UNITED NATIONS: The UN Security Council will vote Saturday on a US-drafted resolution toughening sanctions on North Korea, diplomats said Friday.
The vote is scheduled for 3 pm (1900 GMT) on the new measures that could deprive North Korea of $1 billion in annual revenue from exports of coal, iron, lead and seafood.
Saturday, 5 August 2017
US jobs report sends global stocks higher
NEW YORK: Rosy US jobs numbers sent Wall Street higher on Friday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average rising to an eighth straight record finish.
The beleaguered US dollar also got a shot in the arm from the strong July employment report, which showed the world's largest economy adding north of 200,000 new positions for the second straight month.
Across the Atlantic, European equities also pushed higher amid unequivocal signs of American economic strength.
In New York, the Dow rose 0.3 percent, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq each gained 0.2 percent.
But Adam Sarhan, CEO of 50 Park Investments, told AFP the jobs numbers were a "double-edged sword."
"On the one hand, it is good to see the economy growing, jobs coming in," he said. "At the same time, it is a hawkish data point for the Fed."
The strong job creation and slowly rising wages could spur the Fed to raise the cost of borrowing a third time this year to keep a tight rein on inflation.
But a rate increase would boost bank profits, and that fueled banking shares. Goldman Sachs jumped 2.6 percent, and JP Morgan Chase added 1.3 percent, leading the Dow higher.
Meanwhile, the dollar jumped 0.8 percent against a basket of other major currencies, rising off a 15-month low.
The beleaguered US dollar also got a shot in the arm from the strong July employment report, which showed the world's largest economy adding north of 200,000 new positions for the second straight month.
Across the Atlantic, European equities also pushed higher amid unequivocal signs of American economic strength.
In New York, the Dow rose 0.3 percent, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq each gained 0.2 percent.
But Adam Sarhan, CEO of 50 Park Investments, told AFP the jobs numbers were a "double-edged sword."
"On the one hand, it is good to see the economy growing, jobs coming in," he said. "At the same time, it is a hawkish data point for the Fed."
The strong job creation and slowly rising wages could spur the Fed to raise the cost of borrowing a third time this year to keep a tight rein on inflation.
But a rate increase would boost bank profits, and that fueled banking shares. Goldman Sachs jumped 2.6 percent, and JP Morgan Chase added 1.3 percent, leading the Dow higher.
Meanwhile, the dollar jumped 0.8 percent against a basket of other major currencies, rising off a 15-month low.
As Kenya elections draw near, country reveals an electorate divided by tribe
Residents of Mathare, a slum in Nairobi, prepare for Tuesday's presidential election.
A concrete bridge and a narrow, garbage-filled river divide the slum of Mathare into two parts, a space between ethnic groups and voting blocs that are competing fiercely — and many say dangerously — over Kenya’s presidential elections scheduled for Tuesday.
Here in one of the most economically successful and stable countries in East Africa, Mathare is only a few miles away from Nairobi’s rising skyline. Tech firms have popped up on the city’s periphery. Every week, thousands of tourists pile into sleek safari trucks. This spring, the top U.N. humanitarian official here, Siddharth Chatterjee, called Kenya, “a beacon of hope in a region mired in fragility.”
But with the election approaching, Mathare feels far from stable. On one side of the rutted bridge is a community of ethnic Kikuyus, the tribe of incumbent Uhuru Kenyatta, 55. On the other side are the Luos, the tribe of opposition candidate Raila Odinga, 72.
Most days, those tribes peacefully coexist, as the slum is consumed by honking minibuses and a frenzy of commercial activity, with traffic moving across the bridge in both directions. But as the election approaches, it is a line not to be crossed.
Eight missing in flooded diamond mine
Eight miners are missing after a flood at Russia's largest diamond mine.
Water leaked into an underground shaft on Friday morning when more than 100 workers were inside.
Most have been rescued from Mir mine in eastern Siberia, according to diamond company Alrosa, which runs it.
However, the company said reports that those still missing had been located were not true and the search continues. Divers have reportedly arrived at the scene.
The town of Mirny in Yakutia has declared a state of emergency.
One man was rescued on Saturday morning.
