Fuerzas de EEUU capturan en Afganistán al ‘número dos’ de los talibán paquistaníes

EUROPA PRESSLas autoridades afganas han informado este viernes de que Latifulá Mehsud, el ‘número dos’ del movimiento Tehrik-e-Taliban (TTP), los talibán paquistaníes, ha sido detenido por fuerzas militares de Estados Unidos, ha informado la cadena de televisión privada paquistaní Geo News.

La detención del ‘número dos’ de los talibán paquistaníes, que se habría llevado a cabo la semana pasada, supondría un duro golpe para este movimiento integrista asentado en las regiones fronterizas con Afganistán y que colabora con los talibán afganos para atacar a fuerzas occidentales y afganas.

Mehsud fue detenido por militares estadounidense cuando conducía en su vehículo por la principal carretera del distrito de Mohamed Agha en la provincia de Logar, en el este de Afganistán, según ha informado el gobernador regional, Arsalá Jamal. Esta vía une la provincia con la capital afgana, Kabul.

Según medios occidentales, los talibán paquistaníes han confirmado la detención de su ‘número dos’ pero han asegurado que fue arrestado por fuerzas del Ejército afgano en el puesto fronterizo de Ghulam Jan, en la provincia de Jost, en el este del país centroasiático.

Mehsud regresaba de una reunión para discutir el intercambio de prisioneros afganos por dinero, según han contado varios dirigentes talibán paquistaníes y fuentes de Inteligencia. Fuentes de los servicios de Inteligencia paquistaníes han asegurado que las fuerzas norteamericanas capturaron a Mehsud cuando se encontraba con el Ejército afgano.

Con unos 30 años, Mehsud fue el conductor de Hakimulá Mehsud antes de ascender en el movimiento fundamentalistas hasta convertirse en su ‘número dos’.

Fuente: http://www.europapress.es/

Explosión en Vietnam deja 21 muertos

trabajadoresTokio, Japón.- Al menos 21 personas murieron y otras 98 resultaron heridas en una explosión registrada en una fábrica de fuegos artificiales dentro de un complejo militar en el distrito de Thanh Ba, en el norte de Vietnam.

Un testigo que vive a unos 3 kilómetros del lugar de la explosión, citado por el periódico VNExpress, señaló que escuchó una serie de explosiones que sacudieron fuertemente las ventanas de su casa. El número exacto de los trabajadores que se encontraban no estaba claro cuando ocurrió la explosión, señaló el general Le Quang Dai, jefe del cuartel provincial, que estuvo presente en el sitio.

La explosión pudo sentirse en áreas ubicadas hasta 7 kilómetros del lugar de la explosión, comentaron testigos al diario Thanh Nien News, que agregó que miles de personas fueron evacuadas del lugar.

Algunos informes de la prensa local sostienen que las explosiones se prolongaron durante mucho tiempo incluso cuando estaban los equipos presentes en el lugar. La mayoría de los trabajadores lograron huir, pero Dai no descartó la posibilidad de que algunos otros todavía estén atrapados.

Según Dai, de lunes a viernes hay alrededor de 300 trabajadores, en su mayoría mujeres, pero esta cifra disminuye los fines de semana.

Este sábado, por otra parte, iniciaron las solemnes exequias oficiales del general Vo Nguyen Giap, encabezadas por el secretario general del Partido Comunista de Vietnam, Nguyen Phu Trong. La máxima autoridad del país abrió el cortejo hacia la Casa Funeral Nacional, donde se expone en altar cubierto de flores la foto del estratega.

Más de 100 mil personas que consideraron al emblemático militar como el artífice de las victorias bélicas en Francia y Estados Unidos, han llevado flores al general Giap por respeto a la memoria de uno de los grandes héroe comunista en el país.

Fuente: http://www.aztecanoticias.com.mx/

Al menos 50 muertos, 10 de ellos niños, en un nuevo naufragio en el Canal de Sicilia

naufragioLos servicios de emergencia de Italia y Malta han rescatado a 206 personas de procedencia somalí y eritrea. En la embarcación, que volcó a 70 millas de Lampedusa, viajaban cerca de 250 inmigrantes

Es un interminable éxodo de inmigrantes desesperados. La isla de Lampedusa, con una población de 6.000 habitantes, tiene un centro de acogida de inmigrantes con capacidad para 250. Ahora volverá a estar desbordado.

Cerca de 300 inmigrantes de procedencia eritrea y somalí han naufragado en el canal de Sicilia a las 5 de esta tarde. Fuentes de la marina italiana informan de que ya «se han encontrado 50 cadáveres, 10 de ellos niños», según la agencia ANSA.

El naufragio ha tenido lugar en aguas de competencia maltesa en lo referente a los servicios de emergencia, por lo que dos helicópteros de la Marina procedentes de La Valetta, capital de Malta, han lanzado salvavidas a los supervivientes. La isla de Malta ha rescatado a 150 inmigrantes, cuya procedencia aún se desconoce, mientras que Italia ha recogido a 56 personas.

La embarcación en la que viajaban volcó hoy en el Canal de Sicilia, entre Malta e Italia, a unas 70 millas al sureste de la isla de Lampedusa. Dos unidades de la Marina Militar italiana, el buque ‘Lybra’ y la fragata ‘Espero’ continuan con las labores de búsqueda tras haber rescatado ya a 120 inmigrantes.

Este nuevo naufragio se produce menos de 24 horas después de que terminara la busqueda de cadáveres en las aguas de Lampedusa, donde perdieron la vida 339 personas

El drama de la inmigración
Lampedusa e Italia solos no pueden hacer frente al drama de la inmigración. La guerra de Siria ha agravado la situación. Los traficantes de seres humanos saben que su mercado continúa expandiéndose.

El auténtico boom se registró en el 2011, año de la llamada primavera árabe, cuando 140.000 personas alcanzaron los confines meridionales de Europa: 67.000 en Italia y 57.000 en Grecia.

Tras el trágico naufragio del pasado 3 de octubre, Italia se ha visto impotente para frenar el imparable flujo de inmigrantes.

El gobierno italiano ha hecho un urgente llamamiento a las autoridades europeas para que afronten como un problema prioritario la inmigración y se revisen las políticas de acogida, en particular las del derecho de asilo político. A partir del hecho de que la mayoría de estos inmigrantes huyen de sus países no solo por cuestiones económicas, sino sobre todo para evitar regímenes de opresión y escapar de guerras y de persecuciones. Son, por tanto, prófugos políticos. Por ello, el gobierno italiano ha pedido urgentes modificaciones al reglamento de Dublín (que determina a qué Estado de la UE compete examinar una petición de asilo o el reconocimiento del estatus de refugiado a un inmigrante) porque exige “demasiado” a los países del Mediterráneo.

En junio, la Unión Europea modificó el reglamento de Dublin del 2003, según el cual, a la llegada a Europa, un inmigrante podía hacer petición de asilo solo en el primer país de la UE en el que ponía pie. Se trata de un reglamento con el que se siente muy cómoda Alemania, porque al estar casi completamente rodeada de otros países de la UE, es prácticamente imposible a los inmigrantes entrar legalmente en territorio alemán. La consecuencia es que Alemania, la cuarta potencia económica mundial, está en el undécimo puesto en Europa en la clasificación de los países que acogen más peticiones de asilo en proporción a su población: Alemania acoge 945 por millón de habitantes, frente a los 4.980 de Malta, que ocupa el primer puesto.

