Home » Archives by category » News » World News (Page 905)

Silvio Berlusconi’s government is trying to fast-track a $56 billion austerity package in a bid to allay fears that Italy is about to join Europe’s debt crisis . “For us, for Italy, this is certainly not an easy moment,” the prime minister said in a statement. “The crisis is pushing us…

Continue reading …

Doctors in Spain have carried out the world’s first double leg transplant, giving new lower limbs to a patient who lost both legs at mid-thigh in an accident, officials said yesterday. The surgical team was led by Dr. Pedro Cavadas, who in 2009 carried out Spain’s first face transplant—the…

Continue reading …

North Dakota has been a state since 1889—or has it? An 82-year-old government watchdog and local historian has been trying, for 16 years, to get someone to notice an important flaw in the state’s constitution that he says renders North Dakota’s very statehood invalid. The state constitution omits the…

Continue reading …

Gilead Sciences announced today that it will license four AIDS and hepatitis B drugs to an international patent pool, allowing cheap, generic versions to be produced for sale in low-income countries. The AIDS drugs, which include tenofovir and emtricitabine, represent a major upgrade on the treatments currently available in those…

Continue reading …
Italy’s politicians rally round to prevent market’s slide

Shares and bonds make up ground on frenetic day as hope grows for smooth introduction of austerity measures Italian shares and bonds made up ground on Tuesday as politicians of all stripes worked frantically to shore up confidence in their country and prevent it being sucked into the same maelstrom as Greece. The blue chip FTSE Mib index closed 1.2% up at 18,510.53 after a dizzying session that saw it dip 4.7% after the opening. Sentiment began to change with an auction of short-dated treasury bonds. Though the return demanded by investors soared, from just over 2.1% at the last such auction to almost 3.7%, the demand exceeded supply by more than half. That reflected a growing conviction that Silvio Berlusconi’s government could steer through a package of austerity measures swiftly, and without concessions. Parliamentary managers vowed the package, which aims to clip €40bn (£35.1bn) from the deficit, would be approved by the Senate on Thursday and in the lower house, the Chamber of Deputies, by Sunday. The finance minister, Giulio Tremonti, hastened back to Rome from a meeting of his EU counterparts in Brussels to cut a deal with the opposition on last-minute changes. One such involved limiting or scrapping an increase in the levy on treasury bonds that would have penalised smaller investors and curbed demand at a time when Italy’s debt managers sorely need buyers. By the afternoon, the spread on Italy’s benchmark 10-year bonds, relative to their German equivalents, was back below 3%, after touching almost 3.5%. That was nevertheless higher than Monday night’s close and still nearly a full percentage point above the level Barclays Capital estimated last month was the maximum sustainable in the long term. Tremonti’s austerity package only tackles one issue spooking markets – Italy’s giant public debt and a budget deficit he aims to close by the end of 2014. If anything, though, it could exacerbate another problem, which is Italy’s ultra-low growth – a persistent feature of its economy since 2001 when Berlusconi first returned to office. Some opposition politicians were advocating the formation of a cross-party “technical government” without Berlusconi once the austerity measures had been signed into law. The media tycoon also played a role in sparking the sell-off by openly decrying his finance minister in an interview published on Friday. Anna Finocchiaro, the upper house whip of Italy’s main opposition group, the Democratic Party, said: “Berlusconi is costing Italy too much.” Italy European debt crisis European banks FTSE Europe Silvio Berlusconi Stock markets Europe European monetary union Greece Barclays Banking John Hooper guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

Rupert Murdoch, son James, and News International CEO Rebekah Brooks have been asked to appear before British Parliament. The trio will answer questions about the News of the World phone hacking scandal should they show up one week from today; the summoning is not binding but does ramp up pressure…

Continue reading …

The Casey Anthony jury foreman sheds more light on why she was found not guilty of killing her toddler daughter: The jury was suspicious of Anthony’s father, George. The anonymous foreman, who says he’s been trained to read people for his job, says he didn’t believe defense allegations that George…

