Miscellaneous News

Equation

Lieutenant General
My condolences to all of the victims families. I hope Ecuador will recover from this disaster soon.:(

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PORTOVIEJO/PEDERNALES, Ecuador (Reuters) - Touring a city ravaged by the earthquake that killed at least 413 people, Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa on Monday contemplated a rebuilding costing billions of dollars and a potentially "huge" impact on the fragile OPEC economy.

But the traumatized survivors Correa met on his rounds two days after the magnitude 7.8 quake had much more immediate concerns: many asked him for water.

With the death toll likely to rise further and swaths of flattened homes, roads and bridges coming to light, a visibly moved and grim-faced Correa warned that Ecuador's biggest disaster in decades would put a big toll on the poor Andean country.

"Reconstruction will cost billions of dollars," said Correa in the hard-hit city of Portoviejo, where survivors swarmed him asking for aid. The economic impact "could be huge," he added later.

Growth in the country of 16 million, which is largely dependent on oil and exports, was already forecast near zero this year due to plunging oil income.

The energy industry appeared to have dodged damage although the main refinery of Esmeraldas was closed as a precaution. However, exports of bananas, flowers, cocoa beans and fish could be slowed by ruined roads and port delays.

Michael Henderson, at risk consultancy Maplecroft, said Ecuador was less well equipped to recover than Chile, where a 2010 earthquake caused an estimated $30 billion in damage.

"Whereas Chile's economy was rebounding strongly from the global financial crisis ..., Ecuador has been slowing sharply recently as lower oil prices depress activity," he said.

"But total damage to assets in dollar terms may be quite a bit lower than in Chile due to the smaller magnitude of the earthquake and the fact that Ecuador is a much poorer country."

PLEAS FOR AID, SPORADIC LOOTING

The quake struck Saturday night along the northwest coast, while Correa was in Italy. Vice President Jorge Glas - a potential candidate to succeed Correa in elections next February - flew into the disaster zone within hours to oversee rescue and relief efforts.

But some survivors complained about lack of electricity and supplies, and aid had still not reached some areas. The number of injured rose to over 2,600.

Shaken Ecuadoreans lined up for food and blankets, slept in the rubble of their destroyed homes or congregated in the street after the most destructive quake since a 1979 magnitude 7.7 quake killed at least 600 people and injured 20,000, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

Fears of looting spread as in Portoviejo people stole clothes and shoes from wrecked buildings and police tried to control crowds. A former social security building was ransacked for aluminum window frames and cables by people hoping to sell the materials.

"I have to take some advantage from this horrible tragedy. I need money to buy food. There's no water, no light, and my house was destroyed," said Jorge Espinel, 40, who works in the recycling business.

Elsewhere, armed men robbed two trucks carrying water, clothes and other basics to quake-hit beach locality Pedernales.

There, survivors curled up on mattresses or plastic chairs next to flattened homes. Soldiers and police patrolled the hot streets while rescuers searched for survivors.

Earlier, firefighters entered a partially destroyed house in Pedernales to look for three children and a man apparently trapped inside, as a crowd gathered to watch.

"My little cousins are inside. Before, there were noises, screams. We must find them," pleaded Isaac, 18.

Tents sprang up in the intact stadium to store bodies, treat the injured, and distribute water, food and blankets. Bruised and bandaged survivors wandered around while the more seriously injured were evacuated to hospitals.

Over 300 aftershocks rattled survivors huddling in the streets, worried their already cracked homes could topple.

"We're scared of being in the house," said Yamil Faran, 47, in Portoviejo. "When ... the aftershocks stop, we're going to see if we can repair it."

Some 130 inmates climbed over the collapsed walls of the town's low-security El Rodeo prison, although more than 35 were recaptured.


INTERNATIONAL SUPPORT

The government has mobilized about 13,500 security personnel to the affected areas.

Nearly 400 rescue workers flew in from various Latin American neighbors, along with 83 specialists from Switzerland and Spain. Cuba was sending a team of doctors.

Two Canadians were among the dead. Jennifer Mawn, 38, and her 12-year-old son, Arthur, died when the roof of their coastal residence collapsed.

One U.S. citizen is also confirmed to have died in the quake, the State Department said on Monday. And Britain's Guardian newspaper said Sister Clare Theresa Crockett, 33, a missionary nun from Derry in Northern Ireland, also died.

