Showing posts with label John Kerry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Kerry. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

NEWS,13.08.2013



Recovery signs lift Cameron's poll hopes


Signs of a fledgling economic recovery in Britain have boosted voter trust in Prime Minister David Cameron's financial stewardship, strengthening his prospects ahead of an election in 2015, a poll showed on Tuesday.
The Guardian/ICM survey said that 40% of voters trusted Cameron and his Conservatives on the economy, up sharply from 28% in June, and comfortably ahead of the opposition Labour party, whose economic credentials won approval from just 24% of those asked.
The health of the economy and political parties' perceived ability to nurse it back to sustained growth after three rocky years is likely to be the single most important factor in deciding who wins the 2015 election.
The economy has shown unexpected signs of improvement in recent months with the Bank of England forecasting it will grow by 0.6% during the current quarter, the same as between April and June, and that growth will reach an annual rate of 2.6% in two years' time.
Labour remains a few points ahead of the Conservatives in the opinion polls but has seen its lead shrink after better economic data, even though many economists believe it is too soon to talk of a sustained recovery and are concerned about a possible housing price bubble.
Tuesday's poll put Labour's overall support at 35%, a mere three percentage points higher than the Conservatives.
Cameron, who governs in coalition with the centre-left Liberal Democrats, has put the economy at the heart of his re-election strategy, hoping a strong recovery will materialise and create a feel-good factor that will allow his party to govern alone next time.
According to Peter Kellner, of pollster YouGov, an improving economy poses a problem for Labour leader Ed Miliband.
"Now that Britain's economy has started to recover, he is likely to face a prime minister who can copy one of the slogans that Barack Obama used last year to secure re-election," he wrote.
"The president likened America's economy to a car that his predecessors had driven into a ditch. 'I don't want to give them the keys back,' he said. 'They can't drive'."
Labour, which governed Britain from 1997 to 2010, was in power when the global financial crisis hit and says it was managing the economy well but was knocked off course by events.
The Conservatives say Labour left Britain with its biggest budget deficit since World War Two and cannot be trusted to manage it again anytime soon.
Alastair Campbell, who was former Prime Minister Tony Blair's chief communications adviser, said Labour had allowed the Conservatives to unfairly cast them as the creators of the economic turmoil that followed the financial crisis.
"Britain had 10 good years of growth and prosperity under Labour which is one of the many reasons we won three elections and stopped David Cameron winning a majority," he wrote on his blog.
ICM Research interviewed 1 001 adults by phone on August 9 and 11.

Blasts halt Iraq oil exports to Turkey


Militants on Tuesday bombed a major pipeline carrying oil from northern Iraq to Turkey, stopping exports, a senior official from the North Oil Company official said.
The blast occurred near the town of Albu Jahash in Nineveh province, the official said, adding that production is still continuing, but the oil is being stored instead of exported.
Repairing the pipeline is expected to take between one and three days, the official said.
The 970-kilometre (600-mile) pipeline runs from Iraq's northern oil hub of Kirkuk to the port of Ceyhan on Turkey's Mediterranean coast.
There have been dozens of attacks on the pipeline so far this year, disrupting northern exports.
Oil ministry spokesperson Assem Jihad said earlier this month that Iraq intends to build a new pipeline from Kirkuk to the Turkish border, because the existing one has been repeatedly attacked and to increase Iraq's export capacity.
Iraq is dependent on oil exports for the lion's share of its government income, and is seeking to dramatically ramp up its sales in the coming years to fund the reconstruction of its battered infrastructure.

NSA secrets leaked to 'fearless' journos


US intelligence leaker Edward Snowden said in an interview released on Tuesday he chose to divulge details of a vast US surveillance effort to journalists who reported "fearlessly" on controversial subjects.
Snowden, in the interview released by The New York Times, said he chose documentary filmmaker Laura Poitras and Guardian reporter Glenn Greenwald because they were not cowed by the US government.
"After 9/11, many of the most important news outlets in America abdicated their role as a check to power  the journalistic responsibility to challenge the excesses of government - for fear of being seen as unpatriotic and punished in the market during a period of heightened nationalism," Snowden was quoted as saying in an encrypted conversation with journalist Peter Maass for the Times Sunday magazine.
"Laura and Glenn are among the few who reported fearlessly on controversial topics throughout this period, even in the face of withering personal criticism, and resulted in Laura specifically becoming targeted by the very programmes involved in the recent disclosures."
He said Poitras "demonstrated the courage, personal experience and skill needed to handle what is probably the most dangerous assignment any journalist can be given reporting on the secret misdeeds of the most powerful government in the world making her an obvious choice".
Snowden, who was granted asylum in Russia after spending over five weeks in a Moscow airport transit zone, is said by his lawyers to now be at an undisclosed secret location.
The United States wants to put Snowden on trial for leaking details of vast American surveillance programmes, but Moscow has steadfastly refused to hand him over.
A former contractor, Snowden released details of secret National Security Agency programmes aimed at thwarting terrorism which sweep up vast amounts of phone and internet data.
Snowden said that when he met the two journalists in Hong Kong for a filmed interview, "I think they were annoyed that I was younger than they expected, and I was annoyed they had arrived too early, which complicated the initial verification".
He said Poitras "was more suspicious of me than I was of her, and I'm famously paranoid".
Snowden added that he was surprised that Greenwald did not agree to his requests to encrypt all communications.
"This is 2013, and a journalist who regularly reported on the concentration and excess of state power," he said.
"I was surprised to realise that there were people in news organisations who didn't recognise any unencrypted message sent over the internet is being delivered to every intelligence service in the world."
"In the wake of this year's disclosures, it should be clear that unencrypted journalist-source communication is unforgivably reckless."

Voters mad about NSA spying face battle


Americans are becoming increasingly concerned about government invasion of privacy while investigating terrorism, and some ordinary citizens are finding ways to push back. They are signing online petitions and threatening lawsuits. Some are pressing their providers to be upfront when data is shared with the government, which federal law allows as long as the person isn't being investigated under an active court order.

The question is whether these anti-surveillance voters will be successful in creating a broader populist movement. Many lawmakers have defended the NSA surveillance programme a programme Congress itself reviewed and approved in secret.

And unlike the anti-war effort that rallied Democrats during President George W Bush's administration, and the tea party movement that galvanised conservatives in President Barack Obama's first term, government surveillance opponents tend to straddle party lines. The cause appeals to libertarian Republicans who don't like big government and progressive liberals who do but favour civil liberties. Together, these voters would have little in common otherwise.

Another complication is the potential of another terrorist attack. One spectacular act and public opinion could flip, much as it did after the
11 September 2001, terrorist attacks, back to favouring government surveillance. Politicians know this, with many of them opting to blast the Obama administration for not being more transparent but most opposing an end to broad surveillance powers.

"If in fact something happens, you're basically putting yourself in a position to look like you didn't do something when you should have. And that's got to be in the back of their head," said Ed Goeas, president of the Tarrance Group in Alexandria, Virginia, a Republican survey research and strategy company.

That leaves voter-activists with little to work with, even with national elections next year that expose one-third of the Senate and every member of the House of Representatives to the voters.

Constituents, lawmakers

"I don't believe it's going to be a driving issue" in the upcoming elections, Goeas added. "It's got to be the total picture" on national security that appeals to voters.

At issue is whether the government overstepped its bounds when it began collecting and searching the phone and Internet records of Americans to gather information on suspected terrorists overseas. A Washington Post-ABC News poll released late last month found that Americans are divided over whether they support the surveillance programmes revealed earlier this year, but most Americans 57% still say it's more important for the government to investigate terrorism than to put privacy first.

Like their constituents, lawmakers too are divided. Last month, a House proposal that essentially would have made the NSA phone collection programme illegal failed in a 217-205 vote that didn't fall along party lines. Republican House Speaker John Boehner and Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi were among the 217 who voted to spare the programme.

In the Senate, a small group of lawmakers namely Democratic Senators Ron Wyden and Mark Udall and Republican Senator Rand Paul is taking a stronger line in favour of civil liberties. But progress has been slow, with few co-sponsors joining their legislative proposals to limit NSA spying powers. Meanwhile, such influential senators as Democrat Dianne Feinstein have defended the programme and said Edward Snowden, who leaked details of the NSA programmes, is guilty of treason.