He is in intensive care at a nearby hospital with a bruised lung, but his life is not in danger, Alrosa said.
Chief Executive Sergey Ivanov said every effort was being made to find the other workers.
The company said 142 people had been brought safely back to the surface so far.
Where speaking several languages is a given
Are you the kind of person who points at menus to be understood while you're abroad? If so, you're not alone and you'd fit in well in the UK suggested more than half of UK people do the same, and nearly as many are embarrassed by their lack of language skills.
Some 15% of people even admitted they had spoken English in a foreign accent in a vain attempt to be understood à la footballer Joey Barton a few years back.
But the Brits are in the minority in this regard. It's estimated that 60-75% of people around the world are at least bilingual, and in some places it's the norm to speak three or four languages without blinking an eye.
Trump administration approves sale of attack planes to Nigeria
The Trump administration approves attack planes to be used by the Nigerian military to counter the Boko Haram insurgency and illicit trafficking..View page
Friday, 4 August 2017
US Blackwater guard's murder conviction overturned
A US appeals court has overturned a murder conviction for a former Blackwater security guard over the killing of 14 Iraqi civilians in 2007.
The court ordered a retrial for Nicholas Slatten, saying he should not have been tried alongside three others.View post
US notifies UN of Paris climate deal pullout
he Trump administration has issued its first written notification that the US intends to withdraw from the 2015 Paris climate agreement.
But in the notice to the United Nations the US state department said Washington would remain in the talks process.
President Donald Trump drew international condemnation in June when he first announced the US intention to withdraw.
He said the deal "punished" the US and would cost millions of American jobs.
Friday's announcement is seen as largely symbolic as no nation seeking to leave the pact can officially announce an intention to withdraw until 4 November 2019.
Why the world has gone mad for a towel bra
Bum-enhancing leggings! Light-up phone cases for better selfies! A stick-on bra to "give your girls a lift!"
These are just a few of the products tech-savvy companies have launched into women's social media feeds in recent months, in pursuit of viral marketing campaigns.
Now we have the ta-ta towel, which at first glance is the most ridiculous yet. Variously described as "a bizarre boob hammock" and "the breast accessory you didn't know you needed," it's an absorbent towel for women that only covers their breasts.
It resembles a halter-neck bikini top that wraps around the wearer's neck - but made out of towel fabric.
Israeli PM Netanyahu's son in social media row over dog poo
A son of the Israeli prime minister is facing a public backlash amid an escalating row over his reported failure to pick up his dog's droppings.
Yair Netanyahu, 25, responded with an obscene gesture, a neighbour said on Facebook, after she told him to clear up the waste left in a Jerusalem park.
Mr Netanyahu hit back at critics, leading the son of a former Israeli PM to accuse him of racism and homophobia.
The Netanyahus say Israeli media often unfairly focuses on their family.
The spat began when Talila Amitai posted her account of the exchange with Yair Netanyahu, whom she said raised his middle finger when she asked him to pick up his dog Kaya's poo.
People think Neymar's Paris St-Germain move was motivated by money
Brazil forward Neymar quoted it is "sad" that people think his world record move from Barcelona to Paris St-Germain was motivated by money.
The 25-year-old joined the French club for a fee of 222m euros (£200m) and he will earn 45m euros (£40.7m) a year.
Neymar, who could play in PSG's first league match of the season on Saturday, said his price was "not a burden".
PSG chairman Nasser Al Khelaifi added that Neymar could have earned more money at another club.
China holds drill to shut down
China has carried out an internet drill in order to closing down websites that are consider to be harmful.
State run media said Thursday's exercise was aimed also to force internet data centres to hand over contact details of website owners.
China already operates a strict internet censorship regime.
Analysts say it appears to be tightening controls ahead of an important political meeting later this year.
Beijing also recently began cracking down on VPNs (virtual private networks) which allow internet users to circumvent censorship and surveillance.
Thursday's exercise involved officers from the internet surveillance department at the public security ministry contacting internet data centres and asking them to target websites that host content deemed harmful, state media said.
Secret Service quits Trump Tower
The Secret Service has moved out of Trump Tower in New York City to a street-level trailer in a dispute with the Trump Organization over a lease.
