Italy petrol strike threatens to hit economy
Italian petrol stations began a
60-hour strike today to protest against rising costs and falling profits,
causing long queues as drivers rushed to fill up before pumps closed.Hitting at
the peak shopping period before Christmas, the strike comes at unwelcome time
for retailers.Weak consumer spending has been a key factor in Italy's sluggish
economy, which has been dipping in and out of recession since 2008."It is
incredible, with all that petrol costs us nowadays, that they can even think of
going on strike," Rome resident Ida Lauro said as she queued in her
car.Unions have agreed to maintain minimum service on motorways, with at least
one station open every 100 km.In a joint statement,
unions said they called the strike to combat "a true aggression against
the roughly 24,000 small businesses and 120,000 workers in the
sector".They say oil companies have forced stations to absorb the costs of
discounting campaigns, allowing them a profit of just one euro for every 100
euros ($155) or 55 litres of petrol sold.Oil
distributors in Italy Esso and Shell were not immediately available for
comment. A government attempt to come to an agreement with the unions this week
fell through.Workers will demonstrate outside government buildings in Rome
later today to pressure the state to intervene.The strike will end on Friday
morning on ordinary roads and late on Thursday on motorways.Between December 17
and 22 the petrol stations will refuse to pay oil companies for refills. Then,
between Christmas and New Year, they will refuse credit and debit card payments
in protest at bank charges on electronic payments.Mario Monti's technocrat
government has cut spending and raised taxes since it was appointed last year
to pull Italy out of a debt crisis, and is the focus of increasing protests.The
government was thrown into crisis last week when the party of former Prime
Minister Silvio Berlusconi withdrew its support, prompting Monti to announce he
would resign once the 2013 budget bill is passed before Christmas.
US to keep
strong presence in Mideast
The US military will
retain a "strong presence" in the Middle East despite a strategic
shift to Asia, Defence Secretary Leon Panetta said on Tuesday during a visit to
Kuwait. The US plans to deploy a majority of its naval fleet to the
Asia-Pacific along with other advanced weaponry but Panetta insisted that a
robust American force would remain in place in the Middle East.Panetta spoke to
journalists aboard his plane travelling to Kuwait City on a two-day visit to
discuss bolstering security ties amid tumult in the region and tensions with
Iran."Let me assure you that the United States is strong enough that we
can maintain a strong presence in the Middle East as well as in the
Pacific," he said.He acknowledged that the US had to be
"flexible" in managing its forces in a more austere era and that it
would have only one aircraft carrier in the Middle East for about two months to
allow for maintenance work on another carrier, the USS Nimitz.The American
military still had nearly 50 000 troops and warships positioned across the
region, he said."But in the end, I am very confident that we're going to
be able to maintain the ships and forces we need in order to respond to any
contingency."The US has deployed more ships and aircraft in the strategic
Gulf over the past year after Iran threatened to close the strategic Strait of
Hormuz if Western countries boycotted Iranian oil exports.Kuwait's emir, Sheikh
Sabah al Ahmad al Sabah, held talks at his residence with Panetta in the presence
of the crown prince, the prime minister, defence minister and senior officials,
the state-run Kuna news agency reported.Kuna provided no details about the
talks.During the visit, which ends on Wednesday, Panetta also plans to meet
some of the 13 500 US troops stationed in the Gulf state to thank them for
their service ahead of the Christmas holidays.His visit is the first to the
emirate by a Pentagon chief in five years."We share a history of
co-operation that goes back to the first Gulf War," in 1991 that ousted
Iraqi occupation forces, Panetta said of Kuwait, calling the country an
"important partner"."I look forward to discussing with the
government of Kuwait how can we enhance that co-operation in the face of
regional security challenges in the area," he said."Our presence in
Kuwait and throughout the Gulf helps enhance the capabilities of partner
nations, deters aggression and helps ensure that we're better able to respond
to crises in the region."Panetta's visit coincides with a wave of protests
in the oil-rich Gulf state, with thousands of opposition demonstrators
demanding fresh elections due to a bitter dispute over amendments to the
country's electoral law.Kuwaiti activists have called for protesters to camp
outside parliament next Saturday on the eve of its opening session.