Doug Hattaway, a Washington-based Democratic strategist, said the reluctance by most lawmakers to take sides isn't surprising, considering that most Americans say they want both security and privacy.

"I don't see Democrats benefiting from joining forces with libertarians," he said. "If voters are looking for balance, I wouldn't hop on the bandwagon with Rand Paul."

Not taking it lying down

Another challenge for surveillance foes is that industry isn't exactly fighting back. Technology and phone companies often say they are prohibited from divulging details about government surveillance requests, but that's only partially true. Federal law prohibits alerting customers when they are surveillance subjects as long as a court order remains in effect. But not all gag orders last forever.

But that hasn't stopped some Americans from challenging the surveillance system.

Charlotte Scot, a 66-year-old artist from Old
Lyme, Connecticut, is a liberal who doesn't take things lying down. She moved to Canada in protest when Bush was re-elected in 2004.

So when Scot heard that major telecommunications providers have been turning over data about Americans' phone calls to the government since 2006, Scot demanded that her own phone company tell her what, if anything, it had shared about her.

She soon received a non-response from an unnamed customer service representative informing her how to opt out of its marketing programme, which only made Scot angrier.

"Dear Anonymous," Scot fired back in an e-mail, "I have always opted out of all advertising e-mails. ... However, my question was not about advertising. It was about what information AT&T turns over to the federal government and NSA. I appreciate an answer to this question."

'People are like sheep'

AT&T eventually responded with a link to its privacy policy and a promise that, while it doesn't comment on matters of national security, "we do comply with the law".

When AT&T wouldn't tell Scot whether her information had ever been shared with the government, chances are that's because it didn't want to not because it couldn't.

AT&T spokesperson Michael Balmoris declined to comment on Scot's case in particular or matters of national security. "We value our customers' privacy and work hard to protect it by ensuring compliance with the law in all respects," he said.

Meanwhile, Scot says she can't understand why other customers are not just as angry. She's now looking to switch providers, and has downloaded a mobile application called Seecyrpt that offers encrypted phone calls for $3 a month. But she knows it's unlikely that a majority of Americans will follow her lead.

"I'm just one of these people who gets riled about things," she said.
"People are like sheep."

Kerry defends NSA surveillance programs


US Secretary of State John Kerry defended the National Security Agency surveillance programs on Monday and downplayed their impact on US efforts to deepen relations with two key allies in Latin America.

Brazil and Colombia, two of the United States' closest friends in the region, have been rankled by reports that citizens of Colombia, Mexico,
Brazil and other countries were among the targets of a massive NSA operation to secretly gather information about phone calls and Internet communications worldwide.

The disclosures were made by NSA leaker Edward Snowden.

Kerry sought to play down the rift during a press conference in
Bogota before heading to Brazil on his first trip to South America as secretary of state.

"Frankly, we work on a huge number of issues and this was in fact a very small part of the overall conversation and one in which I'm confident I was able to explain precisely that this has received the support of all three branches of our government," Kerry said.

"It has been completely conducted under our Constitution and the law. ... The president has taken great steps in the last few days ... to reassure people of the
US intentions here."

‘Hotpoint issues’

He referenced the terrorist attacks of
September 11, 2001. "It's obvious to everybody that this is a dangerous world we're living in ... we are necessarily engaged in a very complex effort to prevent terrorists from taking innocent lives."

Colombian Foreign Minister Maria Angela Holguin said
Colombia officials had travelled to Washington to learn more about the surveillance program. "We have received the necessary assurances to continue to work on this," she said through a translator.

In her opening remarks,
Holguin said she appreciated Kerry's efforts to restart the Mideast peace talks.

Kerry said he doesn't think the recent flap over Israeli settlement announcements will derail the second round of
Mideast peace talks this week in the region.

Israel approved building nearly 1 200 more settlement homes Sunday  the third settlement announcement in a week. It fuelled Palestinian fears of a new Israeli construction spurt under the cover of US-sponsored negotiations.

"The announcements with respect to settlements were to some degree expected because we have known that there was going to be a continuation of some building in certain places," Kerry said. "And I think the Palestinians understand that. I think one of the announcements was outside of that expectation and that's being discussed right now."

He restated the
US position that it views the settlements as illegitimate. He said the recent controversy underscored the importance of getting to the negotiating table quickly and resolving the questions with respect to settlements.

"Once you have security and borders solved, you have resolved the question of settlements," he said. "With the negotiation of major issues, these kind of hotpoint issues ... are eliminated as the kind of flashpoints that they may be viewed today."

He said he expected to talk with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu about the issue later today or tomorrow. "I'm sure we will work out a path forward."

‘Success story’

Kerry arrived late on Sunday in Bogota, the Colombian capital, at a time when the country is holding peace talks to end a half century-old conflict with the Western Hemisphere's most potent rebel army.

The rebel force has diminished in strength thanks in considerable measure to US military and intelligence support. Kerry's discussions in Colombia also focused on trade, energy and counternarcotics and he met with
Colombia President Juan Manuel Santos.

"Colombia is a success story," Kerry said. "The
Santos administration has taken a very courageous and very necessary and very imaginative effort to seek a political solution to one of the world's longest conflicts."

Kerry began the day by having breakfast with two negotiators from the Colombian government, which has been conducting peace talks in Havana, Cuba, with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia since last year.

Formed in the 1960s, the Farc is the oldest active guerrilla band in the
Western Hemisphere. Observers say the Farc currently has about 8 000 armed fighters.

After breakfast at his hotel, Kerry visited a gymnasium where members of the
Colombia police and army, many who have lost limbs in the conflict, were playing rugby in wheelchairs reinforced with hard plastic instead of spokes. The chairs were designed to take a beating and during the game, and some players collided so violently that their chairs overturned on the court.

Kerry rolled up one of his pants legs, a national show of support for those who have lost their limbs in the fighting.

Before leaving for Brazil, Kerry visited the headquarters of the Colombian National Police Counter-Narcotics Directorate for a briefing on the US-Colombia partnership on fighting drugs, progress that has been made during the past decade, and an update on Colombia's efforts to share its expertise in security work with other countries in the region.

Colombia has helped to train more than 13 000 international police personnel from 25 Latin American countries and more than 20 other countries since 2009.

According to the State Department,
Colombia has seen a 53% reduction in the cultivation of coca since 2007. Last year, Colombian authorities reported a record seizure of 279 metric tons of cocaine and cocaine products in the country and abroad.

The Colombian government has increasingly assumed operational and financial responsibility for many US-backed drug-fighting programs, has worked to dramatically reduce kidnappings and political assassinations and disrupt illegal narcotics trafficking with the help of more than $8.5bn from the
US since 2000.

But
US assistance to Colombia has been gradually decreasing, falling from $287 million in fiscal 2008 to $161 million in fiscal 2012.

US sets up surveillance review body


The Obama administration on Monday launched a formal review of its electronic intelligence gathering that has come under widespread criticism since leaks by a former spy agency contractor.

The Review Group on Intelligence and Communications Technologies will examine the technical and policy issues that arise from rapid advances in global telecommunications, the White House said in a statement.

The group will assess whether US data collection "optimally protects our national security and advances our foreign policy while appropriately accounting for other policy considerations, such as the risk of unauthorised disclosure and our need to maintain the public trust," the statement said.

The high-level group of outside experts has 60 days to deliver its interim findings. A final report and recommendations are due on 15 December.

A separate statement by Director of National Intelligence James Clapper confirmed the review. Neither the White House nor Clapper released details on the size or composition of the panel.

Public trust

In a news conference at the White House on Friday, President Barack Obama vowed to improve oversight of surveillance and restore public trust in the government's programs.

The formal review is one of four measures unveiled by Obama, who said he had ordered a review of the surveillance programs before ex-National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden leaked secret documents to The Guardian and The Washington Post.

Obama's other measures include plans to work with Congress to pursue reforms of Section 215 of the anti-terrorism Patriot Act that governs the collection of so-called "metadata" such as phone records, and reform of the secretive Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, which considers requests from law enforcement authorities on intelligence-gathering targets.

Obama also vowed to provide more details about the NSA programs to try to restore any public trust damaged by the Snowden disclosures.