To get finance the costs of the emergency, some $600 million in credit from multilateral lenders was immediately activated, the government said.

But the disaster may also push Correa, a leftist, to seek help from the International Monetary Fund, consultancy Eurasia said.

"Such dynamics increase the odds of Correa turning to an IMF Program for support, an option he has so far resisted, and the earthquake could provide him with political cover to do so," it said.
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SteelBird

Colonel
Fierce gunfight between police and drug dealers in Phnom Penh yesterday (April 27, 2016). As a result, 1 policeman and 1 drug dealer were killed, 5 others arrested. More than 16,000g of drug were confiscated.


Check the gears of Cambodian police who fight with drug dealers.
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AssassinsMace

Lieutenant General
Interesting how the death of former "go-to" guy for anything anti-China Harry Wu doesn't get much attention in the media. I guess getting caught setting up a fake Chinese black market organ transplant ring for American TV will do that to you.
 

confusion

Junior Member
Registered Member
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Norfolk Island will be colonized by Australia in July. Renowned lawyer Geoffrey Robertson explains why he is representing the island's 1700 people who are desperate to remain free.

Where in the world is “God Save the Queen” a revolutionary call to arms? In Norfolk Island, whose 1700 citizens—half of them descended from
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and their Tahitian partners—are resisting the forcible re-colonization of their homeland by Australia. Their self-government has been abolished, their parliament locked up, their freedom of speech curtailed and their membership of international sporting and political bodies cancelled. Their autonomy and their identity is being destroyed—they have even been told to stop singing the English anthem “God Save the Queen” and learn the words of Australia’s doggerel national anthem.

..

The 1856 imperial order declared that Norfolk should be kept “separate and distinct” from mainland Australian states, which federated in 1901 without including Norfolk. In 1913 the U.K. handed Norfolk over to Australia to administer as an external territory, and in 1979 it was granted a large measure of self-government, with an elected parliament responsible for health, education, customs, immigration, tourism, culture and most matters of democratic concern, excluding defence, aviation and other international matters of which Australia takes care. It is a tourist idyll; with its trademark Norfolk pine trees, framing two of the Pacific’s most beautiful beaches. It has a local language, unique flora and fauna, an indigenous culture, and is pleasantly free of Australia’s person-eating crocodiles, lethal spiders, snakes, and jellyfish. It has, for the last 36 years, been effectively an autonomous territory, receiving some (but not much) help from Australia and otherwise governing itself.

Such idiosyncratic arrangements, however much they satisfy local aspirations, were not welcomed by a committee of back-bench Australian MP’s, who decided that the island should be assimilated to free-market Australia, and its ethos of self-help and community service should be ended by direct rule from Canberra, 1,800 kilometres away. They issued a 120-page report recommending the re-colonisation of Norfolk, making no mention of the advantages of democracy or the principles of self-determination. The government acted quickly to abolish the parliament and the elected executive, and to replace it by administrators from Canberra. The law that will end Norfolk Island as an autonomous territory takes full effect on July 1, 2016.

From then on, the island will have no special identity. Its people will not be allowed to compete in the Commonwealth or Oceanic games, where they have won medals, unless they do so in an Australian team. They will lose their seat at the Commonwealth Parliamentary Union, and in some UN committees. Already the heavy hand of the Australian public service has censored the local radio station, banning any mention of opposition to the takeover and removing a popular satirical programme. Satire is what the Islanders need: Their precious historical artefacts and records, of the Bounty and of their progress to self-government, have been seized from their parliament and locked away.

There is little the islanders can do against Australian annexation. The new Secretary General of the Commonwealth has shown no interest in their plight. They cannot appeal to international courts (they are not a state). They have, however, decided to petition the UN Special Committee on Decolonisation, which urges UN members to bring their non-self-governing territories towards democracy. In this case, it would be a matter of exhorting Australia to return to the Islanders the powers that they are presently taking away.

