Boudou arrives in Holland for Princess Máxima’s coronation

Vice President Amado Boudou is in Amsterdam, where he will participate in Princess Máxima’s way to the throne of Holland as her husband, Prince Willem who’ll be crowned as new King. The official said he brought “the greetings of President Cristina Fernández and the Argentine people to the new Queen.”

Likewise, Boudou, who visited the Anna Frank Museum, told reporters that Máxima’s new role represent “a lot of work to be done between the two nations, most likely in terms of commercial and technological ties, as well in cultural and educational exchange.”

Boudou has arrived to Holland in company of Senate’s Speaker Beatriz Rojkés with whom will assist to the coronation on Tuesday.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Brazil’s Rousseff to visit Argentina with busy agenda

Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff will travel to Buenos Aires on Thursday to meet with her Argentine counterpart Cristina Fernández de Kirchner and discuss political and commercial matters between the two countries after an imports drop in Argentina last year.

Rousseff assured: “We have a broad agenda with Argentina. We always discuss our relations in all areas (…) and will discuss them this time as well.”

Rousseff and Fernández meet approximately once every three months, however, the last one was suspended due to death of Hugo Chávez on March, 5.

Rousseff stressed that all affairs will be discussed at the meeting, including the recent decision of the mining company Vale to suspend the potassium production project in Mendoza.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Italy names centre-left’s Letta as new premier

Italian President Giorgio Napolitano today asked centre-left deputy leader Enrico Letta to form a new government, signalling the end of a damaging two-month vacuum since elections in the euro zone’s third largest economy in February.

The prime minister designate is expected to quickly select a group of ministers, mixed between politicians and technocrats, under the guidance of Napolitano, whose own unprecedented re-election last weekend opened the way for an end to the crisis.

The new government led by Letta, a former Christian Democrat from the right wing of his Democratic Party (PD), could go to parliament for a vote of confidence by this weekend.
Formation of a government after two months of turbulent political impasse will send a signal that Italy might at last be ready to make a start on much-needed reforms.

Accepting his mandate, Letta said he was surprised by the nomination and felt the profound responsibility on his shoulders.

Italy faced a «difficult and fragile» situation which could not continue and the government must provide answers on jobs, poverty and the crisis facing small businesses in a deep recession, he said.

He added that European economic policies have been too focused on austerity instead of growth.

Napolitano’s choice of Letta instead of veteran former Prime Minister Giuliano Amato, who was said to have been his original favourite, indicated he had plumped for a more political figure who reflects a generational change in Italian politics.

Letta, an urbane moderate who speaks fluent English, is 46 against Amato’s 74 and is an elected member of parliament unlike the older, more experienced man.

He will be the second youngest prime minister in Italian history and as a staunch pro-European is likely to be welcomed by foreign governments and markets.

The new government will be backed primarily by Letta’s centre-left and the centre-right of Silvio Berlusconi, which had hitherto failed to cut a deal following inconclusive elections in late February.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Train plot suspect says Canadian laws not a ‘holy book’

One of two men charged in Canada with plotting to attack a passenger train dismissed Canada’s criminal code as imperfect, saying only God is perfect.

Speaking during a brief hearing where he was ordered back into custody, Chiheb Esseghaier said the allegations against him were based on laws that cannot be relied on, because they are not the work of God.

«All of these conclusions was taken out based on (the) Criminal Code,» the Tunisian-born Esseghaier, 30, told a Toronto court. «The Criminal Code is not (a) holy book.»

Esseghaier said the Code is not perfect: «Only the Creator is perfect.»

Esseghaier, 30, along with Raed Jaser of Toronto, were arrested on Monday in separate raids after what police said was a joint Canada-US investigation that started last year after a tip from a member of the Muslim community.

Esseghaier and Jaser, who appeared at a similar hearing on Tuesday, face charges that include conspiracy to murder in association with a terrorist group.

Esseghaier, who has a thick black beard and wore a blue-black windbreaker, declined to use an Arabic interpreter the court had made available.

But at times he seemed to struggle to understand the proceedings, asking the judge to explain what she meant when she asked if he wished to have the charges read to him.

He spoke at some length with the court’s duty counsel, who typically assists defendants who do not have their own lawyer.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Argentine bishops thankful for selection of Pope Francis

The Argentine Episcopal Conference released a “Letter to the people of God in relation to the appointment of Pope Francis,” in which Argentine bishops express their “joy and gratitude” for his election.

The statement was drafted on April 19th when the Catholic dignitaries were meeting at the 105th Plenary Meeting in Pilar.

“God gives us mercy, joy and hope,” they said as they stressed that “God was the one who inspired Pope Benedict his noble and prophetic gesture of his resignation.”

The bishops considered that this decision sets a very valuable example for the Church and for the entire world. Besides this gift, he is joined by Francis, the first Argentine and Latin American Pope.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Italian president begins talks on new coalition

Italy’s president launched urgent talks that could lead to the naming of a prime minister after two months of post-election stalemate that has weighed on a stagnant economy and alarmed Rome’s partners in the euro zone.

After an angry and emotional blast on Monday at the very parliament that handed him an unprecedented – and unwanted – second term as head of state at the weekend, 87-year-old Giorgio Napolitano began a rapid round of consultations on Tuesday.

No party leaders were invited to the meetings with the Senate and house leaders of all the parliamentary groups, which Napolitano wants to wrap up within the day, suggesting that a government could be in place by the weekend.

Hopes that a government can be formed quickly gave a further boost to financial markets with the yield on 10-year Italian government bonds dropping below 4 percent and the spread, or risk premium over German bonds, narrowing further.

Having threatened to resign if the parties continue with what he called their «irresponsibility» after the inconclusive parliamentary election of February 24 and 25, Napolitano seems determined to force the pace, and could even designate a prime minister to form a grand coalition government within the day.

One leading name is Giuliano Amato, a veteran from the center-left, who has been prime minister twice but no longer sits in parliament.

There has also been speculation that Matteo Renzi, the 38-year-old mayor of Florence, who is seen as a likely future leader of the center-left Democratic Party (PD), could be asked to head a government. He arrived in Rome on Tuesday.

Whoever is named is likely to forge a multi-party cabinet to take over from the technocrat government of outgoing Prime Minister Mario Monti, who was appointed in late 2011.

Though there is scant appetite among the leaders for a new election, any new administration might struggle for stability or the parliamentary backing needed for economic and political reforms seen as vital to revive Italy’s competitiveness.

The center-left narrowly won a majority in the lower house but failed to win control of the Senate, and its inability since February to cut a deal with either Silvio Berlusconi’s center-right or the shock new third force of Beppe Grillo’s anti-establishment 5-Star Movement has left the country in limbo.

The otherwise largely ceremonial presidency plays a key role in the process of forming coalitions, and the coincidence of Napolitano reaching the end of his seven-year term while that deadlock was unresolved led to a series of failed attempts by parliament to elect a new head of state last week.

In the process, the PD fractured, and its leader, Pier Luigi Bersani, resigned, adding to the complex landscape Napolitano must now navigate.

The near-implosion of the PD could add to the difficulties in forming a government as sections of the party have refused to contemplate joining forces with their historic enemy Berlusconi.

Berlusconi in turn has insisted he would only accept a coalition government led by politicians who would give it a share of power with the PD, ruling out a repeat of the kind of technocrat government led by Monti.

The scandal-mired media tycoon Berlusconi was obliged to step down as prime minister in 2011 in favor of Monti amid fears of financial meltdown. But he and his People of Freedom (PDL) have emerged strengthened by the turmoil in the PD.

The PDL is expected to be part of the coalition, but 5-Star, which won a quarter of the vote and speaks for millions of Italians disillusioned with an entire political class, says it will sit in opposition in parliament.

It will be joined by the leftist Left Ecology Freedom party, the former partner of the PD, which said it would also refuse to take part in a grand coalition government.

The instability of the political landscape was underlined by the results of the first local election to be held since the national vote, which saw the center-left candidate take a narrow win in the northern region of Friuli Venezia Giulia.

Grillo’s 5-Star Movement saw its score drop to less than 14 percent, around half the total it won in the national election in February.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Car bomb hits French embassy in Libya

A car bomb in Tripoli wounded two French guards at France’s embassy in Libya today, bringing new violence to the capital.

