Farmer jailed in Hong Kong for burning flag

A man has been jailed in Hong Kong for burning the national flag, in the first sentence of its kind.

S Korea suspends savings banks citing weak finances

South Korea has suspended seven local savings banks citing the weak state of their finances.

Japan urges mass evacuation ahead of Typhoon Roke

More than a million people in central and western Japan have been urged to leave their homes as a powerful typhoon approaches.

Burma begins swap scheme for cars over 40 years old

Owners of some of Burma's most antiquated cars have been queuing in Rangoon to exchange their old vehicles for permits to import newer models.

Polio strain spreads to China from Pakistan

Polio has spread to China for the first time since 1999 after being imported from Pakistan, the World Health Organization (WHO) has confirmed.

Showing posts with label report. Show all posts
Showing posts with label report. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Report: Scammers claim that mother and daughter went missing on Costa Concordia

Tony Gentile / ReutersCosta Concordia cruise ship that ran off the West coast of Italy aground on the island of Giglio is located on the side, half under water and is in danger, slide into deeper waters.

Here, an idea is stellar, amounted to: pretend to be a grandmother, claimed that your daughter and granddaughter of missing wreckage from the Italian coast in the Costa Concordia. Then send a "friend" to a savvy New York lawyer, to tell the story, and then change the story as often as possible. Finally, you have a 5-year old blow your entire coverage.

This story is reported as the first officially falsely stating of the death of the disaster. Allegedly Peter Rónai, a personal - injury lawyer New York, the six Hungarian survivors from the liner represented was a Hungarian woman by e-Mail. The e-Mail claimed that the woman's missing daughter, Eva, and 5-year-old granddaughter of the nave. The emailer wanted Rónai meeting with Eve's friend, thing to do is to discuss. According to which New York Daily News had the Italian media accused the liner stowaways wear, so the fact that the mother and the daughter not on the list of the passengers were "manifest" not count off.

(Photos: save Italy affected Costa Concordia cruise ship)

RONAI, who met in Budapest, was with the supposed friend - and then the story kept changing. The friend is apparently called the next day to say the granddaughter was not missing, blamed a misunderstanding. If Rónai asked to speak the 5-year old girl said that she had seen her "Mama" on this day in the Park on the swing. Then Rónai told ABC News that the "missing MOM" showed up and their story changed. No longer she may was dead - it was just injured when jumping from the cruise ship, but showed no signs of pain.

RONAI says the couple said, pull the scam to make money. Police arrested them; RONAI told ABC that they were recorded in the prison, but they face now criminal indictments.

Hungarian Ministry of Foreign Affairs statement one confirmed the incident. "On the basis of today officially confirmed information it has become clear that claims about the missing woman were unfounded," read the statement.

"People terrible things for money will do", said Rónai. And this can only be the first in the list of disturbing stories.

More: Ship cruise Captain pleaded not to Reboard



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Saturday, October 29, 2011

Iran oil blast kills one, separate incident at refinery: report

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TEHRAN | Fri Oct 28, 2011 5:26am EDT

TEHRAN (Reuters) - An explosion caused a fire at an Iranian oil refinery on Friday and a separate incident killed one person in an oil field explosion, the semi-official Mehr news agency reported.

Mehr said there were no reports on casualties or word on the cause of the blast at the Shazand oil refinery in central Iran, it said the fire was under control.

The oil field blast happened at Bibi Hakimeh near the Gulf, killing one person and injuring three, Mehr said.

(Editing by Jason Neely)



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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

UN denies Madagascar polio report

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25 October 2011 Last updated at 18:41 GMT Archive photo of a child receiving an oral polio vaccine in Ivory Coast Every year, hundreds of thousands of cases of wild poliovirus are prevented by oral vaccinations The UN children's fund has denied that there has been a polio outbreak in the Indian Ocean island of Madagascar.

It said that its office in Madagascar had issued a statement last week that led to the mistaken belief there had been an outbreak of wild poliovirus.

In fact the last such case was detected on the island in 1997, Unicef said.

The confusion had arisen because vaccine-derived poliovirus had been detected in three healthy children amid an immunisation campaign last week.

"The release may have led to a misunderstanding that there is an outbreak of wild poliovirus in Madagascar. Unicef wishes to clarify that there is no such outbreak," the UN children's fund said in a statement on Tuesday.