The federal agency which protects US presidents has been renting office space in the Midtown Manhattan skyscraper since 2015.
But its representatives are baulking at the cost and other unspecified rental terms, reports the Washington Post.
The Trump Organization said the agency should look elsewhere.
Since Mr Trump became a front-runner in the presidential race two years ago, the Secret Service has stationed its command post in a unit one floor below his triplex residence.
Bear kills zookeeper at Sweden
A 19-year-old zookeeper was killed by a bear at a wildlife park in central Sweden.
The park said the zookeeper, who has not been named, was cleaning the enclosure ahead of a special activity when The bear was said to have dug its way back into its enclosure, which the zookeeper was cleaning. The park has been closed for the rest of the day.
Thursday, 3 August 2017
Japan's historic Tsukiji fish market catches fire
The 80-year-old Tokyo market is known for its daily tuna auctions, which supply many of the capital's top sushi restaurants.
Smoke could be seen billowing from the market as dozens of fire engines tackled the flames on Thursday.
There are no reports of serious injuries at this stage.
The fire broke out at about 16:50 local time (07:50 GMT), Japanese broadcaster NHK said, in the outer region of the market and close to the surrounding area's narrow streets.
The area is home to many sushi restaurants and shops,Next page
Boeing jet makes plane outline over America on Dreamliner test flight
During the stunt, the 787 Dreamliner will have travelled further than any commercial route in operation around the world.
When it lands in Seattle, it will have travelled 9,755 miles - compared to the 9,021-mile distance between Auckland and Doha.
It will have also been in the air longer than any current route.
The Boeing test flight will have been in the air for 17 hours and 45 minutes compared to 16 hours, 10 minutes between New Zealand to Qatar.Next page
Trump 'pressed Mexico to stop talk of wall payments'
Mr Trump admonished Enrique Pena Nieto for publicly denouncing the wall during a 27 January phone call, transcripts obtained by the Washington Post show.
"You cannot say that to the press," he reportedly told him.
Transcripts of his first call with Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull were also published.
In a rancorous call, President Trump tells him it was the "worst" conversation he had that day, and one withNext page
Russian on-air attack sparks propaganda debate
Violence against opposition-minded journalists is nothing new in Russia, but this time around it was a correspondent working for one of the key pro-Kremlin channels, NTV.
The attack has been widely condemned, but some also noted that, having celebrated the use of military force in Ukraine, Russian TV now found itself on the receiving end - quite literally.Next Page
US-Russia relations are at 'dangerous low'
Mr Trump approved the measure on Wednesday, despite calling it "flawed".
Russia said the new sanctions were tantamount to declaring a "full-scale trade war".
The law aims to punish Russia for its alleged meddling in the 2016 US elections and its actions in Ukraine.
Mr Trump had opposed the bill, which also contains measures against Iran and North Korea, as it constrains his ability to ease the sanctions without the consent of Congress. Next page
US-wide manhunt after Chicago murder
Police are urging Prof Wyndham Lathem, 42, and Andrew Warren, 56, to "do the right thing and turn yourself in".
Arrests warrants were issued after Trenton Cornell-Duranleau, 25, was found dead in Prof Lathem's flat in Chicago on 27 July.
"The victim had several lacerations to the body," the police said.
Wyndham Lathem is a microbiology professor at Northwestern University in Illinois, who specialises in the bacteria that caused the bubonic plague.
Andrew Warren is a senior treasury assistant at Oxford's Somerville College.
The police warned that the suspects were believed to be "armed and dangerous", and were possibly driving a Hyundai sedan.
Mr Cornell-Duranleau, originally from Michigan, worked as a cosmetologist in Chicago.
Racist messages cause anger
Racist graffiti targeting Chinese students has prompted anger after it was found at two locations in an Australian university.
The words "kill Chinese" were inscribed above a swastika in restrooms at the University of Sydney.
The university condemned the graffiti and said "any and all remnants" would be removed.
Last week, racist flyers directed at Chinese students were posted at two universities in Melbourne.
