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- Trump impeachment inquiry: a timeline of key events so far
- UN mission in Iraq proposes roadmap for ending upheaval
- Nikki Haley: Tillerson and Kelly tried to block Trump to 'save country'
- Nikki Haley: White House Aides Asked Me To Undermine Trump To 'Save The Country'
- Nikki Haley claims top aides tried to recruit her to undermine Trump and 'save the country'
- Iran calls ex-FBI agent's case a 'missing person' file
- 5 Italian soldiers wounded by roadside explosion in Iraq
- Nikki Haley: Top Trump Aides Tried to Recruit Me to Help Subvert the President
- Iran, Russia launch new phase of nuclear power reactor construction
- Jordan retakes lands leased by Israel in 1994 peace accord
- Merkel Coalition Averts Crisis With Deal on Basic Pension
- The Hidden Cost of Gold: Birth Defects and Brain Damage
- Pressure Grows on Britain to Return Its Last African Colony
- U.S., South Korea are reportedly coordinating on North Korea talks as deadline looms
- Napoleon professor confesses to chopping up lover in Russia after woman's arms found in backpack
- Turkey says at least 8 killed by car bomb in northeast Syria
- 10 things you need to know today: November 10, 2019
- Huthi rebels will have role in Yemen's future: UAE
- Iran begins pouring concrete for 2nd nuclear power reactor
- Tories Say ‘Reckless’ Labour Spending Plans Total $1.5 Trillion
- Inside China's 're-education' camps
- Tories Say Labour Spending Plans Total $1.5 Trillion: U.K. Votes
- Opioids emerge as key sticking point for US-China trade deal
- Is North Korea’s Year-End Countdown for Real?
- What the Hell Happened to Hugh Hewitt?
- Iraqis struggle to keep up sit-ins after deadly crackdown
- UPDATE 2-United States "very actively" asking N.Korea to return to talks - S.Korea
- As Putin’s Embrace Tightens, Belarus Strongman Reaches Out to EU
- Donald Trump Has Hit the Corruption Trifecta
Trump impeachment inquiry: a timeline of key events so far Posted: 10 Nov 2019 02:15 PM PST Pelosi launched inquiry on 24 September over allegations that Trump sought the help of a foreign country to harm a political rival * What is the House voting on and why is it important?Members of the media wait at the stairs for former US ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch as she testifies in the impeachment inquiry into Donald Trump on Capitol Hill on 11 October. Photograph: Carlos Jasso/ReutersThe House speaker, Nancy Pelosi, announced an impeachment inquiry against Donald Trump on 24 September.Since then, House committees have been taking witness testimony about an alleged plot by Trump to use the power of his office to solicit interference from a foreign country, Ukraine, in the 2020 election.Democrats say that amounts to an abuse of power impeachable under the US constitution. Republicans have said Trump's conduct was concerning but not impeachable.A vote to impeach Trump on the House floor, which would be held at the conclusion of televised hearings, could play out by the end of the year. If Trump is impeached, the Senate would hold a trial in which a two-thirds majority vote would be required to remove him from office.Here's a timeline of key events so far: April and MayThrough his personal emissary, Rudy Giuliani, Trump applies pressure on Ukraine to announce investigations tied to Joe Biden and his son Hunter. The Ukrainian president-elect, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, meets with subordinates on 7 May to discuss how to stay out of it. 23 MayIn a White House meeting, Trump is unmoved by the enthusiasm of a delegation of officials freshly returned from Zelenskiy's inauguration in Kiev. "He just kept saying: Talk to Rudy, talk to Rudy," EU ambassador Gordon Sondland testified. "I don't know what he meant. He kept repeating it, though, 'They tried to take me down, they tried to take me down.'" 3 JulyLt Col Alexander Vindman, top adviser on Ukraine on the National Security Council, is made aware of the suspension of military aid for Ukraine. In testimony, Vindman said: "But by 3 July, that's when I was concretely made aware of the fact that there was a hold placed by [Office of Management and Budget]." 10 JulyAt a dramatic White House meeting, Trump emissaries ask top Ukrainian officials to investigate Biden, shocking US national security officials. According to multiple accounts, after Sondland makes the Biden ask, then national security adviser John Bolton abruptly terminates the meeting, later calling it a "drug deal". Mid-JulyThe Office of Management and Budget informs the Pentagon and state department that Trump has suspended $391m in military aid for Ukraine. According to testimony by senior diplomat in Ukraine Bill Taylor, "In a regular, NSC secure video conference call on 18 July, I heard a staff person from the Office of Management and Budget say that there was a hold on security assistance to Ukraine but could not say why." 25 JulyTrump speaks on the phone with Zelenskiy, reminding him that "the United States has been very, very good to Ukraine" and then asking for a "favor". Trump wants Ukraine to announce investigations designed to make Joe Biden look bad and to cast doubt on Russian tampering in the 2016 US election. Early August High-level Ukrainian officials are made aware of the suspension of US military aid meant to help in their fight against Russian forces, according to a New York Times report. 12 AugustA whistleblower complaint against Trump is secretly filed to the inspector general of the intelligence community. For six weeks, the Trump administration will block Congress from obtaining the complaint. 16 AugustA security council recommendation that aid for Ukraine be released is raised in a meeting with Trump, according to Vindman. But "the president didn't act on the recommendation". 27 AugustBolton visits Taylor in Kyiv. Taylor brings up his concerns about suspended military aid. Bolton is "very sympathetic", Taylor later testifies, and tells him to send a cable directly to secretary of state Mike Pompeo raising his concerns. 1 September Bilateral meetings in Warsaw, Poland. In a "supplement" to his original testimony, Sondland says, "I now recall speaking individually with [Zelenskiy aide Andriy] Yermak, where I said that resumption of US aid would likely not occur until Ukraine provided the public anti-corruption statement that we had been discussing for many weeks." 9 SeptemberTaylor texts Sondland: "As I said on the phone, I think it's crazy to withhold security assistance for help with a political campaign." 11 SeptemberThe military aid is released. 24 SeptemberPelosi announces a formal impeachment inquiry, accusing Trump of "a betrayal of his oath of office, a betrayal of our national security and betrayal of the integrity of our elections". 25 SeptemberThe White House releases a partial "transcript" of the 25 July call, hours before Trump's first face-to-face meeting with Zelenskiy at the United Nations. It's awkward. 26 SeptemberThe whistleblower complaint is released. Citing "more than half-a-dozen US officials", it presents an accurate version of the Trump-Zelenskiy call and alleges that the White House tried to cover up the call. 4 OctoberKurt Volker, Trump's former special envoy to Ukraine, testifies. Afterwards investigators release WhatsApp messages showing US diplomats pursuing a "deliverable" for Trump in Ukraine in the form of the Biden and 2016 election-tampering "investigations". 8 OctoberThe White House releases a letter refusing to cooperate with the impeachment inquiry, and accusing Democrats of trying to reverse the result of the 2016 election. 14 October Fiona Hill, senior director for Europe and Russia in the National Security Council, testifies. She describes a shadow foreign policy in Ukraine run by Giuliani, describes the 10 July White House meeting, which she attended, and says Bolton told her to take her concerns to the top NSC lawyer. 17 OctoberSondland testifies. He says he took Trump at his word that there was no quid pro quo with Ukraine. He will later return to Capitol Hill to partially or fully reverse that testimony. 22 OctoberTaylor testifies. In a 15-page opening statement, he describes his concern to discover an "irregular, informal policy channel" by which the Trump administration was pursuing objectives in Ukraine "running contrary to the goals of longstanding US policy". 29 October Vindman testifies. He describes his alarm at witnessing the White House subvert US foreign policy in favor of Trump's domestic political agenda and says he took his concerns to the top NSC lawyer. 31 OctoberThe House votes on a resolution laying out a process to move impeachment from closed-door depositions to open hearings. Tim Morrison, senior director for Russian affairs at the National Security Council, testifies a day after announcing that he will resign his post in short order. 5 NovemberThe impeachment committees begin releasing testimony transcripts. The overlapping testimonies tell the same story, of demands by US officials of Ukraine steadily ratcheting up between May and September, from a demand to investigate corruption to a demand that "President Zelenskiy to go to a microphone and say 'investigations', 'Biden', and 'Clinton'." 13 NovemberPublic impeachment hearings are scheduled to begin with the testimony of ambassador Bill Taylor and deputy assistant secretary of state George P Kent. Ambassador Marie Yovanovitch is to follow on 15 November. |
UN mission in Iraq proposes roadmap for ending upheaval Posted: 10 Nov 2019 01:56 PM PST At least 319 protesters have been killed by security forces since the economically driven protests and unrest began last month, according to the latest figures from the Iraqi Human Rights Commission released Sunday. Iraqi security forces put up concrete barriers in central Baghdad in an effort to hamper and block the movement of protesters. |
Nikki Haley: Tillerson and Kelly tried to block Trump to 'save country' Posted: 10 Nov 2019 11:50 AM PST * Former UN ambassador releases book, With All Due Respect * Ex-national security adviser John Bolton signs $2m book dealDonald Trump speaks during a meeting with Nikki Haley in the Oval Office, regarding her departure as UN ambassador. Photograph: Evan Vucci/APNikki Haley, the former US ambassador to the United Nations, has claimed former secretary of state Rex Tillerson and former White House chief of staff John Kelly tried to recruit her to work around Donald Trump in an effort to "save the country".Haley, who left the administration last year, makes the claim in a book, With All Due Respect, that will be published on Tuesday, the Washington Post reported.In Haley's telling, Tillerson told her that if Trump was left unchecked, people would die."Kelly and Tillerson confided in me that when they resisted the president, they weren't being insubordinate, they were trying to save the country," Haley writes.The pair told her that "it was their decisions, not the president's, that were in the best interests of America" and "the president didn't know what he was doing".Haley's claims add to a picture of the White House as a hive of insurrection, with former business leaders, diplomats, career politicians and aides attempting to stymie the wilder impulses of a wildly unconventional president.In September 2018, Watergate reporter Bob Woodward published Fear, an account of Trump's first year in power in which senior aides were reported removing documents from the Resolute Desk. Two books by Michael Wolff, Fire and Fury and Siege, have painted a similar picture of dysfunction, faction and chaos.> Kelly and Tillerson confided in me that when they resisted the president, they weren't being insubordinate> > Nikki HaleyAnother new book on the Trump presidency is due on 19 November. A Warning, by an anonymous administration official, has been extensively reported. Among its contents is a description of a president spiralling from crisis to crisis "like a 12-year-old in an air traffic control tower".The author, who last year produced an explosive column in the New York Times, reportedly claims that some White House officials drew up plans for a mass resignation, or "midnight self-massacre", to draw attention to Trump's behaviour.Tillerson, who was secretary of state from 2017 until he was fired by tweet in March 2018, reportedly while on the toilet, did not respond to requests for comment, the Post said.But Kelly offered a pseudo-confirmation of Haley's claims, saying that if providing the president "with the best and most open, legal and ethical staffing advice from across the [government] so he could make an informed decision is 'working against Trump', then guilty as charged."Kelly recently earned Trump's ire by telling an audience in Georgia the president faced impeachment because he had not listened to his former chief of staff's advice.Haley, a former governor of South Carolina, writes that she agreed with many of Trump's most controversial decisions, including pulling out of the Iran nuclear deal and the Paris climate accord and relocating the US embassy in Israel to Jerusalem.Speaking to the Post, Haley said that though she opposed Trump's infamous request to the Ukrainian president for a public investigation into Joe Biden, a political rival, "it's hard for me to understand where the whole impeachment situation is coming from, because what everybody's up in arms about didn't happen".Trump and senior aides are alleged to have withheld nearly $400m in military aid and dangled the prospect of a White House meeting, in a clear quid pro quo. Public hearings in the House impeachment inquiry will begin this week."Do I think the president did something that warrants impeachment?" Haley asked. "No, because the aid flowed. And, in turn, the Ukrainians didn't follow up with the investigation."In her book, the Post said, Haley does show herself standing up to Trump, including over his relationship with Russian president Vladimir Putin and over what she calls his "moral equivalence" in blaming "both sides" after a white supremacist march in Charlottesville turned deadly in August 2017."A leader's words matter in these situations," she writes. "And the president's words had been hurtful and dangerous. I picked up the phone and called the president."Haley also discusses her response as governor to a mass shooting at an African American church in Charleston, South Carolina, in the summer of 2015. In the aftermath, she says, she was treated for post-traumatic stress disorder.Haley has been talked of as a possible replacement for Mike Pence as Trump's vice-president but here report of Tillerson and Kelly's efforts is likely to ruffle presidential feathers. She adds that she argued that Trump had been elected, so if they disagreed with his policies strongly enough, they should quit."I just couldn't get my arms around the fact that here you have two key people in an administration undermining the president," Haley told the Post. |
