Tuesday, 10 June 2014

TheGuardian: Food shock recovery suggests price spikes went against the grain

After more than 30 years of generally falling grain prices, it came as a shock when the cost of cereals spiked between late 2007 and early 2008. The price of maize and wheat doubled, while rice trebled in cost. Though prices fell back, harvest shocks in 2010 (Black Sea countries) and 2012 (US mid-west) caused another, less dramatic increase.
Unsurprisingly, some observers wondered if high and unstable cereals prices were the new norm. The system, it seemed, was broken.
But it is increasingly clear that it is not. World cereals prices have fallen back again, and major price rises seem unlikely in the near future.
So what's been going on? With the benefit of hindsight, the spike of 2007-08 was caused by three major changes: higher oil prices, anexplosion of ethanol production in the US, and rising wages in parts of Asia. These factors left the cereals market, where stocks were already low, vulnerable to harvest failures. When those failures occurred, in 2006 and 2007, prices rose. Further increases followed when some governments panicked, either by limiting exports or importing more in a tight market.
Since 2007, farmers have been trying to adjust to the new conditions. However, owing to the harvest failures of 2010 and 2012, and the surprising growth of US demand for distillation to ethanol, which continued through to 2011, it has taken them until recently to do so.
Finally, though, the market seems to have recovered equilibrium. There have been few harvest shocks over the past 18 months, while the expansion of ethanol in the US has halted. Oil prices, meanwhile, have barely risen since 2011.
Above all, farmers have finally caught up with the prices, planting more and raising yields. Grain production has increased significantly since 2007. In the seven years before the spike, cereals production grew by just 9%, to 146m tons; in the seven years since, there has been a 16% increase, to 329m tons.
Surprisingly, almost three-quarters of the increase has come from the developing world, not from the traditional grain exporters of North America, Australia, South America and the Black Sea countries. That's partly a response to higher prices, but it also reflects the efforts of governments and donors – including the $22bn (£13bn) promised at theL'Aquila meeting of the G8 in 2009 – to help farmers boost production. In many developing countries farmers were assisted to get seed and fertiliser, and in some cases price incentives were introduced.
Although cereals prices have fallen back, they are still higher than they were in 2005: in constant terms, 74% higher for maize, 60% more for wheat, and 32% more for rice. That's because oil prices have risen by 70% since 2005, and with them the cost of fertiliser; an astonishing 130m tons of maize is turned into ethanol in the US annually; and labour costs on many Asian farms have risen as jobs in cities increase the cost of farm labour.
What have we learned from the past seven years? For one thing, the system is not broken, even if optimists have been reminded that a resilient system can become volatile if perturbed sufficiently. Moreover, some of the policies proposed in response to the 2007 spike – creating world cereals reserves, putting heavy restrictions on futures trading – were unnecessary, and would have achieved little despite exacting a high cost in terms of funds and political capital. And last but not least, determined public action to raise staples production across the developing world to meet new demands has paid off.

TheGuardian: Asian slave labour producing prawns for supermarkets in US, UK




Slaves forced to work for no pay for years at a time under threat of extreme violence are being used in Asia in the production of seafoodsold by major US, British and other European retailers, the Guardian can reveal.
A six-month investigation has established that large numbers of men bought and sold like animals and held against their will on fishing boats off Thailand are integral to the production of prawns (commonly called shrimp in the US) sold in leading supermarkets around the world, including the top four global retailers: Walmart, Carrefour, Costco andTesco.
The investigation found that the world's largest prawn farmer, the Thailand-based Charoen Pokphand (CP) Foods, buys fishmeal, which it feeds to its farmed prawns, from some suppliers that own, operate or buy from fishing boats manned with slaves.
Men who have managed to escape from boats supplying CP Foods and other companies like it told the Guardian of horrific conditions, including 20-hour shifts, regular beatings, torture and execution-style killings. Some were at sea for years; some were regularly offered methamphetamines to keep them going. Some had seen fellow slaves murdered in front of them.
Fifteen migrant workers from Burma and Cambodia also told how they had been enslaved. They said they had paid brokers to help them find work in Thailand in factories or on building sites. But they had been sold instead to boat captains, sometimes for as little as £250.
"I thought I was going to die," said Vuthy, a former monk from Cambodia who was sold from captain to captain. "They kept me chained up, they didn't care about me or give me any food … They sold us like animals, but we are not animals – we are human beings."
Another trafficking victim said he had seen as many as 20 fellow slaves killed in front of him, one of whom was tied, limb by limb, to the bows of four boats and pulled apart at sea.
"We'd get beaten even if we worked hard," said another. "All the Burmese, [even] on all the other boats, were trafficked. There were so many of us [slaves] it would be impossible to count them all."
CP Foods – a company with an annual turnover of $33bn (£20bn) that brands itself as "the kitchen of the world" – sells its own-brand prawn feed to other farms, and supplies international supermarkets, as well as food manufacturers and food retailers, with frozen or cooked prawns and ready-made meals. It also sells raw prawn materials for food distributors.
In addition to Walmart, Carrefour, Costco and Tesco, the Guardian has identified AldiMorrisons, the Co-operative and Iceland as customers of CP Foods. They all sell frozen or cooked prawns, or ready meals such as prawn stir fry, supplied by CP Foods and its subsidiaries. CP Foods admits that slave labour is part of its supply chain.