"The University of Sydney is committed to ensuring that our community is a safe, inclusive and supportive one," it said in a statement.
"Any graffiti or posters placed around campus of a racist nature are immediately removed."
Australian nurse jailed for 18 months in Cambodia
Tammy Davis-Charles was arrested in Phnom Penh in November last year, shortly after the Cambodian government had banned commercial surrogacy.
During her trial the 49-year-old denied the charges and said she only provided medical care to the surrogates.
Commercial surrogacy has grown in South East Asia in recent years, prompting some countries to take action.
On Thursday Davis-Charles, who has already spent the past nine months in detention, was found guilty of acting as an intermediary between an adoptive parent and a pregnant woman.
She was also found guilty of fraudulently obtaining documents.
She had said in court she did not recruit the parents and only took care of the mothers to "make sure they were safe".
Two Cambodians said to have worked with her, Samrith Chakriy and Penh Rithy, were also found guilty and jailed over similar charges.
US sanctions are 'trade war' on Russia or what
Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev has said new sanctions imposed by the US are tantamount to declaring a "full-scale trade war" against Moscow.
The law aims to punish Russia for its alleged meddling in the 2016 US elections and its actions in Ukraine
Mr Trump accused Congress of overreach on the legislation.
He said the measures, signed by Donald Trump, demonstrated the complete impotence of the US president, who he said had been humiliated by Congress.
The law aims to punish Russia for its alleged meddling in the 2016 US elections and its actions in Ukraine
Mr Trump accused Congress of overreach on the legislation.
He said the measures, signed by Donald Trump, demonstrated the complete impotence of the US president, who he said had been humiliated by Congress.
In signing the Countering America's Adversaries Through Sanctions Act on Wednesday, he attached a statement calling the measure "deeply flawed".
The legislation limits the amount of money Americans can invest in Russian energy projects, and makes it more difficult for US companies to do business with Russia.
It also imposes sanctions on Iran and North Korea.
DNA clue to origins of early Greek 's
esearchers analysed genetic data from skeletons dating to the Bronze Age, a period marked by the emergence of writing, complex urban planning and magnificent art and architecture.
These ancient Aegean people were mostly descended from farmers who had settled the region thousands of years earlier.
Dr Iosif Lazaridis, from Harvard Medical School in Massachusetts, and colleagues focussed on burials from the Minoan civilization, which flourished on the island of Crete from 2,600 to 1,100 BC, and the Mycenaean culture, which was existed across Greece from 1,600 -1,100 BC.
But they showed signs of genetic - and possibly cultural - contact with people to the north and to the east.
Friday, 19 May 2017
Syria, Russia condemn US-led strike on pro-Assad forces
Coalition fighter jets on Thursday struck a convoy of militiamen advancing inside a protected "deconfliction zone" north-west of the southern town of At Tanf, the military alliance said in a statement.
Syrians' suffering persists after returning to former ISIL-held town
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The US, which is leading an air campaign in Syria targeting groups such as the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS), said the convoy's advance had posed a threat to US and US-backed Syrian rebel forces in the area.
"This brazen attack by the so-called international coalition exposes the falseness of its claims to be fighting terrorism," a Syrian military source told state media on Friday, confirming that the bombing had killed "a number of people" and caused material damage.
Russia, which launched its own air campaign in September 2015 in support of Syria's President Bashar al-Assad, called the strike "a breach of Syrian sovereignty".
"Such actions that were carried out against the Syrian armed forces ... [are] completely unacceptable," Gennady Gatilov, Russia's deputy foreign minister, was quoted as saying by state-run RIA Novosti on Friday.
A member of the US-backed Syrian rebel forces told the Reuters news agency that the convoy comprised Syrian and Iranian-backed militias and was headed towards the Tanf base, where US special forces operate and train Free Syrian Army rebels.
Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR), said at least eight people had been killed in the attack.
"Most of the killed belong to militias loyal to the Syrian regime and are not Syrians," he told the DPA news agency.
SOHR, a UK-based monitor tracking developments in Syria's long-running conflict via a network of contacts on the ground, also said that four military vehicles carrying pro-government forces and their allies were destroyed in the strike.
