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Latest World News, World News, Current Affairs, Daily Current Affairs

Posted: 19 Apr 2019 03:47 AM PDT

Latest World News, World News, Current Affairs, Daily Current Affairs


Tweets For Today

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 10:30 PM PDT











Mali's Prime Minister And Government Resign Over The Ogossagou Massacre

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 09:29 PM PDT

Soumeylou Boubeye Maiga, Prime Minister of the Republic of Mali (L) speaks to media next to Jean-Yves Le Drian, Minister for Europe and Foreign Affairs of France at U.N. headquarters in New York, U.S., March 29, 2019. REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz

Al Jazeera: Mali's PM Maiga, government resign over Ogossagou massacre

Protesters demanded action after massacre of almost 160 Fulani herders by an ethnic vigilante group four weeks ago.

Mali's prime minister and his government has resigned four weeks after a massacre of almost 160 Fulani herders by an ethnic vigilante group shocked the nation.

President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita accepted the resignation on Thursday without giving a reason for the departure of Prime Minister Soumeylou Boubeye Maiga.

"A prime minister will be named very soon and a new government will be put in place after consultations with all political forces" from both the ruling and opposition sides, the statement from Keita's office said.

Read more ....

Update #1: Mali government resigns after massacre, insecurity -- Reuters
Update #2: Mali prime minister resigns after Ogossagou massacre -- DW

WNU Editor: And the crisis in Mali continues to get worse.

Picture Of The Day

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 09:30 PM PDT

Troitsky Monastery, shown on fire in St. Petersburg, Russia. © Sputnik / Alexey Danichev

WNU Editor: The above picture came from this photo-gallery .... Paradise and Inferno: Holy Places All Over the World That Were Tested by Fire (Sputnik).

Commentaries And Analysis On The Mueller Report

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 09:00 PM PDT



Glenn Greenwald, The Intercept: Robert Mueller Did Not Merely Reject the Trump-Russia Conspiracy Theories. He Obliterated Them.

The two-pronged conspiracy theory that has dominated U.S. political discourse for almost three years – that (1) Trump, his family and his campaign conspired or coordinated with Russia to interfere in the 2016 election, and (2) Trump is beholden to Russian President Vladimir Putin — was not merely rejected today by the final report of Special Counsel Robert Mueller. It was obliterated: in an undeniable and definitive manner.

The key fact is this: Mueller – contrary to weeks of false media claims – did not merely issue a narrow, cramped, legalistic finding that there was insufficient evidence to indict Trump associates for conspiring with Russia and then proving their guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. That would have been devastating enough to those who spent the last two years or more misleading people to believe that conspiracy convictions of Trump's closest aides and family members were inevitable. But his mandate was much broader than that: to state what did or did not happen.

Read more ....

Commentaries And Analysis On The Mueller Report

Factbox: Long-awaited Mueller report is finally out. Now what? -- Richard Cowan, Reuters
Excerpts and Analysis From the Mueller Report -- New York Times
How Mueller's decision on obstruction helped save Trump -- Jan Wolfe and Noeleen Walder, Reuters
Mueller whacks Trump with evidence of obstruction -- Josh Gerstein and Darren Samuelsohn, Politico
Mueller report leaves Democrats in a quandary -- James Oliphant, Reuters
Excerpts and Analysis From the Mueller Report -- The New York Times
Mueller report sparks new DC war over Russia probe: Subpoenas, payback and more -- Gregg Re, FOX News
Mueller's Damning Report -- The New York Times
Mueller report: The winners and losers -- Niall Stanage, The Hill
Mueller completely dropped the ball with obstruction punt -- Andrew C. McCarthy, NYPost
We don't need the Mueller report -- Oliver Sallet, DW
Mueller's 'road map' for impeachment -- Stephen Dinan, The Washington Times
Obstruction of Justice Usually Happens Behind Closed Doors. But Trump's Actions Were Public -- Abby Vesoulis, Time
Mueller report: Attorney General Barr jumped the gun in clearing Trump of obstruction -- Chris Truax, USA Today
Analysis: An annotated guide to the redacted Mueller report -- Politico
POLITICO Playbook PM: The report is out: Trump tried to remove Mueller -- Politico
Heavily redacted Mueller report leaves major questions unanswered -- Alexander Bolton, The Hill
Mueller's report would have signaled the end for anyone other than Trump -- Jon Swaine, The Guardian
The lesson of Mueller: An innocent man's defense can look like a guilty man's obstruction -- John Solomon, The Hill

Democrats React To The Release Of The Mueller Report

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 08:00 PM PDT



USA Today: 'A damning document': Democrats call Mueller report's details disturbing, vow hearings

WASHINGTON – Democrats reacted with alarm to fresh details in Robert Mueller's report on Russian interference in the 2016 election, vowing to hold hearings and look further into whether President Donald Trump improperly tried to impede the special counsel's investigation.

Intelligence Committee member Rep. Jim Himes, D-Ct., said the section of the report focused on obstruction of justice "reads like The Godfather."

"The array of sleazy behavior, of lies, and ordering subordinates to do potentially illegal things is really pretty grim," he told USA TODAY.

"Once you start reading the report, it's very clear that Mueller is jumping up and down and saying 'Congress do what I can't do,'" Rep. Jackie Speier, D-Calif., another member of the Intelligence Committee, told USA TODAY.

Read more ....

Democrats React To The Release Of The Mueller Report

House Democrat Nadler sees evidence of obstruction in Mueller report -- Reuters
House Democratic leader Hoyer: impeachment 'not worthwhile': CNN -- Reuters
Dems run from impeachment post-Mueller -- Politico
House Dem: Mueller report offers 'ample evidence' for impeachment -- The Hill
Ocasio-Cortez says she will sign Trump impeachment resolution -- The Hill
Senior House Democrat: Mueller report the beginning, not the end -- DW
Dem House chairs: Mueller report 'does not exonerate the president' -- The Hill
House Democrat Nadler to subpoena for unredacted Mueller report -- Al Jazeera
How 2020 Democrats Are Reacting to the Release of the Mueller Report -- Adam K. Raymond, NYMag
Mueller report has Democrats promising more investigations -- Financial Times
Dems accuse Barr of misleading Congress and public -- Politico
Top Dems: Barr 'deliberately distorted' portions of Mueller report -- The Hill
John Podesta: The Mueller report shows an attack on our democracy. It's time to act. -- The Washington Post
Clintonworld stews over Mueller report -- Politico

President Trump And Republicans React To The Release Of The Mueller Report

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 07:00 PM PDT



Daily Mail: Furious Trump rages that he could have FIRED 'everyone' and ended the 'witch hunt' as Mueller report reveals he feared 'the end of my presidency' and says Congress could STILL find POTUS guilty of obstruction despite AG Barr clearing him

* Attorney General William Barr published a redacted version of the 448-page report by Special Counsel Robert Mueller on Thursday
* It is divided into two volumes: 207 pages on collusion, and 241 on obstruction
* The report crucially says that the special counsel did not clear President Trump
* It paints a picture of an angry Trump who went outside official channels, voicing rage at the Russia investigation from the beginning of his presidency
* When Mueller was appointed, he ranted: 'I'm f***ed. This is the end of my presidency'
* Barr used a press conference to announce the findings of the report before it had been seen by Congress or the public
* Mueller's report cites Justice Department guidelines prohibiting prosecution of a sitting precedent
* He said the weight of evidence in the Mueller report shows Trump did not obstruct justice and that the president was 'understandably frustrated'
* A triumphant Trump tweeted a Game of Thrones meme saying 'Game Over'
* Speaking at the White House, the president said: 'I'm having a good day'
* Mueller assembled the document over a two-year investigation
* His team conducted 500 interviews, though Trump would only submit to an interview in writing while consulting with lawyers
* Mueller obtained eight convictions so far, including of Trump's campaign chair Paul Manafort on corruption charges

Robert Mueller's redacted special counsel report into Donald Trump and Russian election interference was finally published Thursday saying Congress could find Trump guilty of obstructing justice – an hour after attorney general Bill Barr said he had cleared the president personally of the crime.

The 448-page document was littered with redactions but crucially says that the special counsel did not clear Trump, saying: 'If we had confidence after a thorough investigation of the facts that the President clearly did not commit obstruction of justice, we would state so.

Read more ....

President Trump And Republicans React To The Release Of The Mueller Report

White House fightback begins: Trump denies reacting to Russia probe by saying 'this is the end of my presidency' - and now confidently declares that his re-election is GUARANTEED -- Daily Mail
Trump: 'I could have fired everyone' on Mueller team if I wanted to -- The Hill
Trump: I could have shut it all down -- Politico
US President Donald Trump claims 'Game Over' as Mueller report released -- ABC News Online
Trump claims 'game over' on Mueller report as Democrats say game on -- The Guardian
Trump dodges media's questions after Mueller report release -- The Hill
'Game over': Republicans rejoice after Mueller concludes -- Politico

Mueller Report Release -- News Roundup

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 06:16 PM PDT







Reuters: In unflattering detail, Mueller report reveals Trump actions to impede inquiry

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Special Counsel Robert Mueller's report on his inquiry into Russia's role in the 2016 U.S. election described in extensive and sometimes unflattering detail how President Donald Trump tried to impede the probe, raising questions about whether he committed the crime of obstruction of justice.

The release of the 448-page report on Thursday after a 22-month investigation marked a milestone in Trump's tumultuous presidency and inflamed partisan passions ahead of his 2020 re-election bid.

Democrats said the report contained disturbing evidence of wrongdoing by Trump that could fuel congressional investigations, but there was no immediate indication they would try to remove him from office through impeachment.

Read more ....