«This is an attack that targets not only France but all countries that fight against terrorist groups,» Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said in Paris before flying out to see for himself the damage to the embassy. One of the two wounded French guards required emergency surgery in Tripoli, he added.

President Francois Hollande said: «France expects the Libyan authorities to shed light on this unacceptable act so that the perpetrators are identified and brought to justice.»

Libya’s government, struggling to exert its authority, said it was a «terrorist act» aimed at destabilising their country and ministers said they would work with French investigators.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility in the hours after the early morning blast.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

New York City wants to ban cigarette sales to people under 21

New York City took the first step in outlawing sales of cigarettes to anyone under age 21, in an effort to reduce smoking among the age group in which most smokers take up the habit.

The bill, which was introduced by the City Council and has the backing of Mayor Michael Bloomberg, would make New York City, which already has the highest cigarette taxes in the nation, the first big city or state to set the smoking age at 21. Currently, individuals must be 18 to buy cigarettes.

Eight in 10 adult smokers in the city started smoking regularly when they were below the age of 21, and most smokers who are under age 18 obtain cigarettes from individuals who are just a few years older than them, city officials said.

While an increase in cigarette taxes contributed to a 15-point drop among youth smokers from 1999 to 2007, the number of high-school-aged smokers has held steady at about 8.5 percent over the last six years.

Cigarette packs sold in New York City currently carry a state tax of $4.35 and a city tax of $1.50 – making it the most expensive city in the nation to be a smoker.

«Too many adult smokers begin this deadly habit before age 21,» City Council Speaker Christine Quinn said. «By delaying our city’s children and young adults access to lethal tobacco products, we’re decreasing the likelihood they ever start smoking, and thus, creating a healthier city.»

The bill marks the latest effort in the city’s decade-long fight to discourage smoking, which the city’s health commissioner, Thomas Farley, said was the most significant cause of preventable death in the city. In 2003, Bloomberg outlawed smoking in bars and restaurants, and smoking has since been banned in other public places, including parks.

Quinn, who is running to become the city’s next mayor, made clear that she would continue Bloomberg’s aggressive public health agenda – which has led his detractors to dub him the «nanny mayor.»

While most of the city’s anti-smoking initiatives have originated with Bloomberg, the mayor did not join Quinn in making the announcement on Monday, instead sending Farley to say that the mayor looks forward to signing the bill into law.

Every US state prohibits retailers from selling tobacco products to minors and in most states the smoking age is set at 18. Four states – Alabama, Alaska, New Jersey and Utah – require that a cigarette purchaser be at least 19 years old.

In New York, Nassau and Suffolk counties on Long Island have already boosted their legal age for buying cigarettes and other tobacco products to 19.

Nearly all tobacco use starts in childhood and adolescence, according to the 2012 report by the U.S. Surgeon General, which declared smoking a «pediatric epidemic» both in the United States and globally.

According to the report, 99 percent of all first use of tobacco occurs by age 26. The report also found that if youth and young adults manage to avoid smoking or other tobacco products, very few will begin smoking after that age.

Evidence suggests that once youth start smoking, many find it hard to quit. Of all adult cigarette smokers in the United States who smoke daily, 88 percent started smoking by age 18, according to the report.

Currently, about one out of four seniors in high school – youth aged 17 or 18 – smoke on a regular basis. Among those who continue smoking, half will die 13 years earlier than non-smoking peers.

It was not immediately clear how the tobacco industry would respond to the proposed legislation, which Quinn said she hoped would become a model for the rest of the country.

«Our companies follow the law whatever it is in any jurisdiction,» said Jane Seccombe, spokeswoman for Reynolds American Inc, the parent company of R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co, American Snuff Co and Santa Fe Natural Tobacco Co. «We believe no minors, however they’re classified in those jurisdictions, should be able to access tobacco products.»

She declined to comment on any potential sales impact from changes in the minimum age.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Spain’s population falls as immigrants flee crisis

Spain’s official population fell last year for the first time since the 1940s as immigrants fled a five-year on-and-off recession that has sent unemployment soaring.

The number of residents fell by 206,000 to 47.1 million, the National Statistics Institute said on Monday, a figure entirely accounted for by the fall in the number of registered foreign residents.

It was the first time a population drop had been recorded in official statistics since 1946, in the aftermath of Spain’s civil war – although until 1998 figures were published roughly every decade, rather than annually.

Spain and the rest of Southern Europe are suffering twin economic and fiscal crises.

During a long economic boom that ended abruptly in 2008, Spanish-speaking immigrants from Ecuador, Colombia and Bolivia flocked to Spain to work in construction. Between 2000 and 2010, the immigrant population swelled from 924,000 to 5.7 million.

But building has come to a standstill since a housing bubble burst, and a government spending squeeze to try to meet strict deficit cutting targets imposed by Brussels has further strained the economy. As the unemployment rate has soared to 26 percent, many immigrants have returned home.

The biggest fall in registered foreign residents was among South Americans, especially Ecuadoreans and Colombians, the statistics agency said.

«There was extraordinary growth (in immigrants) from 2000 to 2009, which is reversing quickly due to the economic crisis,» demographer Albert Esteve of the Barcelona Centre for Demographic Studies told Spain National Radio.

«Spain is less attractive because there are no jobs.»

Spain’s two largest groups of immigrants, Romanians and Moroccans, both shrank last year.

Not only are immigrants returning home; many Spaniards are also leaving to look for work abroad. The youth unemployment rate is higher than 50 percent.

The population of native Spaniards grew last year by 10,000, a smaller increase than in recent years, only minimally offsetting a fell of 216,000 in the number of registered foreigners.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Boston bombing suspect charged in hospital bed

Federal prosecutors charged badly wounded Boston Marathon bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev in his hospital bed today with using a weapon of mass destruction, a charge that could result in the death penalty, officials said.

A court spokesman said a magistrate judge was present when Tsarnaev was charged at Boston’s Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital, where Tsarnaev was listed in serious condition.

«Although our investigation is ongoing, today’s charges bring a successful end to a tragic week for the city of Boston, and for our country,» US Attorney General Eric Holder said in a statement.

Tsarnaev, 19, was also charged with malicious destruction of property resulting in death.

Tsarnaev, an ethnic Chechen college student suspected of carrying out the attacks with his older brother, was unable to speak after he was captured with throat injuries sustained during shootouts with police.

The fact that he was charged indicated the previously sedated defendant was communicative because the magistrate judge would have to be satisfied he was aware of the proceedings.

Police previously declined to comment on media reports he was communicating with authorities in writing.

«There have been widely published reports that he is (communicating silently). I wouldn’t dispute that, but I don’t have any specific information on that myself,» Boston Police Commissioner Ed Davis told CNN. «We’re very anxious to talk to him and the investigators will be doing that as soon as possible.»

Around the time the announcement of charges was made, White House spokesman Jay Carney ruled out treating Tsarnaev, a naturalized US citizen, as an enemy combatant in the legal process.

«We will prosecute this terrorist through our civilian system of justice. Under US law, United States citizens cannot be tried in military commissions,» Carnet told a news briefing.

Police captured Tsarnaev on Friday night to cap a violent week of blasts, shootouts, lockdowns and one of the largest manhunts in US history.

His older brother, Tamerlan Tsarnaev, 26, died after a gunfight with police early Friday morning.

The city of Boston crawled back to normal today, a week after twin bombs exploded at the crowded finish line of the city’s famous marathon road race, killing three people and wounding 176. Ten of the injured lost limbs.

The crime scene around the blasts was still closed but was expected to reopen within a day or two. Signs declaring «Boston Strong» hung about the city.

Memorial services were set today for two of those killed in the bombings: Krystle Campbell, a 29-year-old restaurant manager, and Chinese graduate student Lingzi Lu.

An 8-year-old boy, Martin Richard, was also killed.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Obama celebrates young inventors at White House science fair

President Barack Obama hopped on a mountain bike that was mounted on blocks and pedaled away, taking part in a science experiment on how to filter unsafe drinking water during an emergency.

The invention was the brainchild of Kiona Elliott, 18, and Payton Kaar, 16, two participants in the White House Science Fair, which Obama considers one of his favorite events of the year.

Struck by the devastation after Haiti’s 2010 earthquake, Elliot and Kaar, from Oakland Park, Florida, came up with the collapsible pump system, winning a grant from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and scholarships from the Gates Foundation.

