Chinese artist’s relatives say allegations are an attempt to stifle activism amid wider government crackdown on dissidents Relatives of the detained Chinese artist Ai Weiwei have denounced an official report that he is suspected of economic crimes as “absurd”. The state news agency, Xinhua, published a one-line story saying police were investigating the 53-year-old , but deleted it from its website within the hour. The piece did not explicitly say that authorities were holding him and police have not responded to faxed queries. There is still no word on Ai’s friend Wen Tao, 38, who was reportedly detained on Sunday. Human rights groups believe Ai’s detention is part of a wider crackdown in which scores of activists and dissidents have been detained, formally arrested or disappeared . It has sparked an international outcry. Ai’s older sister, Gao Ge, told Reuters: “The economic crimes report is absurd, because the way he was taken and then disappeared shows it’s nothing of the sort. This is more like a crime gang’s behaviour than a country with laws.” She said her brother had previously warned his family he might one day be jailed for his activities. “He was very clear that we shouldn’t try to meddle and stop him speaking out … My mother cried,” she added. Ai’s mother, Gao Ying, said the “economic crimes” allegations were being used to stifle his activism, adding: “If he’s not released, this will be the start of a long struggle … They still haven’t notified us why he was taken or where he is.” Chinese law states that police must inform an individual’s relatives or place of work within 24 hours of detention, unless there is no way to do so or it would “impede the investigation”. Gao said her son was unlikely to accept charges to win a swift release. “If he’s not given justice, he’ll refuse to come out, I think. That’s his character,” she said. Human rights groups allege that similar accusations of economic wrongdoing – such as tax-related charges – have been used to intimidate activists in the past. In an interview last year, Ai told the Guardian the state might take action against him and that security officials had recently visited his bank. But he added: “I also have to speak out for people around me who are afraid, who think it is not worth it or who have totally given up hope. So I want to set an example: you can do it and this is OK.” The Global Times, a popular state-run tabloid, has run another attack on western condemnation of the case. “[China] needs people like Ai Weiwei. But at the same time, it is even more important that Chinese law restrict the provocative behaviour of Ai Weiwei and others,” it wrote. The outgoing US ambassador, Jon Huntsman, described Ai Weiwei as one of the activists who “challenge the Chinese government to serve the public in all cases and at all times” in a strongly worded speech in Shanghai on Wednesday night. He said future ambassadors would continue to defend social activists such as Ai, jailed writer and Nobel peace prizewinner Liu Xiaobo, and Chen Guangcheng, a rights activist under house arrest. China Ai Weiwei Human rights Tania Branigan guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Suspect held in inquiry into murder of Northern Ireland policeman Ronan Kerr Police have confirmed they arrested a man in Northern Ireland this morning in connection with inquiries into the murder of Constable Ronan Kerr. A spokesman said officers from the serious crime branch were questioning the 40-year-old man in Co Tyrone. He was in a car which was intercepted between Omagh and Ballygawley at 8.20am. The suspect has been arrested in connection with the 25-year-old-policeman’s murder and in relation to the find of firearms, munitions and explosives in Coalisland on Tuesday night. He has been taken to the serious crime suite at Antrim police station and a vehicle has A 26-year-old-man arrested in Scotland on Wednesday under the Terrorism Act has been rearrested for Constable Kerr’s murder and is being questioned by detectives. The murdered policeman’s funeral in Beragh, Co Tyrone, on Wednesday was attended by leading politicians, sports figures and police officers from both sides of the Irish border. Northern Ireland Crime UK security and terrorism Henry McDonald guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• Spanish economy minister says there is no risk of contagion • UK could contribute more than £3bn to help Portugal • Jose Sócrates says: ‘This is an especially grave moment for our country’ Spain has insisted it will not become the next victim of the eurozone debt crisis after Portugal finally bowed to widespread pressure on Wednesday night and joined Greece and Ireland in requesting a European Union bailout . Attention turned to Spain as investors questioned whether Portugal’s decision to seek help would bring calm to Europe or help to drag Madrid into the mire. Elena Salgado, the Spanish economy minister, said on Thursday morning that the risk of contagion “is absolutely ruled out… it has