Alexander Downer, who used a photograph of his family at Australia Zoo for his official Christmas card last year, hailed Irwin for his work in promoting Australia through projects such as the "G'Day LA" tourism and trade promotion in Los Angeles in January.
"The minister knew him, was fond of him and was very, very appreciative of all the work he'd done to promote Australia overseas," Downer's spokesman Tony Parkinson said.
&copy; Associated Press 2006​
 

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Budapest Is Stealing Prague’s Spotlight

<a href="http://travel2.nytimes.com/2006/09/03/travel/03journey.html?pagewanted=1">From New York Times</a> <h1>Budapest Is Stealing Some of Prague’s Spotlight </h1><div>By RICK LYMAN</div><div id="articleBody"> <p> <img src="http://graphics10.nytimes.com/images/2006/09/03/travel/03journeys_budapest_600.jpg" width="600" height="300"></p> <p>ONLY the barest of murmurs greeted the arrival at the bustling Café Vian of a dozen or so kilt-clad Scots in their late teens and early 20’s and what looked to be their middle-age coach, also in tartan. They ordered a round of vodka shots and erupted in Highland cheers, drawing worried glances from patrons hovering over sweet multicolored cocktails at nearby tables. </p> <p>Finally, the Scots’ skinny young waiter valiantly ordered them to keep it down. “This is not a soccer bar,” he told them.</p> <p> Cultures have been clashing in Budapest for a good many centuries, and usually not to Hungary’s benefit. But through several waves of occupation, tyranny and heroic revolt, it has become one of the few places on earth that have learned the trick of transforming that clash into music. </p> <p> A spectacularly beautiful and subversively lively old royal capital, Budapest has in the last decade or so languished in the shadow of <a href="http://travel2.nytimes.com/top/features/travel/destinations/europe/czechrepublic/prague/?inline=nyt-geo" title="Go to the Prague Travel Guide.">Prague</a>, which emerged more quickly as a tourist destination after the Communist era. Even Arthur Phillips’s best-selling 2002 novel, “Prague,” was actually about expatriates in Budapest dreaming of the higher life across the Czech frontier. </p> <p>But now the foreign investment that only trickled into Budapest in the 1980’s has become a gusher, spilling new and ostentatious hotels, boutiques for luxury brands like Salvatore Ferragamo and Louis Vuitton, teeming pedestrian-only nightlife districts and smoky bars full of satirical and world-weary graffiti. Budapest seems ready to claim the light.</p> <p> <img src="http://graphics10.nytimes.com/images/2006/09/03/travel/03journeys_budapest2_190.jpg" width="190" height="193" hspace="10" align="left">For more than a decade — since work-related happenstance led me there — Budapest has been one of my favorite places in <a href="http://travel2.nytimes.com/top/features/travel/destinations/europe/?inline=nyt-geo" title="Go to the Europe Travel Guide.">Europe</a>. When I first came to know it, the city was still fresh from the Soviet collapse, an eager place full of downtrodden buildings, dingy marketplaces, makeshift nightclubs, gypsy violinists and restaurant after restaurant serving goulash and little else. In Buda, the once aristocratic old capital on the west side, bicycles navigated near-desolate cobbled medieval lanes. Russian caviar and Hungarian foie gras could be had for a song. </p> <p> When a local paper advertised the arrival of a six-month-old Hollywood movie (“Sneakers,” with Robert Redford), I took a rickety trolley to the foot of the Buda Hills and found an old garage with a white sheet hung from the cinderblock wall and a few dozen happy families seated on wooden benches, unpacking dinner. The projector made an awful racket. Everyone had a wonderful time, eating and laughing, and I walked back to my Danube hotel alone through dark Buda streets.