May 31, 2013

SCIENCE: Russian Scientists Closer To Cloning Woolly Mammoth With Latest Find. For What Purpose? A Real Jurassic Park? :/

The Global Post
written by Samantha Stainburn
Wednesday May 29, 2013

Russian scientists studying a 10,000- to 15,000-year-old frozen woolly mammoth found in the Novosibirsk archipelago in the Arctic Ocean have retrieved fresh blood and well-preserved muscle tissue from the ancient carcass.

“The blood is very dark, it was found in ice cavities below the belly and when we broke these cavities with a poll pick, the blood came running out,” Semyon Grigoriev, head of the Museum of Mammoths of the Institute of Applied Ecology of the North at the North Eastern Federal University, said at a press conference on Wednesday.

“Interestingly, the temperature at the time of excavation was -7 to -10 degrees Celsius [19.4 to 14 degrees Fahrenheit],” Grigoriev said, indicating that woolly mammoth blood may contain some sort of natural anti-freeze.

The muscle tissue was also startlingly intact. “The meat looks pretty fresh, reddish in color in several places. I can’t say that the smell was very fresh, though,” Grigoriev told the Vesti television channel.

The woolly mammoth specimen is well-preserved because it did not defrost and then freeze again, Grigoriev explained.

Grigoriev team of scientists are working with South Korean stem cell expert Hwang Woo-suk's private bioengineering laboratory to clone the woolly mammoth, the Siberian Times reported.

According to Fox News:
Scientists already have deciphered much of the genetic code of the woolly mammoth from balls of mammoth hair found frozen in the Siberian permafrost.

SCIENCE: Scientists Revive Plants Buried 400 Years Ago In A Glacier

Popular Science
written by Francie Diep
Tuesday May 28, 2013
 
The amazing reviving Little Ice Age bryophyte.

This has been in the freezer for a long time. You think it's still good?

Kids, it is most definitely still good. Researchers have regrown mosses and other simple plants that were originally buried in a glacier 400 years ago.

The in-lab resurrection means such plants might be growing in the wild, wrote the re-growing team in a paper they published yesterday. The team, including biologists and an earth scientist from the University of Alberta, had long noticed green growth atop blackened mosses uncovered by the Teardrop Glacier in the Canadian Arctic, which they visit for research every year. Until they performed their lab study, however, they weren't sure if the green really was new growth from ancient plants.

The regrowth shows the resilience of mosses, liverworts and other simple plants known as bryophytes, they wrote. Bryophytes are especially important to polar environments, where few plants grow. Ancient bryophytes, alongside their fresher cousins, might be recolonizing land uncovered by retreating glaciers, the researchers wrote.

The Teardrop Glacier, located on Ellesmere Island just west of Greenland, has shrunk at an accelerated rate since 2004. In 2007 and 2009, the University of Alberta team both set stakes to measure the Teardrop's shrinkage and collected plant pieces from its retreating edge.

The researchers took the plants back to Alberta, ground up the stems and leaves they collected, and sowed the material in a few different growth media, including some potting soil like you'd buy at the hardware store. They spritzed their charges with autoclave-sterilized water every few days for a year. Thirty percent of their petri dishes grew new plant material that they were sure weren't newer contaminants, they wrote. The regrown plants included four different species.

The researchers also asked a lab in California to carbon-date three plant bits from their original collection. They found their bryophytes could be anywhere from 404.5 to 614.5 years old, dating from the Little Ice Age that gripped the Earth between 1550 and 1850.

Many previous studies of mosses uncovered by retreating glaciers have found the mosses were dead, the University of Alberta team wrote. One other team of researchers has been successful in reviving a frozen plant, however. Last year, Russian scientists reported growing this cute Arctic flower—a plant that's much more complex than bryophytes—from a seed buried 31,800 years ago. The flower regrowing process was much more complicated, requiring the researchers to clone tissue from the seed.

Bryophytes have a couple of characteristics that may help them with their Rip Van Winkle-style reawakening. Their cells are able to go into a stem cell-like state, so they can re-start development. They are also able to shut down when they're dried out, and revive when they're exposed to water again. Long-frozen bryophytes might be a previously unknown source of genetic diversity among plants on Earth, the researchers wrote.

The newest bryophyte paper was published in the journal the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

USA: American Classic, Smithfield Ham And Pork Products Is Being Purchased By China's Largest Pork Producer. Ugh :/

Yahoo news
written by Michael Felberbaum
Wednesday May 29, 2013

RICHMOND, Va. — The ham sandwich you had for lunch is the latest example of China's growing appetite for U.S. investment.

Smithfield Foods Inc., one of the biggest pork producers in the U.S., on Wednesday agreed to be bought by Shuanghui International Holdings Ltd., the majority shareholder in China's largest meat processor, for about $4.72 billion.

The deal, which still faces a federal regulatory review and Smithfield shareholder approval, is the largest takeover of a U.S. company by a Chinese firm. It's the latest in a string of such deals made recently by Chinese companies.

But the acquisition is likely to face hefty U.S. scrutiny. It comes at a time when China has had serious food safety concerns, some of which have included Smithfield's suitor, Hong Kong-based Shuanghui.

Risks to the U.S. food supply "enter everybody's mind," said Paul Mariani, director at Variant Capital Advisors in Chicago, who previously worked at a food and agribusiness boutique investment bank. But he said he believes Smithfield will continue to operate as normal.

Smithfield said the deal isn't about importing Chinese pork into the U.S. Instead, the company says it's a chance to export into new markets with its brands, such as Smithfield, Armour and Farmland.

Larry Pope, Smithfield's CEO, said in a conference call on Wednesday that the transaction "preserves the same old Smithfield, only with more opportunities and new markets and new frontiers."

"People have this belief ... that everything in America is made in China," he said. "Open your refrigerator door, look inside. Nothing in there is made in China because American agriculture is the most competitive and efficient in the world."

Indeed, the acquisition highlights what could be growing interest in American food by Chinese consumers. Foreign food, such as milk powder from New Zealand and vegetables from neighboring Asian countries, is prized by Chinese consumers because of the frequent domestic food safety scandals in their country.

Among the most notorious, six babies died and 300,000 were sickened in 2008 from drinking infant formula and other dairy tainted with the industrial chemical melamine. And Shuanghui's reputation was battered in 2011 when state broadcaster CCTV revealed its pork contained clenbuterol — a banned chemical that makes pork leaner but can be harmful to humans.

