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How Meg Whitman Intends to Retool H.P.

Peter DaSilva for The New York Times

Hewlett-Packard needs four more years “to have confidence in itself,” says Meg Whitman, the company's chief executive.

IT'S not as easy being as Meg Whitman might have expected.

At 56, Ms. Whitman, the billionaire who spent a fortune unsuccessfully trying to become the governor of California, has found her Act III. She has been chief executive of for a little more than a year, and many people are still waiting for her to get her message out about the place.

Here it is:

Meg Whitman believes in H.P., and believes that this company matters to Silicon Valley, to California, to the world. She believes that Wall Street doesn't quite get it - doesn't quite see the promise she sees. She believes that mobile devices, cloud computing and Big Data will re-energize H.P., a company that for a decade has grabbed more headlines for boardroom soap operas than for bold innovation.

“I believe in creative destruction,” Ms. Whitman says in a conference room near her executive cubicle.

Even, it seems, when the stakes include her company and reputation. In all likelihood, this is Ms. Whitman's last great public performance. She became rich by building eBay, then spent more money than any candidate for public office in the nation's history trying to become California's governor. She was sometimes portrayed in that race as an aloof 1 percenter - as someone who pushed around subordinates, once literally, and who was unkind to her housekeeper, an illegal immigrant. “I left a little bruised,” Ms. Whitman, a Republican, says of the 2010 race she lost to Jerry Brown. “It was hard, it was personally very hard.”

So now Ms. Whitman is focusing her energy on H.P., the company founded by the tech legends William Hewlett and David Packard. Bill and Dave, as they are referred to at the company, spawned Silicon Valley. Last year, H.P. posted revenue of $127 billion. It employs 320,000 people directly, and easily that many again through a network of manufacturers and computer resellers across 170 countries.

Ms. Whitman has plenty of impressive-sounding stats at her fingertips. H.P., she says, employs thousands of people in Costa Rica, Houston and Boise, Idaho. “In India, we have 60,000 people,” she says. A new program for selling printer ink is in exactly 87 countries. Every 15 seconds, the company turns out 60 new printers, 30 personal computers and one powerful computer server. Still, she yearns for even more data, something closer to the command of the day-to-day process she had at eBay.

THE fact is, H.P. isn't what it used to be. Next to Apple or Google, it looks like a bit of a loser. In the most recent quarter, as Apple soared to new heights, H.P.'s revenue fell 5 percent and its operating margins dwindled. Profit margins at I.B.M. and Apple are several times that of H.P. And H.P.'s share price, at just over $17 on Friday, is about where it was in 1995.

“It's staggering,” says A. M. Sacconaghi, an analyst at Bernstein Research. “This is now the cheapest big stock in the last 25 years. That reflects an industry belief that the company is going to decline.”

Ms. Whitman is impatient to move H.P. closer to a global computing explosion that is transforming the industry. Smartphones and tablets from Apple, Google and others are now flying into consumers' hands worldwide. Those computers are tied via the Internet to cloud computing data centers operated by Amazon, Microsoft, and hundreds of multinational companies. Information from all the consumer devices, in addition to data from billions of sensors and Web-crawling robots, is crunched in these supercomputing clouds, creating a Big Data revolution full of business opportunities and dangers.

From Ms. Whitman's high vantage, the trends of mobile, cloud and Big Data resolve into a single phenomenon: the creation and exploitation of Information Everywhere. H.P. makes consumer devices, in addition to servers for the cloud, sensor networks, and analysis software. Instead of standing at the confluence of the phenomenon, though, H.P. is on the sidelines, with most of the parts but none of the integration to make it a leader.



The Internet is Apple\'s Achilles Heel

Peter DaSilva for The New York Times

Scott Forstall showing the Maps app at the iPhone 5 debut.

IPhone users grew more annoyed all week. When they used 's new mobile maps, they found nonsensical routes and misplaced landmarks. Bloggers and talk-show hosts mocked the sometimes bizarre errors.

Nine days after the maps' release, the Washington Monument was still on the wrong side of the street. But something else changed.

Timothy D. Cook, Apple's chief executive, released an apologetic letter to customers on Friday, making the remarkable suggestion that they try alternative map services from rivals like Microsoft and Google while Apple improves its own maps. “We are extremely sorry for the frustration this has caused our customers, and we are doing everything we can to make Maps better,” Mr. Cook wrote.

The map problems were an embarrassing misstep for a company that strives for perfection in its products and, in the eyes of consumers, often gets pretty close to the mark. Its track record in delivering quality is one reason Apple is now the most valuable public company in the world.

Apple executives have tried to explain their move into maps by saying that the company could no longer afford to rely on Google, its former map provider and growing rival, for such a crucial function. Many analysts and technology executives agree that this was the right move for the long term. But Apple appears to have rushed its map service out prematurely, even though it could have continued to rely on Google until next year.

The outcry shows how map services, which Apple treated as an afterthought when it built the first , have become critical tools for millions of people. And the company's stumble fits in with its pattern of bungling services that rely heavily on the Internet.

Apple has a reputation for obsessive attention to detail in its hardware and software products, down to the beveled edges of the iPhone 5 and the shade of the icons on its screen. But it has stubbed its toe again and again when it comes to releasing reliable, well-designed Internet services. Its less proud moments include Ping, a social network for music that never took off; MobileMe, an error-plagued service for synchronizing data between devices; and, more recently, Siri, the voice-activated virtual assistant that is often hard of hearing.

The company's weakness in this area could become a bigger problem over time as smartphones become more intimately tied to information and software on the Internet - a field where Google, which makes the competing phone software, has the home-turf advantage.

“I always felt if you had to name an Achilles' heel at Apple, it's Internet services,” said Andrew Borovsky, a former Apple product designer who worked on MobileMe and now runs his own design firm in New York. “It's clearly an issue.”

An Apple spokeswoman, Natalie Kerris, declined to comment.

Some have sought to pin the blame for the maps debacle on a relaxing of standards under Mr. Cook, who was elevated from the No. 2 position at Apple just over a year ago. He took over shortly before the death of Steven P. Jobs, a notorious perfectionist known to shelve products that did not pass muster.

But numerous interviews with former Apple employees in the wake of the maps controversy made it clear that Mr. Jobs and other executives rarely paid as much attention to Internet services as they did to the devices for which Apple is best known. Nor did they show the kind of consistent foresight in this area that has served the company so well in designing hardware and software.

Including a maps app on the first iPhone was not even part of the company's original plan as the phone's unveiling approached in January 2007. Just weeks before the event, Mr. Jobs ordered a mapping app to show off the capabilities of the touch-screen device.

Two engineers put together a maps app for the presentation in three weeks, said a former Apple engineer who worked on iPhone software, and who declined to be named because he did not want to speak publicly about his previous employer. The company hastily cut a deal with Google to use its map data.

At the time, relying on Google, which had introduced its map service a couple of years earlier, made sense. Apple and Google had generally friendly relations, and Google's chief executive at the time, Eric E. Schmidt, served on Apple's board.



Australian Scientists Move Closer to Quantum Computer

Competing teams of Australian scientists have given that country a significant lead in an increasingly intense international competition to build a working quantum computer.

In an article that appeared on Thursday in the journal Nature, a team of Australian and British scientists, led from the University of New South Wales, reported that they had successfully constructed one of the basic building blocks of modern quantum computing by relying on manufacturing techniques now used by the modern semiconductor industry.

Quantum computing will potentially lead to a new generation of supercomputers that are not intended to replace today's machines but will instead open new computing vistas, from drug and material design to code breaking, by offering speed to address a new class of problems.

“We are used to designing cars and airplanes with computers,” said Andrew Dzurak, a physicist who is director of the Australian National Fabrication Facility and lead researcher on the latest advance. “Imagine if you could start building your molecule or your material on a computer and then completely simulate its behavior.”

The basic building blocks of quantum computers are quantum bits, or “qubits.” Unlike today's digital computers, which process information in a binary fashion based on logic states of “on” and “off,” a qubit can for brief periods represent multiple states simultaneously. Potentially, this means it is possible to tackle vast new problems by performing parallel computations using a relatively small set of qubits - perhaps as few as several hundred. The advance by Dr. Dzurak's team involves placing a single electron - embedded in a silicon chip - in a “quantum state,” and then repeatedly measuring the state.

In February, a second group based at the University of New South Wales published an article in the journal Nature Nanotechnology reporting their advance: the construction of a single-atom transistor using a different but related design approach.

In both cases, the research teams are international. There is an increasing awareness, however, that Australian scientists have made significant advances this year toward this long-promised new type of computing.

While there is a growing consensus among scientists that working quantum computers will emerge during this decade, there is also a growing belief that they will not replace the conventional computers that are now carried in the pockets of more than half the world's population. For one thing, most of the quantum computing approaches only worked when temperatures were cooled to near absolute zero.

Though there are only a handful of workable algorithms designed to run on quantum computers, scientists say their application may prove vastly more useful than today's technology in simulating a wide variety of biological, chemical and physical systems. That means they could become the standard tool for a wide range of new industries, like drug and material design.

The achievements of the two teams is a payoff from an investment the Australian government began making in the 1990s.

“Both groups are highly competitive and leading in the world in what they do,” said Gerhard Klimeck, a professor of electrical and computer engineering at Purdue, who has collaborated with both groups and was a co-author of the Nature Nanotechnology paper.

Dr. Dzurak's group's work contrasts with a research team led by Michelle Simmons, director of the ARC Center for Quantum Computation and Communication Technology at the University of New South Wales. That group has taken an approach based on placing individual atoms using a scanning tunneling microscope, allowing great precision in building devices on an atomic scale.

