Oktober 22, 2010

Indonesia most dangerous volcano ready to erupt – local authorities


Merapi is one of the most active and dangerous volcanoes in Indonesia and has produced more lava flows than any other volcano in the world.

October 22, 2010 (KATAKAMI / RIA NOVOSTI) --- The Indonesian Center for Volcanology has issued a third-degree warning on the possible eruption of the Merapi volcano in densely populated central Java, local media reported on Friday.

Merapi is one of the most active and dangerous volcanoes in Indonesia and has produced more lava flows than any other volcano in the world. It has been active for 10,000 years and has registered eruptions on average every four years.

"The status of Merapi was raised on September 21 from the second degree "warning" to the third degree "expectation," and all activities in the threatened area around the volcano will be banned for safety reasons," said Surono, the head of the Center for Volcanology.

The official said the volcano's activity had been rapidly increasing, accompanied by tremors and frequent lava spills.

Most eruptions of Merapi involve a collapse of the lava dome creating lava flows which travel 6 to 7 km from the summit.

"According to our calculations, the new eruption could produce lava flows that travel up to 15 miles," Surono said.

Merapi is located about 20 miles north of the city of Yogyakarta, and thousands of people live on the flanks of the volcano, with villages as high as 1,700 m above sea level.

In 1997 and in 2006, thousands of Merapi villagers have been evacuated when it began spewing ash and lava.

The worst eruption in 1930 killed about 1,300 people.


JAKARTA, October 22 (RIA Novosti)

G20 finance ministers meet in South Korea


South Korean Finance Minister Yoon Jeung-hyun (R) shakes hands with U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner during a meeting ahead of the G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors meeting in Gyeongju, southeast of Seoul, October 22, 2010. G20 officials are unlikely to reach an accord rejecting currency devaluations and capping current account balances, an informed source said on Thursday, after U.S. proposals ran into stiff opposition. (GETTY IMAGES / REUTERS/Finance Ministry/Handout )


October 22, 2010 (KATAKAMI / BBC) --- Finance ministers from the G20 leading economies are meeting in Gyeongju, South Korea, ahead of a summit by heads of state and government next month.

Continuing tensions over exchange rates are likely to dominate proceedings.

China is resisting pressure to allow the yuan to appreciate significantly, and many developing countries also fear a currency rise could hit exports.

Low interest rates in wealthy countries have encouraged investors to seek better returns in emerging economies.


Common approach

The G20 is trying to find a co-ordinated path out of the financial crisis.

Perhaps their most immediate challenge now is to agree a common approach to the problems in the currency markets.

All the signs are that the finance ministers will struggle to make significant headway.

Many developing countries are concerned about upward pressure on their currencies, which could make their exports less competitive.

Behind that pressure are very low interest rates in rich countries, which have led investors to seek better returns in emerging economies. That tends to push the currencies higher.

China has resisted this upward pressure on the yuan by buying dollars.


South Korean President Lee Myung-bak (r) talks with World Bank President Robert Zoellick in Korea
There is a widespread desire in the G20 to see China cut back on currency intervention

That exacerbates the problem for other countries that compete with China.

There is a widespread desire in the G20 to see China cut back on the intervention and allow the yuan to rise, expressed most forcefully by US officials.

But China shows no inclination to make much of a move in the near future.

The other factor behind the currency tension - the low interest rates in rich countries - is also unlikely to change soon.

It is a result of their faltering economic recoveries.

Indeed, there are signs that central banks in the US and UK might take further steps to simulate recovery, which could lead to still lower interest rates and even more money flooding into emerging economies, further aggravating the currency tension.