Nikki Haley: White House Aides Asked Me To Undermine Trump To 'Save The Country' Posted: 10 Nov 2019 11:30 AM PST |
Nikki Haley claims top aides tried to recruit her to undermine Trump and 'save the country' Posted: 10 Nov 2019 11:02 AM PST Two of President Donald Trump's senior advisers undermined and ignored him in what they claimed was an effort to "save the country", former United Nations ambassador Nikki Haley claims in a new memoir.Former Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and former White House Chief of Staff John Kelly sought to recruit her to work around and subvert Trump, but she refused, Haley writes in a new book, With All Due Respect, which also describes Tillerson as "exhausting" and imperious and Kelly as suspicious of her access to Trump. |
Iran calls ex-FBI agent's case a 'missing person' file Posted: 10 Nov 2019 10:41 AM PST Iran on Sunday said an open Revolutionary Court case involving an ex-FBI agent who disappeared there in 2007 on an unauthorized CIA mission "was a missing person" filing, not a sign that the man was being prosecuted. Foreign Ministry spokesman Abbas Mousavi's comments come as a new Iranian acknowledgement of the case involving Robert Levinson renewed questions about his disappearance. The U.S. is offering $25 million for information about what happened to Levinson, who disappeared from Iran's Kish Island on March 9, 2007. |
5 Italian soldiers wounded by roadside explosion in Iraq Posted: 10 Nov 2019 10:31 AM PST A roadside blast wounded five Italian military members Sunday in northern Iraq as they returned from a mission aimed at helping Iraqi troops combat the Islamic State group, Italian military officials said. The Italian Defense Ministry said three of the wounded were in "grave condition" after the explosion. Rear Admiral Fabio Agostini said the five -- three members of the navy and two of the army -- are part of a special forces team that was traveling back after a mission aimed at finding IS refuges. |
Nikki Haley: Top Trump Aides Tried to Recruit Me to Help Subvert the President Posted: 10 Nov 2019 10:01 AM PST Kevin Lamarque/ReutersIn her new memoir to be released Tuesday titled "With All Due Respect," Donald Trump's former ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley claims that two top White House officials tried to recruit her to turn against the president "to save the country."Haley, 47, writes that former Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and former White House Chief of Staff John F. Kelly tried to convince her to work around and subvert Trump, but she says she refused. Haley, who was also the governor of South Carolina, describes Tillerson as "exhausting" and imperious, and she claims that Kelly was suspicious of her access to the president, according to a Washington Post article about the memoir based on an advanced copy the paper acquired. "Kelly and Tillerson confided in me that when they resisted the president, they weren't being insubordinate, they were trying to save the country," Haley writes. "It was their decisions, not the president's, that were in the best interests of America, they said."Haley goes on to say that the men—both of whom were let go by Trump and then criticized by him publicly—insisted, "The president didn't know what he was doing." Tillerson additionally told her that people would die if Trump was unchecked, she says.The Post says Tillerson declined to comment on Haley's accusations, but Kelly said that if providing the president "with the best and most open, legal and ethical staffing advice from across the [government] so he could make an informed decision is 'working against Trump,' then guilty as charged."The Post reports that Haley, who is widely thought to have her own presidential aspirations, gives only "glancing" critiques of her former boss and "distances herself from his excesses." She says she backed almost all of the president's foreign policy decisions while others instead tried to "block or slow down" including Trump's withdrawal from the Iran nuclear deal and Paris climate accord. She says she also agreed with Trump's decision to move the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem. Haley, who sat down with the Post for an interview about her memoir, said she did not agree with the current impeachment proceedings based on the Trump's alleged threat to withhold aide from Ukraine. "There was no heavy demand insisting that something had to happen. So it's hard for me to understand where the whole impeachment situation is coming from, because what everybody's up in arms about didn't happen," Haley said." So, do I think it's not good practice to talk to foreign governments about investigating Americans? Yes. Do I think the president did something that warrants impeachment? No, because the aid flowed."Haley did say she openly disagreed with her boss on a number of occasions, especially in his dealings with Russian President Vladimir Putin after the debacle of a press conference he gave in Helsinki in 2017. She says she also disagreed with Trump's response to a deadly white supremacist march in Charlottesville the same year, voicing her objection to what she saw as the president's "moral equivalence" on the matter. "A leader's words matter in these situations," she wrote. "And the president's words had been hurtful and dangerous. I picked up the phone and called the president."Haley did not confirm or deny to the Post whether she has personal White House aspirations. "I'm not even thinking that way. I'm thinking more of, we need to do all we can to get the president reelected," she said. "And then from there, deciding how I will use the power of my voice. I know I'm too young to stop fighting, I know that. And I know that I need and want to be involved in some way that's helpful."Read more at The Daily Beast.Get our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more. |
Iran, Russia launch new phase of nuclear power reactor construction Posted: 10 Nov 2019 09:42 AM PST Tehran and Moscow inaugurated on Sunday a new phase of construction for a second reactor at Iran's sole nuclear power plant in Bushehr on the Gulf coast. Ali Akbar Salehi, head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran (AEOI), and deputy chief of Russia's nuclear agency Rosatom, Alexander Lokshin, launched the new stage at a ceremony where concrete was poured for the reactor base. |
Jordan retakes lands leased by Israel in 1994 peace accord Posted: 10 Nov 2019 09:13 AM PST Jordan's king announced Sunday that his country is retaking "full sovereignty" over two pieces of land leased by Israel, reflecting the cool relations between the neighboring countries as they mark the 25th anniversary of their landmark peace deal. King Abdullah II had said last year that he wouldn't renew the parts of the 1994 treaty that gave Israel a 25-year lease of the two small areas, Baqura and Ghamr. "Today, I announce the expiration of the Peace Treaty annexes on Ghamr and al-Baqura and the imposition of our full sovereignty over every inch of those lands," he said. |
Merkel Coalition Averts Crisis With Deal on Basic Pension Posted: 10 Nov 2019 08:56 AM PST (Bloomberg) -- German Chancellor Angela Merkel's government struck a compromise deal on a basic pension, a key issue for the Social Democrats that was threatening the stability of the ruling coalition.The agreement to bolster retirement income for as many as 1.5 million long-term earners from 2021 was reached on Sunday after a meeting of senior officials from Merkel's CDU/CSU bloc and the SPD in Berlin. In an effort to boost flagging economic growth, the coalition also agreed to cut unemployment insurance contributions by 0.2 percentage points to 2.4% through the end of 2022."This is a means of combating poverty in old age," CDU leader Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer said at a news conference. Pensioners will be subjected to a "comprehensive income assessment," she added, which was initially opposed by the SPD and was one of the main sticking points in the negotiations.Malu Dreyer, one of the SPD's three interim leaders, called the agreement a "milestone in social policy," while CSU leader Markus Soeder said the measures would cost as much as 1.5 billion euros ($1.7 billion).Soeder added that the deal showed there is no reason to doubt the staying power of the coalition, which has come under pressure following a series of setbacks in regional ballots.Support for Germany's traditional political heavyweights has dwindled since they agreed to end a stalemate after the 2017 election by forming another "grand coalition."The next election isn't scheduled until late 2021 and Merkel has said she won't run for a fifth term. Her Christian Democrats, and their Bavarian sister-party, the CSU, have yet to choose a chancellor candidate, while Finance Minister Olaf Scholz is attempting to position himself as the SPD's pick.The coalition also agreed to set up a fund worth 10 billion euros to promote "future technologies" linked to digitization and climate, overseen by the state-owned Kreditanstalt fuer Wiederaufbau development bank.(Updates with comments from party leaders starting in third paragraph.)\--With assistance from Patrick Donahue.To contact the reporters on this story: Iain Rogers in Berlin at irogers11@bloomberg.net;Arne Delfs in Berlin at adelfs@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: Chad Thomas at cthomas16@bloomberg.net, James AmottFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P. |
The Hidden Cost of Gold: Birth Defects and Brain Damage Posted: 10 Nov 2019 08:50 AM PST CIDAHU, Indonesia -- Thousands of children with crippling birth defects. Half a million people poisoned. A toxic chemical found in the food supply. Accusations of a government cover-up and police officers on the take.This is the legacy of Indonesia's mercury trade, a business intertwined with the lucrative and illegal production of gold.More than a hundred nations have joined a global campaign to reduce the international trade in mercury, an element so toxic there is "no known safe level of exposure," according to health experts.But that effort has backfired in Indonesia, where illicit backyard manufacturers have sprung up to supply wildcat miners and replace mercury that was previously imported from abroad. Now, Indonesia produces so much black-market mercury that it has become a major global supplier, surreptitiously shipping thousands of tons to other parts of the world.Much of the mercury is destined for use in gold mining in Africa and Asia, passing through hubs such as Dubai and Singapore, according to court records -- and the trade has deadly consequences."It is a public health crisis," said Yuyun Ismawati, a co-founder of an Indonesian environmental group, Nexus3 Foundation, and a recipient of the 2009 Goldman Environmental Prize. She has called for a worldwide ban on using mercury in gold mining.Mercury can be highly dangerous as it accumulates up the food chain, causing a wide range of disorders, including birth defects, neurological problems and even death.Today, despite the risks, small-scale miners using mercury operate in about 80 countries in Asia, Africa and the Americas. They produce up to 25% of all gold sold.As gold makes its way around the world, so too does mercury -- poisoning the air and food of people thousands of miles away. Small-scale gold mining is the largest single source of mercury pollution.A recent study of women on 24 remote islands found that more than half displayed high mercury levels. The women lived far from sources of mercury pollution but ate a diet rich in fish. In the United States, contaminated fish is the No. 1 source of mercury poisoning.Indonesia, the world's fourth most populous nation, stands out for its huge number of outlaw gold miners and for concerns that some law enforcement officials assigned to police the trade are instead profiting from it.As much as anyone, Cece Rifa'i, a former miner, is responsible for Indonesia's mercury boom and spreading the scourge of contamination across the country.But he has no regrets."I don't feel guilty about anything," he said from the veranda of his two-story home on the island of Java.For years, Cece was a pioneer in a network of illegal mercury producers, traders and smugglers who supply gold miners across Indonesia with mercury, used to extract gold from crushed ore.On a single day, operating a furnace he constructed in his backyard, he could produce a ton of black-market mercury worth more than $20,000, he said.For decades, Indonesia got most of its mercury legally from the United States and Europe. But recognizing the harm it was doing, Western countries began reducing mercury exports six years ago.Since 2013, 114 countries, including Indonesia, have signed on to the Minamata Convention, a treaty that took effect in 2017 and that requires participating nations to reduce the export and use of mercury in a variety of