</p> <p> When I went back this summer, I found a city very much changed, and not just because the movies are in multiplexes. </p> <p>Budapest, with a population of more than 1.7 million, still has bedraggled and struggling outer districts. But Nagyvasarcsarnok, the Central Market Hall in Pest, is a bright, dynamic place full of paprika, aromatic food stalls and sweet Tokaji wine. Sidewalk cafes are alive with thrift-shop fashionistas, canoodling couples and joyful chatter in a dozen languages. In Buda, tourist buses cluster like seagulls at Castle Hill, discharging sightseers from all over the world. </p> <p> Yes, goulash — that old soupy peasant staple of beef stewed with vegetables and paprika — is still on pretty much every menu, but I also found the world’s cuisines on offer. Where $5 once bought a brick of foie gras big enough to gorge four adults, a few bites in a small appetizer serving now run around triple that.</p> <p> A collision of forces is transforming Budapest into one of the continent’s liveliest, prettiest and most animated capitals. Attractive prices, especially for housing, have set off a mini-invasion of foreigners setting up second homes in the stylish 19th-century apartment blocks of central Pest. Retail chains from around the world have followed, along with the hoteliers and commercial developers. </p> <p>The rush of foreign capital and the rising standard of living for Budapesters lucky enough to catch the wave has helped the city resuscitate many lavish buildings that had fallen into ruin, from the spectacular Secessionist-style Gresham Palace — now a Four Seasons Hotel — to lesser-known gems like the Egyetemi Konyvtar (University Library), a pale yellow confection of wedding-cake swirls, and the stately mirror-image Klotild-Palotak buildings, whose imposing Baroque towers rise like sentries at the foot of the Elizabeth Bridge. </p> <p>“Ten years ago, you’d come to Budapest and it was cheap and a little rough and everything was in cash,” said Colin Burns, who was visiting the city for the fourth time with his Welsh choir group. “Now it’s all cutting edge and credit cards and trendy restaurants. There’s better Italian food here than back in <a href="http://travel2.nytimes.com/top/features/travel/destinations/europe/unitedkingdom/wales/?inline=nyt-geo" title="Go to the Wales Travel Guide.">Wales</a>.” </p> <p>There have been missteps. The New York Cafe, long a center of Hungarian intellectual life, was a smoky, murmuring and impossibly grand space where patrons seemed to have stepped from an Eric Ambler thriller. It has become a gaudy patisserie attached to a swank hotel. The huge and hugely popular Westend Center shopping mall is a flavorless glass-and-steel arc of shops wrapping around the back side of Gustav Eiffel’s soaring Nyugati train station. </p> <p> Yet odd, distinct elements speak to the atmosphere of dynamic upheaval. An underground market of cheap clothes and bad CD’s blends seamlessly into the mall above it, asserting an older, Oriental culture that refuses to be drowned entirely by American-style blandness. Big, clanging storefront casinos sit comfortably beside the boutiques and bookstores.</p> <p><img src="http://graphics10.nytimes.com/images/2006/09/01/travel/0903-tra-webBUDAPESTmap.gif" width="190" height="187" hspace="10" align="left">A member of the <a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/e/european_union/index.html?inline=nyt-org" title="More articles about the European Union.">European Union</a> since 2004, Hungary still uses its old currency, the forint, and only its most optimistic economists hope for a conversion to the euro as soon as 2010. Budget deficits are swollen after years of overspending by Hungary’s Socialist government, which was re-elected in April. </p> <p>At the same time, wages are up and the standard of living has noticeably improved, at least for some. Those new luxury boutiques and elegant cafes are not just for foreigners. </p> <p>MY wife, Barbara, and I divided this trip in half: two nights in Buda, with its domed Habsburg palaces and crenellated fortifications stretching along craggy hilltops west of the Danube, and two in Pest, the more populous 19th-century commercial city of grand boulevards on the flats east of the river. </p> <p>Tourism is on the rise in Hungary, up nearly 7 percent in 2005 over 2004, according to the Hungarian Tourist Office. Yet escaping the crowds is still quite easy. </p> <p>In Buda, while tourists concentrated on Castle Hill, we found everyday life