Re-colonisation means Norfolk’s assimilation with New South Wales—the state whose laws will now govern the island, although its citizens will have no say in them. They can only vote in Federal Elections in Canberra, a large landlocked electorate 1,200 miles away where their concerns about fishing rights will not be an issue. They will of course be taxed, for the first time. The islanders have hitherto raised revenue by community levies, customs duties, and tourist licences, and have refused to introduce any system of taxation. (They have not become a significant tax haven, because immigration has been strictly controlled and residents remain liable to tax in other countries where those earnings arise.) So the consequence of the new arrangement will be taxation without representation.

Abolishing Norfolk Island as an autonomous territory may not seem to matter much in the grand scheme of things, but for an international order that cherishes self-government and proclaims the right of self-determination of people, it is a regressive and unimaginative action, an example of the inability to tolerate democracy and difference. For the descendants of Fletcher Christian and his rebellion against the martinet Commander Bligh, it will be little consolation that their identity will be extinguished by a government commanded by one Malcolm Bligh Turnbull, named in honour of the controversial captain.

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Apr 28, 2016
Norfolk Islanders storm parliament demanding former Aussie politician be ejected from the territory.
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Protesters want to restore self-determination in the territory.
The Turnbull government is facing a popular revolt by Norfolk Island residents over the terms of a bailout program imposed by Canberra on the financially-stricken territory.

Around 300 residents – or 20 per cent of the Norfolk Island population – stormed the chambers of the territory’s dissolved parliament on Wednesday demanding the resignation of the territory’s administrator, former federal Liberal Party MP Gary Hardgrave.

“We started our occupation of the Legislative Assembly building on Wednesday night and we are going to stay here until they try to remove us,” sit-in protester Ernie Christian told The New Daily.

“We have decided to take back what is ours – the Australian government sacked our democratically-elected parliament last year and we are here to take it back.”

Mr Christian, a descendant of Fletcher Christian who led the mutiny of Captain William Bligh’s Bounty in 1789, said the protesters identified as Norfolk Islanders, not Australians.

“We don’t dislike Australians, but we certainly don’t like what the Australian government is doing to us,” he said.

Mr Hardgrave took the administrative reins in July 2014 with a mandate from the Abbott government to make Norfolk Island’s tax laws consistent with the Australian mainland.

Hundreds of Norfolk Island residents are now agitating for Mr Hardgrave to be thrown off the island.

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Hundreds of residents are staging a sit-in protest on Norfolk Island.

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4:12 pm today

The occupation of Norfolk Island's former legislative assembly by protesters has entered its fourth day.

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Norfolk Island Photo: AFP

A former Norfolk Island chief minister, Andre Nobbs, said residents had turned out to protest the Australian government's decision to remove the island's limited autonomy.

He said about 10 percent of the island's population had turned out to protest the move, and a few dozen of them had set up camp in the grounds of the former assembly.

Mr Nobbs said they were angry at an alleged lack of consulation by Canberra.

"Out of an electoral roll of about 965 people we have over 350 people gathered in the compound just to really join together to voice their concern over what is being imposed on Norfolk, and also to make it really clear that the actions of the Australian government are not in accord with the people of this community," he said.

Andre Nobbs said some of the protesters showed no sign of planning to leave the grounds on Saturday.

On Monday, Norfolk Islanders presented a petition to the United Nations in New York accusing Canberra of violating their right to self-determination.

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Robertson said Norfolk Island is strategically important to Australia as it has vast fishing and mineral rights.

...

This is despite a referendum conducted on the island in May last year which revealed that 64 per cent of residents objected to the plan for it to become an Australian territory, according to the petition.
 

confusion

Junior Member
Registered Member
New Zealand was willing to take in some of the refugees but Australia wouldn't allow for that? Wow.
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Asylum seekers held in Papua New Guinea detention centre seek compensation
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Lawyers for 850 asylum seekers held in a controversial detention centre in
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said on Friday they planned to seek potentially billions of dollars in compensation, as Australian officials prepared to travel to the country for emergency talks.


Papua New Guinea announced this week the closure of the detention centre it operates on behalf of
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, which has pursued a hardline immigration policy criticised by the
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and international human rights organisation.


The closure of the Manus Island facility – which holds asylum seekers fleeing violence in the Middle East,
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and south
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– has the two south Pacific neighbours at loggerheads at a politically sensitive time for Australia.


Each says responsibility for the detainees’ welfare rests with the other. The number trying to reach Australia is small compared with Europe, but immigration has long been a sensitive political issue.