industries.Nevertheless, United Nations trade data shows that Indonesia became a significant exporter of mercury from 2015 to 2017, peaking at more than 320 tons in 2016.Yuyun, the environmentalist, estimates that illicit manufacturers in Indonesia produce more than 10,000 tons of mercury a year. About a third is used in gold mining in Indonesia, she said, the rest smuggled overseas.The government banned the use of mercury in gold mining in 2014, but has done little to curb its use, clean up contaminated sites or warn the public of the danger.In surveys of 24 hot spots, the Nexus3 Foundation and a team of independent doctors found more than 700 cases of suspected mercury poisoning, including children with birth defects and villagers with irreversible neurological disorders. At least 45 have died.Based on these studies, the environmental group estimates that decades of mining have poisoned 500,000 people.The mercury trade is lucrative, but the gold business it supports is far more profitable. By some estimates, Indonesia's illicit small-scale gold miners produce as much as $5 billion a year.Poverty is widespread in Indonesia, and many people, jobless and desperate, have flocked to the gold fields.As miners, they often live outside the law, digging for ore on land without permission or government permits, sometimes in national parks and protected areas.To extract gold, the miners mix liquid mercury with crushed ore. Gold in the ore binds with the mercury to produce an amalgam of the metals. The miners heat the small lump with a blowtorch, sending mercury vapors into the air and leaving the gold behind.Many miners like the method because it gives them a quick return.But in mining communities, airborne mercury levels can be dangerously high. Wastewater containing mercury finds its way into fields, streams and bays, contaminating rice, fruit and fish, studies show.Government officials have known about mercury-related health problems in the gold fields since at least 2012, Yuyun said, but they have not warned residents about the dangers of consuming potentially contaminated rice and fish.Last year, Indonesia's Ministry of Environment and Forestry conducted tests in seven mining communities and identified 558 adults and children with high mercury levels, many with severe exposure. The sampling also found high levels in rice.But the ministry has yet to notify subjects of their test results or issue a public warning for fear of setting off panic over the safety of the food supply."It's a crime to deliberately conceal the damning results," said Yuyun, the lead researcher on small-scale mining at the International Pollutants Elimination Network. "People are dying and have little access to any effective treatment. The government has to stop the mercury trade and clean up the mess."Environment Ministry officials declined to be interviewed and did not respond to written questions.Officials in the office of Indonesia's president, Joko Widodo, acknowledged that mercury contamination is a serious problem and said he had issued a national action plan that calls for cleaning up four hot spots.The president also has directed police and military commanders to take action against personnel found to be involved in the illegal metals trade. Officials said they were unaware of anyone being disciplined. Spokesmen for the national police and the military declined to be interviewed.Officials say the public has been warned about mercury's dangers, but there is little evidence of this in mining areas. Many miners insist it is not hazardous.The role of corrupt officials in the gold and mercury trade is widely recognized but seldom addressed by the government.Some members of the police and military are said to finance gold mining operations, extort protection money, oversee their own mines and ensure the safe transit of mercury and gold. Many tons of mercury seized by the police have gone missing."When we went to the field and talked to the people there, they admitted that the police gave them the mercury," said Putu Selly Andayani, head of the West Nusa Tenggara Province Trade Agency. "They said the police helped them to set up the illegal mining."Throughout the country, miners work with mercury in plain sight without fear of punishment. The occasional arrests of furnace workers and smugglers have barely dented the supply.Mercury remains cheap and plentiful in the gold fields, where it is sold in mining supply shops or by dealers who travel from village to village. Dozens of Indonesian websites offer mercury for sale.One international smuggler arrested last year was Chander Hass Khera, an Indian citizen. Seized documents show that he shipped 9.7 tons of mercury to South Africa, Thailand and India in 2017.Last year, he bought an additional 3.8 tons from a dozen traders, said Dyah Paramita, a researcher at the Center for Regulation Policy and Governance in West Java, who reviewed court records.Soon after the smuggler's arrest, most of his confiscated mercury disappeared from police custody. The police told the court they were investigating.Khera was sentenced to 18 months in prison for trying to ship mercury produced without proper permits.Like methamphetamine labs in rural America, mercury distillation often takes place in remote areas, far from prying eyes.Cece, 64, the prolific backyard mercury producer, began mining gold as a young man.In 2010, as wildcat mining boomed, he said he started searching for cinnabar, the ore from which liquid mercury is produced.Inspired by his years vaporizing mercury by blowtorch, he constructed a simple concrete furnace with a narrow trench in the center for a wood fire, steel buckets to heat the reddish ore and fixtures to capture the mercury as it cooled and liquefied.His home in Sukabumi Regency in western Java is an unlikely spot for this backyard industry. A picturesque area of rice paddies and simple villages, there is no cinnabar ore or nearby highway. There is not even a road to Cece's house in Cidahu village.But on his patio, Cece built a furnace so large it could produce a ton of mercury in 24 hours.He arranged to have cinnabar shipped from distant islands, often using express courier services.He hired local men -- "robbers, thieves and hit men," he called them -- to work the furnace.Local police officers and health officials visited frequently, sometimes taking water samples. On each visit, he said, he gave them "pocket money."The inspectors found no health problems.On one occasion, he said, he demonstrated his furnace to a high-ranking police official from Jakarta.Soon dozens of copycat furnaces began appearing in Sukabumi and on islands closer to the cinnabar mines, helping flood the black market with cheap mercury."We all know that he is the pioneer," said, Alung, 35, who learned the business working for Cece. Like many Indonesians, he uses one name.The police cracked down on mercury producers in Sukabumi in 2017, shutting down three dozen furnaces and arresting about 100 people, including Cece.He and nearly all the others avoided jail by agreeing to stop making mercury. Cece dismantled his furnace.The police seized nearly a ton of mercury from three furnaces in the village. Cece and Alung suspect the police sold it because they brought their own containers to haul it away.Before the crackdown, mercury production meant jobs.Whatever the health hazard, the work paid better than anything else, and they were disappointed when the furnaces were shut down."We know it's dangerous," Alung said. "But we're sad. We no longer have the income."This article originally appeared in The New York Times.(C) 2019 The New York Times Company |
Pressure Grows on Britain to Return Its Last African Colony Posted: 10 Nov 2019 08:36 AM PST (Bloomberg) -- From a one-story house with mustard-colored walls off a bustling road in Mauritius, Olivier Bancoult is defying the U.K. by plotting a return to the tiny tropical island where he was born.A 55-year-old native of the remote Chagos Islands in the Indian Ocean, Bancoult heads a group of mostly elderly women who, like him, were expelled shortly after Britain bought the archipelago from its then-colony Mauritius in 1965. His campaign has taken him to London and the United Nations and secured him a meeting with Pope Francis.As a young boy, Bancoult and the other roughly 2,000 inhabitants of Chagos were deported to the U.K., Mauritius and Seychelles. The new owners then gassed the residents' pets, closed the coconut plantations and allowed the U.S. to build a military base on the biggest island of Diego Garcia. With the exception of the air force base seen as crucial for U.S. operations in the Middle East and Afghanistan, the U.K. has kept the islands free of inhabitants by declaring an area the size of France a protected marine reserve in 2010. Only a few people are allowed to visit briefly each year, and they can't stay overnight."My mother died here, without ever having been back to her home," Bancoult said in an interview. "I won't let that happen to me."At a time when politicians in Britain are evoking its imperial past as the U.K. prepares to quit the European Union, the country is under international pressure to give up its last African colony, a sign of its diminished global importance when only 80 years ago it held sway over almost a quarter of the world's population."What Britain is facing today is having to confront its colonial past, whether it's Chagos or Northern Ireland," said Philippe Sands, a London-based lawyer who serves as Counsel for Mauritius. "It's the story of its empire coming back to haunt it."In February, the International Court of Justice ruled the 1965 excision of the Chagos Archipelago from Mauritius unlawful because it wasn't based on the free will of the people concerned. In an advisory opinion, the court stated that the U.K. has an obligation to end its administration of the archipelago "as rapidly as possible."Then, in May, the UN General Assembly affirmed the ruling by an overwhelming majority, with 116 member states voting in favor of a resolution setting a six-month deadline for the U.K. to withdraw. Only six members rejected the proposal -- the U.S., Hungary, Israel and Australia among them. The deadline expires on Nov. 22."A UN General Assembly resolution doesn't mean you have to comply, but obviously it's very embarrassing for them," said David Brewster, a senior research fellow at the National Security College in Canberra, Australia. "That's what happens when you alienate your allies."At the end of his September visit to Mauritius, Pope Francis chided the U.K., saying it needs to respect the wishes of international institutions.But things are unlikely to change overnight.The U.K. argues it can't give up the Chagos Islands for security reasons. It doesn't recognize Mauritius's claim over what it calls the British Indian Ocean Island Territory, or BIOT, a spokesperson for the U.K.'s Foreign & Commonwealth Office said in an email."The joint U.K.–U.S. defense facility on the British Indian Ocean Territory helps to keep people in Britain and around the world safe from terrorism, organized crime and piracy," the spokesperson said. "The status of BIOT as a U.K. territory is essential to the value of the joint facility and our shared interests -– an arrangement that cannot be replicated."Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn has repeatedly said the U.K. should respect the international court's opinion, cooperate with Mauritius and ensure the people of Chagos can return home.The Chagos ruling bolstered the legitimacy of Mauritian Prime Minister Pravind Jugnauth as head of government and as an international negotiator, political analyst Catherine Boudet by phone from the capital, Port Louis. Jugnauth, who won an election last week after succeeding his father in 2017, has vowed to pursue the decolonization process with "unflinching determination." But he's also tried to allay concerns about the future of Diego Garcia, saying he has no objections to the base and is ready to enter into a long-term arrangement with the U.S.Today, the Mauritius government is redrawing its national maps and has set money aside to help the Chagossians prepare for an eventual return. The post office even issued special stamps to celebrate the court ruling.Still, organizing and funding the relocation of as many as 9,000 people to an archipelago that's more than 1,100 miles away and has no schools, hospitals or any other public services will cost significantly more than the $1.4 million the government has set aside.That's why there are "extra-parliamentarian groups in Mauritius that question the government's ability to administer the Chagos Archipelago," Boudet said. Bancoult is confident the returning residents can make a decent living, mainly from tourism and fishing. And he's planning to charter a boat for their return when the day comes."There are already people living there who weren't born there," he said, referring to the foreign employees at the military base. "We'll bring our birth certificate to show that we have a right to live there too."(Updates with analyst comment in 15th paragraph)To contact the reporter on this story: Pauline Bax in Johannesburg at pbax@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: Paul Richardson at pmrichardson@bloomberg.net, Karl MaierFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P. |
