Tag: InternationalNews

  • South Korea Shows New Missiles Designed to hit North

    South Korea Shows New Missiles Designed to hit North

    {{South Korea showed off on Tuesday new missiles designed to target North Korea’s artillery and long-range missiles and vowed to boost deterrence against its unpredictable neighbor.}}

    The ballistic Hyeonmu-2, with a range of 300 km (190 miles), and the Hyeonmu-3, a cruise missile with a range of more than 1,000 km (620 miles) were put on public display for the first time in a rare South Korean military parade.

    Both of the indigenously developed missiles have been deployed. They were unveiled in February after the North conducted its third nuclear test in defiance of international warnings, two months after it successfully launched a long-range rocket and put an object into space.

    “We must build a strong anti-North deterrence until the day the North drops its nuclear arms and makes the right choice for its people and for peace on the Korean peninsula,” South Korean President Park Geun-hye said at the parade marking the founding of the South’s armed forces 65 years ago.

    Visiting U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel watched the parade from a podium at a military airfield south of the capital, Seoul.

    Hagel, on a four-day visit to the staunch U.S. ally, visited the heavily fortified Korean border on Monday and said there was no plan to cut the number of U.S. troops stationed in the South from 28,500.

    The North’s rocket launch in December was widely seen as a test of long-range missile technology. The North said it was putting up a satellite for peaceful purposes.

    The launch and the February nuclear test led to tougher U.N. sanctions aimed at stopping the North’s arms development and trade. The sanctions angered the North and it responded with threats of a nuclear strike on South Korea and the United States.

    North Korea, which is much poorer than the South, has invested heavily in weapons of mass destruction.

    The South has a modern conventional military superior to the North’s army, which relies on largely obsolete equipment, but is barred under agreements with the United States and by international conventions from developing nuclear arms or longer-range missiles.

    South Korea reached a deal last year with the United States to extend the range of its missiles to better counter the threat from the North, securing the right to develop ballistic missiles with a range of up to 800 km (500 miles).

    Unlike North Korea which often stages large-scale military parades, South Korea rarely puts on large, public displays of its military. Tuesday’s parade was the biggest in 10 years.

    North and South Korea remain technically at war under a truce that brought a halt to the 1950-53 Korean War.

    reuters

  • Airbus A400M Military Transport Plane Finally Delivered

    Airbus A400M Military Transport Plane Finally Delivered

    {{European aerospace giant Airbus on Monday delivered its first A400M military transport plane to French officials in the southern Spanish city of Seville on Monday, marking what the plane manufacturer hopes will be a string of strong sales worldwide.}}

    Four years late and 6.2 billion euros over budget, Airbus and parent company EADS, officially handed over the revolutionary aircraft to France, its first client, though the plane was actually ready earlier.

    “It is an extremely high performance aircraft and I am quite proud that France is number one for delivery,” French Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said at a handover ceremony also attended by Spain’s Prince Felipe.

    Last June, French President François Hollande made a big entrance at the annual Paris Air Show by arriving in an A400M with Le Drian.

    It took 10 years to bring the A400M to the skies in one of the European military industry’s most ambitious projects, backed by seven partners: NATO members Belgium, Britain, France, Germany, Luxembourg, Spain and Turkey.

    Designed at the request of European chiefs of staff after the first Gulf War of 1991, which exposed the need for such a plane, the A400M is a multi-task military air lifter.

    Equipped with four turboprops, it can transport up to 37 tonnes including armour or helicopters over a distance of 3,300 kilometres (2,050 miles) but also land on unprepared terrain such as sand.

    The A400M will be the sole plane on the market to challenge the US-made Lockheed Martin C-130 Hercules, which has a capacity of 20 tonnes and was designed more than 50 years ago.

    Its other rival, the C-17 Globemaster, which can lift 76 tonnes, will exit production from 2015, US manufacturer Boeing announced recently.

    Airbus Military aims to export 400 A400M planes in the next 30 years, beyond the 174 already ordered in Europe and Malaysia. Germany has ordered 53, France 50, Spain 27 and Britain 22. The manufacturer will assemble ten planes next year, and then about 30 a year.

    france24

  • Japan Arrests Chinese Sailor over Deadly Boat Collision

    Japan Arrests Chinese Sailor over Deadly Boat Collision

    {{Japan has arrested a Chinese sailor after a deadly collision between two cargo ships in Japanese waters, officials say.}}

    Xia Hong-bo, 35, was on duty when the Sierra Leone-registered ship Jia Hui crashed with the Eifuku Maru No 18 on Friday, Japanese coast guard say.

