Diarmuid Martin, archbishop of Dublin, speaks after Enda Kenny accuses Vatican of downplaying abuse of Irish children by clerics The archbishop of Dublin has said the Irish prime minister’s attack on the Catholic church following a report on child sex abuse in the country should be a wake-up call for clergymen. Enda Kenny launched his unprecedented attack on the Vatican in the Irish parliament, accusing it of downplaying the rape and torture of Irish children by clerical sex abusers. He said the recent Cloyne report had exposed an attempt by the holy see to frustrate the inquiry into child sex abuse just three years ago and illuminated the “dysfunction” and the elitism still dominant in the Vatican. Archbishop Diarmuid Martin – close to tears in an interview on RTE Television – said the only way all allegations, abuse and cover-ups could be exposed was through invasive audits of each diocese. “I’m very disappointed, annoyed,” he said. “What do you do when you’ve got groups, whether in the Vatican or in Ireland, who try to undermine what is being done or simply refuse to understand what has been done?” The archbishop said the diocese of Cloyne had ignored Vatican policy issued in 2001 by the then Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, now Pope Benedict. “What does that say? What sort of a cabal is this that is in there [Cloyne]?” He added: “If they think that by not getting at the truth they are helping the church, the statement in today’s Dail should teach them a lesson.” Kenny had told the parliament that the Vatican seemed more interested in upholding the power and reputation of the Catholic church than in confronting the abuse of Irish children by its priests and religious orders. He said that the Vatican’s attitude to investigations in Cloyne, which covers county Cork, was the “polar opposite of the radicalism, the humility and the compassion that the church had been founded on”. He said the rape and torture of children had been downplayed, or managed, to uphold instead the institution with its power and reputation. One of the most damning findings of the report was that the diocese failed to report nine out of 15 complaints made against priests, which “very clearly should have been reported”. This latest report, coming after a string of inquiries into Catholic clerical sex abuse across Ireland, has set the present Irish government on a collision course with the church not only in the republic but at its global headquarters in the Vatican City. Vatican spokesman Fr Federico Lombardi, speaking in a personal capacity, had said that there was nothing in the advice given by the papal nuncio to Ireland in 1997 to encourage bishops to break Irish laws. He said that the Vatican’s advice to Irish bishops on child protection policies could not be interpreted as an invitation to cover up abuse cases. This drew sharp criticism from Ireland’s justice minister, Alan Shatter, who described the Vatican spokesman’s argument as disingenous. Some Irish parliamentarians have called on the Fine Gael-Labour coalition to expel the papal nuncio from Ireland in protest at the Vatican’s attittude to the allegations in the Cloyne diocese. Ireland Catholicism Enda Kenny Vatican Child protection Religion Christianity Europe Henry McDonald guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Four Kenyans allegedly tortured at hands of colonial officials during 1950s insurgency can pursue compensation, judge rules Four Kenyans who claimed they were tortured at the hands of colonial officials during the Mau Mau insurgency in the 1950s have won the right to sue the British government. Without deciding whether there had been systematic torture of detainees, the judge, Mr Justice McCombe, ruled that they had arguable cases in law to pursue claims for compensation. The decision is a severe setback for the Foreign Office which had argued that the UK government should not be answerable for any abuses committed by the former British colony and that liability had devolved onto the present Kenyan government. The judge described the UK authorities’ attempts to avoid responsibility as “dishonourable” but accepted that before a full trial the issue of whether the injuries were sustained too long ago – and beyond any period of limitations – would have to be argued at a separate hearing. Of the five original Kenyan claimants, one has already died. The remaining four are all in their 80s. They allege that they suffered brutal treatment in detention camps at the hands of British colonial officials and soldiers, including castration and sexual assaults. In a summary of the judgment, McCombe said: “I have decided that these five claimants have arguable cases in law and on the facts as presently known that there was such systematic torture and the UK government is so liable.” Earlier in the judgment, he declared: “There is ample evidence in the few papers that I have seen suggesting that there may have been systematic torture of detainees during the [Mau Mau] emergency. “The [documents] evidencing