Tag: InternationalNews

  • OPEC meeting: Oil producers gather to weigh output cap

    {Iran a key sticking point as world’s big oil producers meet in attempt to stabilise prices after months of uncertainty.}

    The world’s biggest oil producers are meeting to hammer out a possible agreement to freeze output and reassure markets that a recent recovery in prices can be sustained.

    Sunday’s talks in Qatar will see the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) – and other major producers – try to agree that average daily crude oil production in the coming months will not exceed levels recorded in January.

    According to a draft copy of the agreement, seen by the Reuters news agency, the cap would last until October 1 this year, and producers would then meet again in Russia to review their progress in engineering what the document called “a progressive recovery of the oil market”.

    READ MORE: Will national interests be sacrificed for a return to stability?

    Final agreement has not been reached on the draft but, speaking to reporters at the meeting on Sunday, Anas Khalid al-Saleh, Kuwait’s acting oil minister, said he was confident a cap would be agreed.

    There have, however, been conflicting statements in the run-up to the summit after months of disagreements about the impact any freeze would have on individual OPEC members.

    The position of Iran, now ramping up production after Western sanctions were lifted as part of the nuclear deal between it and world powers, has proven a sticking point.

    Countries such as Ecuador and Venezuela have been hardest hit by plummeting prices. Venezuela has seen its worst recession since the 1940s, and its economy is expected to shrink by 10 percent this year.

    Larger OPEC producers, though, have insisted on keeping production levels high, because they do not want to lose customers to non-OPEC producers like the United States.

    Iran said there was no point in it sending a full delegation as it would not accept proposals to cap its production until it recovered a similar market share to that which it held before the sanctions were imposed.

    It would instead send Hossein Kazempour Ardebilli, an OPEC governor, according to a report by the oil ministry news agency, Shana.

    “It is impossible for the meeting to fail,” Kamel al-Harami, a Kuwaiti oil analyst, told Al Jazeera on the sidelines of the summit, adding though that were differences of opinion, particularly between Saudi Arabia and Iran.

    Tehran, however, did not yet have the power to cause significant fluctuations in prices, he said.

    Ministers were tight-lipped after preliminary talks in the morning, refusing to talk to reporters as they headed to a meeting with the Emir of Qatar, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani, whose government currently holds the OPEC presidency.

    Uncertainty over the outcome of the summit has already added to market volatility, with some analysts questioning whether a cap would have much impact on prices in the short-term.

    “A decision to freeze production may not trigger an immediate upsurge in oil prices, [but] risks are on the upside as overcapacity would gradually start to normalise over the coming months,” Apostolos Bantis, a credit analyst at Commerzbank, told Al Jazeera.

    Producers would continue to develop the process of consultation on the best ways to bolster the market and the deal would be open for other states to join, the draft document said.
    Despite tanking prices and a glut in global supplies, OPEC members had previously increased production levels as disagreement grew about which strategy to take.

    The cartel is made up of Algeria, Angola, Ecuador, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Libya, Nigeria, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Venezuela.

    Delegates from both OPEC and non-OPEC countries attended the crunch talks in Qatar
  • Powerful Ecuador earthquake leaves 77 people dead

    {“Considerable damage” near epicentre and in Guayaquil, the second most populous city, caused by 7.8-magnitude tremor.}

    A powerful, 7.8-magnitude earthquake has shaken Ecuador’s northwest Pacific coast, killing at least 77 people and spreading panic.

    The US Geological Survey said the shallow quake, the strongest in decades to hit Ecuador, was centred 27km south-southeast of Muisne, a sparsely populated area of fishing ports that’s popular with tourists.

    The quake caused “considerable damage” near the epicentre as well as in Guayaquil, the country’s most populous city.

    Residents streamed into the streets of the capital Quito, hundreds of miles away, and other towns across the nation.

    “Based on preliminary information, there are 16 people dead in the city of Portoviejo, 10 in Manta and two in the province of Guayas,” Vice President Jorge Glassaid in a televised address.

