Evening Edition is an Open Thread
From Yahoo News Top Stories |
1 Syrian opposition demands Assad’s resignation
AFP
Thu Jun 2, 1:14 pm ET
DAMASCUS (AFP) – Syrian opposition groups demanded President Bashar al-Assad’s immediate resignation Thursday, snubbing government concessions after a week in which activists said security forces killed more than 60 people.
Opposition groups called for the “immediate resignation of President Bashar al-Assad from all functions he occupies,” in a joint declaration at the end of a two-day meeting in Turkey’s Mediterranean resort of Antalya. They urged the holding of “parliamentary and presidential elections within a period that will not exceed one year” following Assad’s ouster and vowed to work “to bring down the regime.” |
2 Syria seeks ‘national dialogue’, frees prisoners
AFP
Wed Jun 1, 6:29 pm ET
DAMASCUS (AFP) – Syrian President Bashar al-Assad Wednesday launched a “national dialogue” while freeing hundreds of political prisoners in an amnesty opposition groups and Washington say does not go far enough.
State television said Assad had set up a committee and charged it with “formulating general principles of dialogue that will open the way for the creation of an appropriate climate in which the different elements can express themselves and present their proposals.” The committee will include Syrian Vice President Faruq al-Shara, senior members of the ruling Baath Party and the National Progressive Front (NPF, a coalition of parties led by Baath), as well as one author and one teacher. |
3 Syrian activists call more protests after dozens dead
AFP
Thu Jun 2, 10:09 am ET
DAMASCUS (AFP) – Anti-regime activists in Syria have called for “Children’s Friday” protests, snubbing government concessions after a week in which they said security forces killed more than 60 people.
The fresh protests are to honour the children killed in the uprising, such as 13-year-old Hamza al-Khatib whom activists say was tortured to death, a charge denied by the authorities. The UN children’s agency UNICEF says at least 30 children have been shot dead in the revolt against President Bashar al-Assad’s autocratic rule which erupted in mid-March. |
4 US says Kadhafi isolated, Moscow in mediation bid
by Imed Lamloum, AFP
34 mins ago
TRIPOLI (AFP) – US military chief Admiral Mike Mullen said Thursday that Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi was increasingly isolated as Russia said it would send an envoy to Tripoli and Benghazi to mediate in the conflict.
The United Nations, meanwhile, denounced war crimes committed both by Kadhafi’s forces and the rebels vying to oust the Libyan strongman. “There are from my perspective some signs, certainly in the last few days, that Kadhafi is becoming more and more isolated,” Mullen told reporters in Washington. |
5 NATO raids rock Tripoli as UN denounces war crimes
by Imed Lamloum, AFP
Thu Jun 2, 6:58 am ET
TRIPOLI (AFP) – NATO air raids shook Tripoli Thursday as the UN denounced crimes against humanity and war crimes during fighting between Moamer Kadhafi’s forces and rebels seeking to topple the Libyan strongman.
Libya’s rebel leadership meanwhile welcomed the defection of former oil minister Shukri Ghanem and urged other regime officials to follow suit. A series of six blasts at around 12:35 am (2235 GMT Wednesday) were followed by several more a few minutes later in the Libyan capital, the target of intensive NATO air raids in the past few weeks, an AFP correspondent reported. |
6 Yemen halts flights to Sanaa as fighting rages
by Hammoud Mounassar, AFP
Thu Jun 2, 7:42 am ET
SANAA (AFP) – Deadly fighting raged between armed tribesmen and security forces on the streets of Sanaa Thursday, sending thousands of residents fleeing and closing the Yemeni capital’s airport, witnesses said.
Medics said bodies were lying in the streets of Al-Hasaba neighbourhood, bastion of powerful tribal leader Sheikh Sadiq al-Ahmar, where the fighting erupted on Tuesday after a truce broke down. Tribal leaders meanwhile said thousands of armed tribesmen were on their way to Sanaa to boost Ahmar’s forces, but had been stopped at a military post 15 kilometres (nine miles) north of the capital, where clashes broke out. |
7 ‘First’ outbreak of mystery bacteria kills 18
by Deborah Cole, AFP
20 mins ago
BERLIN (AFP) – The World Health Organisation warned Thursday Europe was seeing the first outbreak of a lethal bacteria, as its death toll climbed to 18 and the first suspected cases were reported in the US.
