Quantcast
Channel: Eurasia Review
Viewing all 73702 articles
Browse latest View live

NASA Announces Partnership Opportunities For US Commercial Lunar Lander Capabilities‏

$
0
0

By Eurasia Review

Building on the progress of NASA’s partnerships with the U.S. commercial space industry to develop new spacecraft and rockets capable of delivering cargo, and soon, astronauts to low Earth orbit, the agency is now looking for opportunities to spur commercial cargo transportation capabilities to the surface of the moon.

NASA has released an announcement seeking proposals to partner in the development of reliable and cost-effective commercial robotic lunar lander capabilities that will enable the delivery of payloads to the lunar surface. Such capabilities could support commercial activities on the moon while enabling new science and exploration missions of interest to NASA and the larger scientific and academic communities.

NASA’s new Lunar Cargo Transportation and Landing by Soft Touchdown (Lunar CATALYST) initiative calls for proposals from the U.S. private sector that would lead to one or more no-funds exchanged Space Act Agreements (SAA). NASA’s contribution to a partnership would be on an unfunded basis and could include the technical expertise of NASA staff, access to NASA center test facilities, equipment loans, or software for lander development and testing.

“As NASA pursues an ambitious plan for humans to explore an asteroid and Mars, U.S. industry will create opportunities for NASA to advance new technologies on the moon,” said Greg Williams, NASA’s deputy associate administrator for the Human Exploration and Operations Mission Directorate. “Our strategic investments in the innovations of our commercial partners have brought about successful commercial resupply of the International Space Station, to be followed in the coming years by commercial crew. Lunar CATALYST will help us advance our goals to reach farther destinations.”

The moon has scientific value and the potential to yield resources, such as water and oxygen, in relatively close proximity to Earth to help sustain deep space exploration. Commercial lunar transportation capabilities could support science and exploration objectives, such as sample returns, geophysical network deployment, resource prospecting, and technology demonstrations. These services would require the ability to land small (66 to 220 pound, or 30 to 100 kilogram) and medium (551 to 1,102 pound, or 250 to 500 kg) class payloads at various lunar sites.

“In recent years, lunar orbiting missions, such as NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, have revealed evidence of water and other volatiles, but to understand the extent and accessibility of these resources, we need to reach the surface and explore up close,” said Jason Crusan, director of Advanced Exploration Systems at NASA Headquarters in Washington. “Commercial lunar landing capabilities could help prospect for and utilize these resources.”

Lunar CATALYST supports the internationally shared space exploration goals of the Global Exploration Roadmap (GER) NASA and 11 other space agencies around the world released in August. The GER acknowledges the value of public-private partnerships and commercial services to enable sustainable exploration of asteroids, the moon and Mars.

Commercial lunar cargo transportation systems developed through Lunar CATALYST could build on lessons learned throughout NASA’s 50 years of spaceflight. New propulsion and autonomous landing technologies currently are being tested through NASA’s Morpheus and Mighty Eagle projects.

NASA will host a pre-proposal teleconference on Monday, Jan. 27 during which proposers will have an opportunity to ask questions about the announcement. Proposals from industry are due by March 17. The announcement of selections is targeted for April with SAAs targeted to be in place by May.

The Advanced Exploration Systems Division in NASA’s Human Exploration and Operations Mission Directorate manages Lunar CATALYST. Advanced Exploration Systems pioneers new approaches for rapidly developing prototype systems, demonstrating key capabilities and validating operational concepts for future human missions beyond Earth orbit.

As NASA works with U.S. industry to develop the next generation of U.S. spaceflight services, the agency also is developing the Orion spacecraft and the Space Launch System (SLS), a crew capsule and heavy-lift rocket to provide an entirely new capability for human exploration. Designed to be flexible for launching spacecraft for crew and cargo missions, SLS and Orion will expand human presence beyond low-Earth orbit and enable new missions of exploration across the solar system, including to a near-Earth asteroid and Mars.

The article NASA Announces Partnership Opportunities For US Commercial Lunar Lander Capabilities‏ appeared first on Eurasia Review.


NASA Tests Orion Spacecraft Parachute Jettison Over Arizona

$
0
0

By Eurasia Review

Engineers testing the parachute system for NASA’s Orion spacecraft increased the complexity of their tests Thursday, Jan. 16, adding the jettison of hardware designed to keep the capsule safe during flight.

The test was the first to give engineers in-air data on the performance of the system that jettisons Orion’s forward bay cover. The cover is a shell that fits over Orion’s crew module to protect the spacecraft during launch, orbital flight and re-entry into Earth’s atmosphere. When Orion returns from space, the cover must come off before the spacecraft’s parachutes can deploy. It must be jettisoned high above the ground in order for the parachutes to unfurl.

“This was a tough one,” said Mark Geyer, Orion program manager. “We’d done our homework, of course, but there were elements here that could only be tested in the air, with the entire system working together. It’s one of the most complicated tests that we’ll do, so we were all excited to see it work just as it was meant to.”

Previous parachute tests at the U.S. Army’s Yuma Proving Grounds in Arizona tested the performance of the parachutes in various conditions without a forward bay cover. Adding the cover and its jettison, along with the deployment of three additional parachutes to pull the cover away from the crew module and lower it to the ground, added a level of complexity to the testing.

“The parachute deployment and forward bay cover jettisons are two of the most difficult things for us to model on computers,” said Chris Johnson, project manager for the parachutes. “That’s why we test them so extensively. These systems have to work for Orion to make it safely to the ground, and every bit of data we can gather in tests like these helps us improve our models and gives us more confidence that when we do it for real, we can count on them.”

The forward bay cover is jettisoned using a thruster separation system built by Systima Technologies Inc. of Bothell, Wash. Lockheed Martin, prime contractor for Orion, tested the system for the first time on the ground in December. Two more ground tests will simulate different types of stresses on the cover, such as a potential parachute failure or loads on the spacecraft. NASA also plans a second airborne test with the forward bay cover to evaluate its performance with a failed parachute.

Orion will be put to its first test in space during its first mission, Exploration Flight Test-1(EFT-1), in September. EFT-1 will have an uncrewed Orion launch to an orbit 3,600 miles above Earth, well beyond the distance traveled by spacecraft built for humans in more than 40 years. After circling Earth twice, Orion will re-enter the atmosphere at speeds as fast as 20,000 mph before the parachute system slows it down for a splashdown in the Pacific Ocean.

The article NASA Tests Orion Spacecraft Parachute Jettison Over Arizona appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Investigations On Algerian Activities: Eni’s Board Examines Forensic Audits Carried Out By Third Parties

$
0
0

By Eurasia Review

Eni’s Board of Directors examined Thursday the results of forensic audits encouraged by Eni and carried out by third parties regarding activities in Algeria which are under investigation by the judicial authority.

According to the company, the results of the audits revealed neither evidence of illegal or corrupt conducts of Eni, nor the existence of intermediary contracts between Eni and the third parties under investigation. In line with Eni’s spirit of full cooperation and transparency, the outcome of the audits will be immediately made available to the relevant authorities, the company said.

The Eni’s Board has also taken note of the actions of organisational and managerial discontinuity and of the audits initiated by Saipem, as communicated by Saipem on 17 July 2013. In compliance with Saipem’s managerial autonomy as a listed company, Eni will continue to monitor the outcome of the ongoing investigations and Saipem’s initiatives, the company said.

The article Investigations On Algerian Activities: Eni’s Board Examines Forensic Audits Carried Out By Third Parties appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Rosneft Names Mikhail Leontyev To Oversee External Communications

$
0
0

By Eurasia Review

Rosneft said Thursday that Mikhail Vladimirovich Leontyev was appointed the Press-Secretary – Director of the Information and Advertisement Department in the rank of Vice President on January 14, 2014. He will be supervising the external communications, advertising and exhibition activities division at Rosneft.

Vladimir Tyulin who occupied the position of Press-Secretary – Director of the Information and Advertisement Department at Rosneft from November 2012 will resign to start a new job.

Rosneft is strictly adhering to the policy of information openness and business transparency, the company said, adding that expanding external communications and enhancing the efficiency of information support for Company’s projects is an integral part of Rosneft’s business activity.

The article Rosneft Names Mikhail Leontyev To Oversee External Communications appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Chelsea Manning Awarded 2014 Sam Adams Prize For Integrity In Intelligence

$
0
0

By RT

The former US Army intelligence analyst who was found guilty of releasing the largest set of classified documents in US history will be honored in absentia for her role in exposing the dark nature of civilian casualties in Iraq.