U.S., South Korea are reportedly coordinating on North Korea talks as deadline looms Posted: 10 Nov 2019 08:00 AM PST The United States is seemingly running out of time to re-establish talks with North Korea, and South Korea says Washington is "very actively" trying to make sure that doesn't happen.A year-end deadline for the U.S. to show more flexibility in denuclearization talks with North Korea set by Pyongyang earlier this year is fast approaching. Chung Eui-yong, a South Korean national security adviser, said Sunday that Seoul is taking the date "very seriously," adding that the government was in coordination with the United States.But, so far, after the most recent round of talks failed in October, there hasn't been much movement. "Only if talks between high-rank officials happen and lead to substantial progress, will the third North Korea-United States summit be possible," Chung told reporters, per Reuters.North Korea acknowledged Friday that the window for talks was indeed closing. Pyongyang, however, did not elaborate on what would happen after the deadline, so it's unclear if there would be any chance of reviving talks at a later date. Of course, it's possible the deadline is mainly a negotiating tactic, though it sounds like Washington and Seoul would prefer not to wait and see. Read more at Reuters.More stories from theweek.com The return of honor politics Lindsey Graham is 'confident' the whistleblower is 'from the deep state' Someone made a font out of gerrymandered congressional districts |
Napoleon professor confesses to chopping up lover in Russia after woman's arms found in backpack Posted: 10 Nov 2019 07:20 AM PST A prominent Saint Petersburg-based Napoleon expert has confessed to murdering his young lover and former student and dismembering her body in a grisly crime that sent shock waves across Russia. Oleg Sokolov, a 63-year-old history lecturer who received France's Legion d'Honneur in 2003, was arrested on Saturday on suspicion of murder after he was hauled out of the icy Moika River with a backpack containing a woman's arms. "He has admitted his guilt," Sokolov's lawyer Alexander Pochuev told AFP, adding he regretted what he had done and was now cooperating. Sokolov was reportedly drunk and fell in as he tried to dispose of body parts. After disposing of the corpse he reportedly planned to commit suicide at the Peter and Paul Fortress, one of the former imperial capital's most famous landmarks, dressed as Napoleon. Sokolov teaches history at Saint Petersburg State University, President Vladimir Putin's alma mater, and was close to the Russian authorities. Russian historian Oleg Sokolov has been arrested in St Petersburg Credit: REX He told investigators that he shot and killed his lover during an argument and then sawed off her head, arms and legs, local media reported. Pochuev suggested Sokolov may have been under stress or emotionally disturbed. "He is an elderly person," he said, adding he was being treated for hypothermia in a hospital. Police discovered the decapitated body of Anastasia Yeshchenko, 24, with whom Sokolov had co-authored a number of works, and a blood-stained saw at his home. The historian, who also taught at Sorbonne University, is the author of books on French emperor Napoleon Bonaparte. He acted as a historical consultant on several films and took part in historical re-enactments of Napoleonic wars. Both he and his lover studied French history and liked to wear period costumes, with Sokolov dressing up as Napoleon. Students described Sokolov as both a talented lecturer who could impersonate the French emperor and his generals and a "freak" who called his lover "Josephine" and liked to be addressed as "Sire". "What happened is simply monstrous," a Saint Petersburg State University lecturer told AFP. Russian police block a bridge over the Moika River Credit: AFP Speaking on condition of anonymity, he said Sokolov was dedicated to his work but was also emotionally unstable and abused alcohol. His former student, Fyodor Danilov, said Sokolov was regarded as one of the university's best lecturers but an eccentric man who at times yelled in French. His relationship with Yeshchenko was an open secret, he said. "But everyone was fine with that, it was her own business," he told AFP. Many expressed dismay, saying Sokolov had long been known for his hostile behaviour but officials had ignored complaints. Vasily Kunin, who studied with the victim, blamed the university management. "They did not pay attention to certain things," he told AFP. "There was a certain policy of hushing things up." Media reports said that Sokolov also beat up and threatened to kill another woman in 2008 but was never charged. On Twitter, screenwriter Andrew Ryvkin said Sokolov was one of his lecturers, describing the Saint Petersburg-based university as a place where "alcoholics" and "anti-Semites" felt at ease. Sokolov was a senior member of the Russian Military-Historical Society headed by Culture Minister Vladimir Medinsky. The organisation immediately sought to distance itself from the controversy. In 2003, Red Star, the official newspaper of the defence ministry, gushingly described Sokolov as a "serious historian" whose works were published in France. Sokolov was also a member of Lyon-based Institute of Social Science, Economics and Politics (ISSEP). On Saturday the society announced that he had been stripped of his position on its scientific committee. "We learn with horror about the atrocious crime of which Oleg Sokolov is allegedly guilty," it said in a statement. ISSEP was founded by Marion Marechal, the niece of Marine Le Pen, leader of the far-right National Rally party. One-legged skeleton found under Russian dance floor is Napoleon's 'lost general', DNA tests confirm |
Turkey says at least 8 killed by car bomb in northeast Syria Posted: 10 Nov 2019 06:41 AM PST A car bomb in northern Syria killed at least eight civilians and wounded 20 others Sunday in a town near the border with Turkey, Turkey's Defense Ministry said. The explosion struck a town south of the city of Tal Abyad, the ministry said. The city was captured last month by Turkish troops and Turkey-backed opposition forces from Kurdish-led fighters. |
10 things you need to know today: November 10, 2019 Posted: 10 Nov 2019 06:15 AM PST 1.House Intelligence Committee Chair Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) on Saturday denied House Republicans' request to bring Hunter Biden and the anonymous whistleblower, whose complaint about President Trump's phone call in July with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky spurred the House impeachment inquiry, to the witness stand in the inquiry's upcoming public hearings. Schiff said the committee will neither "facilitate efforts" to "threaten, intimidate, and retaliate against the whistleblower," nor serve as "a vehicle to undertake the sham investigations into the Bidens." Schiff did say, however, that the committee is reviewing the other possible witnesses proposed by Rep. Devin Nunes (D-Calif.), the top Republican on the Intelligence Committee, in a letter sent Saturday to Schiff. [Axios, Fox News] 2.President Trump told reporters Saturday he is planning to release the transcript of a second phone call he had with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, likely on Tuesday. "We have another transcript coming out that is very important," Trump said. "They ask for it, and I gladly give it." The call took place in April just after Zelensky won the Ukrainian presidential election and it was reportedly mainly a congratulatory call, though little is known about its contents. Of course, the phone call between the two leaders that took place in July was the catalyst for the impeachment inquiry Trump now faces. [The Guardian, Politico] 3.Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) directly challenged billionaire Michael Bloomberg during a Democratic presidential campaign speech Saturday in Iowa. "Our campaign is going to end the grotesque level of income and wealth inequality which exists in America today," Sanders said. "So tonight we say to Michael Bloomberg and other billionaires: Sorry, you ain't going to buy this election." Bloomberg is contemplating a run at the Democratic nomination and filed for the Alabama primary Friday. Sanders also criticized Bloomberg's plan, if he runs, to bypass early voting states like Iowa and New Hampshire in favor of focusing on Super Tuesday states. [The New York Times, The Washington Post] 4.Pro-democracy, anti-government protests continued in Hong Kong on Sunday, one day after thousands gathered for a peaceful vigil mourning Chow Tsz-lok, a 22-year-old university student who fell to his death this week after police were attempting to disperse a rally. The Sunday crowds continued to honor the student, but the day has reportedly been more active than Saturday with messages circulating online calling for people to occupy shopping malls. There have also been calls for a general strike and class boycott Monday with plans to disrupt train service in the city in the early morning. In related news, seven pro-democracy lawmakers were detained or faced arrest Saturday. They could spend up to a year in jail if convicted for allegedly "assaulting, obstructing, or molesting" three pro-Beijing lawmakers. [The South China Morning Post, Deutsche Welle] 5.Saudi Aramco published a 658-page prospectus for its initial public offering Saturday. The document revealed that retail investors will be offered up to 0.5 percent of the offering, but it did not unveil what percentage will be sold to institutions. Investors were ultimately left to guess the number of shares on offer, the price range, and when the listing will officially go forward, though The Wall Street Journal notes that it isn't uncommon for an IPO when demand for the offering is unclear. The prospectus also highlighted the risks in investing in the state-owned oil giant, which include the involvement of the Saudi royal family, climate change, and antitrust suits in the United States connected to Saudi Arabia's OPEC membership. [The Wall Street Journal, The Financial Times] 6.Voters are heading to the polls Sunday for the fourth time since 2015 in Spain where they will decide the outcome of the country's general election. Surveys are predicting the vote will result in a fractured parliament without an absolute majority in a continuation of the norm since 2017 as the Spanish government has struggled to broker deals. The Socialist Party is expected to remain the largest vote-getter, but only at around 27 percent, which will make it unlikely to form a majority government. Meanwhile, the country's far right party, Vox, is also likely to continue to make gains thanks to a rise in support from conservatives angered by the ongoing secession crisis in Catalonia, and the Socialist Party's decision to allow the exhumation of former dictator General Francisco Franco. [El Pais, Al Jazeera] 7.Bolivian President Evo Morales said Sunday he plans to call for new elections after weeks of protests in the country calling for his resignation. Morales' announcement came shortly after the Organization for American States recommended new elections and the annulment of the previous results from Oct. 20, which were considered fraudulent by Morales' opposition. As Bolivians marched in protest throughout the weekend, there were reports that some members of the police joined the demonstrators with some reportedly refusing to guard the square where the presidential palace is located. Members of an elite tactical operations unit were reportedly among those who withdrew in solidarity with the protests. [France 24, Reuters] 8.A cold front emerging from Siberia is expected to reach the United States next week, with temperatures possibly dipping to record lows for November from New England to Texas. The cold front is expected to hit the northern Plains and Upper Midwest on Sunday before heading south, potentially bringing below freezing temperatures even to the Gulf Coast. The expected temperatures are reportedly closer to those that normally occur in January and could wind up being 30 degrees below what is usually expected for this time of year. Some snowfall is anticipated earlier in the week, but will likely taper off even as temperatures remain frigid. [CBS News, The Washington Post] 9.Leaders from Germany, Poland, Hungary, Slovakia, and the Czech Republic attended a ceremony Saturday in Berlin honoring the 30th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, which is viewed as one of the pivotal moments in the final stages of the Cold War. The leaders placed roses in the remnants of the barrier that once divided the city. "The Berlin Wall, ladies and gentleman, is history," German Chancellor Angela Merkel announced. "It teaches us: No wall that keeps people out and restricts freedom is so high or so wide that it can't be broken down." President Trump congratulated Germany on the anniversary, saluting the "courageous men and women from both East and West Germany" who united to "tear down a wall that stood as a symbol of oppression." [The Associated Press, The Week] 10.In one of the most anticipated matchups of the college football season, No. 2 Louisiana State University defeated the third-ranked University of Alabama, in a 46-41 barn burner on Alabama's home turf. The two teams were unbeaten going into the game, and while they both remain in contention for the College Football Playoff, it wound up being a statement win for LSU, who had gone eight straight tries without beating Alabama. The Tigers were led by quarterback and leading Heisman candidate Joe Burrow who threw for 393 yards and three touchdowns. Alabama was down 33-13 at halftime and rallied back, but LSU answered the challenge and survived. Alabama quarterback Tua Tagovailoa, one of the nation's top draft prospects, threw for 418 yards and four touchdowns, but was hampered by an interception and a fumble. [ESPN]More stories from theweek.com The return of honor politics Lindsey Graham is 'confident' the whistleblower is 'from the deep state' Someone made a font out of gerrymandered congressional districts |
Huthi rebels will have role in Yemen's future: UAE Posted: 10 Nov 2019 06:07 AM PST Yemen's rebels will have a role in their country's future, a UAE minister said Sunday, voicing optimism that a recent peace deal between the government and southern separatists could lead to a wider solution. The comments were the latest conciliatory move in the long-running Yemen conflict, after the Iran-backed Huthis offered in September to halt attacks on Saudi Arabia. Anwar Gargash, minister of state for foreign affairs in the United Arab Emirates -- a key member in the Saudi-led coalition backing Yemen's government against the Huthis -- urged all sides to maintain momentum for a political solution. |
