Thousands pack streets of central Caracas to celebrate return of populist president following month abroad Venezuela’s showman president Hugo Chávez made a dramatic return home yesterday, addressing thousands of ecstatic supporters in Caracas with the battle-cry: “The return has begun”. Hordes of Chávez supporters had flocked onto the streets outside the city’s Miraflores Palace to welcome back their leader, following his surprise return from Cuba in the early hours of Monday. At just after 5.35pm local time a sea of red-clad supporters erupted in cheers and applause as Chávez stepped out onto the Palace’s “balcón del pueblo” or “people’s balcony” wearing a red beret and green army uniform. Hoisting his country’s red, blue and yellow flag into the air, Chávez launched into a rendition of the Venezuelan national anthem before shouting: “Viva Venezuela! Viva the Bolivarian Revolution! Viva the Venezuelan People… Viva life! Viva Chávez!” “We will win this battle for life, for the fatherland and for the revolution,” Chávez told thousands of flag-waving supporters, speaking just days after admitting he was being treated for cancer in Cuba. “We will overcome all of these difficulties,” he added from the iconic veranda, the setting for numerous key addresses since he came to power in 1999. Chávez’s sudden return, nearly one month after he left the country, came on the eve of Venezuela’s independence celebrations that kick off on Tuesday. Within hours of Chávez setting foot on Venezuelan soil, allies from his United Socialist Party (PSUV) were appearing on television urging supporters to gather outside the city’s Miraflores Palace. “We have so much to celebrate,” said Blanca Eekhout, the vice-president of Venezuela’s National Assembly. “Let’s celebrate independence and the happiness of having our president back.” Chávez was now “recovering and preparing for the battles ahead,” she added. Throughout Monday, state-controlled television churned out infomercials for the afternoon address, accompanied by a chirpy pop-rock soundtrack and the catch-line “pa’lante comandante” – “onwards, commander”. “Welcome back president,” bellowed the commercial’s voiceover. “The whole of Venezuela receives you with happiness.” Across town the refrain was repeated, as faithful Chavistas celebrated their president’s “resurrection”. “I feel great joy because Chávez is back in his country,” said Iris Teran, a 27-year-old secretary who was among the crowds. “We’ve come to show him our revolutionary support. We have all prayed so that he can continue in his Bolivarian revolution”. Nelson Leon, a 68-year-old headmaster, added his voice to the chorus. “My wife woke me up to tell me he was back, but I thought she was lying. I feel the same joy as all my compatriots to see our president back and in good health.” Rafael Leonides, 51, said he had prayed for Chávez’s return. “We were feeling orphaned.” Political analysts had harboured suspicions that Chávez might attempt a high-profile homecoming to coincide with Venezuela’s independence celebrations on Tuesday – although those chances appeared to have faded last Thursday following Chávez’s admission he had been diagnosed with an unspecified form of cancer. Javier Corrales, a Venezuela expert from Amherst College in Massachusetts, described Monday’s dramatic, pre-dawn return as “typical Chávez.” “He is a micro-manager par excellence, convinced of his own indispensability. Thus a premature return is less surprising from Chávez than a prolonged absence,” said Corrales. “Governance in Venezuela might not necessarily improve with an ailing president back in residence, but at least the internal confusion and posturing within his ruling party will ease, for now,” he added. With a 2012 presidential election looming on the horizon and domestic headaches growing, Chávez needs to recover, and fast. Corrales said Chávez faced “a tough scenario” back home, with an ongoing energy crisis and economic woes presenting a treacherous run-up to the election. “Until his health improves, Chávez’s best hope to prevail in the forthcoming elections may be to win enough sympathy votes,” Corrales said. Venezuela Hugo Chávez Cuba Tom Phillips guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Pakistani shells fired into Afghanistan in recent weeks have killed 42 and wounded 48, according to angry Afghan officials and elders. “Seven hundred families have been displaced” and women and children are among the dead, says one Afghan general. Pakistan’s media says the shells were fired in pursuit of Taliban…
Continue reading …Greece got yet more bad news today, when Standard & Poor’s issued a statement saying that a proposed rescue plan from banks in France “would likely amount to a default” as far as it was concerned. French banks planned to roll over their holdings in the country’s debt, and German…