Chelsea Manning (formerly Bradley Manning), currently incarcerated at Leavenworth Prison, will be recognized at a ceremony in absentia at Oxford University’s prestigious Oxford Union Society “for casting much-needed daylight on the true toll and cause of civilian casualties in Iraq; human rights abuses by U.S. and “coalition” forces, mercenaries, and contractors; and the roles that spying and bribery play in international diplomacy,” according to the press release, published by activist and author David Swanson.

The award ceremony will be held on February 19, 2014, according to the statement.

The Sam Adams Award acknowledged Chelsea Manning, 26, for revealing to the world some of the atrocities of the Iraq War, including the “Collateral Murder” video – footage taken in July 2007 from inside the cockpit of a US Apache helicopter as US troops onboard cut down 12 unarmed civilians, including two Reuters reporters.

The video footage, together with some 500,000 Army documents that are now known as the Iraq War logs and Afghan War logs, was turned over to Wikileaks in early 2010.

Manning was sentenced in August 2013 to 35 years imprisonment.

Former senior NSA executive and SAAII Awardee Emeritus Thomas Drake commented that Manning “exposed the dark side shadows of our national security regime and foreign policy follies.”

Drake writes that Manning’s “acts of civil disobedience … strike at the very core of the critical issues surrounding our national security, public and foreign policy, openness and transparency, as well as the unprecedented and relentless campaign by this Administration to snuff out and silence truth tellers and whistleblowers in a deliberate and premeditated assault on the 1st Amendment.”

The Sam Adams Award is given annually by the Sam Adams Associates for Integrity in Intelligence, comprised of retired CIA officers, to an intelligence professional who has taken a stand for integrity and ethics. It is named after Samuel A. Adams, a CIA whistleblower during the Vietnam War.

Last year, the Sam Adams award was presented to NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden, who recieved the award at an undisclosed location in Moscow. Other renowned recipients of the award in recent years were Thomas Drake, Julian Assange and Samuel Provance.

Jesselyn Radack, of the Government Accountability Project, told RT in October during a roundtable discussion “it’s a dangerous time for whistleblowers in the US.”

At the same time, however, Snowden’s revelations have had a big effect as “courage is contagious,” Radack noted.

“We have more and more whistleblowers coming to the Government Accountability Project than we have had before,” she said. “I really think [Snowden] has had a wonderful effect [on] the US and the world.”

The article Chelsea Manning Awarded 2014 Sam Adams Prize For Integrity In Intelligence appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Ariel Sharon: His Sabra And Shatila Legacy – An Eye Witness Account

$
0
0

By Palestine Chronicle

By Felicity Arbuthnot and Dr. Ang Swee Chai

As Israel buried Ariel Sharon amid eulogies from world figures, Tony Blair, a Butcher of Baghdad, paid a tribute to the Butcher of Beirut which included the line that Sharon: “didn’t think of peace as a dreamer, but did dream of peace.” Also that: “ … he sought peace with the same iron determination” as he had fought (read slaughtered, across the Middle East.) Re-writing history does not come more blatant, but Blair was ever good at fantasy, think “weapons of mass destruction” and “forty five minutes.”

Surgeon, Dr Swee Chai Ang went to help the wounded of Beirut after the 1982 Israeli invasion and witnessed the Sabra and Shatila massacre of unarmed men woman and children, Palestinian and Lebanese, between the 15th-18th September,1982.

In her book “From Beirut to Jerusalem”, she describes the reality:

“As I walked through the camp alleys looking at the shattered homes (many of these houses had just been rebuilt following earlier bombardments by Israel) I wanted to cry aloud, but was too exhausted emotionally even to do that. How could little children come back to live in the room where their relatives were tortured and then killed? If the Palestinian Red Crescent Society could not function legally, who was going to look after the widows and orphans?

“Suddenly, someone threw his arms around me. It was Mahmoud, a little child who had broken his wrist while trying to help his father rebuild their broken home. He had survived and his wrist had mended, but now his father was dead. Mahmoud cried, but he was glad I was alive because, from his hiding place during the massacre, he had seen the soldiers taking us away. He thought they had killed me.

“Soon I was surrounded by a whole lot of children. Kids without homes, without parents, without futures. But they were the children of Sabra and the children of Shatila. One of them spotted my pocket camera, and wanted a picture taken. Then they all stood together, wanting their pictures taken. “They wanted me to show their picture to the people of the world. Even if they were killed and the camps were demolished, the world would know that they were the children of Sabra and Shatila, and were not afraid. As I focused my camera, they all held up their hands and made victory signs, right in front of their destroyed homes, where many had been killed. Dear little friends, you taught me what courage and struggle are about.”

Dr Swee Chai Ang founded Medical Aid for Palestine as a result of her experiences in Beirut and Sabra and Shatila. On the eve of Ariel Sharon’s buriel, she wrote the following. It is published with her permission:

The passing of Ariel Sharon brought back the memories of the horrors of the Sabra Shatilla massacre of September,’82. I arrived in August that year as a volunteer surgeon to help the war victims of Lebanon. The people in Lebanon were wounded, made homeless and lost precious friends and families as the result of ten weeks of ruthless bombardment. That was the “Operation Peace for Galilee”, launched by Sharon who was then the Defence Minister of Israel in June 1982.

No one knew how many were killed as the result of that offensive – the London newspapers estimated a thirty thousand with many times more made homeless. When a ceasefire was agreed with the evacuation of the Palestine Liberation Organisation, Sharon broke that ceasefire and drove tanks under air-cover launching a land invasion into Lebanon’s capitol Beirut. Part of the tanks sealed Sabra Shatilla and prevented the helpless civilian victims from escaping, while sending in Israel’s allies into the camps to carry out the most brutal massacre of defenceless women, children and old people under Israel’s watch. The blame was quickly and deliberately shifted to the Lebanese as perpetrators of the massacres, so that today no one can mention that massacre without blaming the Lebanese Phalange, yet forgetting the Israeli organisers of that event.

I worked in Gaza Hospital in Sabra Shatilla during the massacre trying to save the lives of a few dozen people, but outside the hospital hundreds were killed. My patients and I knew that Sharon and his officers were in control, and without them the massacre would not be possible. The residents of Sabra Shatilla could at least have escaped. Now more than 30 years later, we know that the killers were brought in by Israeli armoured cars and tanks, obeyed Israeli commands, their paths lit by Israeli military flares, and some of them also wore Israeli uniforms. The mutilated bodies of the victims were thrown into mass graves by Israeli bulldozers.

This Sharon continued on to be Israeli Prime Minister, and built the Wall which imprisoned the Palestinians in the West Bank. Sharon’s Wall cut through their lands, separating people from their homes, children from their schools, farmers from their orchards,  patients from hospitals, husbands from wives, and children from parents. He marched into the Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem 2000 with fully armed Israeli soldiers and tried to have the West believe that his intention was for peace.

He was responsible for other massacres such as in Jenin, Qibya and Khan Yunis just to name a few. The older generation in Khan Yunis in Gaza remembers that he killed all the grown men in the massacre of 1956 and left only the women and children to bury the dead.

I thought these facts should be publicised. Those who eulogise Sharon in his role of building Israel should also remember that he built his nation over the dead bodies of the Palestinian people, and the continued dispossession of those who are still alive.

- Dr Ang Swee Chai is the author of From Beirut to Jerusalem, Published by International Librarie, Beirut12 January 2014.

- Felicity Arbuthnot. is a journalist and activist who has visited the Arab and Muslim world on numerous occasions. She has written and broadcast on Iraq, her coverage of which was nominated for several awards. She was also senior researcher for John Pilger’s award-winning documentary Paying the Price: Killing the Children of Iraq. She contributed this article to PalestineChronicle.com.

The article Ariel Sharon: His Sabra And Shatila Legacy – An Eye Witness Account appeared first on Eurasia Review.

The NSA On Trial – OpEd

$
0
0

By Marjorie Cohn

Edward Snowden, who worked for the National Security Agency (NSA), revealed a secret order of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC), that requires Verizon to produce on an “ongoing daily basis … all call detail records or ‘telephony metadata’ created by Verizon for communications (i) between the United States and abroad; or (ii) wholly within the United States, including local telephone calls.”

The government has admitted it collects metadata for all of our telephone communications, but says the data collected does not include the content of the calls.