Iran begins pouring concrete for 2nd nuclear power reactor Posted: 10 Nov 2019 05:03 AM PST Iran began pouring concrete Sunday for a second nuclear reactor at its Bushehr power plant, a facility Tehran points to as its reason to break the enrichment limit set by its unraveling 2015 nuclear deal with world powers. While celebrating the start of construction, the politics of the moment weren't lost on Iranian officials as a U.S. pressure campaign of sanctions blocks Tehran from selling its crude oil abroad. "It was not us who started breaking commitments, it was them who did not keep to their commitments and cannot accept the nuclear deal as a one-way roadmap," said Ali Akbar Salehi, the head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran. |
Tories Say ‘Reckless’ Labour Spending Plans Total $1.5 Trillion Posted: 10 Nov 2019 04:47 AM PST (Bloomberg) -- Sign up to our Brexit Bulletin, follow us @Brexit and subscribe to our podcast.Jeremy Corbyn's Labour Party plans to spend 1.2 trillion pounds ($1.5 trillion) over five years, expenditure that would plunge the U.K. into an economic crisis, Chancellor of the Exchequer Sajid Javid said on Sunday.Javid's Conservatives released a 36-page document analyzing the main opposition party's policies. More than 50% of the costings came from Labour's own figures, Javid said in a BBC TV interview, with the Tories calculating other expenditure in a "reasonable way." Labour's finance spokesman, John McDonnell, dismissed the analysis as a "ludicrous piece of Tory fake news.""These are eye-watering levels of spending," Javid told the BBC. The alleged total "is absolutely reckless and will leave this country with an economic crisis within months. Not years, within months."After a series of missteps last week, during which a cabinet minister quit and another made insensitive remarks about the victims of a high-rise fire, Boris Johnson's Conservatives are trying to get their election campaign back on to safer ground by attacking Labour's credibility on the economy. While they still enjoy a double-digit lead in most polls ahead of the Dec. 12 general election, Labour has gained some ground.Labour's electoral manifesto from 2017 would cost the country 611 billion pounds over five years, and the party has made an additional 587 billion of promises since then, according to the Tory analysis. It said Labour would increase government spending by 30%, or an extra 650 million pounds a day.'Fake News'"This ludicrous piece of Tory fake news is an incompetent mishmash of debunked estimates and bad maths," McDonnell said in a statement. "Labour will tax the rich to pay for things everyone needs and deserves, like decent housing, health care and support for our children."McDonnell told the Independent on Sunday that a Labour government would test out the idea of a universal basic income in a pilot program, and suggested that expansion of Heathrow would be blocked.The Tory analysis includes the cost of abolishing private schools -- which Labour has indicated won't be in its manifesto -- and suggests the party would implement all of its policies from day one.Labour plans to nationalize water and energy utilities, the railways and Royal Mail. It's also proposed a four-day working week and setting up a National Investment Bank. McDonnell promised that Labour would publish a fully costed manifesto later in the campaign. It's something his party did in the 2017 general election – and the Tories didn't.Business Minister Kwasi Kwarteng earlier declined in a Sky News interview to provide an equivalent figure for Conservative spending plans. Javid declined to say what taxation policies his party would pursue, promising to outline them later in the campaign. "I believe in low taxes; I believe people should keep more of their own money," he said.Electoral BlowsPressed to reveal the cost to the economy of Johnson's Brexit deal, the chancellor declined to provide a figure, but also rejected year-old government forecasts that a similar plan would add 72 billion pounds to government borrowing. "That's not right," he said. He pointed to Bank of England analysis last week that showed "growth every year" based on Johnson's deal being enacted.In the past week, both the Conservative and Labour campaigns have suffered blows. Corbyn was deemed "not fit to run the country" by Ian Austin, a former Labour Party member of parliament who urged voters to support Johnson. Another blow came from the Jewish Chronicle newspaper, which ran a front page article describing Corbyn as an anti-Semite.PollingOver the weekend, at least three polls gave the Tories a double-digit lead over Labour, while a fourth put the lead at just 8 points. That's unlikely to trouble Corbyn, who at the outset of the 2017 campaign also lagged the Tories by a double-digit margin before recovering to deprive them of their majority.The Green Party's only MP, Caroline Lucas, said the country "may well be heading again for a hung parliament" in which a "handful" of seats can make a difference. Her party has reached an electoral pact with two other pro-EU groups, the Liberal Democrats and the Welsh nationalist Plaid Cymru party, which has seen two of the parties stand aside in 60 seats nationwide.On the other side of the European debate, Brexit Party Leader Nigel Farage challenged Johnson again to form an alliance of their own. Johnson has already rejected overtures from Farage who had set as a condition of any pact that the prime minister should abandon his Brexit deal. But on Sunday, Farage gave Johnson another four days to reach agreement, or he'll stand Brexit Party candidates in every seat in Great Britain. Tory Brexiteers have expressed concerns that this will split the pro-Brexit vote and allow Labour and other parties to win more seats."This is the chance for a Leave alliance to deliver Brexit and finish off Labour for a generation," Farage told the Sunday Express. "The clock is ticking. Nominations for candidates close this week. After that, the die will be cast."To contact the reporters on this story: Alex Morales in London at amorales2@bloomberg.net;Jill Ward in London at jward98@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: Tim Ross at tross54@bloomberg.net, Sara Marley, Marion DakersFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P. |
Inside China's 're-education' camps Posted: 10 Nov 2019 04:00 AM PST Excerpted from an article that originally appeared in Haaretz Magazine. Used with permission. Twenty prisoners live in one small room. They are handcuffed, their heads are shaved, every move is monitored by ceiling cameras. A bucket in the corner of the room is their toilet. The daily routine begins at 6 a.m. They are learning Chinese, memorizing propaganda songs, and confessing to invented sins. They range in age from teenagers to elderly. Their meals are meager: cloudy soup and a slice of bread.Torture -- metal nails, fingernails pulled out, electric shocks -- takes place in the "black room." Punishment is a constant. The prisoners are forced to take pills and get injections. It's for disease prevention, the staff tells them, but in reality they are the human subjects of medical experiments. Many of the inmates suffer from cognitive decline. Some of the men become sterile. Women are routinely raped.This is life in China's re-education camps, as reported in rare testimony provided by Sayragul Sauytbay (pronounced Say-ra-gul Saut-bay, as in "bye"), a teacher who escaped from China and was granted asylum in Sweden. Few prisoners have succeeded in getting out of the camps and telling their story. Sauytbay's testimony is even more extraordinary, because during her incarceration she was compelled to be a teacher in the camp. China wants to sell its camps to the world as places of educational programs and vocational retraining, but Sauytbay is one of the few people who can offer credible, firsthand testimony about what really goes on in the camps.I met with Sauytbay three times, once in a meeting arranged by a Swedish Uighur association and twice, after she agreed to tell her story to Haaretz, in personal interviews that took place in Stockholm and lasted several hours, all together. Sauytbay spoke only Kazakh, and so we communicated via a translator. During most of the time we spoke, she was composed, but at the height of her recounting of the horror, tears welled up in her eyes.She is 43, a Muslim of Kazakh descent, who grew up in Mongolkure County, near the Chinese-Kazakh border. Like hundreds of thousands of others, most of them Uighurs, a minority ethnic Turkic group, she fell victim to China's suppression of every sign of an isolationist thrust in the northwestern province of Xinjiang. A large number of camps have been established in that region over the past two years, as part of the regime's struggle against what it terms the Three Evils: terrorism, separatism, and extremism. According to Western estimates, between one million and two million of the province's residents have been incarcerated in camps during Beijing's campaign of oppression.As a young woman, Sauytbay completed medical studies and worked in a hospital. Subsequently, she turned to education and was employed in the service of the state, in charge of five preschools. Even though she was in a settled situation, she and her husband had planned for years to leave China with their two children and move to neighboring Kazakhstan. But the plan encountered delays, and in 2014 the authorities began collecting the passports of civil servants, Sauytbay's among them. Two years later, just before passports from the entire population were confiscated, her husband was able to leave the country with the children. Sauytbay hoped to join them in Kazakhstan as soon as she received an exit visa, but one never arrived."At the end of 2016, the police began arresting people at night, secretly," Sauytbay related. "It was a socially and politically uncertain period. Cameras appeared in every public space; the security forces stepped up their presence. At one stage, DNA samples were taken from all members of minorities in the region and our telephone SIM cards were taken from us.""In January 2017, they started to take people who had relatives abroad," Sauytbay says. "They came to my house at night, put a black sack on my head, and brought me to a place that looked like a jail. I was interrogated by police officers, who wanted to know where my husband and children were, and why they had gone to Kazakhstan. At the end of the interrogation I was ordered to tell my husband to come home, and I was forbidden to talk about the interrogation."Sauytbay had heard that in similar cases people who returned to China had been arrested immediately and sent to a camp. With that in mind, she broke off contact with her husband and children after her release. She was repeatedly taken in for nocturnal interrogations and falsely accused of various offenses. "I had to be strong," she says. "Every day when I woke up, I thanked God that I was still alive."In November 2017, I was ordered to report to an address in the city's suburbs, to leave a message at a phone number I had been given, and to wait for the police." After Sauytbay arrived at the designated place and left the message, four armed men in uniform arrived, again covered her head, and bundled her into a vehicle. Following an hour's journey, she arrived in an unfamiliar place that she soon learned was a "re-education" camp, which would become her prison in the months that followed. She was told she had been brought there in order to teach Chinese and was immediately made to sign a document that set forth her duties and the camp's rules."I was very much afraid to sign," Sauytbay recalls. "It said there that if I did not fulfill my task, or if I did not obey the rules, I would get the death penalty. The document stated that it was forbidden to speak with the prisoners, forbidden to laugh, forbidden to cry, and forbidden to answer questions from anyone. I signed because I had no choice, and then I received a uniform and was taken to a tiny bedroom with a concrete bed and a thin, plastic mattress. There were five cameras on the ceiling -- one in each corner and another one in the middle."The other inmates, those who weren't burdened with teaching duties, endured more stringent conditions. "There were almost 20 people in a room of 16 square meters [172 square feet]," she says. "There were cameras in their rooms too, and also in the corridor. Each room had a plastic bucket for a toilet. Every prisoner was given two minutes a day to use the toilet, and the bucket was emptied only once a day. The prisoners wore uniforms and their heads were shaved. Their hands and feet were shackled all day, except when they had to write. Even in sleep they were shackled, and they were required to sleep on their right side -- anyone who turned over was punished."Sauytbay had to teach the prisoners -- who were Uighur or Kazakh speakers -- Chinese and Communist Party propaganda songs. There were specified hours for learning propaganda songs and reciting slogans from posters: "I love China," "Thank you to the Communist Party," "I am Chinese," and "I love Xi Jinping" -- China's president. Sauytbay estimates that there were about 2,500 inmates in the camp. The oldest person she met was a woman of 84; the youngest, a boy of 13. "There were schoolchildren and workers, businessmen and writers, nurses and doctors, artists and simple peasants who had never been to the city."The camp's commanders set aside a room for torture, Sauytbay relates, which the inmates dubbed the black room because it was forbidden to talk about it explicitly. "There were