«This is outstanding!» Obama told the beaming inventors, part of a group of about 100 students from across the country who set up their inventions at the White House Science Fair on Monday.

The fair stood in sharp contrast to events of the past week.

As Obama toured the exhibits, listening to well-rehearsed explanation about inventions that could improve the world, the Justice Department formally charged another young man, 19-year-old Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, for helping to create bombs that killed and injured people at the finish line of the Boston marathon a week earlier.

Shortly after Obama left the science fair, he observed a moment of silence for victims of the Boston bombing, in private.

At the science fair, Obama told students he was proud of them, listened to their earnest speeches, and asked questions about what they planned to do next.

He praised Sara Volz for breeding new types of algae, stored in her bedroom. «You have very supportive parents,» Obama quipped.

Obama encouraged 10-year-old Evan Jackson as well as Alec Jackson and Caleb Robinson, both 8, to keep pursuing science. The boys came up with a cooling system for football equipment, and sensors that help detect overheating.

And he lauded Jack Andraka, a high school student, who invented a faster, cheaper way to detect pancreatic cancer.

«Young people like these have to make you hopeful about the future of our country,» Obama said.

«We’ve got to do everything we can to make sure that we are giving these young people opportunity to pursue their studies and discover new ways of doing things.»

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Canada thwarts ‘al Qaeda-supported’ passenger train plot

Canadian police said they had arrested and charged two men with an «al Qaeda-supported» plot to derail a passenger train.

«Had this plot been carried out, it would have resulted in innocent people being killed or seriously injured,» Royal Canadian Mounted Police official James Malizia told reporters in Toronto.

The RCMP said it had arrested Chiheb Esseghaier, 30, of Montreal, and Raed Jaser, 35, of Toronto in connection with the plot, which authorities said was not linked to the Boston Marathon bombings, but likely had connections to al-Qaeda.

Neither is a Canadian citizen.

«The RCMP is alleging that Chiheb Esseghaier and Raed Jaser were conspiring to carry out an al Qaeda-supported attack against a VIA passenger train,» Malizia said.

VIA is Canada’s equivalent of Amtrak, operating passenger rail services in Canada.

U.S. officials said the attack would have targeted a rail line between New York and Toronto, but Canadian police did not confirm that.

Police said various Canadian security forces had conducted joint operations in the two cities.

The arrests follow not only last Monday’s Boston Marathon bombings in which three people were killed and more than 200 injured but revelations that Canadians took part in an attack by militants on a gas plant in Algeria in January.

It also recalls the arrests in 2006 of a group of more than a dozen Toronto-area men accused of planning to plant bombs at various Canadian targets. Eleven men were eventually convicted of taking part on the plot.

«Today’s arrests demonstrate that terrorism continues to be a real threat to Canada,» Public Safety Minister Vic Toews told reporters in Ottawa.

«Canada will not tolerate terrorist activity and we will not be used as a safe haven for terrorists or those who support terrorist activities.»

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Boston bomb suspect identified on video, no arrest made

Investigators believe they have identified a suspect in the Boston Marathon bombing from security video, a US law enforcement source said, but no arrest had yet been made.

Police may make an appeal to the public for more information at a news conference scheduled for later on Wednesday, a US government source said.

Earlier, CNN reported a suspect was in custody, citing Boston and US law enforcement sources, but later retracted its report.

Three Reuters sources also disputed there had been an arrest. Officials later confirmed the arrest report was inaccurate.

«Despite reports to the contrary there has not been an arrest in the marathon attack,» Boston police said in a statement.

The US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) issued a statement asking the media to «exercise caution and attempt to verify information through appropriate official channels before reporting.»

The identification of a possible suspect marked the most significant, publicly-disclosed break since Monday’s blasts at the Boston Marathon’s finish line killed three people and injured 176 others in the worst attack on US soil since Sept. 11, 2001.

The bombs killed an 8-year old boy, Martin Richard, a 29-year-old woman, Krystle Campbell and a Boston University graduate student who was a Chinese citizen. Boston University has identified the student as Lu Lingzi.

The crowded scene in central Boston was recorded by surveillance cameras and media outlets, providing investigators with significant video of the area before and after the two blasts.

Investigators were also searching through thousands of pieces of evidence from cellphone pictures to shrapnel pulled from victims’ legs.

Based on the shards of metal, fabric, wires and a battery recovered at the scene, the focus turned to whoever may have placed homemade bombs in pressure cooker pots and taken them in heavy black nylon bags to the finish line of the world-famous race watched by thousands of spectators.

Streets around the bombing site remained closed to traffic and pedestrians on Wednesday, with police continuing their work.

Rich Havens, the finish area coordinator at the Boston Marathon who also witnessed Monday’s blasts, said he was relieved officials had identified a suspect.

«When the police said we are turning every rock, they really meant it,» Havens said. «There is a sense of relief that the amazing work they are doing – breaking through bits and pieces – is actually turning things up. And that they’ve gotten to this point in a matter of two days.»

Bomb scene pictures produced by the Boston Joint Terrorism Task Force and released on Tuesday show the remains of an explosive device including twisted pieces of a metal container, wires, a battery and what appears to be a small circuit board.

One picture shows a few inches of charred wire attached to a small box, and another depicts a half-inch (1.3 cm) nail and a zipper head stained with blood. Another shows a Tenergy-brand battery attached to black and red wires through a broken plastic cap. Several photos show a twisted metal lid with bolts.

No one has claimed responsibility for the attack.

«Whether it’s homegrown or foreign, we just don’t know yet. And so I’m not going to contribute to any speculation on that,» said US Secretary of State John Kerry, who until January was Massachusetts’ senior senator. «It’s just hard to believe that a Patriots’ Day holiday, which is normally such time of festivities, turned into bloody mayhem.»

The head of trauma surgery at Boston Medical Center, which was still treating 19 victims on Wednesday, said his hospital was collecting the shards of metal, plastic, wood and concrete they had pulled from the injured to save for law enforcement inspectors. Other hospitals were doing the same.

«We’ve taken on large quantities of pieces,» Dr. Peter Burke of Boston Medical Center told reporters «We send them to the pathologists and they are available to the police.»

Security officials who spoke on condition of anonymity said instructions for building pressure-cooker bombs similar to the ones used in Boston can be found on the Internet and are relatively primitive.

Pressure cookers had also been discovered in numerous foiled attack plots in both the United States and overseas in recent years, including the failed bombing attempt in New York’s Times Square on May 1, 2010, the officials said.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Britain bids farewell to Iron Lady at grand funeral

Borne aloft on the shoulders of eight military servicemen, the coffin of Margaret Thatcher was carried up the steps of London’s main cathedral for a funeral service attended by Queen Elizabeth, Britain’s political elite, and global dignitaries.

In life, the woman the Soviet Union christened the «Iron Lady» divided the British public with her free-market policies which sometimes wrought wrenching change on communities. In death it is no different.

Thousands of supporters lined the streets of London as her casket made its final journey from the centre of British political power in Westminster to the service on top of a gun carriage draped in the red, white and blue British flag.

Most people clapped in respect but about two dozen opponents turned their backs on the procession.

One man held up a placard reading «Boo!» and some shouted «scum», while supporters threw flowers along the route and cheered for Britain’s longest-serving prime minister of the 20th century.

Thatcher, who governed Britain from 1979 to 1990, died on April 8 after suffering a stroke.

Polls have shown that many are unhappy that the estimated 10-million ($15 million) pound bill for the ceremonial funeral is being picked up by the taxpayer, while some left-wing lawmakers say the pomp-filled event is excessive.

Honored with a gun salute from the Tower of London every minute and the silencing of the Big Ben bell, British soldiers played Beethoven, Mendelssohn and Chopin to accompany the grandest funeral for a British politician since that of Thatcher’s hero, Winston Churchill, in 1965.

«She was the first woman prime minister, she served for longer in the job than anyone for 150 years, she achieved some extraordinary things in her life,» said Prime Minister David Cameron, leader of Thatcher’s Conservative Party.

«What is happening today is absolutely fitting and right,» he said, dismissing concerns by some Thatcher critics about the cost and pomp of the event.

A handwritten note placed on a wreath of white flowers on her coffin read: «Beloved mother – always in our hearts».

More than 700 armed forces personnel from units Thatcher led to victory in the 1982 Falklands War lined the streets. Police stood every 5-10 meters along the route.