Children require three to four polio vaccines - taken orally usually in their first year of life - to be immunized against the crippling disease.

In very rare instances, the virus in the vaccine can mutate into a form that can paralyse.

Unicef officials said an investigation had been launched to see why the three children had the vaccine-derived poliovirus.

They said low immunity on the island could be the reason.

The political crisis in Madagascar since 2009 has interrupted vaccination programmes across the country.

Shortages of fuel for refrigerators to store the vaccines, and the closure of 250 clinics, have reduced vaccination rates to less than 40% in the south.

Two further vaccination campaigns are now required to ensure 90% of the 700,000 children are vaccinated to ensure better immunity levels.

Unicef says between 2000 and 2009 10bn doses of oral polio vaccines were given worldwide, from which 14 cases of vaccine-derived polio virus led to 400 polio cases.

At the same time 14,000 children, who had not been immunized, were paralysed by the wild poliovirus.



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Sunday, October 23, 2011

Grenade hits Nairobi club, 14 people wounded: report

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NAIROBI | Sun Oct 23, 2011 8:42pm EDT

NAIROBI (Reuters) - A grenade hit a club in the center of Nairobi early Monday, wounding 14 people, Kenyan media reported.

The Standard newspaper reported the incident in a breaking news text message.

The incident comes a week after Kenya launched a cross-border operation against al Qaeda-linked al Shabaab militants in southern Somalia after a wave of kidnappings of foreigners on Kenyan soil.

Al Shabaab had threatened major reprisals if Kenyan troops did not withdraw, prompting the U.S. embassy in Kenya to warn of an 'imminent threat' of a terrorist attack in the East African country.

(Writing by Yara Bayoumy; Editing by Matthew Jones)



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Sunday, October 9, 2011

Special Report: Crisis grips North Korean rice bowl

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Pak Su Dong, manager of the Soksa-Ri cooperative farm in the area hit by recent floods and typhoons shows damage to agricultural products in the South Hwanghae province September 29, 2011. REUTERS/Damir Sagolj

1 of 30. Pak Su Dong, manager of the Soksa-Ri cooperative farm in the area hit by recent floods and typhoons shows damage to agricultural products in the South Hwanghae province September 29, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Damir Sagolj

By Tim Large

Thu Oct 6, 2011 4:00pm EDT

HAEJU, North Korea, Oct 6 (AlertNet) - In a pediatric hospital in North Korea's most productive farming province, children lay two to a bed. All showed signs of severe malnutrition: skin infections, patchy hair, listless apathy.

"Their mothers have to bring them here on bicycles," said duty doctor Jang Kum Son in the Yellow Sea port city of Haeju. "We used to have an ambulance but it's completely broken down. One mother travelled 72 kilometers (45 miles). By the time they get here, it's often too late."

It's also getting late for North Korea to get the massive amount of food aid it claims to need before the harsh winter sets in. The country's dysfunctional food-distribution system, rising global commodities prices and sanctions imposed over Pyongyang's nuclear and missile programs had contributed to what appears to be a hunger crisis in the North, even before devastating summer floods and typhoons compounded the emergency.

The regime's appeals for massive food aid have gone mostly unanswered by a skeptical international community. Only 30 percent of a United Nations food aid target for North Korea has been met so far. The United States and South Korea, the two biggest donors before sanctions, have said they won't resume aid until they are satisfied the military-led communist regime won't divert the aid for its own uses and progress is made on disarmament talks.

South Korea also says the North is exaggerating the severity of its food crisis. Visiting scholars, tourists and charity workers have sent out conflicting views about it.

The U.N.'s Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO), for instance, said last month after visiting the North that "the damage was not so significant." Another U.N. body, the World Food Programme, which has a regular presence in the North, warned in March of growing hunger. The sharp divergence of views is one reason why the U.N.'s emergency relief coordinator will visit this month to assess the situation.

North Korea's Economy and Trade Information Center, part of the foreign trade ministry, invited Alertnet to see the extent of the crisis on a rare reporting trip to its rice bowl in South Hwanghae province in the southwest.

Alertnet (www.trust.org/alertnet/), a humanitarian news service run by the Thomson Reuters Foundation which covers crises worldwide, saw evidence of alarming malnutrition and damaged crops, but also signs of some promise for the coming rice harvest.

