Obama chooses Biden as running mate

WASHINGTON - Delaware Senator Joe Biden is Barack Obama's choice to be his vice presidential running mate, NBC News has confirmed.

Biden, who has served in the Senate since being elected at the age of 29, is the chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee and will add his foreign policy expertise to the Democratic ticket.
In recent years, he has traveled to Afghanistan and Pakistan two times and to Iraq eight times. He returned Monday from a fact-finding trip to Georgia.
At age 65, the Delaware senator is nearly 20 years older than Obama.
He has endured tragedy and near death: Five weeks after he won his Senate seat in 1972, his wife and infant daughter were killed in a car accident.
And in 1988, he suffered a brain aneurysm and nearly died.
Biden’s voting record is in line with many Senate Democrats: He voted in 2003 to authorize President Bush to use military force in Iraq, and he also voted against the Bush tax cuts and against Republican Supreme Court nominees William Rehnquist, Robert Bork, Clarence Thomas, John Roberts and Samuel Alito.
He has run twice for the Democratic presidential nomination, once in 1988 and again this year.
He was forced to exit the 1988 race after he was caught having borrowed portions of a speech by British Labor Party leader Neil Kinnock — without giving him credit.
In 1987, as the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, Biden managed the Senate’s rejection of Bork, a conservative Supreme Court nominee by Ronald Reagan.
But some Democrats still blame Biden for allowing Thomas to win confirmation to the high court in 1991.

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Signs of pullback by Russian forces in Georgia
IGOETI, Georgia - Russian military convoys rolled out of three key positions in Georgia and headed toward Moscow-backed separatist

regions on Friday in a significant withdrawal two weeks after thousands of troops roared into the former Soviet republic.In western Georgia, a column of 83 tanks, APCs and trucks hauling artillery moved away from the Senaki military base north toward the border of Georgia's breakaway Abkhazia region on Friday afternoon. Georgian police said the vehicles came from the base, which has been under Russian control for more than a week.In central Georgia, at least 40 Russian military vehicles left the strategic city of Gori, heading north toward South Ossetia and Russia. Gori straddles the country's main east-west highway south of South Ossetia, the separatist region at the heart of the fighting."We are seeing the pullback of Russian troops" from Gori, Georgian security council chief Alexander Lomaia confirmed Friday.An Associated Press reporter in Igoeti, meanwhile, confirmed that Russian forces had pulled up from their former checkpoints around the crossroads village. Igoeti, on the road between Gori and the Georgian capital of Tbilisi, had been the Russians' closest position to the Georgian capital.

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Muchdi's motive revenge, court hears

Former top intelligence official Muchdi Purwopranjono premeditated the 2004 murder of human rights activist Munir Said Thalib out of ill will and revenge, a court heard Thursday.

Prosecutors said in their indictment that former State Intelligence Agency (BIN) deputy chief Muchdi sought revenge against Munir, who was deemed responsible for the defendant's ouster as the Army's Special Forces (Kopassus) chief only 52 days after his inauguration in 1998.
"The dismissal was a slap in the face of Muchdi because it put his military career to an end and hurt him personally, causing him to seek revenge," prosecutor Cirus Sinaga told the packed South Jakarta District Court.
Munir had led an investigation by the Commission on Missing Persons and Victims of Violence (Kontras) rights group into the involvement of Kopassus soldiers in the abduction of 13 activists critical of the government between 1997 and 1998. The elite force members, grouped under the Rose Team, were eventually found guilty by the military court.
Some 180 police officers were deployed to secure the court hearing. Dozens of Muchdi's supporters from the Indonesian Red and White Brigade rallied outside the courtroom, saying Muchdi was a victim of foreign intervention.
Prosecutors said Muchdi's posting to the BIN position in 2003 had allowed him to plan measures to stop Munir's activities in criticizing the government and investigating human rights abuses.
As a high-ranking official at the BIN, Muchdi misused his power when he recruited former Garuda pilot Pollycarpus Budihari Priyanto to carry out the plan, prosecutors said.
Muchdi placed Pollycarpus as an aviation security member on a Garuda flight so he could travel with Munir. Pollycarpus was sentenced to 20 years in prison for his role in the murder.
Prosecutors quoted the testimony of a BIN agent, Budi Santoso, who said he was told by Pollycarpus that the latter had been ordered by Muchdi to kill Munir.
Muchdi, prosecutors said, had paid Pollycarpus Rp 10 million on June 14, 2004, at his office at the BIN headquarters. Later, he also paid Rp 4 million and another Rp 3 million. They also said Muchdi had given facilities to Pollycarpus, including in the making of a classified letter asking him to be assigned as a security crew member for Munir's flight to Amsterdam on Sept. 6, 2004.
The next day, Munir was found dead from arsenic poisoning administered during a stopover at Singapore's Changi Airport. The assignment letter had been reported missing, but the Attorney General's Office (AGO) has said it now has it in hand.
In his testimony, Budi said that after the murder, Pollycarpus phoned him, saying "(I) got a 'big fish' in Singapore." When Budi asked whether Pollycarpus had told Muchdi, Pollycarpus said he had, the indictment says.
Prosecutors charged Muchdi with Article 55 of the Criminal Code on premeditated murder, which carries a maximum penalty of death. But they prepared two classifications on Muchdi's role in the murder, charging the former spy with either suggesting others commit a murder or premeditating the assassination himself.
Muchdi's wife and daughter were present in the courtroom. They shook their heads several times as prosecutors read Muchdi's motives over the murder.
Upon arriving at the district court, Muchdi was taken to a prosecutor's room, instead of a detention room, at the request of one of his lawyers.