En definitiva, Italia se siente sola, aunque todos los países europeos no se cansan de reiterar que la inmigración es un problema que afecta a todos los estados de la UE. El alemán Martin Schulz, presidente del parlamento europeo, ha invocado una amplia distribución de las responsabilidades, porque “la inmigración es una cuestión de solidaridad entre los estados de la UE”.

Fuente: ABC

El Nobel de la Paz alienta el desarme químico

Nobel de la PazEl premio Nobel de la Paz ha vuelto a sus orígenes, el desarme y la contribución a la convivencia mundial. En una de sus decisiones más aplaudidas, el comité noruego que entrega el galardón ha elegido este año a la Organización para la Prohibición de las Armas Químicas (OPAQ), un organismo internacional que colabora con Naciones Unidas y lleva 16 años dedicado a erradicar la peor munición imaginable.

“Es un honor que recibimos con humildad”, dijo su director general, Ahmet Uzumcu, al saberlo. Su equipo, formado por 500 personas, se había abrazado, reído y llorado a primera hora de la mañana. Estaban sorprendidos y honrados. Se consideran una familia que opera casi en la sombra, y sus inspectores trabajan contra reloj en estos momentos en Siria para desmantelar el arsenal guardado por el régimen de Bachar el Asad.

“Tenemos la sensación de que se puede acabar de una vez con las armas químicas. Hay que asegurarse de que estos ataques atroces no vuelvan a repetirse. El premio es un reconocimiento a nuestro equipo y somos conscientes de lo que nos ha pedido la comunidad internacional”, añadió Uzumcu en su parlamento de agradecimiento, punteado por los términos “compromiso y dedicación”. Luego reiteró su petición a las partes en conflicto en Siria de que aseguren “un alto el fuego permanente para que los inspectores puedan destruir armas e instalaciones”.

La OPAQ lleva 16 años en activo y se encarga de gestionar la Convención contra las Armas Químicas, que celebra su vigésimo aniversario. Como todos los tratados, entró en vigor poco después, en 1997, y ha servido para que 188 países se dieran cuenta de que la guerra química es la frontera que no debe violarse. La línea roja, evocada por el presidente estadounidense, Barack Obama, al advertir a Damasco de que dejara de gasear a su pueblo. Porque Estados Unidos, Francia y Gran Bretaña están seguros de que El Asad ordenó los ataques que aniquilaron el pasado 21 de agosto a un millar de personas. De la cadena de acontecimientos posterior, se ha llegado a la situación actual: la presencia de 27 inspectores de la OPAQ y de la ONU en suelo sirio. Con el Nobel en el bolsillo, parece fácil. Nada más lejos de la realidad.

En Siria ha habido más de 100.000 muertos, y la organización Human Rights Watch afirma que el régimen y los rebeldes han perpetrado crímenes de guerra. Pero las imágenes de civiles sirios muertos, presumiblemente por culpa del gas sarín, desataron la ira de Washington, que el 27 de agosto amenazó con un ataque militar. Moscú, aliado tradicional de Damasco, entró al trapo y ambas potencias se enzarzaron en un duelo verbal más propio de la guerra fría. El presidente ruso, Vladímir Putin, dijo que no había pruebas de la autoría. “Podrían haber sido los rebeldes sirios”, apuntó, “que cuentan asimismo con gases letales”. Cuando la situación se encalló, John Kerry, secretario de Estado estadounidense, deslizó una frase que quedará para el estudio de la diplomacia. Dijo que Siria podría salir del embrollo entregando todo su arsenal químico. ¿Se le escapó, o fue una jugada maestra? Lo cierto es que la propuesta hizo efecto, y para el 14 de septiembre había cerrado un pacto con su homólogo ruso, Serguéi Lávrov, que evitó la operación militar. Cinco días después, Kerry urgió al Consejo de Seguridad a que legitimara, o diera luz verde, como quiera interpretarse, el plan. El 27 de ese mismo mes la ONU dio el paso y la OPAQ se puso en marcha al instante.

La OPAQ lleva 16 años en activo y cuenta con unos 500 empleados
“Nuestro calendario es muy ajustado, pero Siria está colaborando y el resto de la comunidad internacional nos apoya sin reservas. Siria supone un reto, pero muestra que la convención ha sido un éxito. Hemos acabado con el 80% de estas armas. Queda un 20% y esperamos lograrlo en la próxima década”, se despidió Uzumcu, tras agradecer el premio ante la prensa internacional, junto a su cuartel general, el La Haya.

La convención suma 188 países y Siria, que se ha visto obligada a aceptarla, entrará a formar parte del club el 14 de octubre. Ahora solo quedan fuera Angola, Corea del Norte, Egipto, Israel, Sudán del Sur y Myanmar, la antigua Birmania. Si cambian de opinión, los inspectores de la OPAQ comprobarán el estado de su arsenal químico y asegurarán su destrucción controlada.

En Siria, el mismo día en que los inspectores sobre el terreno se sabían ganadores el Nobel de la Paz, la aviación bombardeó zonas rebeldes concentradas junto a una de las instalaciones de armas químicas que deben revisar. Hace pocos días, tuvieron que protegerse de los disparos de francotiradores. No siempre es así, pero la guerra, y el hecho de que el arsenal completo debe desaparecer para la primera mitad de 2014, tensa la situación.

A pesar de que el Nobel de la Paz ha gozado esta vez del aplauso internacional, las críticas hacia la postura de Estados Unidos y Rusia frente a Siria no cesan. Ambos países exigen a Damasco que acepte la resolución de la ONU, pero ellos no han cumplido con el plazo de 2012 para deshacerse de sus arsenales, los mayores del mundo.

Fuente: El País

Canada’s Munro, ‘master of the short story’, wins Nobel literature prize

Alice MunroCanadian Alice Munro won the Nobel Prize in Literature for her tales of the struggles, loves and tragedies of women in small-town Canada that made her what the award-giving committee called the «master of the contemporary short story».

«Some critics consider her a Canadian Chekhov,» the Swedish Academy said, comparing her to the 19th-century Russian short story writer in a statement on its website.

Munro, 82, started writing stories in her teens. She is mainly known for her short stories and has published many collections over the years. Her works include «The View from Castle Rock» in 2006 and «Too Much Happiness» three years later.

«Her texts often feature depictions of everyday but decisive events, epiphanies of a kind, that illuminate the surrounding story and let existential questions appear in a flash of lightning,» the Academy said.

Munro, who was awarded the prize of 8 million crowns (783.45 thousand pounds) by the committee, lives in Clinton, not far from her childhood home in southwestern Ontario, Canada.

In 2009, she revealed that she had undergone coronary bypass surgery and been treated for cancer. She is known to be averse to publicity and rarely gives interviews.

The literature prize is the fourth of this year’s crop of prizes, which were established in the will of Swedish dynamite inventor Alfred Nobel and awarded for the first time in 1901.

The short story, a style more popular in the early 20th century, has long taken a back seat to novels. Short stories tend to be set in a more concentrated time frame with a limited number of characters.

Munro herself spoke of the phenomenon in an interview with the New York Times in July. Her short stories have often been called ‘novels in miniature’; a notion she rejects.

«While working on my first five books, I kept wishing I was writing a novel,» she said.

