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Other countries invited were Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Republic of Congo, Gabon, Madagascar, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Senegal, Chad and Togo

Bastille Day 2010

Planes flew over the capital trailing red, white and blue smoke. Parachuting soldiers dropped onto the Champs-Elysees bearing African flags.

Soldiers from 13 African countries that are celebrating five decades of independence marched down the Champs-Elysees ahead of French troops. African leaders watched from the stands.

President Nicolas Sarkozy rode down the avenue in an open military vehicle. His wife, singer Carla Bruni-Sarkozy, watched from the stands and later signed autographs. A downpour drenched troops and the crowd during part of the parade.

A unit of female soldiers from Benin opened Wednesday's parade. Other countries invited were Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Republic of Congo, Gabon, Madagascar, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Senegal, Chad and Togo. Ivory Coast, 무료 룰렛 게임 - http://www.hengy.net/?p=68388 which has tense relations with France, declined to send troops, but its defense minister attended.

Another traditional Bastille Day event, the lavish garden party at the presidential palace, was canceled as France's government, like those around Europe, tries to rein in runaway debt. Skipping the party saved about $992,000, government spokesman Luc Chatel said.

The holiday marks the July 14, 1789, storming of the Bastille prison in Paris by angry crowds, which helped spark the French Revolution - http://www.usatoday.com/search/French%20Revolution/ .

The invitation of African leaders forced Sarkozy to defend himself from critics. A host of associations protested about alleged human rights violations by some of the African leaders and said Sarkozy was glorifying the "Francafrique," the French nickname for what many see as cronyism between France and its former African colonies.

During a lunch with African leaders Tuesday, Sarkozy insisted the invitation was not an "expression of colonial nostalgia, or a French temptation to take over your independence celebrations."

Sarkozy said he wanted to celebrate historic bonds and "build the future together."

He also said the government would submit a draft law to ensure that veterans from France's former colonies are entitled to the same sums in pension payments as their French counterparts- a long-standing source - http://www.guardian.co.uk/search?q=long-standing%20source of tension.AP:

Hours after that video was aired, another more professional one appeared on YouTube

Iran's Foreign Ministry said the scientist, Shahram Amiri, was on a flight home, traveling through the Gulf nation of Qatar and was expected to arrive in Tehran on Thursday.

Iran — and at one point, Amiri — claimed the CIA had kidnapped him; the United States said Tuesday that nothing of the sort happened. Amiri disappeared while on a pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia in June 2009, surfacing in videos but otherwise remaining out of sight until he turned up at the Pakistani Embassy in Washington on Monday evening, asking to be sent home.

That prompted the Obama administration's first public acknowledgment that Amiri had been in the United States. "Mr. Amiri has been in the United States of his own free will and he is free to go," Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said.

While Iran has painted the entire episode as an abduction, Amiri's disappearance last year fueled reports that he had defected to the United States and was providing information on Iran's nuclear program. The United States and its allies accuse Tehran of seeking to build a nuclear weapon, a claim Iran denies, saying its program is for peaceful purposes.

With his family facing possible consequences in Iran, Amiri seemingly changed his mind said he wants to go home and face whatever that hard line regime has in store for him, reports CBS News national security correspondent David Martin.

In an interview with Iranian television he said he could explain everything about what he called "my ordeal" over the past 14 months

His return and the bizarre string of videos by him that emerged over the past month raised the question of what went wrong. In one that seemed to be made in an Internet cafe and was aired on Iranian TV, he claimed U.S. and Saudi "terror and kidnap teams" snatched him. In another, professionally produced one, he said he was happily studying for a doctorate in the United States. In a third, shaky piece of footage, Amiri claimed to have escaped from U.S. agents and insisted - http://www.healthncure.net/?s=insisted the second video was "a complete lie" that the Americans put out.

"I expect they got to his family," said Clare Lopez, senior fellow at the Center for Security Policy and a former operations officer for the CIA. "Now he'll go back and save them." ABC News reported that Amiri called home this year because he missed his wife and son in Iran and that his son had been threatened with harm.

A U.S. official who was briefed on the case said Amiri, 32, "left his family behind, that was his choice." The official spoke on the condition of anonymity because the official was not authorized to speak publicly about the case.

Whatever the reason for his disappearance, important questions remain about what of value, if anything, Amiri shared with American intelligence about the Iranian nuclear program. Before he disappeared, Amiri worked at Tehran's Malek Ashtar University, an institution closely connected to the country's powerful Revolutionary Guard.

State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said he does not know what Amiri may have told U.S. officials, but he did say that the U.S. government "has maintained contact with him" during his stay in the United States. Pressed to say whether Amiri was a defector, Crowley replied, "I just don't know the answer."

Michael Rubin, an Iran expert at the American Enterprise Institute, said he expects Iran to reap propaganda value from Amiri's return if he appears on Iranian TV to assert that he was kidnapped.

"What will happen now, however, is that the Iranians will score propaganda points, they will be able to televise a confession that may be more fiction than reality, but which regardless the CIA will have trouble refuting," Rubin said.

On Wednesday, Iranian state TV aired part of a phone interview with Amiri conducted a day earlier. He said that in the Saudi holy city of Mecca, three men told him to get into a car, sticking a gun barrel against his back. Amiri said the U.S. had planned to hand him over to Israel, which would release "false information against Iran" in his name.