    The country’s Geophysics Institute in a bulletin said the quake struck at around 8pm (01:00 GMT) at a depth of 20km.

    Among those killed was the driver of a car crushed by an overpass that buckled.

    On social media residents shared photos of homes collapsed, the roof of a shopping centre coming apart and supermarket shelves shaking violently.

    In Manta, the airport was closed after the control tower collapsed, injuring an air force official. Hydroelectric dams and oil pipelines in the OPEC-member nation were shut down as a precautionary measure.

    The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said hazardous tsunami waves are possible for some coasts but the government has not issued a tsunami alert.

    Towns near the epicentre were being evacuated as a precautionary measure.

    An emergency had been declared in six provinces.

    Ecuador’s quake comes on the heels of two deadly earthquakes across the Pacific, in the southernmost of Japan’s four main islands.

    A magnitude-6.5 earthquake struck Thursday near Kumamoto, followed by a magnitude-7.3 earthquake just 28 hours later.

    The quakes have killed 41 people and injured about 1,500, flattened houses and triggered major landslides.

    The quake caused "considerable damage" in Guayaquil, the country's most populous city
  • Troops called in after fresh Japan earthquake

    {Deployment ordered after second tremor jolts southwestern island of Kyushu, leaving 19 dead and over 1,500 injured.}

    Troops have been called in after a second, more powerful earthquake hit southern Japan, killing at least 19 people, toppling large buildings and causing a massive landslide just over a day after an earlier tremor left nine dead.

    Friday’s earthquake was the second major tremor to rock Japan’s south in 24 hours after a 6.2 quake hit near Mashiki town on Thursday, killing nine people and injuring about 1,000 others.

    Over 1,500 people have been injured, 80 of them seriously, by the two quakes on the southwestern Kyushu island, Yoshihide Suga, Japanese government spokesperson, said.

    Suga says the military will be boosted to 20,000 for rescue efforts. Police and firefighters are also being ordered to the southwestern region.

    Japanese media are also reporting the eruption of Mount Aso, the largest active volcano in Japan located on the island. That is the first eruption in a month.

    moke is rising about 100 metres but no damage has been reported.

    “We have just been woken up by a very large earthquake in the main town of Kumamoto. Things were thrown about in the hotel,” said Al Jazeera’s Rob McBride, reporting from Mashiki near the epicentre.

    “We can’t see much damage, but we feel very large aftershocks.”

    The powerful shaking set off a huge landslide that swept away homes and cut off a highway in one area, and unlike the earlier quake which mostly affected old houses, larger buildings were damaged and some toppled across Kumamoto prefecture.

    According to the Japan Meteorological Agency, Mashiki sits near two faults on Kyushu.

    “There is a great possibly that the damage will spread widely so we must give it our all to gather the information on the damage situation and make the rescues and relief,” Shinzo Abe, Japan’s prime minister, said on Saturday.

    After Thursday’s initial tremors, more than 3,000 troops, police, and firefighters were dispatched to the area from around Japan.

    About 44,000 people stayed in shelters.

    Japan is frequently hit by major quakes. In March 2011, a 9.0-magnitude earthquake led to a devastating tsunami that killed 18,000 people along Japan’s northeast coast.

    The wave struck the Fukushima nuclear plant, causing a major radiation leakage.

    More than 100,000 displaced people are still unable to return to their homes near the nuclear plant because of the contamination.

    The city office in Uto was badly damaged and said to be in danger of collapse, while aerial footage shot by broadcaster TBS showed the toppled centuries-old Aso shrine, its main gates flattened and wooden columns reduced to rubble.

    A large fire that broke out at an apartment complex in Yatsushiro killed one person, city official confirmed.

    {{Airport closed}}

    In nearby Kumamoto city, authorities evacuated patients from a hospital over fears it could collapse and images showed the tilted building.

    The region’s transport network suffered considerable damage with one tunnel caved in, a highway bridge damaged, roads blocked by landslips and train services halted, media reported.