«I thought until you wrote a novel, you weren’t taken seriously as a writer. It used to trouble me a lot, but nothing troubles me now, and besides there has been a change. I think short stories are taken more seriously now than they were.»

Source: Buenos AIres Herald

Iran up for UN disarmament panel post, US objects

IranianIran is running for the vice chairmanship of the UN Disarmament Commission, which the United States said was unacceptable in light of Tehran’s many breaches of Security Council demands that it halt its controversial atomic work.

Several UN diplomats told Reuters that Iran was running unopposed for one of two vice chair posts allotted to the Asia-Pacific Group, one of five regional UN groups.

Iran’s UN mission defended its candidacy for the post, saying Tehran has been a «front-runner» on disarmament for years.

Western diplomats said such UN posts are largely symbolic, though Tehran uses them to try to improve its reputation at the United Nations.

Washington, which cannot prevent Tehran from taking up the post, said that Iran was the wrong country to hold a position on the Disarmament Commission, an obscure committee that discusses and makes recommendations about disarmament issues.

«Iran is absolutely not a suitable choice to be a vice chair of the UN Disarmament Commission,» said Erin Pelton, spokeswoman for the US mission to the United Nations.

«Iran is the subject of multiple … Security Council (sanctions) resolutions regarding its nuclear program,» she said. «Iran is also in violation of its obligations under the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty.

«It is incumbent upon regional groups to enforce the common-sense principle that countries subject to UN sanctions should not be granted formal or ceremonial positions in UN bodies,» she added.

Iran has been hit with several rounds of Security Council, US and European Union sanctions for refusing to suspend its nuclear activities as demanded by the 15-nation council. Tehran rejects Western powers’ allegations that it is pursuing a nuclear weapons capability and insists its atomic ambitions are entirely peaceful.

Alireza Miryousefi, a spokesman for Iran’s UN mission, rejected the US criticism.

«Iran is a major victim of weapons of mass destruction in recent decades and as a founding member of the United Nations and the chair of NAM (non-aligned movement), … has played a front-runner role in disarmament issues,» he said.

He said Tehran has been pushing for the creation of a «Middle East nuclear weapons free zone,» which helped establish Iran’s reputation as «one of the best nominees for this position.»

Earlier this week, Israel condemned the selection of Iran as a «rapporteur» for the 193-nation UN General Assembly’s First Committee, which deals with disarmament and international security.

The UN Disarmament Commission is separate from the First Committee but is related because of its focus on disarmament issues.

«Permitting Iran to serve on the UN’s leading disarmament committee (First Committee) is like appointing a drug lord CEO of a pharmaceutical company,» Israel’s UN Ambassador Ron Prosor said in a letter to Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

«Iran’s appointment erodes the UN’s legitimacy and its ability to promote arms control and disarmament as well as, preserve global peace and security.»

Iran previously served as vice chair of the UN Disarmament Commission in 2006 and 2007, and its deputy foreign minister was chairman in 2000.

Next week Iran will meet with the United States, Britain, France, China, Russia and Germany in Geneva in an attempt to revive stalled negotiations aimed at ending the decade-long standoff over Tehran’s nuclear program.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Shot Pakistani teenager wins EU human rights prize

Malala YousafzaiPakistani teenager Malala Yousafzai, shot in the head by the Taliban for campaigning for education for girls, won the European Union’s annual human rights award, beating fugitive US intelligence analyst Edward Snowden.

The 16-year-old was attacked last year while on a school bus in northwestern Pakistan, but recovered after medical treatment in Britain. She is also a favorite among experts and betting agencies to be named the winner of the Nobel Peace Prize on Friday.

«She is an icon of courage for all teenagers who dare to pursue their aspirations and, like a candle, she lights a path out of darkness,» said Joseph Daul, chairman of the centre-right European People’s Party in the European Parliament.

Yousafzai started her campaigning by writing blogs in 2009 in which she described how the militant Islamist Taliban prevented girls like her from going to school.

She quickly rose to international fame when more and more foreign media outlets conducted interviews with her. Her growing profile attracted the Taliban’s attention and led to frequent death threats.

«I was not worried about myself that much. I was worried about my father. We could not believe they would be so cruel as to kill a child, as I was 14 at the time,» Yousafzai said in a US television interview ealier this week.

Her book «I Am Malala» is currently the second-best selling book on Amazon.com.

The Sakharov Prize for freedom of thought has been awarded by the European Parliament each year since 1988 to commemorate Soviet scientist and dissident Andrei Sakharov. Its past winners include Nelson Mandela and Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

Yousafzai was chosen by a vote among the heads of all the political groups in the 750-member parliament.

Snowden had been nominated by the Green group in the parliament for what it said was his enormous service to human rights and European citizens when he disclosed secret US telephone and Internet surveillance programs.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Greenpeace boss urges meeting with Putin, Moscow reveals ‘narcotics’ accusations

GreenpeaceGreenpeace International Executive Director Kumi Naidoo has written to Russian President Vladimir Putin to demand a one-to-one meeting seeking to unblock the conflict that keeps 28 activists and 2 freelance phtographers arrested in Murmansk facing a piracy sentence since September.

According to the environmental organization, the message was delivered at the Russian embassy in The Hague with Mr. Naidoo offering himself as a “guarantor for the good conduct of the Greenpeace activists.”

“I am willing to move my life to Russia for the duration of this affair. I would offer myself as a guarantor for the good conduct of the Greenpeace activists, were they to be released on bail. They, we, Greenpeace, do not believe us to be above the law. We are willing to face the consequences of what we did, as long as those consequences are within a nation’s criminal code as any reasonable person understands that code to be,” Greenpeace chief’s said in the letter sent to President Putin as he also demands the “immediate release of the two independent freelancers, who are not Greenpeace members,”

“It is clear from your own statements that you do not regard the activists as pirates, although that is the charge leveled against them. You, in common with millions around the world, know that in being accused of piracy they are charged with a crime that did not happen that our activists are accused of an imaginary offence. Indeed, you have previously said that you have admiration for groups like Greenpeace, and that our protests inspire sympathy in you. Were our friends to be released on bail, I offer myself as security against the promise that the twenty-eight Greenpeace International activists will answer for their peaceful protest according to the criminal code of Russia,” the message reads.

Among the 30-member group that has been arrested back in September following a peaceful protest on September 18 when they tried to scale Russia’s state-run Gazprom’s Prirazlomnaya offshore oil platform to condemn Arctic offshore drilling, are Argentineans Camila Speziale and Hernán Pérez Orsi.

«Narcotics» charges

But just as Greenpeace seeks a way out to the escalating row, Russian authorities have been reported to be analyzing further charges as the Investigative Committee in charge of the case has said it has found “narcotics” on board of the Arctic Sunrise, the icebreaker that was carrying the activists the day of the protest.

“During the onboard inspection, narcotic substances (presumably opiate and morphine) have been found. Their origin is being studied as well as its use,” committee spokesman Vladimir Markin announced today and explained that current piracy “charges” are expected to be “corrected” with some activists facing now “more serious accusations.”

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Obama picks Yellen for top Fed job, urges quick Senate approval

obamaUS President Barack Obama announces his nomination of economist Janet Yellen as Federal Reserve chairman at the White House in Washington, DC (AFP).

President Barack Obama has nominated Federal Reserve Vice Chair Janet Yellento run the world’s most influential central bank and urged the Senate to confirm her without delay.

