Tag Archives: Chile

Official: Ford shows off V8-powered Ranger headed to Dakar Rally

By Jeffrey N. Ross

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Avert your eyes now if you’re jealous that the global version of the Ford Ranger is not offered in the US. Ford’s midsize pickup is being tuned up to take on the 2014 Dakar Rally, and the result is a truck that is probably even cooler than any F-150 SVT Raptor we’ve ever seen in the States. Ford is actually building two versions of the truck for Dakar, which will run from January 5 through January 18, covering more than 5,000 miles from Argentina to Chile.

Starting with a fully composite body and a 5.0-liter V8 plucked from a Mustang, nearly every aspect of the trucks have been purpose built to take on the grueling race. This includes things like the six-speed sequential gearbox, liquid-cooled rear brakes and the 132-gallon fuel tank. As proof that Dakar is more about endurance than speed, the engines used in these race trucks will be limited to around 350 horsepower and 413 pound-feet of torque, and will max out at a top speed of just 105 miles per hour. Scroll down for Ford’s official press release offering more information about the trucks and teams being prepped for Dakar.

Continue reading Ford shows off V8-powered Ranger headed to Dakar Rally

Ford shows off V8-powered Ranger headed to Dakar Rally originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 30 Jul 2013 10:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Autoblog

Today in History for 30th July 2013

Historical Events

579 – Benedict I ends his reign as Catholic Pope
1756 – Bartolomeo Rastrelli presents the newly-built Catherine Palace to Empress Elizabeth and her courtiers.
1908 – Around the World Automobile Race ends in Paris
1989 – Chile amends its constitution
1995 – Dominic Cork takes hat-trick in England Test Cricket win v WI
2009 – A bomb explodes in Palma Nova, Mallorca, killing 2 police officers. Basque separatist group ETA is believed to be responsible.

More Historical Events »

Famous Birthdays

1641 – Regnier de Graaf, Dutch physician and anatomist (d. 1673)
1936 – Buddy Guy, rocker
1958 – Daley Thompson, London, Decathalete (Olympic-gold-1980, 1984)
1968 – Robert Korzeniowski, Polish athlete
1974 – Hilary Swank, Bellingham WA, actress (Karate Kid 4)
1978 – James Branaman, American model and reality show contestant

More Famous Birthdays »

Famous Deaths

1540 – Robert Barnes, English churchman (martyred) (b. 1495)
1655 – Sigmund Theophil Staden, composer, dies at 47
1982 – Frank Nicholson, South African cricket wicket-keeper (1935-36), dies
1990 – Ian Gow, British Conservative parliament leader, murdered
1996 – Magda Schneider, actress (Going Gay, Be Mine Tonight), dies at 87
2007 – Ingmar Bergman, Swedish stage and film director (b. 1918)

More Famous Deaths »

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at HistoryOrb.Com – This Day in History

Man City manager Pellegrini could rejoin squad in HK

Manchester City manager Manuel Pellegrini could rejoin the squad in Hong Kong on Tuesday according to assistant manager Brian Kidd.

Pellegrini left City’s pre-season training camp in South Africa and returned to his homeland of Chile due to a personal issue, leaving Kidd in charge for Thursday’s 2-1 defeat in a pre-season friendly against AmaZula.

The reason for the former Malaga coach’s absence remains unclear but Kidd is hopeful that Pellegrini will be back with his players when they continue their tour in Asia.

“He had to go back to Chile for personal reasons and he will hopefully be in Hong Kong on Tuesday,” Kidd said.

“You want the boss here but he prepared the team well for this and (assistant manager) Reuben Cousillas and the coaches have been superb since they’ve been here. The attention to detail has been terrific.”

City are close to signing both Sevilla striker Alvaro Negredo, who had a medical on Thursday, and Montenegro forward Stevan Jovetic from Fiorentina, who claimed on Thursday that a fee had been agreed.

Kidd insisted no deals have been completed but admits that City require more attacking options after selling Mario Balotelli and Carlos Tevez to AC Milan and Juventus respectively since the turn of the year.

“I’m not quite sure how far we are down the road with Negredo. It’s quite close. We’ve not heard wither he’s definitely signed but we’re in the market for a couple of strikers,” Kidd said.