Although tightly controlled by government officials, an Alertnet reporter and Reuters photographers and video journalists were able to conduct a week-long trip into the South Hwanghae region. The visit included rare access to collective farms, orphanages, hospitals, rural clinics, schools and nurseries.

The regime's motive in granting the access appears to be to amplify its food-aid appeals. North Korean officials at first asked Alertnet to reach out to its subscriber base to mobilize help--and at one point asked the Thomson Reuters Foundation for a donation. Alertnet declined, saying all it could do is visit and report on the situation.

The picture the regime presented in South Hwanghae was largely one of chronic hunger, dire healthcare, limited access to clean water and a collapsing food-rationing system, all under a command economy that has been in crisis since the collapse of the Soviet Union 20 years ago threw North Korea into isolation.

In one orphanage in Haeju, 28 children huddled together on the floor of a small clinic, singing "We have nothing to envy" -- an anthem to North Korea's longstanding policy of juche, or complete self-reliance, that has made this one of the most closed societies on earth.

Measurements taken of each child's mid-upper arm with color-coded plastic bracelets -- a standard test for malnutrition -- showed 12 were in the orange or red danger zones, meaning some could die without proper treatment.

Nutrition experts from Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF), who accompanied AlertNet, found similar results among children at other institutions. But they stressed their findings were not statistically representative.

At an orphanage in Hwangju town, across the provincial border in North Hwanghae province, 11 of 12 children in the clinic were critically malnourished. They looked to be no more than three or four years old, but orphanage staff insisted they were eight, citing severe stunting due to malnutrition.

"I've never seen stunting like this before, not ever -- not even in Ethiopia," said Delphine Chedorge, deputy program manager of emergencies for MSF France.

In the orphanage's kitchen, the only food for the 736 children was maize and a thin soup made of onion and radish leaves. Cooks said they had no oil, sugar or protein -- vital ingredients for adequate nutrition.

"They've had to reduce the minimum height limit for the army by 2 cm," a Western aid worker in Pyongyang said, speaking of stunting.

North Koreans on average live 11 years less than South Koreans due mainly to malnutrition, according to U.N. health indicators.

FAMINE FEARS AGAIN?

In March, the World Food Programme (WFP) estimated that 6 million North Koreans needed food aid and a third of children were chronically malnourished or stunted. By contrast, the United Nations says 4 million people face a food crisis in Somalia.

The WFP's appeal inevitably raised the specter of the mid-1990s, when years of mismanaged farm policy and natural disasters resulted in famine that some estimates said killed as many as a million people. Nobody is saying this year is anything like that -- and South Korea has said it suspects Pyongyang of exaggerating the crisis.

North Korea has relied on food aid since the mid-1990s. Critics say Pyongyang spends most of what little hard currency it earns maintaining a million-strong army and developing nuclear weapons and missiles instead of feeding its millions of malnourished people.

A savage winter that froze seeds in the ground hit early crops even before this summer's floods. In South Hwanghae, the governing People's Committee said, the cold wiped out 65 percent of the province's barley, winter wheat and potato crops, which are sown in autumn and harvested in spring.

Between late June and early August, torrential rains, successive floods and two typhoons inundated southwestern and central provinces. Hardest hit were the plains of South Hwanghae, whose sprawling, collective farms are essential food providers in a mountainous nation where only a fifth of land is arable and the climate is harsh.

Typically, the province generates about a third of the country's total cereal supply, pumping wheat, maize and rice into the Public Distribution System, on which two-thirds of the population relies.

Last year, 16 of South Hwanghae's 22 counties produced a surplus, providing precious calories for people elsewhere, especially in towns and cities where chances to fish, forage and keep household gardens are limited. The summer storms destroyed 80 percent of the province's early maize harvest, the People's Committee said.

Those figures were impossible to verify.

AlertNet saw fields buried under mud and sand washed down from higher ground, as well as broken concrete bridges and collapsed school buildings and medical centers.

"The harvest is lost, and we'll just have to turn the ground over," said a senior official with the provincial Flood Damage Rehabilitation Committee. "We don't have any tractors so we'll do it by hand."

At Soa-Ri collective farm, which was hit three times by floods, about 100 families were living under Red Cross tarpaulins amid the buckled ruins of bungalow-style homes.