Photostream : Israel marks 15th anniversary of Rabin’s assassination

An Israeli man and his son visit the site where late prime minister Yitzhak Rabin was assassinated in Tel Aviv in 1995 at the hands of a Jewish extremist opposed to peace with the Palestinians as Israel marks the 15th anniversary of the killing on October 20, 2010. (Photo : JACK GUEZ/AFP/Getty Images)
Israeli school children stand next to a memorial marking the site where Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was assassinated in Tel Aviv October 20, 2010. On Wednesday Israel marks the 15th anniversary of Rabin's killing by an ultra-nationalist Jewish assassin. (GETTY IMAGES / REUTERS/Nir Elias )
An Israeli man lights a candle at a memorial site for late prime minister Yitzhak Rabin in Tel Aviv on October 20, 2010 to mark the 15th anniversary of his assassination at the hands of a Jewish extremist opposed to peace with the Palestinians. (Photo : JACK GUEZ/AFP/Getty Images)
Family members of the late Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin stand in front of his grave during a memorial ceremony on Mount Herzl military cemetery in Jerusalem marking the anniversary of his assassination October 20, 2010. Israel marks on Wednesday the 15th anniversary of Rabin's assassination by an ultra-nationalist Jew. (GETTY IMAGES / REUTERS/Alex Kolomoisky/Pool )
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, left, President Shimon Peres, center, and Parliament Speaker Reuven Rivlin attend a memorial ceremony marking the 15th anniversary of late Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin's assassination, at the Mt. Herzl cemetery in Jerusalem, Wednesday, Oct. 20, 2010. Israel on Wednesday marked 15 years since Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was assassinated by an Israeli extremist who opposed his concessions for peace with the Palestinians. (GETTY IMAGES / AP Photo/Alex Kolomoisky, Pool)
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks at a memorial ceremony marking the 15th anniversary of late Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin's assassination, at the Mt. Herzl cemetery in Jerusalem, Wednesday, Oct. 20, 2010. Israel on Wednesday marked 15 years since Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was assassinated by an Israeli extremist who opposed his concessions for peace with the Palestinians. (GETTY IMAGES / AP Photo/Alex Kolomoisky, Pool)

Photostream : Britain’s PM David Cameron and Deputy PM Nick Clegg visits Wellbeck Primary School in Nottingham

Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron waits outside a classroom with Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg during a joint visit to Wellbeck Primary School in Nottingham, in central England, October 21, 2010. (GETTY IMAGES / REUTERS/Christopher Furlong/Pool )
Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron (R) and Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg enter a classroom during a joint visit to Wellbeck Primary School in Nottingham, in central England, October 21, 2010. ( GETTY IMAGES / REUTERS/Christopher Furlong/Pool )
Britain's Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg (L) and Prime Minister David Cameron chat with pupils during a joint visit to Wellbeck Primary School in Nottingham, in central England, October 21, 2010. (GETTY IMAGES / REUTERS/Christopher Furlong/Pool )
Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron chats to pupils during a joint visit to Wellbeck Primary School in Nottingham with Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, in central England, October 21, 2010. (REUTERS/Christopher Furlong/Pool / GETTY IMAGES)
Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg chats to year six pupils during a visit to Welbeck Primary School on October 21, 2010 in Nottingham, England. After yesterdays government spending review Chancellor George Osborne has insisted that cuts are 'fair' amidst claims that the poorest will be hit hardest. (Photo : Christopher Furlong - WPA Pool /Getty Images)

Carter: Hamas eager to renew talks for Shalit’s release

Member of the 'Council of Elders' Delegation former U.S. President Jimmy Carter listens to Palestinian residents (not seen) during a visit to the Elders Delegation in the Arab East Jerusalem neighborhood of Silwan on October 21, 2010 in East Jerusalem. The Elders, an independent council of retired world figures, visited the neighbourhood to speak with Palestinian residents whose homes are facing demolition. (Photo : Ammar Awad - Pool/Getty Images)



October 21,2 010 (KATAKAMI / HAARETZ) — The Elders hold meetings with Hamas officials, discuss stalled negotiations for Shalit’s release and Middle East peace talks. 

Former American President Jimmy Carter said Thursday that Hamas was interested in renewing negotiations for a prisoner swap deal in exchange for captive Israel Defense Forces soldier Gilad Shalit.
“They let us know… they are very eager to proceed,” Carter told reporters in East Jerusalem several days after meeting Hamas officials in Syria.