The team led by Dr. Dzurak uses conventional semiconductor techniques to implant a phosphorus atom just 10 to 15 nanometers below the surface of a silicon chip. That approach has the twin advantages of using industry standards and potentially extending the individual electron's duration in a quantum state.

The United States has federally financed, corporate and university research efforts under way to design usable quantum computers. I.B.M., for example, recently expanded its research at its Almaden laboratory in California.

Andreas Heinrich, a physicist who is a quantum researcher at I.B.M., pointed out that neither Australian group had shown the ability to interconnect multiple qubits. That capability is necessary for a quantum computer.

Dr. Dzurak said he believed that capability could be achieved as soon as a year from now.



Iranian News Agency Plagiarizes The Onion

By ROBERT MACKEY

Apparently unaware of the unwritten rules of both ethical journalism and satire, an Iranian news agency published an edited copy of a report from The Onion on Friday, without crediting the original or acknowledging that it was fiction.

The Fars News Agency, which is close to Iran's powerful Republican Guard Corps, posted its version of the report (now removed) on its English-language Web site under the same headline used by The Onion for the original four days earlier: “Gallup Poll: Rural Whites Prefer Ahmadinejad To Obama.”

Although the dateline for the news brief says that the reporting was done in Tehran by Fars, the first sentence is identical to the earlier Onion parody: “According to the results of a Gallup poll released Monday, the overwhelming majority of rural white Americans said they would rather vote for Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad than U.S. president Barack Obama.”

The second sentence of the Fars report, however, changed the phrase “have a beer with Ahmadinejad,” to “have a drink with Ahmadinejad,” and entirely omitted The Onion's description of the Iranian president as “a man who has repeatedly denied the Holocaust and has had numerous political prisoners executed.”

The final two sentences of the original Onion report, quoting a fictional voter in West Virginia who prefers Iran's president, were published unchanged by Fars:

“He takes national defense seriously, and he'd never let some gay protesters tell him how to run his country like Obama does.” According to the same Gallup poll, 60 percent of rural whites said they at least respected that Ahmadinejad doesn't try to hide the fact that he's Muslim.

The only other difference between the two versions of the fake report is that The Onion used a more flattering photograph of Mr. Ahmadinejad, showing him with a broad smile.

For more than an hour after the error was noticed, and mocked, by bloggers including David Kenner, an editor for Foreign Policy in Cairo, the report remained on the home page of the Fars English-language site, where it was promoted as the day's third most important story.

The news agency has in the past copied an entire blog post from The Lede without attribution.

While it is unclear how Fars came across the fictional report, Eskandar Sadeghi-Boroujerdi, who blogs about the Iranian press, first noticed on Wednesday that the main, Persian-language version of Fars Web site had mistaken The Onion report for real news. Mr, Sadeghi-Boroujerdi notes that report has now been removed by Fars, but was picked up by at least two other Iranian news sites, Hayat and Mehr.

The incident might also reflect how increasingly easy it is to come across information online that has been intentionally or accidentally denatured through copying as it is passed along from one site to another, or one social media user to another.

The Onion's has been criticized in the past for posting fake news updates on Twitter - where the text is divorced from contextual clues that make it easier to identify the reports as satire. As the Guardian editor Matt Wells wrote last year, when The Onion used Twitter to post fictional live updates on a hostage crisis that was also fictional, as information is passed from user to user on social networks, fiction can easily be mistaken for fact.

The viral way that information spreads online also makes it ea sy for errors to proliferate. To take a recent example, before a violent protest against an anti-Islam film took place in Cairo on Sept. 11, the United States Embassy released a statement condemning the makers of the film for abusing their right to free speech by promoting religious bigotry. After the protest turned violent, however, a version of that statement posted on Twitter was passed around by opponents of the Obama administration who mistakenly described it as an apology to the protesters, released after attack on the embassy. Within hours, Mitt Romney joined the chorus in repeating the false accusation that the statement was posted online after rather than before the protest.

Then too, Fars might have been more easily confused by The Onion's satirical report because competition from satirists and Internet news sites seems to have encouraged traditional news organizations to allow their journalists to lace their reports with comic elements.

A remarkable ca se study of the dangers of the new laughter-based news economy can be found in the great difficulty Reuters has had in correcting a flawed video report produced in Iran in February, on the popularity of the martial art of ninjutsu among Iranian women.

As my colleague David Goodman reported in March, Iran's government imposed a harsh sanction on Reuters journalists in Tehran, rescinding their press cards, in retaliation for errors in what was apparently intended to be a lighthearted video report distributed by the news agency under the headline, “Thousands of Female Ninjas Train as Iran's Assassins.”

Although Reuters issued a correction once the government pointed out that the women featured in the report were not studying the martial art of ninjutsu in a dojo outside Tehran with the intention of killing anyone, but simply to keep in shape, the agency has no control over what news organizations do with the material it provides to them, so several versions of t he story remain on the Web sites and YouTube channels of its clients.

While the corrected item is no longer available on the Reuters Web site, video reports repeating the false premise - that Iranian women who practice the sport primarily for exercise are a squad of trained killers - produced by the American networks CBS and MSNBC, the Saudi channel Al Arabiya, Britain's Channel 4 News, Japan's state broadcaster NHK and The Telegraph in London, can all still be viewed online.

Similarly, there is no correction attached to a version of the report, headlined “Iran Trains 3,000 Female Ninja Assassins,” which has been viewed more than 160,000 times on the YouTube channel of Britain's ITN since February.

A video report produced by Britain's ITN that called Iranian female martial arts students “assassins.”

The narration for that version seems to retain the jokey tone of the original Reuters script, mockin g the women's efforts to appear fierce even as the narrator makes the ominous-sounding claim that “these are Iran's ninja assassins and they are deadly serious. Some 3,000 women are being trained to defend the Islamic Republic to the death, with hand-to-hand combat, and evasion skills.” Interestingly, the ITN journalist who voice that report, Sam Datta-Paulin, explains on his personal Web site that he is “also a performing comedian.”

As Max Fisher explained in a post on The Atlantic's Web site in March, the Reuters report followed an initial report on the female ninjas broadcast on Jan. 29 by Press TV, an Iranian government satellite channel that exists to put Tehran's spin on the news. Four days after that broadcast, the Press TV report was posted on YouTube, where it quickly went viral. Thanks in large part to attention from Internet news outlets like The Daily, which detected some inadvertent comedy in the notion of Iranian female ninjas, the Press TV report has been viewed nearly a million times on YouTube.

Beyond the mocking tone of the Reuters report, Iranian officials seem to have been most angered by the fact that the initial script cast the efforts of the women to learn the martial art in terms of a potential conflict with Israel, despite the fact that the dojo has been in operation for more than two decades.

First on Twitter and then in a careful reconstruction of how the Press TV story spread and was then picked up by Reuters, Shiva Balaghi, an Iranian-American cultural historian who has lived in both countries, argued that journalists working in the era of The Daily Show had perhaps lost focus on what mattered about the story.

Ms. Balaghi suggested that something about the images of the young Iranian women wielding swords and running up walls struck journalists used to thinking of ninja moves as the stuff of action movies and video games as inherently funny. The drive to maximize that comedy then seemed to overwhelm more sober journalistic instincts, like factual accuracy and the need to place the images in context.

“Academics are often rightly accused of being too insular,” Ms. Balaghi wrote in the online journal Jadaliyya. “The same could be said of some journalists, especially those who work for so cial media sites. One wonders if there isn't too much pressure to get more ‘likes,' retweets, mentions, and followers. Brevity and witticism have become valued tools of the trade.”

At the end of her essay, she observed that a far more serious issue, the restrictions placed on women in Iran, was ignored in reports that sought to hype the comedic potential of the story:

Iran's women athletes remain caught in a web of government control within Iran while their modest Islamic attire makes them subject to prohibition by international sporting bodies.

And now some careless or unethical journalists made the women athletes in the Karaj dojo the butt of jokes or props in their jingoistic drum beating for war on Iran. More power to them for speaking out for themselves. Unfortunately, the whole sordid affair provided the Islamic Republic a handy excuse to withdraw Reuters' credentials, making it even harder for us to get accurate reporting from Iran at a critical time. Above all else, the story of Iranian women martial artists turns out to be a cautionary tale.

When the Reuters bureau in Tehran was first shut down, after the women featured in the report took the news agency to court, The National in Abu Dhabi explained that part of the context for the story was that state-owned Press TV has an axe to grind with Britain:

Press TV, which has spearheaded the blowback against Reuters, is viewed as Iran's propaganda mouthpiece in the West. Ofcom, Britain's independent media watchdog, revoked the channel's license in January for failing to pay a record £100,000 fine for broadcasting an interview with a prisoner obtained under duress.

Unlike Press TV, Reuters enjoys an excellent reputation for accuracy and impartiality. It had managed to maintain its bureau in Tehran after Iran's disputed presidential elections in June 2009 which was followed by a crackdown on Iranian journalists . Visas for western reporters have since been very hard to come by. The activities of those allowed in on rare visits are strictly monitored and curtailed.

In late July, Iran's official news agency reported comments from an Iranian offiical who said that after the lawsuit against Reuters in Iranian courts takes its course, the wire service's office in Tehran “is likely to be shut down for good.”



Saudi Forces Kill Two in Manhunt in Eastern Province

By CHRISTINE HAUSER
Video said to show Saudi forces firing in the village of Awamiya.