The WHO advisory came as German and Chinese researchers said they cracked the genetic code of the E. coli strain, which they said in a preliminary analysis was resistant to antibiotics and extremely virulent. US health officials said Thursday that three people were suspected to have fallen ill from the bacteria after travelling to Germany, where the mystery outbreak has killed 17. Sweden has also reported one victim. |
8 Europe trades barbs over origin of killer bacteria
by Deborah Cole, AFP
Thu Jun 2, 9:07 am ET
BERLIN (AFP) – Russia banned European vegetable imports on Thursday as Britain reported an outbreak of the mysterious lethal bacteria that has killed 18, mainly in Germany, and Spain demanded a payback for its farmers.
German authorities have failed to pinpoint the origin of the outbreak, which has infected more than 2,000 people in the last month and dealt a blow to the European farm sector amid official warnings to avoid raw vegetables. As confusion reigned over the killer strain of E. coli bacteria, Russia said it had blacklisted imports of fresh vegetables from European Union countries with immediate effect and slammed food safety standards in the bloc. |
9 Russia bans EU vegetables over outbreak
by Dmitry Zaks, AFP
Thu Jun 2, 7:11 am ET
MOSCOW (AFP) – Russia infuriated the European Union on Thursday, by banning fresh vegetables from its 27 member states and faulting its health safety system for the death of 17 people from a lethal bacterial strain.
The sanction was immediately denounced as “disproportionate” by a European Commission spokesman who said Brussels would demand an official explanation from Moscow. The Rospotrebnadzor watchdog said the ban was going into effect immediately and would remain in force until the European Union explained what caused the 17 mysterious deaths — all but one of them in Germany. |
10 Mladic ‘was treated for cancer in Belgrade’
by Mariette le Roux, AFP
Thu Jun 2, 11:42 am ET
THE HAGUE (AFP) – Wartime Bosnian Serb army chief Ratko Mladic was treated for cancer two years ago while evading genocide charges, his lawyer said Thursday on the eve of the ex-general’s first appearance at a UN court.
“I have medical records showing that he was treated for lymphoma in 2009 in a Belgrade hospital,” Belgrade-based lawyer Milos Saljic who has previously said his client won’t live to see trial, told AFP. The prosecution of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY), meanwhile, said the trial of the man dubbed the “Butcher of Bosnia” would not start for months. |
11 War crimes suspect Mladic faces trial
by Jan Hennop, AFP
Wed Jun 1, 6:28 pm ET
THE HAGUE (AFP) – Former Bosnian Serb general Ratko Mladic was given two days Wednesday to prepare for his first appearance before UN judges on genocide and war crimes charges after spending the past 16 years on the run.
For long Europe’s most wanted man, Mladic, 69, is to appear Friday before a three-judge bench at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) in The Hague to plead to 11 counts. After spending his first night behind bars in a UN detention centre housed in a Dutch jail, the man accused of masterminding Europe’s worst massacre since World War II was on Wednesday informed of the date of his initial hearing. |
12 US replaces food pyramid with ‘healthy plate’
AFP
43 mins ago
WASHINGTON (AFP) – The US government on Thursday ditched its two-decade old “pyramid” model for healthy eating and introduced a new plate symbol half-filled with fruits and vegetables to urge better eating habits.
The colorful design, called MyPlate, was unveiled by First Lady Michelle Obama and Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack. “Parents don’t have the time to measure out exactly three ounces of chicken or to look up how much rice or broccoli is in a serving,” said Michelle Obama, who is a mother of two daughters, Sasha and Malia. |
13 Gmail targeted in China-based campaign: Google
by Glenn Chapman, AFP
Wed Jun 1, 7:01 pm ET
SAN FRANCISCO (AFP) – Google said Wednesday that a cyber spying campaign originating in China had targeted Gmail accounts of senior US officials, military personnel, journalists and Chinese political activists.