Civil liberty groups demanded more details on Obama's plans, but WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has called the announcement "a victory of sorts for Edward Snowden and his many supporters".

The Obama administration has vigorously pursued Snowden to bring him back to the
United States to face espionage charges for leaking details of US surveillance programs to the media. Snowden is now in Russia, where he has been granted a year's asylum.

Monday, August 12, 2013

NEWS,12.08.2013



Investors see riches in luxury US homes


Jan Brzeski stands in a sun-filled, beautifully refurbished living room high in the Hollywood Hills, looking out at a swimming pool and, miles (km) below, stunning views of Los Angeles.
Brzeski is a private money lender running an investment firm in Los Angeles that provides loans to house flippers investors who buy a home, refurbish it, and sell it at a profit. Many flippers turn to money lenders because they cannot get banks to provide such short-term, quick financing.
Standing with Brzeski is Scott Ryan, the realtor who bought this four-bedroom, five-bathroom house in December 2012 for $1.5m  with money lent by Brzeski and has transformed it with another $600 000. This week the property will go on the market at $3.295m.
"People will come in here and fall in love," Ryan said, with a house flipper's standard issue optimism. "This is an emotional sale. If it takes a week to sell, I will be surprised. There are a lot of young, wealthy people here, and a lot of money out there."
Eighteen months ago Brzeski and his firm, Arixa Capital Advisors, were lending investor money to flippers on very different properties: $250 000 single family homes in southern California's up-and-coming lower- to middle-class blue-collar neighborhoods. Most of the deals involved foreclosed homes that were totally refurbished, and then sold quickly.
No more. Brzeski now focuses on developers working on high-end flips of mansions and townhouses in exclusive neighborhoods, such as the Hollywood Hills and Bel Air.
And he is not alone. There has been a surge in high-end and luxury flipping nationwide. Between 2011 and today, flips of homes valued at $1m or more have risen almost 40% across the United States, according to RealtyTrac, the housing data company.
Between 2011 and 2012, high-end flipping soared 456% in Phoenix (150 properties from 27); 867% in Orlando (29 homes from 3); and to 73 properties from 10 in Las Vegas, according to RealtyTrac. To qualify as a flip for the figures, a home has to be bought and sold within six months.
Brzeski says two main factors combined to send him upmarket in the projects he lends on.
Newly flush Wall Street investors moved into the mid-market with so much money that they bought nearly every foreclosure in sight, mostly to rent.
The Blackstone Group, for example, spent $5.5bn on 32 000 homes across America, according to the firm.
American Homes 4 Rent, the California-based real estate investment trust founded by self-storage billionaire Wayne Hughes, spent $3.3bn, on more than 19 000 houses.
"These Wall Street guys employed huge dollars," Brzeski said. "These firms came to the courthouse steps and bought everything in sight. So the low- to mid-market dried up."
Brzeski said he had originally been wary of the high-end market, because of the much bigger sums involved and thus greater risk. But then in 2011 he financed the purchase of a house in West Hollywood for $1.425m. Another $1.175m was spent on a total refurbishment.
"When the developer put it on the market, they had multiple, all-cash offers," he said. "There was a line out the door to buy it. It sold for $3.5m. This was an incredibly profitable project. This really opened my eyes."
The house was bought by actress Sarah Gilbert, who became famous on the television sitcom "Roseanne."
Daren Blomquist, RealtyTrac's vice president, said: "Flippers are getting more confident that the market is really recovering, and therefore are more willing to go high-end, even though it's more risky."
Blomquist said with the stock market doing so well, there is a lot of investor cash out there, and a huge amount of wealth and pent-up demand at the high-end of the market. When a beautifully refurbished mansion hits the market, they are snapped up, often with all-cash offers, he said.
Foreign investors are also spending billions on the US property market. Last year, Chinese investors spent $12bn on US real estate, making the country the second-biggest foreign investor, just behind Canada, according to the National Association of Realtors.
Blomquist also sounded a warning for anyone who thinks flipping is easy. Many who try, suffer catastrophic losses.
"It's 10 times as risky doing high-end flips. Unfortunately what happens a lot of times, flippers have a property, then they can't find a buyer to purchase it."
Brzeski's business model is simple. Using a fund of investor money he lends 75 percent of a project's "hard costs" - that is money used for the purchase and refurbishment - and collects interest at an annual rate of approximately 10%.
Usually the loan is repaid within six to 12 months. He does not share in the profit made by the flip. Brzeski loans between $1m and $4m on each project.
Another factor, unique to California, helps him fund luxury flips, said Brzeski. Because of a 1978 voter initiative law knows as Proposition 13, the tax assessments of California houses have increased dramatically less than home values since the law was enacted, as long as the home has remained unsold.
Now, owners who had been reluctant to part with their large homes since the early 1970s because of "Prop 13" are dying, or are finally ready to downsize.
"Almost all our homes in these A and A-plus neighborhoods have something in common. You look at the appliances in the kitchen. If they are from the 1960s or 1970s, that's the house to flip," Brzeski said.
Across the country, close to Washington, DC, Chris Haddon works for Hard Money Bankers. They provide money for investment deals on "fix and flip" projects in Washington, Maryland and Virginia.
Haddon says he, too, has seen a surge in deals involving high-end properties.
"A few years ago, you would look at a $2m property and have no idea how long it would take to sell. The high-end market is always the last to rebound. But it's now rebounded and DC is hot."
In Miami, Mark Black, a realtor, said people with cash have been moving into the high end of the market in the past year.
"The market has gone through the roof. You see people buying properties one year ago and selling them at 20, 30% profit. Some of these are no more than paint jobs. The ones that are doing big rehabs are making huge profits."
In Manhattan, Tim Desmond, a realtor with luxury realtors Stribling, said high-end flips in New York are not for the faint of heart, but the profits can be huge.
He cited a 12 000-square-foot (1 115-square-meter) home on Manhattan's East 56th Street that was bought by an investment group for $10m. It took two years to convert it into two, three-story, 6 000-square-foot (557-square-meter) condominiums. The first is now on the market with a $17m price tag.

US clown with Obama mask draws criticism



A clown wearing a President Barack Obama mask appeared at a Missouri State Fair event this weekend, and the announcer asked the enthusiastic spectators if they wanted to see "Obama run down by a bull".

The state's second highest-ranking official, Lieutenant Governor Peter Kinder, denounced the performance in a tweet on Sunday. He said it was "disrespectful" to the president.

"We are better than this," the Republican tweeted.

State Fair officials on Sunday said the show was "inappropriate" and "does not reflect the opinions or standards" of the fair.

It wasn't clear if any action will be taken against the performers.

Perry Beam, who was among the spectators, said "everybody screamed" and "just went wild" as the announcer talked about having the bull run down the clown with the Obama mask.

'Klan rally'

"It was at that point I began to feel a sense of fear. It was that level of enthusiasm," Beam said.

He said another clown ran up to the one wearing the Obama mask, pretended to tickle him and played with the lips on the mask. About 15 minutes into the performance, the masked clown had to leave after a bull got too close, Beam said.

"They mentioned the president's name, I don't know, 100 times. It was sickening," Beam said. "It was feeling like some kind of Klan rally you'd see on TV," he said, referring to the Klu Klux Klan, which terrorised African-Americans for decades.

Officials with the
Missouri Rodeo Cowboy Association, the organisation that co-ordinated the rodeo, did not return phone calls seeking comment on Sunday.

After Beam and his family returned home, he posted a photo of the clown in the Obama mask on his Facebook page. The photo and the posting were then promoted online by a blog, Showmegrogress.com, which elicited a huge response Sunday on Twitter.

Scott Holste, spokesperson for Missouri's Democratic Governor Jay Nixon, said on Sunday in an e-mail that Nixon "agrees that the performance was disrespectful and offensive, and does not reflect the values of Missourians or the State Fair".

Gibraltar: UK mulling action against Spain


The British government is considering taking legal action against Spain over stringent border checks imposed at the border with Gibraltar, a spokesperson for Prime Minister David Cameron said on Monday.

The spokesperson said the checks by Spanish guards, which have caused tailbacks of several hours at the border of the British-held territory, were "politically motivated and totally disproportionate".