Saudi Arabia's security forces killed a man who was wanted by the government, and also shot dead a youth who was with him, when they went to a house searching for the man in the country's restive eastern region of Qatif.

The Saudi Press Agency, the kingdom's official news agency, reported late on Wednesday that the forces shot dead Khaled Abdel-Karim Hassan Al-Labad, who had been placed on a list of 23 people that the government has accused of fomenting unrest in the area. The agency said the shooting erupted when Mr. Labad and other gunmen in Awamiya village opened fire on security f orces at a house there. Another person was also shot and killed, while two were injured and a third was captured, the agency said.

Activists on Facebook and Twitter and on Web sites posted reports, photographs and videos related to the operation. Rasid, an Arabic language Web site covering Shiite news in the kingdom, reported that troops “stormed” a house using machine guns aimed at people there including Mr. Labad, who it described as a rights activist having taken part in demonstrations for justice and equality.

The Saudi journalist and blogger Ahmed Al Omran drew attention to the differing accounts as to whether Mr. Labad and the others were armed as well as to the videos of the reported gunfight.

Saudi activists posted photographs of Mr. Labad after he died, showing what appeared to be bullet wounds, as well as a photograph of the youth, identified as 16-year old Mohammad Habib al-Munasif. The Rasid Arabic Web site also reported that three people were injured.

On its Facebook page, Qatifday showed a photograph of Mr. Labad's wrapped-up corpse identified with a hand-written placard. It posted calls for prayers for the injured and announced demonstrations on Friday in a day of anger to call for the release of detainees.

A video posted on YouTube by shababahrar, an account that has previously posted footage of unrest in the province, showed what it said were bloodstains left on the street from a man injured by gunfire.

A Saudi activist, Ahmed Al-Rebh, appeared to take note that the deaths coi ncided with the meeting of the United Nations General Assembly in New York this week.

Another detail reported by Reuters and Al-Akhbar was of a third person killed in a car in Awamiya, but a government spokesman was quoted as saying that security forces suspect criminal activity. Several Twitter accounts that followed the news in Qatif posted a photograph of what appeared to be a teenager shot through the neck, head and upper torso.

My colleagues Robert Mackey and Michael Schwirtz have written about the killings of other protesters recently and clashes that erupted in their wake.

As my colleague Kareem Fahim wrote in July, the oil-rich Eastern Province is a stronghold of Saudi Arabia's Shiite minority, and it has long be en a focal point of anger at the Sunni monarchy and of Shiite complaints about discrimination.



Iranian Diplomat Harassed in New York

By ROBERT MACKEY and RICK GLADSTONE
Video shot by a witness appeared to show an Iranian diplomat being escorted away from a small group of protesters on Wednesday in New York.

A spokesman for Iran's foreign ministry was harassed by a small group of protesters near the United Nations in New York on Wednesday, after an address to the international body by the Iranian president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

Video posted online by witnesses showed the diplomat, Ramin Mehmanparast, being jostled and shouted at as he crossed a street, before police officers stepped in to protect him, ordering the protesters back. A spokesman for the New York City Police Department told The Associated Press that Mr. Mehmanparast was confronted on Second Avenue near East 48th Street.

Video of the incident obtained by the news agency from a documentary filmmaker showed that the protesters included a man wrapped in an old Iranian flag; another man in a yellow vest worn by supporters of the Mujahedeen Khalq, a powerful Iranian exile group known as the M.E.K. or M.K.O.; and a woman wearing the T-shirt of Ma Hastim, Persian for “We Are,” a rights group associated with the Iranian exile community in Los Angeles.

The Associated Press interviewed a documentary filmmaker who shot footage of an Iranian diplomat being harassed by protesters near the United Nations in New York on Wednesday.

Iran's state-run satellite news channel, Press TV, blamed the attack on supporters of the Mujahedeen Khalq, identifying them as “anti-Iran M.K.O. terrorists.” As our colleague Scott Shane reported last week, Sec retary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton has decided to remove the Mujahedeen Khalq from the State Department's list of Foreign Terrorist Organizations, after an intense lobbying campaign on behalf of the group.

In an e-mail to The Times, Alireza Miryousefi, the press attaché for Iran's Mission to the United Nations, characterized the incident as “aggression by M.E.K. sect members” against Mr. Mehmanparast. He added that removing the “terrorist sect” from the State Department's list of Foreign Terrorist Organizations “would be another wrong step by the U.S. administration.”

Another video clip, apparently recorded on the phone of a man shouting threats at Mr. Mehmanparast from very close range, showed police officers escorting the diplomat away from protesters screaming “terrorist!” At one point in the video, Mr. Mehmanparast walks past a pharmacy at the corner of 48th Street and Second Avenue.

Video shot b y one of the protesters who surrounded and verbally abused an Iranian diplomat in New York on Wednesday.

Iranian opposition video bloggers drew attention to a third clip that appeared to show the same incident from another angle, recorded from above the street, that has been copied and viewed more than 100,000 times on YouTube.

The incident came after Iranian exiles rallied outside the United Nations to protest Mr. Ahmadinejad's speech. Maryam Rajavi, the leader of the the Mujahedeen Khalq, which is described as a cult by some former members, addressed the rally from France by satellite. Patrick Kennedy, a former congressman from Rhode Island, who admitted on camera last year that he had been paid $25,000 to voice his support for the M.E.K. at a rally in Washington, also addressed Wednesday's protest.

Homeira Hesami, an M.E.K. organizer and Iranian expatriate who is a medical technician in Texas, told The Times that a group of Iranian officials, wi th police officer escorts, were walking west on 47th Street from the U.N. campus toward Second Avenue at around 1:30 when a number of protesters recognized Mr. Mehmanparast. Ms. Hesami was across the street. “I saw him walking by and of course we started chanting, ‘Get lost!' in Farsi,” she said. “People were angry at him and surrounded him. The presence of Ahmadinejad at the U.N. made people very emotional.”

She said the M.E.K. protesters were commingled with Syrians protesting the Assad government. “We suffer from the same pain,” she said. “We were side by side. It wasn't like they had their own thing and we had our own thing.”

A man who identified himself as Gregory Nelson boasted to The Daily News that he had managed to punch the Iranian diplomat in the stomach during the melee.

Mr. Nelson, who identified himself as a former soldier, said that he flew to New York from Fayetteville, Ark., to attend the anti-Ahmadinejad protest. After a rally in favor of the M.E.K. in Washington last year, Zaid Jilani and Ali Gharib of the liberal Web site ThinkProgress interviewed several people who were bused or flown in for the demonstration who seemed to know little about the group's past involvement in terrorist attacks. Three of the men were from Fayetteville, Ark.



Iranian Diplomat Harassed in New York

By ROBERT MACKEY and RICK GLADSTONE
Video shot by a witness appeared to show an Iranian diplomat being escorted away from a small group of protesters on Wednesday in New York.

A spokesman for Iran's foreign ministry was harassed by a small group of protesters near the United Nations in New York on Wednesday, after an address to the international body by the Iranian president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

Video posted online by witnesses showed the diplomat, Ramin Mehmanparast, being jostled and shouted at as he crossed a street, before police officers stepped in to protect him, ordering the protesters back. A spokesman for the New York City Police Department told The Associated Press that Mr. Mehmanparast was confronted on Second Avenue near East 48th Street.

Video of the incident obtained by the news agency from a documentary filmmaker showed that the protesters included a man wrapped in an old Iranian flag; another man in a yellow vest worn by supporters of the Mujahedeen Khalq, a powerful Iranian exile group known as the M.E.K. or M.K.O.; and a woman wearing the T-shirt of Ma Hastim, Persian for “We Are,” a rights group associated with the Iranian exile community in Los Angeles.

The Associated Press interviewed a documentary filmmaker who shot footage of an Iranian diplomat being harassed by protesters near the United Nations in New York on Wednesday.

Iran's state-run satellite news channel, Press TV, blamed the attack on supporters of the Mujahedeen Khalq, identifying them as “anti-Iran M.K.O. terrorists.” As our colleague Scott Shane reported last week, Sec retary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton has decided to remove the Mujahedeen Khalq from the State Department's list of Foreign Terrorist Organizations, after an intense lobbying campaign on behalf of the group.

In an e-mail to The Times, Alireza Miryousefi, the press attaché for Iran's Mission to the United Nations, characterized the incident as “aggression by M.E.K. sect members” against Mr. Mehmanparast. He added that removing the “terrorist sect” from the State Department's list of Foreign Terrorist Organizations “would be another wrong step by the U.S. administration.”

Another video clip, apparently recorded on the phone of a man shouting threats at Mr. Mehmanparast from very close range, showed police officers escorting the diplomat away from protesters screaming “terrorist!” At one point in the video, Mr. Mehmanparast walks past a pharmacy at the corner of 48th Street and Second Avenue.

Video shot b y one of the protesters who surrounded and verbally abused an Iranian diplomat in New York on Wednesday.

Iranian opposition video bloggers drew attention to a third clip that appeared to show the same incident from another angle, recorded from above the street, that has been copied and viewed more than 100,000 times on YouTube.

The incident came after Iranian exiles rallied outside the United Nations to protest Mr. Ahmadinejad's speech. Maryam Rajavi, the leader of the the Mujahedeen Khalq, which is described as a cult by some former members, addressed the rally from France by satellite. Patrick Kennedy, a former congressman from Rhode Island, who admitted on camera last year that he had been paid $25,000 to voice his support for the M.E.K. at a rally in Washington, also addressed Wednesday's protest.