In response to lawsuits challenging the constitutionality of the program, two federal judges issued dueling opinions about whether it violates the Fourth Amendment’s prohibition on unreasonable searches and seizures.

Judge Richard J. Leon, of the US District Court for the District of Columbia, held that the metadata program probably constitutes an unconstitutional search and seizure. Judge William H. Pauley III, of the US District Court for the Southern District of New York, determined that it does not violate the Fourth Amendment.

Leon’s Opinion

Leon wrote, “Because the Government can use daily metadata collection to engage in ‘repetitive surreptitious surveillance of a citizen’s private goings on,’ the ‘program implicates the Fourth Amendment each time a government official monitors it.’” The issue is “whether plaintiffs have a reasonable expectation of privacy that is violated when the Government indiscriminately collects their telephony metadata along with the metadata of hundreds of millions of other citizens without any particularized suspicion of wrongdoing, retains all of that metadata for five years, and then queries, analyzes, and investigates that data without prior judicial approval of the investigative targets. If they do—and a Fourth Amendment search has thus occurred—then the next step of the analysis will be to determine whether such a search is ‘reasonable.’” The first determination is whether a Fourth Amendment “search” has occurred. If so, the second question is whether that search was “reasonable.”

The judicial analyses of both Leon and Pauley turn on their differing interpretations of the 1979 U.S. Supreme Court decision, Smith v. Maryland. In Smith, a robbery victim reported she had received threatening and obscene phone calls from someone who claimed to be the robber. Without obtaining a warrant, the police installed a pen register, which revealed a telephone in the defendant’s home had been used to call the victim. The Supreme Court held that a person has no reasonable expectation of privacy in the numbers dialed from his telephone because he voluntarily transmits them to his phone company.

Leon distinguished Smith from the NSA program, saying that whether a pen register constitutes a “search” is “a far cry from the issue in [the NSA] case.” Leon wrote, “When do present-day circumstances—the evolution of the Government’s surveillance capabilities, citizens’ phone habits, and the relationship between the NSA and telecom companies—become so thoroughly unlike those considered by the Supreme Court thirty-four years ago that a precedent like Smith simply does not apply? The answer, unfortunately for the Government, is now.”

Then Leon cited the 2012 Supreme Court case of United States v. Jones, in which five justices found that law enforcement’s use of a GPS device to track the movements of a vehicle for nearly a month violated a reasonable expectation of privacy. “Significantly,” Leon wrote, “the justices did so without questioning the validity of the Court’s 1983 decision in United States v. Knotts, that the use of a tracking beeper does not constitute a search because ‘[a] person travelling in an automobile on public thoroughfares has no reasonable expectation of privacy in his movements from one place to another.’” Leon contrasted the short-range, short-term tracking device used in Knotts with the constant month-long surveillance achieved with the GPS device attached to Jones’s car.

Unlike the “highly-limited data collection” in Smith, Leon noted, “[t]he NSA telephony metadata program, on the other hand, involves the creation and maintenance of a historical database containing five years’ worth of data. And I might add, there is the very real prospect that the program will go on for as long as America is combating terrorism, which realistically could be forever!” He called the NSA program “effectively a joint intelligence-gathering operation [between telecom companies and] the Government.”

“[T]he almost-Orwellian technology that enables the Government to store and analyze the phone metadata of every telephone user in the United States is unlike anything that could have been conceived in 1979,” Leon exclaimed, calling it “the stuff of science fiction.” He cited Justice Scalia’s opinion in Kyllo v. United States, which held the use of a thermal imaging device, that measures heat waste emanating from a house, constitutes a “search.” Justice Scalia was concerned about increasing invasions of privacy occasioned by developing technology.

Leon wrote, “I cannot imagine a more ‘indiscriminate’ and ‘arbitrary invasion’ than this systematic and high-tech collection and retention of personal data on virtually every single citizen for purposes of querying and analyzing it without prior judicial approval.”

Quoting Justice Sotomayor’s concurrence in Jones, Leon noted the breadth of information our cell phone records reveal, including “familial, political, professional, religious, and sexual associations.”

Having determined that people have a subjective expectation of privacy in their historical record of telephony metadata, Leon turned to whether that subjective expectation is one that society considers “reasonable.” A “search” must ordinarily be based on individualized suspicion of wrongdoing in order to be “reasonable.” One exception is when there are “special needs,” beyond the need for ordinary law enforcement (such as the need to protect children from drugs).

“To my knowledge, however, no court has ever recognized a special need sufficient to justify continuous, daily searches of virtually every American citizen without any particularized suspicion,” Leon wrote. “In effect,” he continued, “the Government urges me to be the first non-FISC judge to sanction such a dragnet.”

Leon stated that fifteen different FISC judges have issued 35 orders authorizing the metadata collection program. But, Leon wrote, FISC Judge Reggie Walton determined the NSA has engaged in “systematic noncompliance” and repeatedly made misrepresentations and inaccurate statements about the program to the FISC judges. And Presiding FISC Judge John Bates noted “a substantial misrepresentation [by the government] regarding the scope of a major collection program.”

Significantly, Leon noted that “the Government does not cite a single instance in which analysis of the NSA’s bulk metadata collection actually stopped an imminent attack, or otherwise aided the Government in achieving any objective that was time-sensitive in nature.”

Pauley’s Opinion

Pauley’s analysis of the Fourth Amendment issue was brief. He explained that prior to the September 11th terrorist attacks, the NSA intercepted seven calls made by hijacker Khalid al-Mihdhar to an al-Qaeda safe house in Yemen. But the overseas signal intelligence capabilities the NSA used could not capture al-Mihdhar’s telephone number identifier; thus, the NSA mistakenly concluded that al-Mihdhar was not in the United States. Pauley wrote: “Telephony metadata would have furnished the missing information and might have permitted the NSA to notify the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) of the fact that al-Mihdhar was calling the Yemeni safe house from inside the United States.”

“If plumbed,” Pauley noted, the telephony metadata program “can reveal a rich profile of every individual as well as a comprehensive record of people’s association with one another.” He noted, “the Government acknowledged that since May 2006, it has collected [telephony metadata] for substantially every telephone call in the United States, including calls between the United States and a foreign country and calls entirely within the United States.”

But, unlike Leon, Pauley found Smith v. Maryland controls the NSA case. He quoted Smith: “Telephone users … typically know that they must convey numerical information to the telephone company; that the telephone company has facilities for recording this information; and that the telephone company does in fact record this information for a variety of legitimate business purposes.” Thus, Pauley wrote, when a person voluntarily gives information to a third party, “he forfeits his right to privacy in the information.”

While Leon’s distinction between Smith and the NSA program turned on the breadth of information collected by the NSA, Pauley opined, “The collection of breathtaking amounts of information unprotected by the Fourth Amendment does not transform that sweep into a Fourth Amendment search.” And whereas Leon’s detailed analysis demonstrated how Jones leads to the result that the NSA program probably violates the Fourth Amendment, Pauley failed to meaningfully distinguish Jones from the NSA case, merely noting that the Jonescourt did not overrule Smith.

Leon’s decision is the better-reasoned opinion.

Looking Ahead

This issue is headed to the Court of Appeals. From there, it will likely go the Supreme Court. The high court checked and balanced President George W. Bush when he overstepped his legal authority by establishing military commissions that violated due process, and attempted to deny constitutional habeas corpus to Guantanamo detainees. It remains to be seen whether the court will likewise refuse to cower before President Barack Obama’s claim of unfettered executive authority to conduct dragnet surveillance. If the court allows the NSA to continue its metadata collection, we will reside in what can only be characterized as a police state.

The article The NSA On Trial – OpEd appeared first on Eurasia Review.

India Should Stop Forced Evictions Of Riot Victims, Says HRW

$
0
0

By Eurasia Review

Indian authorities in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh should immediately stop evicting people from camps who fled communal violence in September 2013, Human Rights Watch said today. State authorities should conclude their investigations into riot-related crimes, including alleged sexual violence, and initiate appropriate prosecutions.

The central government should ensure that the Uttar Pradesh state authorities provide aid to the displaced, and their safe return or resettlement, in accordance with international human rights law. India should also enact a strong law to prevent and respond to communal violence in the country in consultation with rights experts, and in compliance with well-established international human rights principles.

The state government has forcibly closed camps housing thousands of people displaced four months ago by communal violence between Hindus and Muslims in Muzaffarnagar and surrounding districts that resulted in more than 60 deaths. Instead of displacing these people again, the Uttar Pradesh government should provide needed relief, and ensure the safe, voluntary return or resettlement for all those displaced.