People gathered along the funeral procession route early in the morning with placards that reflected a range of views.

«You gave millions of us hope, freedom, ambition,» read a placard held up by one man, while a short distance away another man held one that read: «Over 10 million pounds of our money for a Tory funeral». Tory is another word for Conservative.

«This country was pretty well down on its knees in the seventies,» said Roger Johnson, who stood in central London.

«Margaret Thatcher came along and sorted everything out. Her legacy is that she put the word «great» back into Great Britain,» he said.

Her admirers, of which there are many in her party and in southern England, argue that she merits a funeral on a par with Churchill.

«Some people say she divided the country: but if she was so divisive, how did she win three elections?» said Joseph Afrane, 49, a security officer from south London, who wore a cowboy hat, jacket, shoes and even watch emblazoned with the British flag.

More than 2,300 mourners are attending including 11 serving prime ministers from around the world, the British government’s entire cabinet, two heads of state and 17 foreign ministers.

But there were notable absences. Former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev and Nancy Reagan, the widow of Thatcher’s great U.S. ally Ronald Reagan, are too frail to attend.

Thatcher struck up a close relationship with Reagan during the Cold War and was among the first to decide that Gorbachev was a man she could «do business with».

The guest list for her funeral has prompted talk of diplomatic snubs. A spokesman for Cameron denied the United States had snubbed Britain by not sending anyone senior from the administration of President Barack Obama.

The Argentinian ambassador refused to attend after Britain said it would not be inviting Argentina’s President Cristina Fernandez, following a request from the Thatcher family, amid increased tensions over the contested Falkland Islands.

Relations between the two countries remain strained after the 1982 war over the South Atlantic islands which Thatcher ordered a task force to retake after Argentinian troops seized it.

Mourners at the funeral heard her favorite hymns, including «To Be a Pilgrim».

St Paul’s, the 300-year-old cathedral where her funeral will take place, played host to the funerals of Nelson, the Duke of Wellington and Churchill as well as to the wedding of Prince Charles and Lady Diana Spencer.

The abiding domestic images of her premiership will remain those of conflict – huge police confrontations with mass ranks of coalminers whose year-long strike failed to save their pits and communities, Thatcher riding a tank in a white headscarf, and flames rising above Trafalgar Square in the riots over the deeply unpopular «poll tax» which contributed to her downfall.

But Cameron said that Thatcher’s battles, particularly her crushing of trade unions that dramatically cut the number of days lost to strikes, had in fact reduced divisions.

«She was a bold politician who recognized the consensus was failing…She took tough and necessary decisions and in many ways created a new consensus…So in the end the breaking of the mould … led to less division, less strife,» he said.

Even Thatcher’s critics concede that – for better or for ill – she transformed the face of Britain.

In 1979, when she came to power, Britain was in the grip of a long post-war decline with notoriously troubled labor relations, low productivity and was being outperformed by continental rivals France and Germany.

Data show she turned that around by boosting home ownership and the service industry, breaking the power of the unions, and deregulating financial services.

But the price – growing inequality and the closure of large swathes of the country’s industrial base – left parts of the country struggling to create new jobs and rebuild decimated communities, leaving a bitter taste which endures.

Source: Buenos AIres Herald

New Zealand legalizes same-sex marriage

New Zealand’s parliament voted in favor of allowing same-sex marriage, prompting cheers, applause and the singing of a traditional Maori celebratory song from the public gallery.

Seventy-seven of 121 members of parliament voted in favor of amending the current 1955 Marriage Act to allow same-sex couples to marry, making New Zealand the first country in the Asia-Pacific region to do so.

«Two-thirds of parliament have endorsed marriage equality,» Louisa Wall, the openly gay opposition Labor Party MP who promoted the bill, told reporters after the vote. «It shows that we are building on our human rights as a country.»

The bill was widely expected to pass, given similar support for the change in a preliminary vote held last month. It will likely come into effect in August.

New Zealand becomes the 13th country to legalize same-sex marriages, after Uruguay passed its own law last week. Australia last year rejected a similar proposal.

Countries where such marriages are legal include Canada, Spain and Sweden, in addition to some states in the United States. France is close to legalizing same-sex marriages amid increasingly vocal opposition.

The bill was opposed by the Roman Catholic Church and some conservative religious, political and social groups which campaigned that it would undermine the institution of the family.

The law makes it clear that clergy can decline to preside in gay marriages if they conflict with their beliefs.

The law to allow same-sex marriages comes after New Zealand gave same-sex relationships partial legal recognition in 2005 with the establishment of civil unions.

«I have a boyfriend, so it means we can get married, which is a good thing,» said Timothy Atkins, a student who was among a crowd listening to the hearing in the parliamentary lobby.

«It’s important to be seen as equal under the law.»

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Malvinas’ islanders say ‘no captives’ of the UK

As part of the British self-determination pledge to justify the occupation of Malvinas Islands, inhabitants of the disputed territories have stated that they are not London’s “captives” and defended the results of the referendum they held in March to ratify their decision to remain an overseas territory of the UK.

Such were the statements made by islander James Mosh who has been rallying across Europe over the past days together with the member of the islands’ Legislative Assembly Roger Edwoods to defend the results of the referendum showing that 99.8 of the British inhabitants of Malvinas want to remain British.

Their European tour coincided with the news of Margaret Thatcher’s death and funeral, UK’s ruling Prime Minister during the 1982 South Atlantic War who decided the sinking of the Argentine ARA General Belgrano warship claiming the lives of 323 soldiers, half of Argentina’s total casualties during the armed conflict.

A member of the British army by that time Edwoods assured that Malvinas Islands’ population recalls ex PM Baroness with gratitude and blasted Argentina’s “male chauvinist” military who, he beleives, gave for granted Thatcher’s leadership to defend the resource-rich archipelago.

Both Mosh and Edwoods renewed UK’s position against Argentina’s long-standing sovereignty claims over Malvinas Islands. “They said that the referendum was nonsense but they have tried hard to criticize such nonsense,” Edwoods said as he questioned Argentina’s stance to reject the referendum as “illegal.”

Over the past years, Buenos Aires has urged London to abide by UN resolutions that call both parties to sit at the negotiating table and settle the controversy over Malvinas Islands, which Argentina considers have been illegally occupied by the UK in 1833.

Fuente: Buenos Aires Herald

El “rey” de los implantes, frente a sus víctimas

El juicio por las siliconas PIP se mudó del Palacio de Justicia de Marsella al parque de exposiciones de esa ciudad por su alto impacto y la cantidad de personas que quieren participar de las audiencias. Hoy, ya dos horas antes de abrirse la sala, había 200 mujeres damnificadas que, por primera vez, se encontraron cara a cara con Jean-Claude Mas, el «rey» de los implantes que fabricó las prótesis defectuosas que muchas mujeres en todo el mundo todavía llevan hoy en sus cuerpos. «Espero que se nos considere víctimas y no solamente como mujeres que quisieron ponerse prótesis», reclamó Angela Mauro, una de las damnificadas.

El abogado de Mas, en cambio, se quejó: «Sea cual fuere el caso, no es digno que hagáis esto a un hombre de 74 años». Mas está en libertad condicional desde octubre, tras haber pasado ocho meses preso. Ante la policía asumió fríamente el fraude, dejando percibir una personalidad de autodidacta autoritario y un tanto megalómano. Desde su liberación no hizo declaraciones a a prensa, pero antes había mostrado una tendencia a la provocación.

Nacido el 24 de mayo de 1939 en Tarbes, es soltero pero reconoció a dos hijos Hizo el servicio militar en Argelia y fue visitador médico del grupo farmacéutico Bristol-Meyers durante 10 años. En 1982, su vida dio un giro cuando conoció a Dominique Lucciardi, quien administraba entonces una empresa de implantes mamarios y trabajaba con un cirujano plástico francés, Henri Arion. Este inventó, en una época en que no había reglamentación, la fórmula de gel de silicona que utilizó luego Mas en los implantes PIP.

Tras nueve años en esa empresa, Mas fundó Poly Implant Prothése (PIP) en 1991. El sector estaba en pleno auge, pero, en 1992, el escándalo del fabricante norteamericano Dow Corning, que se asemeja mucho al caso PIP, acarreó la prohibición de la silicona en Estados Unidos, y luego en Francia. PIP pasó entonces a utilizar en sus implantes hidrogel y suero fisiológico, lo que le valió demandas judiciales en Estados Unidos. En 2000, las autoridades norteamericanas realizaron un control en PIP y prohibieron sus productos.

