Indian Spiritual Leader Dies After Months of Fasting

Posted June 14th, 2011 at 4:45 pm (UTC-5)
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Indian spiritual leader Swami Nigamanand, who was on a hunger strike for 115 days to protest environmental abuses in the country, died late Monday at the age of 36 in a hospital in Uttarakhand state.

Nigamanand was fasting to bring attention to pollution of India's revered Ganga River, also known as the Ganges.

Nigamanand, who began his fast in February and had slipped into a coma last month, died in relative obscurity, compared to the fast of a celebrity yoga guru Baba Ramdev to protest corruption. Ramdev is very much alive and in the spotlight.

Sociology Professor Mala Kapur Shankardass says Ramdev's fast became a media frenzy because anything which has an impact on politics or on socio-economic aspects gets much more attention.

Shankardass said environmental protests like Nigamanand's tend to be limited to the affected regions. He said environmental issues are not yet on the public agenda like corruption.

India's government has been beleaguered by a series of recent corruption scandals. The largest involves the sale of telecom licenses at below market rates, allegedly causing the loss of up to $40 billion to the government.

The hunger strike is a traditional form of protest in India and was used as part of Indian independence leader Mahatma Gandhi's non-violence movement.

UN Convention on Law of the Sea Defines Nations’ Rights, Responsibilities

Posted June 14th, 2011 at 4:40 pm (UTC-5)
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The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea is an international agreement that defines the rights and responsibilities of nations in their use of the world's oceans and management of their natural resources.

Nations participating in the third U.N. Conference on the Law of the Sea reached agreement on the treaty in 1982 after nine years of deliberations. The convention took effect in 1994 after the requisite minimum of 40 states had ratified it. As of May 2011, 161 states and the European Union had ratified the treaty.

The convention set the limits of various sea areas, measured from the baseline of coastal states. The areas include internal waters, territorial waters, contiguous zones, archipelagic waters, exclusive economic zones and continental shelves.

Internal waters cover all water and waterways on the landward side of a coastal state's baseline. The state has full sovereignty over such waters.

The convention says a coastal state has the right to establish territorial waters up to 22 kilometers from the baseline. The state is free to exercise its sovereignty over those waters but must grant the right of “innocent passage” through those areas to ships of all other states.

Innocent passage is defined as the “continuous and expeditious” movement of a foreign vessel that does not prejudice the “peace, good order or security” of the coastal state. Actions that are deemed to be prejudicial include spying, military exercises, polluting and fishing.

The treaty enables a coastal state to set up a contiguous zone beyond its territorial waters to prevent foreign ships from violating the state's laws on customs, taxation, pollution and immigration. The contiguous zone may not extend beyond 44 kilometers from the baseline.

A state that consists of an archipelago can set its territorial boundaries by drawing baselines joining the outermost points of the outermost islands, provided such points are sufficiently close to one another.

The convention defines the area enclosed within those baselines as archipelagic waters and grants the state full sovereignty over them. It also establishes a right of innocent passage through those waters to ships of all other states.

An exclusive economic zone is defined as an area beyond a coastal state's territorial waters that may extend up to 370 kilometers from that state's baseline.

Inside the zone, the treaty says the coastal state has the right to exploit all of its natural resources while respecting the rights of other states. Foreign nations have the rights of navigation, overflight and laying submarine cables and pipelines subject to the regulation of the coastal state.

A continental shelf is defined as a “natural prolongation” of a coastal state's land territory to the outer edge of the continental margin, or a distance 370 kilometers from the state's baseline, whichever is greater. The continental shelf may not exceed 648 kilometers from the baseline.

The treaty says a coastal state has the right to harvest mineral and non-living material in the seabed of its continental shelf. It says no foreign vessel may undertake such activities without the express consent of the coastal state.

In recent months, the Philippines and Vietnam have reported several incidents involving Chinese vessels within their exclusive economic zones in the South China Sea.

China says the South China Sea is Beijing's territory and has been for centuries. But, the Philippines, Vietnam, Brunei, Taiwan and Malaysia also claim parts of the sea and scores of uninhabited islets and outcroppings in the region.

China ratified the U.N. convention in 1996.

US Stocks Push Higher

Posted June 14th, 2011 at 4:15 pm (UTC-5)
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U.S. stock market indexes advanced strongly by the close of Tuesday's trading.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average advanced one percent to end at 12,076. The S&P 500 gained 1.3 percent to finish at 1,288 and NASDAQ rose 1.5 percent to close at 2,679.

European stock markets closed higher. London's Financial Times 100 index gained half a percent to end at 5,803. The CAC-40 in Paris moved up 1.5 percent to close at 3,865. And the DAX in Frankfurt jumped 1.7 percent to finish at 7,205.

Earlier in Asia, Tokyo's Nikkei index gained 1.1 percent to finish at 9,548. Hong Kong's Hang Seng index lost one-tenth of a percent to finish the day's trading at 22,496.

The price of gold gained more than $9 to trade at $1,524.93 an ounce.

The dollar was higher against the yen but lost value compared to the euro.

Oil Prices Rise

Posted June 14th, 2011 at 4:05 pm (UTC-5)
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Here are the prices of some key commodities traded in New York on Tuesday:

Crude oil prices rose more than $2 to close at $99.37 a barrel.

Coffee futures rose two cents to finish at $2.69 per pound.

Copper prices rose 12 cents to end at $4.15 a pound.

Cocoa futures rose $13 to hit $3,014 a ton.

In Chicago trading, wheat prices fell 12 cents to end the day's trading at $7.31 a bushel.

Rice futures fell 28 cents to $14.34 per hundredweight.

Obama Makes Rare Presidential Visit to Puerto Rico

Posted June 14th, 2011 at 4:00 pm (UTC-5)
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U.S. President Barack Obama has reiterated his support for a referendum to allow Puerto Ricans to decide whether to remain a part of the United States.

On a rare presidential visit to the semi-autonomous U.S. Commonwealth Tuesday, Mr. Obama pledged to “stand by” the people of Puerto Rico, as soon as they make a “clear decision.”

The president supports a vote before the end of next year that would allow the island's residents to choose between statehood, independence or remaining semi-autonomous.

His brief stop in Puerto Rico, paying the island its first official presidential visit in 50 years, is seen as a smart move in courting the increasingly powerful Hispanic voting bloc for his 2012 re-election bid.

After landing in San Juan Tuesday, President Obama told an enthusiastic crowd that the aspirations and struggles of Puerto Ricans mirror those across the United States. He highlighted efforts to address the challenges facing the island, including education, health care and the economy.

Puerto Rico received $7 billion in economic stimulus money, but is struggling with a 16 percent unemployment rate, far above the national level. The island's governor, Luis Fortuno, says the stimulus has led to net gains in employment, although it has taken a long time for the spending to have an effect.

During his five-hour stop, Mr. Obama met with Fortuno at the governor's mansion, and was to attend a Democratic National Committee event in the territory.

The visit fulfills a promise Mr. Obama made during a campaign stop on the island in 2008 that he would return if elected president.

Puerto Ricans are U.S. citizens, but the island does not vote in U.S. general elections. Puerto Ricans, however, are still an important part of the voting public, as those living within the 50 states make up the second-largest group of Hispanics in the U.S. after Mexicans.

Mr. Obama is the fifth U.S. president to travel to the island and the first since then-president John F. Kennedy went there in 1961.

Governor Fortuno says Mr. Obama's visit will allow the president to understand the issues that concern Puerto Ricans, particularly the need for job creation, and the impact of a worsening drug-trafficking problem in the Caribbean.

Puerto Rico was ceded to the United States by Spain in 1898 after the Spanish-American war. The island elects its own governor and sends delegates to major U.S. party nominating conventions. It also has a non-voting representative in the U.S. Congress.

Former Tijuana Mayor Detained Again After Release

Posted June 14th, 2011 at 3:50 pm (UTC-5)
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Former Tijuana mayor Jorge Hank Rhon was released from jail Tuesday after a Mexican federal judge ruled officials lacked evidence for the illegal weapons charges against him, but authorities promptly took him into custody again.

This time, state prosecutors brought the wealthy businessman in for questioning related to a murder investigation.

Hank Rhon was arrested earlier this month after a raid on his house turned up 88 weapons and nearly 10,000 rounds of ammunition. Prosecutors have said that two of the guns were linked to two separate killings in 2009 and 2010.

News reports indicate the ex-mayor is now being held in a hotel. Mexican law allows suspects to be held for up to 40 days without charges.

Hank Rohn was mayor of Tijuana, across the border from San Diego, California, from 2004 to 2007.

He is the son of a prominent figure in the Institutional Revolutionary Party, which led Mexico for more than seven decades until 2000 and is trying to win back the presidency next year.

Hank Rohn is also a successful businessman, owning a chain of casinos and a local soccer team.

In 1999, a report by the U.S. National Drug Intelligence Center identified Hank Rhon as having links to drug trafficking, but then-U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno said the report's findings were never adopted as the official government view.

The former mayor, who also ran unsuccessfully for governor of Mexico's Baja California state, has denied allegations of corruption and ties to drug traffickers.

IMF: Iran Cuts Inflation & Subsidies

Posted June 14th, 2011 at 3:50 pm (UTC-5)
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Officials of the International Monetary Fund say Iran has cut inflation in half and sharply reduced the money it spends subsidizing energy, wheat, transportation and other goods needed by consumers.

After a visit to Teheran, IMF experts said Iran's inflation rate has fallen to a bit over 12 percent. The government has also made deep cuts in subsidies for energy, which will encourage Iranian companies to adopt more energy efficient practices. That will make more energy available for profitable exports and help the economy.

Officials from the global lender said Iran's economic growth sped up and rose to 3.5 percent in 2009 and 2010, even though prices for its crucial oil exports faltered.

But the IMF warned that the government should consider raising interest rates and cutting spending to keep inflation under control.

An expert on Iran's economy, Professor Farrokh Zandi of York University in Toronto, says cutting inflation and subsidies are good for the economy in the long term. But Zandi says reducing subsidies is difficult politically because it causes price increases in the short term.

US Extends Sanctions Against Belarus

Posted June 14th, 2011 at 3:30 pm (UTC-5)
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U.S. President Barack Obama has extended sanctions on Belarus for what he called the Minsk government's continued actions against the development of democratic governance, and for its human rights violations.

In a decree issued Tuesday, Mr. Obama accused Belarus' government of using “harsh violence” against protesters and arresting opposition leaders. He said the country's independent media and civil society groups have faced “continuing repression” since disputed elections in December.

Mr. Obama's action kept in force U.S. sanctions against Belarus that were first invoked in 2006 .

Earlier Tuesday, President Alexander Lukashenko vowed to suppress any form of dissent. Mr. Lukashenko's government has cracked down on all political and economic dissent since a public uprising against his re-election in a ballot that many observers said was deeply flawed.

On Tuesday, journalist Andrzei Pochobut, a leader of the ethnic-Polish minority community in Belarus, went on trial on charges of slandering and insulting President Lukashenko. If convicted, he faces up to four years in prison.

Pochobut, who was arrested in April, is a correspondent for the prominent daily Gazeta Wyborcza in Poland, where his name is spelled Poczobut. Human-rights groups and his Polish employer have campaigned for his release.

On the Belarus side of the border with Poland, residents and travelers have protested against tough economic measures Mr. Lukashenko recently enacted, effectively barring Belarus nationals from bringing cigarettes and other goods into Poland for sale there, where domestic prices are considerably higher.

Belarus security forces dispersed more than 100 motorists who were trying to block a border crossing into Poland Monday. Police said they arrested at least 14 people for disrupting public order, and reports from the scene said authorities sprayed tear gas on the demonstrators.

Mr. Lukashenko has denounced citizens of his country who try to sell goods in Poland as “profiteers” and speculators. Those who engage in such trade say they can find no other way to eke out a living during the current economic hard times in Belarus.

Yemenis Rally for Government Transition

Posted June 14th, 2011 at 2:55 pm (UTC-5)
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Thousands of Yemenis have rallied in the capital, Sana'a, where they called for the formation of a transitional council that excludes members of the current government.

The large rally took place on Tuesday, a day after Yemen's political opposition held talks with the acting leader, Vice President Abd al-Rab Mansur Hadi, on a possible transition plan.

President Ali Abdullah Saleh transferred his powers to the deputy after traveling to Saudi Arabia to seek treatment for wounds suffered in an attack on his presidential compound this month.

Meanwhile, the Gulf Cooperation Council met in Saudi Arabia Tuesday to discuss Yemen's political crisis. The group's efforts to help resolve the unrest stalled after President Saleh refused to sign a proposal which calls for him to eventually leave office.

In another development, Yemeni security sources say a bomb explosion in the country's south had killed an army colonel. Officials said the blast tore through the car of Colonel Muti'a al-Sayani while he was driving Monday in a region near the southern port of Aden.

US Bankers, CEOs See Better Times Ahead

Posted June 14th, 2011 at 2:55 pm (UTC-5)
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U.S. bankers and chief executives are not losing their faith in the ongoing economic recovery despite several weeks of poor economic reports.

A report Tuesday from the American Bankers Association , an industry trade group, forecasts the country's total economic output will grow at a rate of 3 percent through the end of 2012.

Meanwhile, a survey of chief executives by Business Roundtable found 87 percent expect increased sales over the next six months while more than half plan to hire more workers.

Despite the optimism, both groups say the U.S. economy is still facing some significant challenges, including a recent period of higher gasoline prices and wary consumers who are not convinced a recovery has taken hold.

The ABA's Economic Advisory Committee predicts economic growth will lead to the creation of 2 million jobs this year and another 2.5 million jobs next year – enough to bring the U.S. unemployment rate down from more than 9 percent in May to just under 8 percent at the end of 2012.

Still, the ABA says that is still less than half of the jobs lost during the recession.

Separately Tuesday, the U.S. Commerce Department said retail sales declined in May because of a sharp drop in sales of automobiles.

Tuesday's report says U.S. auto sales slowed when Japan's multiple disasters hampered production of auto parts.

This is the first decline in retail sales in nearly a year. Experts watch retail sales because consumer demand drives most U.S. economic activity.

A separate measure of inflation at the wholesale level rose two-tenths of a percent. That is less than the gain in prior months because food prices declined and gasoline costs rose more slowly. This data is called the Producer Price Index and provides clues about future inflation at the consumer level.

On Wednesday, experts will publish the latest information on inflation. Economists surveyed by news organizations predict the study will show a modest increase in prices.

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