all kinds of tortures there. Some prisoners were hung on the wall and beaten with electrified truncheons. There were prisoners who were made to sit on a chair of nails. I saw people return from that room covered in blood. Some came back without fingernails."On one occasion, Sauytbay herself was punished. "One night, about 70 new prisoners were brought to the camp," she recalls. "One of them was an elderly Kazakh woman who hadn't even had time to take off her shoes. She spotted me as being Kazakh and asked for my help. She begged me to get her out of there, and she embraced me. I did not reciprocate her embrace, but I was punished anyway. I was beaten and deprived of food for two days."Sauytbay says she witnessed medical procedures being carried out on inmates with no justification. She thinks they were done as part of human experiments that were carried out in the camp systematically. "The inmates would be given pills or injections. They were told it was to prevent diseases, but the nurses told me secretly that the pills were dangerous and that I should not take them.""The pills had different kinds of effects. Some prisoners were cognitively weakened. Women stopped getting their period and men became sterile." (That, at least, was a widely circulated rumor.)The fate of the women in the camp was particularly harsh, Sauytbay notes: "On an everyday basis the policemen took the pretty girls with them, and they didn't come back to the rooms all night. The police had unlimited power. They could take whomever they wanted. There were also cases of gang rape. In one of the classes I taught, one of those victims entered half an hour after the start of the lesson. The police ordered her to sit down, but she just couldn't do it, so they took her to the black room for punishment."Tears stream down Sauytbay's face when she tells the grimmest story from her time in the camp. "One day, the police told us they were going to check to see whether our re-education was succeeding, whether we were developing properly. They took 200 inmates outside, men and women, and told one of the women to confess her sins. She stood before us and declared that she had been a bad person, but now that she had learned Chinese she had become a better person. When she was done speaking, the policemen ordered her to disrobe and simply raped her one after the other, in front of everyone. While they were raping her, they checked to see how we were reacting. People who turned their head or closed their eyes, and those who looked angry or shocked, were taken away and we never saw them again. It was awful. I will never forget the feeling of helplessness, of not being able to help her. After that happened, it was hard for me to sleep at night."Sayragul Sauytbay's story took a surprising turn in March 2018, when with no prior announcement she was informed that she was being released. Again her head was covered with a black sack, again she was bundled into a vehicle, but this time she was taken home. At first the orders were clear: She was to resume her former position as director of five preschools in her home region of Aksu, and she was instructed not to say a word about what she had been through. On her third day back on the job, however, she was fired and again brought in for interrogation. She was accused of treason and of maintaining ties with people abroad. The punishment for people like her, she was told, was re-education, only this time she would be a regular inmate in a camp and remain there for a period of one to three years."I was told that before being sent to the camp, I should return home so as to show my successor the ropes," she says. "At this stage I hadn't seen my children for 2½ years, and I missed them very much. Having already been in a camp, I knew I would die there, and I could not accept that."Sauytbay decided that she was not going back to a camp. "I said to myself that if I was already fated to die, at least I was going to try to escape. It was worth my while to take the risk because of the chance that I would be able to see my children. There were police stationed outside my apartment, and I didn't have a passport, but even so, I tried. I got out through a window and fled to the neighbors' house. From there I took a taxi to the border with Kazakhstan, and I managed to sneak across. In Kazakhstan I found my family. My dream came true. I could not have received a greater gift."But the saga did not end there: Immediately after her emotional reunion with her family, she was arrested by Kazakhstan's secret service and incarcerated for nine months for having crossed the border illegally. Three times she submitted a request for asylum, and three times she was turned down; she faced the danger of being extradited to China. But after relatives contacted several media outlets, international organizations intervened, and in the end she was granted asylum in Sweden."I will never forget the camp," Sauytbay says. "I cannot forget the eyes of the prisoners, expecting me to do something for them. They are innocent. I have to tell their story, to tell about the darkness they are in, about their suffering."More stories from theweek.com The return of honor politics Lindsey Graham is 'confident' the whistleblower is 'from the deep state' Someone made a font out of gerrymandered congressional districts |
Tories Say Labour Spending Plans Total $1.5 Trillion: U.K. Votes Posted: 10 Nov 2019 02:57 AM PST (Bloomberg) -- Sign up to our Brexit Bulletin, follow us @Brexit and subscribe to our podcast.Boris Johnson's Conservatives sought to undermine the Labour Party's credibility on the economy, saying the opposition's spending plans would cost 1.2 trillion pounds ($1.5 trillion) over five years. The analysis by the governing party -- branded a "ludicrous piece of Tory fake news" by Labour's finance spokesman, John McDonnell -- was carried on the front covers of the Sunday Times, the Sunday Telegraph and the Mail on Sunday.Key Developments:Chancellor of the Exchequer Sajid Javid tells Sunday Times that Labour's plans would leave U.K. on "the brink of bankruptcy"McDonnell promises Labour's manifesto will be fully costedYouGov poll in Sunday Times puts Tories 13 points ahead of Labour; Opinium poll gives them a 12-point leadJavid Promises 'Controlled' Spending (10:10 a.m.)A Conservative government would ensure spending levels are "controlled," Chancellor of the Exchequer Sajid Javid said, contrasting it with what he termed "reckless" expenditure by Jeremy Corbyn's Labour Party."We're going to be very clear about how we spend and borrow and it's always going to be controlled," Javid said on Sunday in a BBC News interview. He declined to say what taxation policies his party would pursue, saying he would outline it later in the campaign. "I believe in low taxes; I believe people should keep more of their own money."Javid said his party's calculation that Labour's plans would cost the country 1.2 trillion pounds was based mainly on Labour's own numbers, with other sums carried out in a "reasonable" way. Like Business Minister Kwasi Kwarteng earlier (see 8:40 a.m.), Javid declined to provide an equivalent figure for his own Conservative Party.Pressed to reveal the cost of Boris Johnson's Brexit deal on the British economy, he declined to provide a figure, but also rejected year-old government forecasts that a similar plan would add 72 billion pounds to government borrowing. "That's not right," he said.Greens Say Electoral Pact Could Make Difference (9:50 a.m.)The Green Party's only Member of Parliament, Caroline Lucas, said the electoral pact her party has reached with the Liberal Democrats and Plaid Cymru could be influential in the next Parliament. She said the deal, which saw candidates from two of the pro-European parties stand aside in 60 seats nationwide, was necessary because of the U.K.'s "undemocratic" first-past-the-post electoral system."The evidence suggests that we may well be heading again for a hung parliament, in which case even just a handful of seats can make a difference," she said. "We have a horrible undemocratic unfair electoral system that means we have to try to game the system in that way."Labour Manifesto Costs Not Finalized (9:30 a.m.)Labour hasn't yet totaled up the final cost of its policy program, the opposition party's campaign chief, Andrew Gwynne, told the BBC on Sunday. But he pushed back against Tory calculations that Labour policies will cost 1.2 trillion pounds, calling it "an absolute work of fiction."Gwynne and Labour's Defence Spokeswoman Nia Griffith, who spoke to Sky News, both repeated McDonnell's pledge that the manifesto when published will be fully costed. It'll be finalized next Saturday, Gwynne said. "There will be open transparency from the Labour Party."It's something Labour also did in the 2017 general election – and the Tories didn't.Labour Committed to Keeping Nuclear Deterrent (9:10 a.m.)Shadow Defence Secretary Nia Griffith told Sky News that the Labour Party is "absolutely committed" to keeping the U.K.'s nuclear deterrent. "It's a very, very important part of our defense, particularly when we're seeing a resurgent Russia, and we're seeing the U.S. perhaps being a little bit lukewarm about NATO," Griffith said. She didn't comment on when exactly Labour would use it, though emphasized that Corbyn "fully understands what deterrents mean."Earlier, the SNP's Westminster leader Ian Blackford suggested that Labour's support for nuclear weapons could be a factor in any negotiations for the SNP to prop up a Labour government in the event of a hung parliament, though he declined to give a yes or no answer on whether it was a red line."To waste up to 200 billion pounds on these weapons of mass destruction that can never be used is a fallacy," Blackford told Sky News. "These nuclear weapons are not the answer to the needs of defense and security of the United Kingdom."Business Minister Slams Labour's Spending Plans (8:40 a.m.)Business Minister Kwasi Kwarteng slammed the Labour Party's spending plans, accusing it of "promising the earth." He confirmed that Tory analysis of the main opposition's policies -- including a four-day working week and nationalization of energy infrastructure and water utilities -- show they'll add up to 1.2 trillion pounds."All those things are going to have to be paid for, and Labour's policies don't add up," Kwarteng said in a Sky News interview. "We've shown that they are reckless in their spending. It's a huge amount of money that we can't afford."Challenged repeatedly on what the equivalent total is for the Conservative Party, he was unable to say. He said that the government gave details in its budget, and that Tory spending plans "are not nearly as astronomical" as Labour ones.Kwarteng also urged Brexit Party Leader Nigel Farage to "step aside" now that Boris Johnson has negotiated a deal to take the U.K. out of the European Union.Labour to 'Bankrupt U.K.,' Javid Tells Papers (Earlier)Labour spending plans will cost the country 1.2 trillion pounds over the next five years, the Sunday Telegraph reported, citing a 36-page dossier prepared by the Conservative Party. The story was also carried in the Sunday Times, which cited Chancellor of the Exchequer Sajid Javid as saying the plans are a "truly terrifying spending splurge" which would leave the U.K. "on the brink of bankruptcy."McDonnell, for his part, issued a statement dismissing the dossier as "Tory fake news," and promising his party's manifesto would be "fully costed.""This ludicrous piece of Tory fake news is an incompetent mishmash of debunked estimates and bad maths cooked up because they know Labour's plans for real change are popular," McDonnell said. "Labour will tax the rich to pay for things everyone needs and deserves, like decent housing, health care and support for our children. We will also use the power of the state to invest to grow our economy, create good jobs in every region and nation and tackle the climate emergency."Polls Give Conservatives Double-Digit Lead (Earlier)Three polls give Boris Johnson's Conservatives a double-digit lead over Jeremy Corbyn's Labour Party.A YouGov poll in the Sunday Times puts the Tories on 39%, unchanged from its previous survey, with Labour down a point on 26%. The Liberal Democrats are up a point on 17% and the Brexit Party are up 3 points on 10%.Late Saturday, Opinium released the results of its latest poll, giving the Tories a 12-point lead. That margin was down four points from its previous survey last week. Opinium put the Conservatives on 41%, Labour on 29%, the Lib Dems on 15% and the Brexit Party on 6%. A survey by Deltapoll for the Mail on Sunday had the same numbers for the Tories and Labour, with the Liberal Democrats at 16%. The Brexit Party lost 5 percentage points from the previous poll to 6%.One poll, however, gave a smaller lead for the Tories. The BMG survey for the Independent on Sunday put the Tories on 37%, with Labour on 29%, the Liberal Democrats on 16% and the Brexit Party on 9%.Secret Report Named Russian Tory Donors: Times (Earlier)Nine Russian donors to the Conservative Party are identified in a report from Parliament's Intelligence and Security Committee that the government last week refused to release, the Sunday Times reported.Bloomberg last week revealed that the report raised concerns over the threat of Russian interference in British elections but found no "smoking gun" evidence of Kremlin-sponsored meddling.A row over the government's refusal to publish the report dominated Parliament's final day before the body was dissolved for the Dec. 12 election. The government insists that it needs more time to ensure that secret sources of information aren't inadvertently revealed. People familiar with the report are equally insistent this work has already been done.Earlier:Johnson Sows Confusion Over Northern Irish Trade After BrexitWhich Political Party Has the Best Track Record for U.K. Stocks?Tories Get Nervous as Chaos Hits Johnson's U.K. Election TrainBritain's Election Gamble -- What You Need to Know: QuickTakeTo contact the reporters on this story: Alex Morales in London at amorales2@bloomberg.net;Jill Ward in London at jward98@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: Tim Ross at tross54@bloomberg.net, James Amott, Marion DakersFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P. |