Homeira Hesami, an M.E.K. organizer and Iranian expatriate who is a medical technician in Texas, told The Times that a group of Iranian officials, wi th police officer escorts, were walking west on 47th Street from the U.N. campus toward Second Avenue at around 1:30 when a number of protesters recognized Mr. Mehmanparast. Ms. Hesami was across the street. “I saw him walking by and of course we started chanting, ‘Get lost!' in Farsi,” she said. “People were angry at him and surrounded him. The presence of Ahmadinejad at the U.N. made people very emotional.”

She said the M.E.K. protesters were commingled with Syrians protesting the Assad government. “We suffer from the same pain,” she said. “We were side by side. It wasn't like they had their own thing and we had our own thing.”

A man who identified himself as Gregory Nelson boasted to The Daily News that he had managed to punch the Iranian diplomat in the stomach during the melee.

Mr. Nelson, who identified himself as a former soldier, said that he flew to New York from Fayetteville, Ark., to attend the anti-Ahmadinejad protest. After a rally in favor of the M.E.K. in Washington last year, Zaid Jilani and Ali Gharib of the liberal Web site ThinkProgress interviewed several people who were bused or flown in for the demonstration who seemed to know little about the group's past involvement in terrorist attacks. Three of the men were from Fayetteville, Ark.



Iranian Channel Decries \'Assassination\' of Its Correspondent in Syria

By ROBERT MACKEY

Iran's state-run Press TV reports that one of its correspondents was shot and killed by sniper fire on Wednesday in central Damascus, in an attack that also wounded the satellite news channel's bureau chief in the Syrian capital.

The correspondent, Maya Naser, 33, was born in Syria but reported for the channel in English. His wounded colleague, Hussein Mortada, is a Lebanese supporter of the Syrian government who also directs coverage of Syria for the Iranian government's Arabic-language satellite channel, Al Alam.

The channel's initial report on the deadly attack included audio of Mr. Naser's last dispatch. He was reporting live via telephone from outside a military headquarters in Damascus, bomb ed by rebels earlier in the day, when the line suddenly clicked off. Press TV said that Mr. Naser was shot by a sniper as he was speaking. A later report posted on the station's YouTube channel included footage of the correspondent just before the shooting, and an outraged statement from Press TV's news director in Tehran, who blamed governments that support the Syrian uprising for the reporter's “assassination.”

A video report from Iran's Press TV on the death of one of the channel's correspondents in Syria.

“We hold Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar, who provide militants weapons to kill civilians, military personnel and journalists, responsible for the killing of Maya,” Hamid Reza Emadi of Press TV said. The news director also claimed that “the Western-backed killers in Syria are following the example of the United States in Iraq; the U.S. also sent snipers to assassinate people there.”

Somewhat conf usingly, at least some of the video Press TV used to show Mr. Naser and Mr. Mortada in Wednesday's reports seems to have been filmed last week. The images were used in a report posted on Press TV's YouTube channel on Sept. 18, in which Mr. Naser said that the crew had been “ambushed by a group of militants” while traveling in a Syrian Army vehicle in the sprawling Palestinian refugee camp in southern Damascus. In that report too, Mr. Naser said that Mr. Mortada had been wounded by sniper fire.

A Press TV video report broadcast last week showing the channel's Damascus bureau chief in a hospital.

As The Lede reported in February, reports on the crisis in Syria from Iran's state-owned satellite channels usually echo Tehran's strong support for the government of President Bashar al-Assad, casting the rebels as foreign-backed “terrorists,” with little popular support.

There have been suggestions that the simi larity of Press TV's reports to those broadcast on Syrian state television is no coincidence. In April, when The Guardian published a trove of hacked e-mails taken from the in-boxes of Syrian officials, one message from Mr. Mortada to one of Mr. Assad's media advisers included a complaint about the government not heeding directions passed on to him “from Iran and Hezbollah,” the Lebanese militant group, about who Syria should blame for bomb attacks.

After the e-mail was made public, Mr. Mortada strongly denied that he had advised the Assad government and defended his work for Iran and Hezbolah in an interview with the Arab newspaper Asharq Al-Awsat.

Mr. Naser's report last week from the Palestinian refugee camp in Damascus illustrates how closely the Iranian channel hews to the Syrian government line on the conflict. Despite video and photographic evidence of recent anti-Assad demonstrations in the refugee camp, Mr. Naser claimed in his voice-over that the go vernment military operation he witnessed there, “began when Palestinian refugees in the camp requested the Syrian Army's help to clear the area from armed groups.” In his sign-off, he said the Syrian Army was “chasing foreign-backed armed groups” from the area.

Like many other Syrian bloggers and journalists, Mr. Nasr made frequent use of social networks in his work. In his final update on Twitter, he reported the explosions in central Damascus on Wednesday morning.

His impartiality as a reporter was called into question last month, when he was among the first to draw attention on Twitter to false reports of setbacks for rebel forces in Aleppo that were posted on a Reuters Web site by pro-Assad hackers. After the reports were exposed as a hoax, neg lected to inform his readers on the social network until The Lede drew attention to his role.

Although Mr. Naser's Twitter profile clearly displayed his face, and the Press TV logo, and he appeared regularly on camera in his reports, he wrote last month that he was worried about being identified as an employee of the Iranian channel. In early August, Mr. Nasr complained about the fact that one of his Twitter updates (with the self-portrait he posted there) and a report he filed for Press TV from the Syrian city of Aleppo had been featured in The Lede's report on the fake Reuters reports. “I am in a war zone, there is a price on our heads,” he wrote.

After a pro-Assad television studio was attacked in June, Syrian activists disagreed sharply about whether Syrian reporters whose work might be considered propaganda should be considered legitimate targets for armed rebels. Rami Jarrah, a Syrian opposition activist in Cairo, told The Lede then that while the faci lities of “state-controlled television” are “an element of the regime,” journalists are “absolutely not” legitimate targets for attack or assassination.

According to Press TV, Mr. Naser “studied political science at Kuplan University,” in the United States, possibly a reference to Kaplan University, a subsidiary of The Washington Post Company that offers online degrees.

While Mr. Naser's work for the Iranian channel was not overtly personal in nature, he did reveal his feelings about the conflict tearing his country apart on Twitter, where he regularly sparred with critics, and in blog posts. In a post on the Syria Politics blog two months ago, headlined “Night in Damascus,” Mr. Naser wrote:

Little bit after midnight, me looking out from the window of my bedroom inside Damascus city, watching a full sky moon and listening to the sounds of the army shelling rebels sites in outskirts, asking myself; is this real? Is this fire I can barely see is someone's house burning, or maybe neighborhood store? Is this my country on fire?

Then for a moment I convince myself, I am just dreaming and my day is going to be busy one, I better go sleep, I ought to wake up in few hours to go my work, multiple meetings are waiting ahead, then a lunch with my beloved girlfriend, afterward I have gathering with my best friend to discuss his wedding details. Basically; in few hours I have to get up to have another hard day of life? Who said life should be easy anyway!!!

Then I snap out of this sweet dream, just to remember, I lost my job! That friend of mine had been killed few weeks ago; his body was sent to his fiancé in a black bag! We didn't know why he was slaughtered; we didn't understand what his fault was! He was a doctor serving patients, never been into politics, but sure never been pro Assad, amid all this, the reality hit me, he was minority and the years his father spent at prison for being oppo sition for the current system didn't grant my friend any mercy, his ethnic roots were stronger to be noticed than his family position of this system! And yes this is my country, and this fire is at someone's place, someone I might never know but that doesn't mean he never existed!!!



Pogue: Maps Most Embarrassing, Least Usable Apple Software

Last week, I used 's new Maps app on my to guide me to a speaking engagement.

The GPS navigation screen was clean, bold and distraction-free. The voice instructions spoke the actual street names. The prompts gave me just the right amount of time to prepare for each turn.

There was only one problem: When the app told me that I had arrived, I was sitting in a random suburban cul-de-sac. Children were playing in the front yard, the sky was a crisp blue, and I was late for my talk.

As almost everyone knows by now, that's not an unusual tale. Horror stories about Apple's maps - and ridicule - are flooding the Internet.

The iPhone's old mapping app was powered by . But in the new iOS 6 software for iPhones and iPads, Apple replaced Google's maps with its own, built from scratch.

Unfortunately, in this new app, the Washington Monument has been moved to a new spot across the street. The closest thing Maps can find for “Dulles Airport” is “Dulles Airport Taxi.” Search for Cleveland, Ga., and you'll wind up right smack in Cleveland, Tenn. Riverside Hospital in Jacksonville, Fla., is in the right place but the wrong decade; it became a Publix supermarket 11 years ago.

And on, and on, and on. Entire lakes, train stations, bridges and tourist attractions have been moved, mislabeled or simply erased. Satellite photo views consist of stitched-together scenes from completely different seasons, weather conditions and even years. The point-of-interest data, in particular, seems to be incomplete or flaky, especially overseas (many snarky examples at theamazingios6maps.tumblr.com).

The most stunning new feature, Flyover, offers interactive, photorealistic 3-D models of major cities - but some scenes have gone horribly wrong. The Brooklyn Bridge has melted into the river, the road to the Hoover Dam plunges straight down into a canyon and Auckland's main train station is in the middle of the sea.

In short, Maps is an appalling first release. It may be the most embarrassing, least usable piece of software Apple has ever unleashed.

Yes, it adds spoken turn-by-turn directions, auto-rerouting and a 3-D view of your route, all of which the old app lacked. Its design is elegant, smart and attractive. Flyover is neat. And Maps works beautifully with Siri; setting a destination is as easy as saying, “Give me directions to the White House,” and off you go. The spoken instructions continue even if you turn off the screen.