Derek Scissors, an expert on China's economy with the Heritage Foundation, a Washington-based conservative think tank, said companies like Shuanghui are "not looking to cause any trouble in the American market at all" or "cut corners."

"Quite the opposite ... They want to gain from what the U.S. is able to do," he said. "But whether they can operate an American company in the U.S. market remains to be determined."

The deal comes as Smithfield has been under pressure to improve its business.

Like most pork producers, Smithfield has been caught in a tug of war with consumers. The company needs to raise prices to offset rising commodity costs, namely the corn it uses for feed. But consumers are still extremely sensitive to price changes in the current economy. By raising prices, Smithfield risks cutting into its sales should consumers cut back or buy cheaper meats, such as chicken.

In recent months, Continental Grain Co., one of Smithfield's largest shareholders, had been pushing Smithfield to consider splitting itself up, saying it was time for the company to "get serious about creating shareholder value."

Following a March letter from Continental Grain, Smithfield said it would review the suggestions "in due course." Representatives from Continental Grain did not immediately comment on the deal announced Wednesday.

In its most recent quarter, the company reported that its net income rose more than 3 percent, helped by gains in hog production, its international business and its packaged meats such as deli meats, bacon, sausage, and hot dogs — a large growth area for the company.

Shuanghui gives Smithfield new opportunities. The company owns a variety of global businesses that include food, logistics and flavoring products.

Under the terms of the Shuanghui-Smithfield deal, which was unanimously approved by both companies' boards, shareholders of Smithfield will receive $34 per share — a 31 percent premium to the Smithfield, Va., company's closing stock price of $25.97 on Tuesday.

The companies put the deal's total value at about $7.1 billion, including debt. Smithfield's stock will no longer be publicly traded once the deal closes.

The Smithfield deal including assumed debt would eclipse the Chinese purchase of a stake in a big U.S. investment firm as well. In December 2007, China Investment Corp. bought a 9.9 percent stake in Morgan Stanley valued at $5.6 billion, according to research firm Dealogic.

Smithfield shares surged $7.38, or about 29 percent, to close at $33.35 on Wednesday.

Smithfield's existing management team will remain in place and Shuanghui also will honor the collective bargaining agreements with Smithfield workers. The company has about 46,000 employees.

The transaction is subject to review by the U.S. Committee on Foreign Investment, which evaluates the potential national security effects of transactions. The process typically includes a 30-day initial review, followed by a 45-day investigation before making a recommendation to the president.

China has accused the U.S. of discriminating against its companies, although analysts say American firms face bigger obstructions investing in China.

The deal comes as Chinese investment in U.S. firms, while still comparatively low, has risen sharply in recent years, topping $6.5 billion in 2012 and totaling more than $10 billion in deals in the pipeline so far this year, according Thilo Hanemann of New York research firm Rhodium Group. The data reflect investments that meet the threshold for foreign direct investment, which is a final stake of 10 percent or more of voting rights in the invested company and excludes portfolio investments such as government bonds.

Much of the investments are in energy, advanced manufacturing and technology, as well as entertainment, hospitality and safe-haven assets like real estate.

"It's good news for the U.S. economy and for U.S. manufacturing because Chinese companies are keen to capitalized made in the U.S. brands," Hanemann said. "The level of Chinese investment is still too low to call it a savior ... (but) the potential for future growth is huge."

BOSNIA: Bosnian Croat Ex-President Gets 25 Years For War Crimes

 
MSN news
written by AFP staff
Wednesday May 29, 2013

Former Bosnian Croat president Jadranko Prlic and five co-defendants were jailed on Wednesday for between 10 and 25 years for murdering and deporting Muslims in Bosnia in the early 1990s to create a "greater Croatian state".

The six former top Bosnian Croat officials faced 26 counts of war crimes and crimes against humanity for their roles in the brutal conflict which formed part of the greater war that broke out after Yugoslavia crumbled in 1991 and in which 100,000 people were killed.

Prlic, 53, and three others were found guilty of 22 counts by the Yugoslav war crimes court in The Hague while two accused were acquitted of some of the charges.

"The trial chamber is satisfied that Jadranko Prlic made a significant contribution to a joint criminal enterprise and to a criminal purpose to drive out the Muslim population," French judge Jean-Claude Antonetti told the court.

"The trial chamber therefore sentences you to 25 years in prison," Antonetti said as Prlic, dressed in a dark suit, white shirt and light-blue striped tie, stood and listened without showing any emotion.

The former president and later also prime minister of the self-proclaimed Bosnian Croat state of Herceg-Bosna has been on trial before the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) since April 2006.

His co-defendants were his former defence minister Bruno Stojic, 58, and four senior military officials: Slobodan Praljak, 68, Milivoj Petkovic, 63, Valentin Coric, 56, and Berislav Pusic, 60.

At the end of one of the largest trials ever conducted by the ICTY, the other five were sentenced for terms ranging between 10 and 20 years.

Antonetti said in a record 2,600-page judgement that Bosnian Croat troops "fought alongside Croatian troops" and fell under command of Croatia, pointing the finger at Zagreb's role in the war.

The judge said the six men were all part of a plan which ultimately wanted to establish reunification with Croatia. In order to achieve that it was "necessary to modify the ethnic composition" of the land claimed by Bosnian Croats.

Prosecutors have accused the six of wanting to "politically and military subjugate, permanently remove and ethnically cleanse Bosnian Muslims and other non-Croats who lived in areas on the territory of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina which were claimed to be part of the Croatian Community."

This, Antonetti said, they achieved by force, intimidation and terror "by conducting mass arrests of Bosnian Muslims who were then either murdered, beaten, sexually assaulted, robbed of their property and otherwise abused".

The suspects, who handed themselves in to the tribunal voluntarily, had all pleaded not guilty to the charges.

The bloody 1992-95 war in Bosnia mainly pitted Bosnian Muslims against Bosnian Serbs, but for a period also saw vicious fighting between Bosnian Muslims and Bosnian Croats.

In 1992 the Bosnian Croats established a Croatian entity known as the HVO which was both an army and a government. In August of 1993 they proclaimed the Croatian "state" of Herceg-Bosna in Bosnia.

