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As votes are counted in Egypt's historic election, Christiane is in Cairo! Here are some of her photos as she prepares for tonight's show.
Preparing for the show. FULL POST
By Laura Smith-Spark, CNN
(CNN) - Myanmar's Aung San Suu Kyi gave her Nobel speech in Norway on Saturday, more than two decades after she won the peace prize.
Her presence in Oslo, Norway, on a historic first trip to Europe after years of house arrest, signals the progress toward reform in Myanmar, also known as Burma, over the past year.
Suu Kyi was unable to accept the Nobel when it was awarded in 1991 because she was under house arrest in Myanmar. Her husband and two sons accepted it then on her behalf, paying tribute to her sacrifice.
Greeted by heartfelt applause from those gathered in Oslo City Hall, Suu Kyi spoke of what peace meant to her and also of her country's fragile progress toward democratic reform.
"Over the past year there have been signs that the endeavors of those who believe in democracy and human rights are beginning to bear fruit in Burma. There have been changes in a positive direction; steps towards democratization have been taken," she said.
"If I advocate cautious optimism it is not because I do not have faith in the future but because I do not want to encourage blind faith." FULL STORY
Christiane speaks with Abdulbaset Sieda, the new head of the Syrian National Council, about his organization's contacts with the Free Syrian Army and the prospects for negotiation with Bashar Assad.
Part 1: Egyptian high court disbands parliament Senior International Correspondent Ben Wedeman and Former Presidential Candidate Amr Moussa weigh in on the court’s surprise decision. Part 2: The historical perspective Professor Khaled Fahmy of the American University Cairo says the military’s actions Thursday amounted to a “legal coup.” PLUS: One revolution to another Nasser let to Sadat, and Sadat to Mubarak. What comes next, we don’t yet know.
CNN's Ben Wedeman and former Presidential Candidate Amre Moussa weigh in on the court's surprise decision.
Professor Khaled Fahmy of the American University Cairo says what happened Thursday amounted to a "legal coup."
By Lucky Gold
Egypt’s Elections: Two Opposing Views
As Egypt prepares for a runoff election to choose its president, Amr Moussa, a candidate in the first round of elections and a former foreign minister under Hosni Mubarak, was asked how Egypt can elect a president, with a new constitution to enumerate his powers.
“In fact that is not my point of view,” said Moussa, speaking from Cairo. “My point of view is that the current constitutional declaration is enough to give the president the power he needs.”
Among those powers, he listed “the period of four years, the right of two terms, the separation of forces, the independence of the judiciary.”
“So I don’t think this is a very important point,” he added. “I believe that the president, once elected, knows exactly the powers he will use. The constitutional declaration is quite enough for the time being.”
And if it proves not to be enough? Said Moussa: “If the need arises, then we’ll deal with that through some amendments. So this is not a crucial point concerning the presidential elections.” FULL POST
Part 1: Putting the monkey on Lavrov's back The U.S. relationship with Russia is deteriorating at a critical time for Syria and Iran. Christiane Amanpour speaks with Former U.S. State Dept. Official Martin Indyk. Part 2: Straying from the Vatican line Sister Joan Chittister talks about why the Vatican is going after American nuns for, it alleges, straying from church doctrine and promoting "radical feminists" themes. PLUS: A rose of the desert no longer One year ago, Vogue declared Asma Assad "a rose of the desert." Now, as bloodshed in Syria deepens, she has stood by her husband.
The U.S. relationship with Russia is deteriorating at a critical time for Syria and Iran.
Are American nuns straying from church doctrine and promoting "radical feminists" themes, as alleged?
By Lucky Gold
(CNN) - Why doesn’t the United States apply more pressure to Russia to end its support of the Assad regime? The answer, according to a former US. Assistant Secretary of State, can be found, not in Damascus but in Tehran.
“Ultimately, I think we’re going to have to decide which one is more important to us,” said Martin Indyk, appearing Wednesday on Amanpour. “And I suspect that at the end of the day, it will be the Iranian issue and the nuclear weapons program of Iran that trumps concern about what’s happening in Syria.”
Indyk, the author of “Bending History: Barack Obama’s Foreign Policy,” talked about the effect U.S. actions have had on Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov: “We are in the process of putting the monkey on Lavrov’s back,” he said
“On the one hand,” said Indyk, “we’re expecting Lavrov to go off to Tehran…and deliver a more flexible position on the part of the Iranians toward the offer that’s on the table in the nuclear talks…in which we are heavily dependent on the Russians to cooperate with us and pressure the Iranians.”
“And at the same time,” said Indyk, “we’re beating them (the Russians) over the head for being too supportive of the Assad regime, particularly by providing these attack helicopters. And it’s a very hard balancing game.”
Seeing the Russia’s point of view, Indyk added: “I think the most important thing that they’re concerned about, Christiane, is that at the end of the day, Syria not be taken out from the Russian column and put in the American column. And we don’t have a very good track record on reassuring them of that.” FULL POST
Part 1: Targeting children in Syria Children are bearing the brunt of conflict in Syria. Photojournalist Robert King and Nadim Houri of Human Rights Watch give their accounts. Part 2: Peres: "Assad no longer an alternative" The Israeli President on his country's neighbors: Syria, Iran, and Egypt. PLUS: A world transformed without firing a shot Twenty five years ago, Ronald Reagan and younger voices of change helped drown out the old voices of oppression.
Children are bearing the brunt of conflict in Syria. Human Rights Watch photojournalists give their accounts.
Israeli President Shimon Peres talks about freedom and the future of the Middle East.
CNN’s Ken Olshansky produced this piece for television.
By Lucky Gold
So many wounded kids
“I’ve never seen anything like it,” said Robert King, a photojournalist who spent a month filming in Syria. “It’s the Butcher of Syria. He’s targeting civilians.”
Speaking Tuesday from Beirut to Christiane Amanpour, King said: “In twenty years I’ve not photographed so many wounded kids. And it seems like a lot of the world is indifferent about these horrific crimes.”
Asked why children were often the targets, he offered several reasons: “They (the survivors) assumed it was collective punishment. Then they believed it was because of their religious beliefs, that they were Sunni… and also because they were supporting the revolution. So you have this regime that’s trying to kill the revolutionaries; then they’re trying to kill the offspring of the revolutionaries – it’s ethnic genocide.” FULL POST
By Christiane Amanpour
I’ve often talked to Christine Lagarde about the role of women in this very male-dominated world. Not just at the pinnacle of political power, but also at the top of the banking and business world.
During the financial crisis, for instance, Lagarde told me she thought that if there had been more women in positions of political and economic power, perhaps the financial crisis, bank collapses and very risky investments wouldn’t have been as dramatic.
She was not arguing for a brave new world of female domination! Just a bit more parity where it matters!
Lagarde was the first female chairman of Chicago law firm Baker & McKenzie. She was France’s first female finance minister (indeed the first female finance minister of any G7 country). And she is now the first female managing director of the International Monetary Fund, dispensing billions of dollars in loans around the world.
Lagarde says in all her decades of experience she has noticed a different negotiating tactic between men and women. Men tend to look at it as a zero-sum game, she says: ‘you have to lose in order for me to win.’ She said men bring a lot of ego and testosterone to the table. That is why she argues for more parity in the boardroom.
During the current global economic crisis, especially in the eurozone, we can’t ignore the lighting rod that German Chancellor Angela Merkel has become. I’ve seen her depicted as Nazi, and read the most horrible things written about her looks.
So in my latest interview with Christine Lagarde, I asked did she think that Merkel would be under this kind of personal attack and pressure if she weren’t a woman?

