Cleveland kidnapper Castro gets life in prison

Ariel CastroAn Ohio judge sentenced Cleveland kidnapper Ariel Castro to life in prison for abducting, raping and holding captive three women for as long as 11 years, and murder for forcing one of the women to abort her pregnancy.

Cuyahoga County Judge Michael Russo imposed the prison sentence after an emotional court hearing at which one of Castro’s victims, Michelle Knight, 32, said the former school bus driver put her through a life of hell.

«I served 11 years of hell. Now your hell is just beginning,» Knight said of Castro in a statement read to the court.

Castro pleaded guilty last week to hundreds of criminal charges to avoid the possibility of the death penalty.

Wearing leg shackles and dressed in an orange prison jumpsuit, Castro listened to her testimony without expression.

Amanda Berry, 27, Gina DeJesus, 23 and Knight, all went missing from the west side of Cleveland between 2002 and 2004. They were discovered on May 6 after neighbors heard Berry’s cries for help from Castro’s home.

Cleveland kidnapper Ariel Castro admitted at the hearing on Thursday that he was a sick man but said he is not the monster described by prosecutors.

Castro delivered a rambling statement to the court that he makes no excuses for his behavior, which he said was «wrong.»

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Fugitive Snowden granted a year’s asylum in Russia, leaves airport

SnowdenFugitive former US spy agency contractor Edward Snowden slipped quietly out of Moscow’s Sheremetyevo airport after being granted a year’s asylum in Russia, ending more than five weeks in limbo in the transit area.

Russia’s decision to help the American, and ignore US requests to send him home to face trial for leaking details of government surveillance programs, is sure to anger Washington and increase doubts that a summit between presidents Barack Obama and Vladimir Putin will go ahead in Moscow in September.

After 39 days avoiding hordes of international reporters desperate for a glimpse of him, Snowden managed to give them the slip again, leaving the airport in a car.

«Over the past eight weeks we have seen the Obama administration show no respect for international or domestic law but in the end the law is winning,» Snowden, whose first leaks were published two months ago, was quoted as saying by the WikiLeaks anti-secrecy group which has assisted him.

«I thank the Russian Federation for granting me asylum in accordance with its laws and international obligations.»

Grainy images on state television showed the 30-year-old’s document, which is similar to a Russian passport, and revealed that he had been granted asylum for a year from July 31.

A Russian lawyer said he had handed Snowden a document from Russia which enabled him to leave the airport for a safe location which would remain secret, and that he could now work and travel freely in the country of 142 million.

State television also showed a picture of him getting into a grey car at the airport driven by a young man in a baseball cap. Snowden wore a backpack and a blue button-up shirt.

«He is the most wanted man on planet Earth,» Snowden’s lawyer, Anatoly Kucherena, told media. «He has to think about his personal security. I cannot tell you where he is going.»

«He can live wherever he wants in Russia. It’s his personal choice,» he said.

Snowden, who had his US passport revoked by Washington, fled to Moscow from Hong Kong on June 23 and had stayed at a hotel at the airport, Kucherena said, but was «psychologically exhausted».

«Imagine yourself daily (having to listen to) ‘Dear passengers, the flight to New York, the flight to Washington, the flight from Rome’,» the lawyer said.

Snowden, whose revelations have fuelled a debate in the United States about civil liberties and national security needs, was accompanied by Sarah Harrison, a WikiLeaks representative.

«We would like to thank the Russian people and all those others who have helped to protect Mr. Snowden. We have won the battle – now the war,» WikiLeaks said on Twitter.

WikiLeaks issued its statement as the case against Private Bradley Manning continued for releasing classified US data through its website.

Snowden hopes to avoid a similar fate. Nicaragua, Bolivia and Venezuela have offered him refuge, but there are no direct commercial flights to Latin America from Moscow and he was concerned the United States would intercept any flight he took.

He was forced to bide his time in the transit area between the runway and passport control, which Russia considers neutral territory. Kucherena had given Snowden Russian books to help pass the time and says he has started learning Russian in preparation for his stay, which could be extended after a year.

«I am so thankful to the Russian nation and President Vladimir Putin,» the American’s father, Lonnie Snowden, told Russian state television. He is expected to come to Russia to see his son shortly.

It is not clear what Snowden plans to do in Russia, although he has said he would like to travel around the country. VKontakte, Russia’s answer to social networking site Facebook, has already offered him a job.

Washington has signaled in the last few weeks that Obama might consider boycotting the planned summit with Putin. It did not immediately comment on Snowden’s change of status, which steps up the level of support he is receiving from Russia.