"Clearly the prime minister is disappointed by the failure of
Spain to remove the additional border checks this weekend," the spokesperson told reporters.

"We are now considering what legal action is open to us.

"This would be an unprecedented step so we want to consider it carefully before a making a decision to pursue."

Britain and Spain are embroiled in an increasingly tense diplomatic spat over Gibraltar, a tiny self-governing British territory at the southern tip of
Spain.

Gibraltar has accused Madrid of imposing the checks in retaliation for its construction of an artificial concrete reef off its coast, which it says is aimed at stopping alleged incursions by Spanish fishing boats.

Madrid claims the border checks are necessary to combat smuggling and that the reef is a deliberate impediment to Spanish fishing vessels in a dispute over territorial waters.

A handful of British warships began setting sail for the
Mediterranean on Monday on what the defence ministry stresses is a routine exercise that was planned months ago.

But one of the ships is set to dock in
Gibraltar later this week in a move that is being seen by Spanish media as an act of intimidation.

Cultural Revolution: Ageing Chinese sorry


As a teenager radicalised by China's Cultural Revolution, Zhang Hongbing denounced his mother to the authorities. Two months later a firing squad shot her dead.

Now after more than 40 years of mounting guilt, Zhang has ruffled the silence that cloaks
China's decade of turmoil with a public confession.

Such rare apologies have been welcomed as a potential gateway to the collective soul-searching that could bring healing  but is blocked by a ruling Communist Party whose critics say is unwilling to confront its own responsibility.

"Back then everyone was swept up and you couldn't escape even if you wanted to. Any kindness or beauty in me was thoroughly, irretrievably 'formatted'," Zhang told the
Beijing News last week.

"I hope that from my self-reflection other people can understand what the situation was like at that time."

The 1966-76 Cultural Revolution, unleashed by then-leader Mao Zedong to reassert power after the famines caused by his disastrous Great Leap Forward, inflicted myriad personal tragedies and threw society into chaos.

Winds of change

"Red Guard" youths abused their elders - officials, intellectuals, neighbours, relatives - dragging them into "struggle sessions", ransacking their homes and driving some to suicide.

Many targets were jailed or killed, and while no official figure has been issued, one Western historian estimated half a million people died in 1967 alone.

Zhang reported his mother in 1970 for criticising Mao, and military officials came to their home, assaulted her and took her away.

But as the political winds changed - a few years after the Cultural Revolution ended, a court in his native central
Anhui province recanted his mother's sentence - Zhang began to rethink as well.

"I will never forgive myself," he said.

Only a handful of public confessions have appeared, mostly in recent years as the Revolution's once-heady teenagers enter their 60s.

Embracing apologies

Wen Qingfu from the central
province of Hunan cited age as a spur for admitting in an essay in June that, following orders, he once led a mob to storm the home of a teacher whose son he often played with.

"When people get old they look back and reflect," he told a provincial newspaper. "If I didn't apologise now we would both get too old."

Wen acted in time to see his victim's daughter reply in a public letter on behalf of her frail mother: "You can let go of your guilt."

Many Chinese have embraced these apologies, even though wide airing of past wrongs might invite a spate of legal action, said Ding Xueliang, a Cultural Revolution expert at
Hong Kong University of Science and Technology.

In a rare trial stemming from the era, a court in
Zhejiang province in April sentenced a man in his 80s to 42 months in prison for a 1967 murder.

Still, Ding said, "the positive consequences would go far beyond the negative ones... to collective soul-searching, to build a more law-based society".

Basics

But
China's ruling party prohibits such discussion, which would inevitably broach the question of its own ugly role. Any trial or apology tends to skirt around this central issue, say academics.

"Individual responsibility is one part of this," said Xu Youyu, a researcher at the
Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

"Some things are basic, for example, you can't hit people or humiliate or persecute them."

But the confessions "have not touched on the more important or fundamental issues", he said, and if they did, "there might be a question of whether the discussion could continue".

Shortly after Mao died in 1976 the campaign was ended, and the authorities hung blame on the controversial Gang of Four leaders headed by Mao's wife Jiang Qing, jailing them in 1980.

The following year the official party line declared that the Cultural Revolution had dealt
China "the most severe setback and the heaviest losses" since the founding of the People's Republic in 1949.

No museums

Mao was deemed to have been 70% right and 30% wrong, having made "gross mistakes" but far greater contributions.

And with that a curtain over the matter was drawn.

Former premier Wen Jiabao briefly referenced the period last year, warning that
China should never retread such "historical tragedies".

The remark - seen as a rebuke to the recently disgraced leader Bo Xilai who had championed "red revival" - heartened those who support freer discussion of the decade, but the impact of Wen's words ended there.

Virtually no museums, memorials or films in
China explore the Revolution, except for little-known private efforts such as one museum in southwestern Sichuan province that refers discreetly to a "Red era".

In a public apology published in June, Liu Boqin of
Shandong province in the east detailed his crimes and listed his victims, but only vaguely referenced the political directives that drove him.

Instead he cited "youth and ignorance, being incited, wicked, not distinguishing right and wrong" for having hounded teachers and vandalised homes.

"Although being swept up in the environment of the Cultural Revolution was one reason," he wrote, "I as an individual bear responsibility for my evil actions."

Chilly reception for Kerry?


US Secretary of State John Kerry's trip to Colombia and Brazil this week builds on efforts to deepen relations with Latin America, but he can expect a curt reception from the two US allies after reports that an American spy programme widely targeted data in emails and telephone calls across the region.

On Kerry's first visit to South America as the Obama administration's chief diplomat, the disclosures by National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden could chill talks on trade and energy, and even discussions about the 23 October state dinner that President Barack Obama is hosting for Brazil's president, Dilma Rousseff.

"I don't think this is going to be a warm 'abrazo'," said Michael Shifter, president of the Washington-based Inter-American Dialogue, using the Spanish word for "hug". ''I think it will be businesslike."

Kerry arrived late on Sunday in
Bogota, the Colombian capital. The country is holding peace talks to end a half century-old conflict with the Western Hemisphere's most potent rebel army, a rebel force diminished in strength thanks in considerable measure to US military and intelligence support.

The
US wants to show its support for the peace talks between the Colombian government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or Farc, which are taking place in Cuba.

Colombia is one of the United States' closest allies in the region, but the reports about the spying programme have rankled Colombian officials.

Clarification on intelligence-gathering

Brazil's O Globo newspaper reported last month that citizens of Colombia, Mexico, Brazil and other countries were among the targets of a massive NSA operation to secretly gather information about phone calls and Internet communications worldwide. The reports were based on information provided by Snowden.

Colombia's president, Juan Manuel Santos, said on Thursday that he wanted clarification from
Washington on whether US intelligence-gathering in Colombia had overstepped the countries' joint operations against drug traffickers and illegal armed groups. The US has supplied Colombia with eavesdropping equipment, technicians and aerial surveillance.

Santos said in an interview with The Associated Press that Vice President Joe Biden called him about the issue following revelations by Snowden that US digital snooping has targeted allies as well as foes. Santos said Biden offered a series of technical explanations. Asked if he was satisfied with them, Santos replied, "We are in that process."

Biden also called Rousseff to express what Brazil's communications minister, Helena Chagas, said was "his regret over the negative repercussions caused by the disclosures". Biden invited Brazilian officials to
Washington to get details about the spy programme.

Rousseff told Biden that the privacy of Brazilian citizens and the country's sovereignty cannot be infringed upon in the name of security, and that
Brazil wanted the US to change its security policies and practices.

Last week,
Brazil's Foreign Minister Antonio Patriota was at the United Nations with counterparts from other South American nations to express their indignation about the spy programme to UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

Anti-government protests

The Obama administration has worked to forge stronger ties with
Latin America. In May, Obama took a three-day trip to Mexico and Costa Rica. Biden has visited Colombia and Brazil, where he said stronger trade ties and closer cooperation in education, science and other fields should usher in a new era of US-Brazil relations this year.

Brazil has received much attention in recent months because of Pope Francis' visit and preparations for the 2014 World Cup and the 2016 Olympics to be held in Rio de Janeiro.