SAUDI ARABIA: Saudi Official Whips Migrant Worker With Belt

France24 news
written by Staff and Walid Abou Al Khair
Tuesday May 28, 2013

A video filmed in Saudi Arabia has thrown the authorities’ treatment of migrant workers back into the spotlight. The footage shows an official in the coastal city of Jeddah chasing Africans out of a passport office and beating one of them with a belt, shouting: "Out!"

The video was filmed on Sunday May 26 by a man who had accompanied his domestic worker to the passport office. The situation for migrant workers in Saudi Arabia is increasingly precarious: many are facing expulsion as the country tries to curb unemployment, which stood at 12% at the end of 2012.

“Every day, hundreds of people turn up at passport centres, hoping to legalise their status”

Walid Abou Al Khair is a human rights activist in Jeddah. He was one of the first people to publish the video on social networks.
Every city has a passport centre. They are where immigrants get work and residence permits. These immigrants are mostly from Asia, sub-Saharan Africa and neighbouring Yemen.

To work in Saudi Arabia, unless they have millions of riyals for a residence permit, a migrant worker needs a sponsor [Editor’s note: as in some other Gulf states, Saudi Arabia has adopted the ‘kafala’ immigration system whereby prospective migrants must have a ‘kafeel’, or sponsor].

Many workers have been able to come here by getting a sponsor, and then leaving them in order to work for themselves. Others change sponsor. So these workers' situation is not legal in the eyes of the state. And some have entered the country with a pilgrim visa, and then they’ve stayed and worked illegally.

It is these workers who are targeted by the government’s expulsion measures. The campaign has given rise to abuse: there are images showing hundreds of workers packed into trucks, sent back home from one day to the next, even though they have all their belongings here.

Following the controversy caused by the first wave of expulsions [Editor’s note: 200,000 workers were sent home], the king allowed a three-month grace period to give people a chance to legalise their status by finding a sponsor. So the workers headed to the passport centres, like the one shown in the video, hoping to be legalise their status.

The passport centres are overwhelmed. There are workers on the floor, in the corridors or in front of the building. In this video, an official had clearly had enough of the crowds and that’s why he chased them out. These images are shocking, but unfortunately they offer just one small example of the mistreatment suffered by migrant workers in Saudi Arabia.

SAUDI ARABIA: Gulf States May Place Hezbollah On Terror List

The Daily Star, Lebanon
written by AFP staff
Thursday May 30, 2013

KUWAIT CITY - Gulf Arab states will consider placing Lebanon's Hezbollah, which is openly involved in the Syrian conflict, on its terror list, Al-Rai daily quoted highly placed diplomats on Thursday as saying.

Bahrain will ask foreign ministers of the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council to discuss "placing Hezbollah on the terror list" at a meeting in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia on Sunday, the newspaper said.

Bahrain currently holds the GCC's rotating presidency.

The paper did not say whether this referred to the party as a whole or just its military wing, whose men are fighting alongside government troops in a fierce battle to retake the Syrian town of Qusair from rebels.

The ministers will also discuss Gulf security, "continued Iranian threats, especially the busting of Iranian spy rings," in a number of GCC states.

The GCC includes Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

Kuwait has already convicted several Iranians and one of its own citizens for operating a spy ring for Tehran, while Saudi Arabia and Bahrain have said they busted cells working for the Islamic republic.

On Monday, Bahrain on Monday banned opposition groups from all contact with Hezbollah, a month after branding the movement as a "terrorist organisation."

Hezbollah, like Iran, is a close ally of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

Gulf states have repeatedly accused Iran of meddling in their affairs, a charge the Islamic republic categorically denies.

More than 94,000 people (Assad's opposition) have died in Syria since protests erupted more than two years ago and morphed into an armed conflict after being brutally repressed.

NORTH KOREA: Nine Young North Korean Refugees Were Forcibly Returned To Pyongyang After Literally Escaping To Laos. Not Good. :/

Check out how far they travelled to be FREE only to be FORCED to return to hell. North Korea borders north east China west of Japan and Laos borders south China next to Thailand.
 
The Global Post
written by Jessica Phelan and Geoffrey Cain
Thursday May 30, 2013

Nine North Korean refugees have been forced to return home after escaping to Laos, drawing protests from human rights groups and concern from the US.

The defectors, the oldest aged 23 and the youngest just 15, were arrested in Laos three weeks ago. They were sent to China on Monday and flown to Pyongyang the following day, reportedly accompanied by at least one North Korean official.

Human Rights Watch accused the Lao and Chinese governments of showing a "disregard for human rights" by allowing the escapees to be repatriated.

"As a result of their return they are at dire risk – North Korea criminalizes unauthorized departures and is known to torture those caught trying to escape and those sent back," said the US-based campaign group's deputy Asia director, Phil Robertson.

South Korea also came in for criticism for failing to intervene. Its embassy in Laos was aware of the defectors' presence but "simply watched them be repatriated," according to an editorial in South Korean newspaper JoongAng, translated by Agence France Presse.

More from GlobalPost: North Korean defectors risk the "underground railroad" to escape

Seoul has lodged a "strong protest" with the Lao government over its decision to return the group, a foreign ministry official told Yonhap news agency, adding that South Korea had asked UN agencies to help ensure the returnees' safety.

Chinese authorities are obliged under international law not to return them to North Korea, where they could face persecution and possibly death, Marzuki Darusman, UN special rapporteur on the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (North Korea), said.

The US State Department, meanwhile, expressed concern over the case and urged "all countries in the region to co-operate in the protection of North Korean refugees within their territories."

Laos was previously considered a relatively safe stop on the gruelling "underground railroad" out of North Korea into neighboring countries and ultimately, South Korea.

Activists fear this case could change that. Would-be defectors will be "more intimidated about trying to come to South Korea through Laos or other Southeast Asian countries," Kim Eun Young, an activist with the Seoul-based Citizens' Alliance for North Korean Human Rights, told the Associated Press.

Some observers see Beijing's influence in the Lao government's decision to return the group.

Experts say that Laos has, over the past ten years, been transformed into a de facto satellite state of China. Beijing holds sway over the tiny, agrarian Southeast Asian state of 6 million people with its countless hydropower and natural resource investments. In short, analysts have said that China hopes to turn Laos into the "battery of Asia," fueling its growing demand for electricity and raw materials.

