Category: Non-EU Countries

  • ‘Mossad Chief to leave post’

    ‘Mossad Chief to leave post’

    By JPOST.COM STAFF
    06/26/2010 00:21

    Report claims Meir Dagan’s request to keep his job was rejected.

    sadmos
    Photo by: AP

    Mossad Chief Meir Dagan is to leave his post in three months, Channel 2 news reported on Friday.

    According to the report, Dagan, who has been head of the Mossad for the last eight years, requested to work another year in the role, but was refused.

    Dagan was appointed to the position in 2002 by former prime minister Ariel Sharon.

    Since then his appointment has been extended twice and is due to expire at the end of 2010.

    The decision not to renew Dagan’s appointment is likely related to the fallout from the recent attempt to assassinate Hamas commander Mahmoud al Mabhouh in Dubai.

    A number of states who are normally friendly towards Israel were offended by the use of their passports in the killing. Britain has stopped issuing passports in Tel-Aviv and diplomats were expelled from Britain, Ireland and Australia.

    Source:  https://www.jpost.com/Israel/Mossad-Chief-to-leave-post

  • UK to stop development aid to Russia and China

    UK to stop development aid to Russia and China

    mitchell
    Mr Mitchell wants to redirect some of bilateral aid worth £2.9bn

    Britain will stop giving aid money to China and Russia, as “it is not justifiable” any longer, the UK government has said.

    International Developement Secretary Andrew Mitchell announced a review into how the UK funds overseas development work in around 90 countries.

    “The money will be redirected towards those countries where they can make the most difference,” he said.

    In 2008-09, China received more than £40m, while Russia got £190,000.

    Britain’s annual bilateral aid budget stands now at £2.9bn.

    Mr Mitchell said that, apart from Russia and China, “other country programmes which are less effective will be closed or reduced”.

    The news came on the same day as the head of the Ukrainian presidential administration, Serhiy Lyovochkin, told journalists that Russia had agreed to lend Ukraine $4bn.

    China is considered to be the fastest growing economy in the world, while Russia is also among the leaders.

    Mr Mitchell said: “I am determined to get value for money across my department’s work and focus on the big issues such as maternal health, fighting malaria, and extending choice to women over whether and when they have children.”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/10334927, 16 June 2010

  • Spain Funeral For Brit Kids ‘Killed By Mum’

    Spain Funeral For Brit Kids ‘Killed By Mum’

    Adam Arnold, Sky News Online

    A funeral has been held in Spain for two British children apparently suffocated by their mother in a hotel room.

    Lianne Smith, 43, has admitted asphyxiating Rebecca, five, and her 11-month-old brother Daniel with a plastic bag and is in prison on suspicion of murder.

    She said she had been worried that the authorities would take them away, after her husband and the children’s father Martin Smith, 45, was arrested over alleged child sex offences.

    Mrs Smith will not be attending the funeral in the seaside resort town of Lloret de Mar where the youngsters were found dead.

    Their mother is currently in jail in Girona and was not released temporarily to go to the service on the Costa Brava.

    The children’s bodies were discovered at the Hotel Miramar on May 18. The funeral was held in Sant Roma church.

    The 16th century Gothic chapel was filled with white flowers and prayers were read at the ceremony, which lasted about half an hour.

    Representatives of the town’s civic administration were present along with British consular officials.

    The children were buried in the local cemetery afterwards.

    The priest who conducted the ceremony and did not want to be named described it as “moving”.

    It was a private affair “to show respect for the children”, he added.

    The Smith family fled the UK in 2007 after Mr Smith, originally from North Shields, was arrested.

    He allegedly jumped bail while facing charges of rape of a child under 16, gross indecency with a girl under 16, indecent assault of a girl under 16 and attempted rape of a girl under 16.

    Mr Smith had been one of Britain’s most wanted men until Spanish police tracked him down and detained him last month.

    Rebecca and Daniel Smith died around the time their father was then extradited to Britain.

    The Sky

  • Prisons Warned Over Treatment Of Muslims

    Prisons Warned Over Treatment Of Muslims

    Rob Cole, Sky News Online

    The Prison Service risks turning Muslim prisoners into extremists unless it adopts a more integrated regime, a report has warned.

    Treating all Muslims are as potential terrorists risks being a “self-fulfilling prophecy”, the Chief Inspector of Prisons said.

    Dame Anne Owers warned that young Muslims were more likely to “embrace extremism” if a blanket security-led approach was taken to their care in prison.

    The report, titled Muslim Prisoners’ Experiences, found there are around 10,300 Muslims in prisons around England and Wales.

    “It would be naive to deny that there are, within the prison population, Muslims who hold radical extremist views, or who may be attracted to them for a variety of reasons,” Dame Owers said.

    “But that does not argue for a blanket security-led approach to Muslim prisoners in general.

    “It is essential that the National Offender Management Service (Noms) develops a strategy… for effective staff engagement with Muslims as individual prisoners with specific risks and needs, rather than as part of a separate and troubling group.