Thousands of demonstrators have staged anti-government protests since June demanding better public services in return for high taxes they pay. Under considerable domestic pressure, Rousseff announced a $4bn programme to improve transportation, sewage and public housing in
Sao Paulo, Brazil's largest city.

The protests have weakened her domestic support, but she can bolster her poll numbers with a strong stand against the US over the spying allegations, said Carl Meacham, former Latin America adviser on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and director of the Americas Programme at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.

"I think the tone of the visit will be a bit tense because of these issues raised by the surveillance [programme] and I think Secretary Kerry will have to speak to that," he said.

Saturday, August 10, 2013

NEWS, 08., 09. AND 10.08.2013



Obama pledges greater transparency


President  announced plans on Friday to limit sweeping US government surveillance programmes that have come under criticism since leaks by a former spy agency contractor, saying the United States "can and must be more transparent".
"Given the history of abuse by governments, it's right to ask questions about surveillance, particularly as technology is reshaping every aspect of our lives," Obama told a news conference at the White House.
Saying that it was important to strike the right balance between security and civil rights, Obama said he was unveiling specific steps to improve oversight of surveillance and restore public trust in the government's programmes.
"It's not enough for me as president to have confidence in these programmes. The American people need to have confidence in them, as well," Obama said.
The announcement  made just before Obama heads for summer vacation on Martha's Vineyard may be greeted as at least a partial victory for supporters of ex-NSA contractor Edward Snowden who is now in Russia, where he was granted asylum last week.
Despite the announcement, the Obama administration has vigorously pursued Snowden to bring him back to the United States to face espionage charges for leaking details of the surveillance programmes to the media.
"I don't think Mr Snowden was a patriot," Obama said at the news conference.
Obama said he plans to overhaul Section 215 of the anti-terrorism Patriot Act that governs the collection of so-called "metadata" such as phone records, insisting that the government had no interest in spying on ordinary Americans.
Obama will also pursue with Congress a reform of the secretive Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, which considers requests from law enforcement authorities to target an individual for intelligence gathering.
Obama said he wants to let a civil liberties representative weigh in on the court's deliberations to ensure an adversarial voice is heard.
Public trust
The secretive court, authorised under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978, has been criticized for essentially rubber stamping the US government's requests to search through Americans' electronic records.
Currently, the FISA court makes its decisions on government surveillance requests without hearing from anyone but US Justice Department lawyers in its behind-closed-doors proceedings.
Obama also said he wants to provide more details about the NSA programmes to try to restore any public trust damaged by the Snowden disclosures.
The administration will also form a high-level group of outside experts to review the US surveillance effort.
The NSA declined to comment on Obama's proposals. It is also not clear if Congress will take up the initiatives. A number of influential lawmakers have vigorously defended the spying programs as critical tools needed to detect terrorist threats.
The Patriot Act, launched by then-President George W Bush after the 11 September 2001, attacks, was initiated as a terrorism-fighting tool to prevent a similar attack from ever happening again.
But frequent questions have been raised about the scope of the law and whether its sweeping tactics allows unwarranted intelligence gathering on innocent Americans.
The Snowden disclosures generated concerns about whether people were being forced to sacrifice their constitutionally guaranteed civil liberties in the open-ended search for terrorism links.
Obama met with the CEOs of technology and telecoms companies such Apple and AT&T on Thursday to discuss government surveillance. A Google computer scientist and transparency advocates also participated in the meeting, according to the White House.
The search for Snowden has upset US relations with some Latin American countries, China and, above all, Russia. Obama this week canceled a planned summit in Moscow with President Vladimir Putin.
The revelation of the sweeping US electronic spying programmes has also alienated countries such as Germany, which fiercely defends its citizens' privacy rights.

Juan Manuel Santos, President Of Colombia, Seeks Clarification On U.S. Spying Operations


President Juan Manuel Santos said Thursday that he is seeking clarification from Washington on whether its intelligence-gathering in Colombia has overstepped the countries' joint operations against drug traffickers and illegal armed groups.
Santos said in an interview with The Associated Press that U.S. Vice President Joe Biden called him about the issue following revelations by former U.S. intelligence contractor Edward Snowden that massive U.S digital snooping has targeted allies as well as foes.
He said Biden offered a series of technical explanations. Asked if he was satisfied with them, Santos replied curtly, "We are in that process."
Colombia has long been Washington's closest ally in South America with Washington supplying it with eavesdropping equipment, technicians and aerial surveillance.
Santos said "in that alliance we have had joint intelligence operations, using technical intelligence to fight common enemies, including drug-trafficking (and) terrorism."
He said during the 20-minute interview in a salon of the presidential palace that officials of both nations "are at this time in conversations to see if that was everything that was done or if some other type of espionage occurred."
Santos said a delegation examining the question includes deputy defense minister Jorge Bedoya.
Santos, 61, will host U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry during a visit that begins Sunday night. On Monday evening, Kerry travels to Brazil.
Santos said he did not expect the issue to come up with Kerry as he was already dealing with Biden on it.
Last month, the Brazilian newspaper O Globo reported based on documents provided by Snowden that Brazil was a principal target of data collection by the U.S. National Security Agency, for which he worked as a contractor. The report said other countries in the region targeted by the NSA included Argentina, Ecuador, Mexico, Colombia and Venezuela.
It said the NSA collected information about topics including energy, oil and military purchases.
Colombia said in a brief July 10 communique that it would seek explanations from the United States on the subject.
U.S. Ambassador Michael McKinley has repeatedly declined to respond to questions about whether his country has engaged in unauthorized espionage in Colombia.
Among the NSA programs exposed by Snowden in leaks to the Guardian newspaper was one called XKeyscore that supports his claim the United States has the ability to spy on "the vast majority of human communications."
A series of training slides published by the paper indicates that analysts can use the tool to selectively search digital communications. The slides show Colombia as one of four South American countries hosting an XKeyscore server. The others are Venezuela, Ecuador and Brazil.
Before his 2010 election, Santos was defense minister for three years and was among Colombian officials who sought and welcomed U.S. technical support in electronic eavesdropping.
The country is currently holding peace talks to end a half century-old conflict with the Western Hemisphere's most potent rebel army, a rebel force diminished in strength thanks in considerable measure to U.S. military and intelligence support.
U.S. counterdrug agents employing sophisticated technology have also helped Colombia lock up major drug traffickers.

US to reopen 18 diplomatic missions


Eighteen of the 19 US embassies and consulates that were closed in the Middle East and Africa because of a terrorist threat will reopen on Sunday, the State Department said.

The
US Embassy in Sanaa, Yemen, will remain closed. The US Consulate in Lahore, Pakistan, which was closed on Thursday because of what officials say was a separate credible threat, also was not scheduled to reopen.

In the statement, State Department spokesperson Jen Psaki did not cite a reason for the decision to reopen the 18 missions. She cited "ongoing concerns about a threat stream indicating the potential for terrorist attacks emanating from al-Qaeda in the
Arabian Peninsula," or AQAP, for keeping the embassy in Sanaa closed.

"We will continue to evaluate the threats to Sanaa and
Lahore and make subsequent decisions about the reopening of those facilities based on that information," Psaki said.

The 19 outposts were closed to the public beginning last Sunday. Most American employees at the
US Embassy in Yemen were ordered to leave the country on Tuesday because of threat information.

An intercepted message between al-Qaeda officials about plans for a major terror attack triggered the 19 closures.

Thorny issue of security

The State Department issued a travel warning on Thursday night regarding
Pakistan, saying the presence of several foreign and indigenous terrorist groups posed a potential danger to US citizens throughout the country. At the same time officials ordered nonessential government personnel to leave the US Consulate in Lahore.

In an appearance on Tuesday on NBC's The Tonight Show, Obama said the terror threat was "significant enough that we're taking every precaution".

However, closing embassies and consulates called into question Obama's assertion last spring that al-Qaeda's headquarters was "a shadow of its former self" and his administration's characterisation of the terror network's leadership as "severely diminished" and "decimated". On Friday, the president noted that he was referring to "core al-Qaeda" and that "what I also said was that al-Qaeda and other extremists have metastasised into regional groups that can pose significant dangers".