the continuing abuses in the detention camps … are substantial, as is the evidence of the knowledge of both governments that they were happening and of the failure to take effective action to stop them.” Welcoming the decision, Martyn Day of the solicitors Leigh Day and Co who represented the Kenyan survivors, said: “It is an outrage that the British government is dealing with victims of torture so callously.” Kenya Africa Foreign policy Human rights Owen Bowcott guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Western nations clash with Russia and developing countries over whether climate change is a security matter Western nations clashed with Russia and developing countries on Wednesday over whether climate change was a security matter meriting the attention of the security council, the most powerful UN body. Diplomats said Russia initially blocked the adoption of a statement on the issue by the 15-nation council, but later agreed to a revised, weakly worded text that spoke of the “possible security implications” of climate change. It also failed to take forward the mooted idea of a “green helmets” climate peacekeeping force . The dispute came as the council formally debated the environment for the first time in four years and followed dire warnings by a senior UN official that global warming was speeding up, with unpredictable consequences. In the debate called by Germany, this month’s council president, western speakers said increasing aridity caused by climate change had contributed to conflicts in Sudan’s Darfur region and in Somalia, where the United Nations said famine had hit two areas. US ambassador Susan Rice said Washington strongly believed the council “has an essential responsibility to address the clear-cut peace and security implications of a changing climate,” and should “start now.” Speaking while negotiations on the statement were still deadlocked, Rice charged that the message of the council’s silence to countries threatened by climate-induced disasters would be “in effect, ‘Tough luck’ “. “This is more than disappointing. It’s pathetic. It’s shortsighted, and frankly it’s a dereliction of duty.” But Russian envoy Alexander Pankin said Moscow was “sceptical” about attempts to put the implications of climate change on the council’s agenda, which is defined as dealing with threats to international peace and security. “We believe that involving the security council in a regular review of the issue of climate change will not bring any added value whatsoever and will merely lead to further increased politicisation of this issue and increased disagreements between countries,” he said. Western diplomats said Russia’s statement reflected long-standing concerns about security council agenda “creep.” Temporary council members India and Brazil also said they doubted whether the body should be involved. Indian ambassador Hardeep Singh Puri said the council “does not have the wherewithal to address the situation.” Developing countries railed against what they said was an attempt by the big-power club to muscle in on the territory of the 193-nation general assembly and UN agencies specifically devoted to climate change. But president Marcus Stephen of Nauru, one of several small Pacific island states threatened by rising sea levels blamed on climate change, called on the council to request appointment of a UN special envoy for climate and security. The statement eventually agreed did not take up that proposal but expressed “concern that possible adverse effects of climate change may, in the long run, aggravate certain existing threats to international peace and security.” It also asked UN secretary-general Ban Ki-moon to include information on possible climate change impacts in his regular reports on world troublespots. Western diplomats said the fact that any statement was agreed was an advance on the last council debate on the issue in 2007. “This was a good day today for climate security,” German ambassador Peter Wittig told reporters. Earlier, Achim Steiner, head of the UN Environment Programme, said climate change was advancing faster than attempts to contain it through slow-moving UN-led negotiations on greenhouse gas emissions targets and other measures. He quoted projections that some parts of the world would see 3-4C temperature rises this century while negotiators seek to set a 2C target; that sea levels could rise by 3 feet (1 metre) this century; and that natural disasters could “increase exponentially”. “The world is confronted with a global warming scenario that is already well beyond where we believe we might be able to manage these changes and trends if we will be able to conclude our negotiations,” Steiner told the council. Climate change Global climate talks United Nations Russia Europe guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Nasa employees turn out in darkness to welcome the space shuttle home after 126 million miles travelled The shuttle Atlantis has touched down at the Kennedy Space Centre in Florida for the