Mas buscó entonces nuevos mercados en América Latina, en el sudeste asiático y en Europa: en total, en 65 países, incluida la Argentina, donde se calcula que al menos 10.000 mujeres se colocaron sus prótesis. Entretanto, la silicona volvió a ser autorizada en Francia, pero en vez de utilizar el gel de silicona Nusil, el único homologado, el fundador de PIP optó por siliconas industriales, «porque era más barato», según el mismo admitió. Y, para mantener el sello de autorización europea CE, que le garantizaba el éxito comercial, engañó a los inspectores del líder alemán del control de calidad, TÜV, al que «pagaba para ser certificado» desde 1997.

El asunto se complicó en 2005, cuando las rupturas de prótesis empezaron a multiplicarse y PIP fue denunciada a la agencia francesa de control de productos médicos por cirujanos alarmados por el alto número de rupturas de implantes. Al ser interrogado por la policía sobre lo que pensaba de las víctimas, Mas fue contundente: «nada».

Fuente: AFP

Una explosión en Atlanta (EE.UU.) deja un herido

Un artefacto ha explotado en una tienda de segunda mano de la localidad de Atlanta. Se desconoce si existe relación con los atentados de Boston.

La CBS confirma que se ha producido una nueva explosión en Atlanta, donde ha resultada herida una persona. El artefacto, que no se trataba de una bomba, explotó en una tienda de segunda mano, donde al parecer solo se encontraba el empleado.

El empleado de la tienda ha sido hospitalizado con quemaduras en brazos y piernas. No se sabe si existe relación de esta explosión con los atentados ocurridos en Boston. Las autoridades locales están investigando el incidente.

Fuente: ABC

Otuzco: Continúa búsqueda de ocho personas tras accidente

Continúa la búsqueda de ocho personas desaparecidas tras el vuelco de un ómnibus de la empresa interprovincial Horna que rodó por un abismo de 200 metros hasta caer al río Moche la madrugada del sábado en la provincia de Otuzco, La Libertad.

Según fuentes policiales, hasta el medio día del domingo solo se logró rescatar 34 cuerpos sin vida, de los cuales tres permanecen aún como NN.

El corresponsal de RPP Noticias, informó que la mayoría de las víctimas son profesores y profesionales de la salud que se trasladaban de las localidades de Huamachuco y de Cajabamba rumbo a Trujillo.

Asimismo, se precisó que algunas de las víctimas fueron arrastradas por las aguas del río Moche, situación que complicaría el rescate.

No se descarta que la cifra de fallecidos y desaparecidos se incremente ya que según algunos pasajeros que no lograron viajar, el vehículo llevaba pasajeros en el pasillo.

Fuente: http://www.rpp.com.pe/

Milagro en Bali: un avión cayó al mar y todos los pasajeros sobrevivieron

El Boeing 737-300 de Lion Air tuvo que aterrizar de emergencia y se despistó. El fuselaje se partió al medio.

Un Boeing 737-800 de la compañía Lion Air, la principal aerolínea de Indonesia, cayó ayer al mar al intentar aterrizar en el aeropuerto de Bali y su fuselaje se partió al medio, en un accidente que milagrosamente no se convirtió en tragedia ya que las 108 personas que iban a bordo pudieron ser rescatadas con vida.

“El avión estaba en posición de aterrizaje cuando de pronto vi que se acercaba al mar y finalmente cayó al agua.

La gente entró en pánico, todos comenzaron a gritar aterrorizados por temor a ahogarse. Yo dejé mis pertenencias y corrí hacia una puerta de emergencia. Cuando salí del avión nadé hasta los socorristas que saltaron al agua para ayudarme”, contó Dewi, una de las pasajeras.

La nave volaba a Bali desde Bandung, en Java Occidental, y debía aterrizar en el aeropuerto de Ngurah Rai. Si bien en un primer momento se dijo que el aparato le erró a la pista durante el descenso, luego las autoridades explicaron que en realidad se trató de un aterrizaje de emergencia, aunque no especificaron cuál había sido el problema. A bordo había 101 pasajeros, entre ellos seis niños, y siete tripulantes. A raíz del golpe hubo 47 heridos, aunque ninguno grave.

La imagen del avión accidentado era impactante. Se podía ver cómo se había fracturado el fuselaje a la altura de las alas de la nave, que quedó flotando sobre el mar y a unos 200 metros del final de la pista de aterrizaje. A su costado se hallaban los pasajeros en el agua, con chalecos salvavidas puestos.

Lion Air es una aerolínea de pasajes baratos que controla un 45% del mercado indonesio, país donde la seguridad aérea es un problema de larga data. La compañía tuvo un crecimiento astronómico gracias al auge del transporte aéreo en la región. El mes pasado fue noticia al firmar el mayor contrato de la historia de la aviación civil: compró 234 Airbus a320 por 24.000 millones de dólares. Sin embargo, Lion Air no puede volar en el espacio aéreo europeo y estadounidense, donde es considerada “una compañía aérea de riesgo”.

Fuente: Clarìn

Analizarán parte de las muestras óseas de Neruda en Estados Unidos

Las muestras óseas del poeta chileno serán analizadas en un laboratorio de Carolina del Norte. Se buscará determinar la presencia de toxinas para determinar las causas de su muerte.

Las autoridades chilenas exhumaron el cadáver del poeta, quien fue enterrado en su casa de Isla Negra, con el fin de poder determinar las causas de su fallecimiento (murió a causa de un cáncer de próstata en 1973).

Se cree que el traslado se realizará la próxima semana, cuando llegue al laboratorio estadounidense donde trabaja la toxicóloga Ruth Winecker.

Por otra lado, el juez Mario Carroza, que está a cargo de la investigación, espera recibir en los próximos diez días un informe que detalle la cronología de los exámenes que se van a realizar en Chile

Fuente: radiosalta.com

Escándalo y pérdida de confianza afectan al gobierno francés

París (PL) Con apenas 11 meses en el poder, el gobierno francés registra una pérdida de credibilidad y de confianza sin precedentes tras el escándalo provocado por la acusación de fraude fiscal contra el ex ministro de Presupuesto Jerome Cahuzac.

Aunque los rumores venían desde diciembre, fue el 2 de abril que estalló la tormenta, cuando Cahuzac confesó en su blog personal haber poseído desde hace 20 años una cuenta secreta en Suiza con 600 mil euros, monto que en 2010 traspasó a Singapur.

Poco después la televisión del país helvético afirmó que el ex funcionario había intentado colocar también allí unos 15 millones de euros en 2009, extremo aún no confirmado.

El fraude tiene una doble connotación, primero porque el presidente Francois Hollande había prometido una «República intachable» cuando asumió el gobierno, y segundo porque el funcionario sindicado era el encargado de controlar las cuentas públicas y luchar contra la evasión y el blanqueo de dinero.

Este caso ha provocado una ola de murmuraciones y un ambiente enrarecido en el país, donde incluso el ministro de Asuntos Exteriores, Laurent Fabius, tuvo que salir al paso a las acusaciones en su contra de que también era poseedor de depósitos en Suiza.

Coincidiendo con el escándalo, la prensa publicó una investigación periodística internacional según la cual existen en el mundo unas 130 mil personas, entre ellas 130 franceses, con sociedades fuera de plaza, las llamadas offshore, instaladas en los paraísos fiscales de Islas Vírgenes, Caimán, Cook, Samoa y Singapur.

Uno de los nombres mencionados en tales actividades es el de Jean-Jacques Augier, quien fue tesorero de la campaña electoral de Hollande.

En un golpe de efecto para tratar de contener la tormenta, el gobierno decretó que antes del 15 de abril todos los miembros del gabinete deberán publicar la declaración de su patrimonio.

Se trata de una de las medidas anunciadas por Hollande dentro de una estrategia para mejorar la transparencia y que incluye el reforzamiento de la independencia de la justicia, la lucha contra los conflictos de intereses y la prohibición del ejercicio de cargos públicos a quienes hayan sido condenados por fraude fiscal.