"So it's entirely consistent to say that this tightly organised and relatively centralised al-Qaeda that attacked us on 9/11 has been broken apart and is very weak and does not have a lot of operational capacity, and to say we still have these regional organisations like AQAP that can pose a threat, that can drive potentially a truck bomb into an embassy wall and can kill some people," he said.

Shutting down so many
US missions also raised the thorny issue of security, a political problem for the administration since the deadly assault last September on the US mission in Benghazi, Libya. The deaths of the American ambassador to Libya and three other Americans brought criticism over the lack of security and whether the administration had been forthright about the perpetrators.

The closings covered embassies and other posts stretching 7 725km from
Tripoli, Libya, to Port Louis, Mauritius, and were not limited to Muslim or Muslim-majority nations.

 

US pulls staff from Lahore consulate


The United States has evacuated all non-emergency staff from its consulate in the Pakistani city of Lahore, citing "specific threats" amid a worldwide alert over al-Qaeda intercepts.
The travel warning issued by the State Department also reiterated longstanding advice to US citizens to avoid all non-essential travel to Pakistan.
The closure comes as Pakistan celebrates the festival of Eid al-Fitr, marking the end of the holy month of Ramadan, and a day after a suicide bomber killed 38 people at a police funeral in the southwestern city of Quetta.
"On August 8, 2013, the Department of State ordered the departure of non-emergency US government personnel from the US Consulate General in Lahore, Pakistan," a State department statement said.
"The Department of State ordered this drawdown due to specific threats concerning the US Consulate in Lahore.
"The presence of several foreign and indigenous terrorist groups poses a potential danger to US citizens throughout Pakistan."
Not linked to terror threat
Meghan Gregoris, spokesperson for the US embassy in Islamabad, said the evacuation was not linked to a terror threat that prompted the closure of 19 diplomatic missions in the Middle East and Africa.
"We received information regarding a threat to our consulate in Lahore. As a precautionary measure we have undertaken a drawdown for all but emergency personnel in Lahore," she told AFP.
The US embassy and consulates in Karachi and Peshawar were closed on Friday for the Eid al-Fitr public holiday but are expected to open again on Monday, she said. But the Lahore mission was likely to remain closed and there was currently "no indication" of when it might reopen.
"We will continue to evaluate threat reporting and take decisions as appropriate," she said.
Despite Pakistan's fractious alliance with the United States in the "war on terror", anti-American sentiment runs deep in the restive country, fuelled in part by the CIA's campaign of drone strikes against militants in the tribal northwest.
A suicide car bomber rammed a US diplomatic vehicle in the northwestern city of Peshawar last September, wounding around 20 people at least the third time the consulate and its staff had been attacked by Taliban and al-Qaeda-linked militants since April 2010.
Intercepted messages
This week's closure of US missions mainly in the Arab world was reportedly ordered because of intercepted messages from al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri to the terror network's Yemeni franchise.
The alert focused on al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, a Yemen-based group which has made several attempts to attack the United States in recent years and is widely seen as the group's most sophisticated offshoot.
On Tuesday the US and other Western nations withdrew diplomatic staff from Yemen, where the Americans are fighting a drone war against the al-Qaeda regional affiliate.
US officials have said al-Qaeda's core leadership in Afghanistan and Pakistan has been decimated in recent years. They cite the 2011 killing of Osama bin Laden and the killing of several senior operatives in US drone strikes.

Snowden lies low in Russia


Somewhere on Russia's vast territory, reading books and awaiting the arrival of his father, lurks the US intelligence leaker Edward Snowden, one of the most wanted individuals on the planet.
But over a week after Moscow granted him asylum, his hiding place is still unknown, adding to the aura of mystery that has surrounded the fugitive ex-intelligence contractor since he arrived in Russia on 23 June.
The concrete facts about Snowden's stay in Russia, after he was allowed on 1 August to leave the Moscow airport transit zone where he had been holed up for five weeks, are at best scanty.
The 30-year-old is in a "safe place", according to his Russian lawyer Anatoly Kucherena. Yes, he is on Russian territory. He may be in Moscow, or outside. And no, his whereabouts will not be disclosed for security reasons.
Snowden has been registered a legal obligation for any foreigner in Russia - but it is not clear where. He is running out of money and sympathetic Russian senator Ruslan Gattarov is organising an appeal to raise funds.
Like the Abominable Snowman or aliens from outer space, there are occasional rumours of Snowden sightings but they never stand up to serious scrutiny.
The United States, which wants to put Snowden on trial for leaking details of a vast surveillance programme, only found out about his obtaining asylum in Russia from the local media and has no idea where he is, according to people familiar with the situation.
He has joined a select but colourful list of notorious figures who have found refuge in Russia over the last decades, including the brother of Serbian dictator Slobodan Milosevic and the British double agents who passed secrets to the USSR.
Snowden is now waiting for the arrival of his father Lon, who has applied for a visa to visit Russia and may be able to travel in the next weeks.
"Edward is waiting for the arrival of his parents and friends to take decisions on a range of important questions," Kucherena said in an interview with the Voice of Russia radio station on 6 August.
Spokesperson on holiday
"He has been on a difficult road. I would say a nightmarish one. He needs to go through a period of adaptation."
Kucherena, who has been the sole source of public information about Snowden, has now gone on holiday for a month, assistants at his office who took a call transferred through his mobile told AFP.
"You want to talk to Kucherena about Snowden? Why talk to us? Kucherena is on holiday until September. He has not left a replacement," said one assistant.
Kucherena has said that Snowden spends his time learning Russian and reading translations of Russian novels. He also wants to try out Russian food and travel in the country.
"But the level of security he needs does not allow him to take a stroll on Red Square or go fishing somewhere," the lawyer added.
According to the federal migration service, with his one-year temporary asylum Snowden has the right to go anywhere on Russian territory and take any work outside of the civil service.
Whether Snowden will ever be able to lead anything resembling a normal life in Russia remains unclear and it is possible he could still go back to his original plan of travelling on to asylum in Latin America.
Snowden's enemies might point to comments made by President Vladimir Putin himself in July 2010 in the wake of a major spy swap with the United States that the lives of "traitors" always end badly.
"They finish up as drunks, addicts, on the street," said Putin.
The British double agents who fled to Moscow in Soviet times enjoyed wildly different fates.
George Blake, who was sprung to freedom from Wormwood Scrubs prison in 1966, lives at the ripe age of 90 a quiet life in Moscow, where he is known as Georgy Ivanovich and enjoys receiving family visits from Britain.
However, Kim Philby's life in the Soviet Union from his flight in 1963 up until his death in 1988 was blighted by loneliness, depression and drink problems.

$1 bn stolen in China housing programme


China's affordable housing programme lost nearly $1bn to embezzlement last year, the national auditor reported on Friday, underscoring the obstacles to official efforts to fight graft.
About 5.8 billion yuan ($950m) went towards "loan repayment, foreign investment, land requisition and house demolitions, office cash flow and other expenses not related to affordable-housing projects", the National Audit Office said on its website.
A total of 360 projects or organisations "embezzled" the funds, it said.
Sensitive issue
Housing costs - which have spiralled in recent years despite government controls - have become a sensitive issue as ordinary Chinese find themselves struggling to afford a home.
China plans to build 36 million affordable-housing units from 2011 to 2015 and the programme received almost 880 billion yuan last year, the audit office said, constructing 5.9 million units and assisting 9.5 million families.
But 110 000 families produced false documents to qualify for assistance unfairly, it added.
The state news agency Xinhua warned at the start of the year that tackling corruption in the affordable housing programme was "increasingly urgent".
"Many Chinese have become extremely sensitive to skyrocketing housing prices and any mishandling of housing resources," it said in an editorial.
China's new leadership took office in March pledging to work harder to root out graft and improve people's livelihoods.
Among the spate of scandals exposed in their anti-corruption campaign in recent months, several low-ranking officials have been reported to own multiple homes, sometimes in the dozens.

