Showing posts with label lebanon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lebanon. Show all posts

Sunday, May 19, 2013

NEWS,18. AND 19.05.2013



UK’s Labour moots new company tax plan


Britain's opposition Labour party, tapping into widening public anger over corporate tax avoidance, wants the government to push for new international rules to force companies to report profit and tax payments country-by-country.
Campaigners say the move, which is receiving increased support internationally despite strong opposition from business, will deter companies from shifting profit into tax havens where they have no staff or sales.
Prime Minister David Cameron has said corporate tax avoidance would be discussed at the annual summit of the Group of Eight leading industrial economies, which Britain is hosting in Northern Ireland next month.
He has urged companies to be more transparent but has only proposed voluntary measures.
Companies say country-by-country reporting will impose unreasonable administrative burdens.
But campaigners say firms fear being embarrassed by highlighting how they frequently pay low or no taxes in countries where they have big sales and how they report big profits in tax havens.
The standard could also lead to companies revealing that they earned no money in countries where they told investors they operated profitably.
Tax reform
Coffee chain Starbucks received broad political, media and public criticism in Britain last year after an investigation showed it assured investors the United Kingdom was a profitable market after telling tax authorities its operations lost money.
The European Union agreed earlier this year to force European banks to report profit on a country-by-country basis as part of measures to ensure they hold enough capital.
The US and EU have also agreed measures to force companies in the extractive industries to publish tax and other payments to resource-rich nations, to reduce corruption.
Labour on Sunday issued a new policy document on corporate tax reform which backed forcing companies to publish figures on revenues, profit and taxes in each country that they operate.
Ernst & Young, one of the 'big four' accounting firms which audit most of the big multinational companies, has warned clients that country-by-country reporting may become a global standard unless they come up with an alternative.
Britain's CBI business lobby group has urged businesses to publish "narrative" reports explaining their tax affairs to the public.
A committee of UK lawmakers has accused Google of "unethical behaviour" for avoiding tax by shifting profit from UK sales to an untaxed unit in Bermuda.
Google says it complies with tax rules in every country where it operates.

Cyber experts fear escalation of attacks


Cyber security professionals know a myriad of ways hackers can try to wreak havoc on critical infrastructure or infiltrate corporations to steal or spy, but it is the fear of the unknown that some say keeps them up at night.
US security officials and private sector experts wonder what kinds of time-bombs can be - or have been - embedded by malware into computer networks, just waiting to explode.
Cyber espionage is already "the greatest transfer of wealth in history", National Security Agency Director Keith Alexander, the top US general in charge of cybersecurity, told the Reuters Cybersecurity Summit in Washington this week.
"Disruptive and destructive attacks on our country will get worse," he said. "Mark my words, it will get worse."
Stealing software or money like the $45m lifted from two Middle Eastern banks in a daring global plot revealed this month might pale next to an attack that could, for example, switch off the lights in a major US city.
That was the fear in New Orleans in February when a power outage struck the Super Bowl, the National Football League's championship game, witnessed by tens of millions of viewers. The outage was blamed on an electrical relay device and not a cyber attack.
"The known unknown is what I worry about," US Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano told the Summit.
"For example, we don't have the identity of all the adversaries who are trying to either commit crimes or acts over the cyber networks. The things we know about, we can deal with. It's the known unknown," she added.
The military is a big target, something that Rear Admiral William Leigher, who is in charge of "information dominance" with the US Navy, takes on board.
"Our networks see thousands of intrusion attempts every day...staying up with the threat, making sure that our defensive systems are up to par is probably one of the things that gets most of my attention," Leigher said.
To be sure, the United States has not suffered the kind of destructive cyber attack that damaged some 30 000 computers at Saudi Arabia's oil company, Saudi Aramco, last year. But experts said they were worried about the increasingly sophisticated cyber capabilities of countries such as China, Russia and Iran.
"This new growing trend of nation states engaged in cyber attacks that are designed to be destructive to parts of the US economy is very, very concerning," said Mike Rogers, chairperson of the US House Intelligence Committee.
"The ferociousness of these attacks is increasing and it's something that we better get a handle on," Rogers added.
Dmitri Alperovitch, co-founder of Crowdstrike, a security technology specialist firm that works with governments and private companies, said he is most concerned about Iran, particularly if there is a spike in tensions in the Middle East.
He is watching the attacks that have taken down the websites of more than a dozen US banks in the past nine months. There are no signs that hackers have managed to destroy or modify crucial financial data, but that is the fear.
"Attacks that focus on modifying data in the stealth way, sabotage, integrity attacks - those are the ones that are most insidious and those are the ones we really should worry about," Alperovitch said.
The migration of ever more elements of the economy to the digital world opens the door to malfeasance.
"We keep hooking more and more stuff up to the internet, so the attack surface keeps growing," said Michael Daniel, cyber security policy coordinator at the White House.
"Pretty soon your coffee maker and your refrigerator is going to be an attack vector because it's going to be hooked up to the internet."

More Than 1,000 Unaccompanied Diplomats Face Threats, PTSD As Obama Calls For Increased Embassy Security

When the Yemen-based branch of al Qaeda placed a bounty on her husband's head, Mary Feierstein learned of it from a friend who called and said, "You must be a mess!"

U.S. Ambassador Gerald Feierstein was thousands of miles (km) away at the
U.S. Embassy in Sanaa, without his wife and family on what is called an "unaccompanied" posting.

He is one of more than a thousand
U.S. diplomats on such tours of duty in danger spots around the world, part of a trend that is changing the definition of being a diplomat.

