Category Archives: News, Politics, Government

Mali separatists, Islamists make key pledges

An official says that ethnic Tuareg rebels have agreed to stop pursuing a separate state in Mali‘s north, while Islamists in the area have promised to reject extremism and terrorism. The pledges came during talks with Mali‘s government that aim to avoid a Western-backed military intervention in the troubled country. Tuesday’s meeting in Burkina Faso succeeded in setting up a framework for future negotiations. The Tuareg rebels grabbed control of northern Mali this spring, then lost much of the territory to Islamist groups such as the al-Qaida-linked Ansar Dine. Burkina’s Foreign Affairs Minister Djibril Bassole said the separatists agreed to respect Mali‘s territorial integrity, though the Tuaregs later said they will strive for some autonomy. Bassole added that Ansar Dine, meanwhile, agreed to “reject all forms of extremism and terrorism.”
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Canadian Pacific Railway to eliminate 4,500 jobs

Canadian Pacific Railway says it will eliminate some 4,500 employee and contractor positions by 2016. New chief executive Hunter Harrison said Tuesday they have already made progress and expect 1,700 positions to be eliminated by year end. CP‘s total workforce is 19,500, which includes employees and contractors. The company says the reductions will be achieved through job cuts, attrition and fewer contractors as part of its restructuring plan. Harrison is an American-born retired CEO of Canadian National Railway and is credited with turning the Montreal-based company into the most efficient major railway in North America. Earlier this year, CP CEO Fred Green announced his departure, ending a months-long battle that pitted New York activist investor Bill Ackman against the board of directors. The railroad has since elected a new board.
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Top trafficker of late 1990s slain in Colombia

Colombian police say a onetime leading cocaine trafficker who gained notoriety for testifying against Medellin cartel member Fabio Ochoa in a U.S. courtroom has been slain by gunmen in his homeland National police director Jose Leon says two gunmen killed Alejandro Bernal and another man in the town of Sopo north of Bogota late last week while they were engaged in real estate and automobile deals. Bernal was dubbed a major trafficker by U.S. and Colombian authorities when he was arrested in 1999. They said his organization smuggled 30 tons of cocaine a month to the United States. Bernal was released from prison in 2009. Six years earlier, he was the U.S. government‘s star witness against Ochoa, who was sentenced to 30 years in prison. Bernal was in his mid-50s.
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McAfee says he plans to seek asylum in Guatemala

Surfacing in public for the first time in weeks, software company founder John McAfee says he plans to ask for asylum in Guatemala, saying he fears persecution in Belize. McAfee is now at a hotel in Guatemala City after sneaking out of neighboring Belize, where police have called him a person of interest in the November slaying of a fellow American ex-pat. He tells The Associated Press that he will petition the Guatemalan government to allow him to stay. McAfee has said he fears he will be killed if he turns himself in for questioning in Belize. McAfee has spent weeks narrating his life on the lam through emails, blog posts and calls to reporters.
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Palestinian war crimes case faces long road