Pravda: Western leaders line up to meet Putin in France during D-Day anniversary

The celebrations in honor of the 70th anniversary of D-Day landings were held in Normandy on June 6th. This operation opened Europe a second front against fascism. The heads of states and government of 17 countries came to France to take part in the ceremony. Vladimir Putin conducted a series of important meetings before the ceremony. In the afternoon of June 6, Putin arrived in Deauville, where the celebrations were held.

Putin's participation in the celebrations in Normandy became his first visit to Western Europe since the beginning of the crisis in Ukraine. It was believed that the world leaders will thus be able to discuss the agenda in private meetings. Before flying to France, Putin had made ​​it clear that he was ready to talk to any of his counterparts. 

The French authorities invited the heads of the countries, whose soldiers were on both sides in the fighting in Normandy. The heads of states and governments of 17 countries, including the British Queen, arrived to take part in the event. British Prime Minister David Cameron, on the way to Paris, changed his work schedule and came to Charles de Gaulle Airport the night before to hold talks with Putin before a meeting with Hollande. According to news agencies, the meeting - the first after the beginning of the Ukrainian crisis - started without a traditional handshake, but the dialogue between the two leaders was very substantative. Putin and Cameron discussed ways to resolve the situation in Ukraine and resume dialogue between Russia and the UK. After the conversation, Putin and Cameron shook hands, but it happened off cameras. 

In Operation Overlord, Britain was one of the main participants and the main beachhead for landing expeditionary force under the command of Eisenhower. Seventy years later, descendants of British paratroopers decided to celebrate this day riding vintage motorcycles across the battlefields of their grandparents. 

Prior to the official ceremony, every Western leader decided to use an opportunity to build a political springboard for their countries in a conversation with Putin. They were literally lining up in a queue to meet with the President of Russia personally. The meeting between Hollande and Putin was conducted in the Elysee Palace. The two leaders shook hands on the steps of the residence. It was Putin's first meeting with his French counterpart this year, although they had had five phone conversations before. The two leaders discussed the Ukrainian crisis, termination of the punitive operation in the south-east and Russia's interaction with the EU and NATO. Before the meeting, the French leader said that he would never forget that the Russian nation gave millions of lives in World War II.

From Paris, Putin traveled to the resort town of Deauville, where he will have a meeting with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who can become a mediator in the negotiations between Russia and the United States. Although there are no official meetings planned between Putin and Obama, experts do not exclude a possibility of the so-called corridor meeting. Noteworthy, for the first time since the beginning of the crisis in Ukraine, Obama admitted that Russia had the right to pursue its own interests in connection with what is happening in eastern Ukraine.

Today, Putin will also take part in the international commemorative ceremony on the coast of the English Channel, where the Normandy operation began. The events of 70 years ago serve yet another reason to prevent new conflicts on the European continent and find common ways to restore peace in Ukraine