Laos, in exchange, tends to follow China's foreign policy line, which this episode has shown can include Beijing's approach to North Korean refugees.

The Chinese government treats North Korean defectors as economic migrants rather than political refugees who fear persecution upon return to their homeland. This designation allows China to refuse asylum to North Koreans under the 1951 UN refugee convention, to which it is a signatory.

South Korean government figures show that the number of North Koreans escaping to the South fell by 44 percent in 2012 compared to a year earlier, a drop attributed to increased border controls introduced under new leader Kim Jong Un.

UGANDA: Uganda's Government Lifts Ban On Top Newspaper, Another Still Shut

France24 news
written by AFP staff
Thursday May 30, 2013

Uganda's government ordered police Thursday to allow journalists back into the main independent newspaper after a 10-day blockade that has sparked widespread criticism, but another paper remains shut.

Police, who shut down The Daily Monitor and Red Pepper newspapers on May 20 after they reported arguments among army generals over whether the president's son is to succeed him, had blocked journalists from publishing while they conducted a search for confidential leaked documents they had quoted.

"The police has called off the cordon of the Monitor premises, so that they resume their normal business as police continue with the search," Internal Affairs Minister Hilary Onek told reporters, speaking alongside police chief Kale Kayihura.

However, to allow the paper to reopen, Monitor officials have agreed to "tighten their internal editorial" processes, including ensuring stories "that impact especially on national security are subjected to the most rigorous scrutiny and verification process before they run," Onek added.

Observers have warned the police closures -- financially crippling to the papers -- would lead to great self-censorship in the future.

The Monitor has also agreed not to publish stories that could "generate tensions, ethnic hatred, cause insecurity or disturb law and order", Onek added.

The closures left only one major operating newspaper, the government-owned New Vision.

Two radio stations in the Monitor offices will also be allowed to resume operation, but Red Pepper remains shuttered for now.

"We shall be meeting the Red Pepper leadership... if they agree that they operate within the law, we have no problem allowing them to re-open," Onek said.

The closures came after the newspapers in early May printed a leaked confidential memo by a senior general, David Sejusa Tinyefuza, alleging that President Yoweri Museveni was grooming his son Muhoozi Kainerugaba to succeed him.

Tinyefuza said there were plots to assassinate those opposed to the plan, a report criticised by other generals.

Muhoozi, a brigadier who now commands Uganda's special forces, has recently enjoyed rapid promotion through the ranks, although Museveni has made no mention of plans for him to succeed.

ARGENTINA: Argentine Prosecutor Accuses Iran Of 'Latin America Terror Plot'

The Global Post
written by Jill Langlois and Simeon Tegel
Wednesday May 29, 2013

An Argentine prosecutor accused Iran on Wednesday of trying to infiltrate Latin American countries in order to plan and conduct terror attacks.

A prosecutor in Argentina has accused Iran of building a spy network across Latin America capable of carrying out "terrorist activities" in the region.

Prosecutor Alberto Nisman, who is investigating the 1994 deadly bombing of a Jewish community center in Buenos Aires, made the accusation in a detailed 502-page report submitted to the federal court.

"I legally accuse Iran of infiltrating several South American countries to install intelligence stations — in other words espionage bases — destined to commit, encourage and sponsor terror attacks like the one that took place against AMIA," Nisman told reporters.

He also accused Iran of "making dual use of diplomatic agencies, as well as cultural and charitable associations to conceal terrorist activities."


"The immediate result was building intelligence stations to provide logistical, financial and operative support for possible attacks planned by the Islamic regime as it seeks to 'export the revolution.'"

It's not the first time Iran has been accused of attempting to spread Islamic jihad to Latin America, although analysts say the claims have sometimes been exaggerated for domestic political purposes.

The 1994 bombing of Argentine Jewish Charities Federation (AMIA) building killed 85 people.

The prosecutor Nisman singled out Mohsen Rabbani, who was the cultural attache at the Iranian Embassy in Buenos Aires at the time, as the main person responsible.

He also said Rabbani has, over the last two decades, worked to create an intelligence network in Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay, Chile, Colombia, Guyana, Surinam, and Trinidad and Tobago.

"These are sleeper cells. They have activities you wouldn't imagine. Sometimes they die having never received the order to attack," Nisman said in the indictment.

The report is likely to come as a major embarrassment for Argentine President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, who earlier this year struck a controversial deal with Iran.

The deal was intended to get to the bottom of the unresolved AMIA bombing but has been heavily criticized as effectively allowing an alleged murderer to run his own trial given that the attack is alleged to have been ordered by the Iranian government.

Iran, which does not currently have an ambassador in Argentina, has repeatedly denied the charge that it ordered the 1994 bombing.

IRAQ: Iraq Hints At Steady OPEC Output To Help World Economy

France24 news
written by AFP staff
Thursday May 30, 2013

Iraq indicated on Thursday that OPEC should maintain its oil production ceiling at this week's output meeting in Vienna, arguing that it was wary of damaging the fragile global economy by cutting output which would raise prices.

"In general, OPEC targets -- in making the market well supplied -- are met these days and we do not want to cause a shock to the market which will affect the global economy," Iraqi Oil Minister Abdulkarim al-Luaybi told reporters in the Austrian capital, on the eve of the meeting.

He added that the oil market had been in a "stable" state in recent weeks, despite an overnight slide on Wednesday that was rooted in worries about weak worldwide energy demand, particularly from China.

"The current market is in stable condition and this had been reflected in prices which show a good level of stability in the past few months. We are looking to increase exports and tighten our commercial ties with our customers."

Ministers from governments in the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries have expressed satisfaction with current benchmark Brent crude price of about $100 a barrel. Brent was trading at $101.87 in London on Thursday.

While the cartel's members, which comprise nations from the Middle East, Africa and Latin America, boost their incomes the higher crude prices grow, they are mindful of the fact that oil deemed too expensive risks crippling fragile global economic growth.

The 12-nation Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) accounts for some 35 percent of global oil, but its importance has been overshadowed in recent times by the prospect of booming shale production in the United States.

Meanwhile non-OPEC members Russia and Norway are rival major sources of crude oil for countries worldwide.

