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UN assembly's first muslim woman leader vows reform

UNITED NATIONS, Sep 12 (Reuters) The UN General Assembly's first Muslim woman president took office today vowing to put UN reform and battling world poverty at the top of her agenda.

Haya Rashed Al Khalifa of Bahrain told the first meeting of the assembly's 61st session her religion would not affect her leadership of the 192-nation body but her gender would.

''Over half the world's population, namely women, typically have less access to health care, employment, decision-making and property ownership,'' she told the assembly.

''This disparity needs to be addressed so that women and men can enjoy the same opportunities, the same rights and the same responsibilities in all aspects of life.'' The world's needy look to the United Nations to help them and the organisation must show them it still deserves their trust, as it did when it was founded 60 years ago, she said.

Haya was chosen by acclamation in June to succeed Jan Eliasson, who returned to his job as Swedish foreign minister in Stockholm on Monday. His job is at stake in elections next week that could bring down the current government.

Bahrain's first female diplomat and one of the first two Bahraini women to practice law in her country, she used her legal career to advance women's rights under Sharia law in Islamic family courts before winning the assembly presidency.

In her opening remarks, Haya said she also hoped to press on with efforts to reach agreement on the text of a draft ''comprehensive convention on international terrorism'' stalled since 1996 by disputes over the treaty's breadth and how to define terrorism.

Arab states have pushed for the definition of terrorism to exclude groups such as the Palestinians living under foreign occupation or pursuing national liberation movements, leading to an impasse in the negotiations.

But Haya, asked about the blockage by reporters, said that no cause, including a struggle for national liberation, could justify the killing of civilians.

''Nobody can accept that the killing of human beings is acceptable,'' she told reporters. ''It is the rule of law all over the world.'' REUTERS VJ RAI0230

US again won't seek death penalty in Iraq killing

CAMP PENDLETON, Calif, Sep 12 (Reuters) US military prosecutors said today that they will not pursue the death penalty against another Marine charged in the April shooting death of an Iraqi man in Hamdania. Lt. Col. John Baker, the lead prosecutor, said he would not seek capital punishment against Marine Lance Cpl. Jerry Shumate Jr., 21, of Matlock, Washington. But Baker, during a brief closing statement at the end of an hour-long preliminary hearing.....

Annan presses Syria, Lebanon to agree on ties

United Nations, Sep 13: UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan pressed the leaders of Syria and Lebanon today to quickly launch negotiations to establish diplomatic ties between the two West Asian neighbours.Annan told the UN Security Council he expected Damascus and Beirut to agree to ''the early initiation'' of efforts to establish full diplomatic relations after both Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and Lebanese Prime Minister Fouad Siniora told him they were ready to meet with each other ''at any time'' to.....

Greenstone launches all-women US radio talk network

NEW YORK, Sep 12 (Reuters) Greenstone Media, a radio company whose founders include social activist Gloria Steinem and actress Jane Fonda, has launched an all-women, all-talk network across the United States. Steinem said the network, which is run by women, aims to provide an alternative to current radio talk, which she describes as ''very argumentative, quite hostile, and very much male-dominated.'' This network ''has a different spirit. It has more community. It's more about.....
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