El mandatario prometió la creación de un tribunal financiero, encabezado por un procurador especializado, con autoridad a nivel nacional para luchar contra la corrupción y la evasión de impuestos.

Además, el Gobierno reabrirá la fiscalía encargada de delitos económicos, que fue desmantelada por la anterior administración de Nicolás Sarkozy.

Hollande también se propone luchar contra los paraísos fiscales, tanto en Francia como en Europa, y aseguró que los bancos galos deberán entregar un listado de sus filiales en el exterior, país por país.

En el espectro político, las medidas no han podido aplacar los ánimos y las posiciones varían desde la necesidad de una reestructuración del gobierno hasta reformas más profundas para evitar la corrupción.

Durante los últimos días las críticas han estado enfocadas en el titular de Economía y Finanzas Pierre Moscovici, responsable directo del trabajo de Cahuzac.

Políticos y medios de la derecha tratan de promover la dimisión del ministro, tras poner en duda que no estuviese al tanto de los manejos financieros en el exterior de su subordinado.

Mientras, Pierre Laurent, secretario nacional del Partido Comunista Francés, reclamó al gobierno «un cambio de rumbo fuerte, global, concreto y rápido», y consideró que el Parlamento debería poner en el orden del día con urgencia la lucha contra el fraude y la evasión.

Una estrategia en ese sentido es necesaria, si se tiene en cuenta el impacto negativo que este escándalo ha tenido a nivel de la ciudadanía.

Según la más reciente medición, el índice de popularidad del presidente cayó hasta el 27 por ciento, el más bajo registrado jamás por un mandatario en su primer año de gestión.

Los sondeos muestran también la creciente desconfianza de la ciudadanía hacia los dirigentes, ya que una amplia mayoría de los interrogados consideran a los políticos como corruptos.

La onda de choque del escándalo de corrupción en Francia no sólo afectó al gobierno, sino que tuvo repercusiones en todo el continente; el tema de la evasión fiscal será incluido en el menú de la próxima cumbre de la Unión Europea.

Fuente: Prensa Latina

Tema península coreana en conversaciones China-EE.UU

Beijing, 13 abr (PL) El primer ministro Li Kegiang dijo hoy que un conflicto en la península coreana afectará a todas las partes involucradas y lo comparó con levantar una roca para dejarla caer sobre los pies.

Reitera China preocupación por tensiones en península coreana
China y EE.UU. emiten comunicado sobre cambio climático
Kerry se reúne con Presidente Xi, primer ministro Li y canciller Wang
Las partes involucradas deben cargar con la responsabilidad y estar listas para soportar las consecuencias, expresó el dirigente chino durante una entrevista con el secretario norteamericano de Estado, John Kerry, quien llegó hoy a China en su primera visita oficial desde que asumió el cargo.

Versiones oficiales de este encuentro indican que Li transmitió a Kerry que China y Estados Unidos, como las dos principales economías a nivel mundial, deben encargarse de las tendencias internacionales y beneficiar al mundo.

En cuanto a las relaciones bilaterales, el primer ministro indicó que las dos partes deben alcanzar avances sustantivos sobre la profundidad y calidad de la cooperación bilateral y esforzarse más para promover la competencia justa y proteger los derechos e intereses legítimos de sus negocios respectivos.

Manifestó su esperanza de que Estados Unidos tome acciones que conduzcan a levantar la prohibición de exportar a China productos de alta tecnología de ese país.

De acuerdo con la agencia estatal Xinhua, el dirigente chino reiteró que más de 40 años de relaciones bilaterales han demostrado que los intereses comunes son mucho mayores que las diferencias entre las dos partes.

Li sugirió que los dos países participen en la promoción del proceso de integración económica en la región de Asia-Pacífico con espíritu abierto, transparente e inclusivo.

Kerry, por su parte, señaló que la cooperación bilateral ha beneficiado a ambas naciones y tendrá una gran influencia sobre el mundo.

Afirmó que Estados Unidos valora altamente sus lazos con China y desea realizar esfuerzos concertados con esta nación para mejorar los mecanismos de colaboración, fortalecer la comunicación y la coordinación, y conjuntamente enfrentar los desafíos globales y los temas regionales.

Durante esta jornada, Kerry también se entrevistó con el miembro del Consejo de Estado Yang Jiechi, quien le reiteró que China está comprometida con el mantenimiento de la paz y la estabilidad y el avance del proceso de desnuclearización de la península coreana.

Nuestra posición al respecto es consistente y clara, subrayó Jiang, quien agregó que su gobierno favorece tratar y solucionar el problema de la península a través del diálogo y la consulta y por medios pacíficos.

Es de interés común para todas las partes tratar adecuadamente el tema nuclear coreano y también «es responsabilidad común para todos». Kerry se entrevistó también con el presidente Xi Jinping, con el canciller Wang Yi, además, del premier Li y el consejero Jiang.

Fuente: Prensa Latina

Dura crítica de Vargas Llosa a Lula da Silva

El Premio Nobel dijo que es «escandaloso» que apoye a regímenes «seudodemocráticos o no democráticos», como Venezuela y Cuba. También disparó contra Piñera y Humala

Tras disertar en el seminario «América Latina: Desafíos y Oportunidades», organizado por la Fundación Libertad de Rosario para celebrar su 25º aniversario, el escritor peruano Mario Vargas Llosa, el ex presidente uruguayo Luis Alberto Lacalle y la legisladora venezolana María Corina Machado ofrecieron una conferencia de prensa en la que se centraron en «el triste rol de los gobiernos de la región respecto de los regímenes autoritarios», que poco tiene que ver con la declamada defensa de la democracia.

Vargas Llosa calificó de “espectáculo verdaderamente lamentable” el representado por presidentes democráticos “que en sus países impulsan gobiernos democráticos y de economía abierta”, pero que en el plano internacional «apoyan regímenes populistas semidictatoriales, cuando no directamente dictaduras como la cubana».

En particular, el peruano cargó contra el ex presidente brasileño Lula da Silva, a quien mencionó como «el caso más ecandaloso» de doble moral, pues dentro de su país «impulsó la inversión» y «ha respetado la libertad de prensa», pero a la vez «es un propagandista del chavismo».

En la misma línea acusó a Ollanta Humala de sostener buenas y correctas prácticas democráticas dentro de Perú, pero a la vez mantiene otro estándar a la hora de calificar a Hugo Chávez como «un modelo para la región».

También fue objeto de crítica el chileno Sebastián Piñera, calificado por Vargas Llosa como «patético» por haber entregado a manos del dictador cubano Raúl Castro la presidencia de la Celac, un organismo que cuenta con una “Declaración Especial sobre la Defensa de la Democracia y el Orden Constitucional” que debería excluirlo.

El reconocido escritor tuvo un cierre con un diagnóstico lapidario: «La conclusión es muy triste; los países latinoamericanos que padecen dictadores sólo pueden contar consigo mismos porque los gobiernos democráticos les dan la espalda y a veces les dan puñaladas en la espalda».

En el mismo sentido, la legisladora Machado agregó que para los venezolanos «fue muy doloroso ver cómo estos gobiernos nos dieron la espalda», mientras que el ex presidente Lacalle señaló que la presidencia cubana de la Celac significó un «vaciamiento de las instituciones».

Fuente: Infobae

Mark Zuckerberg crea una fundación para promover la inmigración

El fundador de Facebook, Mark Zuckerberg, abogó este miércoles por la reforma del sistema migratorio de Estados Unidos. En un artículo firmado en el diario The Washington Post, Zuckerberg anunció la creación de una fundación para impulsar leyes de inmigración que respondan a los intereses del sector tecnológico.

“Tenemos un sistema de inmigración muy extraño para ser una nación de inmigrantes”, escribió Zuckerberg. “Y es una política inadecuada para el mundo actual”. El empresario se sumó así a las voces de líderes de todos los sectores de la sociedad estadounidense, cada vez más a favor de una reforma que aborde desde la regularización de 11 millones de indocumentados hasta la creación de un sistema para atraer a los mayores talentos del mundo.

El movimiento a favor de la nueva ley de inmigración vivió este miércoles uno de sus momentos más intensos con la concentración de miles de personas ante el Capitolio, en Washington, para presionar a los legisladores. Un día después, el responsable de la red social más grande del mundo, descendiente de emigrantes que llegaron a Nueva York a través de Ellis Island y uno de los ejemplos de innovación y prosperidad de EE UU, sumaba su voz a la lucha por la reforma.