Chinese IPOs lead US offers in returns by 19%

Another Chinese company will go public on the New York Stock Exchange this week, and data show that the 10 biggest Chinese companies to list in the US in the last 12 months have seen an average return of 44 percent since their first day of trading.
And that compared with 25 percent for all US IPOs of more than $100 million in the same period, Bloomberg News reported on Monday. In that time, the Chinese returns have outpaced all global counterparts, Bloomberg said.
Josef Schuster, founder of Ipox Schuster LLC, a Chicago-based independent financial-services firm specializing in global IPOs, said that US markets provide a better trading infrastructure and a favorable pricing environment for Chinese firms, among other added benefits.
"It's eventually up to the firm where to list but a listing in the US can surely add to the novelty of a Chinese company and may help the marketing appeal," Schuster told China Daily.
IPOs and Chinese firms in particular are taking advantage of a "big window of opportunity," he said. And many of these deals help drive interest in "hot sectors," like e-commerce and consumer-related industries.
Of the 16 Chinese companies that have listed in the US this year, 12 are involved in the Internet technology and web services industry.
Francis Gaskins, the director of research for financial industry website equities.com, said one of the main attractions for a Chinese company to list in the US is "broader exposure to US institutions".
"Chinese IPOs have done pretty well in the US market because they have very good top line revenue increases," Gaskins said on Monday in an interview with China Daily. "The first thing to look at for a Chinese company is do they have a good branding position."
Zhaopin Ltd, a Beijing-based Chinese jobs website operator, is scheduled to go public this week at the NYSE.
Many of the Chinese companies listing in the US in the last year have seen solid returns.
E-commerce firm JD.com and Weibo Corp are two of better-known Chinese companies to list in the US in 2014.
JD.com, the largest direct seller of online goods in China, raised $1.78 billion in its IPO on the Nasdaq Stock Market in May, the biggest IPO by a Chinese company in the US, to date.
Weibo, a popular Chinese micro blog commonly referred to as "China's version of Twitter," netted $285.6 million during its first day on Nasdaq in April.
Since listing in the US, JD's shares have produced a return of 49.6 percent, while Weibo's stock has gone up a more modest 10 percent.
Some other companies that have had solid returns include: Autohome Inc, a car-information website that has gained 110 percent since a December IPO, and online classified ads provider 58.com Inc, which has climbed 140 percent since its IPO in October.
All of those listings pale in comparison to the proposed IPO for Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. A US listing for Alibaba, China's largest online marketplace and No 1 e-commerce firm, could exceed $20 billion, according to some estimates.
ChinaDaily USA

China calls for peaceful settlement of maritime disputes

Wang Min, China's deputy permanent representative to the United Nations, made the remarks at a meeting to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the enforcement of the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea.
The ambassador said that China attaches high importance to the development of maritime endeavors. "We actively participate in international maritime affairs and call for the building and maintenance of a harmonious maritime order."
"In building and maintaining a harmonious maritime order, all countries should uphold the principles of the convention, exercise their rights accordingly, fulfill their obligations and responsibilities with good will and ensure equal and uniform application of the convention," he said.
Wang noted that China is a staunch defender and promoter of international maritime rule of law and peaceful settlement of maritime disputes.
"The Chinese government believes that the most effective way to peacefully settle maritime disputes is negotiation and consultations between the parties directly involved in the dispute on the basis of respect for historical facts and international law," he stressed.
The Chinese envoy on Monday sent a note to UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, presenting documents making clear Vietnam's provocation and China's stance regarding the Xisha Islands in the South China Sea.
Wang asked Ban to circulate the Chinese dossier among all UN member states as UN General Assembly documents.
"China sent the note to tell the international community the truth and set straight their understanding on the issue," Wang said.
ChinaDailyUSA

