sábado, 8 de novembro de 2008

Hans Blix:“Obama significa una distensión increíble para el mundo“


Hans Blix, ex -inspector de armas de la ONU y hábil diplomático internacional .
¿Qué significa la elección de Barack Obama para la política internacional?
Hans Blix: Yo creo que la elección significa, desde el punto de vista político, una distensión increíble para el mundo. Durante mucho tiempo hemos tenido que soportar una política de Bush, en parte casi extremista y netamente militar. Bush tenía la costumbre de dar órdenes a la gente en vez de hablar con ella. Obama ya ha señalizado lo contrario. Que quiere sentarse a hablar con los jefes de Estado y de Gobierno de este mundo, quiere negociar con ellos.
¿Tiene Obama una oportunidad para intermediar de manera pacífica y hábil en el mundo?
Hans Blix:Lo que más valoro de Obama es su llamado al desarme nuclear. La Guerra Fría ha terminado y lo que por ningún motivo necesitamos son armas nucleares. Claro que es utópico pensar que pueden eliminarse de manera inmediata todas las bombas atómicas. Pero habría que dar los primeros pasos en esta dirección. Obama apoya fuertemente esta idea. Quiere reducir la producción de misiles y en eso yo deposito una gran esperanza. Estados Unidos podría ahorrar mucho dinero. El gasto militar a nivel global asciende a 1,3 billones al año, la mitad de esta cifra, casi 700 mil millones es lo que gasta Estados Unidos al año. Obama y su nuevo gobierno podrían dedicar buena parte de ese dinero a otros proyectos.

Deutsche Welle

Más verde, menos desigualdad

Los espacios verdes, aunque sean pequeños, pueden contribuir a disminuir la brecha entre ricos y pobres, señalan investigadores de dos universidades escocesas.
Incluso, dicen los científicos, los parques chicos en el corazón de la ciudad pueden protegernos de enfermedades coronarias, porque contribuyen a reducir el estrés y a estimularnos a hacer ejercicio.
El estudio, publicado en la revista especializada The Lancet, comparó información sobre cientos de miles de muertes y las contrastó tomando en cuenta los espacios verdes que existían en diferentes zonas.
Los municipios deben incorporar más parques para mejorar el estado de salud de los habitantes de las ciudades, recomendó el informe. El contacto con la naturaleza también ayuda a disminuir la presión arterial, y quizás contribuya a una recuperación más rápida después de una operación quirúrgica.Cuanto más grande el espacio verde, mejor, dicen los científicos.
BBC

sexta-feira, 7 de novembro de 2008

Trilha Sonora..


Música:Cigano
Composição:Djavan
Te querer
Viver mais pra ser exato
Te seguir
E poder chegar
Onde tudo é só meu
Te encontrar
Dar a cara pro teu beijo
Correr atrás de ti
Feito cigano, cigano, cigano
Me jogar sem medir
Viajar
Entre pernas e delícias
Resistir
Ao que pode o pensamento
Saber chegar no seu melhor
Momento, momento, momento
Pra ficar e ficar
Juntos, dentro, horas..
Deixar crescer
Até romper
A manhã
Como o mar está sereno
A gente vai ter um dia de calor

quarta-feira, 5 de novembro de 2008

Obama é o presidente eleito mais votado na história dos Estados Unidos

Com números inéditos de participação dos eleitores, o primeiro presidente negro dos Estados Unidos, Barack Obama, se elegeu na terça-feira com uma quantidade recorde de votos, segundo dados do Arquivo Nacional americano.Obama também conseguiu o maior percentual já registrado por um democrata desde Lyndon B. Johnson, que teve 61,1% dos votos em 1964.
Às 18H30 GMT de quarta-feira, com resultados divulgados em 48 estados e no Distrito de Coumbia, Obama acumulava 349 delegados no Colégio Eleitoral, contra 163 do republicano John McCain.O senador por Illinois foi declarado vencedor da histórica disputa eleitoral após superar os 270 delegados necessários. As redes de televisão apontam que Obama venceu com 52% do voto popular, contra 46% para McCain.O presidente eleito, de 47 anos, arrecadou 63,25 milhões de votos a nível nacional, enquanto o senador pelo Arizona coletou 55,9 milhões, segundo NBC, CBS e Fox News.Ao todo, mais de 130 milhões de americanos foram às urnas, número mais alto já registrado em uma eleição geral nos Estados Unidos. O Arquivo Nacional americano informou que 63,25 milhões de votos é a cifra mais alta já alcançada por um candidato à presidência no país.Obama marcou sua vantagem desde o início da apuração, vencendo na Pensilvânia e em Ohio, estados que desde 1960 votam sempre no candidato que acaba ganhando a eleição presidencial. Em seguida, o candidato democrata obteve a maioria nos estados do Colorado, Flórida, Indiana, Missouri, Novo México e Virgínia.
Fonte:France Press-Correio Braziliense