“With Carlos and Mario going we’re two short and when you’re going for the Premier League and you’re in the Champions League you need four strikers.”

Pellegrini took charge of his players for the first time last Monday and Kidd, who worked under previous manager Roberto Mancini and had a spell in caretaker charge after the Italian was sacked, has been impressed by the Chilean.

“The boss has only been there two weeks but he’s worked tremendously,” Kidd said. “He takes all the sessions and has got a wonderful backroom staff with him.”

City’s defeat to AmaZulu followed the 2-0 loss to Supersport United on Sunday and they will hope for better results when they depart for Hong Kong on Sunday.

Argentina internationals Sergio Aguero and Pablo Zabaleta only linked up with the squad this week, while Spain’s David Silva and new signing Jesus Navas will not start training until next week after being given an extended break following the Confederations Cup.

Despite suffering two defeats from their two matches so far, Kidd feels City are on course for the start of the Premier League season.

“The boys have worked really well and the Premier League is what we’ve been building up to,” he said.

“We’ve had two good games against good opposition. The AmaZulu game was a terrific workout and the Premier League is the most important thing.

“It’s a work in progress but there’s been confidence every day in training and it’s been a good training camp and two excellent games.”

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Chile's Pinera asks his bloc for unity amid crisis

Chile’s president is asking his conservative bloc to pick a single presidential candidate and quickly overcome a political crisis just four months before the general election.

President Sebastian Pinera said Thursday that his Alliance coalition must be united and rapidly replace candidate Pablo Longueira. The former economy minister quit the race Wednesday to deal with his depression.

Longueira’s resignation further weakened the chances that the conservative bloc will be able to beat former President Michelle Bachelet, the center-leftist who is the frontrunner in the Nov. 17 vote.

The current governing coalition led by the conservative Independent Democratic Union and the center-right National Renovation is the first conservative government since Chile’s return to democracy in 1990.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Right-wing candidate quits Chile presidential race

The conservative coalition’s candidate in the Chilean presidential campaign has dropped out of the race because he suffers from depression, his son said Wednesday.

The surprise resignation by Pablo Longueira was expected to further weaken the chances for the governing conservatives to beat former President Michelle Bachelet of the Socialist Party, who is the front-runner for the Nov. 17 vote.

“Our father is sick,” the son, Juan Pablo Longueira, said at a news conference. “After the primary election, and after taking some days of rest, his health deteriorated as a result of a bout of depression that was medically diagnosed.”

Longueira, 55, is a former economy minister and one of the founding members of the conservative Independent Democratic Union that supported Gen. Augusto Pinochet’s dictatorship.

He entered the race three months ago when Laurence Golborne, a businessman who had been seen as the center-right’s best hope for holding on to power, was forced out by a financial scandal. Longueira, who supports free-market economic policies and opposes gay marriage and abortion, won a primary held last month by the center-right Alliance for Chile bloc to choose its candidate to replace conservative President Sebastian Pinera.

“We respect any decision taken by him,” Patricio Melero, head of the Independent Democratic Union, said at news conference in the port city of Valparaiso.

“Once he knew of this illness that is troubling him, and taking into consideration the opinion of doctors, he was brave to make this decision that puts the interest of the country above anything else,” Melero said.

Party leaders will meet Thursday to pick a replacement for Longueira, an industrial engineer by training and a career politician who was close to Pinochet.

“This was such a surprising event. It wasn’t considered under any political scenario because the campaign is on its final stretch. This is a crisis for the right-wing coalition,” said Guillermo Holzmann, a political science professor at the Universidad de Valparaiso.

“This political crisis gives Bachelet an important electoral advantage,” Holzmann said.