Over time, his wife has learned to stay calm when the phone rings unexpectedly at her home outside
Washington. For nearly five years, she has not lived in the same country as her husband, a career diplomat who specializes in the Middle East and South Asia.

After militants stormed the
U.S. Embassy in Yemen last September, breaking through to the inner building and ripping plaques and lettering from the walls, Feierstein called his wife to tell her he was OK.

He had also called her a few years earlier when he was based in
Islamabad, Pakistan, and a bomb went off near his residence. He was unhurt in that attack.

But when Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula considered by U.S. officials to be al Qaeda's most dangerous affiliate offered
3 kg of gold last December for the killing of Feierstein, it was Mary's turn to call her husband. He played down the danger.

"He said it was old news. They are constantly under threat, you know," Mary Feierstein said in her first media interview since the threat.

After a police officer came to her home to give her his card and tell her to call him if she needed any help, "that's when I got scared," Feierstein said.

The new perils for foreign service officers were spotlighted last Sept. 11, when militants overran the temporary U.S. mission in Benghazi, Libya, killing four Americans, including Ambassador to Libya Chris Stevens. Two other
U.S. diplomats were killed in Afghanistan in the past year.

President Barack Obama, still grappling with controversy over the
Benghazi attack, called on Congress on Friday to fully fund his $4 billion embassy security budget request.

In a memorial ceremony earlier this month at the State Department, Vice President Joe Biden said that diplomats "take risks that sometimes exceed those of the women and men in uniform."

Honored along with Stevens were Sean Patrick Smith, Tyrone Woods and Glen Doherty, who died in
Benghazi; and foreign service officers Anne Smedinghoff and Ragaei Said Abdelfattah, killed in Afghanistan in 2013 and 2012.


FIVE-FOLD INCREASE IN UNACCOMPANIED DIPLOMATS

The State Department says there are about 1,100
U.S. foreign service officers now at posts abroad where they are unaccompanied or there are limits on who can accompany them - usually meaning no children.

That is a five-fold increase in unaccompanied American diplomats over the past decade, and represents about 14 percent of
U.S. foreign service officers serving overseas.

The change began with "civilian surges" into the war zones of
Iraq and Afghanistan to help with stabilization and reconstruction. Over 400 unaccompanied diplomats are in those countries.

Then, the Arab Spring uprisings starting in 2011 added many unstable countries to the list where the State Department did not want to send families.

The fluctuating list now includes
Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, Yemen, Libya and Tunisia, as well as the new African state of South Sudan, the State Department said.

The
U.S. embassies in Algeria, Sudan and Lebanon are in the "limited accompanied" category as is the U.S. Consulate in Mexico's third-largest city, Monterrey, a focal point for drug-related violence.

The risks to diplomats are not all external. A 2007 State Department survey said 17 percent of employees who had served in dangerous posts indicated some symptoms similar to those of post-traumatic stress disorder. The department, following the military's lead, has set up a program to help diagnose and treat PTSD in its employees.

Mary Feierstein realized she was one of an expanding group of left-behind relatives when she started attending the year-end holiday parties the State Department throws for them, and noticed the crowd getting bigger every year.

She also noticed a lot of small children at those parties, and admitted to thinking, "At least my kids are grown." Her children, two daughters and a son, are all in their 20s. Her son has served two tours of duty with the Marines in
Iraq.

Then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton attended the holiday parties, at which some of the unaccompanied diplomats were Skyped in from abroad. Feierstein said she thought Obama should attend too.

The president did call Gerald Feierstein to thank him for his service after the
Yemen embassy was attacked last Sept. 13, two days after the Benghazi assaults.


'NEW NORM'

The United States used to be quicker to evacuate its embassies and consulates when dangers arose, said Susan Johnson, president of the American Foreign Service Association, the official union representing the Foreign Service.

These days,
Washington tries to manage risks by building up the physical security of posts and increasing diplomatic security personnel, she said.

"In the process, we seem to have built a new level of tolerance for the amount of risk our diplomats face," Johnson said, adding that unaccompanied tours were increasingly becoming "a new norm."

There is pressure on diplomats to do the dangerous tours in order to advance. It is perceived to be "almost mandatory" to serve at an unaccompanied post and "punch that ticket" during a Foreign Service career, she said.

The State Department said 20 percent of its current employees had served in
Iraq, Afghanistan or Pakistan.

The department offers incentives such as danger pay and shorter tours. Unaccompanied posts can be just 12 months, with several breaks, and families can often be left behind at a previous post to minimize disruption.

The State Department has made considerable progress in supporting employees in unaccompanied posts, its inspector general said in a 2010 report. Still, it said, "many returnees experience problems adjusting to their follow-on assignments," and more counseling services may be needed.

Mary Feierstein was born in
Pakistan and met her husband on his first tour there in the 1970s. She said he was one of some "really tough people" that the State Department keeps cycling through stressful, dangerous posts.

Gerald Feierstein served in Lebanon unaccompanied in 2003 and 2004, then returned to
Washington for a few years and was a senior official in the State Department's counterterrorism office.

He was sent to
Pakistan for the third time in his career in 2008, as deputy chief of mission in Islamabad. His family stayed in the United States. In September 2010, Feierstein went to Yemen, again without his family.

"We were planning to go later. ... After the Arab Spring, we haven't been able to go there at all," Mary Feierstein said.

At home, she volunteers for the local Democratic Party and supports causes like gun control. She last saw her husband in March.

While tired of the separation, she said she felt sorrier for her children, even though they are grown. "They miss him so much. They are so happy when he comes home."