An enormous tree lay prone in the muck, snapped at its base by the force of flash floods, whose power and frequency have intensified in recent years due to rampant deforestation in a country where many still need firewood for cooking.

WELLS CONTAMINATED

Jong Song Hui, 40, recalled how she was sleeping when her house started caving in, its mud bricks turned to mush by days of heavy rain. Woken by the crashing of timbers, she grabbed her two children and got out just in time.

"The only things I could save were the portraits of the Great Leaders," she said. She was referring to pictures of North Korea's founding father, Kim Il-Sung, and his now ruling son, Kim Jong-il, which adorn many walls in one of the world's most enduring personality cults. The elder Kim remains posthumously the formal head of state, proclaimed "eternal president" four years after his 1994 death.

The rains also destroyed Soa-Ri's clinic, which serves 4,790 people on the collective farm. "Living conditions are terrible," said the clinic's doctor, standing outside a dilapidated building that functioned as a substitute clinic.

"The water supply is heavily contaminated -- wells are polluted. So people are suffering diarrhea and digestive disorders. Also, it's getting colder, so people are getting pneumonia and bronchitis."

In Haeju, 40 percent of the city's 276,000 people were still without water due to damage to the mains system, forcing residents to trek 4 kilometers into the mountains to lug water from fresh streams, municipal officials said.

Teams of students and factory workers were digging to find the broken concrete pipes connecting Haeju with a reservoir almost 7 kilometers away. All the pipes would have to be replaced.

SOLDIERS GUARD CORNFIELDS

The U.N.'s top humanitarian official, Valerie Amos, will visit the country for the first time later this month to assess the country's food needs and how aid can be monitored to ensure it does go to those who need it most.

Experts have presented conflicting views about North Korea's harvests. Last week, Hiroyuki Konuma, the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization's regional representative in Asia, said crop damage from the summer's extreme weather was "not so significant" after finishing a three-day trip to North Korea.

Ondine Ripka, a food security analyst with MSF France, said even minor natural disasters could have catastrophic consequences for vulnerable people.

"We did witness some damage in the fields," she said. "But we shouldn't forget that people are already living on the edge, and it takes very little to push them over into malnutrition."

Along pot-holed roads neatly planted with cosmos and asters, AlertNet saw acre after acre of brown, drooping cornstalks, suggesting some damage at least to South Hwanghae's maize crops.

Pak Su Dong, manager of the Soksa-Ri farm, held up a withered cob and pulled back the husk, revealing just a few yellow kernels inside.

"Since June, we had heavy rain for two months, so that's why the maize couldn't get enough nutrients to grow properly," he said. "We now expect to harvest only 15 percent of the maize output we had originally planned."

Despite the sorry-looking crops, soldiers were guarding many cornfields against raiders, keeping watch from wooden shelters with straw roofs.

FOOD AND NUCLEAR DIPLOMACY

Next April marks the 100th birthday of "Eternal President" Kim Il-sung, and skeptics accuse North Korea of hoarding food for the centennial celebrations.

South Korean officials say the North is stockpiling food ahead of a possible underground nuclear test, which would likely provoke another round of sanctions.

In August, the United States offered $900,000 in flood assistance that consisted largely of supplies such as plastic sheeting and tents, saying it carried less risk of diversion.

North Korea's closed society and fixation on weaponry have thrown up plenty of doubt over the years about its perennial food aid requests. Aid has often been intertwined with diplomacy over its nuclear and missile programs.

North Korea said in August, in the midst of its food aid appeals, it was willing to resume regional disarmament talks at an early date without preconditions.

North Korea in the past has won food aid pledges after resuming talks on its nuclear program, which have dragged on for much of the past decade. Pyongyang has conducted two nuclear tests, in October 2006 and May 2009, and is believed to have enough nuclear material for up to a dozen warheads.

South Korea halted shipments of food and fertilizer in early 2008 at the outset of South Korean President Lee Myung-bak's five-year term. He demanded progress on the disarmament talks before resuming aid.

Russia, one of the six parties to the disarmament talks, expects them to resume soon, its foreign ministry spokesman said on Wednesday.

IRRATIONAL RATIONING?

Experts have noted that North Korea could better survive natural disasters if it adopted more market-based food policies.