Under Australia’s policy, asylum seekers intercepted trying to reach the country by boat after paying people smugglers are sent for processing to camps in Manus Island or the tiny Pacific island of
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, which holds another 500 people in detention.


They are told they will never settle in Australia.


The harsh conditions and reports of systemic child abuse at the camps have drawn wide criticism inside and outside Australia and have become a major headache for Australian prime minister
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during campaigning for July national elections.


Set himself on fire

Domestic opposition to the policy was stirred even more on Friday with confirmation that a 23-year-old man, who set himself on fire earlier this week in protest against his treatment on Nauru, had died.
Turnbull has warned against being “misty-eyed” over immigration and Australian immigration minister
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reiterated on Friday there would be no policy change.


Dutton suggested one option was to transfer those held on PNG to the Nauru facility.


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on Friday repeated an earlier offer to accept 150 of the refugees but that was again rejected.


“Settlement in a country like New Zealand would be used by the people smugglers as a marketing opportunity,” Turnbull told Australian radio.


Lawyers in Papua New Guinea will go the country’s supreme court on Monday to argue for the immediate release of Manus Island detainees back to Australia, as well as compensation for their detention.


The legal action has support, at least in part, from Papua New Guinea’s high commissioner to Australia,
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, who said on Thursday responsibility for what to do with the men rested with
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.


Compensation case

Papua New Guinea-based lawyer
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, who represents more than 300 of the detained men, told the “Post Courier” newspaper he would file a compensation case on Monday after the supreme court’s ruling.

“We can go straight to assessing reasonable compensation without having to prolong the case any further,” Lomai said.

Refugee advocacy group
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described the death of the man on Nauru as “senseless” and a result of “Australia’s inhumane refugee policies”.


“Refugees who have fled persecution in their homelands don’t deserve a life in limbo in a detention centre or effectively imprisoned on a tiny remote island,” said the group’s Australian director
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.


Confirmation of his death came as about 200 protesters, flanked by dozens of police, marched through central
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carrying signs and chanting slogans such as “refugees are welcome here”.


The fallout from the policy even extended into Australia’s equities market on Friday. Broadspectrum Ltd, the operator of the Manus Island centre, agreed to a A$769 million (€513 million) bid from Spain’s infrastructure giant Ferrovial SA after Papua New Guinea’s decision to close the camp sent its share price soaring.


Broadspectrum’s board had previously urged shareholders to reject several offers from Ferrovial, most recently on April 6th, but said late on Thursday the Papua New Guinea decision had increased uncertainty over its future earnings.
 

confusion

Junior Member
Registered Member
A little bit of action around Gibraltar:

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  • Spanish Guardia Civil vessel Rio Cedena twice tried to disrupt sub's visit
  • USS Florida was trying to dock in Gibraltar when the incursion took place
  • Royal Navy 'fired flares' and dispatching squadron patrol boat HMS Sabre
By
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Published: 07:56 GMT, 5 May 2016 | Updated: 14:06 GMT, 5 May 2016

The Royal Navy has fired a warning shot at a Spanish patrol boat as it tried to 'hassle' a US nuclear submarine attempting to dock at Gibraltar, it has emerged.

Spanish Guardia Civil vessel Rio Cedena twice tried to disrupt the visit by ballistic missile sub USS Florida as it was approaching the British Overseas Territory on the southern tip of Spain.

Flares were fired across its bow as it sailed in front of the American submarine and the Royal Navy reportedly dispatched its squadron patrol vessel HMS Sabre.

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Spanish Guardia Civil vessel Rio Cedena twice tried to disrupt the visit by ballistic missile sub USS Florida (shown in this file picture) as it was approaching the British Overseas Territory on the southern tip of Spain

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Flares were fired across the bow of a Spanish Guardia Civil (file picture) as it sailed in front of the American submarine

According to the
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, the incident has caused outrage among senior officials in Gibraltar with one 'top source' saying: 'This is not only a very dangerous game for the Spanish to play but it is unbecoming of a NATO ally to treat the US Navy with such contempt.'

The newspaper reports that the incident happened in mid-April and senior Royal Navy sources have confirmed the flare firing.