'Made in China' starting to gain prestige

Bay Bridge spokesperson Victor Gauthier clarified last week that "no imported faulty materials", including bolts from manufacturer Shanghai Zhenghua Heavy Industry Co, should be a factor in the recent speculation about the stability of the $6.4 billion construction.
The San Francisco Chronicle reported on May 16 that out of the 274 rods that anchor the eastern end of the new bridge's suspension span, 205 have misaligned since they were installed and are now hazardously close to sharp-edged plates in the interior of the span. Engineers say a major earthquake could wrench the rods into the plates and damage them.
In response to the safety concerns, Gauthier reiterated that the current issue is maintenance of the rods' alignment and is not due to any imported faulty materials. "The rods themselves are from the US and the steel plates are from Shanghai, China," he said. "We inspect these over and over again, we put these through a tremendous amount of tests and quality assurance and quality control before fabrication starts."
Hopefully, Gauthier's statement will ease the worries of people who tend to disparage made-in-China commodities. Usually, they have a deep-rooted mentality that the "Made in China" label is tainted with a huge number of shoddy and dangerous products, or that Chinese manufacturers deliberately and habitually widen profit margins through reductions in quality.
These worriers now have reason to think twice.
In its 2014 "Made In" report released on March 6, the largest brand consultancy in the Asia Pacific, FutureBrand, ranked China No 9 overall based on research into the reputations of countries of origin with consumers worldwide.
FutureBrand's survey listed three Asian countries in its top 10 list of countries of origin brands, with Japan being No 4, China No 9 and South Korea No 10.
FutureBrand president for the Asia Pacific region Sarah Reiter explained that country of origin has multiple layers of definitions, including where raw materials are sourced, where the product is designed, where manufacturing takes place, where final assembly is completed, and finally, where the company is incorporated.
"Country of origin serves as an important heuristic that provides consumers with a frame of reference to guide their brand choices," Reiter said. "Based on our research, where a product 'originates from' is more important to consumers than its price, availability or style."
Overall, China performed most strongly in the electronics (No 5), automotive (No 9), and fashion (No 10) sectors. This is good news for China businesses and brands, which are shrugging off negative stereotypes as being "cheap, low-skill, low-tech", said Reiter.
Like Taiwan and Japan in previous decades, the Chinese mainland is now shifting towards being associated with 'modern, sophisticated, high-tech', she added.
Some of the companies at the forefront of changing China's perceived stereotype are technology companies such as Alibaba, Xiaomi and Lenovo, carmaker Geely and meat producer Shuanghui (now WH Holdings), according to the FutureBrand report.
These companies have mostly come to global prominence through major strategic acquisitions of foreign firms, such as Lenovo's acquisition of IBM's ThinkPad and Geely's marriage with Volvo, through which they upgraded their brand's image.
On May 5, the committee of Edison Awards, one of the US' leading innovation recognitions, honored Yang Yuanqing, chairman and CEO of Beijing-based Lenovo, with this year's Edison Achievement Award, along with Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla Motors and CEO/CTO of Space X.
Multinational high-tech giant Lenovo, with a US branch in Morrisville, North Carolina, is the biggest PC maker worldwide, with products including tablets, smartphones, workstations, servers, electronic storage devices, IT management software and smart televisions.
Yang is the first person from Asia to receive the Edison Award and was recognized as a corporate leader of inspiration and innovative spirit. Dr Paul Jacobs, executive chairman of Qualcomm and a past Edison Award recipient, called Lenovo an incredible startup - No 1 PC maker worldwide, No 4 smartphone maker worldwide, with $5 billon acquisitions executed so far this year.
Polishing the tarnished label of "Made in China" may take time, but worldwide consumers' perceptions of the label are indisputably changing. Just look at Xiaomi, the affordable and feature-rich smartphone, a homegrown business representing a new generation of Chinese brands that is ranked No 3 on Fast Company's 2014 Most Innovative Companies list and also featured on Boston Consulting Group's list of innovative enterprises.
Source: ChinaDailyUSA

Hong Kong. China Voice: Understand correctly the "one country, two systems" policy

The Chinese central government on Tuesday published its first white paper on the work of Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR), detailing the "one country, two systems" practice in the region.
Put forward by late Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping in the early 1980s, the "one country, two systems" policy is a basic state policy the Chinese government has adopted to realize the peaceful reunification of the country.
According to Deng, it means there is only one China and under this premise the mainland adheres to a socialist system while Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan may retain their capitalist systems over a long time to come.
The policy was first applied to solve the question of Hong Kong.
It ensured Hong Kong's smooth return to the motherland on July 1, 1997, and at the same time, the HKSAR was established and the Basic Law came into effect.
Thanks to the policy, the HKSAR exercises a high degree of autonomy in accordance with the law, making Hong Kong continue to prosper, its society remain stable, with development witnessed in all areas.
Before its return, the United Kingdom designated governors to enforce colonial rule over Hong Kong for more than 150 years.
Since 1997, the HKSAR government and its legislature have been composed of local residents.
The election of the HKSAR chief executive has become increasingly democratic. The election of the Legislative Council is becoming more and more direct. And the timetable has been set for universal suffrage.
This fully proves that "one country, two systems" is not only the best solution to the Hong Kong question left over from history but also the best institutional arrangement for its long-term prosperity and stability.
Continuing to adhere to the policy of "one country, two systems" is the common wish of all Chinese people, including Hong Kong compatriots, and is in the fundamental interests of the country and people, the general and long-term interests of Hong Kong as well as the interests of foreign investors.
However, further development of the practice of "one country, two systems" and Hong Kong's social security, economic development, democratic progress have been disturbed as some people in the region are confused or lopsided in their understanding of the policy and the Basic Law.
Endeavors are thus needed to enable people to get a comprehensive and accurate understanding of the meaning of the "one country, two systems" policy to ensure it is carried out further on the right track.
The key to achieving the aim is to realize that "one country, two systems" is a holistic concept.
The "one country" is the premise and basis of the "two systems", and the "two systems" is subordinate to and derived from "one country". Only by respecting and learning from each other can the "two systems" in the "one country" coexist harmoniously and achieve common development.
In the face of profound adjustments and changes in the economic environment both within and outside the region, Hong Kong needs to continuously enhance its competitiveness.
Various social sectors need to pool their efforts to solve deep-seated problems in Hong Kong that have built up over a long period of time and are becoming more conspicuous at present.
Deepening exchanges and cooperation between Hong Kong and the mainland call for better communication and coordination, and people's concerns should be addressed properly.
Meanwhile, it is necessary to stay alert to the attempt of outside forces to use Hong Kong to interfere in China's domestic affairs, and curb the attempt made by an extremely small number of people who act in collusion with outside forces to interfere with the implementation of the "one country, two systems" policy.
As a groundbreaking initiative, "one country, two systems" is a new domain in which the country constantly explores new possibilities to enrich it.
A comprehensive and correct understanding and implementation of the policy and concerted efforts by people from all sectors will be useful for safeguarding China's sovereignty, security and interests and for maintaining long-term prosperity and stability in Hong Kong.