Yellen, an advocate for aggressive action to stimulate US economic growth through low interest rates and large-scale bond purchases, would replace Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, whose second term ends on January 31. The nomination will put Yellen on course to be the first woman to lead the institution and the first to head a central bank in any Group of Seven industrial nation.

«Janet is exceptionally well qualified for this role,» Obama said at a White House ceremony, with a beaming Yellen standing by his side. «She doesn’t have a crystal ball, but what she does have is a keen understanding about how markets and the economy work, not just in theory but also in the real world. And she calls it like she sees it.»

If confirmed by the US Senate, which is expected to endorse her despite opposition from some Republicans, Yellen would provide continuity with policies under Bernanke. She would likely move cautiously in reining in monetary stimulus put in place to shore up the world’s largest economy.

Yellen, who spoke briefly after Obama, said she would promote maximum employment, stable prices, and a sound financial system. She said there was more to do to ensure people who were out of work can find jobs. «While we have made progress, we have farther to go. The mandate of the Federal Reserve is to serve all the American people, and too many Americans still can’t find a job and worry how they’ll pay their bills and provide for their families,» Yellen said.

«The Federal Reserve can help if it does its job effectively.»

Expectations that the Fed might start to taper its stimulus program have been a concern for financial markets since May. The central bank shocked investors in September by maintaining its cash injections of $85 billion a month in full.

Yellen’s nomination coincides with a political stalemate in Washington that has partially closed the US government and threatened a U.S. default if lawmakers fail to raise the country’s $16.7 trillion debt ceiling by an October 17 deadline.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Pentagon begins review of Guantanamo detainees held without charge

GuantanamoThe Pentagon said it had begun re-examining the evidence for the continued detention of terrorism suspects held without charge at Guantanamo, Cuba, more than two years after President Barack Obama directed it to develop a review process.

Pentagon officials said the new Periodic Review Board, created to facilitate the eventual closure of the prison, had not yet considered the case of any individual detainee but was now working on the reviews.

«This process makes an important contribution toward the goal of closing Guantanamo by ensuring that the government has a principled and sustainable process for reviewing and revisiting prior detention determinations in light of the current circumstances and intelligence,» a Pentagon statement said.

Between 60 and 80 of the 164 prisoners at Guantanamo cannot be prosecuted for various reasons, but are considered too dangerous to be released.

The government intends to hold them indefinitely without charge under the authorization of military force against al Qaeda and its supporters following the Sept. 11 attacks.

The review board will evaluate the threat to US security posed by individual detainees, not the legality of their imprisonment, the Pentagon statement said. The detainees can challenge the legality of their incarceration through the US court system, it said.

For the first time, the board is comprised of representatives from across the national security establishment, including the Departments of State, Justice and Defense, as well as the military Joint Chiefs of Staff and the director of national intelligence.

Some human rights groups questioned the multi-year effort that has gone into reviving a detention review process that began during the George W. Bush administration. Others saw it as a positive sign.

«Instead of propping up a broken system at Guantanamo with the Periodic Review Boards, President Obama should end indefinite detention,» said Zeke Johnson of Amnesty International.

«The US government should ensure that each detainee is either given a fair trial in federal court, or released to a country that will respect his human rights,» he added.

Dixon Osburn of Human Rights First called the move «a significant step toward accomplishing the administration’s goal of shuttering the detention facility,» and he urged the new board to finish reviewing all detainees within a year.

Obama campaigned in 2008 on a pledge to close the prison at Guantanamo, which was created during the Bush administration to hold detainees in the US war against al Qaeda. But resistance in Congress and difficulty finding countries willing to take the inmates have prevented the closure.

As part of his push to eliminate the prison, Obama directed the Pentagon in March 2011 to revive a review process to periodically look at whether inmates still pose a threat that merits their detention.

Obama sought to reinvigorate the Guantanamo closure effort earlier this year during a hunger strike by detainees that led to their force-feeding, creating two special envoy positions to work on the project.

Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel named congressional committee attorney Paul Lewis as the Pentagon’s special envoy on closing Guantanamo. Attorney Clifford Sloan was appointed in June to be the State Department envoy.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Obama, Congress search for way out as pressure rises in fiscal stalemate

obamaPresident Barack Obama today launched a series of White House meetings with lawmakers to search for a way to end a government shutdown and raise the debt limit.

House Democrats journeyed to the White House to discuss the fiscal stalemate, and Senate Democrats and Republican leaders in the House of Representatives will make separate treks tomorrow amid rising worries about the potential for economic havoc in the crisis.

The depth of the dispute was evident, however, in the failure of Obama and House Speaker John Boehner to even agree on a guest list for their upcoming session.

The White House invited all House Republicans, but Boehner limited the visitors to 18 party leaders and prominent committee chairs, lessening Obama’s exposure to Republicans who might dissent from the leadership’s hard-line strategy and to rank-and-file Tea Party members who inspired it.

White House spokesman Jay Carney said Obama was «disappointed» at the truncated guest list because «the president thought it was important to talk directly with the members who forced this economic crisis on the country.»

The impasse has shut the government for nine days and rattled financial markets with the threat that the country’s $16.7 trillion borrowing limit will not be raised before an Oct. 17 deadline identified by Treasury Secretary Jack Lew.

There were no tangible signs of progress today, although some members of both parties floated the possibility of a short-term increase in the debt limit to allow time for broader negotiations on the budget.

A House Republican leadership aide confirmed that a short-term debt limit increase was under discussion. House Republican leaders plan to make remarks to reporters on Thursday at around 11 a.m. EDT (1500 GMT), but it was not clear whether they would unveil a plan then. It also was unclear whether any Republican short-term debt limit increase would contain new deficit-reduction or other policy proposals that Obama has warned against attaching to any such measure.

Republican Tea Party fiscal conservatives precipitated the crisis by demanding that Obama’s healthcare reform law be delayed or curtailed in exchange for approving the funding of government operations and raising the debt ceiling.

But in a shift some Republicans hope will strengthen their hand in the fight, the party’s House leaders have played down demands to weaken the healthcare law and focused instead on calls to rein in deficits.

Source: Buenos Aires HErald

Francis sends hope message to CFK, prays for the president’s recovery

FrancisPope Francis has wished President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner a “full health recovery” following the surgery she underwent yesterday at the Fundación Favaloro clinic in Buenos Aires. “I beg you to feel my presence. I guarantee my nearness and prayer,” the ex Argentine cardinal said.

“Cristina, in such these particular times, I wish to make myself present through my prayer for you and your full health recovery,” the pontiff’s message reads as reported by the Vatican official news website.

“Through these words, I beg you to have myself present. I guarantee my prayer and nearness. I ask the Virgin Mary, our Luján Virgin, to give you strength so that you keep your hope and can return to your everyday responsibilities,” Jorge Mario Bergoglio –now Pope Francis- adds and blesses Ms. Kirchner’s family and the medical team that is treating her.

“I do not forget about your relatives in these difficult circumstances, neither of the medical personnel that assists you, begging the Lord to give them light to make their decisions right. Have Jesus bless you and the saint Virgin to take care of you. Sincerely, Francis.”

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Education protest in Brazil turns into riot

burn trashTeachers rallied at the Candelaria area in Rio de Janeiro downtown yesterday as part of a protest day to support the strike that started two months ago to demand salary hikes, changes to the public education system and condemn police brutality.