Opioids emerge as key sticking point for US-China trade deal Posted: 10 Nov 2019 02:00 AM PST A joint operation that led to the conviction of three Chinese nationals for smuggling fentanyl is a hopeful sign for Trump as he faces election yearDonald Trump has personally pressed his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping, to do something to stem the flow of opioids from China. 'You've got to help us with this,' read one note. Photograph: Kevin Lamarque/ReutersThe seemingly never-ending trade dispute between China and the US often seems like a game of snakes and ladders. Last week China signaled a breakthrough on a quarrel that has roiled economies around the world – only for the Trump administration to issue a denial. The sticking point, for some, appears to be the US opioid crisis.America is in the grip of its worst drugs crisis in a generation. About 130 people die each day in the US from opioid-related overdoses and many – including Donald Trump – blame imports of cheap drugs from China. Beijing's acknowledgment of the issue's importance to the US came on Thursday when China's National Narcotics Control Commission held a press conference about a fentanyl smuggling case cracked in a joint operation between US and Chinese authorities.The trial, which culminated in three Chinese nationals being sentenced to maximum punishments for smuggling fentanyl to the US and six others sentenced for up to two years, is one of China's highest-profile cases aimed at curbing the illicit flow of opioids.Chinese-produced fentanyl or Chinese-produced ingredients for the drug have been repeatedly blamed by Trump for the soaring number of US opioid-related deaths.According to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 28,000 synthetic opioid-related overdose deaths were recorded in 2017 alone, and fentanyl-laced pills have been blamed for several high-profile deaths, including the musicians Prince and Tom Petty.The emergence of fentanyl as an underlying reason for trade tensions is not new, say observers of the on-again, off-again negotiations, but it has gained importance as a political issue as Trump heads into an election year."Fentanyl matters a lot in US politics, because it could be politically devastating among suburban housewives in swing states if fentanyl-related deaths are blamed on Trump's political inaction on the issue," said Derek Scissors, a scholar with the pro-market American Enterprise Institute.Fentanyl was implicated in the death of the musician Tom Petty. Photograph: Rex/Shutterstock"The administration knows they have to neutralize fentanyl as a political issue to make a deal with China, and the Chinese have figured out they have to cooperate on this if they want a deal with the US," Scissors said. "There has to be progress or a deal can't hold together."US pressure on China to crack down on fentanyl first emerged in trade negotiations in November 2017 when Trump warned the Chinese leader Xi Jinping, on a trip to Beijing, that he would make stopping the "flood of cheap and deadly" fentanyl "manufactured in China" a "top priority"."A special emphasis will be placed on the new phenomenon – fentanyl – destroying lives by the millions. We're going to be focusing on it very strongly, the president and myself," Trump said at the time.But it was not until the G20 summit of world leaders in Buenos Aires last year, where Trump pressed Xi on the issue at a steak dinner that capped the conference, that China agreed to list fentanyl and its derivatives as a controlled substance, according to CNN.That move came after the White House reportedly sent a copy to Xi of a Los Angeles Times article headlined "Fentanyl smuggled from China is killing thousands of Americans" with "you have to help us with this" scribbled on it.In August, Trump again accused Xi of failing to crack down on the flow of Chinese-produced fentanyl.According to the Drug Enforcement Agency, China is responsible for the precursor chemicals for fentanyl, while most of the production is now through Mexico, a marked shift from recent years when shipments went largely unchecked from China to the US.In congressional testimony last year, the DEA deputy chief, Paul Knierim, described China as "one of the world's top producers of the precursor chemicals used to manufacture methamphetamine and fentanyl, as well as the chemicals used to process heroin and cocaine."Combating illicit fentanyl is a top priority of this administration," Knierim said, welcoming "positive actions being taken by the Chinese government over the last year. Their actions are steps in the right direction, but more can be done."While US opioid-related deaths, estimated at 400,000 since 2000, appear to have peaked, China's agreement to put controls on all fentanyl substances came only after years of bilateral dialog, according to the DEA."It is a very significant step for them and we appreciate China's efforts," a DEA spokeswoman, Katherine Pfaff, told the Guardian. But the effectiveness of China's crackdown is unclear."Based on past actions, whenever China has put controls into place we have seen a difference in what is coming into the US from China, or sourced from China," Pfaff added.While the smuggling trial, which was broadcast on television, is widely held to be a signal that China is prepared to go some way to meet Trump's demands, Beijing maintains it is not responsible for the fentanyl aspect of the US opioid epidemic.In the past, Beijing has described the US holding China responsible for fentanyl production as political "fantasy".That position was repeated on Thursday when Yu Haibing, deputy secretary general of the China National Narcotics Control Commission, said: "China's control of fentanyl has become more strict, but the number of deaths in the US from fentanyl have risen. This shows that China is not the source of the problem," said Yu, reported Bloomberg.Still, the trial was heralded as an important step by US authorities."As the success of the joint investigation demonstrates, Chinese and American investigators have the capacity to collaborate across international borders," said Austin Moore, an attache with the Department of Homeland Security in Beijing, said at a briefing.The issue of China and fentanyl is likely to remain tense for the administration. "Trump already said China is going to help us with this. If they don't, Trump is stuck," said Scissors. "The trial was a gesture of good faith. Now it's up to the US to reciprocate." |
Is North Korea’s Year-End Countdown for Real? Posted: 10 Nov 2019 02:00 AM PST |
What the Hell Happened to Hugh Hewitt? Posted: 10 Nov 2019 01:54 AM PST Photo Illustration by Elizabeth Brockway/The Daily Beast/GettyWhen Hillary Clinton's campaign in 2016 wanted to reach conservative voters, they decided there was only one person in right-leaning media who'd give them a fair shake: Hugh Hewitt. According to multiple sources, the Clinton campaign considered playing ball with Hewitt's radio program because advisers viewed him to be an even-keeled, serious-minded conservative pundit who could have a civilized, intellectual, and issues-focused discussion with the former secretary of state. She eventually appeared on the show in 2017. Nearly three years later, however, the likelihood that any top 2020 Democratic presidential candidate would even consider an appearance on Hewitt's show is closer to zero. Since President Donald Trump took office, it seems, Hewitt has undergone a dramatic political shift mirroring the path of the Republican Party—one that has become increasingly about fealty to the president, above all other values—leaving some of the radio host's friends dumbfounded."He's lost his fucking mind," said one senior colleague at MSNBC, where Hewitt was once a host and is currently an on-air contributor. "He's put himself in the same position as Lou Dobbs."Once an aide to Ronald Reagan and early supporter of Mitt Romney's presidential ambitions, Hewitt has fallen in line with the rest of the conservative media ecosystem as a reliably Trumpian defender of the president's bizarre and potentially criminal behavior—his popular radio show now fervently bashing Democrats and providing cover for Trump's many ongoing scandals in a way that seemingly morphs Hewitt into an intellectualized version of Fox News stars like Sean Hannity or Dobbs.He's become one of the leading GOP media voices attempting to push a legal framework justifying Trump's infamous July 2019 phone call in which he committed a quid pro quo by pressuring the Ukrainian president to investigate former Vice President Joe Biden and his son.After a complaint by a whistleblower at the heart of House Democrats' impeachment inquiry was publicly released, for example, Hewitt was dismissive—and in an unusually conspiratorial manner. "Hot take from a smart guy: 'Just read whistleblowers complaint. Theory, this is a cover up, not just of Biden, but the whole Clintons Obama Biden collusion debacle riff with illegality. The complaint is someone in that mix trying to cover their ass,'" he tweeted.MSNBC Host Hugh Hewitt Personally Lobbied Pruitt to Clean Up Toxic Waste Near His HomeAnd when a memo of Trump's call with Ukraine was released, Hewitt was equally unimpressed, writing a Washington Post column labeling the phone chat a "nothingburger" à la "Al Capone's vault." He also excused and applauded Trump's behavior exhibited on the call."True, a more circumspect president might have steered clear, in the call with Zelensky, of discussing Ukraine's history of corruption," Hewitt wrote. "And another president might have considered it bad form to bring up former vice president Joe Biden's son, Hunter, and his involvement with a Ukrainian energy company. But Trump isn't circumspect. If something is on his mind, that's what he says, and he speaks directly, not with diplomatic evasions."Far from his days as a cool-headed MSNBC daytime host, Hewitt has recently begun to align himself with some of the more fringe characters in the right-wing fever swamp.He appeared on bombastic ex-Trump aide Sebastian Gorka's radio show in late September, defending his assertion that, instead of the whistleblower's revelations being negative for Trump, actually, "the whistleblower took a shot at Trump and instead hit the Bidens."And Hewitt has frequently turned over his airwaves to Kurt Schlichter, a middling right-wing blowhard who provided Trump with one of the more bonkers talking points regarding Syria—that the Kurds are undeserving of U.S. help because they did not assist the World War II D-Day landings—and has fantasized in graphic detail about killing Democrats in a modern civil war.As such, Hewitt has begun to echo the musings of such far-right defenders of the president. On his radio show, he has called the impeachment inquiry a "lynch mob" and a "soft coup, dressed in constitutional clothing." He uncharacteristically added: "Quote it again. You think I'm embarrassed by that? I'm not. That's exactly what's happening."And, of course, Hewitt's public attempts to cover for the president have not gone unnoticed by Trump. "Thank you Hugh!" the president tweeted after the radio host wrote that Americans should support the Trump administration's attempts to get foreign leaders to probe Democratic rivals over the 2016 election. It was a far cry from the pre-election times Trump publicly bashed Hewitt as a "3rd rate" host.The stalwart conservative legal pundit's recent transformation has raised eyebrows among friends who long viewed him as a moderate and reasonable voice in a right-wing media increasingly dominated by pandering to the lowest common denominator.Conservative radio host and prominent Trump critic Charlie Sykes told The Daily Beast that while his shift reflects the GOP's overall descent into Trumpism, it is still striking to see Hewitt—who is regularly featured on Beltway talk shows like Meet the Press, where he'll appear this Sunday—give into such instincts. "What's really surprising isn't just that Hewitt has become a reflexive Trump defender, it is his willingness to torch his reputation by indulging in such rank hackery," Sykes said. "I mean, it's just embarrassing stuff."Hewitt had long been positioned by Beltway political journalists as a genial and calmer alternative to the more stereotypically incendiary right-wing talk radio personalities. USA Today described him in 2015 as "the radio voice of the establishment GOP aired without rancor," saying Hewitt was a principled conservative who still refused to "play to the base." The Guardian went further in a profile that same year, calling him "the thinking candidate's Rush Limbaugh," while the Washington Post said his "reputation for facilitating rich and respectful on-air conversations with guests whose own political loyalties lie far afield from his own" made it so "Hewitt haters like Trump can be hard to find."Hewitt himself used to play into the media framing of him as a compassionate conservative. In the past, he's described his own show as akin to an NPR for conservatives. And like many other mainstream Republicans, during the 2016 campaign, Hewitt expressed many reservations about the former reality television star: He railed against the nominee over the Access Hollywood tape in which Trump bragged about nonconsensually groping women; and, at one point, the conservative radio host was applauded for exposing Trump's lack of knowledge in basic elements of foreign policy, drawing the future president's signature ire."Very low ratings radio host Hugh Hewitt asked me about Suleiman, Abu Bake al-Baghdad, Hassan Nasrallah