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Kidnapped Peru Gas Project Workers Freed-Police

AYACUCHO, Peru (Reuters) - All 60 workers held by suspected leftist rebels who stormed a remote gas pipeline construction camp in southeastern Peru were freed on Tuesday, police sources said.

"The problem is solved. All (hostages) are safe and sound," a high-level police official, requesting anonymity, told Reuters in the mountain city of Ayacucho. He said the raiders had fled and were being pursued by security forces.

The police official said the released workers were in the custody of police special forces. It was not clear if they were released or rescued by security forces, which had ringed the camp after it was attacked around dawn on Monday.

Argentina's Techint group, which is building the pipeline for the giant Camisea natural gas project, employed the workers at the camp in Toccate in the Ayacucho region south-east of Lima.

112 posted on 06/10/2003 4:46:38 PM PDT by TexKat
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Thousands of Iranians Protest Near University

TEHRAN (Reuters) - Thousands of Iranians took to the streets in the early hours of Wednesday, chanting anti-government slogans in so far peaceful protests after police surrounded a Tehran student dormitory, witnesses said.

"Political prisoners must be freed," some 3,000 people shouted in a square near Tehran University, the scene almost four years ago of the biggest pro-reform unrest since the 1979 revolution -- which was also led from the same campus.

Other chants were directed against Iran's clerical rulers, a most unusual development. Residents said the chants were the most extreme since the unrest four years ago.

Many people said they had gathered after hearing calls by U.S.-based Iranian exile satellite television channels to go to the campus after student protests there on Tuesday.

But hundreds of police blocked their way and stood guard around dormitories where Tuesday's student protests took place. The witnesses said some protesters lit fires in the streets but police had not intervened.

Many in Iran have lost faith in moderate President Mohammad Khatami (news - web sites) and his lack of progress in reforming the 24-year-old Islamic Republic in the face of strong conservative opposition from the holders of powerful positions within the state.

High unemployment and frustration with Iran's strict Islamic laws have fed discontent among the overwhelmingly youthful population, around 70 percent of which is under 30 and has little memory of life before the revolution.

Analysts say the reformers have been further weakened by a resurgent hardline faction which is determined not to loosen its grip on power now that U.S. troops are on both the eastern and western borders of Iran, in Afghanistan and Iraq

Despite the reformers' overwhelming victories in presidential and parliamentary polls since Khatami came to office in 1997, most of their efforts to institute change have been blocked by conservatives appointed as political watchdogs.

Late last year Iran saw its biggest pro-reform protests for three years after academic dissident Hashem Aghajari was sentenced to death for blasphemy. The conviction was later overturned.

The initial court verdict in November sparked almost two months of protests as thousands of students boycotted classes and staged rallies, insisting Aghajari's trial and sentencing highlighted political repression and a lack of free speech.

The largely peaceful protests turned violent at times. Hundreds were arrested by baton-wielding police, and Islamic vigilantes attacked rallies.

Dozens of pro-reform intellectuals, journalists and student leaders have been jailed as part of a conservative crackdown that followed the student protests in 1999.

Iranians protest against clerics - BBC

Hundreds of people have taken part in a late-night demonstration against the government in the Iranian capital, Tehran.

The action began as a protest against plans to privatise some universities, correspondents say.

But as the crowds swelled, they started marching through the streets around Tehran University chanting slogans against the hardline Iranian religious establishment.

Police were present but reports say they did not intervene in the noisy but peaceful demonstrations.

113 posted on 06/10/2003 4:59:35 PM PDT by TexKat
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To: TexKat
Shep just highlighted a group of five Iraqi young men---a boy band! The only thing holding them back had been Saddam and now a British label is interested.

Even played a very short clip of the guys singing while sitting in a car. Good luck to them!
114 posted on 06/10/2003 5:00:45 PM PDT by cyncooper
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