It is not clear whether Obama might also consider a boycott of a G20 summit in Russia in September or of the Winter Olympics which Russia will host in the city of Sochi next February.

A senior Kremlin official played down concerns.

«Our president has … expressed hope many times that this will not affect the character of our relations,» Yuri Ushakov, Putin’s top foreign policy adviser, told reporters.

But Senator Robert Menendez, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, criticized Moscow’s decision and said Russia should send Snowden home because his revelations could do great harm to the United States.

«Edward Snowden is a fugitive who belongs in a United States courtroom, not a free man deserving of asylum in Russia,» Menendez said. «Regardless of the fact that Russia is granting asylum for one year, this action is a setback to US-Russia relations.»

Putin wants to improve relations with the United States that are strained by issues from the Syrian conflict to his treatment of opponents and foreign-funded non-governmental organizations, but would have risked looking weak if he had handed him over to the US authorities.

More than half of Russians have a positive opinion of Snowden and 43 percent wanted him to be granted asylum, a poll released by independent research group Levada said this week.

Putin has said Snowden must stop anti-US activities, but it was not clear whether the American had agreed to do so. Snowden has said that he does not regard his activities as hostile to the United States.

There has already been diplomatic fallout from Snowden’s leaks, which included information that the US National Security Agency bugged European Union offices and gained access to EU internal computer networks, even though the EU is an ally.

China, Brazil and France have voiced concern over the spying program and US ties with Latin American states have been clouded.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Gov’t tightens safety controls on train drivers

FlorencioInterior and Transport Minister Florencio Randazzo has announced safety measures in the rail service involving new medical examination and psychological tests for engine drivers as well as the ban on hand-held cellphone use.

In a press conference at the government house, Randazzo exhibited a series of videos captured by the security cameras installed in the cabins showing drivers who fall asleep, read books and talking on mobile phones thus jeopardizing both their own and commuters’ lives.

In that sense, Randazzo explained the new exams will involve vision and BMI tests as well as drug, fatigue and anxiety screening. Extra training hours have been also announced while it will be mandatory for drivers to renew their driving license every year.

As for September 1, traffic supervisors will be appointed and new protocols to improve communications between drivers and control offices will be implemented Randazzo added.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Christian Benitez death caused by heart failure, according to autopsy

Christian BenitezDirectors of Qatari football club Al Jaish have received reports from the autopsy on their former player, Ecuador international Christian Benitez, which determine that the 27-year-old striker’s death was caused by heart failure.

According to the official medical reports, whose conclusions were made public on Wednesday through the club, Benitez’s sudden death on Monday had as an underlying cause an undiagnosed heart defect.

After completing legal requirements, the player’s body will be transferred by private jet to Ecuador, while the club will take care of all expenses for family members who wish to attend the funeral in Doha as well as all medical and transport bills.

Al Jaish also revealed that all team members and directors would be invited to the memorial.

‘Chucho’ Benitez had recently completed a transfer to Qatar, previously starring in Mexico’s America. Just before passing away, the player had been submitted to a series of medical exams in the United Arab Emirates.

Source. Buenos Aires Herald

Opposition files injunction against YPF-Chevron agreement

YPFUNEN party pre-candidates Fernando “Pino” Solanas and Fernanda Reyes filed an injunction against the agreement between YPF and US oil giant Chevron, at the Appeals Chamber of Buenos Aires.

Both opposition members hope the court will finally declare the unconstitutionality of the pact.

“The deal with Chevron violates the Hydrocarbons law. Nobody knows the clauses of the contract, and even the grant was not discussed in Congress. Those are the kind of insulting actions that Kirchnerism has us used to experimenting”, stated Solanas through a media release.

In addition, they requested the annulment of the executive order signed by President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, which consists of economic benefits for the oil companies that want to invest in the country.

“We asked the Energy Minister to show us the agreement but he’s not answering. That’s why we presented the suspension of this executive order”, said Reyes.

Last month, the national government signed a deal with Chevron to exploit “Vaca Muerta”, a shale oil and gas field, located in the province of Neuquén.

The investment is estimated in 1.500 million dollars, most of it contributed by Chevron, and includes the drilling of 1500 wells until 2017.

YPF is under state control since May 2012, when Fernández de Kirchner announced the expropriation of 51% of stocks from Spanish oil company Repsol.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Obama puts forward Democrat Mamet as new Argentine ambassador

qThe White House has confirmed that US president Barack Obama has proposed fellow Democratic Party member Noah Mamet as the new ambassador in Buenos Aires, to replace outgoing incumbent Vilma Martínez.

As revealed by the government in April, Mamet is Obama’s choice to replace Martínez, who served at the head of the US embassy from September 18 2009 to July of the current year.

