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razil and
Argentina, ranks among the world's top 10 in the use of Twitter.
Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos told The Associated Press in an
interview why he likes platform so much. With 2 million followers,
http://twitter.com/JuanManSantos ranks third for Latin America leaders
dead or alive after Chavez and Fernandez."I use
it sometimes to send messages to clarify certain things, to communicate
with the country," said Santos. "You sent out a tweet and immediately,
if it's something important, it comes out in the media. Instead of
making so many press conferences, you use Twitter."Almost two-thirds of
world leaders have joined the Twitterverse, according to an analysis last
year of 264 government accounts in 125 countries that the public relations
firm Burson-Marsteller described as the first-ever global study of world
leaders using the platform.The most-followed account of any world leader,
https://www.twitter.com/BarackObama , which has more than 35 million followers.
But Latin American leaders continue to gain ground a tweet a time.
They have become more adept on the social network than their European
counterparts and rank among the world's top 20 most-followed leaders.____Luis
Velarde in Washington, D.C, Vicente Marquez in Caracas, Venezuela, Belen
Bogado in Asuncion, Paraguay, Almudena Calatrava in Buenos Aires, Argentina,
and Luis Andres Henao in Santiago, Chile, contributed to this report.____Michael
Warren is on Tw
PHOENIX Tough-talking Arizona Sheriff Joe Arapio is warning civilians who
embark on armed patrols in remote desert terrain that they could end
up "seeing 30 rounds fired into them" by one of his deputies.His
unapologetically terse comments came Tuesday after a member of an Arizona
Minuteman border-watch movement was arrested over the weekend for pointing
a rifle at a Maricopa County sheriff's deputy he apparently mistook for
a drug smuggler.Court records say Richard Malley believed he had the right
to aim the rifle at the deputy because he thought a crime
was occurring. Malley was arrested for aggravated assault.He was released
on $10,000 bail and is to appear in court Aug. 26. It
wasn't clear if Malley had an attorney, and telephone numbers listed for
him were disconnected.
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