last time, lowering the curtain on one of the most eventful eras in America’s long history of human spaceflight. The craft’s pre-dawn landing at the remote airstrip in the north of the space centre was a timid affair compared with the grand spectacle of its final launch 13 days ago , which attracted 1m visitors eager to witness a piece of history. But wheels-stop on the 135th and final mission of the 30-year space shuttle programme was no less significant, nor emotional as scores of Nasa employees turned out in the darkness to welcome the spaceship home for the last time – and mourn the end of a half-century of US dominance in space . Atlantis and its crew of four touched down at 5.56am (10.56am BST) on Thursday after a 5 million-mile mission to resupply the International Space Station, which must now be serviced by Russian spacecraft after the retirement of the three-strong shuttle fleet. “Having fired the imagination of a generation, a ship like no other, its place in history secured, the space shuttle pulls into port for the last time, its voyage at an end,” announced Rob Navias, the voice of mission control. Chris Ferguson, the last astronaut to command Atlantis, was also emotional. “Houston, Mission Complete. After serving the world for 30 years the space shuttle has earned its place in history and it’s come to a final stop,” he said. Before the landing, he also had warm words for the space centre workers, up to 10,000 of whom received redundancy notices coinciding with the end of the shuttle era. “We’ve had great teams all taking care of the shuttle programme for goodness knows how many years. We appreciate every one of their efforts, and they’re all with us in spirit today,” he said in a farewell message from space. “It’s been an incredible ride. We’re going go beyond again someday, hopefully in the not too distant future. We’re going to go back to the moon and to Mars, and the future is very bright. But for now it’s a little sad because we’re saying goodbye to an old friend.” Nasa’s retired shuttles are to go on public display . Atlantis, which travelled almost 126m miles in its 33 flights since its first launch in October 1985, will be relocated to Kennedy Space Centre’s visitor centre after a lengthy decommissioning process. Endeavour, which completed its final flight on 1 June, is heading for the California Science Museum in Los Angeles and Discovery, last flown in March, will replace the non-orbiting shuttle prototype Enterprise at the National Air and Space Museum in Washington DC. Nasa’s two other shuttles, Challenger and Columbia, were destroyed in-flight during missions in 1986 and 2003 respectively, each disaster costing seven astronauts their lives. The retirement of the shuttles leaves Nasa with no human launch capability of its own for the first time in the agency’s 53-year history. President Obama cancelled the planned next-generation Constellation programme of spacecraft and rockets on cost grounds, leaving American astronauts to buy seats to the International Space Station, at up to $63m (£40m) a time, on ageing Soviet-era Soyuz spacecraft . Private companies including SpaceX , Lockheed Martin and Sierra Nevada have won Nasa contracts to develop spacecraft to compete for such lower Earth orbit duties while the agency is charged with designing, but not yet building, a new heavy-lift rocket that might eventually take astronauts back to the moon for the first time since 1972. But critics fear that the end of the shuttle era, coupled with plans announced in the US Congress this month to slash Nasa’s budget by $1.9bn, and delays by the Obama administration in approving plans to build the rocket, the so-called Space Launch System (SLS), leaves the US looking backwards. “In my opinion, Nasa’s SLS programme is stalled because the White House doesn’t really want to do it,” Mike Griffin, a former administrator of the space agency, told the Huntsville Times , where Nasa rockets are built at the Marshall Space Flight Centre. “They will do everything possible to prevent it from occurring.” Final space shuttle mission The space shuttle Nasa Space United States Florida Richard Luscombe guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary report says 10% reduction in officers will lead to a 3% rise in crime Police forces in England and Wales plan to cut 34,100 officers and staff over the next four years in a move that will trigger a fresh rise in crime, according to the first authoritative survey of their plans. The first reliable estimate by Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary is far higher than the previous claims of 28,000 officers and staff to go by police staff organisations. HMIC says that the 43 police forces plan to cut 16,200 officers, 1,800 police community support officers and 16,100 police staff – a reduction of 14% in the police workforce. The reduction in uniformed police officers represents 11% of the 140,000 constables in the country. The HMIC report will also infuriate Home Office ministers who have been arguing