Top Hamas official Musa Abu Marzuq confirmed Saturday reports recently denied by the Hamas party that the German mediator, Gerhard Conrad, visited the coastal enclave two weeks ago in a bid to resume the frozen negotiations.

“They are very glad that the German negotiator has been back on the scene lately and that Israeli Prime Minister [Benjamin] Netanyahu has made some positive statements about a prisoner exchange,” Carter said, adding that “they maintained that they are very eager to have a swap but they are demanding the release of some prisoners that are not acceptable to the Israeli negotiators.”

The former president, who arrived in Israel with a delegation of former world leaders, The Elders, held meetings with Hamas officials in Syria, during which they discussed the stalled negotiations fro Shalit’s release and Middle East peace talks.

Shalit was kidnapped by Gaza militants in a cross-border raid in 2006 and has been held by Hamas since. Hamas has demanded the release of hundreds of Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli prisons in exchange for Shalit’s freedom.

The negotiations have been stuck in recent months following Conrad’s failure to reach a deal. The previous round of talks broke down due to Israel’s rejection of Hamas’s demands.

The Elders delegation includes, besides Carter, former Irish president Mary Robinson and former UN envoy Lakhdar Brahimi.
During the Elders’ visit to the East Jerusalem neighborhood of Silwan, carter criticized the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and said that East Jerusalem should be the capitol of a Palestinian state.
In the past week the Elders have visited Syria, Ramallah, Gaza, Egypt and Jordan. Carter, however, did not join the Elder’s visit to Gaza on Saturday.

During their visit on Syria on Tuesday, Carter called for Israel to lift completely its blockade on the Gaza Strip. Despite the U.S. and the European Union’s labeling of Hamas as a terrorist organization, The Elders met with exiled Hamas politburo leader Khaled Meshal, as Carter has done during previous regional visits.

Following their talks with Assad and Meshal, The Elders said people in the region have “very low expectations” that the current U.S.-led talks between Israel and the Palestinian Authority, which excluded Hamas, would succeed.

Moscow : Sergei Sobyanin officially sworn into office

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, left, delivers a speech while new Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin listens to during an inauguration ceremony in Moscow, Thursday, Oct. 21, 2010. Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's chief of staff was named Thursday the Russian capital's new mayor in a move that would tighten federal control over Moscow's political scene and business interests. The appointment of Sergei Sobyanin underlined Putin's preeminence in Russian politics and would allow him to directly oversee Moscow's money flows that account for a sizable chunk of the nation's wealth. (Getty Images / AP Photo/Grigory Dukor, Pool)


MOSCOW, October 21 (KATAKAMI / Itar-Tass) — The newly-approved mayor of Moscow, Sergei Sobyanin, has been officially sworn into office.

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev is attending the inauguration ceremony held in the White Hall of the Moscow’s city administration building.

Earlier in the day, the lawmakers from the Moscow City Duma (or legislature) voted to vest Sobyanin, a presidential nominee, with the powers of the Moscow mayor.

Oktober 21, 2010

Photostream : Barack Obama and Bo, the Obama family dog

President Barack Obama throws a ball for Bo, the family dog, in the Rose Garden of the White House, Sept. 9, 2010. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)
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President Barack Obama and Bo, the Obama family dog, walk along the Colonnade of the White House, Sept. 10, 2010. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)
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Bo, the Obama family dog, pauses for a moment in the Rose Garden of the White House (Official White House Photo by Chuck Kennedy)
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Moscow Duma approves Sobyanin on post of Moscow mayor

Sergei Sobyanin

MOSCOW, October 21 (KATAKAMI / Itar-Tass) — Deputies to the Moscow Duma vested Sergei Sobyanin with the powers of Moscow mayor on Thursday.

Thirty two out of 35 members of the Moscow Duma (32 from United Russia and three from the Communist Party) voted for the approval of his candidature; 34 MPs attended the meeting.

Under the law, a minimum of 50 per cent of votes is needed for being approved on the post of mayor, i.e. no less than 18. The MPs voted by secret ballot.