“The Uttar Pradesh government responded to reports of relief shortages and rising children’s death toll by evicting riot victims from camps,” said Meenakshi Ganguly, South Asia director. “Instead of protecting those in need, it is using coercion to keep their plight hidden.”

A September 7, 2013 communal altercation in Muzaffarnagar that left two Hindus and a Muslim dead was followed by inflammatory speeches by Hindu political leaders from the Jat community that encouraged attacks on Muslims. Three days of violence ensued between Hindus and Muslims in Muzaffarnagar, Shamli, Meerut, Baghpat, and Saharanpur districts until a curfew was imposed and the Indian army was deployed to restore law and order. People from more than 150 villages fled their homes and thousands remain displaced, fearful to return.

In January 2014, Human Rights Watch visited six camps in Muzaffarnagar and Shamli districts and found that those displaced had received little assistance from the government. Religious charities and madrassas, along with civil society groups and local villagers, have taken the lead in providing aid, including shelter, food, and clothing.

Residents of the camps told Human Rights Watch that the state had provided aid for less than a month and since November 2013 the authorities had been putting pressure on them to leave the camps.

The article India Should Stop Forced Evictions Of Riot Victims, Says HRW appeared first on Eurasia Review.


Turkey-Singapore Relations: A Stable Partnership – Analysis

$
0
0

By JTW

By Selcuk Colakoglu

Turkey-Singapore relations have a deep history dating back to the 19th century. The Ottoman Empire opened its first representation to British-ruled Singapore in 1864. This office was transformed to a Consulate General in 1901. Even the first consul general, Ahmet Ataullah Efendi, died in office in 1903 and was interred in Singapore. Singapore won its independence in 1965, Turkey established diplomatic relationship in 1969, and the Turkish embassy to Singapore began operating in 1985. As for Singapore, it opened an embassy in Ankara in 2012. Singapore does not establish embassies in every country, and its opening an embassy in Ankara—even if late—is a symbolic indication of the importance it gives to Turkey.

Singapore under the British administration, as a part of the Federation of Malaysia, and even after independence, has been an important trade and logistics center in Southeast Asia. In this respect, Turkey has worked to establish continuous and regular relations with Singapore since the 19th century. Trade relations between the two countries have developed even more over the last 30 years. The start of bilateral high-level visits since the 1980s are already a sign of this development. There have been two visits at the presidential level from Turkey to Singapore and five at the prime ministerial level. On the other hand, there has been one visit both at presidential and prime ministerial level from Singapore to Turkey. The last three decades have also seen many visits at the ministerial level. The latest visit from Turkey to Singapore was that of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on January 9th, 2014. During this visit, Prime Minister Erdoğan had a discussion with President Tony Tan Keng Yam and Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong. The main agenda items of the top-level talks were the development of bilateral economic and political cooperation, free trade agreement (FTA) negotiations, and cooperation in combating international terrorism.

Economic relations

For Turkey, Singapore comes after Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, and Vietnam in terms of ASEAN trade partners. According to data from the Turkish Ministry of Economy, the volume of trade between Turkey and Singapore was $111 million in 1990, $281 million in 2000, and $666 million in 2012. The highest trade figure between the two countries was $1.194 billion in 2011. Singapore is one of few East Asian countries with which Turkey has a bilateral trade surplus. As for mutual foreign direct investment between the two countries, it is very limited. In truth, Singapore has given importance to developing commercial and economic relations with Turkey in recent years. Singapore has also begun operating an office of the Ministry of Commerce’s International Enterprise Singapore which aims to increase foreign trade with foreign countries.

On January 9th, 2014, Prime Minister Erdoğan and Prime Minister Lee decided to begin negotiations for a 2014 FTA between the two countries. FTA negotiations between the European Union and Singapore were successfully completed in December of 2012. In this case, Turkey as a member of the EU Customs Union, has to sign a parallel FTA in order to benefit from the FTA between the EU and Singapore. Therefore, it is of great importance that FTA negotiations between Turkey and Singapore start in 2014 and conclude as soon as possible.

For years there have been mutual direct flights between Istanbul and Singapore by Turkish Airlines and Singapore Airlines. During the visit, a new civil aviation agreement was signed to increase the number of direct flights and thus boost the number of visitors from both sides—currently at nearly 30,000 Singaporean visitors to Turkey and 20,000 Turkish visitors to Singapore. In addition, both Singapore Airlines and Turkish Airlines, which are the member of the Star Alliance network of airlines, are among the world’s airlines with the most transit passengers. In this respect, cooperation between these two countries in the field of aviation is expected to contribute even more to their airline.

Political cooperation

Turkey and Singapore share similar opinions on issues such as interfaith harmony, dialogue among civilizations, and resolving international issues through peaceful means. Singapore presents a successful model to the world of multicultural society home to Buddhists, Muslims, Hindus, and others living together in peace. In this respect, Prime Minister Erdoğan, during a meeting with Prime Minister Lee, requested that Singapore take some initiatives to stave off the growing Buddhist-Muslim conflict of recent years in Myanmar. Moreover, the Turkish and Singaporean sides mutually exchanged opinions on Southeast Asian and the Middle Eastern issues. A memorandum of understanding between the two countries on the fight against terrorism was also signed. After Ankara signed a treaty of amity and cooperation with ASEAN in 2010, becoming a member of the ASEAN Regional Forum has become Turkey’s biggest regional goal. Turkey wants to get Singapore’s support on this issue.

Looking at the history of relations between Turkey and Singapore, it’s easy to say that bilateral relations will continue to develop in a stable and steady manner going forward from 2014.

The article Turkey-Singapore Relations: A Stable Partnership – Analysis appeared first on Eurasia Review.

MENA Struggles For Growth, Except In GCC – Analysis

$
0
0

By Sajid Rizvi

The Middle East and North Africa region is struggling for continued growth, except in the six Gulf Cooperation Council countries where a different, rosier outlook prevails, says the latest report of a regional economic analysis from the National Bank of Kuwait (NBK).

In its latest roundup dated 14 January 2014, the Kuwaiti institution, a strong presence on MENA’s increasingly fractious, fragmented and volatile financial scene and with significant operations in Europe, NBK says “ongoing challenges in countries undergoing transition – including Egypt, Jordan, Libya, Morocco, Syria, Tunisia and Yemen – will continue to affect economic performance in the MENA region.”

As a bank aiming for apolitical analysis and impartiality it is understandable that NBK lumps all those multiple crises together and characterises everything from civil war, internecine and inter-militia mayhem, post-revolution upheavals, tribal conflicts and random slaughter as “transition.” Germany’s new Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier recently called post-Kadhafi Libya “a failed state.”

NATO countries that funded and spearheaded the 2011 attack on Libya wearing a U.N. fig leaf, an expensive, high-velocity intervention that brought down Kadhafi and set off the current cycle of violence in Libya and beyond its borders in Africa and further afield, are now less eloquent and coy (read: dishonest) about what’s going on in the country.

Nor have European voters been told how much the NATO activity in and around Libya cost the taxpayer, is costing. But NBK is right to stick to the nitty gritty and concentrate on the basics of growth, no growth or slow growth.

Although growth could rise to 4 percent in 2014 from 3 percent in 2013, NBK’s analysis says that growth in most “transition” countries will remain below par, averaging closer to 3 percent. While regional and international aid has helped to stabilise transition economies and reduce short-term external funding pressures, better medium-term prospects depend upon achieving the political consensus needed to bolster economic reforms and the return of foreign capital. For many countries, this still seems some way off.

In the GCC, Dubai’s real non-oil growth rate is currently around 5 percent on the back of a rapid expansion in its real estate, tourism, trade and financial sectors.

Elsewhere in the resource-rich GCC region, growth prospects remain favorable, supported by high oil prices, a steady flow of government development spending and – in some cases – an increasingly buoyant private sector. Real GCC non-oil GDP growth is forecast at around 5.5 percent per year in 2014 and 2015, 0.5 percent points higher than in 2013. Qatar will remain the best performer, but the UAE economy – boosted by returning confidence and renewed impetus from infrastructure investment – appears to be improving the quickest.