been some time since the markets have known that our economy is much more competitive”. Spain is widely seen as the most likely potential candidate for a bailout now Portugal has bowed to the inevitable by saying it needs help . The bailout is expected to total €70bn-80bn (£61bn-70bn) with Britain possibly being forced to contribute more than £3bn, according to the Open Europe thinktank. José Sócrates, the Portuguese prime minister, requested a European Union bailout on Wednesday night after a decade in which increases in borrowing far outstripped economic growth, pushing the country’s borrowing costs to untenable levels. Gary Jenkins, head of fixed income research of Evolution Securities, saud: “The market may turn its attention to Spain. The concern is that they do have a lot of debt to issue and that it would only take a short-term loss of investor confidence for Spain to face real problems.” David Blanchflower, a former Bank of England policymaker, told Bloomberg News that Portugal’s bailout could fuel Europe’s sovereign debt crisis. “This could be another big mistake because then the crosshairs move to Spain,” he said. The probability of Spain needing to be rescued “took a big jump upwards” after Portugal asked for a bailout, Blanchflower added. Spain, where more than a fifth of the population is unemployed, cut its 2012 growth forecast from 2.5% to 2.3% – and its 2013 prediction from 2.7% to 2.4% – on Wednesday ahead of an expected 0.25% rise in the Eurozone’s interest rate on Thursday afternoon. Many economists believe these forecasts could still be optimistic. Salgado insisted that such an interest rate increase would not endanger Spain’s economy, which exited an 18-month recession at the start of 2009 but has performed weakly since then, amid harsh public spending cuts. “The impact of a small rise in rates is very slow. Mortgages [in Spain] are only revised once a year and so the transmission [of a rate rise] is not immediate,” she said. Portuguese rescue plan welcomed Portugal requested the bailout just hours after a €1bn bond auction that had cost the country more than the rates likely to be demanded as part of an International Monetary Fund or EU rescue package. The bonds, providing funds for only six months and a year, were sold to investors, but at interest rates of more than 5% and nearly 6% respectively. A month ago, the cost of six-month money was less than 3%, and two weeks ago the government had been able to sell 12-month bonds at 4.3%. The move was widely welcomed. Erik Nielsen, chief European economist at Goldman Sachs, said: “This is good news. We’ve been saying for a while that Portugal’s finances were not sustainable at these rates.” In a televised address on Wednesday night, Sócrates said: “I want to inform the Portuguese that the government decided today to ask … for financial help to ensure financing for our country, for our financial system and for our economy.” “This is an especially grave moment for our country,” he added. “Things will only get worse if nothing’s done.” Sócrates said the bailout was “the last resort”. The move was immediately hailed in Brussels. “This is a responsible move by the Portuguese government for the sake of economic stability in the country and in Europe,” the European commission’s economic and monetary affairs commissioner, Olli Rehn, told Reuters. Sócrates did not say how much aid Portugal had requested but promised to negotiate the best possible conditions. Analysts said Portugal was expected to need up to €80bn, an amount that can easily be covered by the EU’s bailout fund, the European financial stability facility. The European commission’s president, José Manuel Barroso, promised a swift response. Portugal’s troubles differ from Ireland, which pledged to cover huge losses at its banks, and Greece, which lied about its debt. Instead, it had allowed debt to mushroom during a decade in which its economy grew at just 0.7% a year. Portugal admitted last week that the 2010 budget deficit had been 8.6% of gross domestic product, far above its 7.3% target. Portugal Europe European debt crisis Europe European Union Global economy Economics Spain Tom Bawden Giles Tremlett guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Pachyderm which became a global cause celebre after emergence of upsetting footage enjoys new home in Longleat Safari Park She has a leisurely roll in a pile of sand before spending a good 40 minutes rubbing against assorted metal bars and gates. She pauses to suck up a few stray strands of hay that she sprays over her back. And then she trundles off for a snooze. It is hardly an action-packed day, but after half a century of hard circus graft, Anne the elephant could be forgiven for taking it easy. And, like minders keen to protect a sensitive star, her new keepers at Longleat Safari Park are not going to force her to perform for the cameras. “It’s about giving her dignity now,” says Jon Cracknell, the director of animal operations at Longleat. “She needs