    Kumamoto airport was forced to close after a ceiling collapsed from the shaking, Jiji Press reported, with no immediate plans to resume flights, and communications in the area were spotty.

    Gen Aoki, a Japan Meteorological Agency official, said Saturday’s quake was the strongest to hit in recent days, and that Thursday’s was merely a “precursor”.

    The US Geological Survey measured the quake at magnitude 7.0, or 6.3 times bigger than the 6.2 tremor recorded on Thursday.

    Japan Meteorological Agency, which put the magnitude at a revised 7.3, initially issued a tsunami warning for the western coast of Kyushu but later lifted it.

    There have been more than 230 aftershocks of at least level 1 on the Japanese scale since Thursday’s shock, said Japan’s meteorological agency.

    Japan is on the seismically active Ring of Fire around the Pacific Ocean and has building codes aimed at helping structures withstand earthquakes.

  • Refugee crisis: Pope Francis arrives in Lesbos

    {Pope arrives for five-hour visit of the Greek island where he will meet refugees.}

    Pope Francis has arrived in Lesbos, the Greek island on the frontline of Europe’s refugee crisis for people striving to reach Western Europe on boats from Turkey.

    Francis, who took off from Rome’s Fiumicino airport at 05:20GMT, arrived on the island at around 7:00GMT for a visit expected to last five hours.

    Hundreds of thousands of refugees and migrants have arrived in Lesbos in recent months on flimsy boats. Hundreds others have died on the way.

    In a move bound to turn the spotlight on Europe’s controversial deal with Turkey to end the unprecedented refugee crisis, the pontiff will visit a processing centre.

    The EU-Turkey deal as well as the processing centre have been slammed by rights groups, who claim refugees in Lesbos have been treated in a way that breaches basic human rights.

    His stay will also include lunch with a handful of refugees in one of the adapted containers used to accommodate them, hearing their stories of fleeing war, conflict and poverty and their hopes for a better life in Europe.

    Hours before Francis arrived, the European border patrol agency Frontex intercepted a dinghy carrying 41 Syrians and Iraqis off the coast of Lesbos.

    The refugees were detained and brought to shore in the main port of Mytilene.

    Also ahead of the visit, municipal crews scrubbed the walls of the capital and port after graffiti reading “Papa Don’t Preach” was sprayed in black at several points on the seafront in Mytilene.

    The Vatican insists Saturday’s visit is purely humanitarian and religious in nature, not political or a “direct” criticism of the EU plan.

    The EU-Turkey deal has faced heavy criticism in the wake of the refugee crisis
  • Brazil MPs cleared to sack President Rousseff

    {If the Senate finds her guilty with another two-thirds vote, she would be forced from office.}

    Brazil’s Supreme Court has rejected a last-ditch attempt by President Dilma Rousseff to halt the impeachment process, clearing the way for a key vote in Congress.

    Judges refused a request for an injunction against proceedings that the government lawyer called “Kafkaesque” and said amounted to denying Rousseff the opportunity to defend herself against claims of illegally fudging government budget numbers to boost her re-election chances in 2014.

    The 7-3 ruling in a Supreme Court session that began late Thursday and went well past midnight in the capital Brasilia paved the way for Sunday’s vote by the lower house of Congress, which is due to decide whether to send Rousseff to an impeachment trial.

    In an atmosphere of maximum drama and tension in Latin America’s largest country and economy, debate in the lower house began later Friday leading up to the vote on Sunday.

    Latest counts of voting intentions in the lower house by major Brazilian newspapers show the pro-impeachment camp either at, or on the verge of, the necessary two-thirds majority.
    If the vote passes, the Senate will have authority to open a trial against Rousseff. If the Senate finds her guilty with another two-thirds vote, she would be forced from office.

    The 68-year-old leader’s grip on power is fast slipping, leaving Brazil in crisis at a time of recession and less than four months before hosting the Olympics.

    Rousseff has desperately been trying to assemble enough support in the lower house.