But Maps is missing Street View, which lets you see street-level photos of any address (it has taken Google's photo cars five million miles of driving through 3,000 cities in 40 countries to build it). It's also missing public transportation guidance; where Google's maps could show you what buses or subways to take, the new app just hands you off to a list of independent bus and train schedule apps.

And while you're navigating, you can't zoom out from that spare, elegant routing screen to look ahead at your itinerary - to pick a better route on your own, for example. You can tap an Overview button for that kind of map, but now you're flipping between two displays.

As the magnitude of Mapplegate (as one of my readers calls it) became clearer, I had three questions.

First, why did Apple jettison Google's map service, which is polished and mature? Second, how did Apple and its squad of perfectionists misfire so badly? Third, what exactly is the underlying problem, and how long will it take to fix?

After poking around, here's what I've learned.

First, why Apple dropped the old version: Google, it says, was saving all the best features for phones that run its software. For example, the iPhone app never got spoken directions or vector maps (smooth lines, not tiles of pixels), long after those features had come to rival phones.

The even greater issue may be data. Every time you use Google's maps, you're sending data from your phone to Google. That information - how you're using maps, where you're going, which roads actually exist - is extremely valuable; it can be used to improve both the maps and Google's ability to deliver location-based offers and advertising.

Apple, of late, has been disentangling itself from Google. (It also eliminated the YouTube app from iOS 6, although Google quickly released a free downloadable app.) So when it came time to renew its contract, Apple declined. It was no longer interested in supplying so much valuable user data to its rival.

To build its replacement, Apple licensed data from other companies.

It bought map data from TomTom, which also supplies maps for BlackBerry, HTC and Samsung phones, and even parts of Google Maps.

Apple got restaurant and store listings from Yelp, traffic data from Waze and so on - more than two dozen sources in all, Apple says.

The resulting ocean of information is many petabytes of data (one petabyte is a million gigabytes, if you're scoring at home). Well over 99 percent of it, Apple says, is accurate.



TimesCast Tech: Driverless Cars

  • Previous Post More Are Watching Internet Video on Actual TVs, Research Shows


  • Images of Clashes at Anti-Austerity Protests in Europe

    By JENNIFER PRESTON

    As my colleagues Liz Alderman and Niki Kitsantonis report, tens of thousands of demonstrators gathered in Athens to protest salary and pension cuts on Wednesday. The rally, which began peacefully, turned violent in the early afternoon when a small group of demonstrators threw Molotov cocktails at police officers and firebombs at government buildings near the Greek Parliament.

    The violence came after anti-austerity protesters in Spain clashed with police officers outside the Parliament building in Madrid. Video posted online showed the violence in both capitals.

    Protesters scattered in Athens's Syntagma Square as black smoke filled the air and the police responded with tear gas and batons.

    What began as a peaceful protest in Athens against austerity measures turned violent after a small group of protesters threw Molotov cocktails at the police.

    Stathis Kalligeris, a photographer, captured multiple images of the demonstration showing how it began peacefully but devolved into violence.

    Before the firebombs were thrown by a small group of protesters, teachers and medical personnel joined the march as trade union groups called for a nationwide strike against the cuts that make up a $15 billion austerity plan.

    By afternoon, the crowd dispersed as firefighters put out the lingering fires.

    In Spain, organizers against the austerity measures called for a protest in Madrid to begin early Wednesday evening, a day after thousands of people showed up for a peaceful demonstration that ended with violent clashes with the police outside the Parliament building.

    My colleague Raphael Minder reported that the protests came as Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy was coming under intense pressure from investors and his European counterparts to clean up Spain's banks and public finance.

    In this video, captured and posted on YouTube by Tim Pool, a freelance video journalist who was in Madrid, the police can be seen wielding batons against the crowd.

    El Pais, which published more video of the violence, reported on Wednesday that government officials defended police a ctions.

    El Pais reported on Wednesday that the police had arrested 35 demonstrators on a variety of charges as people criticized what they viewed as a harsh response by the police during the protest.

    El Pais also quoted Cristina Cifuentes, the government delagate in Madrid, about her support for the police response.

    “They have my absolute support, and I want to congratulate the National Police because they showed professionalism during difficult times,” said the government delegate in Madrid, Cristina Cifuentes, on Wednesday. Cifuentes had earlier warned that all protests in front of Congress were illegal and demonstrators would only be allowed to converge on Neptune square.

    Cifuentes said the police came under a “disproportionate attack,” with people at the protest hurling “stones, screws and bottles,” at the law enforcement officers.



    Egyptian-American Commentator Arrested in Times Square for Defacing Subway Ad Calling Israel\'s Opponents \'Savage\'

    By ROBERT MACKEY and MATT FLEGENHEIMER
    Video of the Egyptian-American journalist Mona Eltahawy being arrested for defacing a poster in the Times Square subway station on Tuesday.

    An Egyptian-American columnist, who rose to prominence on social media last year for her commentary during the revolution in Egypt, was arrested in the Times Square subway station on Tuesday for spraying pink paint on a pro-Israel poster that calls Islamist opponents of the Jewish state “savage.”

    The poster was one of 10 placed in subway stations across the transit system this week, on the heels of violent and sometimes deadly protests across the Muslim world in response to an American-made video mocking the Prophet Muhammad.

    The Metropolitan Transportation Authority had initially rejected the ads, citing their “demeaning” language. Read more on the City Room blog.



    Vivid Dispatches From Syria\'s Front Lines

    By ROBERT MACKEY

    Eighteen months have passed since an adviser to President Bashar al-Assad of Syria scolded a BBC correspondent in Damascus for reporting that video posted on YouTube by activists appeared to contradict official accounts of a crackdown on protesters broadcast on state-run television. “The events are happening in Syria,” Bouthaina Shaaban insisted, one week into the uprising, “therefore, it's Syrian television who tells the truth, nobody else.”

    Now that the Syrian government has lost its monopoly on the flow of information - and on the use of violence to impose its will - the Assad government has become somewhat more willing to grant limited access to foreign correspondents to report on the battle for control of Syria's largest cities.

    One of those correspondents, Bill Neely, the International Editor for Britain's ITV News, filed a remarkable video report this week from Homs, where parts of the city are still held by armed rebels, six months after the Free Syrian Army retreated from the district of Baba Amr under heavy bombardment.

    Mr. Neely, a Belfast native who began his career covering sectarian violence by Christian militias, explained on the ITV News Web site that the government snipers he met in Homs were just 50 yards away from the rebels, in a ruined neighborhood where “the front line has moved no more than five hundred yards,” since May. “One hundred yards a month, at a cost of hundreds of lives. A day ago, five Syrian soldiers were killed here.”

    After he returned to Damascus from the front line in Homs, Mr. Neely reported on Twitter that Assad loyalists were still fighting to retake parts of the capital from the rebels on Tuesday.< /p>

    Lyse Doucet, a Canadian correspondent and anchor who is in Damascus for BBC News, filed two reports this week, one from a village in the western region of Latakia, the heartland of the president's Alawite sect, and a second from the capital.

    Her first report showed mourners at the funeral of a government soldier in an Alawite village fiercely loyal to the president, where one man told her: “There are two sides. The conflict is severe and villainâ€" and we don't like it. We don't like it, we don't want it, but we are forced, we are compelled to do it.”

    Writing on Twitter after she returned to Damascus from Latakia on Sunday, Ms. Doucet reported hearing explosions, one of them just outside her hotel.

    Images of the security forces scrambling to respond to the explosion outside the Damascus Four Seasons Hotel, and of a man being detai ned and head-butted by a security officer, were included in Ms. Doucet's second report, broadcast on Tuesday.

    Ms. Doucet's most recent report also showed that the government still restricts the movement of foreign journalists quite heavily. Her crew managed to film the security forces blocking her from reporting in a northern district of the capital and then sending a fighter in plain clothes to listen in on her interview with a fruit seller near a government checkpoint.

    On Tuesday, the Guardian published a portrait of “the bloody stalemate” in Syria's largest city, Aleppo, reported from behind rebel lines in recent weeks by the correspondent Ghaith Abdul-Ahad. The reporter's journey to that front line was featured in a long video report broadcast last week by PBS.



    Video of Obama\'s U.N. Address

    By ROBERT MACKEY

    As my colleague Helene Cooper reports, President Barack Obama devoted most of his address to the United Nations General Assembly on Tuesday to the Arab democracy movement and the tension between free speech and mutual respect among cultures and faiths in an era of instant, global communication.

    PBS Newshour posted video of the entire 30-minute speech online.

    Video of President Barack Obama addressing the United Nations General Assembly on Tuesday in New York.

    Mr. Obama's remarks began and ended with a tribute to “an American named Chris Stevens,” the ambassador to Libya who was killed in Benghazi this month, on the first day of protests over a trailer for a crude film about the life of Islam's founder posted on YouTube in California.

    The president praised Libyans who marched in their thousands to protest the killing of the diplomat, and three other Americans, and discussed the impossibility of constraining speech now that it is possible for Syrian protesters and anti-Islam zealots alike to harness the power of the Web to reach a global audience with their broadcasts.

    I know that not all countries in this body share this particular understanding of the protection of free speech. We recognize that. But in 2012, at a time when anyone with a cell phone can spread offensive views around the world with the click of a button, the notion that we can control the flow of information is obsolete. The question, then, is how do we respond?