    Five crew members of the the Japanese-registered Eifuku Maru were killed and one is still missing.

    The collision was about 11km (seven miles) off an island south of Tokyo.

    The 498-tonne Eifuku Maru capsized after it collided with the 2,962-tonne Jia Hui. A 61-year-old engineer was still missing on Monday, reports say.

    Xia Hong-bo, who is being held on suspicion of negligence, was quoted as saying he was unable to avoid the collision despite efforts to do so, media says.

    The 13 crewmembers of the Jia Hui, bound for South Korea, were unhurt, Kyodo adds.

    The Chinese embassy in Japan said Mr Xia was arrested late on Sunday and the embassy said it has asked Japan to investigate the incident and provide a lawyer for Mr Xia,media reports.

    On Friday, Japan’s coast guard sent boats and helicopters to search for the missing crew. The bodies of the five crew members were recovered.

    At the time, a spokesman for the coast guard said they were unsure of what caused the collision.

    wirestory

  • Eurozone Inflation Falls to Lowest Rate in 3 Years

    Eurozone Inflation Falls to Lowest Rate in 3 Years

    {{Eurozone inflation is running at its lowest rate in more than three years.}}

    Consumer price inflation fell to an annual rate of 1.1% in September from 1.3% in August according to Europe’s statistics agency Eurostat.

    A fall in energy prices helped to ease inflation. Price rises in food, alcohol and tobacco moderated, also helping.

    Economists say slowing inflation gives the European Central Bank (ECB) more freedom to help the eurozone’s weak economic recovery.

    The ECB targets an annual inflation rate of below, but close to 2%.

    “The ECB has plenty of scope to loosen monetary policy further,” said James Howat, European economist, at Capital Economics in a research note.

    “At the very least, further action to boost liquidity in the banking sector looks increasingly likely.”

    Low rates
    The ECB could boost the banking sector by offering eurozone banks a one-off chance to borrow at low rates for relatively long periods of time.

    A similar operation at the end of 2011 offered banks cheap financing for three years and is credited with helping to keep the cost of borrowing low.

    Mr Howat says it may announce a similar policy in its October policy meeting, or perhaps later in the year.

    But economists say the ECB is unlikely to cut interest rates in October as economic data has shown signs of improvement.

    It may also repeat its forward guidance that interest rates will remain at the present level, or be lower, for an extended period of time.

    The ECB’s main interest rate stands at 0.5%.

  • Popes to be Declared Saints in April

    Popes to be Declared Saints in April

    {{Pope John Paul II and Pope John XXIII will be declared saints on 27 April 2014, Pope Francis has announced.}}

    The Pope said in July that he would canonise his two predecessors, after approving a second miracle attributed to John Paul.

    Polish John Paul, the first non-Italian pope for more than 400 years, led the Catholic Church from 1978-2005.

    Pope John was pontiff from 1958-1963, calling the Second Vatican Council that transformed the Church.

    The decision to canonise the two at the same time appears designed to unify Catholics, correspondents say.

    John Paul II is a favourite of conservative Catholics, while John XXIII is widely admired by the Church’s progressive wing.

    ‘The good pope’
    John Paul stood out for his media-friendly, globetrotting style. He was a fierce critic of communism, and is credited with helping inspire opposition to communist rule in eastern Europe.

    John Paul has been on a fast track to sainthood since his death, when crowds in St Peter’s Square chanted “santo subito” (“sainthood now”).

    During his own papacy he simplified the process by which people are made saints, and created more of them than all previous popes combined.

    John XXIII is remembered for introducing the vernacular to replace Latin in church masses and for creating warmer ties between the Catholic Church and the Jewish faith.

    He has a big following in Italy, where he is known as Il Papa Buono, the good pope.

    Two living popes are expected to be present at the canonisation ceremony: Francis, who will officiate, and Pope Benedict, who retired earlier this year.

    The double canonisation will be the first in the Church’s history.

    Pope Francis approved John XXIII’s canonisation despite the fact that no second miracle had been attributed to him – usually a requirement for sainthood.