The fight for a living wage in the UK
Picturehouse workers have been building a campaign to demand staff be paid the living wage |
Brighton, UK - On a grey Saturday in March, about 40 protesters walked out of their jobs at the Duke Cinema in the British seaside resort of Brighton. It felt more like a celebration than an industrial action as the banner-carrying protesters crowded the pavement in front of the cinema.
Workers from London branches of Picturehouse, the chain of which the Duke is a part, travelled to Brighton to join the action, chanting slogans and ferrying coffee to their colleagues on the picket line.
The walkout was a milestone for employees of Britain's major arthouse cinema chain, but this was just the beginning; a tough fight lay ahead.
For the past three years, Picturehouse workers have been building a campaign to demand that staff be paid the living wage.
At £9.75 ($12.63) an hour in London, £8.45 ($10.95) in the rest of the UK, it is an hourly rate that is above the government-fixed minimum wage and calculated to be the minimum amount employees need to live comfortably. It is not a legal requirement, but more than 3,000 employers in the UK have pledged to pay it to their workers.
UK retailers accused of shunning local staff |
The Picturehouse chain, which is owned by multinational corporation Cineworld, isn't one of them.
Nia Hughes, who works for the Ritzy Cinema, in Brixton, south London, is one of the employees who thinks this is unacceptable.
"I don't think any workers should be living under the poverty line," she told Al Jazeera at the Brixton strike, adding that the fact that the chain has expanded and increased its revenue, makes its refusal especially unsettling.
The staff at Picturehouse say the tight budgets imposed by their current wages of £9.05 ($11.72) an hour affect every aspect of their lives.
"You can just about get by on what you're given and that can mean working long hours," says John Karley, a London Picturehouse employee. "It feels precarious, and it's very stressful."
High living costs
High rents and living costs, particularly in London, mean that low wages can have serious implications. The living wage calculation, which is assessed by the Resolution Foundation think-tank, takes into account basic expenditure on food and essentials as well as rent, bills, travel and childcare.
For many workers at Picturehouse cinemas across London, the high cost of rent is what makes it so hard to live on their salaries |
And a growing number of people are having to get by on low wages.
"We've got record levels of people in employment, but the sorts of work people have been moving into are not well-paid jobs," explains Mubin Haq, director of policy at Trust for London, a non-profit group that focuses on reducing poverty and inequality in the capital. "And as well as wages being squeezed you also see costs increasing. So people get this double whammy."
For many workers at Picturehouse cinemas across London, the city's high rents are the toughest squeeze. Statistics from the Mayor of London show that almost all areas in inner London have room rents of more than £130 ($168) a week.
In Brixton, where the Ritzy cinema workers went on strike, the average rent for one room in a shared property is estimated at £686 ($888) a month. On a living wage salary this means that around half an employee's take-home pay would be spent on rent.
This doesn't only affect cinema workers. In February, cleaners employed by universities and hospitals in London went to strike over conditions and wages.
"One of the frustrations for us is people not getting reasonable hours," says Karley, explaining that it’s common for workers to be employed on zero-hours contracts. This means they aren't guaranteed a set number of hours, and could find themselves working fewer, or even no hours.
Since 2008 the number of people in London on part-time or temporary contracts has risen from 25 percent to 29 percent.
Those on strike have also raised the issue of the widening gap between an average worker and top company executives. According to the independent media union BECTU, Cineworld chief executive Mooky Griedinger was paid £1.2 million ($1.5 million) in 2015, the equivalent of £575 ($744) an hour.
Wage disparity has been widening steadily since the 1970s, explains Haq. "We've been told for years that this is about performance-related pay and attracting talent," he says, adding that this argument has been countered by research into low-performing companies with high-earning chief executives.
"But if London really wants to be an attractive place to work it need to keep the wages up, to the living wage at least."
Rising poverty
According to a recent study about 13.5 million people in the UK - or 21 percent of the population - are classified as poor, a category defined as living on 60 percent of the nation's median household income after housing costs are deducted. Yet of this number, 55 percent have at least one member of the household in work.
In Brighton, staff feel that the strike is part of a bigger protest movement that is addressing these problems."[The campaign is] very much part of the bigger picture," says one employee who did not want to be named.