When demonstrators were leaving the protest site, unidentified groups showed up throwing Molotov bombs against the United States Consulate and the Municipal Chamber setting aflame buses and cars. The police fired tear gas at them and 15 protesters were arrested.

Rio de Janeiro has turned into a protest scenario since a wave of riots emerged back in June all across Brazil.

Meanwhile, in San Pablo where university students have been rallying over the past weeks under similar slogans, another protest in support of Rio’s teachers resulted also in violence with 6 people injured, 13 arrested and at least 3 police cars burned as reported by the Globo news channel.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Britain’s Higgs, Belgium’s Englert win 2013 physics Nobel prize

HiggsBritain’s Peter Higgs and Francois Englert of Belgium won the Nobel Prize for physics today for predicting the existence of the Higgs boson particle that explains how elementary matter attained the mass to form stars and planets.

Half a century after their original work, the new building block of nature was finally detected in 2012 at the CERN research centre’s giant, underground particle-smasher near Geneva. The discovery was hailed as one of the most important in physics.

The two scientists had been favourites to share the 8 million Swedish crown ($1.25 million) prize after their theoretical work was vindicated by the CERN experiments.

To find the elusive particle, scientists at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) had to pore over data from the wreckage of trillions of sub-atomic proton collisions.

«The awarded theory is a central part of the Standard Model of particle physics that describes how the world is constructed,» the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said in a statement.

«According to the Standard Model, everything, from flowers and people to stars and planets, consists of just a few building blocks: matter particles.»

The Higgs boson is the last piece of the Standard Model of physics that describes the fundamental make-up of the universe. Some commentators – though not scientists – have called it the «God particle», for its role in turning the Big Bang into an ordered cosmos.

The will of Swedish dynamite millionaire Alfred Nobel limits the award to a maximum of three people. Yet six scientists published relevant papers in 1964 and thousands more have worked to detect the Higgs at the LHC.

Englert, 80, and his colleague Robert Brout – who died in 2011 – were first to publish, but 84-year-old Higgs followed just a couple of weeks later and was the first person to explicitly predict the existence of a new particle.

Similar proposals from American researchers Carl Hagen and Gerald Guralnik and Britain’s Tom Kibble appeared shortly afterwards.

Their combined work shows how elementary particles inside atoms gain mass by interacting with an invisible field pervading all of space – and the more they interact, the heavier they become. The particle associated with the field is the Higgs boson.

Source: Buenos AIres Herald

Microsoft awards over $100,000 to expert for finding bugs

MicrosoftMicrosoft Corp is paying a hacking expert more than $100,000 for finding security holes in its software, one of the largest such bounties awarded to date by a high-tech company.

James Forshaw, who heads vulnerability research at London-based security consulting firm Context Information Security, won Microsoft’s first $100,000 bounty for identifying a new «exploitation technique» in Windows, which will allow it to develop defenses against an entire class of attacks, the software maker said.

Forshaw earned another $9,400 for identifying security bugs in a preview release of Microsoft’s Internet Explorer 11 browser, Katie Moussouris, senior security strategist with Microsoft Security Response Center, said in a blog.

Microsoft unveiled the rewards programs four months ago to bolster efforts to prevent sophisticated attackers from subverting new security technologies in its software, which runs on the vast majority of the world’s personal computers.

Forshaw has also won a similar award from Hewlett-Packard Co for identifying a way to «pwn,» or take ownership of Oracle Corp’s Java software.

Microsoft was scheduled to release an automatic update to Internet Explorer to fix a security bug that it first disclosed last month. Security experts say that hackers had exploited that flaw to launch attacks on companies in Asia in an operation that the cybersecurity firm FireEye has dubbed DeputyDog.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

ECB’s Draghi, reiterating pledge on low rates, says euro zone slowly recovering

DraghiThe euro zone economy remains on track for a slow recovery, European Central Bank President Mario Draghi said today, reiterating the ECB’s pledge to keep interest rates low for now.

«Real GDP growth in the second quarter was positive after six quarters of negative output growth and confidence indicators up to September confirm the expected gradual improvement in economic activity from low levels,» he told a news conference in Paris after the bank had left interest rates unchanged.

The ECB launched its forward guidance to keep interest rates low or lower for an extended period in July to fend off pressure on money market rates following the US Federal Reserve’s announcement to slow down its bond purchases.

He repeated that interest rates would stay where they are or lower for «an extended period of time».

Consumer price inflation in the euro zone slowed to 1.1 percent in September, EU statistics office Eurostat said on Monday. The ECB’s goal is just below 2 percent, though it looks at prices over the medium term.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Russia charges Greenpeace activists with piracy

Camila SpezialeRussian authorities charged Greenpeace activists from several nations with piracy today over a protest against Arctic oil drilling at a platform owned by the state-controlled energy company Gazprom , the environmental group said.

The piracy charges, which Greenpeace said were absurd, are punishable by up to 15 years in prison.

The federal Investigative Committee said authorities had begun charging 30 people arrested after the protest last month, in which a Greenpeace icebreaker approached the Prirazlomnaya platform and two activists tried to scale the rig – a crucial part of Russia’s effort to mine Arctic resources.

By midday, five people had been charged, Greenpeace said – Brazilian crew member Ana Paula Alminhana, Russian activist Roman Dolgov, Finnish activist Sini Saarela, British freelance videographer Kieron Bryan, and Dima Litvinov, an activist with Swedish and US citizenship.

«It is an extreme and disproportionate charge,» Greenpeace International executive director Kumi Naidoo said.

«A charge of piracy is being laid against men and women whose only crime is to be possessed of a conscience. This is an outrage and represents nothing less than an assault on the very principle of peaceful protest.»

A court in the northern city of Murmansk last week ordered all 30 people from 18 countries who had been aboard the Greenpeace icebreaker Arctic Sunrise to be held in custody for two months pending further investigation.

The Investigative Committee said authorities had begun to charge the activists on Wednesday but gave no details.

The environmental group says the protest was peaceful and posed no threat, and that piracy charges have no merit in international or Russian law.

President Vladimir Putin said last week the protesters were clearly not pirates but they had violated international law.

The Investigative Committee said on Monday peaceful aims would not justify what it has called an «attack» that posed a threat to the platform and its personnel.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Obama, congressional leaders still deadlocked on shutdown

John BoehnerPresident Barack Obama met with Republican and Democratic leaders today in Congress to try to break a deadlock that has shut down wide swaths of the federal government, but there was no breakthrough.

After more than an hour of talks, House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner said Obama refused to negotiate, while House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi and Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid accused Republicans of trying to hold the president hostage over Obamacare.

Reid said Obama told Republicans «he will not stand» for their tactics.

As hundreds of thousands of federal employees faced a second day without pay, leaders of the Republican-controlled House of Representatives and the Democratic-led Senate offered token concessions that were quickly dismissed by the other side. Obama, meanwhile, scaled back a long-planned trip to Asia.

Republicans have tried to tie continued government funding to measures that would undercut Obama’s signature healthcare law. Obama and his Democrats say that is a non-starter.

«The president reiterated one more time that he will not negotiate,» Boehner told reporters after the White House meeting. «All we’re asking for here is a discussion and fairness for the American people under Obamacare.»

Reid said Democrats were willing to discuss any ways to tackle the budget after a temporary funding bill is passed. «We’re through playing these little games,» he said.