in the sprawling shopping mall and food market near Moscow Square. Perfectly coiffed mothers in blue jeans pushed baby strollers through narrow aisles of peppers and cabbages while older, weary workmen in gray shirts and kerchiefs sipped tumblers of blood-red wine from nearby lunch counters. </p> <p>An elderly woman pushing a metal cart paused to scream at a young couple who had parked their Mercedes convertible illegally. They smiled at her impassively and strode away. </p> <p>Even on Castle Hill, the crowds thin once you get away from Matthias Church, with its architectural elements from the 16th century, when it was a mosque; the 17th, when it grew a Baroque facade; and the 19th, when Gothic design celebrated Habsburg supremacy. </p> <p>A decade ago, I had a memorable meal at the foot of Castle Hill, with strolling gypsy violinists pouring out the Brahms at a place called Kacsa Vendeglo that looked as if it hadn’t changed its menu or decorations since the Great War. On this visit, we found a fresh violinist, still playing Brahms though he had added some <a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/j/billy_joel/index.html?inline=nyt-per" title="More articles about Billy Joel.">Billy Joel</a> and had his CD’s for sale. </p> <p><img src="http://graphics10.nytimes.com/images/2006/09/03/travel/03journeys_budapest3_190.jpg" width="190" height="284" hspace="10" vspace="0" align="left">The tablecloths were white and the menu was still an old-fashioned ramble through Hungary’s familiar dishes, emphasizing duck (kacsa in Hungarian) in a blizzard of forms. The place is decidedly out of step with Budapest’s cutting edge, which leans toward fusion at places with names like Baraka, Kepiro and Voro es Feher Borbar (Red and White Wine Bar). Across the river in Pest, a central pedestrian strip called Vaci utca contained the most wandering foreigners, who were weaving among buskers and trying to remember where their tour buses were parked.</p> <p> Two semicircular boulevards, the Inner Ring and the Outer Ring, end at Danube bridges and define the heart of Pest. Local residents can be found by day in American-style malls along the Outer Ring or in one of the new pedestrian-only shopping areas, echoes of Vaci utca, that are now sprinkled around the city and serve as centers of its street life. One of the biggest, Raday utca, a little east of the Central Market Hall, is five blocks of sidewalk tables, multiethnic restaurants and music-pulsing bars.</p> <p>“We came up from <a href="http://travel2.nytimes.com/top/features/travel/destinations/europe/austria/vienna/?inline=nyt-geo" title="Go to the Vienna Travel Guide.">Vienna</a> by boat and just wandered around all day and just found our way here,” said Carlos Hererra, who runs a design store near <a href="http://travel2.nytimes.com/top/features/travel/destinations/unitedstates/california/losangeles/?inline=nyt-geo" title="Go to the Los Angeles Travel Guide.">Los Angeles</a> and was sipping a tall glass of wheat beer one day at a Raday utca cafe. “Just sitting here for an hour, I’ve heard more foreign languages than I heard in three days in <a href="http://travel2.nytimes.com/top/features/travel/destinations/europe/austria/?inline=nyt-geo" title="Go to the Austria Travel Guide.">Austria</a> or that I ever hear back in Orange County.”</p> <p> Tourists and locals mingle in the Great Market Hall, where shoppers should be prepared to prowl. The price of a 400-gram tin of foie gras ranged from $37 to $45, depending on the stall. On the market’s second level are a series of inexpensive minicafes offering German beer, Hungarian wine and all sorts of sausages, pies, sandwiches and paprika stews.</p> <p> On my early visits to Budapest, I often came across other visitors who had just arrived from Prague or were about to go there. This time, most tourists we met were visiting only Budapest or had arrived from Vienna on one of the Danube cruises now connecting the two old capitals of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. </p> <p>New in the past half-dozen years, the riverboats seemed emblematic — part of Budapest’s shrugging off its midcentury past, when connections were to places like Prague and Krakow, to reflect an older and more durable relationship. One couple we met, travelers from <a href="http://travel2.nytimes.com/top/features/travel/destinations/unitedstates/california/sandiego/?inline=nyt-geo" title="Go to the San Diego Travel Guide.">San Diego</a> fresh off a river boat, said they were delighted with Budapest’s street bustle and food — and its prices, significantly lower than those they had found in Vienna.