a bit of space and time to get used to her new surroundings, her new life. We do things at her pace, not anyone else’s, and I don’t want her to become a tabloid pawn. She needs her privacy.” It may already be too late for that. For more than a week now the story of Anne, Britain’s last circus elephant, has competed with crime and war stories for space in the tabloids – and fared pretty well. The fuss shows no sign of dying down. When the Guardian was granted an audience with Anne yesterday, the PR department’s phones were ringing off the hook from newspapers wanting to know how Anne was doing and photographers keen to come along and document her every roll and rub. Journalists from as far afield as Brazil have requested access, and Cracknell had to put his foot down when representatives of a Hollywood actor – he is too discreet to say which one – expressed a desire to have their man pictured next to Anne. The hysteria began when upsetting footage, taken by a hidden camera installed by the campaign group Animal Defenders International, was released to the Daily Mail. It showed a worker beating, kicking and jabbing Anne at the winter home of the Bobby Roberts Super Circus, where the animal has worked since 1957. There was an outcry from the Mail, other newspapers, animal charities and the public. The Roberts family expressed their anger and concern over what the worker had done to Anne, whom they said they thought of as a “family pet”, not just a performing animal. But the pressure on the Roberts family became so intense that they agreed to let Anne go. Ownership was signed over to Specialist Wildlife Services, which rescues and rehomes animals ranging from wolves to wallabies, and Longleat in Wiltshire – home to Lord Bath and other exotic creatures – stepped in to take on the mantle of Anne’s guardian. Of course, the tabloids took the credit. The Mail, the Sunday Mirror and the Sun all boasted of the parts they played in Anne’s rescue. Such was the media’s interest in witnessing Anne’s move that police in Northamptonshire treated her as they would a category “A” prisoner and she was whisked away under cover of darkness. She arrived at Longleat on Sunday in an operation that cost around £15,000. Since then she has been settling into her new home, a house she shares with five rhinos, and a yard boasting a fine view of a couple of ponds inhabited by pelicans and flamingos. “She was a little overexcited and playful in the first few days, so she may have overdone it,” said Cracknell. “She’s got to find her limits.” Anne is, according to Cracknell, in pretty good condition. Her back legs, which are racked with arthritis, already seem better, and her dry, cracked skin is improving – she uses the pile of sand as a sort of facial scrub. She is not overweight and does not have the sort of scars and scratches you would expect if she had been routinely abused for a long time. At 57 or thereabouts, she is already older than most elephants in captivity, which suggests she has had a decent life. Cracknell does not see Bobby Roberts as the “villain” that some do. “I like Mr Roberts. He and his wife, Moira, are really upset. Moira is phoning four times a day to ask how Anne is.” He tells Moira that Anne is receiving the best care. Experienced vets are being brought in to make sure she is well but Longleat is also hiring experts in reiki, homeopathy and herbal medicine to see if they can help her arthritis and skin problems. There are three options for Anne now. If she is perceived to be in pain and declining, she could yet be put out of her misery. There is a slim possibility that she could be jetted to an elephant sanctuary in the US, but she is so old that the long flight could be dangerous. It seems more likely that she will stay at Longleat, which has launched an appeal – in unison with the Mail – to build an elephant sanctuary. Some groups, including the Born Free Foundation, have expressed concern at the safari park’s use of the ankus (a stick with a hook at one end) and chains to control Anne, but the consensus seems to be that the safari park is better for Anne than any other option at the moment. But is she missing the circus life? Cracknell thinks she is probably content not having to work, but may miss her old owners. “She formed a close relationship with Bobby and Moira over many years. I think she will miss him and Moira. But she will form new friendships, new relationships at Longleat. I think she’ll be a happy old lady here.” Animal capers that caused a stir Blackie the Donkey Blackie (real name Nero) became a cause celebre in Britain in 1987 when it was reported that she was likely to be crushed to death in a fiesta in a village near Madrid. Hard to get to the truth of the tug of love between Sun and Star reporters who had both been ordered to go and rescue the donkey and not return to Britain without her. One version has a Sun reporter getting to the donkey’s owner first, buying the beast and leaving it in a farmer’s field while he