Bachelet, who ended her 2006-10 presidency with high popularity ratings, is campaigning on promises to use a second term to fight Chile’s vast income inequality, change the Pinochet-era constitution and reform taxes and education.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

A 'New Normal' for Private Equity

By Knowledge@Wharton on Forbes, Contributor The following post was published on the Knowledge@Wharton Today blog on July 11, 2013. Some $200 billion of new capital went to private equity and venture capital management partnerships (collectively referred to here as PE) throughout the world in 2012. For the first time, 20% of that total, some $40 billion, went to fund managers in emerging market countries. Surprisingly, of that $40 billion, only $15 billion went to the subset of emerging economies known as the BRICs (Brazil, Russia, India and China). That leaves $25 billion that went into the non-BRIC emerging markets. So where did the rest of it go? Countries like Columbia, Chile, Peru and Mexico have seen remarkable growth. Several African countries, such as South Africa, Kenya and Nigeria — indeed, the whole of sub-Saharan Africa — have witnessed growth in the number of fund managers and the capital under management. Turkey also has emerged as a destination, as have Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam and now Indonesia. These new players still have work to do in improving their PE ecosystems. Management capacity building is high on the list, as are appropriate laws and regulations, tax treatment and acceptance of contractual provisions. These countries’ governments have recognized the role of PE in their industries and are motivated to make the needed changes. There is a discernible transfer of knowledge from mature economies to the emerged and emerging market PE players. These trends are reflected in two of the articles included in this year’s Wharton Private Equity Review. One offers coverage of a panel discussion titled, “Private Equity Survival Guide: How to Survive and Thrive in Emerging Markets,” which took place at the 2013 Wharton Private Equity & Venture Capital Conference. The second, written by a team of five Wharton MBA students, focuses on the impact of the Arab Spring on private equity in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region. Beyond emerging markets, this year’s review includes a piece by a Wharton MBA student that looks at how the regulatory scrutiny of the PE industry in the United States has evolved dramatically over recent years. The industry has moved from a lightly regulated, self-governing asset class to one that is coming under increasing scrutiny and reporting requirements. The author speculates on what is in store for the industry as regulators continue their investigations. An example of international activity is presented in a case study by another Wharton MBA student, titled “Investing in Times of Distress: the Bank of Ireland and WL Ross,” which provides a detailed overview of how PE investors have played a role in the recapitalization and restructuring of troubled financial institutions. Knowledge@Wharton then reports on another panel from the conference that addressed how PE firms create value and questioned some of the common wisdom surrounding the roles and actions of PE firms once they have acquired a company. Finally, a piece on venture capital from another conference panel then looks at the challenge of generating consistent returns and the growing allure of New York …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Chile chief rejects Bolivia call for border talks

Chile‘s president says the U.N.’s top court should reject Bolivia‘s demand for talks on giving it access to the sea.

In an interview with The Associated Press, President Sebastian Pinera says a court ruling in Bolivia‘s favor would open an international “Pandora’s box” that might lead to a review of Mexico‘s border with the United States, or that of France with Germany.

Land-locked Bolivia this past week asked the International Court of Justice in The Hague to force Chile to negotiate over Bolivia‘s claim to at least part of the 240-mile (400-kilometer) strip of Pacific Coast that it lost in a 19th century war. Chile argues the issue was long ago settled by treaty.

Pinera spoke Saturday while returning from a summit in Haiti.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Barrick Battles Rage on 2 Fronts

By Rich Duprey, The Motley Fool

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Underscoring the turmoil ripping through the world’s biggest gold miner in the wake of a court order suspending its Chilean Pascua-Lama project, Barrick Gold reported that three top executives from its South America operations have resigned, including the president, Guillermo Calo, who was appointed to the position just last July.

Pascua-Lama is one of the world’s largest gold and silver resources, with nearly 18 million ounces of proven and probable gold reserves, 676 million ounces of silver, and an expected mine life of 25 years. It was expected to produce an average of 800,000 to 850,000 ounces of gold and 35 million ounces of silver in its first five years of operation.

Earlier this month, the Chilean court agreed with the concerns of local indigenous tribes that Barrick is mining in pristine glacial regions and causing environmental damage. It ordered the project suspended until the miner addresses those concerns. The Reuters report of the executive resignations indicated that it was part of a larger effort by Barrick to shake up the project and meet the regulatory mandates necessary to get it back on track.

South America has become an unsettled region to mine in. Newmont Mining had its Peruvian Conga project brought to a short stop over environmental concerns, while Vale recently abandoned an Argentinean project because of the country’s policies. Costs for Pascua-Lama have ballooned over the past decade and now stand at about $8.5 billion, putting it at risk of becoming an albatross around the miner’s neck even before the court decision. Barrick even resorted to bringing in engineering specialist Fluor to expand the scope of its project management before the court order.