New Energy Policies in the Middle East Must Go Hand in Hand With Subsidy Reform


The Middle East has amongst the highest average per capita energy consumption of any region in the world, at twice the global average. Consequently, it also has amongst the highest per capita carbon emissions as well. Furthermore, not only is overall energy use high but the energy mix itself is unusually weighted towards oil compared as compared with other regions, with oil accounting for 50 percent of primary energy demand compared with a global average of 33 percent and an OECD average of 38 percent.
There are three major consequences of the Middle East's high energy intensity and reliance on oil: first, it carries a large implicit economic cost as a result of the value of oil and gas exports foregone and additional gas imports required in some cases; second, such a high degree of energy dependence increases the economy's volatility through its greater exposure to energy supply disruptions or price shifts; and third, it has increased the region's greenhouse gas emissions.
Given the intentions of the region to boost economic growth, reduce economic dependence on volatile energy markets and curtail greenhouse gas emissions growth, the region's high energy intensity is a natural target for reform.
Fortunately, the very fact that the region's energy use is anomalously high and possibly inefficient is a sign that relatively easy gains are possible to bring it under control. There are clear signs that there is significant scope for efficiency improvements. Energy use per unit of GDP is even more dramatically out of step with other regions than per capita statistics, with energy use per unit GDP double the G7 average for example, suggesting that with the right reforms energy demand growth can be slowed or even cut without harming economic growth. Indeed cutting energy demand by increasing energy efficiency would actually boost economic output as for the region's oil producers more crude would be available for export, while for the region's net gas consumers less gas would be need to be imported, improving the balance of trade in both cases.
So the theoretical potential for improvements is clear, but what are the practical steps to achieve it? Governments are currently focused on developing alternative energy options as their primary solution, nuclear and solar power especially. These energy sources will deliver two of the key energy policy aims of the regions' authorities: reducing their economic dependence on oil and cutting greenhouse gas emissions growth. However, to focus solely on these fuels would not fix the Middle East's energy problems.
First of all, the high cost and slow delivery of these new energy sources mean that they cannot deliver all of the energy supply changes needed in a timely manner. That is why policymakers must also put the promotion of natural gas front and center alongside nuclear and solar. Natural gas is the clear choice to complement these alternative energy supplies because the region has reserves in abundance which can be developed quickly, while gas-fired power plants are fast to build, reliable, responsive to demand and emit the least greenhouse gases of any hydrocarbon, at least 50 percent less than coal and 30 percent less than oil in power generation.
Second, and more fundamentally, promoting nuclear and solar, or even natural gas, do not address the problem of energy consumption as previously mentioned. Without addressing this, economic growth will still be affected by demand constantly surpassing supply.
The underlying source of the region's high energy intensity must be addressed and reformed if the region is to deliver a sustainable energy policy with maximum economic benefits: subsidies. Subsidies to oil, gas, water, electricity mean that consumers pay far less than the market rate for these products while producers cannot achieve full value for their output. The United Arab Emirates, for example, has amongst the highest subsidy rates per person in the world, with energy subsidies worth nearly $4,200 per capita per annum in 2011 according to the IEA. While such costs may be internalized by the state and judged to provide worthwhile social benefits, subsidies also always distort market incentives and result in a less efficient energy and economic outcome in the long-term.
Middle East energy use is so high because consumers have little incentive to reduce their energy consumption or make their energy use more efficient since the financial savings from doing so are negligible. Conversely, producers have less incentive to develop new supplies if they cannot sell for above the cost of production. Moreover, as the economy and energy market fundamentals shift, the lack of any market-based price signals means that supply and demand does not respond quickly enough to changing circumstance, slowing the economy down further.
A classic example of the effects of subsidies to constrain the region's economic potential is the role of oil in Saudi Arabia's power sector. In the summer months over a million barrels per day of oil is burnt in power plants to meet peak power demand because there is insufficient non-associated gas production to meet demand. Subsidies exacerbate the problem at every turn: subsidized power prices boost demand; subsidized oil prices make it feasible to burn for power even though it comes at a huge opportunity cost compared to the revenues it would have achieved if exported; at current prices Saudi Arabia there is an opportunity cost of USD 85-95 on every barrel burnt in its power generation sector, and so with oil demand in the power sector in excess of 230 million barrels a year that is $20 billion of lost export revenues. Finally subsidized gas prices create the supply shortfall in the first place because they make it uneconomic to explore for and develop the non-associated gas resources that Saudi Arabia is believed to have in abundance in recent years LUKoil, Eni, Repsol, Shell and Sinopec have all committed to look for natural gas in the country and subsequently exited without success while leading to unconstrained industry demand growth. Moving towards a market based system would address all of these imbalances and make the Saudi or any other Middle East economy healthier and more robust.
The eventual removal of subsidies will create both winners and losers, so a transfer from the current system to a new one must be carefully designed to smooth any disruption and compensate the vulnerable but if a plan is prepared and carried out over a number of years this should not be an insurmountable problem. Ultimately, supply side reforms, to boost alternative energy sources can only ever be half a solution. Demand side reform, via a path to ending energy subsidies in the region, is equally essential to deliver the best economic future for the Middle East and its wider effect on the global economy.