Just days after winning upgraded status at the United Nations, the Palestinians are already threatening to join the world’s first permanent war crimes court and pursue charges against the Israelis. Although the Palestinians say that any decision is still a long ways off, the mere threat has unnerved Israel. But pressing a case may not be so simple and could potentially leave the Palestinians themselves vulnerable to prosecution. Since winning recognition as a nonmember observer state in the United Nations General Assembly last week, the Palestinians believe they now qualify for membership in the International Criminal Court. In opposing the Palestinian bid at the U.N., Israel repeatedly cited Palestinian threats to turn to the ICC to prosecute Israeli officials for a variety of alleged crimes, ranging from actions by the Israeli military to Israel‘s construction of Jewish settlements on occupied land. While Israel does not recognize the court’s jurisdiction and believes its actions do not violate international law, officials are concerned legal action that could embarrass Israel, make it difficult for Israeli officials to travel overseas or portray the country as a pariah state. A war crimes conviction can include fines and maximum penalties of life in prison. With this in mind, a senior Palestinian official, Nabil Shaath, spoke of possible ICC action over Israel‘s tough response to the U.N. bid. Israel immediately cut off $100 million in tax transfers to the Palestinians and announced plans to build thousands of new homes in West Bank settlements. “By continuing these war crimes of settlement activities on our lands and stealing our money, Israel is pushing and forcing us to go to the ICC,” Shaath said late Monday. On the surface, the Palestinians appear to have a strong case against Israeli settlements in the West Bank and east Jerusalem. The Palestinians claim the two areas, as well as the Gaza Strip, for their future state. The U.N. resolution last week recognized a Palestinian state in all three territories, captured by Israel in the 1967 war. Israel withdrew from Gaza in 2005 but continues to control access in and out of the area. The U.N. resolution appeared to repudiate the Israeli position that the West Bank and east Jerusalem are “disputed” territories and effectively condemned Israeli settlements in the areas, which are now home to some 500,000 Israelis. Settlements are at the heart of the current four-year deadlock in peace efforts, with the Palestinians refusing to negotiate while Israel continues to build more settler homes. The ICC‘s founding charter describes “the transfer, directly or indirectly, by the Occupying Power of parts of its own civilian population into the territory it occupies” as a war crime. The Palestinian position on settlements has widespread international support. The international community, even Israel‘s closest ally, the U.S., has broadly condemned the latest planned settlement construction. “Under our very clear understanding of international law, the settlements are illegal and have always been illegal, and that will remain so,” Andrew Standley, the European Union‘s ambassador to Israel, told reporters Tuesday. Even so, turning this international opposition into legal action against Israel will be no small task. The Palestinians would face a number of legal and political obstacles in pressing forward. For starters, it remains unclear whether the Palestinians qualify for membership in the court, because it is open only to states. Last April, the court’s chief prosecutor at the time, Luis Moreno-Ocampo, turned down a request by the Palestinians to join the court. But he subsequently said in an AP interview that they would qualify for membership if they gained nonmember state status at the U.N. So far, the court has said only that it “takes note” of last week’s U.N. decision and will consider its “legal implications.” Moreno-Ocampo is no longer at the court. Goran Sluiter, professor of international law at Amsterdam University, said that with their newfound status, it seems likely the Palestinians could join the ICC. But it is unclear whether the court would agree to investigate their complaints. He said the court would look at key issues, including the gravity of the alleged crimes and whether Israel‘s own judicial system is capable of judging the case, before deciding whether to prosecute. If they were to launch a probe, prosecutors also would look at alleged crimes by Palestinians. “I think there is still a very, very, very, long way to go,” Sluitter said. In the conflict between the Palestinians and Israel, “there’s a broad range of conduct that could be a basis for further investigations because they would qualify as war crimes.” Robbie Sabel, a former legal adviser to the Israeli Foreign Ministry, said he thinks the Palestinians “will seriously hesitate” taking action against Israel. He said Israel, for instance, could try to hold the Palestinian Authority responsible for rocket attacks out of the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip aimed at Israeli cities. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, who lost control of Gaza to Hamas five years ago, claims to represent both territories on the international stage. “Any Hamas person who launches a rocket could then be subject to ICC ruling. They have to expose their own people first,” said Sabel, who is now a law professor at the Hebrew University. A U.N. report into heavy fighting between Israel and Hamas four years ago found evidence of war crimes by both sides. Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor said Israel would fight any attempt by the Palestinians to use the ICC as a “politicized instrument” against Israel. “We are not worried about Israel‘s case because we have a good solid case and we work strictly according to international law,” he said. The Palestinians would also face heavy political pressure not to go to court. The U.S. Senate, for instance, is currently debating legislation that would cut off millions of dollars in assistance to the Palestinians and close their diplomatic offices in Washington if they file charges against Israel. The legislation is expected to be voted on in the coming days. A senior Palestinian official said the Palestinians are in “no hurry” to rush to the ICC, in part because they are pleased with the heavy international condemnations of Israel‘s latest settlement plans but also because of fears of antagonizing the U.S. The official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was discussing internal high-level deliberations, said the Palestinians are now focused on repairing ties with the U.S., which sided with Israel in opposing last week’s U.N. resolution. Yet he noted that the Palestinians have refused calls to promise not to go to the ICC. In a letter to the U.N. secretary-general on Monday, the Palestinian representative to the United Nations complained that “all Israeli settlement activities are illegal … and thus constitute a war crime.” Yet, reflecting the Palestinian thinking, the letter did not threaten to pursue the matter in the ICC. ___ Corder reported from The Hague, Netherlands. Amy Teibel and Lauren E. Bohn in Jerusalem contributed reporting.
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Argentine, Ecuador leaders talk southern alliance