    “Without that, there is a real risk of a self-fulfilling prophecy: that the prison experience will create or entrench alienation and disaffection, so that prisons release into the community young men who are more likely to offend, or even embrace extremism.”

    It said that despite the jailing of several high profile terrorist suspects, fewer than one in a hundred Muslim inmates have been convicted of terrorism.

    Officials found Muslim prisoners have a more negative experience of prison than others, often because of fears for their safety.

    They also reported Islam played a positive and rehabilitative role in the lives of many prisoners despite staff being suspicious of religious acts.

    The Sky

  • Pound falls as Fitch warns on UK deficit

    Pound falls as Fitch warns on UK deficit

    (Reuters) – Sterling fell broadly on Tuesday after Fitch ratings agency said the fiscal challenges facing the UK were “formidable,” putting the issue of the UK’s substantial budget deficit back in the spotlight.

    Fitch said the UK needed to cut its deficit more quickly than the previous government set out in its April 2010 budget. It said Britain’s public debt ratios had risen since 2008 more quickly than those of any other AAA-rated sovereign.

    Analysts and traders said the comments reignited concerns about how the safety of the UK’s rating and the cost of insuring British government debt against default rose in response.

    However, Fitch acknowledged the new government, which took power last month, had acted quickly in calling for fiscal consolidation. Finance Minister George Osborne will present an emergency budget on June 22 as the government looks to cut a deficit running at around 11 percent of national output.

    “The comments brought sterling and its associated woes rushing back to the fore of our attentions once again,” said Richard Wiltshire, chief FX broker at ETX Capital.

    “The Fitch announcement certainly accentuated the move lower in sterling, taking it down through $1.4400 and triggering stops of some nervy longs.”

    Sterling hit a nine-day low against the dollar of $1.4374 after the Fitch report. By 12:10 p.m., it had recovered to $1.4433, though it was still down 0.2 percent on the day.

    The euro was up 0.4 percent at 82.66 pence, having hit a high for the day of 82.91 pence. Technical analysts said gains could be capped by resistance around 84.00 pence, the 2009 low.

    The falls pushed sterling’s trade-weighted index down 0.4 points from late trade on Monday to 80.4.

    Wiltshire said the reaction to the Fitch comments proved how fickle markets were in the current volatile trading environment.

    Sterling gained earlier in the day in a cautious welcome of the new coalition government’s determination to tackle the UK’s deficit, and on talk insurer Prudential still needed to buy back sterling following the collapse of its bid for AIG’s Asian arm.

    TACKLING THE DEFICIT

    Prime Minister David Cameron told Britons on Monday the scale of the country’s budget problems was even worse than he had anticipated and cited crisis-hit Greece as an example of the risk of failing to act.

    Investors were wary, however, about the potential impact of large spending cuts on economic growth, while worries about euro zone debt problems left them minded to avoid buying riskier currencies, including sterling.

    “The market is for the moment giving the new coalition the benefit of the doubt that it will come up with a satisfactory fiscal consolidation plan,” said Lee Hardman, currency economist at BTMU.

    “But if the global recovery starts to lose momentum people will be more worried about the growth impact.”

    A British Retail Consortium survey showed like-for-like retail sales rose 0.8 percent last month, although consumers were still reluctant to make major purchases.

    A survey by recruitment company Manpower also showed the majority of UK employers expected to recruit more staff in the next three months, but the public sector’s outlook was the weakest since 1994.

    (Reporting by Jessica Mortimer)

    Reuters

  • McLaren gave Hamilton wrong message in Turkey

    McLaren gave Hamilton wrong message in Turkey

    LONDON (Reuters) – McLaren had assured Lewis Hamilton that Jenson Button would not overtake him in the closing laps of the Turkish Grand Prix moments before his team mate went past, principal Martin Whitmarsh said on Tuesday.

    The team boss, speaking to reporters ahead of Sunday’s Canadian Grand Prix, said the incident in the race ultimately won by Hamilton nine days ago was down to a simple communications error.

    “Shortly after he was told that Jenson wouldn’t overtake him, Jenson did overtake him. (McLaren’s chief engineer) Phil (Prew) gave an opinion, and it turned out his opinion was wrong,” said Whitmarsh. “It’s as simple as that.”

    McLaren were gifted a one-two in Istanbul after both Red Bulls collided, with Hamilton and Button then told to save fuel to the finish.

    Before easing off, and in the lead, Hamilton sought an assurance that world champion Button was doing likewise.

    “He (Hamilton) asked the question and Phil…gave an instinctive and immediate response, which is he didn’t think Jenson was going to pass,” said Whitmarsh.

    However Button then closed the gap and took the lead momentarily, before Hamilton re-passed for his first victory of the season.

    “I don’t think it was expected that Lewis would lift as much in Turn Eight as he did,” said Whitmarsh. “I think for Jenson, when he saw quite a big lift he thought it was his opportunity and subsequently made the pass.

    “Lewis…wasn’t about to give up first place easily and made a fairly robust overtake to ensure he remained in the lead.”

    Button is second overall, five points adrift of Red Bull’s Australian Mark Webber after seven races. Hamilton is third, a further four points back.

    Reuters