went and had a meal. Enter a Star reporter who is said to have bought the donkey from the farmer and spirited it away. Somehow, both the Sun and Star ended up with a donkey called Blackie. The Tamworth Two Another classic animal tabloid scramble, this one in rural Wiltshire. Two piglets escaped from an abattoir and spent a week on the run in January 1998. The Mail newsdesk nicknamed the fleet-footed pair Butch and Sundance ( pictured left ) and despatched a team of reporters to try to catch them. The Mail won the chase, bought the pigs from their owner and re-housed them in Kent. After, of course, devoting pages to the story of how the paper saved them. Anapka the Flying Donkey What is it about donkeys and the tabloids? There was concern around the world when images of Anapka the donkey emerged. The issue? She was suspended under a multi-coloured parachute 50m above a Russian seaside resort. The Sun led the race to save the animal and trumpeted its success on the front page in classic style: “We’ve Saved Her Ass.” Inside, the paper promised: “She will NEVER have to parasail again.” She didn’t and died – on solid ground – of heart failure at her Moscow sanctuary earlier this year. SM Animal welfare Animals Steven Morris guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Pachyderm which became a global cause celebre after emergence of upsetting footage enjoys new home in Longleat Safari Park She has a leisurely roll in a pile of sand before spending a good 40 minutes rubbing against assorted metal bars and gates. She pauses to suck up a few stray strands of hay that she sprays over her back. And then she trundles off for a snooze. It is hardly an action-packed day, but after half a century of hard circus graft, Anne the elephant could be forgiven for taking it easy. And, like minders keen to protect a sensitive star, her new keepers at Longleat Safari Park are not going to force her to perform for the cameras. “It’s about giving her dignity now,” says Jon Cracknell, the director of animal operations at Longleat. “She needs a bit of space and time to get used to her new surroundings, her new life. We do things at her pace, not anyone else’s, and I don’t want her to become a tabloid pawn. She needs her privacy.” It may already be too late for that. For more than a week now the story of Anne, Britain’s last circus elephant, has competed with crime and war stories for space in the tabloids – and fared pretty well. The fuss shows no sign of dying down. When the Guardian was granted an audience with Anne yesterday, the PR department’s phones were ringing off the hook from newspapers wanting to know how Anne was doing and photographers keen to come along and document her every roll and rub. Journalists from as far afield as Brazil have requested access, and Cracknell had to put his foot down when representatives of a Hollywood actor – he is too discreet to say which one – expressed a desire to have their man pictured next to Anne. The hysteria began when upsetting footage, taken by a hidden camera installed by the campaign group Animal Defenders International, was released to the Daily Mail. It showed a worker beating, kicking and jabbing Anne at the winter home of the Bobby Roberts Super Circus, where the animal has worked since 1957. There was an outcry from the Mail, other newspapers, animal charities and the public. The Roberts family expressed their anger and concern over what the worker had done to Anne, whom they said they thought of as a “family pet”, not just a performing animal. But the pressure on the Roberts family became so intense that they agreed to let Anne go. Ownership was signed over to Specialist Wildlife Services, which rescues and rehomes animals ranging from wolves to wallabies, and Longleat in Wiltshire – home to Lord Bath and other exotic creatures – stepped in to take on the mantle of Anne’s guardian. Of course, the tabloids took the credit. The Mail, the Sunday Mirror and the Sun all boasted of the parts they played in Anne’s rescue. Such was the media’s interest in witnessing Anne’s move that police in Northamptonshire treated her as they would a category “A” prisoner and she was whisked away under cover of darkness. She arrived at Longleat on Sunday in an operation that cost around £15,000. Since then she has been settling into her new home, a house she shares with five rhinos, and a yard boasting a fine view of a couple of ponds inhabited by pelicans and flamingos. “She was a little overexcited and playful in the first few days, so she may have overdone it,” said Cracknell. “She’s got to find her limits.” Anne is, according to Cracknell, in pretty good condition. Her back legs, which are racked with arthritis, already seem better, and her dry, cracked skin is improving – she uses the pile of sand as a sort of facial scrub. She is not overweight and does not have the sort of scars and scratches you would expect if she had been routinely abused for a long time. At 57 or thereabouts, she is already older than most