Argentina‘s president has found an ally in Ecuador in her billion-dollar debt showdown against so-called “vulture funds” in New York. Cristina Fernandez is proposing that the UNASUR group of South American nations take a common stand against “judicial colonialism.” That’s her phrase for a U.S. judge’s remedy that would force Argentina to go into default on billions of dollars in debt if it doesn’t pay the funds. Ecuador President Rafael Correa says he’s “totally in agreement with Cristina.” Correa, meanwhile, says he wants Argentina‘s courts to force Chevron Corp. to pay a $19 billion judgment over oil spills in Ecuador. Chevron said this week that an Argentine judge’s seizure of its local assets has clouded Argentina‘s energy future.
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Ivory Coast may try wife of ex-president Gbagbo

Ivory Coast‘s president is leaving open the possibility that his country won’t hand over the wife of ex-leader Laurent Gbagbo to the International Criminal Court, which has indicted her on charges including murder, rape and persecution. Alassane Ouattara, visiting France, told reporters Tuesday that Ivory Coast may try Simone Gbagbo itself. Her husband is already held in The Hague facing similar charges stemming from his fight to retain power after losing a 2010 presidential election to Ouattara. Violence by supporters of both men killed 3,000. Last month, the ICC unsealed its indictment against Simone Gbagbo — its first charges against a woman. She’s seen as an “indirect co-perpetrator.” But Ouattara said Ivory Coast would reply “in the weeks or months ahead,” adding that “she could be judged in Ivory Coast.”
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Blunt Israeli diplomat dropped from election list

Israel’s foreign minister has dropped his deputy, known for international incidents, from his list of candidates for Israel’s January 22 election. Danny Ayalon made headlines during a diplomatic spat with Turkey in 2010, when he forced the Turkish ambassador to sit on a low stool as an insult, and saw to it that the scene was televised. The maneuver worsened the crisis between the two nations. Ayalon eventually apologized. When Foreign Avigdor Lieberman, head of their party, read his list of candidates for parliament on Tuesday, Ayalon was not on it, party spokesman Tal Nahum said. Lieberman’s Yisrael Beitenu Party is running on a joint list with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud. Polls indicate the combined list will finish first, and Netanyahu will remain in his post.
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Oil leak from damaged ship contained in Bahamas

The owner of a salvage company says a damaged cargo ship in the Bahamas has leaked more than 1,000 gallons (3,785 liters) of oil. Ray Darville of Overseas Marine Group Ltd. accused the government Tuesday of not cleaning up the oil leaked by the Panamanian-flagged vessel named Eugenia. The ship is owned by Swiss-based Mediterranean Shipping Co. Darville says officials at Freeport Harbor in Grand Bahama island contracted Bahamas Oil Refining Co. to deal with the spill. Government officials could not be immediately reached for comment. Transport Minister Glenys Hanna-Martin said Monday that the ship’s hull was breached somehow off Grand Bahama. Darville says his crews have hauled the ship back into harbor and it is no longer leaking oil.
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Dozens of Brazil cops charged with corruption

Brazilian law enforcement intelligence agencies responsible for combating organized crime have launched an operation against alleged corruption within the Rio de Janeiro state police force itself. The Rio state security department says Tuesday’s “Operation Purification” is the result of a year of investigation. A press release from the security department says that of 65 wanted officers, 59 were arrested Tuesday morning. There are also warrants for 18 alleged drug traffickers, and 11 have been arrested so far. Among the charges against the officers are that they have been taking monthly bribes from the Red Command, Rio’s most powerful drug trading organization. Other charges include racketeering, kidnapping and extortion stemming from officers allegedly kidnapping drug dealers and holding them for ransom.
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Brazilian Indians protest invasion of their lands

Brazilian Indians are demanding the swift demarcation of their tribal lands, which they say are being invaded by loggers and ranchers. Leaders from some 70 Indian tribes, mostly from the western state of Mato Grosso do Sul, delivered a document with their demands to the presidential office, Congress and the Supreme Court on Tuesday. The document was signed by 20,000 people including American linguist Noam Chomsky and Uruguayan author Eduardo Galeano During a ceremony in Congress, Guarani-Kaiowa leader Ladio Veron said many of his tribe fled their lands in Mato Grosso do Sul after an invasion by ranchers. The ranches, in his words, “are destroying our rivers, forests and are poisoning our land.”
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Greek court convicts 5 over deadly 2007 wildfire