Estos alumnos deberían formar parte de nuestro futuro”
Como otros líderes empresariales del país, Zuckerberg se pregunta «por qué el país deja escapar todos los años al 40% de los graduados superiores en ciencias o matemáticas», que no son ciudadanos estadounidenses “después de invertir en su educación”, o por qué no se ofertan más permisos de trabajo para extranjeros “cuando sabemos que cada uno de esos empleos crearán dos o tres más a cambio”.

El joven empresario, que acaba de lanzar su propia fundación por la reforma: Fwd.us, menciona su encuentro con un estudiante, aspirante a crear una empresa, que dudaba si llegaría a hacerlo porque es indocumentado. “Estos alumnos deberían formar parte de nuestro futuro”. Cuanto mayor es el acceso a la educación, dice Zuckerberg, “mejor preparados estamos, más productivos llegamos a ser y mejor futuro esperará a nuestra nación”.

Sin embargo, el impulso de empresarios tan influyentes como el responsable de Facebook, que cuenta con el apoyo de otros líderes del sector de la tecnología e Internet —desde Marissa Meyer, CEO de Yahoo!, a Eric Schmidt, de Google—, podría topar con uno de los aspectos más complejos de la reforma migratoria que se estudia actualmente en EE UU y el que puede convertirse también en uno de sus grandes obstáculos.

“Para liderar en la nueva economía global, necesitamos a los profesionales con más talento y capacidad de trabajo”, argumenta Zuckerberg. “Necesitamos educar y atraer a los mejores. Necesitamos que los estudiantes de hoy se conviertan en los líderes de mañana”. El empresario defiende una reforma que permita reforzar la frontera y regularice a los indocumentados, un sistema educativo que atraiga a los mejores profesionales del mundo y la inversión en descubrimientos científicos e investigación.

Según las empresas del sector tecnológico -demandantes de ingenieros, matemáticos y científicos- el país debe aumentar el número de permisos que entrega cada año, actualmente limitado a 65.000. Para los detractores de ese aumento, EE UU debe obligar a las empresas a contratar primero entre sus ciudadanos y mejorar las condiciones salariales de estos, en vez de contratar en el extranjero.

Necesitamos educar y atraer a los mejores. Necesitamos que los estudiantes de hoy se conviertan en los líderes de mañana”
Las empresas de tecnología, unas de las más demandantes de los profesionales especializados que estudian en universidades estadounidenses y que deben regresar después a su país por las dificultades para lograr un visado, argumentan que cerca de 300.000 puestos quedan vacantes cada año en el sector por este problema. El Gobierno anunció esta semana que los visados ofertados para el año próximo caducaron en una semana y que las peticiones rebasaron la cuota en un 45%.

Los últimos intentos de aprobar cualquier legislación que incrementase el número de visados H1-B, los entregados a trabajadores extranjeros que son reclamados por una empresa estadounidense, ha fracasado al no superar el mismo argumento. ¿Cómo puede asegurarse EE UU que las empresas no contratan a extranjeros, por un salario más bajo, y exportando además después ese puesto de trabajo a países como India o China?

Ninguno de los proyectos de ley presentados en los últimos años al respecto ha resuelto tampoco cómo puede presionar el Gobierno a las empresas para que contraten primero a estadounidenses, después a extranjeros, que esto no afecte a sus condiciones salariales y que el puesto de trabajo no sea destinado a otro país.

Varios medios han adelantado en las últimas semanas que la propuesta que intenta pactar el “Grupo de los Ocho” podría elevar elevar el número de visados a profesionales hasta los 100.000 cada año. También coincidirían con uno de los principios defendidos por el presidente, Barack Obama, la concesión de una green card o permiso de trabajo y residencia a los graduados de ciencias y matemáticas en universidades estadounidenses —miles de jóvenes cada año—.

Este aspecto de la reforma choca también con los intereses de los sindicatos de empleados del sector servicios y agrícola, así como los defensores de los trabajadores que cada año entran en EE UU con un permiso temporal. Una vez que el “Grupo de los Ocho” logre consensuar un primer borrador, deberán convencer al resto de legisladores de ambos partidos hasta aprobar finalmente una ley que puede hacer historia: después de varias décadas, el Congreso habrá logrado ponerse de acuerdo en algo más que la necesidad de arreglar un sistema fallido.

Fuente: El Paìs

Kerry: ´No aceptaremos que Corea del Norte sea una potencia nuclear´

El secretario de Estado de EEUU, John Kerry, dijo este viernes en Seúl que no se aceptará que Corea del Norte se convierta en una potencia nuclear y aseguró que el régimen de Pyongyang debe acabar con sus «inaceptables» amenazas.

«Estamos todos unidos en el hecho de que no aceptaremos que Corea del Norte se convierta en una potencia nuclear. Y la retórica que estamos escuchando desde allí es inaceptable desde cualquier punto de vista», aseguró el secretario de Estado estadounidense durante una rueda de prensa.

Kerry, que realiza su primera visita a Corea del Sur como responsable de la diplomacia estadounidense, confirmó además tras reunirse con su homólogo surcoreano, Yun Byung-se, que «Estados Unidos, si es necesario, defiende a sus aliados».

Sin embargo, el secretario de Estado de EEUU insistió en que «el verdadero objetivo» no debe ser la defensa de los aliados, sino más bien la apuesta por la paz.

«Todos debemos insistir en la paz, las posibilidades de reunificación y un futuro muy diferente para la gente de la República de Corea y principalmente de Corea del Norte», explicó Kerry.

La visita del responsable de la diplomacia estadounidense se produce en medio de una intensa y prolongada campaña de amenazas contra Seúl y Washington por parte de Corea del Norte, lo que mantiene en alerta elevada a sus ejércitos ante la posibilidad de que se produzca una prueba de misiles del país comunista.

Kerry advirtió de que Corea del Norte cometería un «error enorme» si finalmente realiza un lanzamiento de misiles, una posibilidad que los servicios de inteligencia consideran inminente.

Además de con su homólogo surcoreano, con quien ya se reunió en Washington a principios de mes, el secretario de Estado estadounidense mantuvo también un breve encuentro con la presidenta del país, Park Geun-hye.

La visita de Kerry a Seúl coincide con la del secretario general de la OTAN, Anders Fogh Rasmussen, quien también pidió hoy a Corea del Norte que ponga fin a su campaña de amenazas.

Fuente: EFE

‘Hard work starts now’ as Senate takes up gun control

The Senate cleared the way for debate on proposals to curb gun violence, rejecting an effort by conservative Republicans to block consideration of gun-control legislation prompted by the Newtown school massacre.

The Senate voted 68-31 to open what will likely be weeks of emotional debate on President Barack Obama’s proposals to expand background checks for gun buyers, tighten restrictions on gun trafficking and increase funding for school security.

That margin easily cleared the 60-vote hurdle needed to break a Republican filibuster on a bill that has sparked intense lobbying on both sides, including by families of the victims of the December 14 shooting in Newtown, Connecticut, as well as the powerful gun lobby led by the National Rifle Association.

«The hard work starts now,» Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, a Democrat, said after the procedural vote to open debate, which was watched by some family members of the 20 children and six adults killed by the gunman in Newtown four months ago.

The measure, which would be the first major gun-control legislation to pass Congress since 1994, still faces significant hurdles, including weeks of expected debate in the Senate featuring many amendments that could make the bill unacceptable to senators who now support it.

If it clears the Democratic-led Senate, it would face a tough reception in the Republican-led House of Representatives.

Republican House Speaker John Boehner would not promise a House vote on any gun bill produced by the Senate, saying it probably would be sent to the House Judiciary Committee for review.

«I fully expect that the House will act in some way, shape or form,» Boehner told reporters on Thursday. «But to make a blanket commitment without knowing what the underlying bill is, I think, would be irresponsible on my part.»

Sixteen Republicans joined 50 Democrats and two independents in voting to open Senate debate on the gun-control measure.

Voting to block debate were 29 Republicans and two Democrats – Mark Pryor of Arkansas and Mark Begich of Alaska, who face tough re-election campaigns next year in conservative, gun-friendly states.

The White House said Obama spoke by telephone after the Senate vote to relatives of those killed at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown.

