John Kerry

By Al Jazeera Staff in Africa on February 22nd, 2011
Alleged mercenaries deployed by Gaddafi in Tripoli, the Libyan capital.

As the uprising in Libya enters its ninth day, we keep you updated on the developing situation from our headquarters in Doha, Qatar.

By Al Jazeera Staff in Middle East on January 28th, 2011

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By Ranjit Bhaskar in Africa on January 8th, 2011
Photo by Ranjit Bhaskar

Juba, the main town in southern Sudan, was its normal, languid self on Saturday.

It was as if the townspeople were taking a break from the hectic pace of the day before which saw rallies, public meetings and an all-night music concert.

Those who were busy were the organisers of the week-long referendum beginning on Sunday along with journalists and poll observers from all over the world here to witness and record the historic event.

While the observers busied themselves by consulting senior government of Southern Sudan and Sudan People’s Liberation Movement [the ruling party] officials, journalists had a string of press briefings lined up for them.

It began with a joint briefing by Chan Reec Madut, who heads the Southern Sudan Referendum Bureau, and Barnaba Marial Benjamin, the minister for information.

As the nascent ministry’s conference room was small, the briefing was held under a mango tree.

"It is good not to have a five-star hot

By Alan Fisher in Europe on February 7th, 2010
Afghanistan and the role of Nato was scheduled to be today’s big discussion at the Munich Security Conference.  The big hitters were here, Nato's secretary general, the Afghan president, but instead there's one thing everyone is still talking about.  And that's Iran.
 
The foreign minister left here saying the future was bright, the future was international co-operation.  But first thing on Sunday, back in Tehran, the Iranian president, not for the first time, muddied the waters.  Mahmoud Ahmedinejad has ordered his nuclear scientists to step up the uranium enrichment programme.  It's not what the Western powers wanted to hear.
 
By John Terrett in Americas on November 5th, 2009

They’re three of the biggest hitters in the U.S. Senate.

Lindsey Graham, John Kerry and Joe Lieberman – a Republican, a Democrat and an Independent teaming up to drive climate change legislation forward.

As Lindsey Graham put it: "The green economy is coming we can either follow or lead."

The “Climate Three” didn't say it out loud but it's clear they're fed up with the lack of progress on climate change issues in the U.S. Congress.

Joe Lieberman told journalists in the third floor TV studio waving his arms and striking the microphone as he did so:

“This is the year that we’ve got to reach out and get this done.”

By James Bays in Asia on October 20th, 2009
Photo by Getty Images

Ambassador Richard Holbrooke is Obama’s Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan.

However, Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Senator John Kerry has acted as the senior emissary of the US administration in the three most recent meetings with Hamid Karzai, pressing the President to accept the findings of the Election Complaints Commission.

Holbrooke is reported to have had very stormy relations with Karzai in the past. One person very close to Karzai, in a conversation with me this week, described the ambassador as “that cowboy Holbrooke.”