North Korea's Public Distribution System was the main source of food for most North Koreans until it broke down during the mid-1990s famine. Gradually, the regime allowed a limited form of commercial trading to develop. The majority of people began to rely on crude rural markets to survive.

But in 2005, the state clamped down on the market system, reverting to the PDS, which can ensure food goes to soldiers, officials, party apparatchiks and priority workers but has again proved unable to meet most people's needs, North Korean experts said.

That became evident again this year.

North Korea's standard daily food ration is 700 grams of cereals per person per day. After the harsh winter it was reduced to 400 grams, then cut further to 150 grams in June, officials said. From July it was raised back to 200 grams, where it remains -- about a third of the government's minimum standard of 573 grams.

Back in March, the World Food Programme predicted the PDS would run out of food by early summer. In fact, it didn't -- possibly because of the drastic reductions in rations. One of the tasks of the U.N. assessment mission this month is to figure out why.

AlertNet was not permitted to visit the struggling rural markets where farmers are allowed to barter goods, although a few people were seen on the roadside selling potatoes, eggs, fruit and cigarettes.

The October rice crop will soon be harvested here, and official expectations are muted.

"We're only expecting about 45 percent of the rice crop to come through," said the senior official from the South Hwanghae People's Committee.

However, a North Korean Red Cross official said he was optimistic about the rice harvest, as there had been plenty of sunshine since mid-August.

All over the province, AlertNet saw lush-looking paddies with golden-green rows swaying in the breeze. Under a balmy autumn sun, some men, women and children were beginning to reap rice, working the rows with hand-held sickles.

Visitors to the central parts of the country, including areas around Pyongyang, have also reported seeing crops in good condition.

Red flags marked paddies ready for early harvest and enormous signs proclaimed: "Let's all help the farmers!"

Some farmers used ox-drawn carts to transport produce. Not a single piece of farm machinery was seen during the trip.

Many houses were surrounded by small kitchen gardens, with climbing beans and even melons growing onto roofs. Personal plots were crammed with cabbages, radishes and other vegetables.

A woman whose house was destroyed by floods at the Soa-Ri collective farm showed the food stocks she kept in her tarpaulin tent: corn and a few green leaves.

"I had about 15 square meters by my house that I was allowed to cultivate for myself, but everything was washed away," she said. "So now I have to dig wild grass."

(AlertNet is a humanitarian news service run by Thomson Reuters Foundation. Visit www.trust.org/alertnet)

(Additional reporting by Jeremy Laurence; editing by Bill Tarrant)



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Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Pakistan will not attack Haqqani group, defying U.S.: report

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Girls hold placards while standing on a U.S. flag during an anti-U.S. rally in Hyderabad September 25, 2011. REUTERS/Akram Shahid

Girls hold placards while standing on a U.S. flag during an anti-U.S. rally in Hyderabad September 25, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Akram Shahid

By Michael Georgy

ISLAMABAD | Mon Sep 26, 2011 5:05am EDT

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - Pakistan's military will not take action against the Haqqani militant group that Washington blames for an attack against its embassy in Kabul, despite mounting American pressure to do so, a Pakistani newspaper reported on Monday.

Army chief General Ashfaq Kayani held a "special" meeting with his top commanders on Sunday to discuss the security situation, the military said, after a week of tension and tit-for-tat rhetoric with the United States.

The United States accuses the Pakistani army's powerful spy agency of supporting the Haqqani militant group, a chief driver of violence in eastern Afghanistan and a serious obstacle to President Barack Obama's plan to wind down a long war.

In stunningly blunt comments last week, the top U.S. military officer called the Haqqani network a "veritable arm" of the ISI intelligence agency and accused Pakistan of providing support for the September 13 attack on its Kabul mission.

The Pakistani commanders agreed to resist U.S. demands for an army offensive in North Waziristan, where the United States believes the Haqqani network is based, the Express Tribune reported, quoting an unnamed military official.

"We have already conveyed to the U.S. that Pakistan cannot go beyond what it has already done," the official told the newspaper on condition of anonymity.

The unilateral American special forces raid that killed al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden in a Pakistani town in May heavily strained ties between Washington and Islamabad.

Both sides appeared to be working to repair the damage and then a war of words erupted after the Kabul attack.

Underscoring the magnitude of tensions, Pakistani stocks fell over 2.7 percent on Monday, in part due to concerns about the worsening relations between Islamabad and Washington.

