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Haiti: Between death and life

February 12th, 2010
05:23 PM ET

Watch Peter Turnley as well as Angelina Jolie on her work in Haiti on "Amanpour," CNN International, Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday. In the U.S., the show appears on CNN, Sunday at 2 and 5 p.m ET.

(CNN) - World-renowned photographer Peter Turnley traveled to Haiti after the earthquake to document the lives of people burying their dead and trying to rebuild.

In an exclusive interview with "Amanpour," Turnley - whose photographs have appeared on the cover of "Newsweek" more than 40 times - talks about the extraordinary moments and emotions he experienced.

He was in the morgue with a man searching for the body of his son, and in the hospital to see a mother's first minutes with her newborn.

Fluent in French, Turnley was able to connect personally with the people he photographed.

"What I was seeing was a country and a people between life and death," Turnley said. "They weren't having any sense that this was going to be easy... I hope the world and the journalistic community will continue to come back to this story for a long time to come."

Turnley has covered earthquakes and conflicts around the world, as well as the fall of the Berlin Wall and the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks.


Filed under:  1 • Haiti

Jolie on adopting in Haiti

February 12th, 2010
01:46 PM ET

Friday 2100 CET / Sunday 2pm & 5pm EST:

Angelina Jolie tells me about meeting Haitians injured and displaced in the earthquake for this week’s show.  She told me she was hit hardest an by injured boy in the street – hope you'll join us for our conversation.



Filed under:  1 • Haiti

Angelina Jolie on AMANPOUR.

February 11th, 2010
04:25 PM ET
Discussing Haiti with Angelina Jolie
Discussing Haiti with Angelina Jolie

Angelina Jolie tells me about meeting Haitians injured and displaced in the earthquake for this week’s show.  She told me she was hit hardest an by injured boy in the street. She talks talks about it on our Friday show at 2100 CET and this weekend on CNN in the U.S. at 2pm EST & 5pm EST.


Filed under:  1 • Haiti

And now your feedback

February 10th, 2010
08:35 PM ET

[cnn-photo-caption image=http://i2.cdn.turner.com/cnn/2009/images/11/17/feedback.jpg caption="Christiane – all ears for the feedback."]

Amanpour. viewers held hope for the political future of Nigeria and while most commented they felt the government corruption was at its peak, others thought its economy was about to improve.  The Nigerian audience voiced added types of concern such as violence, poverty and religious differences among some of the causes of continued distress within the communities.  Overall, most commented that while optimism was alive in the country, “the leaders were to blame” for the condition in which the citizens lived currently.

What are your thoughts? Please share your thoughts with us! In addition, if you missed the show go to http://www.amanpour.com for more information.

Below, you will see some opinions from viewers like yourself. We would love to hear what you think.

Email comments

Hi Christiana

I love my country, i dont know why but i would still die for my country in the absence of basic infrastructure, good governance and the rule of law but, also with the hope of a better future and the will to work towards all the aspirations and dreams of a better future. with all due respect to Prof. Wole Soyinka i know he has an opaque view of the political structure and situations in Nigeria due to his level of participation. its not just by writing books and tongue lashing of the people involved but by actual participation and making a difference. Rome wasn't built in a day and people must have shed blood to call the U.S.A what it is today (A great country). you need to drag someone down to your studios, an ex president, a fomer security chief (someone with a lot of insight) and you must ask the right questions!  maybe 'Obasanjo' ask him the right things and he would say it all. he looks up to no one.
Regards
Akinyemi

FULL POST


Filed under:  1 • Feedback

Has oil ruined the Niger Delta?

February 10th, 2010
02:41 PM ET

Filed under:  1 • Nigeria

Nigeria's Turmoil

February 10th, 2010
02:10 PM ET

By Tom Evans; Sr. Writer, AMANPOUR.

Nigeria’s Attorney General Michael Aondoakaa today insisted there is no power vacuum after the country’s parliament voted to install Vice President Goodluck Jonathan as acting head of state – while President Umaru Yar’Adua is absent on medical leave.

“There has not actually been a power vacuum”, Aondoakaa told CNN’s Christiane Amanpour. “The main issue is that there must be ways of resolving our progress constitutionally. The system is working because nobody has taken up arms.”

Aondoakaa’s comments came on the same day Nigeria’s House and Senate approved a resolution to suspend President Yar’Adua, who went to Saudi Arabia for medical treatment at the end of November and has been absent for nearly 80 days. He has not been seen in public since he left Nigeria.

Aondoakaa said the parliament’s resolution is non-binding. He said the Executive Council, made up of government ministers, has to look at the legislature’s proposal.

“What is important now is to move the country forward… for the three arms of government to come and support the Vice President to carry out his duties”, he added.

FULL POST


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And now your feedback

February 9th, 2010
09:17 PM ET

[cnn-photo-caption image=http://i2.cdn.turner.com/cnn/2009/images/11/17/feedback.jpg caption="Christiane – all ears for the feedback."]

Amanpour. viewers geared their commentary toward the European consideration of the Burqa ban.  Controversy was the main component in all conversations that in their majority stated that women “should be allowed to wear the Burqa, unless the country of residence, dictates otherwise.”  Mixed reactions were present by the minority.  Additionally, the legalization of drugs in México continued to be of interest to some, who expressed their opinions about it.