</p> <p> Most cities have different day and night personalities, but the contrast in Budapest seems particularly stark, almost as if an entirely different geography and cast of characters has been imposed upon the place. </p> <p>The Danube comes to life as a kind of a kind of floating smorgasbord of moored barges: one offers jazz dinners, another a pulsing disco, yet another a quiet seafood restaurant. Places like Raday utca and Liszt Ferenc Square, just off the fashionable boulevard of Andrassy, attract crowds that are younger, more chic and louder. Often, a club catering to 20-somethings on the prowl reveals itself down a dark Pest side street with a dim glow from a door opening into a hidden warren of lounge rooms and lantern-lit gardens. </p> <p>For a symbol of how Budapest has changed, an obvious first choice would be Roosevelt Square, at the foot of the Chain Bridge. Previously dominated by hulking old buildings and the state-operated Forum Hotel (now an Inter-Continental), it is now overlooked by the Gresham Palace and a gaudy casino, and it is thick with limos.</p> <p>If you’re looking for the heart of the city today, I’d make a case for sampling Lizst Ferenc Square. That’s where we found Café Vian, in which Budapest’s clashing cultures made a particularly sweet sound. The youthful crowd, hovering over sweet cocktails and yelling to be heard in the din, was flecked with a handful of older faces, mostly fresh from hearing Stravinsky and Gulda at the venerable Zeneakademia a few steps away.</p> <p> The State Opera House was doing Wagner that night, “Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg,” so no telling when that crowd would arrive and what mood they’d be in.</p> <p> Perhaps a generous, $9 plate of chicken paprika or a $7.25 helping of tagliatelle would get their heads out of Wagner and back into Liszt, where they belong. Who knows, they might even share a round with the Scottish soccer team, assuming everyone is still playing nice together. </p> <p> <strong>VISITOR INFORMATION </strong></p> <p><strong>HOW TO GET THERE</strong></p> <p>Malev Hungarian Airlines (<a href="http://www.malev.hu" target="_">www.malev.hu</a>) and Delta Airlines offer nonstop flights between New York and Budapest’s Ferihegy Airport. An Internet search for late September found round-trip fares starting around $840. </p> <p>A taxi ride from the airport to central Pest, where most hotels are situated, should run about 4,000 forints, with a small tip, which is about $18 at 220 forints to the dollar. But some drivers might charge closer to 6,000 if you don’t shop around. </p> <p><strong>GETTING AROUND</strong></p> <p> A three-day metro pass (2,500 forints) gives free access to all subway lines and trams. For 6,500 forints, a three-day Budapest Card adds discounts for museums, attractions and restaurants. See <a href="http://www.budapestinfo.hu/en/budapest_card" target="_">www.budapestinfo.hu/en/budapest_card</a>.</p> <p><strong>WHERE TO STAY</strong></p> <p>At the Corinthia Grand Hotel Royal (Erzsebet korut 43-49; 36-1-479-4000; <a href="http://www.corinthiahotels.com" target="_">www.corinthiahotels.com</a>), peaked glass roofs enclose once open courtyards around an opulent inner structure. The 414 rooms start at 40,680 forints.</p> <p>Nearby is the Boscolo New York Palace Hotel (Erzsebet korut 9-11; 36-1- 886-6111; <a href="http://www.boscolohotels.com" target="_">www.boscolohotels.com</a>), even more gleaming and gilded than the Corinthia. It has 107 rooms, starting at 50,000 forints. The legendary New York Cafe is adjacent.