Sobyanin has been vested with the powers of Moscow mayor for a period of five years.

UK Foreign Secretary stands in solidarity with Burmese political prisoner Ko Mya Aye

http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2009/10/24/article-1222669-06BFEC52000005DC-29_468x303.jpg

October 21, 2010 (KATAKAMI / FCO.GOV.UK) — Foreign Secretary William Hague added his support to Amnesty International’s campaign for the release of Burma’s 2,100 political prisoners on 20 October.

The Foreign Secretary chose to highlight the case of Ko Mya Aye, aged 44, who is a leading member of the 88 Generation Students Group, an organisation synonymous with the long struggle for democracy in military-ruled Burma.

Ko Mya Aye is serving his second spell in detention having previously been imprisoned between 1989 and 1996 for taking part in the 1988 uprisings. Following the Saffron Revolution in 2007, Ko Mya Aye was re-arrested and sentenced to 65 years in prison. Reports suggest he has been tortured and is in poor health.

On hearing the details of Ko Mya Aye’s imprisonment, the Foreign Secretary said:

“The continued detention of Ko Mya Aye and of more than 2,100 other political prisoners in Burma is deplorable. I urge the military regime to release all political prisoners immediately and unconditionally, and respect the human rights of Burma’s people.”

Many of these prisoners are held in detention in locations far from their families in harsh conditions. It is not uncommon for some political prisoners to receive draconian sentences as long as 65 years.

Clinton voices support for UN tribunal in Lebanon

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton speaks at the Fifth Annual Gala of the American Task Force on Palestine in Washington, Wednesday, Oct. 20, 2010. (Getty Images / AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

October 21, 2010 BEIRUT (KATAKAMI / AP)  – U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton says Lebanon should not tolerate any attempt to discredit the U.N. tribunal investigating the 2005 assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri.

The State Department said Clinton spoke to Lebanese President Michel Suleiman by phone Wednesday.
Speculation that the tribunal could indict members of Lebanon’s Iranian-backed Hezbollah has fueled a political crisis in the country. Hezbollah contends the tribunal has been poisoned by witnesses who have given false information.

Hariri, Lebanon’s most prominent politician after the 15-year civil war ended in 1990, was killed by a truck bombing.

Israeli settlers building 544 new homes

A Palestinian worker stands on a construction site in the West Bank Jewish settlement of Kiryat Arba, near Hebron, on Wednesday.


October 21, 2010 KARMEI TZUR, West Bank (KATAKAMI / MSNBC.COM / AP ) — Israeli settlers have begun building new homes at an extraordinary pace since the government lifted its moratorium on West Bank housing starts — almost 550 in three weeks, more than four times faster than the last two years.

And many homes are going up in areas that under practically any peace scenario would become part of a Palestinian state, a trend that could doom U.S.-brokered peace talks.

According to an Associated Press count, ground has been broken on 544 new West Bank homes since Sept. 26, when Israel lifted its 10-month freeze on most new settlement building.

The survey, while not comprehensive, marks the most extensive effort yet to quantify the construction. It was based on visits to 16 of the West Bank’s more than 120 settlements as well as phone calls to more than four dozen settlements and interviews with construction workers and mayors.

“This figure is alarming and is another indicator that Israel is not serious about the peace process, which is supposed to be about ending the occupation,” said Ghassan Khatib, spokesman for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’ self-rule government in the West Bank.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has played down the new construction, saying it “has no real effect on the map of a possible (peace) agreement.”

However, the renewed settlement construction has jeopardized peace talks relaunched only last month, with the Palestinians threatening to walk away if the freeze is not extended. And it could make the daunting task of partitioning the land even more difficult.

The building spurt of the past three weeks compares to average annual housing starts of about 2,000 in recent years, including just under 1,900 in 2009 and just over 2,100 in 2008, according to government figures. That is a rate of about 115 in three weeks, making the current pace more than four times faster.
The actual number is likely higher. When officials provided a range, the AP used the lowest figure. And it did not include 133 apartments a contractor said he was building in three settlements, because he did not say how many were already started.