Continue reading …

Human Rights Watch wants George W. Bush and his top officials prosecuted for war crimes and criminal conspiracy, the Guardian reports. In a new report, the US group calls for foreign governments to move forward with the prosecution if the Obama administration does not investigate. In addition to allegations of…

Continue reading …
Barack Obama battles left and right for debt ceiling agreement

President plays mediator in debt talks to prevent government bills going unpaid, interest rates soaring and US stocks plummeting For the third day in a row, congressional leaders were locked in discussions at the White House over the looming budget crisis, with no resolution in sight amid increasingly entrenched political positions. Washington is well versed in the political theatre of budget crises, but the current head-bashing between Democratic and Republican leaders has entered a class of its own. Not only are the two main parties further apart in their thinking compared with the previous great meltdown that shut the federal government, in 1995, but the stakes are higher now than in living memory. Unless agreement can be reached on raising the debt ceiling from its current $14.3tn towards the end of this month – in time for legislators to prepare the paperwork before the 2 August deadline – then within days, even hours, the US government would be unable to pay its debts, interest rates would almost certainly soar, and US stocks would likely plummet as trust in the American system was undermined. Barack Obama is now engaged in near-permanent talks with congressional leaders, with all other concerns shunted aside. On Tuesday he called Democratic and Republican leaders to the White House to continue where they had broken off the day before, but both sides remain stubbornly resistant to compromise – a sign of the increasingly partisan nature of US politics. At a time when bridge-building between the parties is crucial, the Republican leadership chose to take the opposite path. Mitch McConnell, the party’s leader in the Senate, accused Obama of “deliberate deception” in the talks. John Boehner, the top Republican in the House of Representatives, told reporters that “the debt limit is [Obama's] problem”. At the weekend Boehner jettisoned the search for a big compromise deal, rejecting Obama’s proposal for a package that would reduce the federal deficit by $4tn over 10 years. The rejection left the Republican party – the supposed party of small government – in the surreal position of proposing a smaller reduction in the deficit, which they now want to see cut by just $2tn. At the heart of the Republican resistance is their refusal to contemplate tax increases, even those including removing tax loopholes on oil profits or private jets. The Democrats are also in a bind: many of their congressional members are unwilling to make concessions demanded by the right that would cut social programmes such as Medicare and Medicaid. “The Democratic party on average is further left, and the Republican party on average further right, than before,” said Ron Haskins, a former adviser to George Bush and a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. “So they are trying to cut a deal between folks who are more driven by their ideologies and principles.” Obama, who has been accused in the past by commentators of both left and right of failing to show leadership on the issue, is now energetically trying to carve out a middle ground despite the apparent lack of flexibility from his fellow politicians. As part of the $4tn package, he is asking Republicans to concede $1tn in increased taxes; from Democrats he is asking for cuts in social benefits such as Medicare, the programme of entitlements for older people. One proposal is to raise the age of the programme from 65 to 67, which has distressed the left of the Democratic party. Another is to lower the annual cost-of-living increases, which would see a gradual whittling away of retirement benefits. “I’m prepared to take on significant heat from my party to get something done, and I expect the other side should be willing to do the same thing if they mean what they say,” Obama said on Monday. There are two major influences on the budget process making a resolution more difficult. The first is the Tea Party movement, the nationwide branch of fiscally conservative activists exhorting Republicans to stand firm against higher taxes. The other is the 2012 elections, which are already focusing politicians’ minds, as is the fear that if they are seen to be weak and compromising they could be punished at the ballot box. Barack Obama US politics US economy United States Economics Ed Pilkington guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

Arizona state Sen. Lori Klein has been taking some heat after pointing a loaded gun at a reporter with the safety off. The incident was related in a Sunday Arizona Republic article about Klein’s decision to carry a gun onto the Senate floor in the aftermath of the Gabrielle Giffords…

Continue reading …