Thursday, March 28, 2013

NEWS,28.03.2013



Putin orders surprise military exercises


Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday ordered surprise military exercises in the Black Sea region involving 7 000 troops and dozens of ships to test the army's battle readiness, the Kremlin said. In typical Putin style, the order was presented to the Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu in a sealed envelope in the middle of the night at 04:00, with the drills to start immediately.Putin's spokesperson Dmitry Peskov indicated the order was aimed at testing out the battle readiness of the Russian armed forces and said Moscow was not obliged to warn its partners of the plan."Today at 04:00 am the president of the Russian Federation and supreme military commander Putin gave the order to the defence minister to begin major military exercises in the Black Sea region," Peskov said."We are talking about major exercises, intended as a check," he added in a statement carried by Russian news agencies. He said the exercises would involve 36 ships and up to 7 000 troops.A defence ministry source told the state RIA Novosti news agency that the military drills, which would involve live firing, were already under way and would be wrapped up by the end of the week.Peskov said Putin had already warned the armed forces that they would be subject to sudden checks of their battle preparedness."If we remember what the president said at the council of the defence ministry a little time ago, then we will remember his words that the practice of sudden checks will continue," Peskov added.Putin drew up the sudden order overnight while flying home from South Africa where he attended the summit of Brics emerging economies in Durban.Peskov said 36 ships from the Russian Black Sea Fleet's base in the Ukrainian Crimean city of Sevastopol and the Russian port of Novorossiisk would be involved in the exercises.Aviation, paratroopers and special forces would also take part, Peskov said."According to international practice, exercises involving up to 7 000 people do not require us to inform our partners in advance," he said.The defence ministry's chief spokesperson Igor Konashenkov told RIA Novosti that the drills would involve 7 000 troops, up to 20 military jets and helicopters and 50 pieces of artillery.Key littoral states on the Black Sea include Turkey, Ukraine and Russia's foe Georgia with whom Moscow fought a brief war in 2008. EU members Bulgaria and Romania also have a Black Sea coastline. Peskov said the exercises would take place on three military test ranges on Russian territory.Military reformRussia embarked on a major campaign of military reform after its war with Georgia showed up weaknesses in the reactivity of the armed forces despite the military victory over Tbilisi.The government is seeking to make the army more responsive to the demands of modern warfare by modernising technology and shaking up command structures. Independent military analyst Alexander Golts said that as long as the element of surprise was genuine, the exercises were a good idea "to test the battle readiness of the army".Analyst Pavel Felgenhauer, a military commentator for the opposition Novaya Gazeta newspaper, said Putin was keen to make another display of Russian military might to the West."This is sabre rattling in the place nearest [to Europe] to make a demonstration of our intentions," he said.The exercises represent a major test for Shoigu, one of Putin's closest allies who became defence minister late last year after previous incumbent Anatoly Serdyukov, the architect of the military reform, was implicated in a graft scandal.RIA Novosti said that the manoeuvres come after a similar sudden exercise was ordered in February in Russia's central and southern regions that was the first unscheduled check of the armed forces in 20 years. After those exercises, Russia's top general Valery Gerasimov said a number of systemic problems and shortcomings of military hardware had been uncovered.

Kremlin watchdog slams NGO raids


Members of Kremlin's own rights council on Thursday denounced "unprecedented" raids on activist groups, saying the searches were aimed at paralysing their work and muting their role as a rare critical voice in Russia. Russian prosecutors and tax inspectors have in recent weeks staged a wave of searches of at least 100 leading Russian and foreign non-governmental organisations (NGOs), including Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International."A mass campaign of searches of NGOs is unprecedented in the last 25 years," said Sergei Krivenko, a top official at Memorial rights group and a member of the Kremlin's rights council that advises President Vladimir Putin on rights.He compared the raids to the pressure on civil society under Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin."It can only be compared with a campaign of 1929 when religious organisations were shut down en masse and 1937-1938, when all foreign organisations were closed down," Krivenko, whose group was searched for several days, told a news conference.Pavel Chikov, head of Agora rights association, who is also a member of the Kremlin's rights council, told the same news conference that so far a hundred groups from 25 regions across Russia have reported searches.The raids are being spearheaded by prosecutors and involve members of the FSB security service, police and even Russia's consumer rights watchdog Rospotrebnadzor, he added."First and foremost prosecutors are interested in non-governmental organisations involved in political activities, protest activities, criticism of the authorities and NGOs with foreign financing," he told reporters."Their possible aim is to paralyse NGOs for some time and intimidate them."Rights activists link the searches to a controversial law forcing foreign-funded NGOs involved in politics to carry a "foreign agent" tag.The measure was fast-tracked through parliament upon Putin's return to the Kremlin in May last year in the face of unprecedented protests against his 13-year rule.Rights groups vowed to boycott the law, while Putin said last month that the legislation should be enforced.Tax and fire inspectorsMikhail Fedotov, the head of the Kremlin's rights council, said it was unclear why so many officials including tax inspectors and fire inspectors were involved in the searches."Do they want to check whether NGOs make explosives?" he said. "They found that one group lacked a plan on how to exterminate rats."Earlier this week, the EU called the searches "worrisome", while German officials said the raids on German groups could lead to a deterioration of ties.A US state department spokesperson said Washington was "very concerned" by the searches.In a bid to deflect the mounting criticism, the general prosecutor's office issued a statement on Thursday, saying the current searches were being carried out in accordance with a plan for this year. The results of the checks, it said, will help determine "problem issues and ways to solve them" including by tweaking the current legislation.The prosecutor's office noted that NGOs could file a complaint if they believed their rights and interests were violated, promising that all such complaints would be "swiftly" looked into.In the latest searches, prosecutors on Thursday also visited the offices of Russia's oldest rights organisation, the Moscow Helsinki Group. Its veteran head Lyudmila Alexeyeva led the drive to boycott the "foreign agent" law."Of course, it's possible to make our life a living hell, but we are used to it - they make our life hell and we go on living," the 85-year-old campaigner told AFP.