Barrick now says it is reviewing all options available to it, warning that if construction activities in Chile did not resume before the end of the year, it could suspend the project altogether.

Investors are also becoming restless with management, which sought to give its co-chairman, John Thornton, a massive $11.9 million “signing bonus.” An equally massive 82% of those voting on the non-binding referendum at the annual shareholders’ meeting the other day rejected the payout, even as they approved all the directors that stood for re-election.

Although management isn’t required to follow the shareholder statement, it would probably be a wise move to placate investors until it can also mollify Chilean regulators. With falling gold prices eating into profits, Barrick can’t afford to fight a war on two fronts.

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The article Barrick Battles Rage on 2 Fronts originally appeared on Fool.com.

Fool contributor Rich Duprey has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool owns shares

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Chile says Chinese ship still burns in Antarctica

A Chilean air force plane is checking on a Chinese ship that caught fire in Antarctica.

The Kai Xin vessel burned off the coast of Antarctica on Wednesday and its 97 crew members were rescued by a Norwegian ship.

Then it began to drift unmanned, zigzagging dangerously close to sharp glaciers.

Chile‘s air force said Friday that the ship is still in flames at Bransfield Strait in the Antarctic peninsula.

A Chilean navy tugboat is on its way to tow the ship to harbor before it crashes into the glaciers and causes an oil spill.

A Panamanian-flagged Chinese ship, Skyfrost, is also nearing the area to help tow the disabled craft.

The Kai Xin left port in Uruguay. Chilean officials don’t know how much fuel it carries.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/pRmrsQNBbOs/

Chile rushes to aid ship in Antarctica after fire

A Chilean military tugboat is heading to Antarctica to avoid an ecological disaster where a Chinese fishing ship caught fire.

The Kai Xin vessel burned off the coast of Antarctica Wednesday. Its 97 crew members were rescued by a Norwegian ship close to Chile‘s research base near the Antarctic peninsula.

Capt. Juan Marcelo Villegas is maritime governor for Chile‘s portion of Antarctica and he says the ship has moved about 5 miles (7 kilometers) north, drifting unmanned in zigzags near pointy glaciers.

He says a navy tugboat left port near the southern tip of South America to tow the ship to harbor.

Fog forced Chile‘s air force to cancel a flight Thursday to check on the ship’s condition, but Villegas says the ship is not at risk of sinking.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/j0CWDQFtFfI/

Chile Senate votes to impeach education minister

Chile‘s Senate has voted to impeach Education Minister Harald Beyer for professional misconduct for failing to monitor profits in the education sector.

Beyer will be banned from holding public office for five years following the 20-18 vote. The Chamber of Deputies had previously narrowly voted in favor of the measure to remove him from office.

Wednesday’s vote was seen as a triumph for Chile‘s center-left opposition, which hopes to regain the presidency in November elections, and the country’s student protest movement, which has held two years of marches to demand free education and an end to for-profit universities.

Opposition lawmakers had accused Beyer of not investigating complaints about profits being made at the private Universidad del Mar.

Visibly distraught, Beyer thanked his team at the Education Ministry and said that “the worst face of politics has taken precedence.”

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/L7Nb8Fzuntw/

Report: US, Japan trade talks could see scrapping of car and truck tariffs

By Jonathon Ramsey

2015 Subaru WRX STI Spy Shots

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Trade issues between the United States and Japan, especially in the automotive sector, have struck a repetitive note for decades: our market is open to them, their market is effectively closed to us. Even though Japan doesn’t apply tariffs to cars we export there – whereas we tax Japanese passenger cars 2.5 percent and Japanese light trucks 25 percent – other barriers like Japan‘s 2,000-unit cap in the Preferential Handling Program and regulatory hurdles have limited the amount of effective trade US companies can conduct there. In 2011 for instance, the US exported $1.5 billion in auto products to Japan but imported $41 billion in auto products from Japan. And it’s said that Japan sells 120 cars in the US for every car a US manufacturer sells there.