    And on this we must agree: There is no speech that justifies mindless violence. There are no words that excuse the killing of i nnocents. There's no video that justifies an attack on an embassy. There's no slander that provides an excuse for people to burn a restaurant in Lebanon, or destroy a school in Tunis, or cause death and destruction in Pakistan.

    In this modern world with modern technologies, for us to respond in that way to hateful speech empowers any individual who engages in such speech to create chaos around the world. We empower the worst of us if that's how we respond.



    Video Reports From Japan, Taiwan and China on Confrontation Off Disputed Islands

    By ROBERT MACKEY

    As my colleague Hiroko Tabuchi reports from Tokyo, the Japanese Coast Guard fired water cannons on Tuesday at a flotilla of Taiwanese fishing boats off a chain of islands claimed by Japan, Taiwan and China. Japan's state broadcaster, NHK, captured some of the confrontation on video.

    A video report from NHK World, the broadcaster's English-language satellite channel, showed a Japanese ship spraying water at one of the Taiwanese boats.

    Video of a confrontation between the Japanese Coast Guard and Taiwanese fishing boats in a report from NHK World, the English-language channel of Japan's state broadcaster.

    In its report on the face-off, the Taiwan ese broadcaster TTV showed more of the flag-draped fishing vessels off the islands, which Japan calls the Senkaku and China calls the Diaoyu.

    Taiwanese television's report on a flotilla of vessels from Taiwan turned back by the Japanese Coast Guard in disputed waters.

    The standoff was shown from a third angle in a video report broadcast just after noon local time by the Shanghai-based Chinese satellite channel Dragon TV. That report was later posted on the news section of Youku, a video-sharing site in China, where it was viewed nearly 900,000 times in a few hours.

    Watching the confrontation unfold from Hong Kong, an American journalist, Doug Meigs, observed on Twitter that Chinese officials might well view the clash between two allies of the United States in the region with satisfaction.



    Chinese Social Media Accounts Clash With Official Reports on Riot at Foxconn Factory

    By JENNIFER PRESTON
    Video said to show workers protesting at FoxConn Technology in China late Sunday was uploaded onto YouKu, Chinese video-sharing site, and later posted on YouTube by Richard Lai of Engadget.

    As my colleagues David Barboza and Keith Bradsher report, China's official state-run agency said five thousand police officers were called to Foxconn Technology, one of China's largest manufacturing plants, to help quell a riot by employees that led to a shutdown of the plant on Monday.

    In an official statement, Foxconn, a major supplier to Apple and other technology companies that is located in Taiyuan in Sanxi province, said that 40 people were hospitalized an d many were arrested during the riot that lasted several hours after it broke out late Sunday night. The company said the dispute appears “not to have been work-related,” which conflicts with unconfirmed reports on Chinese social media sites that claim the melee began after security guards beat a worker.

    Richard Lai, a senior associate editor at Engadget, a technology blog, was monitoring posts on Chinese social media sites, including the Baidu Tieba forum, YouKu, a video-sharing site, and Sina Weibo, China's answer to Twitter. Mr. Lai reported that several people said the disturbance started after a worker was beaten. Mr. Lai also published photos of what appeared to be damage resulting from the riot that was shared on social sites; many of which were soon removed from the Web.

    Bill Bishop, publisher of The Sinocism China Newsletter, a daily email about news from China, shared on his Twitter account a photo that he found on Weibo said to show damage from the riot.

    John Ong of The NextWeb posted an official statement from FoxConn about the incident at the facility, which employs 79,000 people:

    Foxconn can confirm that a personal dispute between several employees escalated into an incident involving some 2,000 workers at approximately 11 p.m. last night in a privately-managed dormitory near our manufacturing facility in Taiyuan in Shanxi province. The dispute was brought under control by local police at approximately 3 a.m. this morning. According to police, some 40 individuals were taken to the hospital for medical attention and a number of individuals were arrested. The cause of this dispute is under investigation by local authorities and we are working closely with them in this process, but it appears not to have been work-related. The Taiyuan facility employs 79,000 people and manufactures automobile electronic components, consumer electronic components and precision moldings.

    On Monday, the company dismissed some reports in China that ten people had died during the riots.

    With the recent announcement of the iPhone 5, there was some speculation online that the riot might have been caused by tensions among workers due to increased production but those reports are unconfirmed.

    “>According to Tea Leaf, an online e-magazine that monitors and translates social media posts in China, one text comment posted on a Weibo account called the Sina Technology Channel (@新浪ç§'技) read:

    A large number of workers were moved to Taiyuan to make iPhone 5 in a rush. The security personnel at the factory had a fight with a worker from Shandong Province, dragged him to a van and beat him up. The victim's co-workers from Shandong sought revenge, and workers from Henan Province became involved too, and the situation devolved into chaos where workers chased down security guards and beat them up.

    Foxconn, which has its headquarters in Taiwan, manufactures more than 40 percent of the world's electronics for such companies as Apple, Dell, Amazon and others and is China's largest and most prominent private employer, with 1.2 million workers.

    In the past year, Foxconn has come under intense scrutiny over working conditions inside its factories. Earlier this month in The Times, David Barboza and Charles Duhigg reported that Foxconn was coming under renewed criticism over its labor practices following reports “that vocational students were being compelled to work at plants making iPhones and their components.”



    Interviewing Egypt\'s Islamist President: Answers to Reader Questions

    By STEVEN ERLANGER and DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK

    The interview with President Mohamed Morsi published this weekend prompted more than 1,200 questions and comments on our Web site and a surge of interest on Twitter. Thank you to everyone who participated, and the authors - David D. Kirkpatrick and I - are taking the opportunity to answer some of the most central and thought-provoking questions here.

    A word about the way the interview was conducted. Any interview is by nature artificial, and interviews of heads of state, particularly new ones, have a lot of protocol attached, not to mention consecutive translation, which is time consuming. President Morsi speaks good English but often chose to respond, as Egypt's head of state, in Arabic. But he did understand questions posed in English, which saved time. We had a long wait for him, but then he was generous with his time, giving us nearly 90 minutes. The first part was not as efficient, because the official translator was nervous and not very colloquial; finally a top aide, more bilingual than even Mr. Morsi, stepped in. His is the voice you hear on a lot of the audio excerpts.

    All this to say, to respond to the reader in Atlanta who goes by Another Human and many others, that there are many questions both authors would have liked to have asked, some of which readers raised. But not everything is possible, and Mr. Morsi spent a lot of time at the start talking about the geography of California and his deep respect for a particular teacher of his. While one can interrupt the flow of a head of state to try to raise another question, one cannot do it continuously and maintain a necessary degree of respect. - Steven Erlanger

    I want President Morsi to know that millions of Americans were supportive of Egypt's desire for some form of democracy. Perhaps we were not clear about what that means. My question is: Does Egyptian democracy include Shariah law? I ask this question because Shariah law is about religion and morality. How can that be a democracy? He also states that Egyptian democracy will be for all people. If it is an Islamic state and is under Sharia law how is that possible? - Madeline | Florida

    Thank you for articulating a frequent question. I think the honest answer is that there is a robust debate going on right now in Egypt and across the Arab world over how to apply the teachings of Islam in a democratic context, in the Arab Spring.

    It is worth nothing that Egypt's Constitution, like many in the region, has long contained an article stating that its civil laws derive from the principles of Islamic law. So that is old news here.

    Ther e are some ultraconservatives - under the umbrella term Salafis - who say they want to change that to make the law conform more directly with literal, even medieval Islamic law, although the details are hazy. But Mr. Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhood prefer to keep it as it is. When I have asked Brotherhood leaders about how to apply Islamic law, they say that they believe the first principle is “shura,” or consultation, which they interpret to mean representative government or the consent of the governed. They say that the question of how to apply Islamic law should be up to the citizens, through their elected officials. Democracy, essentially.

    But the same Brotherhood leaders also sometimes say that they believe the people who craft Egypt's public policy should have expertise in a practical field - economics, or transportation, for example - but also in Islamic law. And Mr. Morsi says he will be a president for all Egyptians while also apparently sticking to the view that under Islamic law the president of the state should be a Muslim.

    Still, Mr. Morsi was careful to say that whatever his personal views, the constitution of the civil state should not exclude women or Christians from the highest office. We asked Mr. Morsi how he felt about a proposal by the more conservative Islamists for a panel of Muslim religious scholars chosen by Cairo's Al Azhar, the pre-eminent center of Sunni Muslim scholarship, to have court-like powers to strike down statutes that conflicted with Islamic law. He dismissed that immediately. He said that under the old government the Parliament could call on a panel of Azhar scholars for nonbinding consultation, adding that the “consultative” role at the parliamentary level to continue. (At the moment, Al Azhar is a beacon of moderation, but under Hosni Mubarak its leaders were chosen by the government. Now it is expected to be independent and could evolve in other directions.)

    As a group, th e Muslim Brotherhood has indicated that, however conservative its vision of a good society, it does not intend to impose that vision on others by law - though it might try to encourage by example. So we have seen Egypt drop its ban on female newscasters wearing the Muslim head scarf, though we have not seen newscasters required to wear it. We have seen an Islamic bank open, but we have not seen restrictions on Western banking. We see more public employees allowed to wear beards, but none are required to do so. And so on.

    The Salafis are more open to using the laws to enforce moral codes. And on the other side there are also Islamists - including former presidential candidate and former Brotherhood leader Abdel Moneim Aboul Fotouh, and some other Brotherhood breakaway parties - who argue even more forcefully that Islamic law itself prohibits the enforcing of religious moral codes on others. “There is no coercion in matters of religion” is a quote from the Koran th at Dr. Aboul Fotouh likes to repeat. The more moderate Islamists tend to argue that when the government starts interpreting and applying religious teachings then it risks corrupting both itself and the faith, and so a more or less secular state is the most conducive context for Muslims to practice their faith.