elephants in captivity, which suggests she has had a decent life. Cracknell does not see Bobby Roberts as the “villain” that some do. “I like Mr Roberts. He and his wife, Moira, are really upset. Moira is phoning four times a day to ask how Anne is.” He tells Moira that Anne is receiving the best care. Experienced vets are being brought in to make sure she is well but Longleat is also hiring experts in reiki, homeopathy and herbal medicine to see if they can help her arthritis and skin problems. There are three options for Anne now. If she is perceived to be in pain and declining, she could yet be put out of her misery. There is a slim possibility that she could be jetted to an elephant sanctuary in the US, but she is so old that the long flight could be dangerous. It seems more likely that she will stay at Longleat, which has launched an appeal – in unison with the Mail – to build an elephant sanctuary. Some groups, including the Born Free Foundation, have expressed concern at the safari park’s use of the ankus (a stick with a hook at one end) and chains to control Anne, but the consensus seems to be that the safari park is better for Anne than any other option at the moment. But is she missing the circus life? Cracknell thinks she is probably content not having to work, but may miss her old owners. “She formed a close relationship with Bobby and Moira over many years. I think she will miss him and Moira. But she will form new friendships, new relationships at Longleat. I think she’ll be a happy old lady here.” Animal capers that caused a stir Blackie the Donkey Blackie (real name Nero) became a cause celebre in Britain in 1987 when it was reported that she was likely to be crushed to death in a fiesta in a village near Madrid. Hard to get to the truth of the tug of love between Sun and Star reporters who had both been ordered to go and rescue the donkey and not return to Britain without her. One version has a Sun reporter getting to the donkey’s owner first, buying the beast and leaving it in a farmer’s field while he went and had a meal. Enter a Star reporter who is said to have bought the donkey from the farmer and spirited it away. Somehow, both the Sun and Star ended up with a donkey called Blackie. The Tamworth Two Another classic animal tabloid scramble, this one in rural Wiltshire. Two piglets escaped from an abattoir and spent a week on the run in January 1998. The Mail newsdesk nicknamed the fleet-footed pair Butch and Sundance ( pictured left ) and despatched a team of reporters to try to catch them. The Mail won the chase, bought the pigs from their owner and re-housed them in Kent. After, of course, devoting pages to the story of how the paper saved them. Anapka the Flying Donkey What is it about donkeys and the tabloids? There was concern around the world when images of Anapka the donkey emerged. The issue? She was suspended under a multi-coloured parachute 50m above a Russian seaside resort. The Sun led the race to save the animal and trumpeted its success on the front page in classic style: “We’ve Saved Her Ass.” Inside, the paper promised: “She will NEVER have to parasail again.” She didn’t and died – on solid ground – of heart failure at her Moscow sanctuary earlier this year. SM Animal welfare Animals Steven Morris guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Global implications as NDM-1 gene is found to be widespread in water used for cooking, washing and drinking A gene that causes a wide range of bacteria to become resistant to antibiotics has been found in the water supply in Delhi, with worrying implications for the rest of the globe. A paper by Timothy Walsh from Cardiff University and colleagues, published in the Lancet Infectious Diseases journal, reveals that the gene, known as NDM-1, is widespread in the water used for cooking, washing and drinking in Delhi. It will inevitably be brought into hospitals in the gut flora of patients. The potential for movement around the world is high. NDM-1 can cause many types of bacteria – including E coli and Klebsiella pneumoniae – to become resistant to powerful antibiotics called carbapenems, which are used when other antibiotics fail to work. The team also found the gene had spread to bacteria that cause cholera and dysentery. “Worryingly, dysentery caused by this particular isolate is currently untreatable,” said Mark Toleman, one of the authors.The findings are published on World Health Day, which this year is dedicated to preserving the healing powers of the antibiotics we still have. The World Health Organisation warns that more than 25,000 people die every year in the EU alone from infections caused by antibiotic-resistant bacteria. “We need to raise the alert that we are at a critical point where antibiotic resistance is reaching unprecedented levels and new antibiotics are not going to arrive quickly enough,” said Zsuzsanna Jakab, WHO regional director for Europe. She said antibiotics were being taken for granted and overused. “There are now