Tag Archives: PM

PM axed in C. African Republic in deal with rebels

Central African Republic President Francois Bozize has signed a decree removing the country’s prime minister, one of the steps called for in a peace deal signed last week with rebels who seized the north of the country.

The deal signed with the Seleka rebel movement called on Bozize to dissolve his administration in order to form a national unity government, which will be led by a prime minister chosen by the political opposition.

The decree removing Prime Minister Faustin Archange Touadera was signed Saturday and broadcast on national radio.

A new prime minister has not yet been named, but opposition leaders are hopeful that Henri Pouzere, an opposition lawyer, or else Nicolas Tiangaye, who represented the opposition during the negotiations, will be named.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Pakistan Shiites continue protests, PM to visit

Thousands of Shiites are continuing to protest for a third day in southwestern Pakistan, pressing their demands for greater security by blocking a main road with dozens of coffins of relatives killed in bomb attacks by Sunni extremists.

Prime Minister Raja Pervez Ashraf is scheduled to travel to Quetta, the provincial capital of Baluchistan, on Sunday in an attempt to pacify the protesters. The country’s religious affairs minister failed the day before to convince them to bury those killed in the Thursday night blasts.

Shiite leader Ibrahim Hazara says the group is demanding that the provincial government be dismissed and the army take over responsibility for the city.

A total of 86 people died in the attacks, claimed by the al-Qaida- and Taliban-allied Lashkar-e-Jhangvi militant group.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Canadian Aboriginal leaders meet with PM

Hundreds of Aboriginal rights protesters are marching in front of Canada’s Parliament as Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Aboriginal chiefs attend a summit to discuss disagreements over treaty rights.

The meeting has created divisions among the Aboriginal community. Some chiefs are boycotting the meeting Friday because Governor General David Johnston, a representative of Queen Elizabeth II, is not attending. They argue his presence is imperative because the talks center on treaty rights first established by the Royal Proclamation of 1793.

Among those boycotting is Chief Theresa Spence, who launched a hunger strike a month ago to demand the summit.

The meeting comes almost two months after Aboriginal rights protests erupted against a bill that changes environmental oversight in favor of natural resource extraction. Protesters say the bill threatens treaty rights.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

UK's Cameron: I want to stay PM through 2020

David Cameron says he wants to stay on as British prime minister until 2020, calling his agenda of reforms enough to keep him busy through another term.

The prime minister’s remarks to the Sunday Telegraph newspaper come a day before he and Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg publish a midterm review of how their coalition government, formed in 2010, has fared.

Relations between Cameron’s Conservative Party and Clegg’s Liberal Democrats have become strained over disagreements on austerity measures, political reforms and other matters.

Cameron told the newspaper there was no turning back on policies such as allowing same-sex marriage or the protection of foreign-aid spending, which have been unpopular with his party’s grass roots. He urged critics in his party to “stop complaining.”

Calling his “enormous reform agenda” enough to “keep us all busy,” Cameron said he wants to “fight the next election, win the next election and serve.”

Britain’s next general election is scheduled for 2015.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Report: Nissan's Ghosn urges Japan's new PM to stabilize yen, patch things up with China

By Jonathon Ramsey

Filed under: , , , , , ,

Nissan CEO Carlos Ghosn gestures during speech

Shinzo Abe was sworn in as Japan‘s new prime minister – its seventh in six years – barely a week ago. To count him as the seventh PM is a bit disingenuous, in fact, since he was the prime minister in 2006 and 2007 but had to retire due to medical issues. His return came after a campaign that stressed repairing the nation’s economic issues – a platform that should give you an idea of the issues Japan has had at the top step of its government. Chief among the nation’s woes? An economy still suffering from two decades of deflation and, more recently, a yen that is gaining so bullishly that it’s tearing up the china shop.

Yet even before he took office, RenaultNissan CEO Carlos Ghosn had a message for prime minister Abe: “Please bring [the yen] back to the neutral territory so that we can do our job without a handicap.” By “neutral,” Ghosn was referring to an exchange rate of one dollar to 100 yen, by “our job” he meant Nissan’s ability to build cars for export on the island nation even though Bloomberg posits that it already produces 75 percent of its units outside of Japan.

Above that neutral territory, production in Japan begins to get massively more expensive with every incremental rise in the yen; right now the 100 yen is about $1.15 – and that’s after a ten-percent drop over the course of 2012 – and Bloomberg calculates that every single-digit increase in the yen’s value against the dollar robs Nissan of $232 million in yearly operating profit. Just down the coast in Toyota City it’s even worse – Bloomberg figures each single-digit increase in the yen costs Toyota $402 million every year.

Nissan is one among all the Japanese makers monitoring tensions in China, too. A territorial dispute last year caused Chinese buyers to shun Japanese cars to such an extent that overall car sales fell in China and Japanese automakers cut production and sales forecasts in the world’s largest auto market. Ghosn was less pointed in his comments on the matter, saying only that if the antagonism keeps up then “obviously we will have to reflect it in our long-term plans.” It was Akio Toyoda‘s comments, however, that were probably a good reflection of the private wishes of the new prime minister: “I want it to be a peaceful year where nothing goes wrong.”

Nissan’s Ghosn urges Japan’s new PM to stabilize yen, patch things up with China originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 03 Jan 2013 18:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Autoblog

Sparkling UFO Over Chester County, Pennsylvania On Dec 26, 2012.

By ScottCWaringDate of sighting: December 26, 2012Location of sighting: Chester County, Pennsylvania, USAEyewitness states:This was seen between 2-3 PM in Chester County, PA. The black object (seen in video 2) was seen fist and hovered in the same spot for at least 2-1/2 to 3 hours that we saw. These lights then appeared below it.
Source: UFO Sightings Daily

Running sed and counting number of lines processed

By SkySmart
Code:
/bin/sed -n ‘;4757335,$ p’ | wc -l
/bin/sed -n ‘;4757335,$ p’ | egrep “Failed” | egrep -c “PM late arrrival”

how can i combine the above two sed commands into one? i want to count the number of lines between the specified line number and the end of the file. AND and i want to count how many lines contain a specified set of strings within those lines.

i dont want to run these sed commands separately because they would add greatly to the time it takes for the script to complete.
Source: The UNIX and Linux Forums

Amazon AWS Takes Down Netflix On Christmas Eve

By Kelly Clay, ContributorFor the third time this year, problems with Amazon’s AWS in North Virginia has knocked several websites and services offline, including Netflix. According to AWS’ Service Health Dashboard, problems began 1:50 PM PST, and as of 5:49 PM, the company is continuing “to work on resolving issues with the Elastic Load Balancing Service in […]
Source: Forbes Latest

sed issue

I’m trying to change a date in a couple of large files using SED. The problem is when I use the -n parameter, it doesn’t actually change the file. When I leave out the -n, it sends the whole file to the screen, but it does appear to change it.

The problem is, these files are very large and it would take forever to change it like that. I’m sure it is just an issue with my syntax, but here is what I was trying:

Code:
sed -n ‘s/20121201/20130101/g’ filename
Should this update the existing file? If not, how can I do that?

Moderator’s Comments:

Code tags please, see PM.

Source: The UNIX and Linux Forums