N Korea removes rocket from launch pad
North Korea has
removed a long-range rocket from its launch pad for repair, South Korean media
reported on Tuesday, a day after Pyongyang extended the widely-criticised
mission's launch window.According to analysis of the latest satellite imagery,
the entire three-stage Unha-3 carrier has been removed to a nearby assembly
facility, Yonhap news agency quoted a military source as saying."It seems
that North Korea has pulled down the rocket from the launch pad to fix
technical problems," the source said.The defence ministry refused to
confirm the report which, if true, would signal a lengthy delay in the launch
schedule.North Korea says the rocket is being used to put a satellite into
orbit, but the United States and its allies insist the launch is a disguised
ballistic missile test.North Korea had originally provided a 10-22 December
window for launching the rocket, but that was extended by another week on
Monday when a "technical deficiency" was discovered in the
first-stage engine.Yonhap's military source said Pyongyang was expected to go
ahead with a launch after repair works are completed.The North's decision to
try and launch the rocket in winter has led analysts to suggest a political
imperative behind the timing, which may have overruled technical
considerations.New leader Kim Jong-Un is believed to be extremely keen that the
launch falls around the first anniversary of the death of his father and former
leader Kim Jong-Il on 17 December.The possibility that the launch has been
rushed has been backed by missile experts, sceptical that the problem which
resulted in the failure of the North's last rocket launch in April could have
been resolved in just eight months.North Korea is banned from conducting
missile tests under UN resolutions triggered by Pyongyang's two nuclear tests
in 2006 and 2009.The latest planned launch has been condemned by the United
Nations, as well as the United States and its main military allies in Asia,
Japan and South Korea.Russia has joined international calls for Pyongyang to
cancel the mission, while China, North Korea's sole major ally and its biggest
trade partner and aid provider, has expressed concern.EU foreign ministers said
on Monday that an eventual launch would be a "provocative act" in
breach of UN resolutions and require an international response.UN diplomats
inside and outside the Security Council have started consultations behind the
scenes on what action to take if Pyongyang goes ahead with the launch.According
to Japanese reports, Japan, the United States and South Korea have agreed to
demand the UN Security Council strengthen sanctions on North Korea to levels
that match those on Iran.That would include increasing the list of financial
institutions, entities and individuals already subject to asset freezes.
Berlusconi, Monti set fiery campaign tone
Italy's Silvio
Berlusconi on Tuesday set the tone for his election campaign saying nobody
should care about bond spreads, and accusing Mario Monti of being
"German-centric" as the prime minister said he had spared Italy from
the same fate as Greece."Who cares about the spread?" the 76-year-old
Berlusconi, who is running for the sixth time in two decades, said in an interview
with Canale 5 television part of his media empire."The spread is a trick
and an invention with which they tried to bring down the majority that ruled
this country," said the three-time prime minister and billionaire,
referring to his last government which collapsed in November 2011 following a
parliamentary revolt and panic on the markets.The spread is the differential
between Italian and benchmark German 10-year sovereign bonds a closely watched measure of investor confidence.The
spread had narrowed to below 300 points last week but has widened since
Berlusconi's People of Freedom (PDL) party said on Thursday that it was
withdrawing its support for Monti's government.Berlusconi then announced he
would run for prime minister and Monti said he would resign as soon as
parliament approves next year's budget, bringing forward the likely date for
elections to February.There is growing speculation that Monti will also decide
to run in the election although he has so far declined to comment, saying only
that he is not considering the option "at this stage".The spread was
around 349 points on Tuesday, while the stock market inched up 0.64% in
afternoon trading - a day after it trailed other European bourses reacting to
the weekend of political drama and the re-emergence of Berlusconi.Polls say the
favourite to win is centre-left leader Pier Luigi Bersani, a cigar-chomping
former communist and two-time minister who spearheaded a liberalisation drive
when he was in office.Berlusconi on Tuesday also criticised Monti as "too
German-centric" and said that all the main economic indicators had
worsened since the former Eurocrat was installed in power.He continued saying
that Italy's record-high public debt of nearly $2.6 trillion, or around 120% of
gross domestic product, was "not as high as they want to make you
think".Monti also gave an interview to Rai public television in which he
said that the government had to be "very careful" and
"calm" about bond spreads.In a rare moment of candour on his personal
life, he revealed his own grandson had been nicknamed "spread" at his
kindergarten and recognised the word as his own name when he heard it on
television.Monti also warned about rising populism ahead of the elections,
saying: "There is a tendency to over-simplify things, to present magical
solutions."And he defended his record in government saying: "We have
made great progress but at a cost. In the short term, there has not been
growth."I would appreciate it if someone could explain to me how it would
have been possible financially to spare Italy from suffering the same fate as
Greece and make it grow at a rapid rate," he said.Newspaper Il Fatto
Quotidiano's online edition said the contrasting interviews with Monti and
Berlusconi on Tuesday were a "head-on clash"."Each one used their
own language, but this really is a challenge at a distance," the paper
said.Berlusconi also announced that only 10% of the party's candidates in
elections now expected in February would be chosen from current lawmakers.Fifty
percent of the candidates will come from the business community, 20% from local
government and 10% from the world of culture, he said, without explaining where
the remaining 10% would come from.The PDL has been riven by infighting and hit
by a series of fraud investigations since Berlusconi stepped down last year and
retreated from the political fray before suddenly returning last week to the
dismay of several dissident party members. Berlusconi also said he would be
holding talks later on Tuesday with Roberto Maroni, leader of the populist
Northern League party, on forming a possible coalition.Berlusconi's PDL and the
Northern League won the last general election in 2008 but there have been
tensions between the two parties in recent years.
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