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In Interview, Romney Brings Arab Spring into Presidential Race

By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK

Mitt Romney on Saturday explicitly sought for the first time to turn the Arab Spring into an issue in the United States presidential race. In an interview with an Israeli newspaper to set up his visit to Israel this weekend, Mr. Romney made several provocative statements distinguishing himself from President Obama.

Mr. Romney discussed the Arab Spring revolts as a problem rather than progress, he asserted against some evidence that the Obama administration had abandoned an agenda of pushing for democratic reform pursued by George W. Bush, and he characterized even the most moderate and Western friendly Islamists- those in the political parties leading legislatures in Tunisia and Morocco- as political opponents. The last runs counter to the Obama administration's strategy, endorsed by some Republicans in Congress, of building alliances with moderate Islamists where possible.

- Read the full interview



Newswallah: Bharat Edition

By THE NEW YORK TIMES

Jammu and Kashmir: The 13th anniversary of the 1999 Kargil war between India and Pakistan was commemorated at the war memorial in Drass town in Kargil district (Hindustan Times). War veterans, senior army officials and widows of Indian soldiers killed during the war laid wreaths at the memorial. An enormous Indian flag, more than 37 feet, or 11 meters, long, was hoisted during the two-day event.

Assam: The Supreme Court said Friday that it will look into a petition seeking refugee status for Bengali-Hindu immigrants living in Assam, who are believed to have fled neighboring Bangladesh, their country of origin, because of persecution (Indian Express). The petitioners, two nongovernmental agencies, told the court that other eastern and northeastern states also had such populations.

Bihar: Four of the five students accused of raping a teenager in the state capital, Patna, have been arrest ed, the  news Web site IBNLive reported. The incident took place last month; the perpetrators circulated videos of the alleged crime, according to the report filed with the police.

Gujarat: A recent report released by the World Business Council for Sustainable Development drew attention to weak water-treatment systems in the cities of Ahmedabad and Surat (India Express). The channeling of “industrial sewage into domestic wastewater networks and natural streams exerts pressure on existing wastewater treatment infrastructure,” the report said.

Maharashtra: Raj Thackeray, the chief of Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS), a Hindu nationalist political party in Maharashtra, appealed to the state government to make toll collection more transparent (Daily Bhaskar). He urged citizens not to pay tolls until greater transparency is achieved. “I am not against toll or payment of taxes, but people should get the services for which they pay,” he said. MNS party workers were seen vandalizing property at toll plazas along the Mumbai-Pune Expressway and shutting down toll booths in certain Mumbai suburbs.

Andhra Pradesh: The state has approached the federal government with a proposal to build a second major port (New Indian Express). Visakhapatnam currently is the only major port on the state's 996 kilometers, or 619 miles, of coastline.

Kerala: Tons of grain are rotting in the open while a government agency created to store agricultural produce rents out its warehouses for other purposes (New Indian Express).



Mexico\'s Student Movement Protests Televisa

By SOFIA CASTELLO Y TICKELL and JENNIFER PRESTON

Thousands protested outside the television studios of Televisa starting Thursday night, claiming that Mexico's major television broadcaster delivered biased coverage of the July 1 presidential election.

Blocking entrances to the network's studios in Mexico City into Friday, the crowd of mostly students shouted “Tell the truth,” as they made it difficult for employees to get in and out.

It was the latest effort by the student movement that started last May to try and drive change around issues of freedom of expression and raise concerns about corruption, even though they were unable to influence the outcome of the July 1 presidential election.

From London, where he is covering the Olympics, Joaquín López-Dóriga, one of the television network's biggest stars, complained on Twitter that the protesters were keeping his colleagues from returning home. He included a p hoto of a colleague sleeping under a desk.

The post prompted unfavorable comments about Mr. López-Dóriga and fueled the anger from the crowd, both online and offline, over accusations that Televisa provided favorable coverage of Enrique Peña Nieto, the winner of the presidential election.

Perceived media manipulation of public opinion during the presidential contest by Televisa became a major focus for the student movement since it began last May, calling itself #YoSoy132 after its Twitter hashtag.

Video from the protest and from Televisa's broadcast.

The Guardian reported that a unit in Televisa was set up to provide favorable coverage of Mr. Peña Nieto and his political party.

Last weekend, 30,000 people showed up for Mexico City's latest mass protest with people shouting, “Peña is not our president,” nearly a month after Mr. Peña Nieto won the election with 38.8 percent of the vote.

Similar protests took place in cities across Mexico, including Monterrey and Oaxaca, dismissing some questions that the student movement would fade after the July 1 election.

In interviews at the march, protesters said they believed that their presence at demonstrations could play a role in shaping the debate over Mexico's future and in keeping the Mr. Peña Nieto's party, the PRI â€" the Institutional Revolutionary Party â€" from returning to the autocratic, corrupt form of government that defined its reign from 1929 to 2000.

“At minimum, we want it to be understood that society has matured and changed and become more demanding,” said Dr. Raimundo Yanes, a physician. “We can't be fooled that easily a nymore.”

The student movement began at a private university, but the demonstration last weekend and the protest on Thursday included students, union workers and people from myriad backgrounds. The future of the #YoSoy132 is unknown, but some members said that they could begin to forge a more strategic path now that they were no longer dealing with the timeline of an election.

“You have people of few means marching along with the elites,” said Sebastian Mitl, a student. “There is such a wide gamut of visions.”

Mr. Mitl described the movement as an “escape valve” for the frustrations of Mexican society.

“I want a different Mexico,” said Ariel Tonatiuh, a schoolboy with closely cropped hair, adding that some of his friends have also become intere sted in politics. “One without violence and corruption.”