Questioned by journalists about the prospect of a sharp increase in US shale oil and gas output, and its overall impact on the market, Luaybi added:

"The US shale oil production increase -- although it has some impact, it's not a significant impact on oil production or exports, and as you all might notice OPEC countries are all producing more oil than the agreed quota ceiling."

Most analysts expect OPEC will leave its collective oil production ceiling at 30 million barrels per day (mbpd), where it has stood since the end of 2011, despite actual output running above the official target.

Hawkish members Iran and Venezuela have already declared that they would be open to an oil production cut in order to maintain and even boost crude price levels.

However, Kuwait's OPEC governor Siham Abdulrazzak Razzouqi told reporters earlier on Thursday that she saw no calls for the group to change its current production levels. The United Arab Emirates has also said that current price levels are "convenient and fair" and did not hurt growth.

OPEC kingpin Saudi Arabia had meanwhile hinted that the kingdom would prefer the cartel to maintain the ceiling in line with market expectations.

Influential oil minister Ali al-Naimi, who arrived in Vienna on Tuesday, told Saudi state news agency SPA that "international oil market is stable and balanced".

He added that "prices are at a level suitable for producing and consuming nations, and to the oil industry".

Luaybi added on Thursday that OPEC ministers will also discuss the selection criteria for a new secretary-general on Friday, and repeated his backing for Iraq's candidate, Thamir Ghadhban.

Saudi Arabia has been battling against both Iraq and Iran to have its candidate succeed Libya's Abdullah El-Badri.

CHINA: China's Highest Court Says No Mercy Will Be Shown to Child Molesters

UPI
written by Staff
Thursday May 30, 2013

BEIJING - Child molesters in China will be shown no mercy, the country's highest court said, as a primary school teacher faced a death sentence for raping small girls.

The Supreme People's Court announced it will require local courts to do all they can to protect the rights of minors and severely punish those who sexually abuse children, China Daily reported Thursday.

The decision by the high court comes as public outrage grows over cases of sexual abuse and molestation of children, the report said. The court said it will issue guidelines to local courts after more research.

Experts told China Daily the high court's decision means harsh punishment for those convicted of child molestation in recent cases.

A primary school teacher has been sentenced to death for repeatedly raping and molesting seven female students, ages 9 and 10, from 2004-11, the report said. The students were also forced to watch pornographic videos.
 

ITALY: Oil Fields Under Olive Groves Offer Italy Economic Boost

Bloomberg news
written by Alessandra Migliaccio
Thursday May 30, 2013

Underneath the groves that make southern Italy the world’s second-largest olive oil producer, geologists have found a more lucrative liquid: Europe’s biggest onshore crude oil fields.

Basilicata, a mountainous, sparsely populated province that sits in the arch of Italy’s boot, holds more than 1 billion barrels, offering the country a weapon to fight a two-year recession. Rome-based Eni SpA (ENI) and France’s Total SA (FP) plan to double production raising Italy’s output to almost 200,000 barrels a day, making the country Europe’s third-largest oil producer behind the U.K. and Norway.

Since the fields started production in the 1990s, their development has been held back by environmental campaigns and bureaucratic delays. Those impediments are falling away, analyst Carlo Stagnaro said, because the priority for Italy’s government is kickstarting an economy that’s shrunk for six straight quarters and where more than 35 percent of young people are unemployed.

“This is a giant field, so there’s huge potential here,” Claudio Descalzi, Eni’s head of exploration and production and president of Italy’s Oil and Mining Industry Association said in an interview. Italy spends as much as 60 billion euros ($78 billion) on oil and boosting production can save about 5 billion euros and create around 20,000 jobs, he said.

The Italian government’s 2012 national energy strategy sets increased oil and gas production as one of its goals. Former Prime Minister Mario Monti gave Total the green light for its new Tempa Rossa field in Basilicata last year, and Eni and local authorities are in talks to increase production in the region’s Val d’Agri.

Longest Recession

Italy, which is combating its longest recession in more than two decades, hasn’t been an oil rich country. It produces about 101,000 barrels a day, about 7 percent of total consumption, mostly from Basilicata with the addition of some onshore and offshore wells in Sicily and parts of central and northern Italy, according to 2012 statistics from the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

“Talk of freedom from energy dependence is an overstatement, but increasing production can certainly be an opportunity for Italy,” said Stagnaro, head of research at Instituto Bruno Leoni, which studies the Italian economy. “The real point for Eni is whether, after respecting all the laws and health and environmental requirements, the gain is worth the costs, if so then they need to forge ahead.”

Drilling Moratoriums

Environmentalists and citizens’ associations have periodically pushed local authorities to declare moratoriums on further drilling and lobbying contributed to the creation of a national park in the Val d’Agri in 2007 which further hampered drilling. There are 13 wells within the park’s territory, all sunk before 2007, according to Eni.

“We don’t want charity, we want investments in new energy sources and sustainable development,” said Marco De Biasi, head of the local branch of environmental protection agency Legambiente, referring to the 10 percent in royalties that Eni pays to the national and local governments. He said his group will oppose any increase in output past what has already been agreed.

Eni and partner Royal Dutch Shell (RDSA) Plc produce 85,000 barrels of oil per day in Basilicata and have permission to raise that to 104,000 barrels a day in the Val d’Agri, Eni’s head of southern Italy Ruggero Gheller said in an interview. Shell also owns the nearby Tempa Rossa field along with France’s Total SA (FP) and Japan’s Mitsui & Co. which the companies say will pump 50,000 barrels a day by 2016.

Eni shares dropped 1.4 percent to close at 17.84 euros in Rome today.

Total Production

Once all that oil starts flowing, Italy’s total production will be boosted to about 170,000 barrels a day, a 68 percent increase compared with 2012.

Eni is in talks with local authorities to increase output by another 25,000 barrels a day, and Descalzi says production could be boosted by a further 20,000 in the future. That would more than double current output making Italy Europe’s third-biggest producer, surpassing Denmark which pumped 202,000 barrels a day in 2012, according to the EIA. While Denmark’s production had been declining since 2004, Italy’s has been on the rise since 2009, according to the EIA.

In some respects, Basilicata has been oil country since the Middle Ages.

Small amounts of shiny oil emerge from a natural spring near Viggiano along with bubbles of natural gas emitting a stench more akin to a gas station than the miles of green woods that surround it. Legends also point to oil.