there is no direct link between falling police numbers and levels of crime. The report contradicts this by saying recent research, using more robust methodologies, has demonstrated a clear link and that a 10% fall in officers will lead to a 3% rise in crime. The report says that 11,200 jobs – nearly one-third of the 34,100 cut – have already gone as forces make preparations to deal with a 20% cut in Whitehall funding over the next four years. Separate Home Office figures published on Thursday confirm this by showing that there are 4625 fewer police officers than a year ago – a fall of 3.2% and 5,586 fewer police staff. The survey says that 22 police forces are planning to cut more than 30% of their non-frontline workforce in order to protect frontline numbers. That includes 10 forces who are planning to cut their non-frontline workforce by more than 50%. The 20% cut in Whitehall funded has been front-loaded with two-thirds falling over the next two years and HMIC say it will be “very challenging to protect the frontline” over the next 18 months. Forces will have to transform their efficiency if they are to protect frontline services, the report adds. Police Public sector cuts Crime Alan Travis guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Radio station reports that officers fired teargas at protesters opposed to President Bingu wa Mutharika in capital, Lilongwe Police fired teargas at anti-government demonstrators in Malawi’s capital, a radio station reported, after a day of nationwide unrest. MIJ 90.3 FM, a private radio station, said demonstrators clashed with security forces in Lilongwe. The situation in the southern African country’s commercially central second city, Blantyre, was returning to normal, however. Shops in the city reopened after being shuttered during clashes between soldiers, riot police and marchers demanding the resignation of President Bingu wa Mutharika, although some banks remained closed. Blantyre police spokesman Davie Chingwalu said the riots had caused extensive property damage and several demonstrators and police had been injured. A number of arrests had been made, he said. There were reports that police in the northern city of Mzuzu had shot a protester dead, although police did not confirm this. The outburst of public anger in the landlocked nation of 13 million people was directed mainly at Mutharika, a former World Bank economist who was first elected in 2004 and has presided over six years of high-pace but aid-funded economic growth. The sheen has come off this year as Mutharika has become embroiled in a diplomatic row with Britain, Malawi’s biggest donor, over a leaked embassy cable that referred to him as “autocratic and intolerant of criticism”. The cable led to the expulsion of Britain’s ambassador to Lilongwe. In response, Britain kicked out Malawi’s representative in London and suspended aid worth $550m (£340m) over the next four years. The freeze has left a yawning hole in the budget of a country that has relied on handouts for 40% of its revenues, and intensified a dollar supply crunch threatening Malawian currency the kwacha’s peg at 150 to the dollar. The lack of foreign currency has also pushed up fuel prices and exacerbated an already chronic energy shortage. Malawi Protest Africa guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Australian prosecutors take action to seize profits of Guantanamo, My Journey under ‘proceeds of crime’ law Australian prosecutors have begun legal action to seize book profits from the former Guantánamo Bay inmate David Hicks, who was convicted of terrorism offences at a US military tribunal. Random House published Hicks’s book, Guantanamo, My Journey, last year. It is based on his time at Guantánamo Bay from 2001 until 2007. Under Australian law, a person cannot gain commercial benefit from a crime. This can prevent criminals receiving payment for writing books about their offences. A spokeswoman for the Commonwealth director of public prosecutions said Hicks had been served orders on Wednesday and that the case was set for 3 August in the New South Wales state supreme court. Hicks’s book has reportedly sold 30,000 copies, regarded as “solid” sales for a hardcover book in Australia. As a rule of thumb, an author can expect around 10% of sales, with Hicks’s book having a recommended price of A$49.95 (£33). Hicks was captured in Afghanistan in late 2001 and spent five years in Guantánamo before pleading guilty to supporting terrorism and becoming the first person convicted by the war crimes tribunals the US created to try non-American captives. Law professor Clive Williams said Australia’s “proceeds of crime” law favoured the prosecution, but Hicks may use the court case to publicly raise issues over his conviction. “He may well raise issues going to the nature of his plea, whether duress was involved, whether it was a plea that should be recognised under the Australian legal system,” Williams, from the University of New South Wales, told local radio. “For David Hicks to defeat the