A Ministry of Defence spokesman told MailOnline this morning: 'We don’t comment on force protection measures or submarine operations.'

The Sun reported that a spokesman for Gibraltar's Governor’s office as confirming the incident.

It is not the first time such incursions have been reported.

In August, the Government of Gibraltar said they were 'astonished and appalled' after Spanish police used boats and helicopters to make several incursions into British waters.

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+5
The Royal Navy reportedly dispatched its squadron patrol vessel HMS Sabre (file picture) when the incursion took place

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The incident happened as a US Navy submarine was approaching Gibraltar during a visit

A year earlier HMS Sabre was embroiled in a stand-off with Rio Cedena after another illegal incursion.

Britain was given Gibraltar in the 1713 Treaty of Utrecht, but Spain has said it will never renounce its claim to sovereignty.

Spanish aggression over the Rock increased after the election of Mariano Rajoy as the country’s prime minister in 2011.

But relations between Madrid and London over the Mediterranean territory have deteriorated drastically since the construction of an artificial reef by the Gibraltar government which Spain says has interfered with their fisherman.

Madrid responded by imposing tighter border controls, leading to long delays at the frontier, as the row escalated.

HOW GIBRALTAR HAS CAUSED TENSIONS BETWEEN BRITAIN AND SPAIN
The sovereignty of Gibraltar is a major source of tension between the UK and Spain.

Both in 1967 and 2002, the people of Gibraltar rejected proposals for Spanish sovereignty.

Yet, despite this, Spain still asserts a claim to the territory.

Tension began in 1704 when an Anglo-Dutch force captured Gibraltor from Spain during the war of the Spanish succession.

The territory was then ceded to Britain under the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713.

The thorny issued surfaced again as recently as March when it was reported that Spain could demand joint sovereignty of the Rock in the event of Britain deciding to leave the EU.

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The Royal Navy fired a warning shot at a Spanish patrol boat as it tried to 'hassle' a US nuclear submarine attempting to dock at Gibraltar (file picture)

Moves to revive a shelved 2002 proposal that would impact on the 30,000 inhabitants, was outlined by Spain's acting foreign minister Jose Manuel Garcia Margallo.

The concept of both Britain and Spain laying claim to Gibraltar, located off the southern tip of Spain, was floated 14 years ago and residents voted on whether they would approve of this.

However, the results showed that the population overwhelming wanted to stay in the sovereignty of the UK.

Historically, it has proved to be an important base for the Royal Navy.

Now, its economy is based on tourism, financial services and shipping.

Under the 2006 constitution of Gibraltar, the territory governs its own affairs although defence and foreign relations are still the responsibility of the UK Government.

Located on the southern end of the Iberian Peninsula, it is an area of 6.8 square kilometres.
 
I'm late but I noticed something important had been going on Brazil recently:
'Trust me': Michel Temer takes over as interim Brazil president
Dilma Rousseff suspension hands power to ex-deputy who installs conspicuously white, all-male cabinet on promise of unity

Brazil’s interim president, Michel Temer, has unveiled an all-male, conspicuously white cabinet to run one of the world’s most ethnically diverse nations as he promised to restore confidence in Latin America’s biggest economy.

Following the
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, the country’s first female president, the new head of state called for unity and said his primary task was to form a government of “national salvation” that could restore Brazil’s credibility so it could attract investment.

“Trust me,” he said in his inaugural speech at the Planalto presidential palace. “Trust the values of our people and our ability to recuperate the economy.”

His message came a few hours after he was accused of treachery by his former running mate Rousseff, who claimed she was forced out of office by “sabotage”, “open conspiracy” and a “coup”.

The sharply contrasting statements highlight the rancorousness of an impeachment battle that has curtailed 13 years of Workers’ party rule and divided the nation.

Rousseff was stripped of her powers on Thursday after losing a preliminary impeachment vote in the Senate. This followed a similar crushing defeat in the Congress in April. She now faces trial by the Senate on charges of doctoring government accounts to give an unrealistically healthy impression ahead of the 2014 election.

Temer – a senior figure in the centrist Brazilian Democratic Movement party – was elected on Rousseff’s coat-tails in 2014, but recently abandoned his former government partner on the grounds that the country needed new leadership to get out of its deepest recession in decades.