The shootings horrified the country and put gun control at the top of the agenda for the president, who flew 11 family members of the victims to Washington this week to meet with lawmakers and press for action.

The vote to proceed with the bill came a day after a compromise agreement on background checks between prominent defenders of gun rights from each party – Democrat Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Republican Patrick Toomey of Pennsylvania.

That agreement – on a plan to expand criminal background checks of gun buyers to include commercial sales made at gun shows and online – was expected to boost bipartisan Senate support for the measure. Background checks are intended to prevent criminals and the mentally ill from buying guns.

«It is a really important start,» Democratic Senator Christopher Murphy of Connecticut said before Thursday’s vote, displaying photos of some of the school shooting victims.

Reid said expanded background checks, a provision that polls show has the support of more than 80 percent of Americans, will be the first amendment offered during debate. It appears to be Obama’s best hope for achieving meaningful gun-control legislation.

Obama is unlikely to get other elements of gun control that he has advocated, including a ban on rapid-firing «assault» weapons like the one used in Connecticut and limits on the capacity of ammunition magazines.

Reid said amendments to add those provisions to the bill also would be considered by the Senate. Both amendments appear to have a slim chance of winning on the Senate floor. Republican opponents also will be given an opportunity to offer amendments, many of which likely will seek to weaken or effectively kill the legislation.

«How the amendments play out, I think it’s just too early to know,» Toomey said on Thursday on MSNBC.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Cybercrime ring attacks videogame companies for years

Cybersecurity researchers have uncovered a Chinese hacking ring that they said broke into the servers of dozens of online videogaming companies and stole valuable source code over a four-year period.

Kaspersky Lab warned that an organization it christened «Winnti» had infiltrated the servers of at least 35 game developers and publishers, mostly in East Asia including South Korea, but also in Germany, the United States, Japan, China, Russia, Brazil, Peru, and Belarus.

The cybersecurity firm said it found evidence that the hackers attempted to steal proprietary software code, possibly to develop pirated versions of online games, or to steal in-game currency that can be converted into real money.

The campaign, which began in 2009 and is still active today, had an unusually wide reach because because it targeted so-called «massively multiplayer games,» which can involve millions of users across different countries, according to Kaspersky.

The victims include South Korea’s Neowiz, Mgame Corp, Nexon Corp and privately held U.S.-based Trion Worlds, Kaspersky said.

Neowiz did not respond to requests for comment, while Trion and Nexon declined to comment. Mgame said it had no immediate comment.

Kaspersky said it was unclear how much damage the hackers caused in the campaign. Kaspersky was not given full access to all the infected servers, but some gaming companies reported malicious software in certain processes that suggested the hackers manipulated virtual currencies — such as the «gold» that games typically accumulate in online role-playing games.

«We could not verify, but one obvious possibility would be to manipulate (the) internal state of the game to the advantage of the attackers,» said Kaspersky Lab’s senior security researcher, Kurt Baumgartner.

He said the hackers stole digital certificates, which can be used to authenticate software and gain access to computers. There was evidence that some of the digital certificates that Winnti stole were used by other groups with different agendas. For example, the certificates were used to spy on the computers of Tibetan and Uyghur activists, Baumgartner said.

«We believe that the source of all these stolen certificates could be the same Winnti group. Either this group has close contacts with other Chinese hacker gangs, or it sells the certificates on the black market in China,» Kaspersky Lab said.

Major corporations around the world have lost data to hackers in China and elsewhere for years. But the number of companies publicly admitting such breaches has been growing. Apple, Microsoft, Twitter, and Facebook confirmed attacks in a recent campaign.

Kaspersky is still investigating Winnti. The Moscow-based security firm has discovered significant malicious software campaigns in the past, including one known as «Flame» that spied on industrial facilities in Iran.

The security firm was first called in to investigate in 2011 when malware was discovered on the computers of users across the globe, all of whom were players of a popular online game that it did not specify.

The malware was traced to a downloaded update from the unidentified game publisher’s servers.

Kaspersky found that the attackers had managed to install a trojan — malware granting surreptitious access to compromised machines — on the company’s servers. Closer scrutiny showed the group employed similar tactics against other game publishers.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

G8 condena amenazas de Corea del Norte

Los cancilleres de Estados Unidos, Gran Bretaña, Francia, Alemania, Italia, Japón, Canadá y Rusia instaron a Corea del Norte a «abstenerse de más actos provocativos».

Los ministros de Relaciones Exteriores del G8 reunidos en Londres, condenaron «en los términos más duros posibles» el desarrollo de armas nucleares y tecnología de misiles balísticos de Corea del Norte, según un comunicado emitido el jueves.

De igual manera, los ministros de Relaciones Exteriores de Estados Unidos, Gran Bretaña, Francia, Alemania, Italia, Japón, Canadá y Rusia instaron a Corea del Norte a «abstenerse de más actos provocativos».

Corea del Norte lazó este jueves una nueva ronda de amenazas, asegurando que tiene «poderosos medios de ataque» preparados.

Las fuerzas estadounidenses y surcoreanas continúan en un elevado estado de alerta por la posible prueba de un misil norcoreano que las autoridades dicen podría tener lugar en cualquier momento.

El Ministerio de Defensa de Corea del Sur dice que está totalmente preparado para hacer frente a un lanzamiento norcoreano, según lo expresó el portavoz Kim Min-seok.

“Nuestras fuerzas armadas están preocupadas que el lanzamiento de un misil norcoreano pueda amenazar nuestro territorio y la seguridad de nuestra gente”, dijo Kim. “También, nos estamos preparando para que cuando Corea del Norte lance el misil, podamos determinar inmediatamente a dónde se dirige”.

El portavoz del Defensa surcoreano dice que el lanzamiento podría ocurrir el lunes, que es el aniversario del fundador de Corea del Norte, Kim il Sung, o incluso antes.

Los movimientos en un punto de control fronterizo han disminuido en medio de informes de que Corea del Norte ha posicionado misiles para posibles ataques a objetivos estadounidenses en la región.

En el Pentágono, el secretario de Defensa, Chuck Hagel, dice que las acciones de Corea del Norte son inaceptables.

“Corea del Norte con su retórica belicosa, con su acción, ha estado deslizándose muy cerca de una línea peligrosa. Sus acciones y sus palabras no han ayudado a distender una situación inflamable”, dijo.

Fuente: Voanoticias

El Louvre reabre con 20 policías de refuerzo para frenar a los carteristas

A más carteristas, más policías. Aunque tampoco muchos más. El Museo del Louvre ha reabierto hoy sus puertas con una veintena de agentes de seguridad de refuerzo, tras el cierre de ayer, debido a una huelga de los vigilantes de la pinacoteca que protestaban precisamente contra el aumento incontrolable de los rateros.

«La presencia de agentes de policía uniformados tiene un efecto disuasivo importante. Esperamos que se queden el máximo tiempo posible, varios meses, hasta que la situación vuelva a la normalidad», ha subrayado a la prensa el administrador general del museo, Hervé Barbaret, según recoge la agencia Europa Press. Los 20 policías van a añadirse al millar de vigilantes que ya controla el centro.

Aun así, la pinacoteca ha decidido también colgar en su página web una serie de recomendaciones para sus visitantes: «El museo del Louvre es un establecimiento muy frecuentado que,desgraciadamente, es escenario de prácticas ilegales que lamentamos». El centro invita a los turistas a la «vigilancia indispensable» de sus pertenencias, a que no compren entradas a los revendedores, y que «cierren bien sus bolsos».

No es para menos. Los vigilantes que cuidan la pinacoteca denunciaron ayer que se ven desbordados por los carteristas, que actúan tanto dentro del museo como en sus alrededores, y que ellos mismos han recibido en distintas ocasiones «escupitajos, golpes, insultos y amenazas». Hasta el punto de decir basta y obligar el museo más visitado del planeta, con 10 millones de personas al año, a clausurar durante 24 horas y colgar un mensaje en su página web que rezaba: «Importante. Por circunstancias excepcionales, el museo está actualmente cerrado. Pedimos disculpas a nuestros visitantes, y les mantendremos informado de la hora de reapertura».

La dirección del museo asegura que ya presentó una denuncia ante la Fiscalía de París en diciembre de 2012 por los frecuentes robos, además de 150 denuncias de particulares, y que prohibió la entrada a los sospechosos que pudo identificar.

fuente: El Paìs