claim, the attempt to seize those assets, he will have to raise questions that go to the heart of his conviction.” Hicks, a former kangaroo skinner, admitted training with al-Qaida and meeting its then leader Osama bin Laden, whom he described as “lovely”, according to police evidence given to the US military court. Hicks returned to Australia in 2007 as part of his guilty plea, which also included a one-year gag order. Another Australian, Mamdouh Habib, was released from Guantánamo without charge in 2005. Australia, a close US ally, was an original member of the US-led coalition that invaded Iraq in 2003 and Afghanistan after the September 11, 2001 airliner attacks. Australia Guantánamo Bay Cuba Autobiography and memoir Biography United States guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Australian prosecutors take action to seize profits of Guantanamo, My Journey under ‘proceeds of crime’ law Australian prosecutors have begun legal action to seize book profits from the former Guantánamo Bay inmate David Hicks, who was convicted of terrorism offences at a US military tribunal. Random House published Hicks’s book, Guantanamo, My Journey, last year. It is based on his time at Guantánamo Bay from 2001 until 2007. Under Australian law, a person cannot gain commercial benefit from a crime. This can prevent criminals receiving payment for writing books about their offences. A spokeswoman for the Commonwealth director of public prosecutions said Hicks had been served orders on Wednesday and that the case was set for 3 August in the New South Wales state supreme court. Hicks’s book has reportedly sold 30,000 copies, regarded as “solid” sales for a hardcover book in Australia. As a rule of thumb, an author can expect around 10% of sales, with Hicks’s book having a recommended price of A$49.95 (£33). Hicks was captured in Afghanistan in late 2001 and spent five years in Guantánamo before pleading guilty to supporting terrorism and becoming the first person convicted by the war crimes tribunals the US created to try non-American captives. Law professor Clive Williams said Australia’s “proceeds of crime” law favoured the prosecution, but Hicks may use the court case to publicly raise issues over his conviction. “He may well raise issues going to the nature of his plea, whether duress was involved, whether it was a plea that should be recognised under the Australian legal system,” Williams, from the University of New South Wales, told local radio. “For David Hicks to defeat the claim, the attempt to seize those assets, he will have to raise questions that go to the heart of his conviction.” Hicks, a former kangaroo skinner, admitted training with al-Qaida and meeting its then leader Osama bin Laden, whom he described as “lovely”, according to police evidence given to the US military court. Hicks returned to Australia in 2007 as part of his guilty plea, which also included a one-year gag order. Another Australian, Mamdouh Habib, was released from Guantánamo without charge in 2005. Australia, a close US ally, was an original member of the US-led coalition that invaded Iraq in 2003 and Afghanistan after the September 11, 2001 airliner attacks. Australia Guantánamo Bay Cuba Autobiography and memoir Biography United States guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Starving Somalis make the long journey on foot to refugee camps in Kenya, some of which have yet to officially open Khadija Aliow Mohamed sits silently in the sand inside her tiny twig igloo, staring at the small bundle wrapped in a red and blue shawl on the bed. The 20-year-old Somali walked for 30 days with her two-year-old daughter Madina to get to this refugee camp in northern Kenya a few weeks ago. Hungry and exhausted, the family escaped the worst drought in southern Somalia in decades, which has already claimed tens of thousands of lives, according to the United Nations. But while Mohamed regained her strength in Dadaab, the world’s biggest refugee settlement, Madina did not. Just an hour after the UN declared a famine in two regions of Somalia, Madina died. Her mother, who is pregnant, is too shocked to talk. Instead her grandfather, Ali Mohamed, explains what happened. Mohamed escaped Somalia with them, and carried Madina’s body here along the sand road from the hospital at noon on Wednesday. “The child never recovered from the malnutrition,” he says, clutching a small blue slip of paper with the words “Permit for Burial”. “Madina died because of the drought.” She will not be the last. According to the UN, more than six out of every 10,000 people are dying of hunger every day in some parts of the Bakool and Lower Shabelle regions of Somalia, with more than half the children there suffering from acute malnutrition. This is far above the normal famine threshold of two deaths per 10,000 people a day, and 30% malnutrition levels, UN agencies say. While there have been numerous disasters in the Horn of Africa over the past decade, it is the first time a famine has been declared in the region