    BBC

  • New trial for Boeing as Norwegian demands 787 repairs

    New trial for Boeing as Norwegian demands 787 repairs

    {{The brochure for Boeing Co’s aircraft repair service makes a simple assertion: “No one knows Boeing airplanes better than Boeing.”}}

    Now that claim is being put to a visible test as budget airline Norwegian Air Shuttle ASA grounded a brand new, $212 million 787 Dreamliner over the weekend. The airline demanded Boeing fix the state-of-the-art jet, saying it needs repairs after less than 30 days in service.

    Investment analysts say the glitch involving a hydraulic pump is minor and isolated, and it is unlikely to affect Boeing’s stock price, which is towering at record levels.

    But Norwegian Air’s vocal airing of its complaints is another black eye for the troubled Dreamliner. It follows a string of electrical and other safety problems that included battery meltdowns so severe they prompted regulators to ban the long-haul jetliner from flight for more than three months this year.

    On Sunday, Polish airline LOT 787 flying from Toronto to Warsaw was forced to land at Iceland’s Keflavik airport after problems with its air system.

    Norwegian Air’s formal request on Saturday for Boeing to take charge of fixing the plane throws a spotlight on an often overlooked facet of the 787’s performance: reliability. And it shows how quickly a plane that cannot fly can hit a carrier’s bottom line.

    Like other airlines with small long-haul fleets, Norwegian Air does not have a spare plane it can use if a jet breaks down. The carrier said it had to rent planes and cancel tickets when it could not use its 787s, and the company’s stock has fallen 6 percent since a peak earlier this month, hit by a string of 787 problems and concerns about its broader business.

    “Reliability is a big deal, especially for low-cost carriers such as Norwegian,” said Russell Solomon, an analyst at Moody’s Investors Service in New York.

    But since the problem appeared to be a “one-off” and part of the normal growing pains for a new plane, he added, it probably would not unsettle Boeing investors.

  • Moyes: Man Utd Must Move on From Worst League Start

    Moyes: Man Utd Must Move on From Worst League Start

    {{David Moyes insisted Manchester United should be judged on how they “move on” after their worst start for 24 years.}}

    Goals from Morgan Amalfitano and Saido Berahino for West Brom either side of a Wayne Rooney free-kick kept United on seven points, the same tally they had after six games of the 1989-90 season.

    They now travel to Shakhtar Donetsk on Wednesday in the Champions League.

    “You’re always going to have bad results in football, it is how you deal with them,” the Old Trafford boss said.

    “We will move on and look forward to the next one. There are lots of games here and you get ready for the next one.

    “I’m concerned after the game but only because we didn’t play well. We can put it right.”

    Moyes, whose side have won just two Premier League games since he replaced the retired Sir Alex Ferguson in the summer, bemoaned the champions’ below-par performance.

    “We did not defend well at all but we did not attack well,” the former Everton manager told reporters. “We had a lot of the ball in the first half but didn’t make the most of it.”

    On-loan Marseille midfielder Amalfitano opened the scoring in the second half when he ran who through the United defence before lifting the ball stylishly over United goalkeeper David De Gea.

    Rooney responded for United when his free-kick – which was intended as a cross – found the net, but Berahino got the winner with a low strike as the hosts pushed for a second of their own.

    “When we got back in I expected us to win it with the talent we have got,” added Moyes.

    “Our intensity was not good enough in the first half, we tried to pick it up in the second half but we got done by it as well [on the break].”

    The win for the Baggies was just their second this season in the Premier League and their first on the road. It was also their first victory at Old Trafford since 1978.

    Manager Steve Clarke was keen to praise his players rather than focus on United’s poor display.

    “We deserve a lot of credit,” he said. “We came here to be positive. We made some good late additions in the transfer window and now hopefully the supporters and everyone else can see we can have another good season.”

    wirestory

  • Israel Arrests Suspected Iranian Spy

    Israel Arrests Suspected Iranian Spy

    {{Israel’s Shin Bet security service on Sunday announced the arrest on September 11 of an Iranian “spy” carrying photographs of the US embassy in Tel Aviv.}}

    News of the arrest was released just hours after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu left for Washington and New York, determined to expose what he described as “sweet talk” by Israel’s arch-foe Iran.

    The suspect, holding a Belgian passport, was sent to Israel by Iran’s elite Republican Guards and arrested at Tel Aviv’s Ben Gurion international airport, Shin Bet charged in a statement.

    The domestic intelligence service identified him as Ali Mansouri, 58, and said he had enrolled in a “special operations unit of the Revolutionary Guards responsible for numerous terrorist attacks around the world.”

    He had been using the fake identity Alex Mans after being recruited last year, the agency said, naming his four alleged handlers as senior Iranian officials.