On the GCC’s continued dependence on oil, the NBK says, “We maintain our forecast for oil prices at $100 per barrel (pb), on average, for 2014, a fall of 8 percent from 2013. Although oil prices held up well last year, continued strong growth in non-OPEC supplies and a potential rise in output from OPEC members Iran, Iraq and Libya are expected to loosen oil market fundamentals in 1H 2014. Key GCC OPEC members – led by Saudi Arabia – are forecast to cut oil output from current elevated levels early in 2014 in order to balance the market. Real oil sector GDP is therefore seen declining 2 percent in 2014, pushing overall GDP growth down to 3 percent.

“Inflation across the GCC region could be pushed higher by a combination of solid growth and rising pressures on housing rents. But at around 3 percent on a weighted basis, it is unlikely to concern policymakers very much. Meanwhile, the decline in oil revenues will reduce the GCC’s aggregate fiscal surplus to 7percent of GDP, from 10 percent in 2013. Although this is still very strong by international standards, we expect GCC countries to pay growing attention to the sustainability of their fiscal positions going forward. This could translate into slower growth in overall spending than before, and tighter curbs on current spending in particular. This, in turn, will have implications for macroeconomic performance in the years ahead.”

In Egypt, which the analysis calls “a pivotal economy for the MENA region” – a combination of capital controls, a managed depreciation of the pound and financial support from the GCC helped ease pressures on the external position in 2013. Along with a slight improvement in the political climate, this has set the stage for a modest acceleration in growth to 3 percent in FY14/15. But major challenges remain. As well as sustaining progress with the political transition, the government must navigate the need to protect living standards and social stability on the one hand, and enact major deficit-reducing fiscal reforms (particularly on subsidies) on the other.

Outside the scope of NBK’s admirable, concise but thorough analysis of the shape of economic things to come in MENA — and, inevitably, its European environs — there remain many questions still unanswered about the regional governments’ responses to urgent issuance of governance and transparency that keep cropping up in materials produced by advocacy groups like Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and numerous national activist groups. These are disturbing materials that seldom get aired in international media and certainly hardly ever in regional and national bearers of news. Any economist worth his/her salt would know those issues constitute threats to whatever the government planners may be dreaming about or trying to implement.

Copyright © Sajid Rizvi. Reproduced with permission from The Middle East in Europe, www.meenet.info.

The article MENA Struggles For Growth, Except In GCC – Analysis appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Bears Becoming Bulls En Masse As Optimism Rises – OpEd

$
0
0

By Daily Gains Letter

By Moe Zulfiqar

Increasing optimism is dangerous for key stock indices. Sadly, this is exactly what we’re seeing in the markets right now. It is very evident wherever you look. Stock advisors are saying, “Just buy stocks, and you will do alright.” Investors feel good about stocks. Those who were bearish on the key stock indices since the crash in 2008 and 2009 are also turning bullish—the bears are declining in numbers each week; it’s becoming especially difficult for them to keep their pessimistic stance these days.

One of the key economic indicators that I follow when looking at the optimism in key stock indices is called the Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE) total options put/call ratio.

This indicator, at the very core, shows the ratio of volume of puts and call options. When there are more call options, this ratio stands below one. When there are more put options than call options, the ratio stays above one. Currently, this ratio stands at 0.6—a level last seen in 2011. Since at least 2007, this ratio of call options to put options has reached this level only a handful of times, as you can see in the chart above.

When call options increase, it means investors are bullish towards the key stock indices. When the put options increase, it means investors believe the key stock indices will experience pressures ahead. The current put/call ratio suggests investors are not worried.

Another indicator I look at to assess the optimism on key stock indices is margin debt—the amount of stock purchased on borrowed money. When margin debt is high, this shows that investors are willing to invest in stocks and risk borrowed money that they eventually have to return, meaning they’re very optimistic. In November of 2013, the margin debt on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) hit an all-time high. It stood at $423.7 billion—a more than 16% increase since January of 2013, when it was $364.1 billion. (Source: “NYSEData.com Factbook: Securities Market Credit ($ in mils.),” NYSE Technologies web site, last accessed January 13, 2014.)

Margin debt—or leverage—at the end of the day, turns a small downtick in key stock indices into a massive market sell-off. As the stock prices go down, investors’ losses get massive, so investors panic and run for the exit door. In 2007, margin debt on the NYSE reached an all-time high; a few months down the road, key stock indices made a top. A massive sell-off followed in 2008.

Is what we are seeing now an indicator of a top in key stock indices?

As I have mentioned many times in these pages, it can be very hazardous for investors to predict tops and bottoms. It can have a significant impact on their portfolio—possibly facing massive losses if their predictions don’t come true. Instead of predicting where the top will fall in place or if the top has already been placed in key stock indices, investors should simply just be cautious. If the key stock indices do turn, investors may be able to profit through exchange-traded funds (ETFs), like ProShares Short S&P500 (NYSEArca/SH). This ETF essentially provides investors gains as the S&P 500 falls.

The article Bears Becoming Bulls En Masse As Optimism Rises – OpEd appeared first on Eurasia Review.

India-Sri Lanka: Conflict Over Fishing Rights – Analysis

$
0
0

By IPCS

By Kuhan Madhan

The conflict between the Sri Lankan and Indian Tamil fisher communities resonates with the larger ethnic struggles of the Tamil community in Sri Lanka. The civil war which ran into three decades stifled Sri Lankan fishing activity, and this created a vacuum for the Indian side to fill. The conflict has now escalated into a larger bilateral problem with the political leaders of Tamil Nadu asking the Centre to tag Sri Lanka as an enemy state. The earlier parleys between the fisher communities resemble an interest-laden approach to the problem. However, with other spaces of engagement now, the modus operandi needs to be refashioned.

The once cordoned off areas, now accessible to both sides, pose a ‘tragedy of commons’ scenario. The neo-Malthusianist perspective argues that a process of diminishing natural resource stocks generally constitutes a significant source of strife. The entry of a merchant class in India with no historic roots in fishing has altered the fishing community. The drastic change in employer-employee relations and the absence of legal provisions defining acceptable working conditions has furthered the woes of the fishermen. The Sri Lankan Tamils have a more organised cooperative society, which addresses some of the asymmetries created by technology and capital. Capitalism brings in a diabolical significance; the more overwhelming the capital one side of the sea border, the more extensive its influence on the other side of the border. In this mode of expansion where competition is primary, capital often means the annihilation of ecological and social spaces. This has faded the once fluid and inherited identities of the Tamils on either side; leading to more geopolitical identities. The political leadership has to comprehend this anomaly of capitalism and bring about symmetries in livelihoods to achieve larger Tamil cultural rapprochement.

The previous negotiation kicked off with the basic underlying assumption that the space of dependency for both parties is the Palk Bay and that the fishers should collectively manage it. The negotiators at the table were members of civil society and leaders of the fishing community. The negotiations focused on the destructive elements, especially on the impact of Indian trawlers, and the restriction of their activity to 70 days a year with the proviso that trawling should end in a year. This grassroots approach, though commendable and interest-based, comes in the absence of foreign affairs and defence considerations. In this context the Joint Working Group (JWG) and leaders of the fishing community have never had a joint meeting. This working in isolation or single spaces of engagement needs to be revisited.

Laments by the political leadership in Tamil Nadu are superficial acts, aiming more at the ballot or earning brownie points. Trumpeting claims to the Kachchatheevu Island on the legal pluralistic stance of traditional rights has provided them space to avoid tougher questions and gain credibility from the audience. The plight of the artisanal fishers on both sides and sustainable water practices have long been ignored. The drastic depreciation on the other three coasts around Tamil Nadu points to unsustainable fishing and the compulsions of the merchant class. The claim of historical commonness of resources and identity denies the asymmetries between the two fishing communities. The fishermen are not just engaging within the community, but also at the national and supra-national scales. Therefore, conflict resolution that only focuses on their interests is counter-productive, and the political leadership should align this mechanism. The Sri Lankan Tamils are in a predicament when it comes to pivoting their political energy; while desirous of reducing Indian encroachment, they are weary of fuelling anti-Tamil strife, which the Sri Lankan government can capitalize on. The fact that Tamil Nadu has been a strong ally of Tamils in Sri Lanka during the wars, while now being the epicenter of their worries, creates a mental and political stalemate.

Fishermen should look at their communities as a form of social organisation rather than a form of shared understanding. Community as a social organisation encapsulates differences in identity, hierarchy and internal conflict. It gives the status of a political entity, providing space for voicing the concerns of the community and correct the anomalies caused by exogenous forces. The call for the larger Tamil cultural identity lies first in mending the bitter skirmishes in the high seas, which would lead to the reinvigoration of historic ties and assert Tamil Nadu’s stance as an unflinching ally in the cause of Sri Lankan Tamils. Tamil Nadu will host the next dialogue on 20 January, and it has a historic agenda cut out.