The shutdown, which took effect Monday at midnight (0400 GMT Tuesday), has raised questions about Washington’s ability to carry out its most essential duties.

Though it would do relatively little damage to the world’s largest economy in the short term, global markets could be roiled if Congress also fails to raise the debt limit before borrowing authority runs out in coming weeks.

The shutdown has closed landmarks like the Grand Canyon and prevented some cancer patients from receiving cutting-edge treatment.

United Technologies Corp, which makes Sikorsky helicopters and other items for the military, said it would be forced to furlough as many as 4,000 employees, if the US government shutdown continues through next week, due to the absence of government quality inspectors.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Alarma por bomba en aeropuerto de Florida

aeropuertoUn hombre de origen bosnio ha sido capturado por asegurar falsamente que llevaba una bomba en su mochila.

Un hombre de origen bosnio fue arrestado en el Aeropuerto Internacional de Jacksonville, Florida luego de aproximarse a los agentes de seguridad en un punto de revisión y declarar que tenía una bomba en su mochila.

La policía solo encontró una balanza electrónica y unas baterías, pero la alarma provocó la evacuación y el cierre del aeropuerto durante casi cinco horas.

El sospechoso fue identificado como Zeljko Causevic, de 39 años, quien está acusado de amenazar falsamente con una bomba. Otra persona más también fue arrestada porque actuó de manera sospechosa al momento del incidente, pero la policía dice que no están relacionadas.

El aeropuerto fue evacuado poco después de las 6 de la tarde del martes, mientras las autoridades revisaban y “neutralizaban” la mochila en la terminal, según informó el vocero de la oficina del alguacil de Jacksonville, Shannon Hartley.

La emergencia obligó a que algunos vuelos que aterrizaban fueran retenidos en un extremo de la pista y los pasajeros fueran recogidos por buses, mientras que ningún vuelo saliente pudo despegar en el momento de la evacuación.

Este miércoles, muchos vuelos continuaban retrasados o cancelados continuaban, por lo que las autoridades estaban recomendando a los viajeros chequear los horarios de salidas antes de llegar al aeropuerto.

Fuente: http://www.voanoticias.com/

David Cameron vuelve a hablar de Malvinas: elogió a Margaret Thatcher por «salvar» a las islas

David CameronEl primer ministro del Reino Unido destacó la figura de su antecesora conservadora; resaltó que «ganó» la guerra fría y la guerra del Altántico Sur

LONDRES.- El primer ministro británico, David Cameron, volvió hoy a hablar de la guerra de Malvinas, al defender y elogiar a la ex premier conservadora Margaret Thatcher, quien murió hace seis meses a los 87 años, al participar de un encuentro partidario en Manchester, al norte de Inglaterra.

«Margaret Thatcher hizo que nuestro país se volviera a parar, tanto a nivel nacional como en el extranjero. Rescató nuestra economía, le dio poder a nuestra gente, permitió a los británicos ser propietarios de su vivienda. Creó trabajo, ganó la Guerra Fría y salvó a las Islas Falklands (Malvinas)», dijo el premier durante su discurso ante el congreso del Partido Conservador, según consignó el diario británico The Guardian.

Cameron contó además una anécdota de la primera premier británica, que gobernó el país entre 1979 y 1990: «Le pregunte una vez sobre su legado. Estaba sentado junto a ella en una cena, y estaba muy nervioso. Como siempre, estaba encantadora y me la hizo fácil. pero después de un rato, le dije: «Margaret, ¿si tuvieran tu momento en el gobierno de nuevo, hay algo que harías diferente?». Y ella me miró y me dijo: «¿Sabés? Creo que estuve muy bien la primera vez»».

En el plenario conservador, Cameron agregó: «Todos podemos coincidir con esto: ella fue la mejor primera ministra en tiempos de paz que tuvo nuestro país».

Cameron siempre defendió a la líder tory, incluso en su controvertida decisión de hundir el crucero Belgrano durante el conflicto bélico en Malvinas, pese a que el barco estaba fuera de la zona de exclusión establecida.

En el conflicto, que duró dos meses y medio en 1982, murieron 649 argentinos y 255 británicos.

El primer ministro mantiene firme su posición de defender la soberanía británica en las islas e impulsó un referéndum en las islas este año para preguntarle a los habitantes, de origen británico, si querían seguir siendo un territorio de ultramar que responda a Londres. Esta situación volvió a llevar a un punto máximo de tensión la relación entre Gran Bretaña y la Argentina..

Fuente: La Nación

Egypt army chief calls for quick transition to election

EgyptEgypt’s army chief called for a quick transition to elections in order to restore stability to the country, while supporters of the Islamist president he ousted, Mohamed Morsi, staged daring protests urging an end to «military government».

Egypt has been gripped by turmoil since the army removed Morsi on July 3 following mass protests against his rule.

Political tensions and a sharp rise in attacks by Islamist militants have decimated tourism and investment in Egypt, the most populous Arab state, which depends heavily on US aid.

Speaking to soldiers and police officers at a seminar, army chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi «called on everyone to be truly aware of the size of the problems facing society, and which necessitate speeding up the end of the transitional phase,» the army spokesman’s official Facebook page said.

In a reference to Morsi’s year in power, Sisi condemned what he said were attempts to distort «a ruling experience that failed to meet the demands of the Egyptian people» and portray it as a «religious battle and a war on Islam.»

After toppling Morsi, the military installed an interim government and announced a «road map» for a transition to a new election. The Muslim Brotherhood accused the military of staging a coup that removed Egypt’s first freely elected president.

Foreign Minister Nabil Fahmy said last week that the transitional phase of government should end «by next spring.»

Since Morsi’s downfall, security forces have killed hundreds of pro-Morsi protesters, and senior members of his Muslim Brotherhood have been arrested, actions that drastically reduced the size of protests.

Morsi supporters protested in Cairo’s Tahrir Square on Tuesday for the first time since the army forced him from office in July, risking the wrath of security forces who had been keeping a close eye on the area.

About 100 protesters gathered in the square, chanting, «Down with the military government!»

«We are a country not a military camp,» the Morsi supporters shouted in Tahrir, which was the rallying point in 2011 for hundreds of thousands of people against former President Hosni Mubarak. «We want freedom!» they said.

Shortly after arriving in Tahrir, passersby attacked them with rocks. Riot police then moved in and dispersed the crowd.

Source: Buenos Aires HErald

Iran sanctions in US Senate delayed before Geneva talks

IranUnder pressure not to squeeze Iran too hard, the US Senate is unlikely to impose a fresh round of sanctions on the Islamic Republic until after Tehran holds nuclear talks with world powers later this month, lawmakers and congressional aides said.

The Senate Banking Committee had been due in September to look at a new package of sanctions passed in July by the House of Representatives, but now it will not do so for at least a few more weeks, an aide said.

That could create a better atmosphere at talks between Iran and six major nations in Geneva on Oct. 15-16, the first such encounter since President Barack Obama and new Iranian President Hassan Rouhani held a historic phone call last week.

While the sanctions issue has been slowed by congressional wrangling over the US government shutdown, lawmakers acknowledged that the idea had come up of deliberately delaying new sanctions to improve the mood at the Geneva talks.

«There’s been some discussion about whether it’s best right now, while the negotiations are occurring, just to keep the existing ones in place,» Senator Bob Corker, the senior Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and a member of the Banking Committee, told Reuters.