    GO DOWN FIGHTING

    On Thursday, she launched a new line of defense, sending her government’s top lawyer, Jose Eduardo Cardozo, to file for the injunction. The government alleged procedural failings in the impeachment case, saying it had violated her right to a defense.

    “Evidence unrelated to the case has been included in the process, such as matters related to President Dilma (Rousseff)’s previous term,” Cardozo said in the filing.

    He called the impeachment drive “a truly Kafkaesque process in which the accused is unable to know precisely what she is accused of or why.”

    Rousseff, who has vowed to go down fighting, also tried another tack by repeating an offer to forge a political compromise with opponents if deputies throw out impeachment on Sunday.

    “The government will fight until the last minute of the second half… to foil this coup attempt,” she said in an interview published by various media outlets Thursday.

    Rousseff on Thursday held a meeting with ministers and some of the lawmakers still loyal to her, a presidential source said, shortly before Cardozo announced his appeal.

    Several of the parties in Rousseff’s coalition have jumped ship, starting with the PMDB of her vice president, Michel Temer. Scores of lawmakers have since turned against Rousseff, saying they will vote for impeachment.

    Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff gestures during the Education in Defense of Democracy event, at the Planalto Palace in Brasilia, on April 12, 2016.
  • 6,000 refugees land in Italy weekly

    {Most travelled on rubber dinghies, with roughly 130 people packed on each.
    }
    Nearly 6,000 migrants who crossed the Mediterranean have reached Italy since Tuesday, the International Organisation for Migration said, warning that the surge in arrivals would continue.

    “A total of 6,021 migrants and refugees have made the dangerous sea crossing since Tuesday,” IOM spokesman Joel Millman said, adding that all landed in Italy, excluding 174 people who reached Greece.

    Millman said there was no evidence to suggest the rise in Italy arrivals was linked to an EU-Turkey deal aimed at stemming the influx of people to Europe via the Greek islands, or the closure of the Balkans migrant route.

    Migrants who spoke to IOM staff in Italy said they had crossed from Libya.

    {{RUBBER DINGHIES}}

    Most travelled on rubber dinghies, with roughly 130 people packed on each.

    “Many were from sub-Saharan Africa, and we have noticed an increase in numbers from the Horn of Africa, particularly Eritreans,” Federico Soda, head of the IOM’s Rome office, said.

    “There have been very few Syrians arriving from Libya in recent months.”

    Millman said with weather warming at the start of the main crossing season, Italy would likely see persistently high arrivals in the weeks ahead.

    So far this year, more than 23,000 migrants have landed in Italy, compared to nearly 153,500 who have ended up in Greece, the organisation said.

    A rescue operation of migrants and refugees at sea, off the coast of Sicily, on April 11, 2016. Nearly 6,000 migrants who crossed the Mediterranean have reached Italy since Tuesday.
  • Thousands flee as fighting rages near Syria’s Aleppo city

    {The watchdog accused Turkish border guards of shooting at some of those displaced.}

    Fierce fighting raged around Syria’s Aleppo province as a surge in violence made tens of thousands more flee their homes, overshadowing the latest round of peace talks in Geneva.

    The clashes on several fronts have put a strain on a fragile ceasefire in place since February 27, and left more than 200 fighters on all sides of the civil war dead in recent days.

    The delegation representing President Bashar al-Assad’s regime arrived in Geneva where UN-brokered indirect talks between representatives of the government and opposition were due to be held.

    However, the fighting around Syria’s second city, Aleppo, cast a shadow over efforts to end the five-year war, which has left more than 270,000 people dead and displaced millions.

    Troops and militiamen loyal to Assad’s regime have fought Islamic State group fighters to the southeast of Aleppo city this week, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

    They also battled jihadists from the Al-Qaeda-affiliated Al-Nusra Front and allied rebels in the flashpoint area of Handarat, north of Aleppo city.

    Meanwhile IS fought rebels near the Turkish border, the Britain-based group added.

    On one Aleppo front alone — pitting rebels against IS — fighting has forced about 30,000 civilians to flee, according to Human Rights Watch.
    The watchdog accused Turkish border guards of shooting at some of those displaced as they approached the frontier.