Kuhan Madhan
Research Intern, IPCS
Email: kuhan.madhan@gmail.com

The article India-Sri Lanka: Conflict Over Fishing Rights – Analysis appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Patrick Buchanan: Why Congress Is Held In Contempt – OpEd

$
0
0

By Patrick J Buchanan

I’ve got a pen,” said President Obama early this week.

“I can use that pen to sign executive orders and take executive actions … that move the ball forward.”

“When I can act on my own without Congress, I’m going to do so,” the president added Wednesday at North Carolina State.

Thus did Obama signal that he will bypass Congress and use his executive powers to advance his agenda of national transformation.

This dismissal of Congress has gone almost unprotested. In an earlier age it might have evoked talk of impeachment. But not now.

For though Congress may be the first branch of government in the Constitution, with the longest list of enumerated powers in Article 1, its eclipse has been extraordinary.

Congressional powers have eroded or been surrendered. The esteem in which Congress is now held calls to mind Emily Dickinson: “It dropped so low in my regard/I heard it hit the ground.”

Congress boasts a 13 percent approval, a surge from its all-time low of 9 percent last fall before the budget deal.

While ex-Secretary of Defense Robert Gates expressed disappointment in Obama and Hillary Clinton in his book “Duty,” and was dismissive of Joe Biden, his view of Congress dripped with venom:

“Uncivil, incompetent in fulfilling basic constitutional responsibilities (such as timely appropriations), micromanagerial, parochial, hypocritical, egotistical, thin-skinned, often putting self (and reelection) before country — this was my view of the majority of the United States Congress.”

At Congressional hearings, Gates says he was “exceptionally offended by the constant, adversarial, inquisition-like treatment,” and lines of inquiry that were “rude, insulting, belittling, bullying, and all too often personal.”

Admirers of Obama, Hillary and Biden have all come forward to defend them. Where are the defenders of Congress from this searing indictment by Gates? Almost nowhere.

What happened to Congress? Not so long ago, school children were taught more about Sens. Henry Clay, John C. Calhoun and Daniel Webster than many of the presidents of that pre-Civil War era.

High among the causes of Congress’ decline has surely been the loss or surrender of its constitutional powers — to presidents, the Supreme Court and a federal bureaucracy Congress itself created.

Consider this. Under Article 1, Congress is entrusted with the power to “regulate commerce with foreign nations.”

With the exception of slavery, there was not a more divisive issue before the Civil War than the tariff question.

In the Jacksonian era, South Carolina almost seceded over the tariff, and Andrew Jackson threatened an invasion.

Today, Congress first surrendered to the executive the authority to negotiate trade deals, and then passed fast track, denying itself the right to amend those treaties. Congress has restricted itself to a yes or no vote on what the executive negotiates.

The transnational corporations that finance campaigns are delighted.

But as a consequence of NAFTA, GATT, and the WTO, a third of U.S. manufacturing jobs and a huge slice of our manufacturing base have been shipped overseas, and we have run $10 trillion in trade deficits since Bush I.

The stunning industrial decline of the United States has been matched in two centuries only by the USSR.

Congress was granted the power to “coin money” and “regulate the value thereof.” But in 1913, Congress transferred that power to the Federal Reserve.

With the Fed as its steward, the dollar’s purchasing power had fallen to that of a couple of pennies in 1913. And the Fed was responsible for the stock market bubble that bought on the Great Crash of 1929 and Great Depression, and the real estate and stock market bubbles that brought on our own Great Recession.

Yet, the Fed is untouchable.

Though Congress was granted exclusive power “to declare war,” our last declared war was in 1941.

Obama today draws “red lines” and tells nations not to cross them or we bomb, and announces to the world that, in dealing with Iran, “all options are on the table,” meaning war.

But when did Congress authorize Obama to wage war on Iran? Never.

Nor did Congress authorize Bill Clinton to bomb Serbia.

While Congress was granted the power in the Constitution to restrict the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court, that court has been on an ideological tear, remaking America without a nod to Congress.

The court has created new rights for criminal suspects out of thin air. It ordered all states to integrate public schools, even if that meant forced busing by race across cities. It declared abortion and homosexual relations to be constitutionally protected rights.

Congress often complained, but almost always did nothing.

Congress has behaved more timidly than the Court, whose justices serve for life. And unlike the president, Congress cannot act decisively or speak with a single voice. It’s a cacophony.

Sundered by party and ideology, with 535 members, and rules and regulations that inhibit decisions and impede action, Congress appears a 19th-century anachronism at sea in a 21st-century world.

Who looks to Congress today as the bulwark of our liberties?

The article Patrick Buchanan: Why Congress Is Held In Contempt – OpEd appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Pakistani Teen Sacrifices His Life For Classmates

$
0
0

By Al-Shorfa

By Zahir Shah

Pakistanis are hailing 14-year-old Aitzaz Hassan, who gave his life earlier this month to protect classmates from a suicide bomber.

Aitzaz, a ninth-grade Government High School Ibrahimzai student from the Hangu District in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP), gave his life when he stopped a suicide bomber from entering his school with the aim of targeting the children who had gathered on the lawn for morning assembly.

“I am lucky to have a son willing to make such a sacrifice,” said Aitzaz’s father Mujahid Ali.

“I am not here to mourn the death of my son; rather, I am proud,” Mujahid told Central Asia Online. “My son has saved many mothers from grief and sorrow. I am the father of a martyr, and if the need arises, I am ready even to sacrifice my second son Mujtaba for the country.”

The country’s religious and political figures termed his sacrifice an act of courage.

Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) Police Inspector General Nasir Khan Durrani wrote to KP Chief Minister Pervez Khattak requesting that Aitzaz receive the highest civilian award for gallantry posthumously.

Prime Minister Mian Muhammad Nawaz Sharif also advised President Mamnoon Hussain to approve the conferment of the Star of Bravery to Aitzaz, according to a January 10th Prime Minister House press release.

Aitzaz’s brave act saved the lives of hundreds of students and was a sterling example of gallantry and patriotism, the statement said.

Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) chief, Imran Khan, tweeted that Aitzaz’s sacrifice “will not go in vain”.

Meanwhile, officials in KP have decided to name the boy’s school and a future Hangu stadium after him, AFP reported.

A national hero

Aitzaz had arrived late to school and was waiting for the morning assembly to finish before entering, his brother Mujtaba Hassan said.

The incident occurred when the would-be bomber approached Aitzaz and a fellow student and inquired about procedures to enter the school, District Police Officer Iftikhar Ahmed, citing eyewitness accounts, told Central Asia Online.

Aitzaz suspected the man had a detonator and chased after him when he tried to flee. The man then detonated his bomb, killing Aitzaz, Iftikhar said.

About 2,000 students were attending the morning assembly, so a successful bombing would have been devastating, he added.

“I am proud of my brother; he did something few could accomplish,” Mujtaba said. “It is an honour for our family and the entire Pashtun nation.”

It was a great act of courage, he added, expressing grief at losing a brother but saying that Aitzaz was a son of the soil who saved many families from grieving.

“Aitzaz made us proud by saving the lives of hundreds of [...] students,” Aitzaz’s cousin and Peshawar High Court lawyer Muddasir Ali told Central Asia Online.

He is a national hero and deserves recognition on all levels, Muddasir said. “Such gruesome acts of terror against children are justified in no religion.”

A kind-hearted human being

Those who knew Aitzaz were not surprised he gave his life for others.

His teacher Habib Ali described him as a friend to all and as a loving boy who respected everyone.

He was a humble, polite and kind-hearted human being, Ali said.

His death was shocking but his sacrifice unmatchable, Government High School Ibrahimzai Principal Lal Baz said.

“Aitzaz has made his parents and schoolmates proud,” he said. “We wanted him to progress, but now he has achieved more than what he would have thought. He is no doubt a national hero.”

The article Pakistani Teen Sacrifices His Life For Classmates appeared first on Eurasia Review.

French Companies Renew Interest In Iranian Business

$
0
0

By Radio Zamaneh

In anticipation of relaxed international sanctions on Iran, a delegation of top French companies are to visit Iran next month.

Reuters reports that the head of France’s employers’ union said the delegation of France’s biggest companies will seek greater business relations with Iran.