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Attack forces Indonesian Christians off campus

Hundreds of Christian theology students have been living in tents since a mob of angry Muslim neighbors stormed their campus last month wielding bamboo spears and hurling Molotov cocktails, according to reports by The Associated Press.

The incident comes amid growing concern that Indonesia's tradition of religious tolerance is under threat from Islamic hard-liners.
In talks since the attack, the Arastamar Evangelical School of Theology has reluctantly agreed to shut its 20-year-old campus in east Jakarta, accepting an offer this week to move to a small office building on the other side of the Indonesian capital.
"Why should we be forced from our house while our attackers can walk freely?" asked the Rev. Matheus Mangentang, chairman of the 1,400-student school.
The government of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, which relies on the support of Islamic parties in Parliament, is struggling to balance deep Islamic traditions and a secular constitution. With elections coming next April, the government seems unwilling to defend religious minorities, lest it be portrayed as anti-Islamic in what is the world's most populous Muslim-majority country.
The July 25 attack, which injured 18 students, was the culmination of years of simmering tensions between the school and residents of the Kampung Pulo neighborhood.
Senny Manave, a spokesman for the Christian school, said complaints were received from neighbors about prayers and the singing of hymns, which they considered disturbing evangelical activity.
Several neighbors refused to comment, saying they feared that could further strain relations. A prominent banner, signed by scores of people, has been hung over an entrance to the neighborhood.
"We the community of Kampung Pulo demand the campus be closed and dissolved," it says.
The assault began around midnight, when students woke to the crash of stones falling on their dormitory roof as a voice over a loudspeaker at a nearby mosque cried "Allah Akbar," or "God is great" in Arabic.
The unidentified speaker urged residents to rise up against their "unwanted neighbors," said Sairin, the head of campus security, who goes by a single name.
The attack followed a claim that a student had broken into a resident's house, but police dismissed the charge.
Uneasy relations date to 2003, when neighbors began to protest the school's presence. Last year, residents set fire to shelters for construction workers to try to stop the campus from expanding deeper into the neighborhood. Some also questioned the legality of the school's permit.
Christian lawmaker Karol Daniel Kadang accused property speculators of provoking last month's incident to clear the land for more profitable use, after the school refused to sell out.
He also blamed the government for failing to build interfaith relations, which he and others believe are beginning to fray.
"People are still tolerant, but there is a growing suspicion among Muslims of others," said Prof. Franz Magnis-Suseno, a Jesuit priest who has lived in Indonesia for half a century.
He added that the police have failed to prevent both attacks on minorities and the forced closure of Christian churches and nontraditional mosques by mobs incited by radical Muslims.
"The state has some responsibility for this growing intolerance, namely by not upholding the law," he said.
A mob stormed a church service last Sunday in another east Jakarta neighborhood, forcing dozens of Christian worshipers to flee, said Jakarta Police Chief Col. Carlo Tewu. No arrests have been made.
Since being driven from campus, nearly 600 female students have been sleeping under suspended tarps at a nearby scout camp, where they had to dig trenches to keep water out during downpours. Classes are held with megaphones in the sweltering summer heat, under trees or the tarps. A similar number of male students live in a guesthouse. The remainder have returned to their families.
Food, water and school supplies are donated by church groups and community charities.
"We feel like refugees in our own country," said Dessy Nope, 19, a second-year student majoring in education. "How can you study here? I only followed 20 percent of my last lesson. It's difficult to concentrate."
Christians have not been the only targets for Muslim hard-liners, who this year set fire to mosques of a Muslim sect, Ahmadiyah, that they consider heretical.
In June, the government ordered members of the sect to return to mainstream Islam, sparking concern among activists who fear the state is interfering in matters of faith and caving in to the demands of radicals.
"We're living in a country where there are many religions, but the government cannot prevent the actions of fundamentalist groups," said Manave, the school spokesman. "The government cannot protect minorities.

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