    This thinking may sound familiar to Americans. - David Kirkpatrick

    Great interview, but far too short. What are his plans for the country? What is his vision for the future? What does he see as the next step for the Arab Spring? What are his opinions of the other countries in the region? Does he think Iran is building nuclear weapons, or that Israel is planning an attack? How is the political transition going in Egypt - completely finished, or still in progress? How does he perceive the average citizen to be doing at this point in the history of his country? They just went through a great deal of change, and there are so many other topics worth exploring.

    Mr. Morsi seems like a very rational, aware, levelheaded person. He seems to have a clear understanding of his role, and of how to provide balanced leadership to his people and his nation. I hope the American media will stop focusing on his faith and pay more attention to his actions as a statesman,because the man himself clearly understands that those two things are separate. - Another Human | Atlanta

    Please tell our editors you found our article too short! We are always fighting for space, in competition with all the other news around the world.

    I think you are right that President Morsi may have preferred to talk about his plans for Egypt, mainly its economy. Mr. Morsi, his advisers, his party, and the Brotherhood have all made clear that they see that as the most important issue they face in the short term, and how they handle it will go a long way toward determining their fortune in politics as well as Egypt's future. They are very much oriented tow ard the free market and, over time, dismantling a bloated public sector.

    In foreign affairs, Mr. Morsi has sought to take a leadership role on the crisis with Syria. He has said he sees a successful outcome of the Syrian uprising as the next step for the Arab Spring, and he has used his case of Syria to stake out a new approach to regional politics and Iran.

    His first real foray into foreign affairs was convening a contact group composed of what he considers the four chief regional powers, Egypt, Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Iran - even though the last is treated as a pariah by the West, to try to broker their own solution to the Syrian crisis.

    Advisers say Mr. Morsi's project on Syria reflects his larger approach to relations with Iran: open to dialogue as key players in the region, unencumbered by Washington's own relations with Iran but without embracing Tehran as a new ally either.

    In the interview, Mr. Morsi said he had received only encouragement from the United States and Europe for his efforts. “No government I dealt with, including American government, had any objection to this quartet,” Mr. Morsi said.

    He said the United States should focus its own effort on diplomacy within the United Nations Security Council, where Russia and China have blocked the imposition stringent penalties on the Assad government. And he stressed that he did not support any military intervention. “I want to continue to close the space around the Syrian regime, to allow the Syrian people to resolve this with their own values and their own strength,” he said.

    As for your point about treating him as a public official instead of a religious figure, he is the first Islamist freely elected as an Arab head of state. His inauguration is a defining moment for a movement that has struggled in the shadows for more than eight decades to try to remake the Arab world and its relations to the West. So I would expect continued media a ttention to the Islamic character or aspects of his agenda. - David Kirkpatrick

    I wish you had asked the following questions:

    1. What is Morsi's opinion of [Sayyid] Qutb's writings and their role in defining the ideology of the Muslim Brotherhood. Does he reject Qutb's assessment of the inherent conflict between the Muslim world and the cosmopolitan West or does he accept them?

    2. Hamas in the Gaza Strip is an affiliate of the Muslim Brotherhood. Would Morsi criticize any moves Hamas has taken since gaining control of Gaza, such as harassing Western nongovernmental aid organizations, and even some Christian congregations?

    3. Morsi attended graduate school in the United States for his Ph.D. in materials science, and yet has endorsed the 9/11 deniers' belief that the World Trade Center towers collapse was due to explosives planted by parties other than the Al Qaeda terrorists. Indeed, Morsi has expressed skepticism that amateur pilots could have flown the planes into the towers. Does Morsi still believe this?

    4. In his years in the U.S., Morsi undoubtedly was exposed to the First Amendment and the importance of free speech to Americans. Yet after the Cairo embassy attack, Morsi's first reaction was to call for the American government to place the filmmakers of the “Innocence of Muslims” on trial. Why did Morsi demand this, and did he expect the U.S. government to comply? Thanks. - Dubbmann | Albuquerque

    I see you are following Egypt closely! And these are also questions that come up often.

    Sayyid Qutb was a historically significant and widely influential midcentury Islamist thinker. And he was a part of the Brotherhood during the revolution that brought Gamal Abdel Nasser to power. But he is now best remembered for his most radical and militant ideas. Those ideas were always controversial within the Brotherhood, whose founder, Hassan el-Banna, emphasized inclusiveness. And the Brotherhood has disavo wed militancy or violence since at least Nasser's revolution in 1952.

    But I find Qutb often looms larger in the West these days than he does in Egypt or the Middle East, because his ideas the foundation of a different, far more militant and anti-democratic strain of Islamist thinking that led to Al Qaeda. The Muslim Brotherhood has never endorsed terrorism or Al Qaeda. And when Al Qaeda took responsibility for the terrorist attack of September 11, 2001, Mr. Morsi-then a leader of the Brotherhood's political arm and its parliamentary minority - was quick to denounce it.

    We tried briefly to ask Mr. Morsi about Hamas's rule in Gaza, and, in a polite way, he told us it was a silly comparison. Egypt is a giant and far more diverse. It has an established Christian minority whose rights are at least written into the law, and it has a relatively strong tradition of respecting the rule of law, compared to some of its neighbors. But I regret that we did not get a chance to ask him exactly your question.

    We did not ask Mr. Morsi about 9/11, but, despite an engineering degree in materials science, his aides tell me he does indeed question the official United States government account of what happened to the buildings.

    I know that a lot of Egyptians question the official story but at the same time think the attacks were a horrendous crime. I suspect part of the explanation is that many Egyptians, probably including Mr. Morsi, deeply distrust the United States for some of the reasons that he tried to articulate. And I think another part of the explanation is that Egyptians have been lied to by their own government and its official media for at least 60 years (and the privately owned media is not so accurate either). I sometimes have to explain to Egyptians that The New York Times is not owned or controlled by the United States government.

    Mr. Morsi's first response to the attack on the United States Embassy here did condemn th e violence. It is not true that he first called for legal actions against the makers of the video mocking the prophet.

    But his reaction was more than a day late. The Muslim Brotherhood, which is allied with Mr. Morsi, had called for a nonviolent protect against the film in advance of the day the protest took place, and afterward it continued to call for criminalizing such films. And when Mr. Morsi and the Brotherhood both condemned the violence, their statements were mixed with criticism of the video. Many Egyptians seem to believe that it is possible to criminalize grave insults to established religions without intruding too much of freedom of expression - an idea utterly alien to the United States' legal tradition. - David Kirkpatrick

    I wish we had asked some of those questions, too, especially on Qutb. Morsi was clearly put off by the sexual freedom the United States, as Qutb was, but clearly to a significantly less violent degree. Even the 9/11 hijackers w ere both fascinated and repelled by parts of the American lifestyle. But I think a vast majority of Muslim visitors, even from conservative backgrounds, take it in stride. As Morsi said, couples living together out of wedlock is something legal and tolerated by American society. He does not admire it, he said. But his point was a fairly simple one: not all cultures are the same.

    Singapore's Lee Kwan Yew often talked of “Asian values” as different from Western values on social issues as well as issues of human rights. And Beijing's leaders are very aggressive in stating the same thing. Mr. Morsi is breaking no new ground here.

    I am sorry not to have asked the question about 9/11, though I'm sure he would have had an answer prepared, as he did for questions about Egypt's delay in ousting demonstrators from the U.S. Embassy.

    In general I would say I found Mr. Morsi warm, affable and guarded. He was well-prepared and conscious of the importance of the inte rview for his visit to the United States. I had in the past met Mr. Mubarak and Omar Suleiman, and my sense for the moment is that Mr. Morsi is a man with a lot of good will, with an extraordinarily difficult task in front of him - a country of more than 80 million people, with rising prices and high unemployment, with enormous expectations that the Arab spring and Egypt's new leadership will deliver a new more prosperous life for all, and quickly.

    Respect and a little patience seem to me modest things to ask. - Steven Erlanger

    Please ask President Morsi how the U.S. should assist the Palestinians in achieving self-rule when Hamas, by its very charter, denies Israel's right to exist. Or phrased slightly differently, can there be a two-state solution when one of the states denies the other's right to exist. A third variation on the same question would be to ask President Morsi for his vision of an Israeli-Palestinian peace. - Pete | New Jersey

    Thank you f or your question, which touches on a concern of many readers about Egyptian and Palestinian relations with Israel.

    You were curious about President Morsi's long-term view of relations between Egypt and the Palestinians, particularly since Hamas does not recognize Israel's right to exist. I wish we had more opportunities to speak directly to President Morsi and at more length, so we could press him on all these things!

    But I have had a chance to speak to others in Mr. Morsi's Freedom and Justice Party, the political arm of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood, about their view of these things. Hamas, as you may know, is a Palestinian offshoot of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood, and its parent organization has traditionally argued that Hamas was exercising a legitimate right to resist against a foreign occupation. The Brotherhood was sharply critical of the Western-backed Fatah faction that controls the Palestinian Authority for agreeing to work with Israel without receiving any real guarantees about an end to settlements or genuine statehood.