and more - typical 'gotcha' questions," the future president whined on Twitter, minutes later adding: "Why would a very low ratings radio talk show host like Hugh Hewitt be doing the next debate on @CNN. He is just a 3rd rate 'gotcha' guy!"Since Trump took office, Hewitt has obviously changed his tune on the president—largely citing his desire to see a more conservative Supreme Court. But such a drastic conversion has resulted in Hewitt contradicting many of his own previous positions that were of deep concern to him during the Obama administration. During a May 2013 show, for instance, Hewitt was adamantly opposed to whistleblower intimidation, and was aghast at House Democrats who he believed tried to silence a Benghazi whistleblower. "If you can imagine the number, the principal aide to the Secretary of State berating the chief of mission, and a survivor of a terrorist attack, and demanding a report on the visit and upset that her lawyer was excluded from a meeting, it's a clear intimidation of a whistleblower," he said then.Also directly contradicting his excuses for the Trump administration: Hewitt was a leading voice of concern about Obama using his office to target political opponents. On numerous occasions, the radio host lamented the allegations that Obama's SEC targeted Romney supporters and that the IRS targeted conservative tea party activists. "The IRS got away with murder, and with targeting tea party groups," Hewitt said at the time. "There has been no justice."During the IRS investigation, Hewitt even boosted a column bemoaning that Republicans simply asked questions while Democrats attacked House Oversight Committee then-Chairman Darrell Issa—a nearly mirror image of Republicans' Trump-era attacks on Rep. Adam Schiff, a top House Democrat chairing the intelligence committee.And despite the fact that perhaps Hewitt's most famous moment of the 2016 cycle was his schooling of Trump on the future president's confusion of the Kurds and Quds Force, the Orange County-based radio host now seems wholly impressed with Trump's approach to abandoning Kurdish allies in Syria."Turkey can't want a war with Kurds but if it does we can't be killing Turks with Americans throughout Turkey, our base there," he recently tweeted. "Some will cast any deal w/ Turkey as @realDonaldTrump getting close w/ a dictator. It's not. It's dealing with the realities that we can't stay forever."Indeed, the fact that Hewitt now often seemingly twists himself into pretzels to defend Trump has baffled and frustrated many of his Beltway fans—including elected lawmakers. "[M]y friend Hugh (who I like) makes the case that trading foreign aid for political help is the modern equivalent of the Louisiana Purchase," Sen. Chris Murphy (D-CT) recently remarked on Twitter. "Bold."Even NBC anchor Chuck Todd, one of Hewitt's biggest friends at MSNBC, seemed confused when Hewitt said in September that Hunter Biden should have been under FBI surveillance since at least 2014."I don't—Hugh, I have no—," the anchor stammered."Read the column," Hewitt replied."I have no idea how that is even remotely relatable," an exasperated Todd said, adding: "But I will read your column."MSNBC Host Blows Up at Hugh Hewitt Over Iran: 'Just Stop for Heaven's Sake!'Read more at The Daily Beast.Got a tip? Send it to The Daily Beast hereGet our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more. |
Iraqis struggle to keep up sit-ins after deadly crackdown Posted: 10 Nov 2019 01:42 AM PST Iraqi protesters struggled to keep up their anti-government sit-ins Sunday following a deadly crackdown by security forces that Amnesty International warned could turn into a "bloodbath". Seven protesters died on Saturday in Baghdad and the southern city of Basra in the latest violence to hit the wave of popular protests that have shaken the country since early October. The United Nations warned of a spreading "climate of fear" and its top official in Iraq, Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert, said it was receiving "daily reports of killings, kidnappings, arbitrary arrests, beatings and intimidation of protesters". |
UPDATE 2-United States "very actively" asking N.Korea to return to talks - S.Korea Posted: 10 Nov 2019 12:13 AM PST The United States is "very actively" trying to persuade North Korea to come back to negotiations, South Korea's national security adviser said on Sunday, as a year-end North Korean deadline for U.S. flexibility approaches. South Korea was taking North Korea's deadline "very seriously", the adviser, Chung Eui-yong, told reporters, at a time when efforts to improve inter-Korean relations have stalled. |
As Putin’s Embrace Tightens, Belarus Strongman Reaches Out to EU Posted: 10 Nov 2019 12:00 AM PST (Bloomberg) -- Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko is set to make his first bilateral visit to the European Union since it dropped sanctions against him in 2016, as he strives to balance growing pressure from Moscow for integration with Russia.Lukashenko, once dubbed "Europe's last dictator" by the U.S., is due to meet Austrian President Alexander Van der Bellen in Vienna on Nov. 12, his first state visit to the country that hosts United Nations agencies and likes to act as hub of West-East diplomacy. The trip was flagged when then Chancellor Sebastian Kurz met Lukashenko in Minsk in March.Belarusian officials "are really trying" to boost ties with the West, mainly for economic reasons, said Igar Gubarevich, senior analyst at the Ostrogorski Centre, a London research group. Still, "they are willing to improve relations insofar as they don't require reforms which may threaten Lukashenko's power."The visit comes a week before the Russian and Belarusian prime ministers hold talks in Moscow on integration "roadmaps" intended to bind the two countries' economies more tightly together. The program is due to be presented for approval by Lukashenko and Russian President Vladimir Putin in December.The EU has been trying to pry the former Soviet republic out of the shadow of the Kremlin by removing sanctions that included Lukashenko personally, when he freed political prisoners and helped mediate in the conflict between Ukraine and Russian-backed separatists.The U.S. has also thawed relations, announcing in September that its returning its ambassador to Belarus for the first time since 2008. That came shortly after the then National Security Adviser John Bolton met Lukashenko in Minsk to "emphasize U.S. support for Belarus's sovereignty and independence," according to the U.S. embassy.'Build Bridges'Lukashenko's Austria visit shows that "gates that were closed before are opening now for Belarus," said Konstantin Zatulin, first deputy head of the Russian lower house of parliament's committee on CIS affairs. "Belarus is trying to build bridges with the West and the West is interested in encouraging Belarus."While Russia and Belarus signed a 1999 accord to form a so-called Union State, Lukashenko has rebuffed demands for a monetary union, single legal system and common foreign and security policy. As recently as April, three people close to the Kremlin said Russia may press for a unified state with Belarus as a way to sidestep a constitutional ban on Putin extending his presidency when his current term ends in 2024.Putin has denied any such plans. Lukashenko ruled out unification in July, saying he'd agreed with Putin that "absorbing Russia into Belarus or Belarus into Russia" shouldn't even be discussed, the Belta news service reported.Still, with Belarus largely dependent on Russian oil and gas supplies, Lukashenko felt the pressure when Moscow introduced new tax rules this year that he said may lead to nearly $11 billion in losses for his country by 2024 through increased crude costs.Topics to be discussed in Vienna include the EU's Eastern Partnership program and the maintenance of a memorial site in Maly Trostinets near Minsk, where the Nazis killed many Austrian Jews in World War II. The Austrian presidency said there will be a "critical dialogue on human right problems" and a meeting of business leaders.While Lukashenko "can make all the gestures he wants" to demonstrate his independence, "there is one objective thing - Belarus is deeply economically dependent on Russia," said Fyodor Lukyanov, who heads the Council on Foreign and Defense Policy, a research group that advises the Kremlin. The Union State plans "suggest that Belarus has no room for maneuver," he said.\--With assistance from Aliaksandr Kudrytski.To contact the reporters on this story: Boris Groendahl in Vienna at bgroendahl@bloomberg.net;Stepan Kravchenko in Moscow at skravchenko@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: Chad Thomas at cthomas16@bloomberg.net, Tony Halpin, Gregory L. WhiteFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P. |
Donald Trump Has Hit the Corruption Trifecta Posted: 09 Nov 2019 02:04 AM PST Photo Illustration by Sarah Rogers/The Daily BeastIt is now likely that President Trump will be impeached by the House of Representatives on the grounds that he has abused his power. But history teaches that there are three kinds of corruption in national politics: money, power, and sex. Amazingly, in less than one term, Trump has racked up ample material for impeachment on all three.Money is at the root of the standard political scandal. Using high office to line his own pockets is what brought down Vice President Spiro Agnew, who took kickbacks as governor of Maryland on government contracts. And the two great presidential scandals before Watergate involved money. The Crédit Mobilier matter rocked the Ulysses Grant administration in the 1870s, when government officials accepted bribes in return for providing land grants to railroad barons. And Warren Harding's Teapot Dome scandal in the 1920s involved Cabinet members who made a fortune using their authority to enrich oil magnates and others. Unlike Agnew, neither Presidents Grant nor Harding profited in these sordid affairs, but their ineptitude allowed the wrongdoing.Trump Follows Nixon's Last Lines of Defense as Walls Close InSo fixated were Americans on corruption of money as the source of presidential disgrace that many could not understand how Nixon's impeachment could result from the misconduct in which he and his top aides engaged. "What scandal? I never made a cent from Watergate," exclaimed former Attorney General John Mitchell. But Watergate introduced the second kind of scandal: corruption of power. Nixon may not have ordered the break-in at the DNC headquarters, but he was brought low because he actively managed the cover-up and subsequent efforts to obstruct the impeachment inquiry.This was followed by the Iran-Contra affair in the late 1980s. This one did not lead to an impeachment, but corruption was obvious in the effort to secretly–and illegally–supply arms to Iran-backed Shiite militias in return for the release of hostages and money to fund Contra insurgents in Nicaragua. Which brings us to the sex scandal. President Bill Clinton was impeached for lying under oath in 1998, when he denied having a sexual affair with an intern. He was not the first president to have a consensual (albeit highly improper) affair in the White House. But he was the first person in national politics to be entangled in a scandal involving behavior entirely unrelated to his official duties.Amazingly, Trump is a candidate for impeachment on all three. His effort to keep porn star Stormy Daniels from publicizing their relationship made him an unindicted co-conspirator in a crime that sent his former lawyer to jail. And if any of the almost 20 women who have accused him of sexual harassment ever had their day in court, there might be other reasons—including criminal misconduct—to impeach the man who bragged on tape about grabbing women's genitals with impunity.Trump could also be impeached for corruption of money. His brazen efforts to profit from the presidency are a daily spectacle, culminating in his breathtaking (and since withdrawn) decision to host a summit of world leaders at his Miami golf club. This is a clear violation of the Emoluments Clause in the Constitution, which, bizarrely, Trump recently called "phony." Unlike Grant and Harding, Trump is the one being paid in this corrupt use of his office. And of course, it is corruption of power that is leading to Trump's impeachment. In the Ukraine affair, there is evidence of an impeachable offense: attempting to coerce a vulnerable foreign government into providing dirt on a political opponent. This is a more serious abuse of power than even the Watergate robbery and its cover-up. And it is only one of this president's many abuses of power, including contempt of Congress and the obstruction of justice revealed by Robert Mueller's inquiry into Russian interference in the 2016 election.To be clear, it is not an impeachable offense to be a terrible president. He cannot be impeached for being a pathological liar, a vicious bully, a narcissist, or an ignoramus. He cannot be removed for stimulating fear and hatred, attacking a free press, or characterizing political opponents as "traitors." It is not impeachable to admire autocrats and demean democratic allies. He cannot even be impeached for imprisoning children on the border or betraying the Kurds and allowing ISIS to spring back to life.But Trump can be impeached for a stunning number of other things. Unlike Nixon, who stuck to abuse of power, Clinton, who simply lied about sex, and Harding, who allowed cronies to make off with bags of money, Trump has not confined himself to a single avenue of impeachable scandal. He has hit the trifecta.David H. Bennett, an Emeritus Professor of American History at Syracuse University, is the author of From Teapot Dome to Watergate, a monograph on presidential scandal.Read more at The Daily Beast.Get our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more. |
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