Election Unleashes a Flood of Hope Worldwide


Alan Cowell
From the front lines of Iraq to more genteel spots like Harry’s Bar in Paris, the election of Barack Obama unlocked a floodgate of hope that a new American leader will redeem promises of change, rewrite the political script and, perhaps as important as anything else, provide a kind of leadership that will erase the bitterness of the Bush years.
Whether it was because of Mr. Obama’s youth, his race, his message or his manner, some European leaders abandoned diplomatic niceties to compete for extravagance in their praise, while others outside the United States — fascinated by an election that had been scrutinized around the globe — reached for their most telling comparisons.
“There is the feeling that for the first time since Kennedy, America has a different kind of leader,” said Alejandro Saks, an Argentine script writer in Buenos Aires. Or, as Ersin Kalaycioglu, a professor of political science in Istanbul, put it, “The U.S. needs a facelift and he’s the one who can give it.”
There were some glaring departures from the feel-good mood. One in particular illustrated the challenges that will test the president-elect: President Dmitri A. Medvedev of Russia chose the day to lambaste the United States and threaten new missile deployments.
The final moments of the election were covered in obsessive detail far from America.
In Australia, radio stations interrupted their shows to broadcast the Obama acceptance speech.
In Berlin, newspapers printed special editions.
Perhaps one of the most poignant accolades came from Nelson Mandela, South Africa’s former president, who said in a letter to Mr. Obama: “Your victory has demonstrated that no person anywhere in the world should not dare to dream of wanting to change the world for a better place.”
Significantly, though, among American troops in Iraq, the hope seemed tinged with skepticism that change in the White House would not automatically mean change in American doctrines that have meant deployments in Iraq and Afghanistan.
“It’s not like even if Obama is elected we’ll up and leave,” said Specialist James Real, 31, of Butte, Montana, as soldiers watched the returns on television at Forward Operating Base Falcon in Iraq.
Indeed, Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari said Iraq itself did not “expect that much change in the American policies toward Iraq. Any changes won’t be made in one night.”
In Afghanistan, where American troops are also deployed in an increasingly bitter war, the election brought a rebuke .
“Our demand is to have no civilian casualties in Afghanistan. The fight against terrorism cannot be won by the bombardment of our villages,” said President Hamid Karzai, referring to a string of coalition airstrikes that have caused civilian casualties.
For many outsiders, Mr. Obama’s victory raised expectations that a new administration would seek new relationships across the globe.
“I think he can restore the image of America around the world, especially after Bush got us into two wars,” said David Charlot, 28, a lawyer with French and American citizenship who was among a throng of expatriate revelers outside Harry’s Bar in Paris.
The French president, Nicolas Sarkozy, said something on similar lines. “Your election raises in France, in Europe, and elsewhere in the world, an immense hope,” he said in a message that called Mr. Obama’s victory “brilliant” and his campaign “exceptional.” Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany called his victory “historic” and invited Mr. Obama to return to Berlin, where he addressed a huge rally during his campaign.
Even in lands whose leaders are no friends of Washington -- such as Venezuela and Iran -- the election outcome cut through official propaganda to touch some people.
“It’s kind of nice to feel good about the United States again,” said Armando Díaz, 24, a bookkeeper in Caracas, Venezuela, where Enrique Cisneros, a storekeeper summed it up like this: “A few hours ago, the world felt like a different place.” In Iran, too, some said the American example should persuade politicians closer to home to adopt similar political ways.
‘’His election can be a lesson for the dictators of the Middle East,” said Badr-al-sadat Mofidi, the deputy editor of the daily Kargozaran newspaper. Some in Iran focused on their hopes for a change in American attitudes towards their country. ‘’The nightmare of war with the United States will fade with Obama’s election,” said Nehmat Ahmadi, a lawyer.
Indeed, for many who had watched this campaign from afar, there was a sense that the election was not just an American affair but something that touched people around the world, whatever their origin. “I want Obama to win with 99 percent, like Saddam Hussein,” said Hanin Abu Ayash, who works at a television station in Dubai and monitored early returns on his computer. “I swear if he doesn’t win, I’m going to take it personally.”
In Berlin, Anna Lemme, a 29-year-old architect, said she did not usually hurry to catch the news first thing in the morning. ‘’But this morning I jumped to the radio first thing at 5 a.m.,” she said. There was little doubt that for some, Mr. Obama’s skin color made his victory all the more exhilarating.
“The United States is choosing a black man as its president. Maybe we can share a bit in this happiness,” Mr. Cisneros said in Caracas.
The Afghan president, Mr. Karzai, said the election had shown the American people overcoming distinctions “of race and color while electing their president” and thereby helping to bring “the same values to the rest of the world sooner or later.”