</p> <p>The city’s premier hotel, the 179-room Four Seasons Gresham Palace on Roosevelt Square (36-1-268-3000; <a href="http://www.fourseasons.com/budapest" target="_">www.fourseasons.com/budapest</a>), is sophisticated and luxe. Rooms start at 87,000 forints. </p> <p>On the Buda side of the Danube, the starkly modern art’otel (Bem rakpart 16-19; 36-1-487-9487, <a href="http://www.artotel.hu" target="_">www.artotel.hu</a> ), offers sweeping views of the Chain Bridge and the ornate Parliament building, and is a short walk from Castle Hill. The 164 rooms start at $184, $242 with a river view.</p> <p><strong>WHERE TO EAT</strong></p> <p>Where goulash once ruled all and still makes a pretty good showing even at the fanciest places, Budapest is now home to pretty much all cuisines. One of the earliest harbingers of this trend was Restaurant Lou Lou, a French-leaning bistro unobtrusively nestled at Vigyazo Ferenc utca 4 (36-1-312-4505), on an otherwise unremarkable side street between Roosevelt Square and Parliament. An antique horse perches over the bar; huge mirrors glisten on the salmon walls while spot lighting illuminates individual tables. A foie gras appetizer is 3,200 forints, and scallops and gravlax are 3,300; among main courses, a duck duo is 3,900 forints and sautéed goose liver is 4,100. Yes, there is goulash, for 1,400 forints.</p> <p>Costes, at Raday utca 4 (36-1-219-0696), is one of the nicer places along Raday utca, a bustling pedestrian strip, with a menu that stresses game and includes French, Italian and Hungarian flavors. A game consommé or goulash runs about 890 forints, a rack of venison with wild mushrooms costs 4,590 forints and a monkfish filet perched improbably atop a thick omelet is 4,000.</p> <p>Less than a block away is the louder and more informal Soul Café, Raday utca 11-13 (36-1-217-6986), with all manner of Mediterranean dishes in a <a href="http://travel2.nytimes.com/top/features/travel/destinations/unitedstates/california/?inline=nyt-geo" title="Go to the California Travel Guide.">California</a>-style setting. A mozzarella and tomato salad is 1,500 forints, asparagus cream soup 913 forints, a Thai cashew chicken only 2,200 and a delicious butterfish in lime sauce over jasmine rice 2,936. Goulash, if you must, is 1,500 forints. </p> <p>For a blast of old Budapest, Kacsa Vendeglo is across the river in the Watertown area of Buda, at Fo utca 75, (36-1-201-9992). The specialty here is duck in many forms — in a strudel, crispy, stuffed with prunes, as a pâté, homestyle, Tisza style, Rozsnyai style or atop mashed apple. If you’re sick of duck, there’s also goose, as well as pike, perch, lobster, chicken and sirloin steak Budapest style. Paprika plays a prominent role. The wandering violinist accepts requests and tips.</p> <p> A particularly pleasant place to begin the day is the Angelika cafe (36-1-212-3784), tucked into one wing of an old church building on Batthyany with a terrace overlooking the river. Inside, the dark rooms are arched and illuminated through stained glass. A café American runs just 400 forints and a fortifying four-egg omelet about 980.</p> <p><strong>WHERE TO DRINK</strong></p> <p>The swank spot is the Gresham Bar, just off the lobby in the Four Seasons Gresham Palace Hotel on Roosevelt Square, just at the Pest foot of the Chain Bridge (36-1-268-3000). The style is international business luxe, and there’s the marble, the dark wood and the recessed lighting to prove it. A glass of palinka, the traditional fruit brandy, is 2,200 forints, and a glass of Calvados 2,400. Good free snacks, though.</p> <p>For a more atmospheric, smoky and downscale alternative, there is West Balkan, a warren of darkly lit rooms at Kisfaludy utca 36 (36-1-371-1807), where a happy crowd lived out its <a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/l/john_le_carre/index.html?inline=nyt-per" title="More articles about John Le Carre">John le Carré</a> fantasies — or maybe that was just me. The Calvados here was 550 forints. Beers, of which there were dozens on offer, averaged around 480 forints.</p> <p>The coffeehouse is also a Budapest staple, beginning with the venerable Café Gerbeaud on Vorosmarty Square in the center of Pest (36-1-429-9000). This 19th-century palace with a huge outdoor patio spilling into the square has been around since 1858 and is famous for its pastries. A chocolate torte is 590 forints and a cappuccino 680.</p></div>
 
Oldal tetejére