Airlines Pursue Chinese Leisure Travelers With New U.S.-China Flights

        The WSJ reports,"airlines in the U.S. and China are adding a flurry of new connections between the two countries, emboldened by signs of economic recovery in the U.S. and rising travel demand in China, but persistently high fuel prices and intensifying competition might undercut their profitability.
American Airlines Group Inc.,  the largest U.S. airline by traffic, will launch new routes this week to Shanghai and Hong Kong and from its hub at Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport. Delta Air Lines Inc., plans to launch a nonstop flight between Hong Kong and Seattle next week. Meanwhile, United Continental Holdings Inc.  Monday added a route from San Francisco to the central Chinese city of Chengdu.
In China, flag carrier Air China Ltd.  on Tuesday launched nonstop flights between Beijing and Washington, D.C. A smaller competitor, Haikou-based Hainan Airlines Co. , which flies to Seattle and Chicago, plans to launch a service between Beijing and Boston this month, followed by a route from Beijing to New Jersey's Newark Liberty International Airport later this year.
The moves reflect the consistent growth in the number of Chinese leisure travelers venturing abroad, despite China's economic slowdown. Gross-domestic-product growth in the world's second-largest economy slowed to 7.4% in the first quarter, its lowest level in 18 months.
American Airlines Vice President Erwan Perhirin said that forward-booking demand for the carrier's two new Dallas routes for the summer peak travel season is "very solid," with load factor—or the proportion of seats filled on each flight—staying above 80%.
The Hong Kong service is American Airlines' third new Asian route in the past 13 months, signaling the carrier's growing optimism toward air-travel demand there.
"We're investing heavily in the region," Mr. Perhirin said. He added that the airline will continue to seek growth opportunities, though he didn't elaborate.
However, analysts warned that a string of service launches could lead to overcapacity in the U.S. and China aviation markets, hurting airlines' profitability. "The growth in the long-haul routes industry has come through chasing volume at the expense of yields, with airlines trying to gain market shares by offering discount tickets to travelers," said Eric Lin, an aviation analyst at UBS Securities.
Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd.  in late May warned investors that its January-April revenue was weaker than it had expected because of high fuel prices and poor yields—a measurement of an airline's profitability—partly because of promotional fares in March for new routes including Hong Kong-Newark and Hong Kong-Doha.
The airline, based in Hong Kong, also plans to boost frequencies to Los Angeles and Chicago in the coming months.
Mr. Lin expects yields to remain under pressure, as capacity between China and the U.S. has risen 20% so far this year.
Instead of traditional gateways such as New York or Los Angeles, some of the new routes planned by U.S. and Chinese airlines would connect second-tier cities in both countries, with a primary focus on leisure travel, suggesting weaker ticket-pricing power amid intensifying competition, he added".