French businesses had extensive operations in Iran but had to curb them in recent years due to strict sanctions.

The visit by companies such as Safran and Alstom is reportedly scheduled for February 2 – 5.

Reuters reports that Peugeot and Renault have already sent executives to Iran for an automotive conference.

The article French Companies Renew Interest In Iranian Business appeared first on Eurasia Review.


Problems Still Plague Obamacare

$
0
0

By VOR

State insurance exchanges in Maryland, Oregon and Colorado are under the microscope and drawing criticism. Meanwhile, Republican state lawmakers in Tennessee and Texas propose legislation to undermine the health law in those states.

Vicki Rapoport is the face of the breakdown in state exchanges – in her case, Maryland.

Rapoport thought she was a Maryland success story trying to enroll in insurance through the Affordable Care Act, and so did the state health exchange navigators in Howard County who helped her.

“I started from day one, Oct. 1 signing up,” Rapoport said. “They told me I was the very first one who signed up in Howard County on Oct. 22.”

On Friday, two and a half months later, Rapoport has no record of having insurance from either the medical or dental plan carrier involved.

“To me it’s very personal,” she says, “and it’s very frustrating because the system has failed me.”

“They don’t even have me in the system,” Rapoport said.

Vicki Rapoport, who is self- employed, starting trying to sign up in early October. She eventually went to an official navigator for Howard county, called Healthy Howard, which signed her up, gave her a confirmation number and a printout of the plan she chose.

But then she hit a brick wall.

“I was told by the insurance company I selected that they have no record of me. I did go to the state navigation system and they have no record of me,” she said.

Facing a deadline to pay her premium for coverage, Rapoport shows a pile of documents indicating she reached out to the governor, her representatives in Washington, and the White House, as well as the state exchange.

“I was told by both the Maryland Health Connection and the troubleshooting site,” she says, “that somebody would get back to me within two to three days, and I never heard from anybody.”

Analysts say more problems like Rapoport’s are likely to emerge in the coming months.

The article Problems Still Plague Obamacare appeared first on Eurasia Review.

World Economy Growth Remains Interdependent – Analysis

$
0
0

By IDN

By J C Suresh

A new report has underlined the interdependence of the world economy, which is expected to strengthen in 2014 with growth picking up in developing countries and high-income economies appearing to be finally turning the corner five years after the global financial crisis.

According to the World Bank’s Global Economic Prospects (GEP) report, the firming of growth in developing countries is being boosted by an acceleration in high-income countries and continued strong growth in China. However, growth prospects remain vulnerable to headwinds from rising global interest rates and potential volatility in capital flows, as the United States Federal Reserve Bank begins withdrawing its massive monetary stimulus.

“Growth appears to be strengthening in both high-income and developing countries, but downside risks continue to threaten the global economic recovery,” said World Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim as the GEP report was released on January 14 in Washington.

“The performance of advanced economies is gaining momentum, and this should support stronger growth in developing countries in the months ahead. Still, to accelerate poverty reduction, developing nations will need to adopt structural reforms that promote job creation, strengthen financial systems, and shore up social safety nets,” said Kim.

Global GDP growth is projected to rise from 2.4 percent in 2013 to 3.2 percent in 2014, stabilizing at 3.4 percent and 3.5 percent in 2015 and 2016, respectively, with much of the initial acceleration reflecting stronger growth in high-income economies, says the report.

It expects growth in developing countries to pick up from 4.8 percent in 2013 to a slower than previously expected 5.3 percent this year, 5.5 percent in 2015 and 5.7 percent in 2016. “While the pace is about 2.2 percentage points lower than during the boom period of 2003-07, the slower growth is not a cause for concern,” argues the World Bank in a press release.

“Almost all of the difference reflects a cooling off of the unsustainable turbo-charged pre-crisis growth, with very little due to an easing of growth potential in developing countries. Moreover, even this slower growth represents a substantial (60 percent) improvement compared with growth in the 1980s and early 1990s,” it adds.

The report predicts that for high-income countries, the drag on growth from fiscal consolidation and policy uncertainty will ease, helping to boost economic growth from 1.3 percent in 2013 to 2.2 percent this year, stabilizing at 2.4 percent for each of 2015 and 2016.

Recovery most advanced in the U.S.

Amongst high-income economies, says the GEP report, the recovery is most advanced in the U.S., with GDP expanding for 10 quarters now. The US economy is projected to grow by 2.8 percent this year (from 1.8 percent in 2013), firming to 2.9 and 3.0 percent in 2015 and 2016, respectively. Growth in the Euro Area, after two years of contraction, is projected to be 1.1 percent this year, and 1.4 and 1.5 percent in 2015 and 2016, respectively.

This is how Kaushik Basu, Senior Vice President and Chief Economist at the World Bank, characterizes the situation inimitably: “Global economic indicators show improvement. But one does not have to be especially astute to see there are dangers that lurk beneath the surface. The Euro Area is out of recession but per capita incomes are still declining in several countries. We expect developing country growth to rise above 5 percent in 2014, with some countries doing considerably better, with Angola at 8 percent, China 7.7 percent, and India at 6.2 percent. But it is important to avoid policy stasis so that the green shoots don’t turn into brown stubble.”

Stressing the oft ignored interdependence of the world economy, the report says: Developing countries face counterbalancing forces from high-income countries. The strengthening in high-income countries will boost demand for developing country exports, on the one hand, while rising interest rates will dampen capital flows, on the other. The report projects global trade to grow from an estimated 3.1 percent in 2013 to 4.6 percent this year and 5.1 percent in each of 2015 and 2016.

However, weaker commodity prices will continue to temper trade revenues. Between their early-2011 peaks and recent lows in November 2013, the real prices of energy and food have declined by 9 and 13 percent, respectively, while those of metals and minerals have fallen by 30 percent. These downward pressures on commodity prices are expected to persist, in part reflecting additional supply.

Risks of disruption

“The strengthening recovery in high-income countries is very welcome, but it brings with it risks of disruption as monetary policy tightens. To date, the gradual withdrawal of quantitative easing has gone smoothly. However, if interest rates rise too rapidly, capital flows to developing countries could fall by 50 percent or more for several months – potentially provoking a crisis in some of the more vulnerable economies,” said Andrew Burns, Acting Director of the Development Prospects Group and lead author of the report.

The GEP study adds: Private capital inflows to developing countries remain sensitive to global financial conditions. As high-income monetary policy normalizes in response to stronger growth, global interest rates are projected to slowly rise. The impact of an orderly tightening of financial conditions on developing-country investment and growth is expected to be modest, with capital flows to developing countries projected to ease from about 4.6 percent of developing country GDP in 2013 to 4.1 percent in 2016.

However, should the adjustment be disorderly, as it was in response to speculation about when a taper might begin during the spring and summer of 2013, interest rates could rise much more quickly. Depending on the severity of the market reaction, capital flows to developing countries could be cut by 50 percent or more for several months. In such a scenario, countries that have large current account deficits, large proportions of external debt and those that have had big credit expansions in recent years would be among the most vulnerable.

The report points out that, although the main tail risks that have preoccupied the global economy over the past five years have subsided, the underlying challenges remain. Moreover, while developing countries responded to the global financial crisis by deploying fiscal and monetary stimuli, the scope for such actions has declined, with government budgets and current account balances in the red in most countries.

The report calls upon policy makers to give thought to how they would respond to a significant tightening of global financing conditions. It argues: “Countries with adequate policy buffers and investor confidence may be able to rely on market mechanisms, counter-cyclical macroeconomic and prudential policies to deal with a decline in flows. In other cases, where the scope for maneuvering is more limited, countries may be forced to tighten fiscal policy to reduce financing needs or raise interest rates to incite additional inflows.

“Where adequate foreign reserves exist, these can be used to moderate the pace of exchange rate adjustments, while a loosening of capital inflow regulation and incentives for foreign direct investment might help smooth adjustment. Finally, by improving the longer term outlook, credible reform agendas can go a long way towards boosting investor and market confidence. This could set in motion a virtuous cycle of stronger investment, including foreign investment, and output growth over the medium term.”

The article World Economy Growth Remains Interdependent – Analysis appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Senate Benghazi Report Lets Obama, Clinton Escape Blame – OpEd

$
0
0

By Jim Kouri

A highly anticipated Senate intelligence committee report regarding the Sept. 11, 2012, terrorist attack on a U.S. diplomatic compound in Benghazi, Libya, which was finally released on Wednesday, reveals that the attacks were preventable but mentions the name of Hillary Clinton, the State Department’s leader, only once while leaving questions about President Barack Obama unanswered.