    Since coming to power in Egypt, however, the political arm of the Muslim Brotherhood says that it has changed its stance and feels an obligation to play a more neutral role as an arbiter between Hamas and Fatah. The party's stated position is that Palestinian unity will advance the cause of a peaceful two-state solution. That means pressing Hamas to accept the fact of Israel's existence, if not Israel's moral right to exist. Analysts who follow Hamas closely tell me it has sometimes hinted of its willingness to do this, if it received enough recognition in return.

    When I asked if a Brotherhood-led Egypt might provide weapons or military support to Hamas, a senior Brotherhood official responded with something close to shock at the idea; he said the overarching goal was regional peace and stability and the Brotherhood would never condone the militarization of the region.

    The stated goal i s putting more pressure on Israel to ensure Palestinian self-rule - not wiping Israel off the map.

    That seemed to be President Morsi's thinking as well. He approached the question of the Palestinians in the framework of the Camp David Accord, which also envisions two states living side by side in peace. He has met with leaders of both Palestinian factions. When asked about his agenda, his advisers speak earnestly and almost exclusively about reviving the Egyptian economy, and they acknowledge that requires tranquil borders.

    In my view of the Egyptian political scene, it will be a long time before any politician (secular or Islamist) starts talking publicly about an abstract moral “right” for Israel to exist. But by the same token there is not much appetite in the Egyptian public for efforts to challenge the fact of Israel's existence. - David Kirkpatrick

    I am neither a Jew nor a Muslim. I've spent a great deal of time in the Middle East. I can appreci ate Egypt's position on Palestine and Israel's position on Iran. I would have asked President Morsi if he would renounce Iran's position regarding the destruction of Israel if and when substantive progress were made on a Palestinian State?

    Let's hope that all players in the Middle East's drama begin thinking more of what they can do for their grandchildren and less of what their parents did to one another. - Old | Boston

    Mr. Morsi made it clear he would try engagement with Iran, especially on Syria, and said that the U.S. and others gave him the green light to do so, to try to arrange a regional solution. But there is no doubt that Iran remains a rival to Egypt for supremacy in the region, that the prospect of a nuclear-armed Iran shakes Egyptians as well as the Gulf Arabs, that the Sunni-Shiite rivalry remains hot and hostile, and that Mr. Morsi intends for a newly democratic Egypt, led by a member of the Muslim Brotherhood, to take a more assertive leadership role. And that includes firm opposition to the continuing rule of the Assads in Syria, but also opposition to any outside military intervention. - Steven Erlanger

    “On the eve of his first trip to the United States as Egypt's new Islamist president, Mohamed Morsi said the United States needed to fundamentally change its approach to the Arab world, showing greater respect for its values and helping build a Palestinian state, if it hoped to overcome decades of pent-up anger.” And this seems to anger many readers, a great many saying Egypt has no business telling the U.S. how to interact with his country. They also suggest that the U.S. can cutoff funding if Egypt does not act as they think it should.

    As usual we see ignorance of history by these conservative commentators. They do not know the history of the Aswan Dam and the Russian financing. The Russians were quite happy to step in and give aid and arms to Egypt which made the U.S. sit up and take notice, yo u just cannot go pushing people around because they can use your financial aid. There are others willing to take your place, and Egypt is the largest and most influential country in the Arab world. Arabia my have more money, but Egypt has more resources.

    He is not dictating to the U.S. how to treat them, he is saying what a great many of you do not want to hear. There is pent up anger and the U.S. has to change its approach to dealing with the Arab world, and many of you do not seem to be able accept this. Well get over it. He and his government are in charge there, and they can do without U.S. financing, they have before and can do so again. So listen to what he says. - David Underwood | Citrus Heights

    Thank you for your perspective. It is not for me to judge whether his comments were appropriate. But there are two things worth noting Egypt's view of the U.S. aid money. First, in my experience the Egyptian military and political elite seems to feel like Egypt h olds a lot of leverage here. Egypt is the linchpin of peace with Israel and stability in the region. Egypt controls the Suez Canal at the cross roads of three continents. And by virtue of its size and military strength it is a major player in the Arab world. Egyptian leaders often feel that the United States is getting more than its money's worth if its aid buys Egypt's allegiance. “The U.S. got Egypt cheap,” is how one retired general put it to me.

    Second, most Egyptians feel that all United States aid delivered before the revolution did not go to them. It went to Hosni Mubarak and his government. So when readers say, “We want our money back!,” most Egyptians would say, “Please! See if you can get it back from those crooks but don't look at us! You helped prop up a corrupt autocrat who left his country's economy in a shambles, so our feelings about your past financial support are ambivalent - but this is no take it away.” - David Kirkpatrick

    How gr eat is it that people from all over the world, including President Mohamed Morsi of Egypt, chose to come to universities in the United States for their higher education. They bring their skills home again, but they also take with them cross-cultural understanding that serves them well when they become leaders back home. Of course Arab Spring is about beginning a path toward democracy and the U.S. played a certain role in 2011, but give some credit to our education system and visa opportunities that bring future leaders to the US in their early years. - Marc Seltzer | Los Angeles

    I agree. During the cold war, we used to joke that the best way for the Soviet Union to lose future allies was to let their students come to Moscow to study. But the American university system, though varied by state, represents a major source of American soft power. Mr. Morsi had high praise for the California higher education he received, for his professors and for the way students organized themselves, including providing help to the disabled. He admired, he said, the openness and inclusiveness of America, and he admired, too, he said, the way that Americans worked hard and managed their time. - Steven Erlanger

    My first impression, is that Mr. Morsi sounds is a lot more agreeable, logical, sensible and more contemplative than his counterpart in Israel. We back Israel blindly to our detriment. Notice his response to the “ally” question â€" it's spot on. I perceive in Mr. Morsi a real window of opportunity for the United States to move past its often myopic view of the middle east and reset its relationship to that world, with Mr. Morsi potentially acting as our ambassador of that good will. I think he's got the street cred we need to make it work, if we can prove that we are serious about it.

    Frankly, I'm a little tired of being barked at by what seems to me to be a completely ungrateful and unapologetic Netanyahu. And I feel that Mr. Morsi pre sents a refreshing new view and with it new possibilities.
    Hopefully, this opportunity won't be wasted. - Chicago Guy

    Mr. Morsi enjoyed American freedoms and saw equality at work while he was living here. Yet, as a leader he would discriminate against both females and Christians. It would seem that Mr. Morsi only chooses to remember the scientific things that he learned here.

    It is time for the U.S. to do now with Arab countries like Egypt that call us neither enemy or ally, as President Reagan did in Lebanon after our Marines were killed in an unprovoked attack. We withdraw taking all of our aid, support, and materials that we have provided in the past until such time as leaders like Mr. Morsi decide if their countries will be enemy or ally of the U.S. If we compare the actions of Libya and Egypt after the attacks on the U.S. embassies in those countries, there is little doubt which country we can count on as an Ally and which one fits in one of the other categories. We should give aid only to those countries who openly claim to be allies of the U.S.

    Mr. Morsi knows full well the game he is playing. The question seems to be what does he hope to gain by playing the way he is now and will he be sent home knowing that he played and lost it all? His popularity at home will quickly decline as the consequences of complete loss of U.S. aid starts to spread through Egypt.

    Egypt may have been a valuable ally at one time. With the election of Mr. Morsi, Egypt is nothing more than the sum of its most recent actions. - Merlin8735 | Oklahoma

    Mr. Morsi is very much aware of the context in which he spoke. The relationship with the U.S. is very important to him and to Egypt, not simply for aid - which the U.S. has been slowly diminishing - but for future investment and stability. He has a huge unemployment problem among young people, a considerable factor in the Egyptian revolt against Hosni Mubarak, and Egypt needs to pr ovide young people, especially those with an education, better jobs. It is easier in Egypt to get a job without education than with it; clearly that has to change.

    Also a point on aid: a lot of what the U.S. gives to Egypt is military aid - in Israel's case, all or nearly all of it now is. And a lot of that goes to buy American-made equipment.

    It seems to me, at least, that the United States has an important opportunity to rebalance its relationships with the Arab world itself, to deal with the new realities of shaky but more democratic governments and a wide variety of so-called Islamists. President Obama obviously feels himself constrained by electoral politics from reaching out too forcefully to Mr. Morsi, who knows enough about America to understand why. But beginning with President George W. Bush, the U.S. is committed formally to a Palestinian state living alongside Israel, while guaranteeing Israel's security; Mr. Obama supports the same ends.

    Egypt matters enormously to U.S. interests and that is well understood in Washington, at the White House, State Department and Pentagon. The peace treaty with Egypt and a quiet Egyptian border are one of Israel's main security requirements, and Mr. Morsi and the Egyptian military give no indication that they want to overturn matters with Israel.

    Mr. Morsi knows that the Sinai is a large and sometimes lawless place and that security has slipped since the Tahrir Square uprising. He says he intends to keep order there, and diplomats suggest the Egyptians and Israelis are in regular contact about Sinai, Gaza and possible radical Islamic groups and possible terrorists there. Hamas, too, is worried about being outflanked on the so-called right - by the Salafis and the Al Qaeda wannabes. But Morsi also made clear that Egypt has begun to shut down tunnel activity between the two Rafahs, which the military council did little about before his election.

    I say good luck to that. T he conditions of life in Gaza remain a sore point for Egyptians, but at the same time, Egypt itself is wary of opening up to Gaza so much that it allows Israel to wash its hands of Gaza entirely and Cairo becomes responsible for it.

    Menachem Begin offered Gaza to Anwar Sadat in their peace-treaty negotiations; Sadat said no, thank you. The position in Cairo is unlikely to have changed. - Steven Erlanger