What are your thoughts? Please share your thoughts with us! In addition, if you missed the show go to http://www.amanpour.com for more information.

Below, you will see some opinions from viewers like yourself. We would love to hear what you think.

Email comments

During Amanpour's recent broadcast, it was stated to the Mexican Foreign Minister that marijuana was legalized only in California, stating that this was but a small fraction of the country.  However, it should be noted that the number of states to legalize marijuana for medicinal purposes has grown rapidly over the past decade to 14 states in all. Rather than dismissing the argument of legalizing marijuana to attack the narco-trafficking problem in Mexico, it should be taken as a legitmate argument considering the growing of public support within the United States for such a policy.  Too much responsibility is placed on foreign governments when the roots of the problem are high demand and the cumbersome policies of the drug war.
Joshua Lunbeck Denver, Colorado

FULL POST


Filed under:  1 • Feedback

Tom's Take

February 9th, 2010
02:12 PM ET

[cnn-photo-caption image=http://i2.cdn.turner.com/cnn/2009/images/11/16/christianetom.jpg caption caption="Sr. Writer for Amanpour, Tom Evans, works on scripts with Christiane"]

On AMANPOUR. today, we look at Nigeria. With its vast oil wealth and immense reserves of human capital, it should be the powerhouse of Africa. Instead, the country faces a sea of troubles, with a president who is absent and an unresolved insurgency. Complicating the situation is Nigeria’s ethnic politics - the divisions between the President, a Northern Muslim refusing to turn over power to his Vice President, a Southern Christian. Among our guests today is one of Nigeria’s literary lions, Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka. Now here are some perspectives on some other news in the headlines today.

Tom Evans
Sr. Writer, AMANPOUR.

PAKISTAN – Will death of Pakistan Taliban leader lead to a new direction for the insurgency?

–         Three Taliban sources tell CNN Pakistani Taliban leader Hakimullah Mehsud died while on the way to Karachi for medical treatment

–         Government has been looking into reports Mehsud died after being wounded in a suspected U.S. drone attack last month

–         Drone attack came a few days after Mehsud appeared in a videotape with man thought to be the suicide bomber who killed eight people at a CIA base in Afghanistan on Dec. 30

QUESTION: Will death of Mehsud open a window for negotiations between the Pakistan Taliban and the government in Islamabad?
FULL POST


Filed under:  1 • Tom's Take

Talking with the Taliban

February 9th, 2010
01:30 AM ET

[cnn-photo-caption image=http://i2.cdn.turner.com/cnn/2010/images/02/08/afghanistanaman.jpg caption=""]

Tim Lister

Over the weekend, the White House point man on Afghanistan stressed the United States was NOT talking with the Taliban. But Richard Holbrooke, a veteran mediator of the wars in the Balkans, chose his words precisely.  "I want to state very clearly that our nation is not involved in any direct contacts with the Taliban," he said at a security conference in Munich, Germany.

The operational word being "direct." There are plenty of back channels for sounding out the Taliban – or at least some of them. The United States has encouraged Saudi Arabia (one of the few states that recognized the Taliban when they were in power) to open a dialog with more moderate members of the Taliban. But the Saudis have their own conditions – the Taliban must disown al Qaeda, which in the form of its Saudi-born mastermind Osama bin Laden has brought the Kingdom so much pain and embarrassment. The UN's special envoy to Afghanistan has also met low-level Taliban representatives in Dubai.

Holbrooke acknowledged this and was comfortable with it. So was British Defence Secretary Bob Ainsworth. "We mustn't raise that bar too high in terms of our preparedness to bring people in," he said. "Neither should we wait until there is real victory before we try to reconcile or reintegrate those elements in the insurgency who are prepared to come across."

FULL POST


Filed under:  1 • Afghanistan

Iranian official: Window for nuclear negotiations still open

February 9th, 2010
12:22 AM ET

[cnn-photo-caption image=http://i2.cdn.turner.com/cnn/2010/images/02/08/iraniaea.jpg caption="Iran's Permanent Representative to the International Atomic Energy Agency, Ambassador Ali Asghar Soltanieh."]

By Tom Evans; Sr. Writer, AMANPOUR.

(CNN) - Iran's envoy to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said Monday that the window for nuclear negotiations is still open - even as tensions rise over Iran's decision to defy the world on uranium enrichment.

Referring to the possibility of new international sanctions against his country, Ali-Asghar Soltanieh told CNN's Christiane Amanpour, "If they (other countries) come to the conclusion that they had better have a cooperative environment or approach rather than the language of threat, and they are ready to come to the negotiating table, our proposal is still on the table."

But he said the new enrichment program, at the Natanz plant, would begin Tuesday.

"As (of) tomorrow, the steps will start in fact under the full scope,
safeguards, and the supervision of the (IAEA) inspectors." Soltanieh's interview with CNN came hours after President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Iran will begin enriching uranium up to 20 percent, compared to 3.5 percent now - a step the U.S. National Research Council says is the threshold for uranium capable of setting off a nuclear reaction. The U.S. and other countries immediately condemned Iran's announcement, saying it means sanctions against Tehran are much more likely.

Many world powers say Iran is on a path towards making nuclear weapons. Iran, though, insists its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes only. Tehran has defied repeated United Nations resolutions and three rounds of previous sanctions designed to persuade it to freeze uranium enrichment.

FULL POST


Filed under:  1 • Iran
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