    LIVE AMMUNITION

    “As civilians flee IS fighters, Turkey is responding with live ammunition instead of compassion,” said HRW researcher Gerry Simpson.
    “The whole world is talking about fighting IS, and yet those most at risk of becoming victims of horrific abuses are trapped on the wrong side of a concrete wall.”

    According to the observatory, fighting between rebels and jihadists near the Turkish border was still going on.

    At least 210 fighters on all sides have been killed in the battles around Aleppo since Sunday.

    Among them were 82 army troops and pro-regime militiamen, 94 members of Al-Nusra Front and allied rebel groups, and 34 IS jihadists, the observatory said.

    The heaviest losses came near Al-Eis in the south of Aleppo province where 50 regime troops and loyalist militia fighters were killed along with 61 Al-Nusra and allied fighters.

    The latest violence came a day after a senior official in Washington said the United States was concerned about reports of a Russian-backed Syrian government offensive near Aleppo.

    European Union foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini also expressed concern about the Aleppo offensive.

    Syrian opposition body (HCN) delegation (from left) George Sabra, delegation head Asaad al-Zoabi and Chief negotiator, Army of Islam rebel group's Mohammed Alloush attend a meeting on Syria peace talks with UN Syria envoy at the United Nations Office on April 15, 2016 in Geneva.
  • Japan earthquake forces evacuation of 40,000

    {At least nine killed and nearly 1,000 injured after 6.2-magnitude earthquake strikes 11km east of Kumamoto city.}

    At least nine people have been killed and nearly 1,000 injured after a 6.2-magnitude earthquake knocked down houses and destroyed roads in the southwestern Japan.

    The tremor struck 11km east of Kumamoto on Thursday, according to the US Geological Survey (USGS), and strong aftershocks continued to shake the area around the city on Friday.

    More than 40,000 people were evacuated to schools and community centres, some spending the night outside after the first quake hit around 9:30pm local time.

    Roads cracked, houses crumbled and tiles fell from the roof of Kumamoto Castle in the centre of the city.

    Troops despatched

    More than 3,000 troops, police and firemen were dispatched to the area from around Japan, and Shinzo Abe, prime minister, said more would be sent if needed.

    One of the victims in Mashiki died after being pulled from the rubble, and the other was killed in a fire.

    Footage from public broadcaster NHK showed firefighters tackling a blaze in a building in Mashiki, a town of about 34,000 people near the epicentre of the quake.

    About 16,500 households in and around Mashiki were without electricity, according to Kyushu Electric Power Co Inc.

    There were no irregularities at three nuclear plants on the southern major island of Kyushu and nearby Shikoku, the Nuclear Regulation Authority said.

    The plant is 130km south of Kumamoto. The operator restarted the reactors last year, the first two units under updated regulations.

    Tsunami of 2011

    In March 2011, a 9.0-magnitude earthquake led to a devastating tsunami that killed 18,000 people along Japan’s northeast coast.

    The wave struck the Fukushima nuclear plant, causing a major radiation leakage.

    More than 100,000 displaced people are still unable to return to their homes near the nuclear plant because of the contamination.

    The damage and calls for help are concentrated in the town of Mashiki, about 1,300km southwest of Tokyo
  • North Korea missile launch reportedly fails

    {South Korean media says North Korea test-fired a missile to mark Kim Il-sung’s birthday, but launch unsuccessful.}

    North Korea attempted to launch an intermediate range ballistic missile off the country’s east coast on Friday but the launch failed, South Korea’s Yonhap news agency reported.

    The US military detected and tracked the missile launch at 5:33am Korea time, or 20:33GMT on Thursday, a defence department spokesman said in a statement. The missile did not pose a threat to North America, it added.

    “We call again on North Korea to refrain from actions and rhetoric that further raise tensions in the region and focus instead on taking concrete steps toward fulfilling its international commitments and obligations,” the official said.