China's Sinopec Doubles Oil Output At Iranian Project-Sources

Sinopec, has doubled production at its Iranian oil project, according to people familiar with the matter, a rare success as the country struggles to revive its flagging oil output.
The push is part of a broader attempt by China and Iran to mend fences after the cancellation of a $2.5 billion oil-field deal with another Chinese state-owned giant, China National Petroleum Corp.
Production at the Sinopec-run Yadvaran project, near the Iraqi border, has increased to about 50,000 barrels a day from 25,000 barrels a day in early April, the people said. Sinopec didn't responded to repeated requests for comment.
Sinopec is also pushing to start a new phase to boost output to 135,000 barrels a day, people familiar with the matter said.
The increase will be welcomed by Iran where production has been heavily hit by international sanctions.
Iranian crude output was down 7% in April compared with its average level of 2013, according to the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries.
But more of this oil is going to China, where imports of Iranian oil were up 115% in April on a year-on-year basis, according to Chinese official statistics.
Source: The WSJ

WSJ: World Bank Cuts 2014 Global Growth Estimate to 2.8% From 3.2%

         The WSJ reports,"A harsh winter in the U.S. along with the Ukraine conflict have chilled the outlook for global economic growth this year, but highly developed economies will lead a rebound later in the year, the World Bank projected.
The bank trimmed its global growth forecast to 2.8% for the year, from its 3.2% forecast in January. Still, growth in the U.S. and Europe will accelerate this year as the effect from government spending cuts recedes, labor markets improve, and pent-up demand starts to flow through high-income economies, the bank said in its Global Economic Prospects report.
Growth in emerging markets will likely face headwinds due to a reluctance to enact policy changes in many countries, a rise in military conflicts, and the specter of higher interest rates in the future, the bank said.
"We're coming to a period where growth is going to be more difficult to achieve than in the past everywhere, including in emerging markets," said World Bank economist Andrew Burns, the report's lead author.
In China, policies that curb credit growth could slow the country's export-fueled economy and infrastructure expansion while boosting risks in real estate, many economists say. But a failure to shift gears in the economy could lead to unsustainable levels of debt down the road, many economists say.
In its report, the World Bank warned of a "hard landing" in China that could weigh down East Asian countries and hurt commodity exporters.
"Rebalancing the economy, while minimizing financial instability as credit growth slows and financial reforms are implemented is a formidable task," the bank said. It highlighted China's rocky real-estate market as one area of "growing concern," noting the combined factors of "falling house prices, record-levels of unsold units, and stagnant investment."
A hard-landing scenario in China, with investment growth falling 10%, would cut 3 percentage points off growth there but would have only a small impact on non-Asian countries, unless they are commodity suppliers to China, Mr. Burns said.
Beyond China, many developing countries are concerned a return to growth in developed economies could lead the U.S. Federal Reserve and other major central banks to raise interest rates, a move likely to divert capital from higher-risk investments in emerging markets.
"For economies that have large financing needs—either because they have a lot of debt or large current account deficits—they'll come under pressure," Mr. Burns said. "You know you can't stay with this kind of monetary support forever."
Financial concerns aren't the only worries for global growth. From Egypt to Thailand, military intervention is also taking a toll on economic prospects. This year Russia moved troops into Ukraine's Crimea region and annexed the territory, contributing to instability in other parts of Ukraine and pushing Ukraine's economy toward a 5% contraction this year, the World Bank said. Russia is expected to grow at just 0.5% this year due to elevated political tensions, the bank said".