“We recently uncovered a campaign to collect user passwords, likely through phishing,” Google security team engineering director Eric Grosse said in a blog post. “The goal of this effort seems to have been to monitor the contents of these users’ emails, with the perpetrators apparently using stolen passwords to change peoples’ forwarding and delegation settings,” he said. |
14 Angry China rejects blame for Gmail attack
by Dan Martin, AFP
Thu Jun 2, 5:41 am ET
BEIJING (AFP) – China said Thursday it was “unacceptable” to blame it for a cyberspying campaign which Google said had targeted the Gmail accounts of senior US officials, journalists and Chinese activists.
The comments marked the latest salvo in a battle between the Chinese government and Google dating back to last year when the US Internet giant revealed it had been the victim of a separate China-based cyberattack. “To put all of the blame on China is unacceptable,” foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei told reporters. |
15 Trichet warns Greek debt failure means interference
AFP
Thu Jun 2, 11:55 am ET
FRANKFURT (AFP) – European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet warned on Thursday that a Greek failure to stabilise its economy on its own would increase pressure for the international community to do it.
The ECB chief suggested creating a second stage of bailouts under which the eurozone would take limited control of a member country’s economic policies if it was not able to successfully implement adjustment programmes. “Would it go too far if we envisaged, at this second stage, giving euro area authorities a much deeper and authoritative say in the formation of the country?s economic policies if these go harmfully astray?,” said Trichet. |
16 Spanish prime minister hails uptick in economy
Thu Jun 2, 11:12 am ET
MADRID (AFP) – Spain’s prime minister Thursday hailed encouraging signs in the beleaguered economy and pledged the government would meet its deficit target this year without new austerity measures.
The Spanish economy slumped into recession during the second half of 2008 as the global financial meltdown compounded the collapse of the once-booming property market. It emerged with meagre growth in early 2010. The crisis sent the unemployment rate soaring to 21.29 percent in the first quarter of 2011, the highest in the industrialised world, and has whipped up nationwide demonstrations against the government’s austerity measures. |
17 Japan PM survives no-confidence vote
by Shingo Ito, AFP
Thu Jun 2, 11:49 am ET
TOKYO (AFP) – Japan’s Prime Minister Naoto Kan survived a no-confidence vote on Thursday after pledging to step down once the country is on the road to recovery from the March 11 quake and nuclear disaster.
The promise to hand over power to a younger generation appeased internal party rebels who had threatened to bring down Kan, the country’s fifth premier in as many years, days before his first anniversary in the job. The motion brought by the opposition conservative Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and its allies was defeated by a comfortable 293-152 margin after most lawmakers of the centre-left ruling party fell into line behind Kan. |
18 Goldman Sachs subpoenaed for financial crisis role
By Lauren Tara LaCapra, Reuters
53 mins ago
NEW YORK (Reuters) – New York prosecutors have asked Goldman Sachs to explain its behavior in the run-up to the financial crisis, the latest investigation that has cast a pall over the reputation of the largest U.S. investment bank.
Goldman Sachs Group Inc now faces probes by several government authorities into derivatives trades it executed in late 2006 and 2007. On Thursday, sources close to the matter said Goldman received a subpoena from the Manhattan district attorney, who joins the Justice Department and the Securities and Exchange Commission in examining Goldman’s actions. The probes follow a scathing report by U.S. lawmakers that cast Goldman as a central villain of the financial crisis and accused it of misleading clients about mortgage-linked securities. |
19 Moody’s may cut BofA, Citi, Wells ratings
By Maria Aspan, Reuters
46 mins ago
NEW YORK (Reuters) – Moody’s Investors Service said it may downgrade the debt ratings of Bank of America Corp, Citigroup Inc and Wells Fargo & Co, citing concerns about waning U.S. political willingness to offer support for the largest banks.
The sweeping Dodd-Frank financial reform law is eliminating the certainty of U.S. governmental support that some “too big to fail” banks needed to survive the financial crisis, Moody’s said on Thursday. Lower ratings can translate into higher borrowing costs, which can have a big impact on a bank’s bottom line. They can also force banks to post more collateral in derivative trades. |
20 EU agrees in principle on new Greek bailout: source
By Lefteris Papadimas and Sakari Suoninen, Reuters
2 hrs 19 mins ago
ATHENS/AACHEN, Germany (Reuters) – Senior euro zone officials have agreed in principle on a new international bailout of Greece that will give it more time to try to resolve its debt crisis, a source close to the talks said on Thursday.