superbugs that do not respond to any drug. Given the growth of travel and trade in Europe and across the world, people should be aware that until all countries tackle this, no country alone can be safe.” There are few new antibiotics in the pharmaceutical pipeline, because they have proved hard to discover and are not lucrative investments for drug companies – new drugs would be kept as a last resort and used very infrequently to begin with. International travel and medical tourism have already brought NDM-1 to the UK. The same team of scientists reported last year that they had found NDM-1 positive bacteria in a small number of patients who had visited India for kidney or bone marrow transplants, dialysis, pregnancy care or burns treatment, while others had undergone cosmetic surgery. India Water Health Sarah Boseley guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Global implications as NDM-1 gene is found to be widespread in water used for cooking, washing and drinking A gene that causes a wide range of bacteria to become resistant to antibiotics has been found in the water supply in Delhi, with worrying implications for the rest of the globe. A paper by Timothy Walsh from Cardiff University and colleagues, published in the Lancet Infectious Diseases journal, reveals that the gene, known as NDM-1, is widespread in the water used for cooking, washing and drinking in Delhi. It will inevitably be brought into hospitals in the gut flora of patients. The potential for movement around the world is high. NDM-1 can cause many types of bacteria – including E coli and Klebsiella pneumoniae – to become resistant to powerful antibiotics called carbapenems, which are used when other antibiotics fail to work. The team also found the gene had spread to bacteria that cause cholera and dysentery. “Worryingly, dysentery caused by this particular isolate is currently untreatable,” said Mark Toleman, one of the authors.The findings are published on World Health Day, which this year is dedicated to preserving the healing powers of the antibiotics we still have. The World Health Organisation warns that more than 25,000 people die every year in the EU alone from infections caused by antibiotic-resistant bacteria. “We need to raise the alert that we are at a critical point where antibiotic resistance is reaching unprecedented levels and new antibiotics are not going to arrive quickly enough,” said Zsuzsanna Jakab, WHO regional director for Europe. She said antibiotics were being taken for granted and overused. “There are now superbugs that do not respond to any drug. Given the growth of travel and trade in Europe and across the world, people should be aware that until all countries tackle this, no country alone can be safe.” There are few new antibiotics in the pharmaceutical pipeline, because they have proved hard to discover and are not lucrative investments for drug companies – new drugs would be kept as a last resort and used very infrequently to begin with. International travel and medical tourism have already brought NDM-1 to the UK. The same team of scientists reported last year that they had found NDM-1 positive bacteria in a small number of patients who had visited India for kidney or bone marrow transplants, dialysis, pregnancy care or burns treatment, while others had undergone cosmetic surgery. India Water Health Sarah Boseley guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Differences remain despite the progress, but Obama announced on Wednesday night that talks would continue through the night in hopes of avoiding a government shutdown President Barack Obama said that he remains confident that a government shutdown can be avoided this weekend if negotiators can build on constructive talks held at the White House. Obama spoke after a hastily arranged late-evening White House meeting with Republican House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner and Democratic Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. The three met for roughly and hour and 15 minutes. The session underscored the stakes of the deepening political fight as time grew short. After huge wins in last year’s House elections gave them control of the lower chamber, Republicans have vowed to slash spending and bring the US deficit under control. Lawmakers must reach a deal by Friday at midnight, when a temporary government funding bill is set to expire. Federal agencies’ day-to-day operations through the end of the budget year are at stake. Differences remain despite the progress, but Obama announced on Wednesday night that talks would continue through the night in hopes of avoiding a government shutdown. “It’s going to require a sufficient sense of urgency,” Obama said, “to complete a deal and get it passed and avert a shutdown.” Obama emerged before reporters to declare his differences with Republicans in the House were narrowing but that both sides were still stuck in an impasse. “I thought the meetings were frank, they were constructive,” Obama