Continue reading …Country’s coal capital exemplifies hostility to a looming pollution levy, which has made prime minister Julia Gillard very unpopular They call this city “carbon central”. But in the polarised Australian climate change debate, this mining hub is not central at all, but firmly positioned at one extreme. Wollongong, 50 miles south of Sydney in New South Wales, is home to 300,000 people and millions of tonnes of coal. The steep hills around Wollongong afford views of endless queues of ships on the watery horizon, waiting for their cargo of black gold. Coal has been the lifeblood of the city for 150 years and the backbone of its steel industry. Regardless of the climate extremes, the droughts, wildfires, cyclones and floods that are ravaging Australia, locals do not want to give it up. “It’s all right for greenies to say this carbon tax has to happen, but we can’t all hug trees for a living,” said Brett Withers, who has worked as an industrial cleaning contractor in the steelworks for 20 years. “It might just be the straw that breaks the camel’s back. If the tax comes in, this area will be devastated. It’s not just the steel industry – it’s the butcher, the hairdresser and the baker. Everyone will suffer.” Withers’ remarks illustrate a furious backlash against imminent government plans to introduce a carbon tax. Labor prime minister Julia Gillard plans to announce the level of tax to be levied on pollution on Sunday 10 July. The levy was proposed by Gillard, who needed support from Greens in a hung parliament. But the plan has divided Australia like no other issue of recent years. An opinion poll on Tuesday 28 June showed Gillard’s disapproval rating at 62%. Another poll suggested barely one in four Australians would vote for her, making her government the most unpopular in 40 years. Cities such as Wollongong have led the assault, as blue collar voters – who have done well on the back of the mining boom – desert the prime minister in droves. Australia is the world’s largest producer of iron ore and coal, much of it bound for China’s hungry construction industry. As commodity prices have skyrocketed, so have profits. Australia’s commodity export earnings are expected to rise 18% to a record $270bn (£180bn) in the next year. It is an industry that sustains a lot of livelihoods, and a lot of voters. “If the polls as they stand now persist, then Labor will suffer a landslide thrashing in two years’ time,” said Nick Economou, senior lecturer in politics at Melbourne’s Monash University. “They’re in terrible, terrible trouble.” Gillard is not the first Australian leader to be unsettled by the climate and carbon debate. Her predecessor, Kevin Rudd, dropped his planned emissions trading scheme after failing to get it through parliament. It was the beginning of the end of his tenure. In last year’s election campaign, Gillard promised there would be no carbon tax if she was elected. But then came the hung parliament, with a majority of just one. With her political survival suddenly based on support from the Greens, she quickly changed her mind. “You’re really going to test the credulity of the electorate if you say one thing on a carbon tax and then do another,” said Economou. Post-election, Gillard set up a multi-party committee to hammer out details of the carbon tax. The scheme will start with a government-fixed price on carbon, moving to a market-set price after three years. The committee is expected to finalise the details of the tax within days but negotiations have dragged on for months, further damaging the government’s credibility. Over the weekend, Gillard announced that petrol would not be included in the tax but there is still no certainty on what the price of carbon will be under the scheme, which industries will be in or out and, crucially, what the compensation to households will be. Gillard’s standing has taken a battering and many voters have stopped listening to her. The conservative opposition – led by climate sceptic, Tony Abbott, who once described human-induced climate change as “crap” – has capitalised on the uncertainty and on Gillard’s flip-flop. His slogan about a “great big new tax on everything” has been drilled home, along with the message that a carbon tax will hurt ordinary Australians. His party has proposed “direct action” to meet the bipartisan agreed target of reducing CO² emissions by 5% by 2020 (based on 1990 levels). Abbott’s voluntary scheme includes, among other things, planting 20m trees. Rightwing shock jocks have also rammed home the anti-tax message, arguing that whatever Australia does will make little difference to the world’s climate. They have called Gillard “Ju-liar” and launched scathing personal attacks on senior government advisers on climate change as well as scientists. Some have even been subjected to death threats. The growing number of climate change deniers put recent events like this year’s devastating floods in Queensland and the most powerful cyclone in Australia’s history ( cyclone Yasi in February 2011 was as powerful as hurricane Katrina) down to freaks of nature rather than climate change. From his inner city veggie patch stocked with lettuce, beetroot and cabbage, Sydney resident Greg Bearup despairs at the government’s handling of the carbon tax debate. “I just can’t see how we went from 60-70% support for action on climate change to a position where Gillard looks like she could lose her job over it,” he said. “It’s unbelievable it could have been handled so badly.” Bearup’s street is just 15 minutes from the centre of the city, but a world away from the glistening blue of the harbour. The area has been gentrified but remains a concrete jungle with first world war era houses. Two years ago Bearup and his neighbours dug up the concrete in front of their homes and planted gardens. He says the concrete was acting as a heat bank. Removing it has lowered the temperature in the summer, reducing the need for air conditioning. He said a carbon tax will make sure heavy polluting industries like mining pay their fair share for the damage they are causing to the environment. “Everyone should be making an individual contribution to tackling climate change,” he said. Australia Natural disasters and extreme weather Julia Gillard Carbon emissions Energy Coal Fossil fuels Climate change scepticism Mining Climate change Mining Climate change Alison Rourke guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …As its finances spiral, the board of the bankrupt Crystal Cathedral has ousted the megachurch’s founder. Robert H. Schuller had “wanted to add board members,” but the board “didn’t want that because they would lose control,” said his son. “They kicked him off … I feel bad for him because he’s…