The Israeli settlement watchdog Peace Now estimates there have been more than 600 housing starts and plans to release its own detailed report next week.

Much of the building activity witnessed by the AP involved leveling ground, and some settler leaders argue it is premature to define that as housing starts.

Asked about the AP count, a spokeswoman for the settler group Yesha Council said: “I prefer not to get into the numbers game because it’s misleading.”

About two-thirds of post-freeze work is preliminary and could be halted if the freeze is renewed, said the spokeswoman, Aliza Herbst.

Still, the scale of the construction is likely to harden Palestinian demands that a settlement freeze be reimposed as a condition for proceeding with the talks. Efforts by the United States to coax Israel into another building slowdown have so far failed.

In crisscrossing the West Bank, an AP team saw bulldozers and jackhammers tearing into rocky slopes in a number of locations.

One of the new building sites is in Karmei Tzur, a settlement with about 135 families located on the “Palestinian side” of the planned route of Israel’s West Bank separation barrier, seen by some in Israel as the basis for drawing Israel’s future border.

On Monday, jackhammers pulverized rocks on a barren slope as trucks carted off debris and heavy machinery drilled holes in preparation for pouring foundations. A woman answering the phone at the settlement’s main office said 56 new apartments were being built.

A drive through Kiryat Arba, home to more than 7,000 Israelis, revealed two construction sites, for a total of at least 22 apartments, according to Palestinian laborers. And in the settlement of Revava, bulldozers were seen leveling ground along a slope. A contractor at the site said his company is building 83 apartments there.

In Kiryat Arba, Revava and many other settlements visited by the AP, officials declined comment on construction. In two places, armed guards denied reporters entry.

Other settlement officials were more forthcoming.

Avi Roe, who heads the Binyamin regional council, which represents about one-third of the West Bank settlements, said he is aware of at least 200 housing starts in his area.

Another 344 housing starts were confirmed by AP visits to settlements and interviews with mayors, construction workers and other officials.

Netanyahu imposed the settlement curbs last November in a bid to draw the Palestinians to the negotiating table. Netanyahu, who leads a hard-line coalition dominated by pro-settler parties, has said the slowdown was a one-time gesture.

The Obama administration has been trying to persuade Israel to extend the freeze and is expected to step up the effort after next month’s midterm elections. Washington has floated the idea of a one-time two-month extension, during which Israelis and Palestinians would be asked to reach agreement on the future borders of a Palestinian state.

The Palestinians insist on a freeze for the duration of negotiations, saying two months is unrealistic to reach a border deal.

Nearly 300,000 settlers now live in the West Bank, along with 2.2 million Palestinians. Settlers have covered the territory — captured by Israel in the 1967 Mideast war, along with Gaza and east Jerusalem — with an increasingly intricate web of established communities and nearly 100 unauthorized hilltop outposts.

Despite the recent building spate, settlement leaders complain that approval for the largest construction projects is being held up. The Yediot Ahronot daily reported this week that construction of more than 3,700 apartments awaits the signature of Defense Minister Ehud Barak, who has final say in the West Bank.

“I’m pessimistic about the near future,” said Benny Kashriel, mayor of Maaleh Adumim, a settlement of 33,000 near Jerusalem. He said he hasn’t been able to start new construction since the end of the moratorium.

Medvedev says NATO has no aggressive intentions toward Russia

Dmitry Medvedev at a meeting with participants of the 46th Munich Security Conference in Moscow

October 20, 2010 (KATAKAMI / RIA NOVOSTI) — Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said on Wednesday that the opinion of many of his countrymen that NATO was hostile to Russia was “in many respects a mistake.”

“Relations between Russia and NATO have always been difficult,” Medvedev said at a meeting with participants of the 46th Munich Security Conference in Moscow. “We have a certain historical background.”

He agreed with conference participants that in Russia “there is the sense that NATO is some kind of aggressive element.”

“This is in many respects a mistake,” he went on.

“What is also evident is that Russia is often perceived by parts of the Western world, by ordinary people, as a country where there can be no democracy, whose leadership always adheres to authoritarian principles,” Medvedev said.