The Economic and Financial Committee of deputy ministers and senior officials of the 17-nation currency zone approved the plan in principle in talks in Vienna that ended in the early hours of the morning, the source said. The second bailout of Greece, which will effectively replace a 110 billion euro ($160 billion) scheme launched in May last year, will run until mid-2014, giving Athens an additional year of financial support beyond the original plan, the source said. |
21 High jobless claims add to slowdown concerns
By Lucia Mutikani, Reuters
23 mins ago
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The number of Americans signing up for jobless benefits fell only slightly last week, doing little to calm growing fears of a pullback in the economy’s recovery.
Initial claims for state jobless benefits slipped 6,000 to 422,000, the Labor Department said on Thursday, which was higher than the 415,000 claims expected by economists. The disappointing drop fits in with other data on consumer spending and manufacturing indicating the economy has taken a decisively weak tone as the Federal Reserve prepares to wrap up its $600 billion government bond-buying program. |
22 U.S. weighs security after "serious" Google allegation
By Andrew Quinn, Reuters
2 hrs 20 mins ago
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Washington scrambled on Thursday to assess whether security had been compromised after Google Inc revealed a major hacker attack targeting U.S. officials that the Internet giant pegged to China.
“These allegations are very serious,” Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said. “We take them seriously; we’re looking into them,” Clinton told reporters a day after the Internet giant said it had disrupted a campaign aimed at stealing passwords of hundreds of Google email account holders, including senior U.S. government officials, Chinese activists and journalists. |
23 Romney kicks off presidential bid, blasts Obama
By Ros Krasny, Reuters
Thu Jun 2, 2:15 pm ET
STRATHAM., New Hampshire (Reuters) – Mitt Romney, the multimillionaire former governor of Massachusetts, kicked off his second bid for the White House on Thursday with a hard-hitting economic message charging that “Barack Obama has failed America.”
“I’m Mitt Romney. I believe in America. And I’m running for president,” Romney said to cheers during an 18-minute speech in Stratham, New Hampshire. The Republican front-runner so far, Romney started his campaign in this early-voting state where a win in February’s primary election is crucial to his chance of winning the party nomination to face President Barack Obama in the November 2012 election. |
24 Europe E.coli is toxic new strain, trade row grows
By Kate Kelland, Reuters
1 hr 6 mins ago
LONDON (Reuters) – A highly infectious new strain of E.coli bacteria is causing a deadly outbreak of food poisoning in Germany, scientists said on Thursday, with cases in Europe and the United States raising the alarm worldwide.
Experts in China, part of a global network of laboratories racing to understand the sickness which killed a 17th victim overnight, said they had found the bug carried genes that made it resistant to several classes of antibiotics. The United Nations said the strain had not infected people before but some consumers, especially in Germany, said they were nervous about eating raw vegetables. |
25 Russia bans EU vegetables over E.coli, EU protests
By Steve Gutterman and Gleb Bryanski, Reuters
Thu Jun 2, 1:00 pm ET
MOSCOW (Reuters) – Russia banned imports of fresh vegetables from the European Union Thursday, accusing Brussels of sowing chaos by failing to give sufficient information about a deadly E.coli outbreak.
The European Commission said Moscow’s move was disproportionate. The outbreak has killed 17 people and made more than 1,500 others ill, and food poisoning is spreading from Germany across Europe. Russia extended a ban on German and Spanish fresh vegetables to cover the European Union because it said Moscow had not been given proper information on the situation despite repeated requests. The source of the infection is still unclear. |
26 Japan PM survives with offer to quit once crisis
By Yoko Kubota and Chisa Fujioka, Reuters
Thu Jun 2, 10:24 am ET
TOKYO (Reuters) – Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan on Thursday survived a no-confidence vote by offering to resign once he has overcome the worst of the country’s nuclear crisis, a last-minute deal with ruling party rebels who had threatened to oust him from office.
Kan’s offer to step down buys him time to prepare an extra budget to fund the rebuilding cost of the March 11 earthquake and tsunami, but does little to resolve the country’s long-running political and policy paralysis. Thanks to Kan’s maneuvering, the parliamentary no-confidence motion — brought by the opposition over his handling of the country’s deepest crisis since World War Two — was comfortably defeated by 293 to 152 votes. |
27 Benghazi blast shows risk of post-Gaddafi unrest
By William Maclean, Reuters
Thu Jun 2, 11:41 am ET
RABAT (Reuters) – An explosion in rebel-held Benghazi may be a harbinger of the kind of unrest Libya could face in the event of Muammar Gaddafi’s ousting as diehard loyalists seek to stifle revolutionary rule at birth.