Medieval Statue

The town that houses Eni’s oil processing plant, whose bright red flame can be seen for miles at night, is also home to the Madonna of Viggiano. It’s a medieval statue that according to legend was found by a group of shepherds after seeing mysterious fires in the night.

“Let’s say that in God’s mind, it was all already written,” says Viggiano’s priest Don Paolo who considers the oil underneath the valley “an opportunity for development” of the historically poor area.

While exploration started in the 1940s, the valley’s full potential only became clear in the early 1990s when Eni started to drill and develop the wells. Opposition from locals and complex bureaucracy slowed down extraction until a deal was reached with the region in 1998 setting the 104,000 barrel a day limit that Eni plans to reach in the next few years, and setting up a system of royalties for local populations.

Royalty Payments

Eni pays 10 percent royalties, most of which go to local administrations. The company said in its latest report on Basilicata that it has given 585 million euros to the region and towns involved in production between 1998 and 2012. Viggiano alone, which has 3,300 inhabitants, received about 15 million euros in 2012, according to mayor Giuseppe Alberti.

The town is willing to consider an increase in production as long as jobs are created and improvements in technology guarantee no increase in emissions from the plant, Alberti said in an interview from his office perched atop the medieval town overlooking the valley and oil facility.

While many favor further development, some residents grumble as they uneasily look at the oil plant’s flame, which has become for them a symbol of the valley’s exploitation.

“We’re simple people and the cohabitation isn’t always easy, health is a concern, the environment is a concern and we intend to protect both,” mayor Alberti said.

Both Eni and an independent regional authority regularly monitor the air, water and soil. The company has tried to mitigate the visual impact of its work, putting a cover around the less attractive parts of its rig and painting equipment in soft green colors that blend with the landscape. An operation that Eni manager Gheller says is “unique in its kind.”

“We don’t need green skirts on wells, we need to stop,” said environmentalist De Biasi. “They’ll push for more but we’ll give battle too.”

VENEZUELA: Besides Toilet Paper Shortage, Venezuela Also Runs Out of Detergents, Wheat, Corn, Flour, Mass Wine and Altar Bread :o

International Business Times
written by Vittorio Hernandez
Thursday May 30, 2013

The shortage of products in Venezuela has turned for the worse. Aside from running out of toilet paper, the country's Catholics may also no longer have the wine and the host when they attend Mass.

The church estimated that its holy wine stock is enough only for two months. Bodegas Pomar, the only national winemaker in the South American nation, said it has difficulties making more wine, the church spokesman was quoted by BBC.

The communion host is also in short supply since it is made of wheat which is imported in the form of flour, but importers don't have sufficient foreign currency to buy more commodities overseas.

Other commodities in short supply because of panic buying, merchants hoarding goods, tight government controls and insufficient domestic production, are detergents, wheat and corn flour.
For those of you who don't know, the former Marxist Socialist toxic leader Hugo Chavez used to hide food and goods in warehouses to punish his people and do exactly what the new illegitimate leader Maduro is doing right now. Maduro is blaming it on a conspiracy. The former Marxist pig used to let tons of food rot in storage. This about this for a moment, Maduro Marxist government is made up of all former Hugo Chavez people and basically control all imports and control commerce. So who do think created this crisis?! It's a no-brainer. They're using the same playbook that Hugo Chavez used for over a decade. (emphasis mine)
Sky news
written by Staff
Friday May 31, 2013

A huge stash of toilet roll has been found in Venezuela, just weeks after it was revealed the country faced a crisis over shortages.

A tip off from a member of the public led police to a warehouse where 2,450 bales were discovered.

Officers also found 7,000 litres of fruit juice and 400 packages of disposable baby nappies.

Two weeks ago, huge queues were being reported at supermarkets as shelves were left empty by the toilet roll shortage.

New president Nicolas Maduro, who took over after the death of Hugo Chavez, blamed a 'conspiracy' to destabilise the country.

Interior Minister Miguel Rodriguez Torres said on Twitter the paper was stored "in a clandestine warehouse".

An investigation has been launched to determine where all the merchandise came from and who it was for, National Police chief Luis Karabin said.

Other products the country is suffering from severe shortages of are toothpaste, toilet soap, nappies and feminine hygiene products.

The government announced this month it was importing 50 million rolls of toilet paper.

Congress, meanwhile, approved an $80m (£52m) loan to import loads of the five scarce essentials.

The shortages have prompted the government to hold meetings with businessmen in various economic sectors.

Price controls were introduced for certain basic goods in 2003 after an oil industry strike paralysed the economy, sent inflation soaring and led to shortages of goods.

Experts say such price controls lead to shortages as there is little incentive to supply when the amount manufacturers receive for the goods is less than they are worth.

It can also lead to hoarding as some are tempted to buy up large amounts of goods when they are cheap so they can be resold elsewhere or later where or when prices are more expensive.

USA: Prosecution: Alleged ex-Hezbollah Commander Admitted To 'Sodomizing And Murdering Israeli POW'

The Blaze
written by Jason Howerton
Wednesday May 29, 2013

Counterterrorism officials on Wednesday revealed stunning details about 44-year-old Wissam Allouche, an alleged former Hezbollah commander who was arrested in Texas after being indicted on charges of not disclosing his affiliation with terrorist groups.

During Allouche’s bail hearing in San Antonio Wednesday, the prosecution said the FBI recovered documents they claim he fabricated to falsely show he had security clearances. It was also alleged that Allouche tried to “hook up” with women at Fort Sam Houston to possibly to gain access to sensitive material, MySanAntonio.com reports.

And that’s not all.

As previously reported by TheBlaze, Allouche was arrested last week for failing to disclose his membership in the Amal militia and Hezbollah in Lebanon in the 1980s and lying about issues concerning his marriage to a U.S. citizen. He is also charged with failing to disclose his ties to the terror groups when he applied for a Defense Department position that required security clearance.

If you haven’t heard of Allouche or his alleged plot to gain security clearance at the Defense Department, you’re not alone. A Google news search on the frightening story yielded very few results as of Wednesday night.

The FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force has reportedly been investigating Allouche for more than three years, even going as far as using an undercover agent to secretly record conversations with him.

The FBI reportedly raided his then-home in Universal City in 2011 and found documents he allegedly fabricated to show proof of security clearances, membership in U.S. special forces and Defense Department intelligence units.