The United States has long pressed ally Pakistan to pursue the Haqqani network, one of the most lethal Taliban-allied Afghan groups fighting Western forces in Afghanistan.

"CONFUSION AND POLICY DISARRAY"

Pakistan denies it supports the Haqqanis and says its army is too stretched battling its own Taliban insurgency to go after the network, which has an estimated 10,000-15,000 fighters.

Analysts say the Pakistani military could suffer heavy casualties if it were to attempt a crackdown on the group, which has developed extensive alliances with other militant organizations in the region, and has mastered the rugged mountain terrain.

Pakistan says Washington overlooks the sacrifices it has made since joining the U.S. "war on terror" launched after the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States.

Pakistani officials say about 5,000 soldiers and security forces have been killed fighting militants and 30,000 civilians have died.

Widespread anti-American sentiment in Pakistan also makes it difficult for the army to cave in to U.S. pressure.

"Are we responsible for the attacks that Taliban do throughout the country. It was a big mistake of our rulers that they supported Americans," said Khan Alam Marwat, 40, a car salesman in Islamabad.

Sirajuddin Haqqani, who heads the Haqqani network, says the group no longer needs sanctuaries in Pakistan, and it feels safe operating in Afghanistan.

Two weeks ago, militants launched an assault against the U.S. embassy and NATO headquarters in Kabul. U.S. officials blamed those attacks on the Haqqani network.

U.S. officials said there was intelligence, including intercepted phone calls, suggesting those attackers were in communication with people connected to Pakistan's principal spy agency, the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) directorate.

The Pakistan government and army have rejected the U.S. allegations. On Saturday, Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani rejected the charges as a sign of American "confusion and policy disarray."

(Additional reporting by Saud Mehsud in Dera Ismail Khan and Sahar Ahmed in Karachi; Writing by Michael Georgy; Editing by John Chalmers)



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Monday, September 26, 2011

Census Report Spells Trouble For Obama

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Home > Politics & Policy > Ken Walsh's Washington > Census Report Spells Trouble For Obama

September 14, 2011 Print

The Census Bureau's latest report on the overall poverty rate is making headlines, but the more important political story is getting less media attention than it deserves. Buried in the data is the disclosure that three key constituencies that supported President Obama in 2008 — African Americans, Latinos, and women — are now suffering some of the worst poverty rates in the country. If they turn against Obama because of their economic plight, his re-election prospects will be dim.

[Read: More Americans in Poverty Than Ever Before.]

And their situation is bleak. The poverty rate for African Americans in 2010 rose to 27.4 percent from 25.8 percent a year earlier, and for black children it was 39 percent. Obama has been under increasing pressure from black leaders, including members of the Congressional Black Caucus, to formulate an agenda specifically to help African Americans, but so far he has refused. He says his overall agenda is the best thing for blacks as well as whites and other ethnic and racial groups.

But the data make clear that many minority citizens have been left out of whatever recovery is occurring. The poverty rate for Hispanics increased to 26.6 percent from 25.3, and it was 35 percent for Hispanic children.

The rate for women was 14.5 percent, up from 13.9 percent, the highest in 17 years. [Read about the president's latest jobs proposal.]

The poverty rate for whites was better at 9.9 percent, compared with 9.4 percent a year earlier.

It was another part of the Census report that gained media attention--that 15.1 percent of all Americans lived in poverty last year, an increase from 14.3 percent in 2009. This is the third consecutive year that there was an annual rise in poverty. Most of that period spans the Obama administration.

Tags:2012 presidential election, Census Bureau, unemployment, politics, deficit and national debt

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Sunday, September 25, 2011

Census Report Not Enough to Say Healthcare Law Is Working, Yet

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The new Census Bureau report does not necessarily mean the Affordable Care Act is working, despite claims by President Obama's health secretary. The report revealed an uptick from 2009 to 2010 in the number of insured only among 18- to 24-year-olds, the group that benefited from the law's provision allowing children to stay on a parent's insurance plan until age 26. But since that provision was only in effect the last few months of the year, experts say next year's survey will be far more telling.

Though, if opponents have their way, next year's survey won't matter anyway. A Tuesday ruling in Pennsylvania added to the pile of conflicting district court decisions on whether or not the law is constitutional, and the Supreme Court is expected to take up the case before next summer.