since 1992, when hundreds of thousands of Somalis starved to death, prompting an international peacekeeping intervention. “Somalia is facing its worst food security crisis in the last 20 years,” says Mark Bowden, the UN official in charge of humanitarian aid in Somalia. “This desperate situation requires urgent action to save lives.” Other countries in the region, in particular Ethiopia and Kenya, are also facing a crisis because of the failures of rains in pastoralist areas – the worst situation for 60 years in some places – as well as soaring food prices and longer term issues such as underdevelopment and high population growth. Across the Horn 11 million people require humanitarian assistance. But it is Somalia, where the situation is even more complex, that has been hardest hit, with 3.7 million people, nearly half the population, requiring food aid. The country has lacked an effective government since before the famine of the early 1990s. Most of southern Somalia is controlled by the al-Shabab Islamist group, which has prevented most international aid organisations, including the World Food Programme, from operating in its areas two years ago, only lifting the ban last week. This has meant that many people have received little or no help since the drought first started to bite last year. At the same time, prices of staple foods such as sorghum has increased more than threefold over a year, due to the conflict and lack of supply. First the animals perished. Ali Mohamed, the 63-year-old grandfather of the dead toddler Madina, says he lost his entire herd of 90 camels, goats and cows this year. “There was no water, no grazing, no food production. We lost everything. This is the worst drought I’ve ever experienced.” Then people started to die of hunger-related diseases. Over the past month the number of deaths has grown sharply, according to aid organisations, prompting an exodus from southern Somalia towards the capital Mogadishu, as well as across borders. Some 2,000 Somalis are crossing into Ethiopia a day, with a further 1,300 coming to Dadaab daily, according to Attidzah Fafa, head of the UNHCR office here. He says 30,000 people arrived in June alone, and he expects similar numbers in July and August. The settlement, which was built for 90,000 people in Kenya’s arid and barely hospitable northeast, now houses more than 370,000 Somalis. Instead of in the igloo-shaped huts covered in plastic sheeting, which many people sleep in, new arrivals like Idhoy Abdinor are forced to sleep under thorn trees. The 53-year-old grandmother finally reached Ifo, one of the Dadaab’s three camps, on Tuesday. She had walked through the desert scrubland for 22 days wearing a pair of mismatched pink and yellow flipflops. She did not complain. “Some of the others’ shoes broke, so they had to come barefoot,” she says. With her came seven of her children, the youngest just eighteen months. After a night in the open on the outskirts of the camp, some other Somalis who arrived a few weeks ago shared some food rations with them. Abdinor, who trekked from the town of Dinsor, says the situation there had became increasingly desperate. “For the last three years we did not receive rain,” says Abdinor, whose reed-thin forearms are cabled with protruding veins. “We were farmers, but there are no farms anymore. No animals.” War provided an extra push. Al-Shabab Islamist rebels and government forces had been clashing in the area recently. Abdinor’s eighth child went missing during fighting three months ago, as did her husband. She has heard rumours that he is dead. Still, the decision to leave was not easy, as Abdinor had heard the stories of how bandits are preying on the refugees on both sides of the border. Fortunately she was not robbed during the walk to Kenya, but she suffered greatly because of the lack of food and water. “Some of us had donkey carts but the donkeys died because there was no water,” she says. “We also had to leave some mothers and children behind on the road because they were too tired. People were very weak.” The next rains are only expected in September or Ocotober, and even if they are good, subsequent harvests are expected to be weak because so many people have been uprooted. The UN warned that without immediate action the famine would spread to all eight regions of southern Somalia within two months. Oxfam, which is assisting new arrivals in Dadaab, says that of the $1bn (£619m) needed to avert a humanitarian disaster only $200m had been pledged, and accused several European governments, including France, Italy and Denmark of “wilful neglect” of a crisis that has been known about for many months. “There is no time to waste if we are to avoid massive loss of life. We must not stand by and watch this tragedy unfold before our eyes,” says Fran Equiza, Oxfam’s regional director. “The world has been slow to recognise the severity of this crisis, but there is no longer any excuse for inaction.” But getting aid into Somalia is not going to be easy, despite al-Shabab agreeing