Top firms scramble for oil wealth


Lebanon's Energy Ministry says 50 companies have participated in a pre-qualification process to win licenses for oil and gas work off the Lebanese coast. The ministry says the companies include Chevron and Exxon Mobil from the United States and Royal Dutch Shell.Lebanon is a resource-poor nation and any finds could help it pay off what is one of the highest debt rates in the world.The names of winning companies will be announced on April 18.Recent Israeli discoveries of oil and gas have raised tensions between Lebanon and neighboring Israel, which are in a state of war. Both countries claim a small maritime area of 850 square kilometers (328 square miles) in the Mediterranean.

US jobless claims rise


The number of Americans filing new claims for unemployment benefits rose more than expected last week, but probably not enough to suggest the labour market recovery was taking a step back.Initial claims for state unemployment benefits increased 16 000 to a seasonally adjusted 357 000, the Labour Department said on Thursday. Still, they remained in the middle of their range for this year.The prior week's claims figure was revised to show 5000 more applications than previously reported. Economists polled by Reuters had expected first-time applications last week to rise to 340 000.Last week's report contained annual benchmark revisions to the series and the model used by the government to iron out seasonal fluctuations.Last week's increase pushed claims above the 350 000 level for the first time since mid-February.The four-week moving average for new claims, a better measure of labour market trends, rose 2 250 to 343 000, but remained below the 350 000 level.That could offer hope job growth this month retained some of the momentum from February. Nonfarm payrolls increased 236 000 last month, with the unemployment rate falling to a four-year low of 7.7%.Claims over the next several weeks will be watched closely for signs of layoffs related to $85bn in government budget cuts known as the "sequester." So far, there is little sign the across-the-board spending cuts are affecting the job market.A Labour Department analyst said no states had been estimated and there were no special factors influencing the report.Claims, however, could become volatile in the coming weeks because of the early timing of Easter and spring breaks, which could throw off the so-called seasonal factor.The labour market is being closely watched by the Federal Reserve, which last week said it would maintain its monthly $85bn purchases of mortgage and Treasury bonds to foster faster job growth.The number of people still receiving benefits under regular state programs after an initial week of aid dropped 27 000 to 3.05 million in the week ended March 16. That was the lowest since June 2008.The so-called continuing claims covered the period for the household survey from which the unemployment rate is derived.

Strict controls as Cyprus banks reopen


Cypriots will finally get access to their bank accounts later on Thursday after a nearly two-week lockdown, but under tight restrictions unprecedented in the eurozone.With world markets still jittery over the crisis, the banks closed since March 16 will reopen from 12:00pm (10:00 GMT) until 6:00pm (16:00 GMT), the central bank confirmed.But Finance Minister Michalis Sarris has imposed temporary limits on daily withdrawals to €300 to prevent a run on the banks that could wreak havoc on the island's already fragile economy.He also banned the cashing of cheques and ordered those travelling abroad not to take more than €1 000 out of the country.Five shipping containers reportedly filled with billions of euros were delivered to the central bank in Nicosia late Wednesday, an AFP photographer said.Under a deal agreed in Brussels on Monday, Cyprus must raise €5.8bn to qualify for a €10bn bailout from the "troika" of the European Union, European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund.Depositors with more than €100 000 in the top two banks Bank of Cyprus (BoC) and Laiki or 'Popular Bank' face losing a large chunk of their money.Cyprus also agreed to major reforms to its banking system, which is heavily dependent on Russian money an estimated $31bn in corporate and private deposits.Monday's deal kept the Mediterranean island from crashing out of the euro but it has provoked fury at home.OnWednesday, around 1 500 anti-austerity protesters marched on the presidential palace to protest the EU-IMF rescue package, which delivers a major hit to big depositors and threatens thousands of jobs.Under the government-imposed restrictions, money transfers to accounts outside Cyprus are forbidden, with some exceptions, and there is a limit of €5 000 monthly in credit or debit card purchases while abroad.Sarris said the strict capital controls would be temporary.But in comments to the private television station Sigma on Wednesday night he warned: "We will see worse days in 2013... the economy will go into deeper recession."Cyprus is the first eurozone country to impose capital controls after bailouts unlike Greece, Spain, Portugal and Ireland, which have also received multi-billion-dollar rescue packages.Sarris's decree said that the restrictions were in place to prevent a run on the banks as depositors tried to get their money out, which would see the financial system collapse and destabilise the economy.The bailout involves restructuring BoC and eventually winding down Laiki, whose "good" assets will be absorbed by the bigger bank.BoC chief executive Yiannis Kypris was sacked by the central bank governor on Wednesday a day after the bank chairman's resignation was rejected.Laiki depositors face losses of up to 80% on deposits above €100 000, while BoC savers have been warned they stand to lose 40%.Thanks in part to comments by Eurogroup chief Jeroen Dijsselbloem on Monday that appeared to suggest the harsh terms of the Cyprus deal could be repeated elsewhere - comments later retracted the markets remained nervous.At one point Wednesday the euro sank to below the $1.28 line for the first time since November. In Tokyo trade on Thursday morning, the euro was still under pressure, fetching $1.2785 and ¥120.33.European and US stock markets closed down, and in early trading on Thursday in Asia markets were also slipping amid fears over Cyprus.Investors were worried about "the 'contagion effect' of a possible run on banks spreading to other parts of the eurozone," SMBC Nikko Securities general manager of equities Hiroichi Nishi told Dow Jones Newswires.Bank employees union ETYK have appealed to the public not to take out their frustrations on bank staff, saying that they too are "victims of criminal acts".In the Greek capital Athens on Wednesday night, a bomb exploded near the home of former BoC executive Nikos Tsakos, a Greek ship owner who had served on the board of the Cypriot lender. Nobody was injured.