Israel Wants To Reject EU Deal Over Settlement Clause

Europe's tough new stance against Jewish settlements could cost Israel hundreds of millions of dollars in EU research grants, putting a hefty price tag on its refusal to stop building on lands Palestinians want for a state.
Deputy Foreign Minister Zeev Elkin suggested Friday that Israel would forgo the money rather than accept a new European Union-mandated caveat that any partnership deals with Israel do not apply to the West Bank, Gaza and east Jerusalem, lands Israel captured in 1967.
The "territorial clause," to be written into future agreements, is part of new EU guidelines and an expression of growing dismay in Europe over continued Israeli settlement expansion.
Israel is particularly concerned about losing access to Horizon 2020, a seven-year, Europe-wide research grant program that starts in 2014 and has an estimated budget of 80 billion euros ($107 billion).
On Thursday, less than a week before Israel-EU talks on Horizon 2020 are to begin, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu asked for more EU clarifications after consulting with Cabinet colleagues about the potential funding cut. It's not clear how much room there is for compromise.
The EU has insisted that new agreements must be "unequivocal and explicit" in their territorial limitations. At the same time, Europe might want to avoid a showdown with Israel when Israeli-Palestinian peace talks are finally underway following a five-year freeze. Negotiations resumed last month in Washington. Teams are to meet in Jerusalem on Wednesday.
Elkin said Israel is eager to join Horizon 2020, but won't do so under the current terms. "We want to sign and we are ready to negotiate, but if the conditions are as they are today, which are unprecedented, ... we can't sign," Elkin told Israel Radio.
The Palestinians welcomed Europe's stance.
"For the first time, Israel finds itself face to face with a minimum level of accountability," said Hanan Ashrawi, a senior PLO official. "I would say it's been a long time in the making. We have been discussing this for more than 20 years with the Europeans."
In Israel, a nation proud of its thriving high-tech and research sector, the threat of losing vital EU funding has shifted the domestic debate on settlements.
Traditionally, opponents have argued that the dozens of settlements Israel has built since 1967 in the West Bank and east Jerusalem are an obstacle to peace and divert money from Israel's poor. Some critics warned Friday that a pro-settlement policy could hurt Israel's innovative edge.
The confrontation with the EU "reveals the price of the continued normalization of construction in the settlements," Israeli columnist Nahum Barnea wrote in the Yediot Ahronot daily. "It is not just `settlements instead of (disadvantaged) neighborhoods.' It is settlements instead of research, instead of high-tech, instead of industry."
Israel did well under Europe's research grant program FP7, which ran from 2007-2013 with a budget of 55 billion euros ($73 billion). Israel paid 535 million euros ($714 million) into the fund and received 634 million euros ($846 million) in grants. It was Israel's second-largest source of research funding in recent years.
Under Horizon 2020, Israel likely would contribute about 600 million euros ($800 million), but could expect a payout of more than 1 billion euros ($1.33 billion), according to Israel's Science Ministry.
The loss of the funding worries scientists.
"I can't image that there will be a time that we won't get funding from the EU," said Yoram Reich, a professor of mechanical engineering at Tel Aviv University who receives European funding. "It's almost the death penalty for many people."
Isaiah Arkin, vice president for research at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, argues that Europe benefits from Israeli participation as much as the other way around. He said that "there is nothing to be gained by assigning political preconditions that would prevent us from being successful together in the future."
Under the new guidelines, funded research must be conducted entirely in Israel's pre-1967 lines. For loans, also offered by Horizon 2020, rules are even stricter; companies doing any business in the occupied lands, even if that activity is not linked to EU funding, are not eligible.
Israel would not be able to sign off on Europe's terms on legal grounds, particularly when it comes to east Jerusalem, annexed by Israel after the 1967 war, said an Israeli government official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not permitted to discuss internal deliberations with the media. With Israel considering east Jerusalem as part of its territory, it would violate its own anti-boycott regulations if it accepts the EU rules, the official said.
The annexation was not recognized by most countries in the world, and the Palestinians want east Jerusalem as the capital of their state.
The EU has said it will recognize any changes to Israel's border that come as a result of negotiations with the Palestinians. Netanyahu has said he's willing to cede land to a Palestinian state, but has refused to recognize the 1967 lines as a starting point or consider a partition of Jerusalem.
Alon Liel, a dovish former Israeli diplomat, said Europe is helping prod Israel toward a moment of truth.
"Israel needs to understand that if it is really going for an agreement (with the Palestinians), it needs to make a dramatic, drastic change in its attitude toward the territories," he said. "And that is what Europe is demanding."

Israeli Drone Strike In Egypt's Sinai Kills 5


An Israeli drone strike killed five suspected Islamic militants and destroyed a rocket launcher in Egypt's largely lawless Sinai Peninsula on Friday, two senior Egyptian security officials said, describing a rare Israeli operation carried out in its Arab neighbor's territory.
The attack came a day after Israel briefly closed its airport in the Red Sea resort of Eilat, close to the Sinai, in response to unspecified security warnings. Eilat was previously targeted by rocket fire from the Sinai.
Israel maintained official silence about the strike, suggesting that if the Jewish state was involved, it might be trying to avoid embarrassing the Egyptian military. An Egyptian military spokesman later denied the report but did not provide another cause for the explosion.
Egypt's official MENA news agency said an explosion destroyed a rocket launcher set up near the border to launch attacks against Israel, and at least five Islamic militants were killed. But it did not elaborate.
Bodies of the slain militants were charred from the blast, an Egyptian official said. He said four of the dead appeared to belong to a family called el-Menaie whose members are wanted for several terrorism-related charges.
"Next to the bodies, there were rockets and a motorcycle that turned into pieces," the official said. He spoke on condition of anonymity as he wasn't authorized to speak to journalists.
A tribal leader in the area said that an Egyptian helicopter flew over the site a few minutes after the drone strike. The Egyptian security officials told The Associated Press that the drone had been flying near the site of the attack since early Friday on the Israeli side of the border and fired from there. Those on the Egyptian side of the border could hear the drone buzzing overhead for hours, they said.
The site of the strike sits some five kilometers (three miles) from the Israeli border.
An Israeli drone attack in the Sinai could signal a significant new level of security cooperation between the two former foes following a military coup that ousted Egypt's president, Mohammed Morsi, last month. The military has alleged that Morsi and his Muslim Brotherhood movement had turned a blind eye to Islamic militants in the Sinai.
Meanwhile, Morsi's ouster, which came after mass protests demanding he step down, has triggered a rise in attacks against security forces on the peninsula, raising fears that extremists could exploit Islamist anger to spread their insurgency.
The Egyptian security officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to release the information, said the Israeli attack was launched in cooperation with Egyptian authorities despite past insistence that the government would not allow anyone to use its territories to launch attacks against jihadi groups.
Israel has increased surveillance along the Egyptian border over the past two years, and is building a barrier along the 230-kilometer (150-mile) frontier to keep out militants and African migrants.
The Israeli military said only that it was looking into the report after being contacted by the AP.
Egyptian military spokesman Col. Ahmed Mohammed Ali initially said on his official Facebook page that security forces were investigating two explosions in el-Agra. He later issued a statement denying "in form and substance any attacks from the Israeli side inside Egyptian territories" and saying the claim of cooperation was "baseless."
Egypt's military and security forces have long been engaged in a battle against Islamic militants in the northern half of the peninsula. Militants and tribesmen also have been engaged in smuggling and other criminal activity in the area for years.
Under Morsi, Egypt's military tried to launch a major military operation in the Sinai after suspected Islamic militants carried out a surprise ambush of Egyptian troops on the border with Israel and Gaza on last year, killing 16 soldiers. The militants drove into Israel in an apparent attempt to launch an attack there, though they were killed by Israeli airstrikes.
After the ambush, thousands of Egyptian troops backed by tanks and heavy equipment deployed to northern Sinai near the Israeli border. But not long, Egypt started to withdraw its forces – which were barred under its peace treaty with Israel. No reason was given at the time, though after Morsi's ouster, several military officials said Morsi wanted to use former jihadis to negotiate for peace with those in Sinai.
Amid the political turmoil facing the nation in the more than two years since longtime autocratic leader Hosni Mubarak was ousted, Egypt has adhered to a 1979 peace deal with Israel.
But militants have fired rockets toward Eilat, a major destination for domestic and international tourists on Israel's southern tip.
Israel briefly closed its airport there on Thursday, citing unspecified security concerns. An Egyptian security official told the AP that officials warned Israel about the possibility of rocket strikes. The official said Egyptian authorities received intelligence suggesting terrorist groups planned to fire missiles Friday at Israel, as well as at locations in northern Sinai and the Suez Canal.