The Russian leader cited Russian-Polish relations, which have improved of late after many years of tension, as an example of how historical differences can be overcome.

The Munich conference, set up in 1962, is an international forum gathering politicians, diplomats, military, businessmen, scientists and public figures from over 40 countries. This is the first time that the conference has taken place in Russia.

GORKI, October 20 (RIA Novosti)

Oktober 20, 2010

Boehner Congratulates Archbishops Burke & Wuerl on Cardinal Appointments by Pope Benedict XVI

John Boehner

October 20, 2010. Washington (KATAKAMI / GOP LEADER.GOV) — House Republican Leader John Boehner (R-OH) today offered his congratulations to U.S. Archbishop Raymond L. Burke, prefect of the Apostolic Signature, and U.S. Archbishop Donald W. Wuerl of Washington, after Pope Benedict XVI announced their appointments to the College of Cardinals:

“In Archbishops Burke and Wuerl, Pope Benedict has selected men of God and loyal servants of the faithful to help lead our church around the world.  I am confident that these men of generous spirits and immense gifts will strengthen the bonds of ecumenical friendship in America, continuing the work of so many to protect life and lift up the hearts of the lonely, discouraged, and oppressed.  I congratulate them both.”

Pope says Church’s mission a duty of every Catholic

Pope Benedict XVI


Vatican City, Oct 20, 2010  (CNA/EWTN News).- Pope Benedict XVI said that World Mission Sunday is an opportunity for Catholics to to reflect on the Church’s mission to bring Christ’s message and love to “every people, culture, race and nationality.”

Authentic Christian mission recognizes that God’s love cross all geographical borders and boundaries of culture, the Pope said in a message prepared for the annual day of prayer and promotion of the Church’s missionary activity, to be celebrated this year on Oct. 24.

“The Father calls us to be sons and daughters, loved in the beloved Son, and to recognize that we are all brothers and sisters in (Christ), who is the gift of salvation for humanity,” the Pope reflected.
The Pope said that while “discord and sin” divide humanity, members of the Church are called to bear witness by the example of their lives and to promote a “new humanism founded on the Gospel of Jesus.” The demonstration of authentic love, he said, gives credibility to the words of the Gospel, both in its historic centers and in remote lands.

This proclamation of God’s love in Christ, he emphasized, is “a duty of the whole Church” which is “by her very nature missionary.” While some individuals experience a particular call to proclaim this message as clergy, catechists, or lay missionaries, others participate in the universal mission to “offer signs of hope and to become universal brethren.” In all circumstances, he said, “the Gospel is a leaven of freedom and progress” and “a source of brotherhood.”

Pope Benedict stressed that the task of foreign missions “cannot be fulfilled without a … community and pastoral conversion” involving “all diocesan and parish communities.” The local church’s celebration of the Eucharist, he explained, both calls and enables its members “to promote the proclamation of the Gospel in the heart of … every people, culture, race and nationality in every place.”

Pope Benedict expressed special gratitude of “missionaries who bear witness to the coming of the Kingdom of God in the most remote and challenging places, often with their lives.” Describing them as the “vanguard of the Gospel’s proclamation,” he urged all members of the Church to support the work of the Pontifical Missionary Societies through prayer and the gift of their resources.

Pope names 24 new cardinals

Pope Benedict XVI

October 20, 2010 VATICAN CITY (KATAKAMI / MSNBC.COM / AP) — Pope Benedict XVI has named 24 new cardinals, including a large number of Italians, two Americans and prelates for key posts in Europe, Latin America, Asia and Africa.

The new cardinals include Archbishop Donald Wuerl of Washington, D.C., and Archbishop Raymond Burke, an American who leads a Vatican court and has been sharply critical of the Democratic Party in the United States for its support of abortion rights.

The pope made the announcement Wednesday, putting his mark on the body that will elect his successor.
Other key posts were Warsaw, Munich, Kinshasa, Quito, Lusaka, Zambia, and Sri Lanka.