The economy was the focus of his first speech. “It is essential to rebuild the credibility of the country abroad to attract new investments and get the economy growing again,” he said.

Adding fuelling to claims of betrayal, the
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had spent the past few weeks putting together the centre-right administration that he unveiled on Thursday.

Although he promised to maintain welfare programmes such as
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poverty relief, he has touted balancing the budget and getting inflation back under 10% as his priority.

In a sign of his commitment to austerity, Temer has slashed the number of cabinet posts from 31 to 22. But he may find it hard to cut other costs ahead of municipal elections and with unemployment already in double digits.

Whether this tough task can be achieved will depend largely on new finance minister Henrique Meirelles, who gained considerable kudos as central bank president under the first two Workers’ party governments. He will be charged with reining in expenses and encouraging other ministers to push ahead with privatisation, outsourcing and weakening stringent labour and pension laws.

Several appointments were controversial. Conservationists are alarmed that the top agriculture post has been given to “soyabean king” Blairo Maggi, who has recently been promoting a constitutional amendment to remove environmental licensing on public projects.

Despite the
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, the new health minister, Ricardo Barros from the Progressive party, has no background in medicine. He becomes the fourth in little over six months to hold a portfolio which is much coveted because it has the biggest budget of any ministry.

While the markets are likely to be happy, the public will need a lot of convincing. Temer’s ratings are almost as low as those of the suspended president. He has a disapproval rating of 62% and support from fewer than one in seven voters, according to the most recent poll.

Temer and his cabinet are also tainted by corruption allegations. The interim president himself faces an impeachment challenge and has been barred from standing for office for eight years due to election violations. He has also been named in two plea bargains in the
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into the kickback and bribery scandal at the state-run oil firm Petrobras.

Half a dozen other members of his proposed cabinet, including new planning secretary Romero Jucá, also face charges by Lava Jato prosecutors.

Despite these problems Temer said he had “absolute confidence” in his ability to turn things around with the help of the population.

“It is urgent to restore peace and unite
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. We must form a government that will save the nation,” he said.

As he spoke there were minor scuffles outside the building, where several dozen anti-Temer protesters staged a lie-in. They were ejected by security guards with beatings and pepper spray.

Unity also appeared far from the mind of his predecessor, who has vowed to fight against her removal from office.

“I may have committed mistakes but I never committed crimes,” Rousseff said. “It’s the most brutal thing that can happen to a human being — being condemned for a crime you didn’t commit. No injustice is more devastating.”

Rousseff has only a slim chance of avoiding permanent removal from office. The final Senate vote – which requires a two-thirds majority – could come by September.

André César, a political consultant, said the new president will not be able to enjoy a honeymoon because he has to cut costs while keeping a range of political partners happy, in addition to the likely protest on the streets from social movements.

“In the very short term, turbulence will increase,” he said. “But if he can manage to advance his agenda in the first couple of months, then he can take a breath. The problem is coalition politics. There are several parties and politicians with different world views.”

Mauro Rochlin, an economist at the right-leaning Getúlio Vargas Foundation, praised Temer’s economic team but said he would need support from Congress to push ahead with the necessary policies.

“All the things that he needs to cut are in very sensitive, essential areas. There is no other way around it. It will be up to Congress to make important changes in spending policies. They will have to allow changes in public salaries and retirement, but the public sector is very sensitive and very mobilised.”

Leda Maria Paulani, a leftwing economist at the University of São Paulo who considers the new government to be illegitimate, acknowledged there may be an initial boost to GDP because the business community had got what it wanted.

But she warned that the long-term impact would be a rolling back of hard-won benefits for poor sectors of society, particularly if the government pushed austerity.

“This will have terrible results in terms of the rates of growth, unemployment and everything that goes along with a recession,” she said.
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delft

Brigadier
The latest news is that there was a fire on board, as reported by the aircraft systems to the maintenance organisation. The fact that that the crew didn't mention the fire suggest that their radio systems were among the first to fail. The fact that it was a fire and not an explosion that started the trouble doesn't make it unlikely that it was an infernal devise planted by terrorists, at least to me. But we will want to know exactly what happened and, with the sea having a depth of some three kilometres we might have to wait months. At any rate we do not have to look at an immense ocean to find the wreckage as in the case of MH370.
 
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