Deputy Iranian Foreign Minister Hassan Qashqavi told state TV that Iran will pursue the case of Amiri's abduction through legal means.

Iran's foreign minister, Manouchehr Mottaki, told a news conference in Madrid on Tuesday that Amiri was found after having been kidnapped during the Saudi Hajj and taken to the United States against his will. He demanded that Amiri be allowed to return home "without any obstacle."

The Obama administration denied any kidnapping, saying Amiri had been in the United States of his own will and free to leave whenever he wanted.

Amiri's videos threw convoluted and unlikely twists into the story.

In the video that appeared on Iranian TV on June 7, Amiri was seen speaking into what appeared to be a Web cam. He said the date was April 5, that he was in Tucson, Arizona, and that he was abducted in Saudi Arabia by U.S. and Saudi intelligence.

"When I became conscious, I found myself in a plane on the way to the U.S.," he said.

But he did not explain how he was free to make the video.

Hours after that video was aired, another more professional one appeared on YouTube. In it, Amiri, wearing a sports jacket and sitting in an office, says into the camera that he is free, safe and working on his degree in the United States. But he gives no explanation for why he would apparently move to the U.S. from his pilgrimage without telling his family.

Yet another video appeared on Iranian TV on June 29. It shows Amiri saying the date is June 14.

"I have succeeded in escaping from American intelligence in Virginia," he said, adding that he was speaking from a "safe place" although he feared he could be rearrested.

Amiri is not the first defector to have second thoughts. During the cold war, 카지노 솔루션 - http://webdatartist.com/blog/index.php/2019/07/09/%ec%88%98%eb%b0%b1%eb%... Vitaly Yurchenko, a high ranking KGB officer defected and told the CIA about two spies inside American intelligence. Three months later, he went back to the USSR.

But the image has not been displayed publicly there and has sparked no outcry

The poster, which went up in June in the western city of Poznan just steps from a synagogue, is an Italian artist's take on what he calls the "horrors" of the American lifestyle and is one piece of artwork in a contemporary art exhibition opening in the fall.

But the reaction shows that there is little appetite in Poland for satirical or artistic uses of images linked to Nazi Germany, which invaded Poland in 1939 and built ghettoes and death camps across the country in which millions were murdered.

"This art provocation is a form of violence against the sensitivity of many people," said Norbert Napieraj, 포커 순서 - http://coursely.co.il/blog/%ec%99%9c-%eb%8c%80%eb%b6%80%eb%b6%84%ec%9d%9... a city council member who asked prosecutors to ban the poster.

Billboard Linking Obama, Hitler Draws ComplaintsAnne Frank Story Gets Graphic Novel Treatment

Prosecutors, however, determined that the poster is art and does not violate the country's laws against glorifying Nazism.

The poster has been vandalized twice since it first went up, and on Tuesday was no longer stretched across a building in the city center. Despite the uproar, gallery - http://www.buzzfeed.com/search?q=gallery director Maria Czarnecka said she plans to put it back up.

"Art should be provocative and controversial," she told The Associated Press, insisting that the poster does not seek to propagate Nazism but instead wants to explore "symbols and how they work."

"The Mickey Mouse head and swastika are on the same level - they don't mean anything and they are both part of the globalized world," Czarnecka said.

Jewish leaders, who have been outraged at the poster, would disagree, saying the swastika still means something very real to many Poles, Jews and non-Jews alike.

Poland was once home to Europe's largest Jewish community, which numbered close to 3.5 million people before it was nearly wiped out in the Holocaust. The Nazis also committed atrocities against the non-Jewish population, and killed some 6 million Polish citizens, about half Jewish and the other half Christian.

The head of Poznan's Jewish community, Alicja Kobus, 64, described being overwhelmed by revulsion when she first saw the poster. She had just been with Jewish visitors from Holland to the synagogue, which the Nazis turned into a swimming pool - http://www.squidoo.com/search/results?q=swimming%20pool .

"It is a shock for people still scarred by the hell of the Holocaust," she said.

The work - "NaziSexyMouse" by Italian artist Max Papeschi - is part of a series works that blend iconic American cartoon figures with images of warfare or destruction.

Papeschi explains on his website that the series - which he dubs "Politically-Incorrect" - is meant as commentary on the United States, revealing "all the horror of this lifestyle."

His images - Mickey Mouse as a Nazi or Ronald McDonald as a machine-gun bearing soldier in Iraq - lose "their reassuring effect and change into a collective nightmare," Papeschi said.

"NaziSexyMouse" also went on show this week in Berlin as part of an exhibition at a sister gallery. But the image has not been displayed publicly there and has sparked no outcry.

A Berlin art gallery manager said older people often do not understand that the combination of pop culture icons like Mickey Mouse and historical symbols like the swastika are meant to be satirical.

"For the younger generation, this painting is just a joke; older people sometimes don't like it or don't find it funny, but nobody has taken any offense so far," said Agnes Kaplon, manager of the Abnormals Gallery in Berlin.

A Russian art exhibition that also used the iconic Disney character's image has also been at the center of a legal case in Russia. Two Russian curators who angered the Russian Orthodox Church with an exhibition that included images of Jesus Christ portrayed as Mickey Mouse and Vladimir Lenin were convicted Monday of inciting religious hatred and fined, but not sentenced to prison.

Associated Press Writer Kirsten Grieshaber in Berlin contributed to this story.

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