Mugabe's Election Win Challenged By Opposition Party In Court, MDC Seeks New Vote


Zimbabwe's Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) challenged President Robert Mugabe's landslide re-election in the country's top court on Friday, calling for a re-run of the July 31 vote the MDC says was rigged.

Lawyers for the MDC, which is led by Morgan Tsvangirai, filed papers with the
Constitutional Court in Harare arguing the election should be annulled because of widespread alleged illegalities and intimidation of voters by Mugabe's ZANU-PF.

"We want a fresh election within 60 days. The prayer that we also seek is to declare the election null and void," MDC spokesman Douglas Mwonzora told journalists outside the court.

Zimbabwe's constitution says the court must rule on the case within 14 days. Most analysts believe the MDC's legal challenge to Mugabe's victory will not prosper given ZANU-PF's dominance over the judiciary and state institutions in the country.

Mugabe will be sworn in only after the case is decided.

ZANU-PF has denied any vote-rigging in the election, which Tsvangirai, who had served as Mugabe's prime minister in a fractious unity government, has called a "coup by ballot".

The
Zimbabwe Electoral Commission announced on Saturday Mugabe had beaten Tsvangirai with just over 61 percent of the votes, against nearly 34 percent for Tsvangirai.

While election observers from the African
Union and the Southern African Development Community (SADC) broadly approved the presidential and parliamentary elections as orderly and free, the vote has met serious questioning from the West.

The
United States, which maintains sanctions against Mugabe, has said it does not believe his re-election was credible. The European Union, which has been looking at easing sanctions, has also expressed concerns over alleged serious flaws in the vote.

"The person on trial here is not the MDC but Mr. Mugabe.
Zimbabweans expect nothing but justice," Mwonzora said.

Nigeria's Police Corruption Problem Highlighted By YouTube Clip Of Cop Soliciting Bribe


A Nigerian police officer caught soliciting a $155 bribe from a driver on a video viewed widely on YouTube has been sacked and taken into custody, authorities said Friday.
The arrest and dismissal of the police sergeant was a rare example of justice linked to the common practice of officers soliciting bribes from drivers on the roads of Africa's most populous nation.
Drivers are regularly stopped by police, told they have committed an offence -- whether one has been committed or not and told to pay.
Rights groups say the officers are then required to pay a portion of what they collect up the chain of command, but police deny the claims and say they are working to clean up graft in the force.
"He has been dismissed" after an internal trial, police spokesman Frank Mba said of Sergeant Chris Omeleze, who is being held in custody until the police legal department decides whether there is sufficient evidence to press charges,
Mba said that current police management was working to end such behaviour through enforcement and by improving working conditions for the more than 350,000-strong force.
"There are still some positives," he noted, saying police responded immediately upon learning of the incident.
He added: "The fact that Nigerians are beginning to rise up, the fact that we are beginning to have whistleblowers ..."
The video secretly recorded by the driver in the economic capital Lagos and which spread through social media prompted police to take action. It had been viewed more than 150,000 times on YouTube as of Friday morning.
In it, the police officer who has entered the vehicle and is seated in the passenger seat demands 25,000 naira ($155, 115 euros), claiming the driver has committed an offence.
When the driver protests and says he can only afford to pay 2,000 naira, the officer then says he should pay 13,000 naira.
The driver continues to plead with the officer, who says he is not working alone and threatens to bring the driver to the station. The officer then appears to make a phone call to discuss the matter with his colleagues.
According to Mba, the officer did not actually make a phone call and was only trying to threaten the driver.
It is a familiar scene for drivers in Nigeria and one that would usually go unnoticed if not for the video that prompted social media outrage.
A 2010 report by Human Rights Watch described a deeply corrupt police force in Nigeria, where extortion and bribery had become institutionalised and junior officers paid up the chain of command to their superiors.
The current police administration, which was not in charge at the time of the 2010 report, argues that it is working to end such practices.

John Kerry, Chuck Hagel Meeting With Russian Officials In Washington

President Barack Obama said Friday he was reassessing the U.S. relationship with Russia because of a growing number of issues on which the two countries differ, and he lamented what he called his mixed success in trying to persuade Russian leader Vladimir Putin to abandon a Cold War mentality.
Obama's comments at a White House news conference just two days after cancelling a planned summit with Putin next month came as senior U.S. and Russian officials met at the State Department to look at areas in which cooperation is possible. Those officials put a brave face on the badly strained ties and said the meeting produced some tangible results on the military front and on the push to forge a political solution to the crisis in Syria, among other issues.
Obama said Putin's return to the Kremlin last year had brought about "more rhetoric on the Russian side that was anti-American, that played into some of the old stereotypes about the Cold War contest between the United States and Russia."
"I've encouraged Mr. Putin to think forward as opposed to backward on those issues, with mixed success," he told reporters. He said he decided not to attend the summit because "Russia has not moved" on a range of issues where the U.S. would like to see progress. He said his unhappiness with Russia granting asylum to NSA leaker Edward Snowden was one reason, but not the only one, for his decision.
"I think the latest episode is just one more in a number of emerging differences that we've seen over the last several months around Syria, around human rights issues where, you know, it is probably appropriate for us to take a pause, reassess where it is that Russia's going, what our core interests are, and calibrate the relationship so that we're doing things that are good for the United States and, hopefully, good for Russia," Obama said.
He added that no one could hope for 100 percent agreement and that differences could not be completely disguised. But he said U.S.-Russian cooperation is important.
"We're going to assess where the relationship can advance U.S. interests and increase peace and stability and prosperity around the world," Obama said. "Where it can, we're going to keep on working with them. Where we have differences, we're going to say so clearly."
Obama praised trade and arms control successes that the U.S. and Russia were able to seal when he was dealing with former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev. Obama played down suggestions that he and Putin do not get along.
"I don't have a bad personal relationship with Putin. When we have conversations, they're candid. They're blunt. Oftentimes, they're constructive," he said.
But, he took a shot at the often dour-looking Russian leader for his demeanor in meetings and appearances before reporters.
"He's got that kind of slouch, looking like the bored kid in the back of the classroom," Obama said. "But the truth is, is that when we're in conversations together, oftentimes it's very productive."
He urged Putin to think in broad terms and not view the United States as an enemy.
"If issues are framed as if the U.S. is for it, then Russia should be against it, or we're going to be finding ways where we can poke each other at every opportunity, then probably we don't get as much stuff done," Obama said.
Obama's comments came shortly after Secretary of State John Kerry and Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel wrapped up talks with their Russian counterparts that were intended to try to repair some of the damage caused by the differences over Syria, Russia's domestic crackdown on civil rights and anti-gay legislation, a U.S. missile defense plan for Europe, trade, global security, human rights and American adoptions of Russian children.
Officials from both countries said after the talks that the atmosphere had been positive and productive and that they had agreed to renew efforts to bring about a political resolution to the deteriorating situation in Syria at an international conference. On the military side, the officials said Russia had invited the U.S. to observe a joint Russian-Belarussian training exercise next year involving 13,000 troops as well as establish a video link between the defense chiefs.
Kerry allowed that U.S.-Russia ties had been complicated by "colliding and conflicting interests." Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov also acknowledged the fractious state of the relationship but called on both sides to act like "grown-ups," saying that's how Moscow wants to handle the differences.
Noting that he and Lavrov are former ice hockey players, Kerry said that they understood "that diplomacy, like hockey, can sometimes result in the occasional collision, so we're candid, very candid, about the areas in which we agree but also the areas in which we disagree."
He added: "It's no secret that we have experienced some challenging moments and obviously not just over the Snowden case."
Both men maintained that U.S-Russian cooperation on even limited areas of shared concern is important.
Russia has minced no words in expressing its disappointment that Obama cancelled the summit, and Lavrov made it clear that Moscow had been prepared to sign agreements on trade and nuclear research and security had it gone ahead.
"At least we in Russia were prepared to table our proposals to the two presidents," Lavrov said.
"Of course, we have disagreements. We'll continue discussing matters on which we disagree calmly and candidly," he said. "We need to work as grown-ups. And this is what we do. And we hope that this will be reciprocal.