For many in Africa — and in Kenya in particular — his election evoked a deepening of pride.
As President Mwai Kibaki said in a message to Mr. Obama, “your victory is not only an inspiration to millions of people all over the world, but it has special resonance with us here in Kenya” — the birthplace of Mr. Obama’s father and paternal grandparents.
That sense of association may also encourage some to believe that Mr. Obama will give Africa special attention. “We express the hope that poverty and underdevelopment in Africa, which remains a challenge for humanity, will indeed continue to receive a greater attention of the focus of the new administration,” said Kgalema Motlanthe, the South African president.
Many outside Africa competed for his attention, too.
In a statement, the 27-nation European Union said it saw “the promise of a reinforced trans-Atlantic relationship” in Mr. Obama’s election. Even big business joined in.
“From a business perspective, I’m very happy that the economic issue was at the top of the agenda in the campaign,” said Lakshmi Mittal, the head of the world’s biggest steel-maker, “and we’re very positive that we’ll see more measures to address the economic crisis with his election.”
On momentous occasions, politicians reach for big words. The French foreign minister, Bernard Kouchner, for instance, said that “American democracy has just lived through a marvelous moment, one of those major turning points that periodically demonstrates its vitality, its belief in the future and its trust in the values on which it was founded over two centuries.”
In Parliament in London on Wednesday, members of Britain’s three major political parties lavished praise on Mr. Obama. Prime Minister Gordon Brown said that Mr. Obama had run “an inspirational campaign, energizing politics with progressive values and his vision for the future.”
Mr. Brown mentioned several times that he planned to work closely with the new administration, said he had spoken to Mr. Obama “on many occasions,” called him a “true friend of Britain” and said: “I know Barack Obama and we share many values.”
But politicians also peer through the prism of self-interest.
In South Korea, some pondered the destiny of a free-trade agreement negotiated by the Bush administration and criticized by Mr. Obama. Lee Hae-min, South Korea’s top trade negotiator, warned that any change in the deal could undermine South Korea’s support for the deal and “open a Pandora’s box”.
In the Middle East, the focus of much tension that has drawn in successive American administrations, Saeb Erakat, an aide to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, urged Mr. Obama to transform the proposal for a two-state solution in the Palestine-Israel conflict “to a realistic track immediately.”
At the Vatican, a statement urged Mr. Obama to show “respect of human life” and expressed the hope that “God should illuminate the way” for him in his “great responsibility.”
Some saw a chance to patch up old feuds.
Spanish Prime Minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, who displeased Washington when he withdrew Spain’s troops from Iraq in 2004, said Mr. Obama’s victory “demonstrated the vitality of this great country, and of democracy and the unstoppable force of the ballot to bring about change.”
“I am confident this opens a horizon of promise for relations between the United States and Spain,” he told a press conference in Madrid.
But even in the moment of triumph, some in Europe questioned whether Mr. Obama would really make a break with his George W. Bush, the least popular American president among Europeans in recent history.
“When Obama takes office on January 20,” the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung said in an editorial, “we will see whether the Europeans — and especially the Germans — really just had a problem with Bush’s presidency or with America itself.”
Others were less cynical. “The margin of victory was emphatic and, whatever else follows, today the world changed,” said an editorial in The Times of London, and The Guardian newspaper proclaimed: “They did it. They really did it. So often crudely caricatured by others, the American people yesterday stood in they eye of history and made an emphatic choice for change for themselves and the world.”
That was not a universal view in Moscow where one analyst, Mikhail Delyagin, compared Mr. Obama to Mikhail S. Gorbachev, who is often blamed in Russia for destroying the Soviet Union.
“Not having large-scale management experience, he has greater chances to disorganize America, to destabilize America, out of the very best intentions, as Gorbachev once did.”
But the supporters generally outnumbered the skeptics.. “We were all hoping that he would win,” said Carla Saggioro, a retired architect in Rome. “And the fact that he did with such a large margin is a sign of real change _ at least let’s hope so.”
The United Nations secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, called Mr. Obama’s election a “historic opportunity” for a stronger working relationship with the United States.
“He values highly the resolution of all the conflict issues through dialogue,” Mr. Ban said. “He has expressed publicly that he is willing to meet anybody, any country, so that will provide good opportunity not only for the United States, but also the United Nations as a whole to resolve all issues through dialogue.”
Mr. Ban said he had met Mr. Obama by chance last year on a plane flight. “He was very engaging and he knew a lot about the United Nations,” Mr. Ban said, “and I was very much encouraged.”