Obama calls for action on guns


US President Barack Obama on Thursday urged lawmakers to take serious action against gun violence, telling Americans not to forget the tragedy of the mass shooting in Newtown, Connecticut just months ago. "Tears aren't enough, expressions of sympathy aren't enough," Obama said.Congress is currently considering a bill that would institute background checks on all gun purchases and punish those who buy weapons with the intention of turning them over to criminals.Obama also reiterated his calls for a ban on assault weapons, which is not included in the main legislation to be considered by Congress.Harry Reid, leader of the majority Democrats in the Senate, did not include the proposal in the bill because he felt it was unlikely to pass amid opposition from gun-rights advocates. However, an assault weapons ban will likely be voted on as an amendment to the main measure."There's absolutely no reason why we can't get this done," Obama said. "But the reason we're talking about it here today is because it's not done until it's done. And there are some powerful voices on the other side that are interested in running up a clock of changing the subject or drowning out the majority of the American people to prevent any of these reforms from happening at all."He called on Americans to remember the shooting in Newtown that left 20 children and six teachers dead just over three months ago, saying the tragedy should be turned into action."Shame on us if we've forgotten. I haven't forgotten those kids," he said.Obama's message coincided with the release of details of the police investigation into the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting.First deathThe shooter, Adam Lanza, 20, killed his mother in the home they shared on 14 December, then went to the school in Newtown, Connecticut and turned his gun on children and teachers. The police documents show that he took his own life within five minutes of shooting his way into the building, Connecticut state attorney Stephen J Sedensky III said.Lanza used a single weapon - a Bushmaster .223-caliber rifle to kill the children and school employees, then used a Glock 10 millimetre handgun to kill himself, the records show. Investigators also found a loaded 12-gauge shotgun in the car he drove to the school and shotgun ammunition.Other details of the investigation reveal that Lanza had a gun safe in his bedroom and had received a Christmas card from his mother with a check inside for the purchase of a gun, according to a search warrant.Details of the investigation also said police interviewed a person who said that Lanza rarely left his home and was an avid gamer, who played the computer war game Call of Duty.A recent poll published by CNN shows public support for major restrictions on guns or making all guns illegal has declined from 52% immediately after the shooting to 43% now.

US flies stealth bombers over South Korea


The United States said two nuclear-capable B-2 stealth bombers flew "deterrence" missions over South Korea on Thursday, defying apocalyptic threats of retribution from North Korea against ongoing war games.The deployment of the stealth bombers was clearly meant to deliver a potent message to Pyongyang about the US commitment to defending South Korea against any aggression as military tensions on the Korean peninsula soar.It came shortly after the North severed its last-remaining military hotline with South Korea and put its rocket units on combat status with a threat to target US bases in the Pacific region.The two B-2s, from Whiteman Air Force base in Missouri, flew the 20 800km round-trip in a "single continuous mission", dropping dummy ordnance on a target range in the South, the US military said in a statement."This ... demonstrates the United States' ability to conduct long-range, precision strikes quickly and at will," the statement said.The bombers were participating in South Korean-US military exercises that have incensed North Korea, which has threatened to unleash a second Korean War and launch pre-emptive nuclear strikes on South Korea and the US mainland.US, South in new pact"The B-2 bomber is an important element of America's enduring and robust extended deterrence capability," the US statement said.Earlier on Thursday, US Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel told his South Korean counterpart that Seoul could rely on all the military protection the United States has to offer - nuclear, conventional and missile defence.The US and South Korean militaries signed a new pact last week, providing for a joint military response to even low-level provocation by North Korea.The use of the stealth bombers is sure to prompt a fresh outcry from Pyongyang, which has already denounced the use of US B-52 bombers in the joint exercises as a rehearsal for a nuclear strike.While most analysts have dismissed the bulk of the North Korean threats as rhetorical bluster, there are concerns that even a minor incident could swiftly escalate in such a volatile environment.In its latest protest at the military drills, North Korea announced on Wednesday that it was severing its military hotline with the South, saying it was no longer needed given that "war may break out any moment".Communication line severedThe joint drills are held every year and are regularly condemned by Pyongyang as rehearsals for invasion.Their staging this year came as tensions were already riding high following the North's long-range rocket launch in December and its nuclear test last month.The North has severed the military hotline before, most recently in March 2009, again in protest at the annual South Korean-US military exercises. In that case, the line was reconnected less than two weeks later.Several weeks ago North Korea severed a Red Cross hotline that had been used for government-to-government communications.Among other things, the military hotline was used on a daily basis to organise movement in and out of the Kaesong industrial complex - a joint South-North Korean venture established in 2004.The South Koreans used the line to give the North the names of those seeking entry to Kaesong, guaranteeing their safety as they crossed one of the world's most heavily militarised borders.The crossing was operating normally on Thursday, officials said, adding that they had had used a civilian link to get the names to the North Korean guards.North Korea has always been wary of allowing crises in inter-Korean relations to affect the zone, which lies 10km inside its side of the border and is a crucial hard-currency earner for the communist state.