It was also revealed that Allouche had at least three aliases, one of which meant “god of death.” Investigators claim the suspected Hezbollah member was known for “acting crazy or acting dangerously.”

“He admitted on tape that he was a member of Amal and that he was a commander of Hezbollah,” prosecutor Mark Roomberg reportedly told the judge during the bail hearing on Wednesday. U.S. Magistrate Judge Henry Bemporad agreed to keep Allouche in jail pending a trial.

Roomberg also said the suspect admitted to “sodomizing and murdering an Israeli POW.”

Jeff Cram, an Army criminal investigations agent and member of the FBI task force, testified that an investigation uncovered more details about Allouche’s ties to terror groups.

The investigator told the judge that the suspect was spotted by at least two people at Fort Sam Houston dressed in a U.S. military uniform bearing insignias from special forces.

Additionally, Cram said that the task force obtained eight photos from a source that show Allouche wielding assault rifles or rocket propelled grenades during his time with Amal and Hezbollah.

More from the report:
[Allouche] is not charged specifically with espionage or terrorist activity. Hezbollah, conceived by Muslim clericks, was formed in the 1980s in the wake of the Israeli occupation of Lebanon, and has been considered a terrorist group by the U.S. since 1997, according to testimony and news reports. Some reports said Hezbollah was formed by members of the Amal movement, and other reports say Hezbollah gets support from Iran and Syria.

[…]

Allouche entered a not guilty plea to the charges, and his lawyer, Cynthia Orr, challenged the government’s characterization of her client.

Much of “the evidence comes from his disgruntled ex-wife and his disgruntled ex-father-in-law,” Orr told the judge.
According to the defense, Allouche has been living in the U.S. since 2002 and once owned a gas station. Prior to 2009, he reportedly worked for L3, a company that provides linguistic services to the U.S. military overseas. The suspect spent several months in Iraq.

He later went through a bitter divorce with his wife, a member of the U.S. Army, in 2009. The two met in Germany in 1999.

Orr pointed out that the Department of Homeland Security found “no derogatory information” about her client’s character and he was granted citizenship. However, the department apparently asked the Joint Terrorism Task Force to look into Allouche.

Allouche faces up to 10 years in prison if convicted of lying on his naturalization forms and five years in prison if convicted of lying on security clearance forms.

TheBlaze will continue to follow Allouche’s trial and developments relating to his case.

CHINA: PetroChina Said to Sell Stakes at Home for Cash to Spend Abroad

Bloomberg news
written by Aibing Guo
Wednesday May 29, 2013

PetroChina Co. (857), the world’s second biggest publicly traded oil company, is set to sell minority stakes in oil and gas fields as well as gas pipeline projects in western China to raise cash for overseas acquisitions, said a person familiar with the plans.

Some agreements may be announced in the next few months, said the person who asked not to be identified because the information isn’t public. The pipelines offer near double-digit investment returns, the person said without identifying the assets. Talks are taking place with several parties and their investments will be in the billions of yuan, the person said, declining to be more specific or identify who the company is in discussions with.

PetroChina needs more private capital in the company’s domestic oil and gas businesses to relieve its financing burden, chairman Zhou Jiping said on May 23 in Beijing. It had 505 billion yuan ($82 billion) in interesting-bearing debt at the end of 2012, from 350 billion yuan in 2011, according to its annual report published in April.

“PetroChina can use the cash to buy more assets or expand its overseas projects that over time will provide higher returns than what domestic projects can currently provide,” said Simon Powell, an oil and gas analyst at CLSA Ltd. Hong Kong. Of course, what the market will be looking at is what price PetroChina can get for the assets, he said.

The company’s profit fell to 115 billion yuan in 2012 from 133 billion yuan in 2011 and 140 billion yuan in 2010. Capital spending is forecast to rise to 355 billion yuan in 2013 from 352 billion yuan in 2012 and 284 billion yuan in 2011.

‘Unpleasant Choices’

PetroChina’s debt to equity ratio was about 10 percent in 2007, the same level as oil explorer Cnooc Ltd., though much lower than around 60 percent at China Petroleum & Chemical Corp., according to a research note by Neil Beveridge, Hong Kong-based head analyst for oil and gas in the Asia-Pacific region at Sanford C. Bernstein & Co.

The ratio surged to 47 percent by the end of March and is expected to break 50 percent mark by 2015, Beveridge said in the note published on May 2.

“PetroChina will increasingly have to make the choice between growth, dividend or raising additional capital to fund growth,” Beveridge said. “Give the infrastructure investment over the next decade on gas, pursuit of overseas growth and unconventional growth, it seems inevitable Petrochina will have to make some unpleasant choices ahead.”

Go West

Sales of stakes in western China, which holds the bulk of the company’s oil reserves, would follow Zhou’s comments on May 23, when he said PetroChina would offer up 600 million tons, or about 4.4 billion barrels of oil-equivalent reserves in its north and northeast oilfields for private investment.

Based on 30-35 percent oil recovery rate from proven reserves and a $100 a barrel crude price, the assets in the north could be worth as much as $153.3 billion, according to the person. Minority stakes from 20 percent to 40 percent in those fields would value them at between $30 billion to $61 billion, according to Bloomberg calculations.

PetroChina reported proven undeveloped reserves in China of 9.6 billion barrels of oil equivalent in 2012, according to a filing to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in April.

Only about 600 million barrels of those reserves are in the Daqing oilfield in Northeast China, while most of the reserves are in Shaanxi, Sichuan and Xinjiang in western China, according to the filing.

Home & Away

PetroChina and its parent China National Petroleum Corp. have announced plans to spend about $7 billion in the past six months on assets from Mozambique to Australia, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

That compares with less than $1 billion deals announced during the same period of time a year earlier.

Meantime, the company opened its third West-East gas transmission pipeline to outside investment last year. It spent 32.5 billion yuan on a 52 percent stake, while the National Council for Social Security Fund, Beijing Guolian Energy Industry Investment Fund, and Shanghai-based Baoshan Iron and Steel Co. and its parent each agreed to invest 10 billion yuan for a 16 percent stake.

PetroChina will soon set up a joint pipeline business unit, inviting private and other investment into its first west-east pipeline project and some assets in western China, Zhou said on May 23, without providing details.