to let humanitarian organisations in. The refugee agency UNHCR says it wants additional security guarantees from the rebels, who practise an extreme version of Islam, before stepping up assistance. The World Food Programme, which has experienced repeated problems in working with al-Shabab areas in the past, says it is ready to negotiate with local drought committees in rebel areas to ensure safety for its staff. “Operations in Somalia are among the highest risk in the world, and WFP has lost 14 relief workers there since 2008,” says the programme’s executive director Josette Sheeran. “We will aggressively pursue efforts to mitigate against risk, through robust assessments and monitoring, but I am calling on all sides to stand together in recognising the inevitable risks that will be present in southern Somalia.” The agency said it was considering sending shipments of high-energy biscuits and other supplementary foods for children and pregnant mothers by air to strategic location in southern Somali where the needs are greatest. Meanwhile in Dadaab, aid agencies are struggling to cope with the rapid influx of refugees. The Kenyan government, which is reluctant to host more Somalis on its soil, has yet to officially allow the opening of new camp for refugees that has already been built close by. So in the areas where there are fresh arrivals sleeping, people are also defecating in the open, raising fears of an outbreak of disease. Still, no matter how grim the conditions here, there is also a palpable sense of relief from people that they have arrived somewhere where help is near. Asked why she had risked the 20-day walk to get here from Saku in Somalia, Garmana Mohamed Aden, a 30-year-old mother-of-two, replied instantly. “People were dying there.” Somalia Famine Africa Refugees Aid Charities Xan Rice guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Germany’s Angela Merkel and France’s Nicolas Sarkozy have hammered out a deal ahead of a crisis summit of European leaders in Brussels Markets were on tenterhooks on Thursday morning after Germany and France hammered out a last-minute deal on a second bailout of Greece intended to rescue both it and the euro from financial ruin. French president Nicolas Sarkozy rushed to Berlin on Wednesday and spent six to seven hours talking to German chancellor Angela Merkel ahead of a crisis summit in Brussels. They managed to agree a compromise on the losses that Greece’s private creditors are to take, in a complex new bailout for Athens. European Central Bank president Jean-Claude Trichet, who has been Merkel’s most vocal opponent in the wrangling over how to respond to the euro crisis, attended part of the talks. The deal, following a telephone dispute between the two leaders on Tuesday, is to be put to the heads of the European commission, council and central bank on Thursday morning before an emergency summit of the 17 leaders of eurozone countries. The euro hung on to gains, trading at $1.460 after rallying to the highest level for a week on Wednesday night. Stock markets across Europe were nervous, with the FTSE 100 index falling 3 points to 5850 in early trading. Gilts slid along with Bunds on hopes of a bailout. European shares initially rose, led by banking stocks, before turning negative. “France and Germany striking an accord is very good news for the eurozone and is what we have been looking for and it has been greeted quite well,” said Will Hedden, sales trader at IG Index. “But the risk of contagion still remains, the Greece problems has not really gone away, just been brushed aside.” The new bailout would supplement the €110bn (£97bn) package for Greece launched in May last year. It is expected to include fresh emergency loans to Athens from eurozone governments and the International Monetary Fund, as well as other measures. Former UK chancellor Alistair Darling said on the BBC Today programme: “We are involved in this. Most of our exports go to European countries. You can see real calamity facing us.” He pointed to the possibility of the US losing its prized top-notch credit rating, the eurozone troubles and “sluggish growth” in Britain. No details of the Berlin pact were revealed, leaving analysts to speculate. “Markets will react positively if they get a sense that the politicians and central bankers are getting ahead of the curve,” said Louise Cooper, markets analyst at BGC Partners in London. Senior officials at the European commission in Brussels indicated a compromise was in the air to save Greece and halt contagion by levying a tax on banks in the eurozone – opposed by Berlin and proposed by Paris – as well as a long-term Greek debt rollover stretching for decades, and other measures aimed at reducing Greece’s crippling debt level. It appeared that the multi-pronged formula would inexorably lead to Greece being deemed to be in sovereign default, at least temporarily. Cooper said: “So what is in this deal? Well the plan to make private sector bond holders share the pain via a eurozone bank tax, seems