Ukraine Offers Safe Passage for Civilians to Escape Fighting in East

        The WSJ reports, "Ukraine's new president on Tuesday ordered the creation of a corridor to allow civilians to leave eastern regions where government forces are battling pro-Russia rebels. Moscow praised the move even as it brushed off renewed Western appeals to help stop the fighting.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov warned Ukraine against moving too fast to sign a sweeping trade deal with the European Union—one of the president's main campaign promises—saying such a deal would have consequences for economic ties with Moscow.
Russia is Ukraine's single-biggest trading partner and supplies much of its energy. Kiev has already been threatened with an imminent cutoff in natural-gas supplies because of a pricing dispute with Russia's energy giant OAO Gazprom".
"The Obama administration, meanwhile, said it had yet to see signs that Russia was following through on a weekend promise to block fighters and weapons from flowing across its border into Ukraine".
"There was no immediate word on when the corridor ordered by President Petro Poroshenko, who was inaugurated Saturday, would be set up or where it would lead. Scattered fighting was reported across eastern Ukraine on Tuesday; officials in the Donetsk region said two children were killed around the separatist stronghold of Slovyansk.
Mr. Poroshenko told top security officials to do everything necessary for civilians who want to leave the area. He also ordered them to take responsibility for transportation and health care for people caught up in the violence, and expand a network of mobile units to provide drinkingwater, food and medicine, his office said".
"Mr. Lavrov welcomed Kiev's proposed corridor after a meeting with European diplomats in St. Petersburg, but brushed off their calls for Moscow to appeal to the separatists to stop fighting. He demanded as before that Kiev stop its military operation first.
"You can't blame people for wanting to defend the cities and towns where their children live," Mr. Lavrov said when asked why the Kremlin wasn't publicly saying it didn't support the separatists. "The key for us is the end of military operations against the protesters.""
"Separatists who have declared independence in the Luhansk and Donetsk regions, which border Russia, dismissed the corridor.
"We don't believe the words of the president of that country," the spokesman for the self-proclaimed Luhansk People's Republic was quoted as saying by the Interfax news agency.
The Interfax news agency reported Saturday that Mr. Putin, who has pledged to work with Ukraine's new president, had ordered stepped up controls on the border with Ukraine to prevent weapons and reinforcements from crossing for the rebels.
German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier and Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski sparred with Mr. Lavrov over what Russia should do to stop that flow, according to people familiar with the meeting. The EU diplomats also questioned Kremlin claims that Ukraine would legally be forced to give up trade benefits with Russia if it signed a deal with the EU.
The meeting in St. Petersburg was the highest-level EU visit to Russia since the Ukraine crisis erupted early this year.
Mr. Poroshenko has vowed to press ahead with the military campaign but also presented what he called a peace plan, promising the regions more self-governance and vowing to respect the rights of Russian speakers.
Ukraine and Russia were due to meet Wednesday in Brussels in a fresh effort to resolve a standoff over Kiev's natural-gas bills. Gazprom has threatened to cut off supplies to Ukraine this week unless it gets what it says it is owed—a step that could have ripple effects around central and eastern Europe.
Also in Brussels, the European Commission said it would disburse €500 million ($677 million) in loans to Ukraine on June 17 to help the country pay its bills.The EU has pledged to make up to €1.6 billion available to Ukraine this year, and EU officials have acknowledged that some of the money may be used to help settle Kiev's gas bills".
Violence and fighting have continued in the eastern provinces of Ukraine,but the true casualties
have been disputed by both sides.

Militants Overrun Iraq's Second-Largest City As Government Forces Flee

         The WSJ reports,"Al Qaeda-inspired militants seized control of Iraq's second-largest city on Tuesday in a brazen military operation that underscored the weakness of the Baghdad government across vast swaths of the country.
Hours after government forces fled Mosul in disarray following four days of fighting, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki declared a nationwide "state of maximum preparedness" but didn't indicate whether government forces were mobilizing to retake the Iraqi city, 220 miles north of the capital Baghdad.
The capture of Mosul by rebels linked to the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham, or ISIS, is the latest evidence of the weakness and disorganization that have beset Iraq's security forces since the U.S. forces withdrew from the country in December 2011.
It also underlines the group's determination to establish an Islamic emirate encompassing the Iraqi-Syrian frontier, weaken the already fragile Iraqi state and expand the theater of the three-year-old civil war in neighboring Syria".
"Residents of Mosul said they were shocked at the ease of the rebel takeover of government buildings, television stations and military installations where U.S.-supplied fighter airplanes, helicopters and other heavy weaponry are based".
"Jessica Lewis, a former U.S. Army intelligence officer, said ISIS fighters won a notable victory in Mosul.
"ISIS is designing its campaign around the state that it believes it has already created," said Ms. Lewis, currently research director for the Institute for the Study of War in Washington, D.C.
"I think that means that Iraq is going to start to look more like Syria. It's a gauge of the severity of the conflict and the trajectory that it's on. That's a very bad sign.""
"The U.S.-trained and equipped Iraqi security forces, which have floundered since the U.S. pullout, haven't succeeded in thwarting ISIS's emergence as a formidable paramilitary force. Its fighters regularly launch daytime attacks against government forces and have held the city of Fallujah, 36 miles east of the capital, since early January.
Mosul, the capital of Nineveh province, has been a longtime staging ground for al Qaeda-linked forces. Residents of the province have complained recently about stepped-up ISIS activities, including cash-for-protection demands to local businessmen and political officials—a major source of funding for the group's operations".
The threat of an attack rose sharply last Thursday, when fighters identified as ISIS commandos seized and occupied the nearby city of Samarra for 12 hours before withdrawing. Authorities in Mosul sounded the alarm, ordering government employees to go home and imposing a dusk-to-dawn curfew.
"Despite the security precautions, ISIS fighters raided the western half of Mosul early Friday, forcing military personnel and federal police forces to retreat over bridges to the eastern bank of the Tigris River, which divides the city.
For three days, residents in the eastern half of the city huddled in their houses and parceled out their ever-dwindling supply of food and other staples, as authorities tried to secure the city.
Mosul governor Atheel Nujaifi, appearing Monday evening on national television, made a desperate call for city residents to form ad hoc committees to defend themselves. But he fled on Monday night.
In the early-morning darkness of Tuesday, local resistance dissolved, as insurgents poured across the bridges separating east from west. According to witnesses, government soldiers fled on foot, leaving the streets littered with abandoned army vehicles, weapons and uniforms.
The vanquished soldiers knocked on doors and begged for civilian clothes, so they could escape without being identified, said Ahmed Khaza'al, a cosmetic dealer.
The victory by ISIS and its allies means they control sizable regions in at least three of Iraq's 18 provinces. Upon news of Mosul's fall, fears of more fighting rippled across the country.
Authorities in Kirkuk, a city near Mosul, have requested aid from Kurdish fighters known as Peshmerga.
The request for help from the Kurdistan Regional Government, a semiautonomous northern province, is likely to compound the troubles facing Mr. Maliki's government. It is already in a heated dispute with the KRG's government in Erbil, and stepped-up Peshmerga operations will only complicate it.
Mosul's capture also comes at an inopportune time for Mr. Maliki. His State of Law Coalition won a plurality of seats in late April parliamentary elections on promises that he would secure the country and subdue al Qaeda-linked fighters. But he still needs the support of other parliamentarians to secure a third, four-year term as premier".