Continue reading …Bradley Manning “felt he was female,” and looked into changing his gender, his former counselor tells New York . Though the suspected WikiLeaker “really wanted to do surgery,” the counselor says, “he was mostly afraid of being alone, being ostracized or somehow weird.” Manning used the Internet as a release: Online…
Continue reading …Boost to both brands, but English-language search results will be censored to meet Chinese government’s demands Microsoft has signed a deal with Baidu, the biggest search engine in China, to provide English-language search results — but they will be censored to meet the Chinese government’s demands. The announcement of the deal is a boost to Microsoft, which has been struggling to boost the position of its Bing search engine against Google’s dominance in almost every country around the world. It will also be a boost for Baidu, which has ambitions internationally. Baidu has roughly 83% of the Chinese search market, but there are also up to 10m English searches per day, the company said. The Chinese market comprises roughly 470m users, despite only about 30% of the population having internet access. Bing — which filters out results in China relating to controversial subjects, such as political dissidents, Taiwan or pornography, to be able to operate in the country — has a negligible share of the market, while Google has nearly 20% counting visits to its offshore sites, making it the second-biggest in China. Yahoo has 6% and Microsoft’s Bing 4%, according to Net Applications. English-language searches to Baidu will be redirected through Bing. Kaiser Kuo, a spokesman for Baidu, said that Bing searches would not be censored any more “than they already do”. Google withdrew from the Chinese market in 2010 after alleging that government-inspired hackers had broken into the systems for its email and source codes to its wider network. Google’s founders, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, had been unhappy at the idea of submitting to China’s censorship for search results, and declared after the hacking incident that they would stop censoring them. That required them to withdraw from the country. Some analysts were sceptical over how much demand there would be for English search on Baidu. “It’s a good thing, but I see very minimal impact for Baidu. I don’t see a lot English keywords going through Baidu. It goes through Google,” said Wallace Cheung, a Hong Kong-based analyst at Credit Suisse. Search engine marketing company Greenlight said it saw the deal as positive for both sides, and could envisage the new partners dominating the Chinese search-advertising market. “Whilst it represents an opportunity for Bing to make more money from the Chinese market, Baidu gets what it needs to expand overseas when it is ready to do so,” said Greenlight Chief Operating Officer Andreas Pouros. “Microsoft has entered the Chinese market slowly and has made some friends, in a way that the Chinese government will have no issue with. This should leave Baidu and Bing to control the Chinese search ad market without too much difficulty.” Baidu made $1.2bn in online marketing revenues last year, up 78% from 2009. Microsoft’s total online advertising revenue in fiscal 2010, including a small contribution from Bing, was $1.9bn. However Bing loses almost as much money as it takes in. Microsoft may be satisfied with delivering censored results. It acknowledged as long as as 2006 that it filtered certain words, including “democracy” and “freedom” from the Chinese version of MSN. At the time Brad Smith, Microsoft’s general counsel, said that it was better to do business inside the country than to boycott it. “We certainly think it is better for us to be present around the world rather than not,” Smith said in 2006 . Search engines Microsoft Internet Computing Google Yahoo China Censorship Technology sector United States Charles Arthur guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …The Obama administration is trying to convince automakers to accept a significant hike in fuel efficiency standards that would put US vehicles on par with those sold in Europe, Japan and China. The administration would like to raise the standard to 56.2 miles per gallon, or roughly double the…
Continue reading …He’s only 21, but Daniel Radcliffe is off the booze for good. In an interview with British GQ as reported by the Telegraph , the actor explains that he started partying too much at age 18, during the filming of Harry Potter and The Half-Blood Prince. His drink of choice? Whisky….
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