That’s why potential US approval of Japan‘s request to enter the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) is sending automotive criers out in the streets. The TPP is a series of long-running talks to open up trade between the US and 10 other nations (Australia, Brunei Darussalam, Canada, Chile, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, and Vietnam). Last month, Japan asked to join the talks, and the TPP membership would need to assent to the request within 90 days of the next TPP meeting, scheduled for Peru in July.

It looks like the US will agree to let Japan in and that has some politicians and labor groups concerned, the fear being that Japan will get an even easier time of it here without truly eliminating hurdles over there. Talks between Japan and the US are said to be at “an advanced stage,” with the US trying to get some early agreements in advance in sectors like auto, insurance and agriculture before the July meeting.

The AFL-CIO is wary, just one of the labor groups worried about losing ground just when it’s said that American manufacturing is coming back. Ford, not a newcomer to being vocal about trade issues with Japan, is against Japan‘s inclusion to the TPP talks, as is the American Automotive Policy Council. And certain members of Congress are hesitant to let Japan sit at the table, based on past and current unresolved issues. Nevertheless, it doesn’t look like the Obama Administration and a large pro-business lobby will turn away from the possibility of adding the world’s third largest economy to the proceedings, the US government having already unofficially welcomed Japan to the TPP talks.

US, Japan trade talks could see scrapping of car and truck tariffs originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 16 Apr 2013 07:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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From: http://feeds.autoblog.com/~r/weblogsinc/autoblog/~3/qlBZCW_-6XM/

Chile's Bachelet launches presidential campaign

Former President Michelle Bachelet formally launched her campaign for November’s presidential election Saturday, saying she would use a second term to reform taxes and education and to fight Chile‘s huge income inequality.

Bachelet, 62, begins her campaign for the Nov. 17 election as the front-runner in polls after leaving office four years ago with soaring popularity ratings. She was unable to seek immediate re-election because Chile‘s constitution bans consecutive terms.

But she conceded many issues were left unsolved during her presidency, key among them education reform and the sharp income inequality that has marred the country’s economic growth.

“Combatting inequality is what gives us a purpose to be here. It’s the fine print that affects millions of consumers who are in debt. It’s the salary gap between men and women and the inability of workers to negotiate collectively,” the moderate Socialist Party member told a cheering crowd of about 5,000 people at the Caupolican theater in downtown Santiago.

Bachelet promised to push for tax reform so that “those who earn more, contribute more” to fund deep changes to Chile‘s troubled education system.

“We must guarantee everyone a public education system that integrates them at all levels, ends profit and advances toward universal gratuity,” she said. “It’s the desire of most Chileans.”

Student protests demanding free education marked the final years of her term and boiled over during the administration of her conservative successor, Sebastian Pinera, whose popularity plunged to the lowest level of any Chilean leader since the end of Gen. Augusto Pinochet‘s dictatorship in 1990.

Tens of thousands of students flooded the streets of Chile on Thursday to demand free education, showing the continuing strength of the student movement in an election year.

Bachelet’s opponent from the conservative governing coalition is likely to be either former Defense Minister Andres Allamand or Laurence Golborne, the former public works minister who led the 2010 rescue of 33 miners trapped deep underground in the Atacama desert.

Bachelet is the daughter of a general tortured to death for opposing Pinochet’s 1973 military coup. Bachelet herself was arrested along with her mother in 1975 and went into exile to australia and the former East Germany.

When she returned to Chile in 1979, she studied

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/aoGUt4iSQZM/

Aloca's Stock Loses Luster Along With Gold

By Rich Duprey, The Motley Fool

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Following a week that saw the Dow Jones Industrial Average gain 275 points despite horrendous economic data, the index closed out Friday unchanged from the day before. The biggest loser on the day, however, was aluminum producer Alcoa‘s  stock, which pulled back 1.2%, putting it within striking distance of its 52-week lows again.