The Ritzy branch of Picture house offers a blueprint for the campaign. |
The Ritzy branch of Picturehouse, which in 2013 became the first cinema chain to strike, offers a blueprint for the campaign that lies ahead.
Hughes has been part of strike action at the Ritzy since the beginning when staff there unionised with BECTU and began a campaign that saw them walk out of work 13 times in the course of a few months.
Eventually the Ritzy staff secured a 26 percent pay rise that brought their salaries to £9.10 ($11.8) - close, but not quite equal to the living wage.
That is still more, however, than the £6-£8 ($7.7-$10.3) an hour that other staff at Cineworld are paid, according to salary and employer review network, Glassdoor.
"I think that it was pretty groundbreaking for modern striking," Hughes says of the first year of the campaign. At the time the campaign attracted significant attention, with a "carnivalesque" atmosphere, branding that riffed on movie tropes, and support from high-profile figures in film and TV.
"We didn't want to just have a picket line with people handing out forms," Hughes says. "We wanted to modernise striking, I guess. We understood that what we were striking for appealed to all workers, and especially those at the lower paid end of the scale."
Now, the momentum of that campaign is spreading. In the past six months, the Picturehouse branch in Hackney, north London, began strike action for the living wage, followed by branches in Crouch End, in central London, and Dulwich. The Brighton walk-out marked the strike's jump from a London-based protest to a nationwide campaign.
For the Picturehouse brand, the attention drummed up by the strike could already be a concern, especially as strikers are now calling for a boycott of the chain until demands are met.
At its Hackney branch, large orange posters advertising the pay rates of workers are the first things customers now see when they walk in.
Christie Grant from Hill & Knowlton Strategies, the PR agency that represents Cineworld, told Al Jazeera: "This is an issue for Picturehouse and its management team and we hope that the dispute will be resolved as quickly as possible."
Christie Grant from Hill & Knowlton Strategies, the PR agency that represents Cineworld, told Al Jazeera: "This is an issue for Picturehouse and its management team and we hope that the dispute will be resolved as quickly as possible."
A representative of Picturehouse declined a request for an interview, but referred Al Jazeera to a statement on the company website stating that the company's pay rates are among the highest in the industry and above the minimum wage, and that increases in pay outstripped inflation rates.
Collective bargaining unit
The Picturehouse website states that staff are paid £8.72 ($11.30) an hour outside London and £9.65 ($12.50) in the capital, based on 7.5 hours worked in an 8-hour shift. Staff point out that when a mandatory half hour break is incorporated this works out at £9.05 ($11.73) an hour.
"We have operated a policy of raising the pay rates of front of house cinema teams and cleaning staff at a different proportion to the rest of the company, in order to slim the differentials between the top and the bottom wages paid," the statement says. "Working together for a profitable business enables us to create more jobs, share more in pay and provide a return to shareholders."
Picturehouse's statement adds that almost all staff are represented by the Forum, a collective-bargaining unit set up by the cinema itself.
But frustrated at a lack of progress in negotiations with the Forum, the strikers have joined BECTU, and want the cinema chain to recognise it. Despite having recognised BECTU representation at the Ritzy in an earlier agreement, Picturehouse is yet to meet this demand.
"I became very disillusioned with how limited the Forum really was," says Karley, who has been working with Picturehouse for 10 years. "You feel there's so many limitations in what you can do ... For the company I think it's very much a way of stopping the staff from having any independent representation."
Iranians head to the polls for presidential vote
Iranians were headed to the polls on Friday for the first presidential election since the landmark 2015 nuclear agreement, in a vote that could have serious implications for the future of the country and its relationship with the West.
President Hassan Rouhani, a moderate, was seeking a second term as he Face off against Ebrahim Raisi, the frontrunner among the conservative set.
The position of president is the second most powerful in Iran after the Supreme Leader, who is commander-in-chief and controls the Guardian Council. The May 19 vote will be the first stage, with a possible runoff vote if none of the candidates wins a simple majority of 50 percent +1 of the votes.
All voting is to be concluded before the start of the holy month of Ramadan.
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