The blast on Wednesday damaged a hotel used by rebels and foreigners in Benghazi, wounding one person, and rebel authorities said they believed the explosion might be linked to Gaddafi agents still operating in the east. Abdel Hafiz Ghoga, vice chairman of the rebel National Transitional Council, said the explosion outside Tibesti hotel was believed to have been caused by a hand grenade thrown in a “desperate attempt” by Gaddafi loyalists to sow terror. |
28 Google reveals Gmail hacking, says likely from China
By Sui-Lee Wee and Alexei Oreskovic, Reuters
Thu Jun 2, 7:43 am ET
BEIJING/SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – Suspected Chinese hackers tried to steal the passwords of hundreds of Google email account holders, including those of senior U.S. government officials, Chinese activists and journalists, the Internet company said.
The claim by the world’s largest Web search engine sparked an angry response from Beijing, which said blaming China was “unacceptable,” pointing to further tensions in an already strained relationship with Google. The perpetrators appeared to originate from Jinan, the capital of China’s eastern Shandong province, Google said. Jinan is home to one of six technical reconnaissance bureaus belonging to the People’s Liberation Army and a technical college U.S. investigators last year linked to a previous attack on Google. |
29 OPEC mulls oil supply target hike to calm prices
By Simon Webb, Reuters
Thu Jun 2, 9:24 am ET
SINGAPORE (Reuters) – OPEC is considering raising oil supply targets for the first time since 2007 in a move that could weaken $100 oil prices and lessen the drag of high energy costs on global economic growth.
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, which pumps more than a third of the world’s oil, may raise supply targets by as much as 1.5 million barrels per day (bpd) when ministers meet on June 8, two Gulf oil sources told Reuters on Thursday. “There is a need for an increase to replace the loss from Libya,” one delegate said. “Oil prices are too high. $100 oil is scaring people.” |
30 Jobs malaise warrants easy policy: Fed officials
By Kristina Cooke, Reuters
Thu Jun 2, 12:20 am ET
COLUMBUS Ohio (Reuters) – The high unemployment rate means the Fed’s ultra-easy money policies remain the right course of action, top Federal Reserve officials said on Wednesday.
High unemployment is not a “quickly resolvable problem,” but April’s job gains show that the economic recovery is on a firmer footing, Cleveland Fed President Sandra Pianalto said. “We’ve got a long way to go before labor markets can be described as healthy again,” Pianalto told the Columbus Metropolitan Club. |
31 Libya oil chief defects as NATO extends campaign
By Peter Graff and Deepa Babington, Reuters
Wed Jun 1, 5:41 pm ET
TRIPOLI/ROME (Reuters) – Libya’s top oil official became the latest leading figure to desert Muammar Gaddafi on Wednesday, complaining of “unbearable” violence and adding political momentum to a revolt against the leader’s long rule.
In rebel-held eastern Libya, an explosion damaged a hotel used by rebels and foreigners in Benghazi, wounding one person, and police said rebel authorities believed the explosion might be linked to Gaddafi agents still operating in the east. Abdel Hafiz Ghoga, vice chairman of the rebel National Transitional Council, told Reuters the explosion outside Tibesti hotel was believed to have been caused by a hand grenade thrown in a “desperate attempt” by Gaddafi’s loyalists to sow terror. |
32 Taxpayer loss on auto bailout narrows
By John Crawley, Reuters
Wed Jun 1, 4:36 pm ET
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The government expects to recover more money than anticipated from the auto bailout as it pulls back financially from the sector, but taxpayers still face billions in potential losses, the White House said.
“We’ll get back what we get back,” Ron Bloom, the Obama administration’s point man on manufacturing and restructuring of General Motors Co and Chrysler, said on Wednesday. “It will be what it is.” While the administration long ago conceded it would write off a portion of the $80 billion bailout, loss estimates have fallen from more than 60 percent to less than 20 percent, according to White House economic advisers. |
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