Although I’ve been (incorrectly) calling a top for a while now, perhaps it was the lack of consumer confidence as measured by the University of Michigan’s survey that finally did in the index’s inexorable climb. The survey plunged to 72.3 from 78.6, the lowest level in nine months, and said to be the biggest miss to expectations in the survey’s history. Of course, retail sales for March also fell, adding to the drumbeat of negativity we’ve seen, which is why the stock market‘s continued rise is so incongruous. Apparently the Federal Reserve‘s pumping of tens of billions of dollars into the economy, along with Japan‘s recent opening of the floodgates, is all that’s necessary to artificially levitate the markets.

I maintain it’s all going to end badly, and sooner rather than later. In the meantime, commodities are getting crushed, and gold has officially reached bear-market territory, but Alcoa’s own earnings — and not just macroeconomic issues — have played a role in its performance since they were released. It may have beaten estimates for profits, but revenues came in weak and guidance seemed a head-scratcher, leading analysts to question whether the aluminum producer wasn’t wearing rose-colored glasses.

Commodities crushed
Since Alcoa’s unofficial kickoff to the earnings seasons, its stock is down 2%. Yet year to date it’s off 5%, a wide divergence from the overall performance of the Dow, which is up 13%, and that’s just a torrid pace that can’t be maintained.

As I mentioned before, though, gold is now in bear territory, having fallen 21% from its peak. It fell more than $63 an ounce on Friday, or more than 4%, to close trading at just over $1,500 an ounce (intraday it was as low as $1,480 an ounce). That’s a level it hasn’t seen since July 2011, as traders seek better returns elsewhere.

The consequence, however, is that precious-metals miners and streamers are being taken down, too. The world’s largest gold miner, Barrick Gold tumbled 9% yesterday, but it has the added problem of having its huge Pascua-Lama project in Chile being placed on hold as it looks at delays measured in months (at least) before it’s able to start up again.

The worst performer in the sector was NovaGold Resources , which fell 13% yesterday as it scrambles to make sense of its Donlin Gold project in Alaska, the biggest known undeveloped gold deposit anywhere. The joint venture with Barrick has essentially been in limbo since NovaGold’s partner said last year it no longer made economic sense to pursue it.

About the only positive thing the miner can hang its hat on

From: http://www.dailyfinance.com/2013/04/13/alocas-stock-loses-luster-along-with-gold/

A list of papal advisers on Curia reform

Pope Francis on Saturday named eight cardinals to a panel that will help advise him running the church and reforming the Vatican bureaucracy, or Curia. Seven non-Vatican officials were drawn from Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe, North and South America to give it geographical breadth.

VATICAN OFFICIAL

Cardinal Giuseppe Bertello, president of the Vatican city state administration that runs the actual functioning of the Vatican, including its profit-making museums. There has been much speculation that Bertello might take on a greater role in Francis’ administration; he has been mentioned as a possible secretary of state.

NON-VATICAN OFFICIALS

Cardinal Francisco Javier Errazuriz Ossa, the retired archbishop of Santiago, Chile. Like the former Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio, Errazuriz was a papal contender in the 2005 conclave, since he was then the president of the powerful Latin American Conference of Bishops. This time around, at age 79, he was dogged by allegations that he mishandled the case of a notorious sexually abusive priest.

Cardinal Oswald Gracias, archbishop of Mumbai, India.

Cardinal Reinhard Marx, archbishop of Munich and Freising, Germany. Marx has been at the forefront in Germany of trying to turn the tide on clerical sex abuse; his archdiocese is part of a joint effort to create a center to teach priests and church personnel around the world the best practices to protect children and prevent them being abused.

Cardinal Laurent Monsengwo Pasinya, archbishop of Kinshasa, Congo.

Cardinal Sean Patrick O’Malley, archbishop of Boston. O’Malley was considered a contender for the papacy in the last conclave, a Franciscan Capuchin monk so very much in the same spirituality as Francis. He was a leading voice of reform during the pre-conclave meetings. The 68-year-old O’Malley has spent his career as a bishop cleaning up dioceses shattered by child sex abuse.

Cardinal George Pell, archbishop of Sydney, Australia. Pell has also been a major proponent for reform, telling The Associated Press before the conclave: “It would be useful to have a pope who can pull the show together, lift the morale of the Curia, and strengthen a bit of the discipline there and effectively draw on all the energies and goodness of the great majority of the people in the Curia,” Pell said.