USA: Qatar Investment Authority In Talks To Buy Neiman Marcus :/

The New York Post
written by James Covert
Wednesday May 29, 2013

Oil money is eyeing Neiman Marcus, but the shoppers aren’t from Texas.

Deep-pocketed investors from Qatar — the petroleum-soaked Persian Gulf kingdom that owns Harrods in London — are in talks to buy the Dallas-based luxury chain, The Post has learned.

The Qatar Investment Authority, sources said, may shell out upwards of $6 billion for Neiman, parent of the swanky Bergdorf Goodman store on Fifth Avenue.

Neiman’s current owners, the private-equity giants TPG and Warburg Pincus, shelled out $5.1 billion for the retailer in 2005.

Negotiations with Qatar’s investment fund don’t appear to be exclusive, but they “are farther along than people realize,” according to one insider.

Officials at Neiman and TPG, its lead investor, declined to comment. Qatari officials didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Qatar, which is ranked by Forbes as the world’s richest country, even as it has been blasted by watchdogs for human-rights abuses, is on a luxury buying spree of late.

It recently upped its stake in Tiffany to nearly 13 percent to become the Big Apple jeweler’s biggest investor.

Last month, the Qatari fund cut a deal to acquire Printemps, the iconic Parisian department store, for more than $2 billion.

Qatar’s upscale portfolio includes Porsche and French luxury conglomerate LVMH.

A sale to a sovereign fund was the “first option” pegged by Credit Suisse after the bank was hired this spring to explore strategic alternatives, according to a source.

Credit Suisse has likewise trained its sights on the investment arms of Kuwait and Singapore, which together acquired a 5 percent stake in TPG two years ago. Qatar, meanwhile, owns 6 percent of Credit Suisse.

Management presentations with prospective bidders are slated for the coming weeks when additional suitors are expected to enter the fray, sources said.

Recent speculation about a possible merger of Neiman and Saks appears increasingly unlikely as the market value of Saks has ballooned, insiders said.

Last week, The Post exclusively reported that Saks has hired Goldman Sachs to explore a possible sale, sending Saks shares surging as much as 20 percent.

Qatar’s interest in Neiman, however, could steal an important bidder from Saks, one source noted.

“Saks may not have the same appeal overseas” as Neiman, according to the source.

USA: Fate Of Vernon Battery Factory Shut Down Over Lead, Arsenic Emissions Subject Of Hearing Thursday


CBS2 local
written by Staff
Wednesday May 29, 2013

VERNON — Public hearings will begin Thursday morning to see if a recycling plant in Vernon should be allowed to re-open after tests showed it may have released dangerous levels of lead and arsenic into the air and groundwater.

The state Department of Toxic Substances last month issued an emergency order against the Exide Technologies plant on 2700 South Indiana Street, citing air and ground pollution violations.

Officials warned the 110,000 residents living in Boyle Heights, Maywood and Huntington Park they may have been exposed to dangerous levels of the chemicals, which could pose a relatively high cancer risk.

Many more who drive or work in the area could have been affected as well, according to the report.

KCAL9′s Dave Bryan reports the LA City Council this week passed a resolution asking the city attorney to look into a possible lawsuit against the Exide plant, demanding answers as to why it was allowed to operate for years on only a temporary permit.

“We need to know why it was allowed to operate for over 31 years under an interim permit… It is just unacceptable,” Councilman Jose Huizar said.

Exide operates in 80 countries and is one of the world’s biggest producers, distributors and recyclers of lead-acid batteries.

The facility has been the target of complaints for years, according to elected officials.

Earlier this year, a video released by the Department of Toxic Substances showed a damaged discharge pipeline at the facility reportedly pumping arsenic-filled water directly into the ground. Lead is also a byproduct of the melting process used in recycling car batteries, but the hazardous products are supposed to be safely removed and recycled before they show up in the air and water.

In March, officials with the South Coast Air Quality Management District (AQMD) said that Exide Technologies may have exposed local residents to harmful emissions from the battery disposal.

After executives were ordered to shut the facility down, Exide filed a motion for a temporary stay of the suspension order.

In a statement issued at the time, the company said it is committed to working with the community toward promoting a healthy environment.

“Exide welcomes the opportunity to present to the citizens the work that it has undertaken at its Vernon plant to meet required regulatory standards,” a spokesperson said.

Thursday morning’s hearing is scheduled to take place at the Huntington Park Community Center.

Additional meetings are scheduled next month.

A hearing for Exide’s temporary stay of suspension order is set for June 3. A judge is expected to issue a recommendation to the Toxic Substances Control Department at that time.

LEBANON: Beirut Airport Seizes Over 7 kg Of Heroin Headed To Europe

The Daily Star, Lebanon
written by Staff
Monday May 13, 2013

BEIRUT: Authorities at Beirut’s international airport seized Monday approximately 8 kilograms of heroin headed to Europe, the Internal Security Forces said in a statement.

The statement said customs inspectors at Rafik Hariri International Airport detained H.N., 34, after finding 7.75 kilograms of heroin in the suspect’s luggage.

A security source said the estimated street value of the heroin was approximately $200,000.

The police said the H.N. was headed to a European country, without giving further details.

A source at the airport said H.N. was a Lebanese national and was headed to Brussels, Belgium.

The source said H.N. used a double-padded suitcase to try to get past inspection.

H.N. was referred to the Central Anti-Drug Office, the police said in its statement.

LEBANON: Men Carrying $1.2 Million From Beirut Airport Robbed

The Daily Star, Lebanon
written by Staff
Thursday May 30, 2013

BEIRUT - Two men carrying $1.2 million in cash from Beirut airport were robbed at dawn Thursday, a security source told The Daily Star.

The source said gunmen in a Jeep Cherokee and a Kia SUV intercepted Ali Qandil and Fouad Matar in their Nissan Sunny on the airport highway and forced them to go to Haret Hreik in Beirut’s southern suburbs.

After taking a briefcase full of money, the gunmen drove to the Beirut suburb of Hay al-Sellom in a different car where they dropped off Qandil and Matar.

The robbed men said the cash came from a Lebanese person in Africa, according to the source who spoke to The Daily Star on condition of anonymity.

A senior source at the Beirut airport said travelers entering Lebanon may bring any amount of cash to the country as long as they declare the money with customs officers.

The source said airport procedure is to inform Lebanon’s Central Bank about incoming money.