Europa reacciona al triunfo de Obama


Las elección de Barack Obama como presidente 44 de la Unión Americana provoca ya reacciones en instituciones como la Comisión Europea y la Unión Europea.
Francia se convirtió en el primer país europeo en felicitar al presidente electo de Estados Unidos, Barack Obama. El mandatario francés, Nicolas Sarkozy, telefoneó a Obama para manifestarle su beneplácito por el resultado electoral en favor del mandatario electo, informaron fuentes gubernamentales francesas desde París.
"Mientras el mundo campea la duda, el puebo estadounidense se ha volcado lleno de confianza en el progreso y el futuro, hacia los valores que conforman la identidad de ese país", dijo Sarkozy.
Francia es presidente pro tempore de la Unión Europea. En tal función, el ministro de Relaciones Exteriores de Francia, Bernard Kouchner, afirmó que la “energía y determinación” del presidente electo serán necesarias para construir un mundo más seguro. “Francia, Europa y la comunidad internacional necesitan de su energía para avanzar en la construcción de un mundo más seguro, justo y estable.”
En cuanto a su país, Kouchner aseguró que “los franceses se alegran por la elección de un hombre comprometido con el diálogo entre los pueblos y las comunidades y con la colaboración entre las naciones”.
El presidente de la Comisión Europea, José Manuel Durao Barroso, hizo votos porque “Estados Unidos y Europa participen como aliados al conducir al mundo a un orden distinto. Necesitamos otro New Deal para un mundo nuevo”, dijo Barroso al presidente electo de Estados Unidos. “Es tiempo de que europa y Estados Unidos vuelvan a trabajar de manera estrecha”, agregó.
En Alemania, la primera reacción provino del partido socialdemócrata, SPD. El portavoz de dicho instituto político para asuntos exteriores, Rolf Mützenich, afirmó que Europa gana con la oferta hecha por Obama, en cuanto a que promoverá la colaboración internacional.
Deutsche Welle

Obama,el presidente electo de Estados Unidos

Barack Obama fue electo primer presidente afroamericano en la historia de Estados Unidos.
En su discurso triunfal, llamó a la unidad e hizo una advertencia: "a los que pretenden destruir el mundo, los derrotaremos".
La cadena de noticias CNN dio a conocer a las 4:58 de la mañana, hora centroeuropea, la primera proyección que daba como presidente electo de Estados Unidos a Barack Obama.
De acuerdo con tal estimación, Obama se convertiría en el primer afroamericano en ser elegido mandatario en EE.UU.
La proyección electoral fue transmitida luego de que Obama conquistara estados clave para la elección, como Ohio, Florida y Virginia.
Las reacciones fueron inmediatas. El anuncio vino acompañado de escenas en directo en ciudades como Chicago y Nueva York, así como diversas partes del mundo donde se produjeron escenas de júbilo ante este adelanto, que sin ser el resultado oficial tenía gran peso dentro del proceso electoral.
Minutos más tarde, el candidato republicano, John McCain, reconocía su derrota electoral .
El presidente en funciones, George W. Bush,telefoneó al candidato ganador para felicitarlo en esta "hora extraordinaria", dieron a conocer portavoces de la Casa Blanca.
Minutos después, el candidato triunfante pronunció un sobrio discurso dirigido a la unidad, en el Parque Grant de Chicago. Ante 200.000 simpatizantes reunidos en ese espacio, reconoció el papel de John McCain en el proceso electoral y llamó a todos los ciudadanos estadounidenses a luchar juntos para hacer frente a los retos a los que se enfrenta el país.
"Esta victoria les pertenece", dijo Obama a los votantes, y consideró que su llegada al poder demuestra la solidez de la democracia estadounidense.
Deutsche Welle