Cardinal Oscar Andrés Rodríguez

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/0QCWm6nLhB4/

Chile's Neruda bone remains to be analyzed in US

Bone remains of Chilean Nobel literature laureate Pablo Neruda will be analyzed in the United States as investigators seek to resolve a four-decade mystery about his death.

Neruda’s body was exhumed this week in an effort to discover if he died from prostate cancer as was recorded, or if he was poisoned by agents of Gen. Augusto Pinochet‘s bloody dictatorship, as his driver and others believe.

Rodolfo Reyes, one of Neruda’s nephews, met with Chilean and foreign forensics experts Friday and said some of the poet’s skeletal remains will be sent to a laboratory at the University of North Carolina medical school.

“They’re going to take some toxin tests at a laboratory,” Reyes said after confirming that a jacket and a belt inside the exhumed coffin belong to the poet.

“It’s a technical skill and we want them to take all the time in the world to do it and that it doesn’t leave a single doubt,” Reyes told Radio Cooperativa.

Judge Mario Carroza, who approved a request by Chile‘s Communist Party for the disinterment, said he will receive a preliminary report about tests performed in Chile on April 22.

The judge said he needs the report before he can order the return of Neruda’s casket to his home in Isla Negra, a rocky outcropping overlooking the Pacific Ocean.

Neruda was also a leftist politician and would have been a strong voice in exile against Pinochet’s regime.

That ended with his death just 24 hours before he was to have escaped Chile in the chaos after the Sept. 11, 1973m military coup.

He was 69 and suffering from prostate cancer when he died 12 days after the coup that led his close friend, socialist President Salvador Allende, to kill himself rather than surrender to Pinochet’s troops attacking the presidential palace.

For long, the official version was that Neruda died of natural causes brought on by the trauma of witnessing the coup and the killing of many of his friends. But suspicions remained, even after Pinochet lost power and Chile returned to a democracy in 1990.

For years, Neruda’s driver and aide said dictatorship agents injected poison into

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/-Lxx6QQ2nMA/

Barrick suffering big setbacks in Latin America

A Chilean court’s halt to construction of Barrick Gold Corp.’s $8 billion, border-straddling mine on the high spine of the Andes is only the latest setback in Latin America for the world’s largest gold miner.

Barrick also faces growing environmental resistance in Argentina, which shares the Pascua-Lama mine project, and the Dominican Republic‘s government is insisting on rewriting the royalty contract for its $4 billion Pueblo Viejo mine.

The Canadian company’s troubles reflect increased risks for the industry in Latin America, where authorities are taking a closer look at how mining is regulated and taxed. They are determined to capture more of the profits while protecting natural resources.

In country after country, the world’s biggest miners are facing new environmental standards, confronting changing tax and currency laws and defending long-term contracts they thought were written in stone.

Denver-based Newmont Mining Corp. has seen its $5 billion Minas Conga project in Peru stalled amid violent protests over allegations of water pollution. Brazil’s Vale SA sank $2.2 billion into building a mine, railroad and port in Argentina before bailing out in frustration last month over soaring inflation and restrictive currency controls.

“There are more concerns about standards of living and more concerns about environmental issues. At the same time, there’s pressure on governments to increase mining revenues, improve education, health and services,” said Risa Grais-Targow, Latin American analyst at Eurasia Group.

Peru has experienced exceptional growth, but many feel they have not benefited and have been left out. Most of the conflict there revolves around water, whereas in Chile there’s a growing middle class concerned about the environment.”

The court ruling against Barrick on Wednesday in Copiapo, Chile, sent shares of the Toronto-based company tumbling 6 percent to a new four-year low. The stock recovered some Thursday, rising 27 cents, or 1.1 percent, to close at $24.73 a share.

Chile‘s environmental and mining ministries are on record supporting the suspension of work on the Andes mine. Critics allege construction has spread dust that has settled on the nearby Toro 1, Toro 2 and Esperanza glaciers, hastening their retreat, and is threatening the Estrecho river, which supplies water to the Diaguita tribe living downstream.

Barrick said it will work “to address environmental and other regulatory requirements” on the Pascua side of the project. But it insisted

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/jS1wY6kakOY/