[See a collection of political cartoons on healthcare.]

The 2.1 percentage point bump in 18- to 24-year-olds with insurance was the one bright spot in the Census survey, which revealed that compared to 2009, the 2010 median U.S. income dropped, the poverty rate increased, and health insurance coverage overall was stable. But that one bright spot inspired optimism from the Obama administration. "[The] new report shows that the Affordable Care Act is working," Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius blogged on the government's healthcare website, connecting the gains to the new rule extending coverage for young people, which went into effect late last September. "We expect even more will gain coverage in 2011 when the policy is fully phased in," Sebelius wrote.

Not so fast, says Ed Haislmaier, a health policy analyst at the conservative Heritage Foundation. "It's really hard to see how you could reasonably think even more than a quarter of the difference could possibly be attributed to a policy that went in over the last quarter of last year," Haislmaier says. After reviewing the numbers in all the insurance categories—employer-based, direct purchase, Medicaid, Medicare, and military—he's not convinced. The most likely place an increase in kids on their parents' plans would show up is among employer-based, direct-purchase, and military insurance, which increased by 0.6 percentage points, 0.1 points, and 0.4 points, respectively. And since the survey is a national sampling with a margin of error, not a complete national total, Haislmaier doesn't think those numbers are enough to connect the dots to the Affordable Care Act. "If you saw some increase next year, you might have a stronger case to say that that policy was having an effect," he says, adding that 2010's tentative economic recovery or stabilization could account for part of the increase, since perhaps some young people simply got hired. "Come back in a year and we'll see."

[See photos of healthcare reform protests.]

Matt Broaddus, a research associate at the left-leaning Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, agrees that next year's survey will be a better gauge. He says the bump in the number of 18- to 24-year-olds insured in 2010 is statistically significant and "outstanding," but he takes a more cautious approach as to whether or not the Affordable Care Act is responsible. "We don't know for sure," Broaddus says, adding it is likely one of several factors. "Since we're seeing employer-sponsored coverage drop for all the other working age groups, we start to think that this may be related to the healthcare law."

Of course, correlation does not necessarily imply causation, but other evidence does support the theory: In an August survey of employers conducted by consulting firm Mercer, 40 percent of employers reported they saw insurance enrollment grow because of the provision allowing children up to 26 to stay on parents' plans.

Neera Tanden, who oversees the healthcare team at the left-leaning Center for American Progress, believes that the report is a good sign for the program's success. "The only bright spot in this entire Census picture was an increase of insurance among young people," says Tanden, who was on the White House team that helped pass the law. She points out that young people typically have the lowest rates of insurance and the highest unemployment—and no other age group saw gains in coverage. "There's no explanation in the economy of why that would happen other than the Affordable Care Act."