    An official at the South Korean defence ministry said North Korea attempted a missile launch early Friday but it appeared to have failed, however. The official could not confirm the type of missile.

    Yonhap – citing multiple South Korean government sources – reported a mobile launcher was spotted carrying up to two Musudan missiles on Thursday following North Korea’s fourth nuclear test in January and a long-range rocket launch the next month, which led to fresh UN sanctions.

    Analysts speculated the North would fire the Musudan missile with a design range of more than 3,000km. It is not known to have been flight-tested previously by Pyongyang.

    Some analysts said North Korea may choose to test-fire the Musudan in the near future as it tries to build an intercontinental ballistic missile designed to put the mainland United States within range.

    US intelligence estimates say North Korea’s ability to reach the United States is low, but its capabilities will increase, making continued investment in missile defence essential.

    The United States, which has 28,000 troops stationed in South Korea, said it was aware of reports that North Korea was preparing to test intermediate-range missiles and was closely monitoring the Korean peninsula

    Admiral Bill Gortney, the officer responsible for defending American airspace, told a US Senate hearing on Wednesday that he agreed with a South Korean assessment that North Korea was capable of putting a nuclear warhead on a medium-range missile that would reach all of South Korea and most of Japan.

    The United States and South Korea began talks on the possible deployment of a new missile-defence system, the Terminal High Altitude Area defence (THAAD), after the latest North Korea nuclear and rocket tests.

    North Korea, which regularly threatens to destroy South Korea and the US, often fires missiles during periods of tension in the region or when it comes under pressure to curb its defiance and abandon its weapons programmes.

    In March, the North Korean government released a video depicting a nuclear attack on the US. The four-minute state media video – titled “Last Chance” – showed a digitally created scene of a missile being fired from a North Korean submarine and wiping out the US capital

    South Korean analysts have said North Korea may choose to display a show of force ahead of a major ruling party congress in May, where it is expected to declare itself a nuclear power, or around the April 15 anniversary of the birth of Kim’s grandfather, Kim Il-sung.

    North Korea reportedly launched a missile on the birthday of founder Kim Il-sung
  • Israeli military to charge soldier with manslaughter

    {After execution-style shooting of wounded Palestinian, military prosecutors to press manslaughter charge, not murder.}

    The Israeli military on Thursday said prosecutors have announced their intention to file a manslaughter charge against a soldier caught on video shooting a wounded Palestinian attacker in the head.

    The soldier appeared in a military court, where his detention was extended until Monday. The military said that prosecutors informed the court they plan on charging the soldier with manslaughter, but are still working out technical details before formally indicting him.

    The shooting took place last month in Hebron, a West Bank city that has been a focal point of a seven-month wave of Israeli-Palestinian violence.

    At the time, the military said two Palestinians stabbed and wounded an Israeli soldier before troops shot and killed the pair.

    But in a video later released by the Israeli human rights group B’Tselem, one of the attackers was shown still alive after the initial shooting.

    The video, taken by a Palestinian volunteer for the group, shows the wounded attacker lying on the ground, slowly moving his head before a soldier raises his rifle and fires. Blood is then seen streaming from the Palestinian’s head. An autopsy determined the bullet to the head was the cause of death.

    The incident has triggered uproar in Israel with the country’s defense minister, military officials and many Israelis calling it contrary to the army’s values. That has led to widespread support for the soldier, with many calling his actions appropriate for a country reeling from months of attacks.

    More than 200 Palestinians have been killed and at least 33 Israelis and foreign nationals have died since violence erupted in October.

    On Thursday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu claimed that “extremist elements” are attempting to rekindle violence ahead of the Jewish holiday of Passover.

    Speaking at a pre-Passover ceremony, Netanyahu said Israel had sent messages to Jordan, the Palestinian Authority, and “the entire Arab world” in attempt to calm tensions.

    He said Israel would increase security forces and use “additional defensive measures” to respond to possible riots.

    Israeli soldiers cover the body of the Palestinian man shot dead in Hebron on March 24