Mueller Report Release -- News Roundup

Mueller Reports -- US Justice Department
Full text of Mueller's questions and Trump's answers -- AP

The Latest: Report links Senate intel chair to White House -- AP
Mueller Report Released: Live Reporting -- BBC
The Mueller report is out (Live Updates) -- CNN
Mueller report: Democrats round on Barr over 'misleading' Trump exoneration – live -- The Guardian
Mueller finds no conspiracy, but extensive Trump-Russia contacts -- Reuters

'No collusion' says Barr ahead of Mueller report release -- France 24
Mueller: Russia sought to help Trump win but did not collude with campaign -- The Hill
Mueller report reveals Trump tried to seize control of Russia probe -- France 24
MUELLER REPORT: ELEVEN times special counsel says Trump's actions could have been obstruction of justice and how they were a part of 'pattern of conduct' by the president -- Daily Mail
Trump took steps to fire Mueller, stop probe after campaign welcomed Russian dirt on Clinton, Mueller report says -- USA Today
Five takeaways from Mueller's report -- The Hill
Key quotes from U.S. Special Counsel Mueller's report -- Reuters
Mueller report finds 'no collusion by any American,' says William Barr -- DW
Read key excerpts from Robert Mueller's report -- UPI
The Mueller report has just been made public. Here's some of what it says -- ABC News Online
Redacted Mueller report released by US Justice Department -- The Al Jazeera
US: What does the redacted Mueller report say? -- Al Jazeera
Mueller report: Eight things we only just learned -- BBC
What Mueller asked Trump, what he said in reply - and the string of written questions he simply ignored including: did you ask anyone to set up a back channel to Moscow? -- Daily Mail
Tapping Ivanka's fashion friends, 3am emails to Hope Hicks and the infamous Trump Tower meeting with Don. Jr: The relentless ways Russia tried to penetrate the Trump campaign and then the White House -- The Daily Mail
Mueller report shows how Trump aides sought to protect him and themselves -- The Hill
Mueller report recounts 10 'episodes' involving Trump and questions of obstruction -- CNBC
'I'm f---ed': Trump called Mueller appointment 'the end of my presidency' -- Politico
Mueller report found Trump directed White House lawyer to 'do crazy s---" -- NBC
Mueller says Congress has authority to conduct obstruction probes -- The Hill
The 7 most interesting nuggets from the Mueller report -- The Hill
Mueller on obstruction: Evidence prevents 'conclusively determining no criminal conduct occurred' -- The Hill
Attorney General William Barr defends Trump's actions, handling of Mueller report ahead of its release -- ABC News
Barr to allow some lawmakers to review less-redacted Mueller report as soon as next week -- The Hill
Mueller reveals how it all began, with Australian foreign minister warning the FBI about a Trump campaign aide's wine-fueled boast that Russia was going to help the candidate with stolen Hillary emails -- Daily Mail
Mueller reveals Trump's staff, associates sometimes ignored him -- Reuters
MUELLER REPORT - It really ISN'T over for Trump: The President is STILL facing a string of investigations, including 14 referrals made by the special counsel -- Daily Mail
What's NOT in the report: How page after page is covered with redactions covering WikiLeaks, Manafort and Roger Stone and there are TWELVE mystery referrals to prosecutors for secret crimes -- The Daily Mail
FIFTEEN shocking revelations from the Mueller report, including Hope Hicks hanging up on Putin, Seth Rich getting exonerated and Manafort's lost millions and Don. Jr's dealings with Wikileaks -- Daily Mail

Editor's Note

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 03:00 PM PDT

Must see my accountant tonight to sign off on my taxes. Blogging will return at 21:00 EST with a news roundup on the release of the Mueller report.

Is There A Liberal Political Institutional Bias At The CIA And Other Intel Agencies?

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 02:00 PM PDT

Bill Gertz, Washington Free Beacon: U.S. Intelligence Institutionally Politicized Toward Democrats

Former CIA analyst says agencies dominated by liberals.

The CIA and other U.S. intelligence agencies have become bastions of political liberals and the pro-Democratic Party views of intelligence personnel have increased under President Donald Trump, according to a journal article by a former CIA analyst.

John Gentry, who spent 12 years as a CIA analyst, criticized former senior intelligence leaders, including CIA Director John Brenan, Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, and former deputy CIA director Michael Morell, along with former analyst Paul Pillar, for breaking decades-long prohibitions of publicly airing their liberal political views in attacking Trump.

Read more ....

WNU Editor: How times change. I remember when President Obama was elected, in his first year the narrative was that the intel community was too conservative. As to what is my take on today's intel community. In theory, intelligence agencies are supposed to be staffed with non-partisan/apolitical civil servants, and the military agencies with military officers. In reality they are not. They have their own prejudices and biases, and group think is far more common than what it should be. Intelligence entities are also reflections of the political environment that they exist in, and their operations and management will reflect that. But we are also living in a unique time, and the culture on how former senior intel officials must keep their opinions to themselves is no longer there. When former CIA Director Brennan accuses President Trump of working for Russia .... in essence calling him a traitor .... you have to wonder how many who are currently in the intel community also feel that way, and what are they doing about it.

'American Taliban' John Walker Lindh To Be Released From Prison Next Month

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 01:12 PM PDT

Daily Mail: American Taliban fighter John Walker Lindh gets early release from 20-year jail sentence next month but is banned from using internet or travelling overseas

* John Walker Lindh, 38, was convicted of supporting the Taliban and sentenced to 20 years in prison in 2002
* He is scheduled to be released from federal prison in Indiana on May 23 after 17 years behind bars
* Lindh will not be allowed to own an internet-capable device without permission from his probation officer
* Lindh also will not be permitted to watch any video content related to terrorism, or communicate online in any language other than English
* He was among the group of fighters captured by US forces in November 2001
* In 2016 the National Counterterrorism Center found that Lindh was continuing to 'advocate for global jihad' and 'write and translate violent extremist texts'
* And in 2015 Lindh told a television news producer 'that he would continue to spread violent extremist Islam upon his release'

American Taliban fighter John Walker Lindh will be released from prison next month after agreeing to strict restrictions on his internet use, communications and travel.

Lindh, 38, will walk out of federal prison in Terre Haute, Indiana, a free man on May 23 after spending 17 years behind bars.

Lindh was among a group of Taliban fighters who were captured by US forces in November 2001, just months after the September 11 attacks and the beginning of the war in Afghanistan.

Read more ....

Update #1: 'American Taliban' Lindh To Be Released From Prison Next Month (RFE)
Update #2: 'American Taliban' John Walker Lindh to be released from prison next month (NBC)

WNU Editor: He is going to be the first of many as their prison sentences run out. Sighh .... I prefer to remember Johnny Micheal Spann .... Remembering Johnny Micheal Spann (Legal Insurrection).

Ukraine Presidential Candidate Volodymyr Zelenskiy Is Poised To Win On April 21

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 12:32 PM PDT



RFE: Fresh Poll Shows Zelenskiy Maintains Large Lead Over Poroshenko In Ukraine Vote

KYIV – A fresh opinion poll shows Volodymyr Zelenskiy, a comedic actor with no political experience, far ahead of incumbent Petro Poroshenko just days before Ukraine's presidential runoff.

The poll issued on April 18 by the research group Reiting showed Zelenskiy with 57.9 percent of the vote and Poroshenko at 21.7 percent. Reiting polled 3,000 voters in all regions, except annexed Crimea, from April 12-16.

A previous poll by Reiting from April 5-10 gave Zelenskiy 61 percent while Poroshenko received 24 percent.

Zelenskiy, who stars on a TV comedy series about a teacher who becomes president after denouncing corruption, won nearly twice as many votes as Poroshenko in the first round of voting on March 31.

Read more ....

WNU Editor: He is definitely heading for a landslide.

More News On Ukraine Presidential Candidate Volodymyr Zelenskiy Poised To Win On April 21

Poll: 73 percent to vote for Zelenskiy, 27 percent for Poroshenko -- Kyiv Post
Comedian Zelenskiy keeps Ukraine presidential poll lead -- Reuters
Ukraine elections: actor and comedian poised to win crushing victory -- The Guardian
Ukraine poised to step into the unknown with election runoff -- Euronews


Are Russia And China Searching For Japan's Downed F-35?

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 12:17 PM PDT


FOX News: Speculations that Russians or Chinese are after downed F-35 technology are unfounded, officials say

U.S. and Japanese officials say that speculations that foreign adversaries are after the wreckage of a downed F-35A stealth fighter in Asia are so far unfounded.

The Japanese F-35 stealth fighter jet disappeared from radar over the Pacific Ocean earlier this month during a night training flight.

Some wreckage of the aircraft was found last week. Maj. Akinori Hosomi, the pilot, is missing and the U.S. is assisting in the search.

Read more ....

WNU Editor: If Russian or Chinese naval ships were showing up at or near the F-35 crash site, we would know about it very quickly.

My Take On The Mueller Report

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 11:02 AM PDT


WNU Editor: Main points from the Mueller Commission report and Attorney General Barr's remarks this morning.

* Russia tried to interfere in the 2016 election, but no Americans were involved, and there was no collusion.

* No conspiracy to collude.

* No Presidential executive privilege was used, and the President took no act that deprived the special counsel of the documents and witnesses necessary to complete his investigation

* Attorney General Barr and Deputy General Rosenstein are convinced that with the evidence presented, obstruction was not committed.

The media is ignoring the report's conclusion that there was no Trump campaign collusion with Russia, and are instead pushing the narrative that President Trump obstructed the Special Counsel .... Attorney General William Barr says Mueller report outlines 10 instances of potential obstruction of justice by Trump (Business Insider). But from what I have read so far in this report, I am not impressed with those who are pushing the case for obstruction.

- How can you push an obstruction case when no crime was committed?
- How can you push an obstruction case when no one was fired during the tenure of the Mueller report?
- How can you push an obstruction case when in a fit of anger he wanted people fired, but were never fired?
- How can you push an obstruction case when no Presidential executive privilege was used?
- How can you push an obstruction case when President Trump took no act that deprived the special counsel of the documents and witnesses necessary to complete his investigation?
- How can you push an obstruction case when someone who believes he is innocent lashes out publicly that a witch-hunt is being instigated against him?

I read very fast, and from what I have read so far this report reads more like a political document that was deliberately made to keep the discussion and narrative of the past two years to continue. And with a lot of innuendo being posted in this report, I can see why. Case in point, CNN and CTV News in Canada are pushing the narrative that President Trump told Attorney General Sessions that with the appointment of Special Counsel Mueller he is now f____ed. The context of this CNN and CTV News story is false. What President Trump said to everyone was basically the following .... that the appointment of Special Counsels have a history of paralyzing a White House and its agenda, and it would also create the narrative that he won the election due to the Russians when he knows that he won it on his own.

The amount of fake news that I am seeing on TV while I am reading the report is quite a sight to see. And I can understand why. They are melting down right now because they bought into the Russian collusion story, and this report is telling them the opposite. And while the lead story should be no collusion and no conspiracy to collude, it will not be.

In conclusion. The one sentence that caught my eye was the report's assertion that they have no evidence to exonerate President Trump for obstruction (this is the last paragraph of Part II, page 182, of the report). Is this the state of U.S. Justice today? That the person who is being accused must provide the evidence to prove that he is innocent? According to the Mueller Report and many in the media today this is the case, and as far as they are concerned, President Trump must provide the evidence to be exonerated. Sighhhh .... this is how Soviet Justice operated, and how the justice system of many authoritarian governments function today. Is the U.S. now abandoning this principle? Apparently yes.

Update #1: The parts that were redacted did not surprise me. Grand jury testimonies. ongoing trials,  and methods used to gather information need to be kept confidential.

Update #2: A full news roundup followed by commentaries and opinions will be posted later this evening.

Special Counsel Robert Mueller's Report Has Been Released With Redactions

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 09:18 AM PDT

Attorney General William Barr preparing to speak at Thursday's news conference to discuss the special counsel Robert Mueller's report on Russian interference in the 2016 US presidential race. Reuters

WNU Editor: I am reading the report right now. The complete report is here .... Report on the Investigation into Russian Interference in the 2016 Election (Robert Mueller Special Counsel).

World News Briefs -- April 18, 2019

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 09:02 AM PDT



The Hill: Barr releases redacted Mueller report

Attorney General William Barr on Thursday released a redacted version of special counsel Robert Mueller's report on his sprawling investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election.

The release of the report comes just over three weeks after Barr laid out what he described as Mueller's core findings in a four-page letter that effectively cleared President Trump of allegations of criminal coordination between his campaign and Moscow, and just over an hour after Barr held a press conference reiterating there was no "collusion."

Read more ....

MIDDLE EAST

Army shelling kills 10 in Syria's Idlib: monitor.

Iraqi prime minister makes first visit to Saudi Arabia.

HRW: Torture persists in Iraq jail.

UN expresses 'grave concern' that Yemen ceasefire agreements not yet implemented, urges immediate action.

Saudi, UAE send relief aid to flood-stricken Iran.

Iranian president calls on Mideast nations to repel U.S.. Iran's Hassan Rouhani urges regional powers to 'unite against US'.

Iran's Rouhani calls on Mideast states to 'drive back Zionism'.

ASIA

Kim Jong-un to visit Russia to meet Putin for first time .

Interview: Ex-Afghan warlord says 'no doubt' Pakistan 'supports' Taliban.

Indians vote in second phase of parliamentary elections.

Defiant Rakhine rebels say 'no peace by prayer' in battle with Myanmar army.

US-China tensions may continue after trade war, says Singapore's finance minister.

Pakistan: Gunmen kill 14 on passenger bus.

6.1-magnitude earthquake shakes Taiwan.

AFRICA

Libya death toll rises to 205 as Tripoli fighting continues: WHO.

UN condemns latest attack on Libya's Tripoli, mulls ceasefire.

UN envoy to Libya warns conflict could spark 'conflagration'.

Omar al-Bashir's brothers arrested as Sudan protests continue. Opposition in South Sudan urges delay to unity government.

Sudan demonstrators keep up pressure week after al-Bashir removed.

Benin's ex-president calls for halt of vote.

South Africa interfered in Rwandan spy chief's murder case, inquest told.

Ethiopia's first female defence minister replaced.

EUROPE

Notre-Dame fire: Temporary wooden cathedral proposed.

France honors firefighters who battled Notre Dame fire.

European Parliament calls for more EU border guards.

Center-right projected to remain biggest group in EU Parliament.

Ukraine elections: actor and comedian poised to win crushing victory.

Brunei accused of 'abusive lobbying' ahead of EU vote on death penalties for gays and adultery.

Greek parliament demands Berlin pays WWII reparations.

Facebook bans far-right groups including BNP, EDL and Britain First.

AMERICAS

Trump Russia investigation: Attorney General Barr backs Trump.

Trump took no action to thwart Mueller probe: attorney general.

Mueller report recounts 10 'episodes' involving Trump and questions of obstruction.

Bolton warns Venezuela: Monroe Doctrine 'alive and well'.

Trump administration announces measures against Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua.

Nicaragua protests: First anniversary march halted.

Mexico says will restrict migrants to southern states.

TERRORISM/THE LONG WAR

9,000 ISIS fighters and 60,000 family members held in Syria - report.

Leaked terrorists' letters show Daesh boss Baghdadi 'still pulls rank' – Report.

Al Qaeda declares solidarity with Turkistan Islamic Party in the face of Chinese oppression.

ECONOMY/FINANCE/BUSINESS

Two more rounds of talks set for May amid hope the US-China trade war is ending.

Samsung's folding phone breaks for reviewers.

Amazon to shut down China website in July.

Military And Intelligence News Briefs -- April 18, 2019

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 06:48 AM PDT

Missile maintainers with a Minuteman III at F.E. Warren AFB, Wyo. (U.S. Air Force photo)

FAS: Pentagon Blocks Declassification of 2018 Nuclear Stockpile

For the first time in years, the Department of Defense has denied a request to declassify the current size of the U.S. nuclear weapons stockpile.

"After careful consideration. . . it was determined that the requested information cannot be declassified at this time," wrote Andrew P. Weston-Dawkes of the Department of Energy in a letter conveying the DoD decision not to disclose the number of warheads in the U.S. arsenal at the end of Fiscal Year 2018 or the number that had been dismantled.

Read more ....

Military And Intelligence News Briefs -- April 18, 2019

US Halts Recent Practice of Disclosing Nuclear Weapon Total -- Military.com/AP

US Inexplicably Halts Disclosure of Info on Size of Nuclear Arsenal -- Sputnik

New Nuclear Missiles' Cost Estimate Changes Again -- Defense One

The cost of new intercontinental ballistic missiles is going up. Here's why the Air Force isn't concerned. -- Defense News

Air Force Planning Shorter, More Frequent Strategic Bomber Rotations -- Military.com

US Ready to Disclose Top-Secret F-35 Info to Japan – Report -- Sputnik

Japan's F-35As had 7 emergency landings before crash -- UPI

F-35 Parts Suppliers Moved to Long-Term Contracts to Reduce Costs - Producer -- Sputnik

New study shows grim outlook for future of Air Force pilot shortage -- Federal News Network

These are the five areas where the Air Force wants to see an explosion of technology -- Defense News

Report to Congress on Columbia-class Nuclear Ballistic Missile Submarine Program -- USNI News

Pentagon watchdog to audit $128B Columbia-class submarine: report -- The Hill

New Multi-Year War Experiment Will Prepare Marines to Fight in Crowded Cities -- Military.com

GenDyn awarded $125M for MK80, BLU-109 bomb components -- UPI

What will be the fate of the Chinook? Even the Army isn't sure -- Defense News

Esper: The ultimate size of the Army is a moving target -- Army Times

Number of Female Generals, Admirals Has Doubled Since 2000, Report Finds -- Military.com

Next CNO Wants to See More Women Getting Promoted to Captain, Admiral -- Military.com

The trials of Patrick Shanahan -- Foreign Policy

DARPA's director on how the Pentagon can transition innovation -- C4ISRNet

Report to Congress on U.S. Military Electronic Warfare Research and Development -- USNI News

US officials clash over Trump Iran arms control document: report -- The Hill

Diego Garcia: U.S. military's "unsinkable carrier" springs a leak -- People's World

Europe missile defense command upgraded as Army announces leadership moves -- Stars and Stripes

Why another US destroyer is prowling the Black Sea -- Mark D. Faram, Navy Times

Senior Turkish Official Discusses Dispute With Trump Administration Over Military Deal -- NPR

Sweden Launches New 'Top Secret' Spy Ship in the Baltic Sea -- Sputnik

MiGs and Rafales to Slug It Out in Largest Indo-French Naval Exercise - Report -- Sputnik

U.K. Developing its Own Extra Large UUV for Royal Navy -- USNI News

Russia's Aerospace Force forewarns of looming satellite collisions in space -- TASS

Russia flexes its heavy-lift helo muscles with new Mi-26 test flights -- Defense News

Indian purchasing agency OKs tank buy, but negotiations with Russia stand in the way -- Defense News

Iraqi Air Force Flies First Ever F-16 Combat Sortie Alongside Coalition Aircraft -- Sputnik

Satellite Photos Show Chinese Radar in Syria Restored After IAF Attack - Reports -- Sputnik

Attorney General Barr's News Conference On Redacted Mueller Report (Live Coverage At 9:30 EST)

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 05:51 AM PDT








Afghan - Taliban Peace Talks Postponed

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 05:47 AM PDT


Reuters: Peace talks postponed as Taliban objects to size of Afghan delegation

KABUL (Reuters) - A meeting between the Taliban and Afghan politicians and civil society aimed at ending more than 17 years of war in Afghanistan has been postponed, officials and diplomats said on Thursday, citing Taliban objections to the size of the Afghan delegation.

The talks were set to begin on Friday in Doha, but a senior government official in Kabul said "the gathering has been called off for now and details were being reworked."

Afghan delegates scheduled to fly to the Qatari capital on Thursday were told the trip was postponed and new dates were being discussed, a western diplomat in Kabul said.

Read more ....

Update: Afghan delegation's visit to Qatar postponed, likely due to Taliban's opposition (Khaama Press)

WNU Editor: The Afghan government is sending a delegation of 250 with 52 of them being women. It is not only the size that bothers the Taliban, but I am willing to bet that the presence of 52 women delegates is a bridge too far for them to accept.

Russian Presdient Putin Will Meet North Korea's Kim Jong-un At The End Of April

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 05:40 AM PDT



TASS: Putin to meet with Kim Jong-un in Russia in second half of April

South Korea's Yonhap news agency said earlier that Kim Jong-un might visit Russia next week

MOSCOW, April 18. /TASS/. Russian President Vladimir Putin and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un will hold a meeting in Russia before the end of the month, the Kremlin said in a statement published on its website.

"Vladimir Putin will meet with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un. Chairman of the State Affairs Commission of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea Kim Jong-un will make a visit to Russia in the second half of April at Vladimir Putin's invitation," the statement reads.

Various options for a summit were under discussion in 2018, including a meeting on the sidelines of the Eastern Economic Forum in Russia's Far Eastern city of Vladivostok in September 2018 but the parties were unable to arrange a Putin-Kim meeting at the time. However, Russian authorities have stated on many occasions they are ready to welcome the North Korean leader at any time convenient for him.

Read more ....

WNU Editor: North Korean leader Kim Jong-un's will be pushing to have access to Russian energy supplies. Russian President Putin will be in China on April 26-27, so their meeting will probably be held in Vladivostok before or after these dates.

More News On Russian President Putin Meeting North Korea's Kim Jong-un At The End Of April

Kremlin says Kim Jong Un will visit Russia this month -- AP
North Korea leader Kim to meet Russia's Putin this month: Kremlin -- Reuters
Putin will meet North Korea's Kim Jong-un towards the end of April -- Euronews
Putin to meet with Kim Jong-un in Russia in 2nd half of April – Kremlin -- RT

Russia And China Almost Had A Nuclear War In 1969

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 05:26 AM PDT

Photo: China's first nuclear test in 1964 set off a series of dominoes that almost convinced Russia to nuke it. (Public domain)

We Are The Mighty: One of the closest brushes with nuclear war was Russia vs China

As they're now America's two top rivals, it's easy to forget that China and Russia aren't allies and actually have decades of regional rivalry and have been at each other's throats more than once. In fact, in 1970, the Soviet Union started asking around about whether or not anyone would really care if they launched a preemptive nuclear strike against China.

Ya know, for world security and all that.

Read more ....

WNU Editor: Even though Chinese - Russian relations are considered to be very good today, the historical and cultural mistrust still exists. Not trusting the east is deeply embedded in the Russian soul, and that is probably what propelled the Soviet leadership at the time to contemplate launching a nuclear strike against China. It fortunately did not happen, but that mistrust still exists, even though the leadership in both countries today are trying their best to forge better ties.

Norway’s Ruined Frigate Is Afloat Again

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 05:09 AM PDT

The re-raised ship from the starboard rear quarter. Norwegian Navy

Popular Mechanics: Norway's Ruined Frigate Is Afloat Again and It Doesn't Look Good

Helge Ingstad is floating on its own but officials are doubtful it can return to service.

A guided missile frigate that sank last year after a collision with an oil tanker is floating on its own while the Royal Norwegian Navy assesses the damage. The Helge Ingstad spent more than three months submerged in the frigid Norwegian Sea before being raised again in March. Experts believe the warship, exposed to oxygen-rich salt water, is so badly damaged it will never sail again.

Read more ....

WNU Editor: 3 months underwater in saltwater. It is a write-off. It will cost almost as much to fix it over buying a new one.

China Expands It's Social Credit System To Monitor Government Employees Outside Of Work Hours

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 05:01 AM PDT

Surveillance cameras in front of the giant portrait of Chairman Mao Zedong at Beijing's Tiananmen Square in September 2009. China is increasingly monitoring on citizens' behavior. Jason Lee/Reuters

Business Insider: China reportedly monitors what civil servants do outside work as the country rolls out its ambitious social credit system

  * Some local authorities around China are monitoring government employees' behavior outside work hours, Bloomberg reported.
  * At least three cities have started assessing public servants' activities outside of work to determine whether they get promoted, Bloomberg said. 
  * This new form of scrutiny comes as China rolls out its ambitious social credit system, which aims to track, reward, and punish citizens' behavior.
  * China's Communist Party has also been cracking down on its members to ensure loyalty to the party and its leader, President Xi Jinping.

Local authorities around China have started monitoring civil servants' behavior outside of work hours, Bloomberg reported, as it sets up its ambitious surveillance state over citizens, bureaucrats, and Communist Party members.

At least three cities in China have rolled out various measures to track public servants' loyalty and behavior in their personal lives over the past year, Bloomberg reported.

They include assessing employees' behavior at work, at home, and in public to determine performance reviews and promotions, Bloomberg said. The specific kinds of behavior that would help or jeopardize a public servant's performance are not clear.

Read more ....

WNU Editor: China is the world's leader in developing and deploying facial and behavioural recognition software. I have see it work, and it is truly unsettling. Think of George Orwell's 1984, but backed with sophisticated and modern technology. China's goal is to implement this program nationwide in 2020.

North Korea Says It Wants To Talk But Is Demanding The Removal Of U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo From The Talks

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 04:53 AM PDT

U.S. Secretary of State Pompeo and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un

CNN: North Korea: If US wants to talk, put someone 'more mature' than Pompeo in charge

North Korea's Foreign Ministry has issued a stinging rebuke of United States Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, hours after the country claimed to have tested a new tactical weapon.

In a statement released by the state-run Korean Central News Agency, Foreign Ministry official Kwon Jong Gun said Pompeo had been "letting loose reckless remarks and sophism of all kinds against us every day."

Kwon said North Korean leader Kim Jong Un had made his "principled stand" on negotiations between Pyongyang and Washington clear in a recent speech to the country's rubberstamp parliament.

"Everyone has a clear interpretation of his speech which says that the US should change its way of calculation and come up with responsive measures before the end of this year," Kwon said.

Read more ....

WNU Editor: Not going to happen.

More News On North Korea Demanding The Removal Of U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo From The Talks

North Korea demands removal of US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo from talks -- BBC
NKorea says it tested new weapon, wants Pompeo out of talks -- AP
North Korea calls for Pompeo to be dropped from talks; tests tactical weapon -- Reuters
North Korea says Pompeo is 'talking nonsense,' wants him replaced in nuclear talks -- The Washington Post
North Korea calls for Pompeo to be dropped from talks; tests tactical weapon -- CNBC
North Korea demands US to sideline Pompeo from nuclear talks: report -- FOX News
N Korea demands Pompeo be removed from nuclear talks -- Japan Times

World News Updates, World News, Current Affairs, Daily Current Affairs, World News Updates

Posted: 19 Apr 2019 02:22 AM PDT

World News Updates, World News, Current Affairs, Daily Current Affairs, World News Updates


Notre Dame fire’s billionaire donors ATTACKED - ‘The PUBLIC will pay!’

Posted: 19 Apr 2019 01:48 AM PDT



FRENCH billionaires came under attack after pledging to donate millions for the restoration of the Notre Dame Cathedral, which was ravaged by a massive fire on Monday evening.

Notre Dame fire: Cause of devastating blaze revealed by French police

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 04:01 PM PDT



THE cause of the catastrophic Notre Dame fire has been identified by investigators, a police official has said.

California airport HORROR: Plane crashes into runway as FIREBALL erupts killing one

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 09:21 PM PDT



A PLANE has burst into flames after crashing into the runway at an airport in the US, leaving one male dead according to reports.

Fox News host defends Trump over Mueller report - 'Most humiliating thing EVER to happen'

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 07:14 PM PDT



DONALD TRUMP has received a defiant defence from a Fox News host following the release of the Mueller report yesterday.

Russia ready for WAR with US over Venezuela as regional tensions SOAR to new heights

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 06:37 PM PDT



RUSSIA has warned the US it's ready for a war over Venezuela as it prepares to invade the crisis-stricken country.

Trump impeachment SHOCK: Ocasio-Cortez launches resolution - 'He OBSTRUCTED justice'

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 07:15 PM PDT



ALEXANDRIA OCASIO-CORTEZ announced her desire to impeach Donald Trump last night.

North Korea missile testing: What are 'tactical guided weapons'?

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 02:57 PM PDT



NORTH KOREA has tested its first missile system following the breakdown of nuclear talks with the United States - but what are "tactical guided weapons"?

Notre Dame fire: Is Notre Dame owned by Catholic Church? Calls for Vatican to help rebuild

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 02:38 PM PDT



NOTRE DAME faces a lengthy and costly renovation after a massive blaze tore through the medieval Catholic cathedral - but is Notre Dame owned by the Catholic Church and will the Vatican contribute towards its repair?

'Gift from HEAVEN' - new Kim Jong-un biography makes bizarre claims on North Korean despot

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 02:32 PM PDT



A NEW biography of Kim Jong-un has described the North Korean despot as an "unusually bold and courageous" leader who is "a gift from heaven".

Russia scrambles warships to track NATO battlegroup in Baltic Sea as tensions surge

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 01:41 PM PDT



RUSSIAN warships are tracking a NATO battlegroup which steamed into the Baltic Sea today, according to Kremlin defence chiefs.

World News, World News Updates, World News Headlines, Latest World News, Current Affairs

Posted: 19 Apr 2019 01:47 AM PDT

World News, World News Updates, World News Headlines, Latest World News, Current Affairs


Food Shortages in Cuba Are Raising Fears of a New Economic Crisis

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 08:15 PM PDT

(BAUTA, Cuba) — Just after 8 a.m., Pura Castell got in line behind about 100 other people waiting for a chance to buy frozen chicken legs. For two hours she leaned on her cane watching people leave the state-run market with their 5-pound limit.

The chicken ran out at 10 a.m. while the 80-year-old Castell still had 20 people in front of her. She returned the next morning, but no chicken. Then, relief. A neighbor told her that chicken had arrived at the government store that distributes heavily subsidized monthly food rations. Her household of three was due three pieces, either thighs or drumsticks.

“I’ve taken care of myself my whole life,” said Castell, a retired janitor. “I don’t just sit on my hands. I’m worn out but I walk all over town.”

After two decades of relative stability fueled by cheap Venezuelan oil, shortages of food and medicine have once again become a serious daily problem for millions of Cubans. A plunge in aid from Venezuela, the end of a medical services deal with Brazil and poor performances in sectors including nickel mining, sugar and tourism have left the communist state $1.5 billion in debt to the vendors that supply products ranging from frozen chicken to equipment for grinding grain into flour, according to former Economy Minister José Luis Rodríguez.

Stores no longer routinely stock eggs, flour, chicken, cooking oil, rice, powdered milk and ground turkey, among other products. These basics disappear for days or weeks. Hours-long lines appear within minutes of trucks showing up with new supplies. Shelves are empty again within hours.

No one is starving in Cuba, but the shortages are so severe that ordinary Cubans and the country’s leaders are openly referring to the “special period,” the years of economic devastation and deep suffering that followed the collapse of the Soviet Union, Cuba’s Cold War patron.

“It’s not about returning to the harshest phase of the special period of the ’90s,” Communist Party head Raul Castro said last week. “But we always have to be ready for the worst.”

Two days later, President Miguel Díaz-Canel said cutbacks were necessary because: “This harsh moment demands we set clearly defined priorities in order to not return to the worst moments of the special period.”

The Trump administration is working hard to push Cuba toward economic crisis. Washington has sanctioned Venezuela’s oil industry and the shipping companies that move Venezuelan oil to Cuba.

On Wednesday, U.S. National Security Adviser John Bolton announced further measures against Cuba and its allies, including a new cap on the amount of money that families in the United States can send their relatives on the island and new restrictions on travel to Cuba. “The troika of tyranny — Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua — is beginning to crumble,” he said.

The move followed the announcement a day earlier that lawsuits would now be permitted against foreign companies doing business in properties seized from Americans after the island’s 1959 revolution. The policy could deal a severe blow to Cuba’s efforts to draw foreign investment.

A senior Trump administration official said the economic pressure on Cuba was aimed at forcing the socialist government to stop helping its allies in Venezuela and Nicaragua. The U.S. has accused Cuba of sending soldiers and spies to both countries to strengthen their leaders against protests and potential defection. Cuba denies that.

“We’re going to make sure they cannot afford subsidized adventurism, subsidized subversion of democracy outside of their borders,” said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly about U.S. policy toward Cuba. “At an extraordinarily vulnerable time in their history, they’re going to have to refocus on the domestic needs, their domestic pressures.”

Despite some market-oriented reforms over the last decade, Cuba is one of the last countries on Earth to maintain a Soviet-style economy, with most business run by the state.

The economy is afflicted by deep inefficiency and corruption. Many state employees demand bribes to provide services to the public. Others spend only a few hours a day at their jobs, spending the rest of their time doing informal private work or selling supplies stolen from their office, warehouse or factory. Despite a highly educated and generally well-qualified workforce, Cuba’s industrial sector is dilapidated after decades of underinvestment. The country produces little of value on the global market besides rum, tobacco and the professionals who earn billions for the government working as doctors, teachers or engineers in friendly third countries.

The agricultural sector is in shambles, requiring the country to import most of its food. Economy Minister Alejandro Gil said Saturday that Cuba would spend $5 billion on food and petroleum products this year.

Over the last 20 years, many of those billions came from Venezuela’s socialist government, which has deep ties to Cuba’s and sent nearly 100,000 barrels of oil daily for years. With Venezuela’s economic collapse, that has roughly halved, along with deep cutbacks in the economic relationship across the board. And the news has been bad in virtually every other sector of the Cuban economy. Nickel production has dropped from 72,530 metric tons in 2011 to 50,000 last year, according to Rodríguez, the former economics minister. The sugar harvest dropped nearly 44%, to a million tons. The number of tourists grew only 1%, with many coming on cruise ships, a relatively unprofitable type of visitor. Overall GDP growth has been stuck at 1% for the last three years.

Meanwhile, under agreements Castro struck to rehabilitate Cuba’s creditworthiness, the country is paying $2 billion in debt service to creditors such as Russia, Japan and the Paris Club.

State-run stores that sell low-quality Chinese household goods at double or triple their price outside the country are facing competition from vendors in Panama, Guyana, Mexico, Haiti and even Russia, where Cubans fly in, fill suitcases with goods, and return to sell them at a profit.

That overseas shopping has become a vacuum sucking precious hard currency out of Cuba. Economist Omar Everleny Pérez said he estimated that Cubans spent more than $2 billion a year buying products overseas.

With less cash on hand, there’s been even less in the state-run stores.

The manager of the butcher shop where Castell waited for chicken last week said she needed 80 boxes of chicken to fill that day’s demand and only 40 arrived.

Fears of a return to darker times are growing.

“During the special period we had it bad, like everyone. Even when we had money we couldn’t buy anything,” said Castell, a mother of six.

“It was really rough, blackouts, no food at all, I don’t want to go back to that,” said Ariadne Medina, a 47-year-old worker in a private restaurant who was waiting to buy chicken behind Castell.

Independent experts say a return to the depths of the special period is unlikely. Cuba does business with dozens of nations, hosts nearly 5 million tourists a year and Cubans can travel freely to dozens of countries on direct flights to the U.S., Europe and Latin America. Expatriates send billions home in annual remittances.

“The new government is trying to halt the deterioration, but it’s a tough assignment,” Pérez said. “It’s going to take resources and time.”

‘We Won’t Be Silenced,’ Afghan Female Musicians Tell Taliban

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 07:39 PM PDT

Fresh from a sold-out concert tour of the U.K. and Sweden, Afghanistan’s first female conductor is convinced music can help deliver peace to her war-torn country. If only the Taliban would listen.

At just 22, Negin Khpelwak has already stared down threats and intimidation from her conservative relatives, who wished she would take on any career but music. Now, like many of her fellow citizens, she is watching peace talks between the U.S. and the Taliban with growing alarm.

“We can bring freedom, peace and honor to Afghanistan,” said Khpelwak, who leads the country’s the first all-female Zohra Orchestra who’ve played classical Western and Afghan music at the World Economic Forum in Davos. “Women can’t go back to the dark days — they can break our instruments, they can ban the music, but they never take it from our hearts.”

The Taliban, who control or contest half the country, banned all forms of music during their brutal regime that ran from 1996 to 2001. Even now, when the orchestra played its last concert in Kabul in February, most of the 700 guests had to pass through as many as 10 security check points protected by armed guards and dogs.

The U.S. reached a draft peace agreement with the insurgent group in January that may eventually lead to a withdrawal of foreign troops and a Taliban pledge not to allow terrorists to use the country. Talks aimed at bringing an end to 18 years of war were scheduled to begin again over the weekend, but appear to have been stalled. After being initially excluded from the U.S.-led talks, the Afghan delegation was set to include 52 women, up from just a handful in earlier sessions.

The country’s key demands in the dialogue include preserving the current government system under “Islamic Republic of Afghanistan,” holding elections and retaining the current constitution. U.S. Special Envoy Zalmay Khalilzad is leading the negotiations. He’s hoping to finalize a deal this year before presidential elections slated for September.

Women’s Voices

Afghan women have repeatedly voiced concerns about the lack of female representation at the peace talks, particularly given what is at stake.

Women have won hard-fought gains in politics, business and education since 2001, pushing back against the country’s male-dominated society. Last year about 400 female candidates contested in 68 seats reserved for women in the parliament, while hundreds of women run small businesses and teach at schools, and more than 3.5 million girls are now in education.

Zakia Wardak has been fighting for women’s rights in Afghanistan for eight years. Last October she stood for a seat in the parliamentary elections in Kabul, the results of which have yet to be announced — sweeping aside concerns for her safety and about entering the hyper-masculine, deeply corrupt world of Afghan politics.

“I highly doubt peace will come at the cost of our rights because the women today are not the women of 1996, neither are the Taliban,” said Wardak, whose late father and brother were Afghan generals, noting she is sure Afghan women will be part of the wider negotiations.

There’s much at stake for Afghan women after the “horrors” they experienced during the last period of Taliban rule, said Michael Kugelman, a senior associate for South Asia at the Woodrow Wilson Center in Washington.

Read more: Why Afghanistan is Still the Worst Place to Be a Woman

Yet with U.S. President Donald Trump last month calling the war “ridiculous,” many analysts believe the Washington is ultimately unconcerned with protecting the relative gains for women in Afghanistan as it tries to extract itself from the seemingly unending conflict. Some also doubt the Taliban’s lip-service towards women’s rights.

“The Taliban claims to be a more moderate outfit than it was in previous years,” said Kugelman. “If it truly does represent a new and more conciliatory Taliban 2.0, then one would expect it to welcome Afghan women in negotiations. Unfortunately to this point there’s no indication this is happening.”

For now, the group still condemns and punishes anyone playing music, but said it would review its position and make a decision based on “the verdict of Islam” if it returns to the country after a peace deal, their spokesman Zabihullah Mujahed said in a message, without providing more detail. The group’s current position banning all forms of music is also based on the verdict of Islam.

Musical Journey

Khpelwak was just a baby when the Taliban took over the country in 1996 and immediately banned women from attending schools or leaving home without a partner. Now she is at the Afghanistan National Institute of Music, that world is alien to her.

“Music is part of our life and music is our passion,” she said at the school, urging both Afghan President Ashraf Ghani’s government and the U.S. to convince the Taliban not to harm musicians.

The founder and director of the school music — who himself survived a Taliban bombing in 2014 at a concert in Kabul — said the days of the militant group ruling the country as a dictatorship have now gone.

“The youth of Afghanistan today are a totally different force than the youths of 1996,” Ahmad Naser Sarmast, 56, said at his office adorned with musicians’ portraits and trophies lining the shelves. He said the new generation won’t allow the Taliban “to come and turn the wheel of history backward.”

Music has flourished in Afghanistan since 2001, and now hundreds of students — male and female — are learning the craft in Sarmast’s school, which has represented Afghanistan’s music in more than 35 countries since its inauguration in 2010.

Still, some female musicians worry the Taliban will forcibly push them to quit and stay at home.

“If the Taliban comes back, it might be a great danger for us,” said violinist Gul Mina, who is in grade 11 at the school and hopes to become a violin teacher in order to change other girls’ lives. “Their return could be a huge disaster to our lives and musical works.”

Climate-Change Protesters in London Are Planning to Disrupt Heathrow Airport

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 06:56 PM PDT

(LONDON) — Environmental protesters who have blocked London roads and bridges for more than three days said Thursday they plan to take their civil disobedience campaign to Heathrow, Europe’s busiest airport, at the start of the Easter holiday weekend.The Extinction Rebellion group said it would mount a protest at the airport on Friday. The group vowed to escalate its campaign of disruption if the British government doesn’t step up action against climate change. London’s Metropolitan Police force urged the group to reconsider, saying the airport action could “cause further disruption and misery to thousands of travelers, many of them families, over Easter.””Protesters can expect a robust police response,” said Assistant Commissioner Nick Ephgrave. “We are determined to keep the airport operating.”Heathrow said it was “working with the authorities to address any threat of protests which could disrupt the airport.”

Hundreds of demonstrators have blocked central London sites including Waterloo Bridge over the River Thames, Parliament Square and the Oxford Circus and Marble Arch intersections since Monday.

The protest sites have sprouted tents, sound systems and even an ice cream van. Traffic has been snarled and many bus routes disrupted, to the frustration of commuters.

Police have made more than 460 arrests.

Extinction rebellion co-founder Gail Bradbrook said “more people are joining us all the time.”

“It’s certainly an option that tactics will be escalated if our demands are not met,” she said.

Home Secretary Sajid Javid, Britain’s interior minister, condemned the demonstrations, saying protesters “do not have the right to break the law and significantly disrupt the lives of others.”

“I expect the police to take a firm stance and use the full force of the law,” Javid said.

Tens of Thousands Protest in Sudan’s Capital Demanding Civilian Rule

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 10:39 AM PDT

(KHARTOUM, Sudan) — Tens of thousands of protesters converged on the main sit-in in the Sudanese capital of Khartoum on Thursday to pressure the ruling military council to speed up the transition of power to a civilian government as the new rulers announced the arrests of former president Omar al-Bashir’s two brothers on corruption charges.

Military council spokesman Gen. Shams Eddin Kabashi was quoted by the official SUNA news agency as saying that Abdullah and Abbas al-Bashir were taken into custody, without providing additional details or saying when it happened.

The arrests were part of a broad sweep against officials and supporters of the former government.

The Sudanese military ousted Omar al-Bashir last week, after four months of street protests against his 30-year rule marred by conflict, civil war and corruption. Al-Bashir is also wanted for genocide and crimes against humanity by the International Criminal Court for atrocities committee in the western region of Darfur.

“The arrests are ongoing of the ousted regime’s figures in addition to those who are suspected of corruption,” Kabashi said, adding that authorities are looking for a number of wanted fugitives. He said the detainees will be held in prisons in Khartoum and other cities.

The English-language Sudan Tribune said the brothers and al-Bashir’s wife are suspected of having accumulated illegal wealth through the years of al-Bashir’s rule.

The brothers’ detention was likely another concession by the military to the protesters, who have demanded that all key figures and ranking officials from the former president’s circle be arrested. A number of al-Bashir’s close associates and former government officials have already been taken into custody since the military overthrew al-Bashir last Thursday. A number of them are also wanted by the International Criminal Court.

The military council that now runs the country said the former president was transferred Tuesday to Koper Prison in the capital, Khartoum, a facility notorious for holding political prisoners under al-Bashir.

Meanwhile, the Sudanese Professionals Association, which has been spearheading anti-government street protests since mid-December, released Wednesday together with several opposition groups a proposed blueprint for the transfer of power from the military to a civilian government.

Though the street protesters were overjoyed at al-Bashir’s ouster, they were not happy with the military taking over and have demanded a swift handover of power to civilian rule. The military council has said it plans to rule for a maximum of two years as the country prepares for new elections.

The U.S. State Department said Thursday it supports a transition to a civilian government.

“The United States supports a transition to a peaceful and democratic Sudan led by civilians who represent the diversity of Sudanese society,” spokesman Morgan Ortagus said in a statement. “The will of the Sudanese people is clear: it is time to move toward a transitional government that is inclusive and respectful of human rights and the rule of law. ”

The protesters fear the army, dominated by al-Bashir appointees, will cling to power or select one of its own to succeed him. They have vowed to continue to protest, focusing on a sit-in outside the military headquarters in Khartoum, until the transfer of power is complete.

The two-page blueprint posted online envisages a civilian presidential council made up of “revolutionary figures” and a defense minister, the only representative from the military.

It also proposes the formation of a Cabinet of technocrats to run daily affairs of the state and a legislative council to draft laws and oversee the Cabinet until a new constitution is written.

“We have to continue our sit-ins until a transitional civilian authority takes over,” the document says. “We have faith that our people’s victory is coming and that no power can stop our people from achieving all their goals.”

The military did not immediately comment on the document. The organizers of the protests called for a “one million people rally” to pressure the military to meet the demands of the protest movement. Chanting, dancing and clapping, protesters rallied in massive numbers in front of the military headquarters, the focal point of protests.

It’s not clear what will happen next to al-Bashir, a pariah in any countries. The military has said it would not extradite him to the ICC but has not ruled out that a future civilian government could someday hand him over to the tribunal in The Hague, Netherlands.

Meanwhile, South Sudan’s President Salva Kiir offered to mediate in Sudan’s political crisis. In a letter seen by The Associated Press, Kiir this week pledged his support for a transition in which the rights of the Sudanese people are protected and offered to “mediate the on-going negotiations” among various groups.

Some in South Sudan are concerned that al-Bashir’s departure will hurt their countries’ fragile peace deal, which al-Bashir helped broker. South Sudan declared independence from Sudan in 2011, following decades of civil war.

But the new country subsequently sank into its own civil war, which ended with an agreement signed in September. The deal calls for opposition leader Riek Machar to return to South Sudan next month to once again become Kiir’s deputy, though that looks increasingly unlikely as tensions continue.

One political analyst called Kiir’s offer of mediation over al-Bashir a “hypocritical public relations” stunt.

“It doesn’t make sense. You cannot leave your house in a mess and claim to clean your neighbor’s house,” Jacob Chol, professor at the University of Juba, told the AP.

Electrical Short-Circuit Likely Caused Notre Dame Cathedral Fire, French Official Says

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 09:40 AM PDT

(PARIS) — Paris police investigators think an electrical short-circuit most likely caused the fire at Notre Dame Cathedral, a police official said Thursday, as France paid a daylong tribute to the firefighters who saved the world-renowned landmark.

A judicial police official told The Associated Press that investigators made an initial assessment of the cathedral Wednesday but don’t have a green light to search Notre Dame’s charred interior because of ongoing safety hazards.

The cathedral’s fragile walls were being shored up with wooden planks, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to speak by name about an ongoing investigation.

Investigators so far believe the fire was accidental, and are questioning both cathedral staff and workers who were carrying out renovations. Some 40 people had been questioned by Thursday, according to the Paris prosecutor’s office.

The police official would not comment on an unsourced report in Le Parisian newspaper that investigators are looking at whether the fire could have been linked to a computer glitch or the temporary elevators used in the renovation work, among other things. The prosecutor’s office said only that “all leads must be explored.”

Since the cathedral will be closed to the public for years, the rector of the Catholic parish that worships there has proposed building a temporary structure on the plaza in front of the Gothic-era landmark, and City Hall gave its approval Thursday “subject to technical restraints.”

“The rector has no cathedral for the moment. …. But I’m going to try to invent something,” Bishop Patrick Chauvet said.

A crypt containing vestiges dating from antiquity is located under the vast esplanade.

President Emmanuel Macron has said he wants Notre Dame to be restored in five years, a timeline that restoration specialists have questioned as overly ambitious, with some saying it could take three times that long to rebuild the 850-year-old architectural treasure. Macron hopes to reopen the cathedral in time for the 2024 Summer Olympics, which Paris is hosting.

Earlier Thursday, Macron held a ceremony at the Elysee Palace to thank the hundreds of firefighters who battled the fast-moving fire at Notre Dame for nine hours starting Monday evening, preventing the structure’s destruction and rescuing many of the important relics held inside.

“We’ve seen before our eyes the right things perfectly organized in a few moments, with responsibility, courage, solidarity and a meticulous organization”, Macron said. “The worst has been avoided.”

The cathedral’s lead roof and its soaring spire were destroyed, but Notre Dame’s iconic bell towers, rose windows, organ and precious artworks were saved.

Macron said the firefighters will receive an Honor Medal for their courage and devotion.

Paris City Hall also held a ceremony in the firefighters’ honor Thursday afternoon, with a Bach violin concert, two giant banners strung from the monumental city headquarters and readings from Victor Hugo’s “The Hunchback of Notre Dame.”

Remarkably, no one was killed in the blaze that broke out as the cathedral was in the initial stages of a lengthy restoration.

A large swath of the island in the Seine River where Notre Dame is located was officially closed Thursday by police, who cited “important risks” of collapse and falling objects. The area had been unofficially blocked off since the fire.

Meanwhile, workers using a crane removed some statues to lessen the weight on the cathedral’s fragile gables, or support walls, to keep them from collapsing since they were no longer supported by the roof and its network of centuries-old timbers that were consumed by the inferno.

They also secured the support structure above one of Notre Dame’s rose windows with wooden planks.

Among the firefighters honored Thursday was Paris fire brigade chaplain Jean-Marc Fournier, who told the Le Parisian daily he was able to save the cathedral’s consecrated hosts. The paper said he climbed on altars to remove large paintings, but that he was especially proud “to have removed Jesus” from the Cathedral — a reference to the Catholic belief that consecrated hosts are the body of Christ.

An earlier report credited Fournier with helping salvage the crown of thorns believed to have been worn by Jesus at his crucifixion, but Fournier told France Info Thursday he arrived after rescuers had already broken the relic’s protective covering and an official who had the secret code needed to unlock it finished the job. He praised the action that preserved “this extraordinary relic, this patrimony of humanity.”

Among others honored was Myriam Chudzinski, one of the first firefighters to reach the roof as the blaze raged. Loaded with gear, they climbed hundreds of steps up the cathedral’s narrow spiral staircase to the top of one of the two towers.

“We knew that the roof was burning, but we didn’t really know the intensity,” she told reporters. “It was from upstairs that you understood that it was really dramatic. It was very hot and we had to retreat, retreat. It was spreading quickly.”

Benedicte Contamin, who came to view the damaged cathedral from afar Thursday, said she’s sad but grateful it’s still there.

“It’s a chance for France to bounce back, a chance to realize what unites us, because we have been too much divided over the past years,” she said.

France Pays Tribute To the Firefighters Who Saved Notre Dame Cathedral From Collapse

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 08:01 AM PDT

(PARIS) — France paid a daylong tribute Thursday to the Paris firefighters who saved Notre Dame Cathedral from collapse, while construction workers rushed to secure an area above one of the church’s famed rose-shaped windows and other vulnerable sections of the fire-damaged landmark.

President Emmanuel Macron held a ceremony at the Elysee Palace to thank the hundreds of firefighters who battled a fast-moving fire at Notre Dame for nine hours starting Monday evening, preventing the structure’s destruction and rescuing many of the important relics held inside.

“We’ve seen before our eyes the right things perfectly organized in a few moments, with responsibility, courage, solidarity and a meticulous organization”, Macron said. “The worst has been avoided.”

Macron said the firefighters will receive an Honor Medal for their courage and devotion.

As the ceremony took place, investigators continued seeking clues to what sparked the fire. The huge cathedral, including the spire that was consumed by flames and collapsed, was in the initial stages of a lengthy restoration.

The roof was destroyed, but Notre Dame’s iconic bell towers, rose windows, organ, and precious artworks were saved.

Fire officials warned that the building remains very fragile and extremely dangerous for construction workers, restoration experts and neighbors.

Police, citing “important risks” of collapse and falling objects, officially closed Thursday a large swath of the island in the Seine River on which Notre Dame sits. The area had been unofficially blocked off since the fire.

Workers using a crane were removing some statues to lessen the weight on the cathedral’s fragile gables, or support walls, and to keep them from falling, since the section lacked the support of the massive timber roof that burned up in the devastating blaze.

They were also securing the support structure above one of Notre Dame’s rose windows with wooden planks.

Paris City Hall was holding a ceremony in the firefighters’ honor Monday afternoon, with a Bach violin concert, two giant banners strung from the monumental city headquarters and readings from Victor Hugo’s “The Hunchback of Notre Dame.”

Remarkably, no one was killed in the fire, which began during a Mass, after firefighters and church officials speedily evacuated those inside.

Among the firefighters honored Thursday is Paris fire brigade chaplain Jean-Marc Fournier, who says he was falsely credited with helping salvage the crown of thorns believed to have been worn by Jesus at his crucifixion.

The chaplain says a team of rescuers broke the relic’s protective covering and an official who had the secret code to unlock the protection finished the job. Fournier told France Info on Thursday that his own team arrived on the heels of the salvaging and praised the action “to preserve this extraordinary relic, this patrimony of humanity.”

However, Fournier told the daily Le Parisian that he himself was able to save the most precious thing for Catholics from the fire, the cathedral’s consecrated hosts. The paper said he climbed on altars to remove large paintings, but that he felt especially proud of another personal salvaging operation: “to have removed Jesus” from the Cathedral.

For Catholics, consecrated hosts are the body of Christ.

Among others honored was Myriam Chudzinski, one of the first firefighters to reach the roof as the blaze raged. Loaded with gear, they climbed hundreds of steps up the cathedral’s narrow spiral staircase to the top of one of the two towers. She had trained at the site for hours for just this moment.

“We knew that the roof was burning, but we didn’t really know the intensity,” she told reporters. “It was from upstairs that you understood that it was really dramatic. It was very hot and we had to retreat, retreat. It was spreading quickly.”

Investigators so far believe the fire was accidental, and are questioning both cathedral staff and workers who were carrying out renovations. Some 40 people had been questioned by Thursday, according the Paris prosecutor’s office.

The building would have burned to the ground in a “chain-reaction collapse” had firefighters not moved as rapidly as they did to battle the blaze racing through the building, José Vaz de Matos, a fire expert with France’s Culture Ministry, said Wednesday.

An initial fire alert was sounded at 6:20 p.m., as a Mass was underway in the cathedral, but no fire was found. A second alarm went off at 6:43 p.m., and the blaze was discovered already consuming the roof.

Macron wants to rebuild the cathedral within five years — in time for the 2024 Summer Olympics that Paris is hosting — but experts say the vast scale of the work to be done could easily take 15 years, since it will take months, even years, just to figure out what should be done. Nearly $1 billion has been pledged for the cathedral’s restoration.

Benedicte Contamin, who came to view the damaged cathedral from afar Thursday, said she’s sad but grateful it’s still there.

“It’s a chance for France to bounce back, a chance to realize what unites us, because we have been too much divided over the past years,” she said.

North Korea Demands Removal of Secretary of State Pompeo From Nuclear Negotiations

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 07:21 AM PDT

(SEOUL, South Korea) — North Korea said Thursday that it had test-fired a new type of “tactical guided weapon,” its first such test in nearly half a year, and demanded that Washington remove Secretary of State Mike Pompeo from nuclear negotiations.

The test, which didn’t appear to be of a banned mid- or long-range ballistic missile that could scuttle negotiations, allows North Korea to show its people it is pushing ahead with weapons development while also reassuring domestic military officials worried that diplomacy with Washington signals weakness.

Separately, the North Korean Foreign Ministry accused Pompeo of playing down the significance of comments by leader Kim Jong Un, who said last week that Washington has until the end of the year to offer mutually acceptable terms for an agreement to salvage the high-stakes nuclear diplomacy. Both the demand for Pompeo’s removal from the talks and the weapon test point to North Korea’s displeasure with the deadlocked negotiations.

In a statement issued under the name of Kwon Jong Gun, director general of the American Affairs Department at the Foreign Ministry, North Korea accused Pompeo of “talking nonsense” and misrepresenting Kim’s comments.

During a speech at Texas A&M on Monday, Pompeo said Kim promised to denuclearize during his first summit with President Donald Trump and that U.S. officials were working with the North Koreans to “chart a path forward so we can get there.”

“He (Kim) said he wanted it done by the end of the year,” Pompeo said. “I’d love to see that done sooner.”

The North Korean statement said Pompeo was “misrepresenting the meaning of our requirement” for the negotiations to be finalized by the year’s end, and referred to his “talented skill of fabricating stories.” It said Pompeo’s continued participation in the negotiations would ensure that the talks become “entangled” and called for a different counterpart who is “more careful and mature in communicating with us.”

In a speech at his rubber-stamp parliament last week, Kim said he is open to a third summit with Trump, but only if the United States changes its stance on sanctions enforcement and pressure by the end of the year.

Kim observed the unspecified weapon being fired Wednesday by the Academy of Defense Science, the North’s state-run Korean Central News Agency said. Kim was reported to have said “the development of the weapon system serves as an event of very weighty significance in increasing the combat power of the People’s Army.”

The Associated Press could not independently verify North Korea’s claim, and it wasn’t immediately clear what had been tested. A major ballistic missile test would jeopardize the diplomatic talks meant to provide the North with concessions in return for disarmament. A South Korean analyst said that details in the North’s media report indicate it could have been a new type of cruise missile. Another possible clue: one of the lower level officials mentioned in the North’s report on the test — Pak Jong Chon — is known as an artillery official.

Some in Seoul worry that the North will turn back to actions seen as provocative by outsiders as a way to force Washington to drop its hard-line negotiating stance and grant the North’s demand for a removal of crushing international sanctions. A string of increasingly powerful weapons tests in 2017 and Trump’s response of “fire and fury” had many fearing war before the North shifted to diplomacy.

Russia announced Thursday that Kim will visit later this month for talks at the invitation of President Vladimir Putin, but gave no further details. Russian media have been abuzz in recent days with rumors about the rare meeting between the leaders.

Putin is to visit China later this month, and some media speculated that he could meet with Kim in Vladivostok, the far eastern port city near the border with North Korea.

Trump said last month that he “would be very disappointed if I saw testing.” There have been fresh reports of new activity at a North Korean missile research center and long-range rocket site where the North is believed to build missiles targeting the U.S. mainland. North Korean media said Wednesday that Kim guided a flight drill of combat pilots from an air force and anti-aircraft unit tasked with defending the North from an attack.

Kim Dong-yub, an analyst from Seoul’s Institute for Far Eastern Studies, said North Korea’s descriptions of the test show the weapon is possibly a newly developed cruise missile. The North’s report said the “tactical guided weapon” successfully tested in a “peculiar mode of guiding flight” and demonstrated the ability to deliver a “powerful warhead.”

The analyst said the test could also be intended as a message to the North Korean people and military of a commitment to maintaining a strong level of defense even as it continues talks with Washington over nukes.

Melissa Hanham, a non-proliferation expert and director of the Datayo Project at the One Earth Future Foundation, said the North Korean weapon could be anything from an anti-tank weapon to a cruise missile.

The North said Thursday that Kim Jong Un mounted an observation post to learn about and guide the test-fire of the weapon.

This is the first known time Kim has observed the testing of a newly developed weapon system since last November, when North Korean media said he watched the successful test of an unspecified “newly developed ultramodern tactical weapon.” Some observers have been expecting North Korea to orchestrate “low-level provocations,” like artillery or short-range missile tests, to register its anger over the way nuclear negotiations were going.

North Korean officials accompanying Kim at the test included Ri Pyong Chol and Kim Jong Sik, two senior officials from the North’s Munitions Industry Department who have been sanctioned by the U.S. Treasury Department for their activities related to the country’s ballistic missile program. Ri is believed to be a key official involved in North Korea’s intercontinental ballistic missile development, while Kim Jong Sik has been linked to the country’s efforts to build solid-fuel missiles. The Pyongyang-based Munitions Industry Department is sanctioned both by the United States and the U.N. Security Council.

“Even if this is not a ‘missile’ test the way we strictly define it, these people and MID are all sanctioned entities for a reason,” Hanham said.

The White House said it was aware of the report and had no comment. The Pentagon also said it was aware but had no information to provide at this point. South Korea’s presidential office said it has no immediate comment. South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said it is analyzing the test but did not specifically say what the weapon appeared to be.

After the animosity of 2017, last year saw a stunning turn to diplomacy, culminating in the first-ever summit between the U.S. and North Korea in Singapore, and then the Hanoi talks this year. North Korea has suspended nuclear and long-range rocket tests, and the North and South Korean leaders have met three times. But there are growing worries that the progress could be killed by mismatched demands between the U.S. and North Korea over sanctions relief and disarmament.

Indonesian President Joko Widodo Declares Victory in Re-Election Campaign

Posted: 18 Apr 2019 07:04 AM PDT

(JAKARTA, Indonesia) — Indonesian President Joko Widodo said Thursday he has won re-election after receiving an estimated 54% of the vote, backtracking on an earlier vow to wait for official results after his challenger made improbable claims of victory.

Widodo, after meeting with parties in his coalition, told reporters that the leaders of Malaysia, Singapore, Turkey and numerous other nations have congratulated him on securing a second term.

The vote estimate is based on so-called quick counts of a sample of polling stations by a dozen reputable survey organizations. Widodo said that 100% of sample polling stations have now been counted or close to that. The quick counts have been accurate in previous elections.

“We all know that the QC (quick count) calculation is a scientific calculation method. From the country’s experiences of past elections the accuracy is 99.9%, almost the same as real count results,” Widodo said.

Widodo’s rival, former Gen. Prabowo Subianto, has claimed he won 62% of the vote in Wednesday’s election based on his campaign’s own counts, repeating a similar claim when he lost to Widodo in 2014.

The Election Commission is required to release official results by May 22.

Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim-majority nation, is an outpost of democracy in a Southeast Asian neighborhood of authoritarian governments and is forecast to be among the world’s biggest economies by 2030. A second term for Widodo, the first Indonesian president from outside the Jakarta elite, could further cement the country’s two decades of democratization.

Subianto, a strident nationalist, ran a fear-based campaign, highlighting what he sees as Indonesia’s weakness and the risk of exploitation by foreign powers or disintegration.

Widodo said he had sent a representative to talk to Subianto and his camp.

“This afternoon I have sent an envoy to meet Prabowo to set a meeting, and if people see our meeting, we will be able to show how the elections have ended smoothly, safely and peacefully,” he said.

The country’s security minister and its military and police chiefs said earlier Thursday that they will crack down on any attempts to disrupt public order while official results from presidential and legislative elections are tabulated.

Security minister Wiranto, who uses a single name, told a news conference with the chiefs of police and all military branches that security forces will “act decisively” against any threats to order and security.

He said the voter turnout of 80.5% gives the winner of the presidential election “high legitimacy.”

National police chief Tito Karnavian said the Election Commission and courts are the appropriate institutions for resolving complaints about the election.

Subianto’s hard-line Muslim supporters plan mass prayers in central Jakarta on Friday but it was unclear if the event will be allowed to go ahead.

“I appeal to everybody not to mobilize, both mobilization to celebrate victory or mobilization about dissatisfaction,” Karnavian said.

The election was a huge logistical exercise with 193 million people eligible to vote, more than 800,000 polling stations and 17 million people involved in ensuring the polls ran smoothly. Helicopters, boats and horses were used to get ballots to remote and inaccessible corners of the archipelago.

Voting ran smoothly, apart from a few districts where logistical problems caused delays, and was peaceful, a remarkable achievement for a country steeped in political violence.

Widodo’s campaign highlighted his progress in poverty reduction and improving Indonesia’s inadequate infrastructure with new ports, toll roads, airports and mass rapid transit. The latter became a reality last month in chronically congested Jakarta with the opening of a subway.

Kipling, Manto and Conrad in Mumbai

Posted: 19 Apr 2019 12:05 AM PDT

The mad and lively city, with its teeming markets and vintage cafés, has been hallowed ground for many a writer
Source: BHT

Free furniture

Posted: 19 Apr 2019 12:05 AM PDT

"Have you seen the couch?" asks Bins. "No," I say, groggily. It's not yet seven o'clock. "Come out now," he says, "I insist. It might be gone in half
Source: BHT

Quiz on famous twins

Posted: 19 Apr 2019 12:04 AM PDT

It's the 18th birthday of my twin sons, and so the perfect week for a quiz about twins1. The illustrious Waugh twins have only once scored 100s in the
Source: BHT

Congress’ temple run in North Goa

Posted: 19 Apr 2019 12:04 AM PDT

In the BJP stronghold of North Goa, where Shripad Naik, the sitting MP, has held sway for 20 years, Girish Chodankar, his Congress opponent, is on a
Source: BHT

Airtel Payments Bank ties up with Bharti AXA for two wheeler insurance

Posted: 19 Apr 2019 12:04 AM PDT

Airtel Payments Bank has tied up with Bharti AXA General Insurance to offer two-wheeler insurance to its customers across India.This insurance will be
Source: BHT

BBB identifies 75 senior officers for leadership roles in PSBs

Posted: 19 Apr 2019 12:04 AM PDT

It has made a case for giving a complete autonomy to banks to decide organisational structure for better efficiency.
Source: BHT

Dollar steadies after upbeat US data amid holiday-thin trade

Posted: 19 Apr 2019 12:04 AM PDT

The dollar steadied against a basket of currencies on Friday after hitting a 2-1/2-week high overnight as data pointed to a sturdy US economy, while
Source: BHT

Goldman works out best times to enter, exit earnings trades

Posted: 19 Apr 2019 12:04 AM PDT

As earnings season powers ahead, the question of when to enter and exit stock trades has been answered by Goldman Sachs Group Inc.Over the past decad
Source: BHT

Oil prices inch up on signs of tighter global supply

Posted: 19 Apr 2019 12:04 AM PDT

In post-settlement trade, the contract added 4 cents to $72.01 a barrel.
Source: BHT

Nissan to cut global production by 15%: Nikkei

Posted: 19 Apr 2019 12:04 AM PDT

Nissan Motor Co Ltd will cut global production by about 15 per cent for the current fiscal year ending March 2020, as it shifts away from the aggress
Source: BHT

Malian PM resigns over surge of violence

Posted: 19 Apr 2019 12:04 AM PDT

Mali's Prime Minister and cabinet resigned on Thursday following a motion of no confidence in the government over its handling of violence in the cen
Source: BHT

Uber wins $ 1 bn investment from Toyota, SoftBank fund

Posted: 19 Apr 2019 12:04 AM PDT

Japanese car giant Toyota and investment fund SoftBank Vision Fund on Friday unveiled an investment of $ 1 billion in US company Uber to drive forwar
Source: BHT

WTO largely sides with US in dispute over China grain import tariffs

Posted: 19 Apr 2019 12:04 AM PDT

The World Trade Organization on Thursday largely sided with the United States in its Obama-era case against Beijing over Chinese restrictions on impor
Source: BHT

Elections 2019: 36 file nominations in Delhi on Thursday for LS polls

Posted: 19 Apr 2019 12:04 AM PDT

Thirty-six candidates filed their nominations on Thursday, taking the total tally to 48 for the Lok Sabha polls in Delhi scheduled for May 12. Twelve
Source: BHT

AI offers ‘rescue’ fares to stranded international passengers of Jet Airways

Posted: 19 Apr 2019 12:04 AM PDT

Air India on Thursday announced special fares to international passengers of Jet Airways who have been stranded due to the grounding of the airline.
Source: BHT

Amazon, Google agree to allow each other’s streaming apps

Posted: 19 Apr 2019 12:04 AM PDT

Amazon and Google announced on Thursday they had agreed to allow each other's streaming media applications to work on their platforms, ending a spat
Source: BHT

Pandya brothers, Chahar set-up resounding win for Mumbai

Posted: 19 Apr 2019 12:04 AM PDT

The big-hitting Pandya brothers -- Hardik and Krunal -- and young leg-spinner Rahul Chahar set up a comprehensive 40-run win for Mumbai Indians over D
Source: BHT

Facebook says more Instagram passwords exposed than thought

Posted: 19 Apr 2019 12:04 AM PDT

Millions more Instagram users were affected by a password security lapse than parent company Facebook acknowledged nearly four weeks ago. The social
Source: BHT

Top five stories to watch out for on April 19, 2019

Posted: 19 Apr 2019 12:04 AM PDT

The officials of the Election Commission (EC) will submit their opinion about the biopic on Prime Minister Narendra Modi to the Supreme Court on April
Source: BHT

Broker's call: Bajaj Consumer Care (Buy)

Posted: 19 Apr 2019 12:04 AM PDT

Centrum BrokingBajaj Consumer Care (Buy)CMP: ₹335.4Target: ₹438Bajaj Consumer Care has re-entered the cooling oil segment with the non-sticky Bajaj Co
Source: BHT

Broker's call: Wipro (Accumulate)

Posted: 19 Apr 2019 12:04 AM PDT

Narnolia FinancialWipro (Accumulate)CMP: ₹284.8Target: ₹314FY19 was restructuring year for Wipro where the company went through lot of changes all thr
Source: BHT

GVK signs stake sale deed with ADIA, NIIF

Posted: 19 Apr 2019 12:04 AM PDT

GVK Power & Infrastructure Limited today announced that its subsidiaries, GVK Airport Developers Limited and GVK Airport Holdings Limited have sig
Source: BHT

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