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Friday, September 23, 2011

Thousands riot in south China over land grabs: report

HONG KONG (Reuters) - Thousands of people have attacked government buildings in southern China in a protest over land sales, a newspaper reported on Friday, the latest outbreak of trouble in the economic powerhouse of Guangdong province.
The protests in Lufeng, a city of 1.7 million, are the latest sign of growing public anger over land grabs, generally carried out by either private or state-linked companies but with the acquiescence of local governments.
These property disputes, in a country where the government legally owns all land, have led to protests, fights with police, imprisonment and suicides, and created a headache for the stability-obsessed ruling Communist Party.
Witnesses in Lufeng city said the protests, in which around a dozen residents were hurt, were triggered by the seizure of hectares of land and their sale to property developer Country Garden for 1 billion yuan ($156.6 million), Hong Kong's South China Morning Post reported.
Directing their ire at the local seat of government and attacking buildings including the local Communist Party headquarters and a police station, the angry mob in some cases used "sticks, bricks and their fists," the Post reported.
Roads were also blocked, and a businessman said several thousand villagers had joined demonstrations outside government headquarters since Wednesday.
The trouble started on Wednesday morning when villagers demanded the return of their land, the report said.
GUANGDONG TROUBLES
The municipal government of Shanwei region, which includes Lufeng, confirmed the unrest in a statement issued late on Thursday night which said more than a dozen police officers were injured on Thursday, and six police vehicles damaged.
The Shanwei government accused villagers of having "ulterior motives" and of "inciting" other villagers to charge into the police station on Thursday afternoon by spreading rumors about police officers beating a child to death.
Four people have been detained for their role in organizing the protests on Wednesday, according to the website of Shanwei's local news service.
Earlier this year, in the Guangdong factory town of Zengcheng, thousands outraged migrant workers rioted over the alleged maltreatment of a female worker, torching government offices, smashing police cars and marching in their thousands through the streets.
Protests and incidents of "mass unrest" have risen recently, fueled by rapid economic transformation, according to Zhou Ruijin, a former deputy editor-in-chief of the People's Daily, writing in current affairs magazine 'China through the Ages'.
Between 1993 and 2006, the national number of recorded "mass incidents" such as riots and protests grew from 8,708 to around 90,000, Zhou wrote in the September edition of the magazine.
From 2007 to 2009, the number of such incidents was consistently above 90,000, he added.
"These conflicts are concentrated in rural land requisitions and urban housing demolition, as well as in resource development and environmental protection," wrote Zhou.
MESSAGES BLOCKED
Chinese authorities are wary of any discussion of such discontent spreading, and by Friday morning, searches for 'Lufeng' on China's Twitter-style microblogging service Weibo were blocked, with a message saying the "relevant legal regulations" prevented showing the search results.
The unrest in one of China's most economically important provinces, encompassing the famed Pearl River Delta "world factory" zone that accounts for around a third of China's exports, is a major challenge for Guangdong Communist Party chief Wang Yang.
Wang, who is widely expected to be promoted to China's highest leadership ranks in a once-in-a-decade leadership transition next year, has called for a more balanced "Happy Guangdong" development model emphasizing social harmony.
A message on the Internet bulletin board of the Southern Daily, Guangdong's official newspaper, says the residents of Wukan village have petitioned many times in 2009 and 2010 about the land disputes that triggered the riot.
"Please tell us, just who will take charge of this case? Do we really have nowhere to complain?" wrote a user.
(Additional reporting by Sisi Tang in Hong Kong and Chris Buckley and Sabrina Mao in Beijing, Writing by Sui-Lee Wee, Editing by Ken Wills and Daniel Magnowski)


Monday, September 12, 2011

BofA discussing about 40,000 job cuts: report

A Bank of America sign is pictured outside a bank branch in Charlotte, North Carolina January 19, 2010. REUTERS/Chris Keane

A sign of the Bank of America is depicted, outside a bank branch in Charlotte, North Carolina, January 19, 2010.

Credit: Reuters/Chris Keane

BANGALORE | Fri 09/09/2011 3:51 am EST

BANGALORE (Reuters)-employees of Bank of America Corp. discussed cutting approximately 40,000 jobs during the first wave of a restructuring, said the Wall Street Journal, citing people familiar with the plans.

The number of job cuts is not final and could change. The restructuring aims to reduce the Bank's work force of 280,000 during a period of years, told the newspaper.

BofA could not immediately be reached for comment by Reuters outside us regular office hours.

The newspaper said BofA executives met Thursday in Charlotte, North Carolina, where the Bank is headquartered, and will meet again Friday to make final decisions on reductions, putting the finishing touches on five months of work.

Investors are pressuring BofA to improve its performance after he lost money in four of the last six quarters and its stock has dropped by half this year.

The newspaper said that the cuts proposed may exceed the last big cut of BofA in 2008 when called for cuts of 30,000 to 35,000 jobs over three years. This movement was caused by an economic slowdown and the planned acquisition of Merrill Lynch & Co.

Earlier this month, the Charlotte Observer reported that BofA executives were discussing plans to launch potentially 25,000 to 30,000 jobs in the coming years.

BofA had previously planned to cut 3,500 jobs, its Chief Executive Brian Moynihan had said in a memo to staff on 18 August, while he tries to come to grips with $ 1 trillion dollars of mortgages of the problem.

Bank of America announced a profound reorganisation of its senior management team on Tuesday, which included the departure of the consumer Bank Chief Joe price and wealth management head Sallie Krawcheck.

Banks are shedding jobs throughout the world as more stringent standards and a tough second quarter income trading to take its toll on investment banking units in particular.

More than 70,000 staff cuts were announced this year or are declared as the works of European and US banks, some of them will be lost over three or four year programs.

(Reports by Sakthi Prasad in Bangalore; Editing by Anshuman Daga)



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