Patient Cypriots queue as banks reopen


Cypriots queued calmly at banks as they reopened on Thursday under tight controls imposed on transactions to prevent a run on deposits after the government was forced to accept a stringent EU rescue package to avert bankruptcy. Banks were shut almost two weeks ago as the government negotiated a €10bn international bailout, the first in Europe's single currency zone to impose losses on bank depositors.Bank staff turned up for work early as cash was delivered by armoured trucks, and queues of at least a dozen people formed at branches in the capital, with uniformed security guards on duty.Doors opened at noon but initially at least there was no sign of any major run on the banks, as had been feared.A lot of money had already left electronically. Figures published by the Central Bank of Cyprus on Thursday showed that savers from other euro zone countries withdrew 18% of their deposits from the stricken island in February, as talk of a tax on bank accounts rose.Overall private sector bank deposits in Cyprus fell by 2.2% to €46.4bn last month, after a similar drop in January.Authorities say the emergency rules imposed to limit withdrawals and prevent a bank run will be temporary, initially for seven days, but economists say they will be difficult to lift as long as the economy is in crisis.The capital controls decree was taped to the windows of bank branches and staff handed out copies to customers. In Nicosia, there was relief, but some apprehension about what might happen."You've no idea how much I've been waiting for this," said 64-year-old pensioner Froso Kokikou, waiting in line at a branch of Cyprus Popular Bank, also known as Laiki."I feel a sense of fear and disappointment having to queue up like this; it feels like a Third World country, but what can you do?" Kokikou said. "This is what they imposed on us and we have to live with it."Kostas Nikolaou, a 60-year-old pensioner, said the uncertainty of the past two weeks had been "like a slow death".He added: "How can they tell you that you can't access your own money in the bank? It's our money, we are entitled to it."Many of those waiting in line were elderly people, who said they had run out of cash because they did not have bank cards.The Cyprus stock exchange said it would remain closed on Thursday.On international markets, German 10-year bond yields fell to their lowest level since August on fears of spill-over from the Cyprus crisis to other struggling euro zone members. Yields fell 2 basis points to 1.256%. Traders cited the risk that depositors in other countries could take fright at any signs of a run on deposits in Cyprus.Container trucks loaded with cash pulled up inside the compound of the central bank in the capital Nicosia on Wednesday night to prepare for the reopening, a central bank source said.As in all countries that use the euro, Cyprus's central bank supplies cash for its banks from the European Central Bank (ECB) in Frankfurt. Officials have promised that enough funds will be on hand to meet demand. The ECB did not comment on reports it had sent extra cash to the island.Cash LimitA finance ministry decree limited cash withdrawals to no more than €300 per day and banned the cashing of cheques.The island's central bank will review all commercial transactions over €5 000 and scrutinise transactions over €200 000 on an individual basis. People leaving Cyprus may take only €1 000 with them.A police source told Reuters that passengers leaving Cypriot airports were subject to extra searches. Officers had orders to confiscate cash above the €1 000 limit.With just 860 000 people, Cyprus has about €68bn in its banks a vastly outsized financial system that attracted deposits from foreigners, especially Russians, as an offshore haven but foundered when investments in neighbouring Greece went sour.The EU and International Monetary Fund (IMF) concluded that Cyprus could not afford a rescue unless it imposed losses on depositors, seen as anathema in previous euro zone bailouts.That view has angered Cypriots, whose foreign minister said his country was sacrificing too much for the bailout."Europe is pretending to help us but the price to pay is too high: nothing less than the brutal destruction of our economic model," Ioannis Kasoulides told the French newspaper Les Echos.Cyprus euro’Cyprus's financial difficulties have sent tremors through the already fragile single European currency. The imposition of capital controls has led economists to warn that a second-class "Cyprus euro" could emerge, with funds trapped on the island less valuable than euros that can be freely spent abroad. Reflecting fears of a spill-over, ratings agency Moody's said it kept euro zone strugglers Ireland and Portugal on negative outlook, citing the Cyprus bailout as an extra risk.The European Commission said the capital controls were legal and justified under EU law provided they were strictly temporary and proportionate. The EU executive said it would monitor "the need to extend the validity of or revise the measures".The bailout, agreed in Brussels on Monday, looks set to push Cyprus deeper into an economic slump, shrink the banking sector and cost thousands of jobs.Cyprus Popular Bank, the country's second biggest, will be closed and its guaranteed deposits of up to €100 000 transferred to the largest bank, Bank of Cyprus.Deposits of more than €100 000 at both banks, too big to enjoy a state guarantee, will be frozen, and some of those funds will be exchanged for shares issued by the banks to recapitalise them.While big depositors will lose money, the authorities say deposits up to €100 000 will be protected.

Monday, February 13, 2012

NEWS,13.02.2012.


Diplomats targeted, Israel blames Iran
















A member of the Israel embassy was targeted in India.