    The Shin Bet said that under questioning, the suspect had said he had been promised $1 million to use his position as a businessman to set up companies in Israel on behalf of the Iranian intelligence services to “harm Israeli and Western interests.”

    He had previously visited Israel in July 2012 and last January. An Iranian national, the suspect had in 2006 married a Belgian woman whom he had since divorced.

    On the diplomatic front, Netanyahu has been dismissive in his response to the drive by Iran’s new President Hassan Rouhani to mend fences with the international community, which culminated in a historic 15-minute telephone conversation with US President Barack Obama on Friday.

    Israel, the Middle East’s sole if undeclared nuclear-armed power, remains adamant that Iran is bent on developing a nuclear weapons capability, something it regards as a threat to its existence.

    Israeli leaders have repeatedly vowed to take military action rather than see Iran develop a bomb and have called on its US ally to take tougher action against Tehran, saying they see no real change of policy under Rouhani.

    AFP

  • French Believe Roma Should Leave France

    French Believe Roma Should Leave France

    {{A new poll published on Saturday finds a whopping 77% of French people agreeing with a recent statement by Socialist Interior Minister Manuel Valls, who said that Roma immigrants are inherently “different” and “will have to return to Bulgaria and Romania” .}}

    According to the survey, carried out by French polling agency BVA and commissioned by TV channel i-Télé and daily newspaper Le Parisien, only 22% disagree with Valls, saying “he should not stigmatise a segment of the population”.

    As for the issue of how well this particular group of immigrants adapts to French society, 93% of those polled responded that the Roma are poorly integrated. That opinion crosses political lines, with 98% of right-leaning participants and 84 percent of left-leaning participants in agreement on the question.

    The poll referred specifically to Valls’ September 24 statement, which said it was “illusory to think that we will solve the Roma problem through integration”, since, according to the interior minister, only a minority of Roma want to assimilate into French society.

    {{French left voices outrage}}

    The comments set off a storm of indignant reactions from fellow left-wing politicians.

    Housing Minister Cécile Duflot, a member of the Green Party, told fellow party members in the Western city of Angers on Thursday: “It’s not acceptable to say that there are categories [of people] within a society whose background makes it impossible for them to assimilate.”

    Valls’ comments were also slammed by Social Affairs Minister Marisol Touraine and François Lamy, a junior minister in charge of urban centres, both of whom met with President François Hollande to express their opposition, according to daily newspaper Le Monde.

    Forced evictions of Roma reached a record 10,000 in 2013, Amnesty International said in a report published this week.

    france24

  • Bombs kill 33 in Northwestern Pakistan

    Bombs kill 33 in Northwestern Pakistan

    {{Islamist violence has been on the rise in Pakistan in recent months, undermining Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s efforts to tame the insurgency by launching peace talks with the Taliban.}}

    The blasts hit outside a police station in an area crowded with shops and families. Police said it appeared at least one of the explosions had been a car bomb.

    There was no immediate claim of responsibility.

    A crowd gathered outside the Lady Reading Hospital in Peshawar, where many of the victims had been taken. Distraught relatives frantically tried to dial mobile phone numbers of those caught up in the blasts but were unable to get through.

    Women sobbed as ambulances pulled up with more bodies.

    “Who is burning Peshawar, who is burning Peshawar?” screamed one woman in a long headscarf.

    Shopowner Sher Gul said he had made repeated trips on his motorbike to bring six people to hospital. Gul cursed a provincial government minister who came to visit the victims.

    “Why have you come so late?” Gul shouted.

    The blasts follow an attack by a Taliban faction on Peshawar’s Anglican church last Sunday that killed more than 80 people, the deadliest attack on Christians in predominantly Muslim Pakistan.

    The Taliban have repeatedly rejected Pakistan’s constitution and have called for the full implementation of Islamic law and for war with India.

    Sharif is due to meet Indian counterpart Manmohan Singh on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly later on Sunday, only hours after Singh described Pakistan as the “epicenter of terrorism in our region”.

    Another Pakistani politician, former cricket player Imran Khan, has suggested the Taliban might open an office in Pakistan to negotiate but the suggestion drew an angry response from those caught up in Sunday’s blasts.

    “The government wants to open an office for the Taliban? What office? They are killing us, for how long do we have to suffer like this? I have no hope,” said Waheed Khan as he searched for his nephew, a rickshaw driver, among the dead and wounded.

    agencies