He stressed that Congress generally remains deeply suspicious of Iran and supportive of tougher sanctions.

Catherine Ashton, the European Union’s foreign policy chief, made clear on Monday she would prefer US lawmakers and others not to impose additional sanctions before the nuclear talks.

«I would like to get to Geneva with the best possible atmosphere to really have these negotiations,» she said.

Congressional aides familiar with the issue said some Obama administration officials have been quietly pressing for Congress to hold off.

«We will continue to consult with Congress on all Iran-related legislation as we have long before last week. Iran has an imperative to improve its economy, because every single economic indicator is negative for them,» said State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki.

The House passed a new package of sanctions by a vote of 400 to 20 at the end of July. That bill seeks to cut Iran’s oil exports by another 1 million barrels per day over a year to near zero, to try to reduce the flow of funds to the nuclear program.

Sanctions on Iran’s oil sales, shipping and insurance businesses have led to losses of billions of dollars in revenue each month as well as crippling inflation and high unemployment.

The Senate bill will likely be less tough than the House’s measure in targeting Iran’s oil exports, which already have been halved by existing European and US sanctions. The Obama administration has noted that it has concerns about the House legislation.

Administration officials declined to elaborate, but analysts and congressional aides said the White House fears that if sanctions are too hard on Iran’s customers they may stop cooperating with the United States.

Source: Buenos Aires HErald

US government shutdown starts, 1 million workers on unpaid leave

US governmentThe US government began a partial shutdown for the first time in 17 years, potentially putting up to 1 million workers on unpaid leave, closing national parks and stalling medical research projects.

Federal agencies were directed to cut back services after lawmakers could not break a political stalemate that sparked new questions about the ability of a deeply divided Congress to perform its most basic functions.

After House Republicans floated a late offer to break the logjam, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid rejected the idea, saying Democrats would not enter into formal negotiations on spending «with a gun to our head» in the form of government shutdowns.

In the hours leading up to the deadline, the Democratic-controlled Senate repeatedly stripped measures passed by the House that tied temporary funding for government operations to delaying or scaling back the Affordable Care Act healthcare overhaul known as Obamacare.

Shortly after midnight, President Barack Obama tweeted: «The Affordable Care Act is moving forward. You can’t shut it down.»

Whether the shutdown represents another bump in the road for a Congress increasingly plagued by dysfunction or is a sign of a more alarming breakdown in the political process could be determined by the reaction among voters and on Wall Street.

The US dollar slipped 0.2 percent against a basket of widely traded currencies. The price of the 10-year US Treasury note, a bedrock reference for bond markets, fell 0.3 percent.

S&P stock futures rose 0.3 percent, pointing toward a higher Wall Street open. On Monday, the S&P 500 index closed 0.6 percent lower, weighed down by defense contractors since the shutdown would likely diminish its new business.

The political dysfunction at the Capitol also raised fresh concerns about whether Congress can meet a crucial mid-October deadline to raise the government’s $16.7 trillion debt ceiling.

«A technical Treasury default could follow, sending financial markets into a tailspin,» wrote ING analyst Tom Levinson.

After missing the midnight deadline to avert the shutdown, Republicans and Democrats in the House continued a bitter blame game, each side shifting responsibility to the other in efforts to redirect a possible public backlash.

If Congress can agree to a new funding bill soon, the shutdown would last days rather than weeks. But no signs emerged of a strategy to bring the parties together.

With an eye on the 2014 congressional elections, both parties tried to deflect responsibility for the shutdown. Obama accused Republicans of being too beholden to Tea Party conservatives in the House of Representatives and said the shutdown might threaten the economic recovery.

The political stakes are particularly high for Republicans, who are trying to regain control of the Senate next year. Polls show they are more likely to be blamed for the shutdown, as they were during the last one in 1996.

«Somebody is going to win, and somebody is going to lose,» said Quinnipiac University pollster Peter Brown. «Going in, Obama and the Democrats have a little edge.»

The shutdown, the culmination of three years of divided government and growing political polarization, was spearheaded by Republican Tea Party conservatives united in their opposition to Obama, their distaste for the president’s healthcare law and their campaign pledges to rein in government spending.

Obama refused to negotiate over the demands and warned a shutdown could «throw a wrench into the gears of our economy.»

Some government offices and national parks will be shuttered, but spending for essential functions related to national security and public safety will continue, including pay for US military troops.

Even so, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, visiting US ally South Korea early Tuesday, warned that the shutdown will undermine American credibility abroad and lead allies to question the nation’s commitment to treaty obligations.

«It’s not shocking there is a shutdown, the shock is that it hasn’t happened before this,» said Republican strategist John Feehery, a former Capitol Hill aide. «We have a divided government with such diametrically opposed views, we need a crisis to get any kind of results.»

«The key to this is not what happens in Washington,» said Democratic strategist Chris Kofinis. «The key is what happens out in the real world. When Joe Public starts rebelling and the financial markets start melting down, then we’ll see what these guys do.»

A poll showed about one-quarter of Americans would blame Republicans for a shutdown, 14 percent would blame Obama and 5 percent would blame Democrats in Congress, while 44 percent said everyone would be to blame.

An anticipated revolt by moderate House Republicans fizzled earlier on Monday after House Speaker John Boehner made personal appeals to many of them to back him on a key procedural vote, said Republican Representative Peter King of New York.

After Boehner made his appeal, House Democratic Whip Steny Hoyer called on him to permit a vote on a simple extension of federal funding of the government without any Obamacare add-on. «I dare you to do that,» Hoyer roared.

The potential fallout has some Republican Party leaders worried before the 2014 mid-term elections and the 2016 presidential race, particularly given the Republican divisions over the shutdown.

Republican Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, who commandeered the Senate floor for 21 hours last week to stoke the confrontation and urge House colleagues to join him, sparked a feud with fellow Republicans who disagreed with the shutdown and accused the potential 2016 presidential candidate of grandstanding.

«Whether or not we’re responsible for it, we’re going to get blamed for it,» King said on Monday. «They’ve locked themselves into a situation, a dead end that Ted Cruz created.»

It was unclear how long the shutdown would last, and there was no clear plan to break the impasse. The Senate on Tuesday planned to recess until 9:30 a.m. (1330 GMT), when Democrats expect to formally reject the House of Representatives’ latest offer for funding the government.

The shutdown will continue until Congress resolves its differences, which may be days or months. But the conflict could spill over into the more crucial dispute over raising the federal government’s borrowing authority.

A failure to raise the $16.7 trillion debt ceiling would force the country to default on its obligations, dealing a blow to the economy and sending shockwaves around global markets.

Some analysts said a brief government shutdown – and a resulting backlash against lawmakers – could cool Republican demands for a showdown over the debt limit.

«A lot of this is political theater. It’s not about real policy. Part of this is taking a stand for their constituents,» said Julian Zelizer, a historian at Princeton University.

«If there is fallout from a shutdown and there is a big enough shock, maybe they will be willing to move on to other issues,» he said.

Obama says negotiating over the demands would only encourage future confrontations, and Democrats are wary of passing a short-term funding bill that would push the confrontation too close to the deadline for raising the debt ceiling.

«The bottom line is very simple,» Democratic Senator Charles Schumer said. «You negotiate on this, they will up the ante for the debt ceiling.»

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Obama blames gov’t shutdown on ‘ideological crusade’

obamaPresident Barack Obama today blamed Republicans for an «ideological crusade» aimed at his healthcare program and urged lawmakers to vote to keep government operations running without conditions.