to be firmly on the table. But this is rather a circuitous route, from A (Greece cannot afford to pay back it’s debt) to B (the banks who hold their bonds need to accept less back from Greece). The direct route from A to B was limited by the credit ratings agencies – they warned that the French plan to ‘voluntarily’ roll over Greek debt would constitute a default. So the power players are taking a more tortuous route to ensure that banks ‘share the pain’. “However the end result is still the same – that banks will make less profit – either they take writedowns on their Greek debt (classic default) or they pay more tax. Less profits, less retained earnings, less capital. And already many European banks are undercapitalised – draft proposals suggest that a total of €460bn of capital needs to be raised by 2019 by banks. Getting banks to pay more tax is only going to make the underlying problem worse – banks need more capital – where are they going to get it from?” The Brussels summit – the 10th time in 18 months that European leaders have tried to save the euro and Greece from collapse – is being staged amid grave pessimism that politicians will be able to bury their differences and combine to rescue the single currency. It remains to be seen if the Franco-German compromise can win the support of other leaders and goes far enough to satisfy the financial markets. Amid a febrile mood and an ominous sense that the euro was facing a make-or-break moment, an unusual hush descended on the key European capitals on Wednesday. It was as if leaders and officials had been struck dumb by the weight of the responsibility bearing down on them. The silence was broken only by José Manuel Barroso, the president of the European commission, who chastised the current crop of EU leaders, declaring that “history will judge this generation of leaders harshly” if they refuse to act decisively in the euro’s darkest hour. The main challenge is to forge a pact that will reduce Greece’s crippling level of debt. The fundamental issue is who pays for that. On Wednesday night, the Germans insisted that Greece’s private creditors pick up a large part of the tab, the main dispute with Sarkozy and Trichet. The markets are more than jittery, and Washington is nervous. President Barack Obama intervened on Tuesday by phoning Merkel. Daiwa Capital Markets said: “Might this meeting finally bring an end to the farce surrounding the euro area’s response to Greece? No chance.” Amid growing calls from Washington, the IMF, and the markets for a radical step towards eurozone fiscal union as the only hope of saving Greece from default and inoculating the euro, the Germans exasperated many by pooh-poohing such notions. “I know there’s a great longing for a big decision, proposals for eurobonds, a big restructuring [of Greek debt], for a transfer union, and much besides,” said Merkel on Tuesday. “I will not give in to this. The government will not give in to this.” New suggestions this week from France are to impose a levy on eurozone banks, raising €10bn a year. This is problematic. It would take time to establish, would penalise banks not exposed in Greece, would exempt non-eurozone banks lending to Greece, and would run into political opposition in national legislatures. The advantage is it would impose private creditor involvement without seeing Greece declared to be in default. Other options are lower interest rates on loans to Greece, debt rollovers or swapping bonds for longer maturities, using the €440bn eurozone bailout fund. The talk in Brussels was of a combination of rollover, bank levies, and haircuts that could cut Greece’s debt by about a quarter. The reported Berlin pact was believed to be a mixture of the various options. “What cocktail will they make out of all this?” said a senior commission official. “The real priority is that they produce a cocktail that everyone can drink.” The major challenge was to finesse the complex package in a way that does not trigger declaration of Greek default by the international ratings agencies. That looked unlikely. The ECB is warning it will refuse to accept defaulted bonds as collateral from Greek banks in return for liquidity to keep them afloat. The eurozone taxpayer, in the form of the European financial stability facility, would then need to step in to save the Greek banks or risk a wider European banking crash. The crisis has been compounded in the past fortnight by Italy, whose borrowing costs are also now close to unsustainable. “Either we act as Europe, or we are not actors at all,” warned Barroso. “The situation is very serious. It requires a response. Otherwise the negative consequences will be felt in all corners of Europe and beyond. Leaders need to come to the table saying what they can do and what they want to do and what they will do. Not what they can’t do and won’t do.” European debt crisis Euro Europe Europe Euro Angela Merkel Greece Nicolas Sarkozy Julia Kollewe Ian Traynor guardian.co.uk
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