Israel accused arch-enemies Iran and its Lebanese ally Hezbollah of being behind twin bomb attacks that targeted embassy staff in India and Georgia today, wounding four people. Tehran denied involvement in the incidents, which amplified tensions between two countries already at loggerheads over Iran's nuclear programme. Hezbollah made no comment. Police in the Indian capital New Delhi said a bomb wrecked a car carrying an embassy official as she was going to pick up her children from school. The woman needed surgery to remove shrapnel but her life was not in danger, officials said. Her driver and two passers-by suffered lesser injuries. Israeli officials said an attempt to bomb an embassy car in the Georgian capital Tbilisi failed. The device was defused. Israel had put its foreign missions on high alert ahead of the fourth anniversary this past Monday of the assassination in Syria of the military mastermind of Hezbollah, Imad Moughniyeh - an attack widely assumed to be the work of Israeli agents. Israel is believed to be also locked in a wider covert war with Iran, whose nuclear programme has been beset by apparent sabotage, including the unclaimed killings of several Iranian nuclear scientists, most recently in January. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu blamed both Iran and Hezbollah, accusing them of responsibility for a string of recent attempted attacks in countries as far apart as Thailand and Azerbaijan.” Iran and its proxy Hezbollah are behind each of these attacks," said Netanyahu, who dismisses Iran denials that it is trying to develop a nuclear weapon. "We will continue to take strong and systematic, yet patient, action against the international terrorism that originates in Iran.” Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast rejected Netanyahu's accusation, calling it "psychological warfare against Iran”.” We condemn any terrorist action and the world knows that Iran is the biggest victim of terrorism," Mehmanparast was quoted as saying by the official IRNA news agency. The New Delhi blast took place some 500 metres from the official residence of Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.B.K. Gupta, the New Delhi police commissioner, said a witness had seen a motorcyclist stick a device to the back of the car, which had diplomatic registration plates.” The eyewitness ... says it (was) some kind of magnetic device. As soon as the motorcycle moved away a good distance from the car, the car blew up and it caught fire," said Gupta. The Iranian scientist killed in Tehran last month died in a similar such attack by a motorcycle bomber who attached a device to his car. No one has claimed responsibility for that, although Iran was quick to accuse agents of Israel and its US ally. Thailand said last month its police had arrested a Lebanese man linked to Hezbollah and he later led them to a warehouse stocked with bomb-making materials. Also last month, authorities in Azerbaijan arrested two people suspected of plotting to attack Israel's ambassador and a local rabbi.

Sunday, February 5, 2012

NEWS,05.02.2012.

Iran launches new exercises


Iran has begun ground military exercises and defiantly warned that it could cut off oil exports to "hostile" European nations as tensions rise over suggestions that military strikes are an increasing possibility if sanctions fail to rein in the Islamic Republic's nuclear program. Tehran has stepped up its rhetoric as international pressure mounts over allegations that it is seeking to develop atomic weapons, a charge it denies. Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has issued stern warnings against any possible US or Israeli attacks against Tehran's nuclear facilities. Western forces also have boosted their naval presence in the Gulf led by the American aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln. The new military manoeuvres came weeks after Iran rolled out its troops and arsenals in an unprecedented display of military readiness, with 10 days of naval manoeuvres that included the first threats to block Gulf oil tankers in early January. Ground forces also were sent on winter war games - against what a Tehran military spokesman called a "hypothetical enemy" - with US forces just over the border in Afghanistan. Plans for new Iranian naval games in the Persian Gulf off the country's southern coast have been in the works for weeks. Iranian state media reported the ground manoeuvres of the elite Revolutionary Guard started Saturday near Jiroft, 745 miles (1200 kms) south of the capital Tehran. No more details were available, but it appeared that they were small-scale exercises and not linked to the planned major naval manoeuvres near the Strait of Hormuz, the route for one-fifth of the world's crude oil. Iranian officials and lawmakers repeatedly have threatened to close the strait, which funnels down to a waterway no wider than 30 miles (50 kms) at the mouth of the Gulf, in retaliation for sanctions that affect Iran's oil exports. But they have as yet made no attempts to disrupt shipping through the waterway, and the US and other Western powers have warned they would respond swiftly to any attempts at a blockade. Washington and its allies fear Iran could use its uranium enrichment labs - which make nuclear fuel - to eventually produce weapons-grade material. Tehran insists it only seeks reactors for energy and medical research. So far, the West is relying primarily on the threat of economic sanctions to pressure Iran over its nuclear program. Tehran has claimed that the most recent move - EU sanctions approved on January 23, which include an oil embargo and the freezing of central bank assets - will be ineffective, while members of Iran's parliament say they have drafted a bill which would cut off the flow to Europe early, before it can find alternative suppliers. Iran's Oil Minister Rostam Qassemi also said on Saturday (local time) the Islamic Republic would "definitely" cut off oil to "hostile" European countries, without specifying which ones they were. However, he said Iran is moving toward reducing reliance on oil revenues, a hint that Tehran is preparing for the worst. Oil sales account for about 80 per cent of Iran's foreign revenues. Qassemi, the oil minister, reiterated Iran's argument that the EU oil embargo will not cripple Iran's economy, claiming that the country already has identified new customers to replace the loss in European sales that accounted for about 18 per cent of Iran's exports. "We've made the necessary planning to deal with that. We have friends in the world and will assist each other," he said. "We won't back down a single step under political pressures and won't give up our right position even if we can't sell a single barrel of oil." In contrast, he said, the ban would rebound on oil consumers. "If Iran's oil is totally deleted from the market, then a terrible tension will be created. The costs will be intolerable. The option of imposing a total ban on Iran's crude exports is unenforceable," he said. Qassemi also reinforced Iran's warning to Saudi Arabia and other fellow OPEC members against boosting production to offset any potential drop in Tehran's crude exports, saying the cartel should not be used as a political weapon against a member state.
Israel, for its part, has so far publicly backed the efforts by the US and European Union for tougher sanctions that target Iran's oil exports. But Israeli leaders have urged even harsher measures and warn that military action remains a clear option despite Western appeals to allow time for the economic pressures and isolation to bear down on Iran. Khamenei, in a nationally broadcast speech on Friday, staked out a hard line after suggestions by Israel that military strikes are an increasing possibility if sanctions fail to rein in Iran's nuclear program. He pledged to aid any nation or group that challenges Israel and said any military strikes would damage US interests in the Middle East "10 times" more than they would hurt Iran. The comments also may signal that Tehran's proxy forces - led by Lebanon's Islamic militant group Hezbollah - could be given the green light to revive attacks on Israel as the showdown between the rivals intensifies.