A Greek court has convicted an elderly villager and four local officials on charges of negligence that led to 36 deaths five years ago in one of the country’s worst-ever wildfires. Judges gave a suspended 10-year sentence to Sofia Nikolopoulou, who was accused of starting the fire accidentally while cooking outdoors in the southern Peloponnese region. A former local mayor, a regional governor and a fireman received the same sentence for allegedly failing to take sufficient precautions, or not reacting efficiently after the fire started. The court in the southern town of Pyrgos on Tuesday also handed down a suspended five-year sentence to a local fire brigade official. The August 2007 wildfire ravaged more than 170,000 hectares of land, destroying scores of homes. All five defendants appealed their convictions.
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Venezuela chocolate king thrives despite controls

Cacao pods ripen to colors from bright yellow to crimson in the forest-shaded plantations of Venezuela, where some of the world’s finest chocolate is born. The crop is transformed into gourmet bars that sell briskly in Venezuela and are exported to the United States, Europe and Japan by the country’s premier chocolate maker, Chocolates El Rey, or The King. As the company has won success and international acclaim, though, it has also had to cope with difficulties brought on by President Hugo Chavez’s socialist government. El Rey‘s growing business illustrates how some entrepreneurs are managing to hold on and even thrive in Venezuela despite more government regulations and state takeovers of companies and farmland. Producers of crops such as coffee and sugar have struggled in the face of price controls and cheap imports. El Rey used to go through just four bureaucratic steps to export its chocolate. Now, owner Jorge Redmond says the list of requirements has grown to more than 50. Some cacao plantations have been taken over by the government, and while those seizures haven’t affected El Rey, the company suffered a major setback a decade ago when its model farm was overrun by squatters. Those who took the land planted corn and cut down towering mahogany and saman trees. El Rey‘s attempts to get the farm back have been fruitless, and Redmond acknowledges feeling worried about the possibility of one day being targeted for expropriation by the government. Still, he remains optimistic about cacao and plans new investments to increase output at the company’s plant, which is already churning out 3,000 tons of chocolate a year. El Rey has a workforce of more than 200 employees, and plans to increase its exports. “We’re going to stay here and fight it out. We’re not giving up. And I think most other companies are going to do the same,” said Redmond, who has been leading El Rey for nearly four decades as its majority owner and president. “You have to keep working. My philosophy is that we’re going to last longer than the government.” Chavez, for his part, has talked about harnessing Venezuela‘s potential in cacao and increasing exports. His government has already established the Venezuelan Cacao Socialist Corporation, which has invested in several processing plants. Redmond said officials from the state company explained in a private meeting with buyers in November that the company plans to buy about 2,000 tons directly from growers in the region of Barlovento, east of Caracas, and then divvy it up in the industry. “We were very clear … that we’re only going to buy what suits us,” Redmond said at his office in Caracas, which is decorated with wooden cacao pods and smells of chocolate. Redmond’s company has found a winning strategy by paying more for quality cacao, providing assistance to small farmers and marketing its chocolate in Venezuela and around the world. Some of the aromatic cacao comes from independent farmers in Barlovento, where the lush coastal forests sprout with moss and bromeliads along with pea-sized cacao blossoms. Lifelong grower Pablo Planchar said he is thankful to El Rey for the higher prices it pays for each burlap sack of cacao. He’s also grateful that the company has provided equipment for pruning trees and special boxes made of apamate wood where he ferments his cacao. The cacao is then spread out and raked on a concrete patio for sun-drying, where a sliding metal roof installed by El Rey helps keep the crop dry when it rains. “It’s the institution that has helped us the most,” Planchar said of the company. On a recent morning, Planchar and six other men squatted among the trees, cracking open the cacao pods with machetes and scooping out clumps of white pulp and seeds with their fingers. “This one’s ready. Look at the color,” Planchar said, cradling a golden yellow pod in his hands. While they worked, he and the other men smoked cigars and passed around a bottle of homemade liquor made from local plants and spices. Planchar said he can earn the equivalent of $465 a month, and he hopes for higher prices and more assistance of the sort El Rey is providing, as well as credit. His typical earnings are less than the minimum wage of $476 for those with regular full-time jobs, and as a result many independent farmers do other work to make ends meet. Venezuela‘s cacao has long been highly prized as an export, harvested by slaves during Spanish colonial times in the 1600s and shipped off to Europe in increasing amounts. Then came oil