«They’ve shut down the government over an ideological crusade to deny affordable health insurance to millions of Americans,» he said in remarks in the White House Rose Garden.

«Many Representatives have made it clear that had they been allowed by Speaker (John) Boehner to take a simple up or down vote on keeping government open with no strings attached, enough votes from both parties would have kept the American people’s government open and operating,» he said.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Obama prepares for government shutdown, hopes for deal

obamaUS President Barack Obama has prepared Americans for what he called an «entirely preventable» government shutdown while urging Republicans in Congress to reach an 11th-hour deal to avoid economic harm.

With no apparent movement in negotiations, the White House prepared to put in place a skeleton staff on Tuesday to operate essential functions like the National Security Council. Many staff were preparing for furloughs of uncertain length.

And Obama’s own plans seemed up in the air. He is scheduled to leave Saturday on a four-nation, week-long tour to Asia, but a shutdown could force a postponement.

«We have this trip scheduled, and we intend to take it,» said White House spokesman Jay Carney. «You know, we’ll see obviously what happens as the week unfolds.»

Hours before a shutdown was to begin, Obama placed phone calls to the two top congressional Republicans, House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner and Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, but they appeared to restate well-worn positions and there was no sign of a breakthrough.

«The president made clear that Congress has two jobs to do: pay the bills on time and pass a budget on time. Failure to fulfill those responsibilities is harmful to our economy, small businesses and middle class families across the country,» the White House said.

The president and his aides worked to prepare Americans for the possibility of a shutdown, the resulting impact on the US economy and to pin the blame on Republicans who want to gut his healthcare law.

«I respect the fact that the other party is not supposed to agree with me 100 percent of the time, just like I don’t agree with them. But they do also expect that we don’t bring the entire government to a halt or the entire economy to a halt just because of those differences,» he said.

Speaking to reporters at the White House, Obama stressed that mail would be delivered and Social Security payments would be made, but warned that national monuments would close immediately to tourists, government office buildings would close and veteran centers would lack staff if a shutdown took place.

«A shutdown will have a very real economic impact on real people, right away. Past shutdowns have disrupted the economy significantly. This one will too.»

The law funding thousands of routine government activities expires at midnight.

Washington edged ever closer to a shutdown as the US Senate, controlled by Democrats, killed a proposal by the Republican-led House of Representatives to delay Obama’s healthcare law for a year in return for temporary funding of the federal government beyond Monday.

Obama stressed that the healthcare law, known as Obamacare, would proceed regardless of whether the government shut its doors.

Publicly, Obama was optimistic about a last-second deal. Speaking during an Oval Office meeting with visiting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Obama said he was not resigned to a shutdown happening and in his remarks to reporters later he said he hoped a deal could still be reached.

«Time is running out. My hope and expectation is that in the 11th hour once again that Congress will choose to do the right thing.»

As the hours ticked away toward a shutdown, Obama met with his Cabinet to discuss the potential disruptions of a shutdown for their respective agencies and ensure essential operations will take place.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Israel’s Netanyahu urges Obama to keep sanctions in place on Iran

Benjamin NetanyahuIsraeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu urged President Barack Obama today to keep sanctions in place against Iran and to even tighten them if Tehran continues its nuclear advances during a coming round of negotiations with the West.

Seeking to ease Israeli concerns about US diplomatic engagement with Iran, Obama said Tehran must prove its sincerity with actions, not just words, and vowed to keep all options on the table, including the possibility of a military response.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Syria compares militant onslaught to 9/11 attacks

SyriaSyria’s foreign minister has compared what he described as an invasion of foreign terrorists across his country to the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States, remarks that Washington dismissed as offensive and disingenuous.

In a speech to the annual meeting of the UN General Assembly in New York, Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Moualem also said that «terrorists from more than 83 countries are engaged in the killing of our people and our army under the appeal of global Takfiri jihad.»

«There is no civil war in Syria, but it is a war against terror that recognizes no values, nor justice, nor equality, and disregards any rights or laws,» Moualem said.

The United Nations says more than 100,000 people have been killed in Syria’s 2-1/2 year conflict. It began in March 2011 when the government tried to crush pro-democracy protests and eventually became a full-scale war. Now more than half of Syria’s 20 million people need aid.

«The people of New York have witnessed the devastations of terrorism, and were burned with the fire of extremism and bloodshed, the same way we are suffering now in Syria,» Moualem said, referring to the Sept. 11 attacks that brought down the World Trade Center and damaged the Pentagon.

«How can some countries, hit by the same terrorism we are suffering now in Syria, claim to fight terrorism in all parts of the world, while supporting it in my country?» he said.

The US mission to the United Nations responded angrily, saying Moualem’s comment was «as disingenuous as it is offensive,» adding that his statements «have no credibility.»

«The fact that the Syrian regime has shelled schools and hospitals and used chemical weapons on its own people demonstrates that it has adopted the very terrorist tactics that it today decried,» said Erin Pelton, spokeswoman for the US mission.

Assad’s government accuses Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Britain, France and the United States of arming, financing and training rebel forces in Syria.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Canonisation for John Paul II, John XXIII set for April 27

popesPope John Paul II, the Polish pontiff who led the Catholic Church for 27 years and witnessed the fall of communism and Pope John XXIII, who called the reforming Second Vatican council, will be declared saints on April 27, Pope Francis announced today.

The announcement of the date for the canonizations had been expected since July when Francis approved a second miracle attributed to John Paul, opening the way to the fastest canonisation in modern times.

He also approved sainthood for John, who reigned from 1958 to 1963 and who oversaw sweeping reforms to modernise the Church, even though he has only been credited with one miracle since his death.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Interpol issues alert for British ‘white widow’ sought in Kenya

Samantha LewthwaiteInternational police agency Interpol said it had issued an internationally wanted persons alert for Samantha Lewthwaite, a British citizen dubbed the «white widow» at the request of Kenya.

The announcement of Interpol’s so-called «red alert» made no mention of the siege of a Nairobi shopping mall by Islamists from Somalia’s al Shabaab movement, in which British police have cited Lewthwaite as a possible suspect.

Interpol said Lewthwaite is wanted by Kenya on charges of possession of explosives and conspiracy to commit a felony dating back to December 2011. It said she was also believed to use the alias ‘Natalie Webb’.

Source: Buenos Aires HErald

Six major powers, Iran agree to meet in Geneva next month

IranSix major powers and Iran agreed to meet in Geneva next month for further talks on resolving the standoff with Tehran on its nuclear program, the European Union’s foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said.

«We had a discussion about how we would go forward with an ambitious timeframe to see whether we can make progress quickly,» Ashton told reporters after a meeting between major powers and Iran.

She described the meeting as substantial and energetic.

The meeting took place on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York and included Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and counterparts from the United States, France, Russia, China and Germany.

The talks were aimed at jump-starting efforts to resolve a decade-long standoff over Iran’s nuclear ambitions.

Ashton said the Geneva meeting on Oct. 15-16 would «carry on from today’s meeting and hopefully move this process forward.»

«We want to spend our time in Geneva translating that into the practical details,» said Ashton, adding: «I am very ambitious for what we can do, but we all know we have to be very practical.»

Earlier, British Secretary William Hague described the tone and spirit of the meeting as «extremely good.»

Source: Buenos Aires Herald