The bipartisan Senate report claims that there had been a “significant strategic warning” about the possibility of an attack in the months leading up to the terrorist incident in which four Americans were killed — including U.S. Ambassador to Libya Christopher Stevens — on Sept. 11, 2012.

“Despite the clearly deteriorating security situation in Benghazi and requests for additional security resources, few significant improvements were made by the State Department to the security posture of the Temporary Mission Facility,” the report alleges.

While there was much criticism by some lawmakers over a lack of response during the attack, the report claims there were no military rescue units located in a place where they could have saved the Americans killed in the attack. There is also criticism about blaming a video denigrating Islam that provoked the attackers, according to a previous Examiner news story.

The Senate Intelligence Committee investigated the various allegations that have come out since the attack and to get to the truth about the attack, Senator Dianne Feinstein D-Calif., chairwoman of the committee, said in a press statement.

“I hope this report will put to rest many of the conspiracy theories and political accusations about what happened in Benghazi, ” she added.

However, former U.S. Marine and police detective Mike Snopes disagrees. “We still don’t know where [President Barack] Obama was after he spoke with the Defense Secretary [Leon Panetta]. Did he go to bed in order to rest up for his trip to Las Vegas to collect his campaign money?” Snopes rhetorically asked.

“Feinstein also told reporters [Wednesday] that the Senate report proves that the State Department needs to do a better job in assessing risks, but made certain not to mention Hillary ‘what difference does it make’ Clinton who plans on being Obama’s successor,” added Snopes.

According to an Examiner news story, “Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and her senior staff positively knew that U.S. embassies and consulates in dangerous regions throughout the globe were not properly protected from attack and they failed to increase security at U.S. diplomatic facilities in cities such as Benghazi, State Department documents revealed.”

What appears surprising is that Hillary Clinton’s name appears in the report only once, according to the released copy.

White House Press Secretary Jay Carney said at a regular press briefing on Wednesday that several recommendations contained in the report are consistent with the work the State Department has taken to improve diplomatic security, but he made no mention of the Christmas Day attack on the U.S. Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan.

“My stomach turned when I heard Carney boasting [on Wednesday] that the Obama administration is focused on bringing to justice those responsible for the deaths of four Americans. The attack was almost 16-months-ago and we’re no closer to capturing the murderous terrorists than we were while Obama and his minions blamed a practically unknown Internet video,” said Lt. Gerald Ackerman, an expert in anti-terrorism and anti-organized crime.

While GOP lawmakers have been heaping one accusation on top of another ever since the terrorist attack on Sept.11, 2012, only recently have Obama’s fellow Democrats distanced themselves from the Obama administration’s explanation of the Benghazi, Libya, attacks in the midst of more evidence being gathered by investigators in Congress and the news media, including Internet bloggers.

The article Senate Benghazi Report Lets Obama, Clinton Escape Blame – OpEd appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Monarchy Debate In Libya

$
0
0

By Magharebia

By Asmaa Elourfi

A debate is under way in Libya about the best form of government for the country.

Some citizens are calling for a monarchy under King Idris’ heir Mohammed Hasan al-Rida al-Senussi, others reject the idea outright, and some say the issue should be decided by popular referendum.

“What we’re interested in now is the country’s development, stability, reconstruction and unity,” said lawyer Mansour al-Ramli, 34.

“I approve the prince’s return to office because he is the best given his loyalty,” he said.

But Sharifa al-Fesi, a Benghazi-based journalist working for Brnieq newspaper, said that Libyans didn’t want “to return to the past”.

“When the revolution took place, we deleted the name of his uncle, King Idris al-Senussi, from the anthem because there was a group that didn’t like monarchy,” he told Magharebia.

“We want someone who would secure this country for us and establish security in Libya,” al-Fesi said.

Soaad Ali al-Magharabi, 34, an employee at the Electricity Institute, also rejects the idea of a monarchy for Libya.

“I don’t approve of the prince’s return because he has lived as a prince and doesn’t know the tragedy of Libyans. I’m also against the rule of Libya by anyone who lived overseas and doesn’t know anything about Libyans’ concerns,” he said.

“We don’t want a hereditary royal regime where the affairs of state are put in the hands of one family or one person,” Mohamed Salem Ali Salem agreed. “Why don’t we elect a president of the state?” he asked.

Some people raised the prospects of improved security under a king.

Ahmed Beshir said, “The prince has every right to rule. Wasn’t the revolution staged to remove injustice and restore rights to their rightful owners? Wasn’t it said that Kadhafi’s coup was a coup against legitimacy?”

It’s only fair to restore power to those who own it, he said.

“After that, change can take place via democratic means through an elected parliament,” he added.

Saad al-Dinali, a journalist at the Press Support Authority, said, “Everyone knows that the current stage in Libya is tough and unusual. Therefore, everyone is trying as much as they can to have a share in the Libyan cake.”

“There are changes on the ground now and we need the prince to show his position from so we can have an opinion about him returning to rule Libya again,” al-Dinali continued. “One of the most prominent issues is the form of government: will it be a constitutional or absolute monarchy?”

“Now the Prince needs to take the initiative and clearly explain these things to us, and after that, the issue can be raised to all Libyans in a referendum about monarchy,” he said.

“If the prince’s return to office will lead to the country’s stability, why not?” asked Mahmoud Ali al-Barghathy, a 43-year-old engineer at the Man-Made River Company.

The article Monarchy Debate In Libya appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Montenegro Sees Increased Support For NATO

$
0
0

By SETimes

By Ivana Jovanovic

Positive public opinion in Montenegro on the state’s NATO accession has been growing over the last six months.

The Podgorica-based Centre for Democracy and Human Rights, an organisation that closely follows the process of Euro-Atlantic integration in Montenegro, published a report last month that shows 38 percent of citizens support NATO integration, an increase of 6 percent since March.

Nenad Koprivica, executive director of the centre, said that although 45 percent of citizens do not support Alliance membership, that number is slowly decreasing.

“Political parties that participate in the government publicly support NATO integration, while the majority of parties in the opposition are against NATO integration. NATO integration opponents are of the opinion that citizens have to decide on the issue in a referendum and believe that the referendum result will be negative,” Koprivica told SETimes.

Montenegro jointed the Alliance’s Membership Action Plan in 2006, and full membership in NATO is considered to be the next step.

“Given our desire and ambition to be given an invitation for membership in 2014, we will continue with further fulfilment of obligations, and we actively contribute to global stability as a dedicated and reliable partner of the alliance,” Foreign Minister Igor Luksic said.

Lukšić also told local media that the government will “intensify the dialogue with citizens on the subject of integration in NATO, and offer sufficient arguments so that they understand the benefits of membership in the alliance.”

Predrag Nikolic, the owner of Blues Brothers bar in Niksic, said that NATO membership is the only guarantee for peace in the Balkans.

“I do not see any other organisation that can guarantee stability. If we talk about crucial things for normal people like economy, security, stability, it is enough to compare countries that are NATO members with those who are not, and see the difference and benefits,” Nikolic told SETimes.

The government is also advocating membership in the Alliance.

“Montenegro’s foreign policy priority is to join NATO. This organisation is a guarantee for our country’s sovereignty,” Nebojsa Kaluđerović, foreign policy adviser to the prime minister and co-ordinator for NATO, said.

Aleksandar Dedovic, director of NGO Alpha Centre, said Alliance membership will have positive political, economic and security implications on the country’s international reputation.

“Peace, stability, rule of law, human rights, and improvement of citizen freedoms and civil oversight of the defence and security sector are some of values that are shared among NATO members and to which is Montenegro dedicated,” Dedovic told SETimes.

He added that strengthening and de-politicising state institutions, savings in the defence sector, exchange of technological achievements, opportunities for studying, employment and jobs in NATO countries create an image of a country where it is safe to invest.

Koprivica said NATO integration is connected with EU integration, which is supported by 75 percent of Montenegro’s citizens.

“There is no state in the former Yugoslavia hasn’t realised the dream about EU accession without NATO accession. Although this principle is not public, and although NATO representatives are not underlining it, there is an impression that Montenegro cannot join the EU without joining NATO,” Koprivica told SETimes.

The article Montenegro Sees Increased Support For NATO appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Viewing all 73702 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images