in the early 20th century, passing coffee and cacao, and taking root as the lifeblood of Venezuela‘s economy. Today Venezuela produces about 17,000 tons of cacao a year, less than one-half of 1 percent of the world’s production, said Cesar Guevara, president of the country’s cacao industry association. Venezuela is one of a select group of countries producing fine aromatic varieties of cacao, along with Ecuador, Trinidad and Tobago, and some other Caribbean islands. Nonetheless, cacao has long been viewed as an artisanal crop here and hasn’t been promoted for export on a large scale. Connoisseurs differentiate between the rich assortment of varieties of cacao in Venezuela, with names such as Porcelana and Rio Caribe, as they would with fine wines. “Venezuela has always been a fantastic, wonderful chocolate for me,” said Michael Recchiuti, a chocolatier in San Francisco, California, who chooses Venezuelan chocolate for some of his creations and says it has a distinctive flavor with touches of yellow fruit and “blond tobacco” notes. He said he considers it to be among the world’s finest, along with chocolates from Madagascar, Ecuador and other countries. El Rey‘s business has expanded since 1995, when it launched a line of single-bean variety bars. They come in shades from milk chocolate to dark chocolate named after varieties of shade trees found on plantations. Another business that has been flourishing is the family-owned Hacienda San Jose on the eastern Paria Peninsula, which has been producing cacao since 1830. Sales manager Claudia Franceschi, who represents the family’s sixth generation in the business, said domestic sales of their Chocolate San Jose bars have more than doubled recently and a new brand of dark chocolates will be exported starting next year. German-born Kai Rosenberg, however, tells a different story. He said his small plantations were seized by the government without warning when National Guard troops arrived in 2010. “There was no explanation. They just came and put a lock on my door and said we had to go,” said Rosenberg, who hasn’t been able to talk with anyone in the government since about compensation. “They don’t want to pay, and this is the rule rather than the exception,” said Rosenberg, who for nearly three decades worked to recover rare varieties of criollo cacao. He is now challenging the government in court but isn’t optimistic about his chances. Meanwhile, the government‘s plan to buy and sell cacao in Barlovento remains up in the air; private companies such as El Rey and Nestle continue to lead the market nationwide. “We’re not exactly sure how this is going to pan out,” Redmond said. Officials with the state company couldn’t be reached for comment. In a previous state foray into the market in the 1970s, the government sought to establish a monopoly to buy and sell cacao. But Redmond and others say that led to a disastrous drop in production and the effort was scrapped. For now, El Rey is focusing on its own efforts, including producing a “private reserve” chocolate brand with a variety of cacao once grown on the same model farm that was seized by squatters. It also has adapted to expanding regulations, obtaining documents showing compliance with labor obligations and permits to move shipments both within the country and through the ports. In order to ensure quality, it’s providing regular advice to small farmers, a job that falls to agricultural scientist Francisco Betancourt. While chatting with one farmer recently, Betancourt rolled a freshly dried cacao bean between his fingers, then raised it to his nose and declared, “This one’s beautiful.” It smelled nutty and fruity, like the beginnings of a delicious chocolate bar. ___ Ian James on Twitter: http://twitter.com/ianjamesap
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Correction: Guatemala Hospital Abuse Story

In a story Nov. 30 about allegations of abuse at a Guatemalan psychiatric hospital, The Associated Press reported erroneously that 300 children were found held in isolation there. The rights group Disability Rights International says it found a total population of about 340 patients but saw only a few in isolation, including a teenager. The story also said that the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights participated in the investigation. Two rights groups conducted the investigation, then submitted their findings to the commission. A corrected version of the story is below: Human rights groups say they found women and children subjected to abuse at a public psychiatric hospital in Guatemala‘s capital. The investigation was conducted by the Human Rights Office of the Archbishop of Guatemala and Disability Rights International, and the findings were submitted to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. Executive Director Nery Rodenas said Friday that the probe found patients in the Federico Mora hospital suffering from a lack of medical attention, along with abuse by staff and inmates from a neighboring prison who were allowed into the hospital. The commission called for Guatemala to swiftly address conditions in the hospital. Investigators found more than 300 children and adults at the facility. It said it found that newly admitted minors were kept in isolation cells, and patients in locked cells had died of preventable diseases due to lack of medical attention.
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