Google to buy satellite company Skybox Imaging for $500 mln

Google Inc said on Tuesday it is acquiring satellite company Skybox Imaging for $500 million in cash, the Internet company's second high-profile acquisition of an aerospace company this year.

Google said that Skybox's satellites will provide images for Google's online mapping service. Google, the world's No.1 Internet search engine, said that Skybox's technology could also eventually be used to provide Internet access and help with disaster relief.

The acquisition of the five-year old company comes as Google and rival Facebook Inc are racing to snap up satellite and drone companies in an expensive effort to expand the reach of their businesses.

In April Google acquired Titan Aerospace, a New Mexico-based maker of solar-powered drones, for an undisclosed sum. Google has also launched a small network of balloons designed to deliver Internet access over the Southern Hemisphere.

Facebook, the world's No.1 Internet social network, announced in March that it had created a special "Connectivity lab" project tasked with developing satellites, drones and other technology that could be used to beam Internet connectivity to people in underdeveloped parts of the world.

Skybox has built satellites packed with sensors and camera electronics that take high-resolution images and video of the earth but which it says are smaller and lighter than traditional satellites. The company, which like Google is based in Mountain View, Calif, has launched one satellite and had planned to launch a constellation of 24 satellites, according to the company's website.

"The time is right to join a company who can challenge us to think even bigger and bolder, and who can support us in accelerating our ambitious vision," Skybox said on in its Website on Tuesday in a message announcing the deal with Google.

Google said the deal's closing is subject to regulatory approvals in the United States.

Shares of Google were down less than 0.5 percent at $568.07 in midday trading on Tuesday.


Source: Reuters

La Banque de France prévoit toujours une croissance de 0,2% au T2

 La Banque de France a confirmé mardi tabler sur une croissance de 0,2% de l'économie française au deuxième trimestre 2014, dans sa deuxième estimation fondée sur son enquête mensuelle de conjoncture de mai.

L'Insee attend de son côté une progression de 0,3% du PIB.

L'enquête de la Banque de France fait apparaître une baisse d'un point de l'indicateur du climat des affaires dans l'industrie, à 97, et une baisse d'un point de celui des services à 93.

Le niveau des indicateurs d'avril a été confirmé.

Selon la Banque de France, la production industrielle est stable, le recul des matériels de transport, des équipements et de la métallurgie étant compensé par une hausse de la pharmacie et de la chimie.

Les livraisons progressent légèrement, le volume des commandes est inchangé et les stocks sont jugés normaux.

Les effectifs sont en léger recul, les prix des produits finis sont stables et les trésoreries continuent de s'améliorer.

Les chefs d'entreprise prévoient une progression de la production en juin.

Le taux d'utilisation des capacités de production a diminué, à 75,9% contre 76,4% en avril.

Dans les services, l'activité est en léger repli, sous l'effet notamment de la baisse de l'hébergement-restauration, des transports et du travail temporaire.

Les prix continuent de s'éroder, les effectifs sont stables et les trésoreries restent assez larges.

Selon les chefs d'entreprise, l'activité devrait rebondir en juin.

Popular Posts