said. “I remain confident that if we’re serious about getting something done, we should be able to complete a deal and get it passed and avert a shutdown. But it’s going to require a sufficient sense of urgency from all parties involved.” Boehner criticised Obama, though he said he likes the commander in chief personally. “The president isn’t leading,” Boehner said. “He didn’t lead on last year’s budget, and he’s not leading on this year’s budget.” Obama has already ruled out the weeklong measure Republicans intend to push through the House, and Senate Democrats have labeled it a non-starter. Republican officials said the details of the bill could yet change. But passage of any interim measure is designed to place the onus on the Democratic-controlled Senate to act if a shutdown is to be avoided. The White House used its unmatched megaphone to emphasise the stakes involved in the negotiations, arranging a briefing for the presidential press corps on the ramifications of a partial government shutdown. National parks would close, as would the Smithsonian Institution and its world-class collection of museums clustered along the National Mall within sight of the Capitol. NASA spokesman Bob Jacobs said he was unable to predict what the impact would be on preparations for the shuttle Endeavour’s flight on April 29, or Atlantis’ trip into space on June 28. Senator Dick Durbin, the No. 2 Senate Democrat, hinted at movement in the talks. “There’s been a direct negotiation things put on the table that had not been discussed before and I think we’re moving” toward’ agreement, he said. United States Barack Obama Democrats Republicans John Boehner guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Differences remain despite the progress, but Obama announced on Wednesday night that talks would continue through the night in hopes of avoiding a government shutdown President Barack Obama said that he remains confident that a government shutdown can be avoided this weekend if negotiators can build on constructive talks held at the White House. Obama spoke after a hastily arranged late-evening White House meeting with Republican House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner and Democratic Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. The three met for roughly and hour and 15 minutes. The session underscored the stakes of the deepening political fight as time grew short. After huge wins in last year’s House elections gave them control of the lower chamber, Republicans have vowed to slash spending and bring the US deficit under control. Lawmakers must reach a deal by Friday at midnight, when a temporary government funding bill is set to expire. Federal agencies’ day-to-day operations through the end of the budget year are at stake. Differences remain despite the progress, but Obama announced on Wednesday night that talks would continue through the night in hopes of avoiding a government shutdown. “It’s going to require a sufficient sense of urgency,” Obama said, “to complete a deal and get it passed and avert a shutdown.” Obama emerged before reporters to declare his differences with Republicans in the House were narrowing but that both sides were still stuck in an impasse. “I thought the meetings were frank, they were constructive,” Obama said. “I remain confident that if we’re serious about getting something done, we should be able to complete a deal and get it passed and avert a shutdown. But it’s going to require a sufficient sense of urgency from all parties involved.” Boehner criticised Obama, though he said he likes the commander in chief personally. “The president isn’t leading,” Boehner said. “He didn’t lead on last year’s budget, and he’s not leading on this year’s budget.” Obama has already ruled out the weeklong measure Republicans intend to push through the House, and Senate Democrats have labeled it a non-starter. Republican officials said the details of the bill could yet change. But passage of any interim measure is designed to place the onus on the Democratic-controlled Senate to act if a shutdown is to be avoided. The White House used its unmatched megaphone to emphasise the stakes involved in the negotiations, arranging a briefing for the presidential press corps on the ramifications of a partial government shutdown. National parks would close, as would the Smithsonian Institution and its world-class collection of museums clustered along the National Mall within sight of the Capitol. NASA spokesman Bob Jacobs said he was unable to predict what the impact would be on preparations for the shuttle Endeavour’s flight on April 29, or Atlantis’ trip into space on June 28. Senator Dick Durbin, the No. 2 Senate Democrat, hinted at movement in the talks. “There’s been a direct negotiation things put on the table that had not been discussed before and I think we’re moving” toward’ agreement, he said. United States Barack Obama Democrats Republicans John Boehner guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …