Category: Spain

  • Euro bail-out in doubt as ‘hysteria’ sweeps Germany

    Euro bail-out in doubt as ‘hysteria’ sweeps Germany

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel no longer has enough coalition votes in the Bundestag to secure backing for Europe’s revamped rescue machinery, threatening a consitutional crisis in Germany and a fresh eruption of the euro debt saga.

    merkel sarko
    Seething discontent in Germany over Europe's debt crisis has spread to all the key institutions. Photo: AP

    By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard

    Mrs Merkel has cancelled a high-profile trip to Russia on September 7, the crucial day when the package goes to the Bundestag and the country’s constitutional court rules on the legality of the EU’s bail-out machinery.

    If the court rules that the €440bn rescue fund (EFSF) breaches Treaty law or undermines German fiscal sovereignty, it risks setting off an instant brushfire across monetary union.

    The seething discontent in Germany over Europe’s debt crisis has spread to all the key institutions of the state. “Hysteria is sweeping Germany ” said Klaus Regling, the EFSF’s director.

    German media reported that the latest tally of votes in the Bundestag shows that 23 members from Mrs Merkel’s own coalition plan to vote against the package, including twelve of the 44 members of Bavaria’s Social Christians (CSU). This may force the Chancellor to rely on opposition votes, risking a government collapse.

    Christian Wulff, Germany’s president, stunned the country last week by accusing the European Central Bank of going “far beyond its mandate” with mass purchases of Spanish and Italian debt, and warning that the Europe’s headlong rush towards fiscal union stikes at the “very core” of democracy. “Decisions have to be made in parliament in a liberal democracy. That is where legitimacy lies,” he said.

    A day earlier the Bundesbank had fired its own volley, condemning the ECB’s bond purchases and warning the EU is drifting towards debt union without “democratic legitimacy” or treaty backing.

    Joahannes Singhammer, leader of the CSU’s Bundestag group, accused the ECB of acting “dangerously” by jumping the gun before parliaments had voted. The ECB is implicitly acting on behalf of the rescue fund until it is ratified.

    A CSU document to be released on Monday flatly rebuts the latest accord between Chancellor Merkel and French president Nicholas Sarkozy, saying plans for an “economic government for eurozone states” are unacceptable. It demands treaty changes to let EMU states go bankrupt, and to eject them from the euro altogether for serial abuses.

    “An unlimited transfer union and pooling of debts for any length of time would imply a shared financial government and decisively change the character of a European confederation of states,” said the draft, obtained by Der Spiegel.

    Mrs Merkel faces mutiny even within her own Christian Democrat (CDU) family. Wolfgang Bossbach, the spokesman for internal affairs, said he would oppose the package. “I can’t vote against my own conviction,” he said.

    The Bundestag is expected to decide late next month on the package, which empowers the EFSF to buy bonds pre-emptively and recapitalize banks. While the bill is likely to pass, the furious debate leaves no doubt that Germany will resist moves to boost the EFSF’s firepower yet further. Most City banks say the fund needs €2 trillion to stop the crisis engulfing Spain and Italy.

    Mrs Merkel’s aides say she is facing “war on every front”. The next month will decide her future, Germany’s destiny, and the fate of monetary union.

    www.telegraph.co.uk, 28 Aug 2011

  • Anonymous hacker group members arrested in all over Europe

    Anonymous hacker group members arrested in all over Europe

    Anonymous11

    Police in Italy and Switzerland searched more than 30 apartments as part of an investigation into online activist collective “Anonymous,” amid a growing global law-enforcement crackdown on high-profile computer attacks claimed by the group’s followers.

    The move is the latest enforcement activity in a probe that since December has netted more than 40 arrests of individuals authorities in the U.K., Netherlands, Spain and Turkey have linked to Anonymous.

    In the U.S., the Federal Bureau of Investigation is continuing a probe that has involved dozens of searches over recent months.

    That includes the raid last week of the home of a Hamilton, Ohio, man believed to have links to an Anonymous splinter group called LulzSec.

    Italian police said they suspect some 20 people, five of whom are ages 16 or 17, are behind so-called denial-of-service attacks, in which websites are bombarded with data with the aim of knocking them offline.

    The searches conducted on Tuesday included the home of someone the police identified as a leader of Anonymous’s Italian cell, a 26-year-old man who goes by the nickname “Phre” and lives in Switzerland.

    According to Italian authorities, the attacks targeted the websites of the Italian Parliament and top companies including Enel SpA, ENI SpA and Mediaset SpA, the country’s largest commercial broadcaster, which is owned by Silvio Berlusconi. No arrests were made.

    Anonymous grew out of an online message forum formed in 2003 called 4chan, a popular destination with hackers and gamers.

    It entered the spotlight late last year, claiming cyberattacks against companies and individuals the group said tried to impede the work of document-sharing website WikiLeaks. That included MasterCard Inc. and Visa Inc.

    Over recent months, followers of Anonymous and LulzSec—which takes its name from Internet slang for laughter—have claimed responsibility for a number of denial-of-service attacks and computer breaches of a number of high-profile targets, ranging from corporations like Sony Corp. to the FBI and other government organizations.

    British police, who are cooperating with the FBI, have arrested seven individuals this year. That includes 19-year old Ryan Cleary, who had been a prominent figure in Anonymous and then LulzSec.

    U.K. prosecutors late last month charged him with five computer-related offenses.

    Authorities allege he infected computers in order to form a computer network, called a botnet, which he then used to launch online attacks against websites including that of the U.K. Serious Organised Crime Agency.

    Essex-based Mr. Cleary, who is out on bail, is cooperating with police, his lawyer has said. The other six individuals arrested in the U.K. have been released on bail and haven’t been charged.


    The Wall Street Journal

     

  • Spain arrests Anonymous “Hactivists” group members over Turkey attack

    Spain arrests Anonymous “Hactivists” group members over Turkey attack

    anonymous

    Spanish police arrest 3 suspected Anonymous “hactivists”

    * Suspects accused of attacking websites of Sony, banks

    * Spanish police say further arrests may follow (Recasts making clear police did not link to big PlayStation attacks; adds comment from Anonymous, details throughout, BOSTON dateline, byline)

    By Iciar Paneda and Jim Finkle

    MADRID/BOSTON, June 10 (Reuters) – Spanish police arrested three men suspected to be members of the hacker group Anonymous on Friday, charging them with organizing cyber attacks against the websites of Sony Corp (6758.T), banks and governments — but not the recent massive hacking of PlayStation gamers.

    Anonymous responded by threatening to retaliate for the arrests: “We are Legion, so EXPECT US,” the group said on its official Twitter feed.

    Spanish police alleged the three “hacktivists” helped organize an attack that temporarily shuttered access to some Sony websites. They were not linked to two massive cyber attacks against Sony’s Playstation Network that resulted in the theft of information from more than 100 million customers.

    Police also accused the men of launching cyber assaults on Spanish banks BBVA (BBVA.MC) and Bankia, and Italian energy group Enel SpA (ENEI.MI).

    The arrests are the first in Spain against alleged members of Anonymous, following the detention of others in the United States and Britain. Police told Reuters all three men were Spanish and in their 30s. One worked in the merchant navy.

    Anonymous is a loose grouping of self-proclaimed hactivists who frequently try to shut down the websites of businesses and other organizations that it opposes.

    Its members describe themselves as Internet freedom fighters and have previously brought down websites of the Church of Scientology, as well as Amazon.com Inc (AMZN.O), MasterCard Inc (MA.N) and others they saw as hostile to WikiLeaks and its founder Julian Assange.

    Anonymous members cripple websites by overwhelming them with traffic in what is commonly known as “denial of service” attacks. The group publicizes these campaigns on the Web, giving supporters the information to attack a targeted site.

    The group is currently sponsoring attacks to shut down Turkish government websites in a protest against Internet censorship. Attempts to reach the group by email were not immediately successful.

    To date, the group has not been linked to crimes for financial profit.

    <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

    Sony PlayStation recovery delayed in Asia [ID:nL3E7GV08P]

    Turkey comes under attack from Anonymous [ID:nLDE75825A]

    In the chatroom with the cyber guerillas [ID:nLDE70I121]

    ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>

    Spanish police said the accused, who were arrested in Almeria, Barcelona and Alicante, were guilty of coordinated computer hacking attacks from a server set up in a house in Gijon in the north of Spain.

    The Spanish police said members of Anonymous, known for wearing Guy Fawkes masks made popular by the graphic novel “V for Vendetta,” had also hacked government sites in Egypt, Algeria, Libya, Iran, Chile, Colombia and New Zealand.

    “They are structured in independent cells and make thousands of simultaneous attacks using infected ‘zombie’ computers worldwide. This is why NATO considers them a threat to the military alliance,” the police said in a statement.

    “They are even capable of collapsing a country’s administrative structure.”

    The police did not rule out further arrests.

    Sony PlayStation spokesman Dan Race declined to comment on the arrests on Friday. (Additional reporting by Diane Bartz in Washington and Liana B. Baker in New York; Writing by Nigel Davies and Georgina Prodhan;

    Reuters

     

  • Europe takes on US to win $16 bln Turkey fighter jet deal

    Europe takes on US to win $16 bln Turkey fighter jet deal

    Turkey, with its plan to purchase 100 fighter jets — for which it was going to shake hands with Lockheed Martin for $16 billion, but later suspended due to the American aerospace company’s refusal to share technology with it — has also received an offer from Europe, one that includes the sharing of the know-how Turkey wants.

    fighter jet 1

    Speaking to Today’s Zaman on the condition of anonymity, a leading executive from European Eurofighter — an aerospace consortium of Germany, Italy, Spain and the United Kingdom — said they agree to fulfill Turkey’s demands to that end. “We are ready to share all software codes and critical technologies with Turkey,” the official said. Previously the Lockheed Martin director responsible for the F-35s Turkey initially agreed to buy said that what Turkey wanted was not acceptable because of “financial and cost constraints.” The American company declined to comment on the issue despite Eurofighter’s offer.

    Earlier in March, Turkey announced that it was putting the planned purchase of 100 F-35 fighter jets from the US on hold because the Pentagon refused to share the source code used in the software designed for the aircraft, as well as the codes that might be used externally to activate the planes. Lockheed is the Pentagon’s top supplier by sales. It builds the F-16, F-22 and F-35 fighter aircraft, as well as the Aegis naval combat system and THAAD missile defense.

    Without the source code, Turkish engineers wouldn’t be able to make any changes to the software that operates the jets. The external flight codes are equally important, if not more so, as they can be used externally to navigate the jets.

    via zaman

  • Turkish, Spanish businesspeople meet in Istanbul

    Turkish, Spanish businesspeople meet in Istanbul

    Turkish and Spanish businesspeople gathered on Tuesday in a meeting in Istanbul with an eye to boost business and commercial ties.

    Tuesday, 14 December 2010 14:48

    istTurkish and Spanish businesspeople gathered on Tuesday in a meeting in Istanbul with an eye to boost business and commercial ties.

    The Turkish-Spanish Cooperation Meetings — co-hosted by Turkey’s Foreign Economic Relations Board and the Council of Spanish Chambers of Commerce and Industry — brought together over two hundred business people from 23 Spanish and more than 100 Turkish companies.

    Delivering a keynote speech at the opening of the meetings, Zeynel Abdin Erdem, president of the Turkish-Spanish Business Council, said Turkey was among Spain’s top 10 list of strategic trade partners, which he said was sign that commercial relations would develop further in the future.

    Erdem said the trade volume between the countries had quintupled in the last last ten years to reach 7.8 billion USD in 2009, adding that the figure was expected to stand at 9 billion USD this year.

    AA

  • Europeans Love Turkish Tourists

    Europeans Love Turkish Tourists

    Monday, 19 July 2010

    Turkish tourists, who spend four times more than the average far eastern, Arabic or American tourists, have become the target of European tour operators.

    Speaking to the AA on Monday, spokesperson for the Tour Operators Platform, Cem Polatoglu, said that “in the past few years, the number of Turks going overseas for holidays has increased sharply”.

    Turkish tourists, in general, have a tendency to travel to Europe for holidays. European countries realized the importance of Turkish tourists, who spend four times more than far eastern, Arabic or American tourists, during the global economic crisis, Polatoglu said.

    Turkish tourists spend around 2,500 euros in weekly tours and around 1,200 euros during three-day tours, Polatoglu noted.

    In the past, Turkish tourists had to go through “torture” due to visa and related documents requirements. Those European countries which in the past did not want Turkish tourists are now chasing them. Every single day, tour operators from Spain, France, Germany, Italy and Greece are now coming at our door for Turkish tourists. I have been working in the tourism sector for the past 35 years and have not seen such excellent days during my career, Polatoglu stressed.

    According to Polatoglu, 1,750,000 Turks went to Europe for holidays during 2009.

    We expect a rise of 15 percent in the number of Turks going to Europe in 2010, Polatoglu said.

    Turkish tourists are Europe’s most favorite tourists, Polatoglu also said.


    A.A