In common with his predecessor, Mamet is not a career diplomat and is known to have donated $500,000 to Obama’s last presidential campaign.

The candidate served as consultant to Democrat leader of the House of Representatives, Richard Gaphardt, between 1995 and 2003, and worked for the Bill Clinton Foundation. He also worked alongside former secretaries of state Hillary Clinton and Madeleine Albright.

Mamet’s selection must first be approved by the US Congress and and the Argentine government before he takes his post in Buenos Aires. The embassy is currently under the supervision of business leader Kevin Sullivan, who belongs to the US diplomatic service.
Relations between Argentina and the United States have been volatile under the leadership of Nestor and Cristina Kirchner, with the selection of consul staff occasionally raising tensions.

The last conflict between the two nations rose due to revelations of US cyber surveillance realised by the NSA which affected Argentina, although president Kirchner stopped short of naming the nation in a formal complaint made to the courts.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Italy’s top court confirms Berlusconi prison sentence

BerlusconiItaly’s supreme court today upheld a jail sentence against Silvio Berlusconi for tax fraud in a devastating blow to the former prime minister that could throw the country’s fragile coalition government into crisis.

After a three-day hearing, the five judges of the supreme court rejected Berlusconi’s final appeal against the verdict handed down by two lower courts in Milan which sentenced the media mogul to four years in jail – commuted to 1 year under an amnesty.

But the top judges ordered a judicial review by a Milan court of the second part of his sentence, a five-year ban from public office. This will enable him to remain as a Senator and as leader of his center-right People of Freedom Party (PDL) for the moment.

He was convicted over the fraudulent purchase of broadcasting rights by his Mediaset television empire.

It was the 76-year-old media mogul’s first definitive conviction in up to 30 court cases on charges ranging from fraud and corruption to having sex with an under aged prostitute. He accuses leftist magistrates of relentlessly trying to remove him from politics since he stormed onto the scene in 1994.

The verdict could not only end the 76-year-old media mogul’s 20-year domination of Italian politics but destabilize the three-month-old government of Prime Minister Enrico Letta and send tremors across the euro zone.

The bloc’s third largest economy is ruled by an uneasy and fractious coalition of Letta’s center-left Democratic Party (PD) and Berlusconi’s PDL.

The former premier has repeatedly said the government must not fall whatever the verdict but PDL hawks had called for a mass walkout of its ministers and public protests including blocking motorways with demonstrations if he was convicted.

Supporters of the media mogul demonstrated outside his Rome home before the verdict, causing traffic disruption.

A greater threat to the government could come from the faction-ridden PD, many of whose members are already unhappy with ruling in coalition with Berlusconi’s party and could rebel following his first definitive conviction.

Because of his age, Berlusconi can do community service or submit to house arrest instead of jail but the sentence is unlikely to take effect until the autumn because of bureaucratic delays.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Taxis prices to climb 10% in Buenos Aires

TaxisThe price of taxis in Buenos Aires is set to rise from Thursday onwards, as a 10 percent increase comes into effect.

According to plans approved by the City government, agreed with taxi businesses, the meter will begin at 10 pesos during the day, rising from the previous starting fare of $9.10. The fare will then go up in increments of $1, which was previously set at $0.90.

Night-time fares meanwhile, will start at 12 pesos (from 11) and increase in increments of $1.20.

A second increase is already planned for October of this year, which would mean a total rise in fares of 21 percent across 2013.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

Kirchnerite governors pledge support for Insaurralde

KirchneriteGovenors and mayors from across Argentina have met in support of Martín Insaurralde, who will lead the list of Kirchnerite Victory Front candidates in the upcoming midterm elections, while the Lomas de Zamora official took the opportunity to attack the campaign of rival Sergio Massa.

The summit was held in La Matanza, and included Buenos Aires governor Daniel Scioli as well as his counterparts José Luís Gioja (San Juan) and Luís Beder Herrera La Rioja.

Among the mayors present were Ezeiza’s Alejandro Granados and Fernando Espinoza, head of the La Matanza district.

«we have come to give unconditional support to our dear Martín Insaurralde, a colleague and a friend,» Espinoza signalled, while Buenos Aires lawmaker Juan José Dominguez added «the GESTAR [the Justicialist Party’s organisation for political formation, hosts of the event] backs its best, hardest-working candidate, which is Insaurralde, who takes forward the national government’s commitment to keep working.»

Insaurralde, meanwhile, hit back against Renewal Front leader Massa as he closed the summit, and maintained that Kirchnerism «does not need to go to a clerk’s office in order to continue transforming this nation.»

Source: Buenos Aires Herald