Thursday, December 31, 2015

Dubai Skyscraper Ablaze, New Year’s Fireworks Proceed Nearby - from TRUNEWS

Fire engulfed a 63-storey skyscraper in Dubai on Thursday night, but with the block evacuated and only minor injuries reported authorities went ahead with a New Year’s fireworks display at the world’s tallest building a few hundred meters away.

Tongues of flame shot skywards from one side of the luxury Address Downtown Dubai hotel and residential block, which stands across a plaza from the 160-storey Burj Khalifa tower where people had gathered for fireworks to mark the New Year.

Television pictures showed pieces of blazing debris raining down from The Address as evacuated occupants hurried away from the building, some running.

“We came out on my balcony to look at the Burj. All the buildings around here had fireworks prepped on the roof,” Paul Mithun, a U.S. consultant in downtown Dubai said.

“We were like, huh, that looks like a little Olympic torch off in the distance. We thought someone lit fireworks. In under two minutes, the fire went up two-thirds of the length of the hotel. I watched the whole thing. It was real bad.”

But as midnight struck, with the Address building continuing to burn, onlookers cheered as a swirling mass of multicoloured fireworks enveloped the Burj Khalifa.

The Dubai government’s media office said the Address blaze was 90 percent under control. Police chief Major General Khamis Matar told Al Arabiya television: “All residents of the hotel were evacuated and there are 14 injured, with light injuries.”

A medic on the scene who declined to be identified told Reuters: “There are more than 60 people injured with light injuries from smoke inhalation and from crowding while in the stairs evacuating the building.”

One resident staying on the 15th floor of the tower, completed in 2008, told Britain’s Sky News of “absolute pandemonium” as those inside realized the building was ablaze.

“The alarms went off when the building was already properly on fire,” he said.

FIREWORKS GO AHEAD

A Reuters correspondent saw police evacuating a viewing area near the base of the Burj Khalifa.

The fire at the Address building had take hold in minutes.

“Oh my God!” shouted one witness who happened to see the first few moments.

“The flames were running up one side of the building, reaching about halfway up … Flames were licking upwards‎ and out. Orange and yellow,” the witness said.

As the evacuation proceeded, there were moments of panic.

“There’s more shouting. It’s more panicked this time, many voices, some screams,” the witness said.

The Dubai media office said the blaze had started on the 20th floor, on the outside of the 300-metre tower, and that internal fire-fighting systems were operating to try to prevent it getting inside the hotel.

Four fire brigade teams were at the site.

Dubai is a trade, tourism and investment hub for the Gulf region, and is one of seven emirates that make up the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

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TRUNEWS 12/31/15 – Alex Abella, RAND Corp. Exposé - from TRUNEWS

On the Thursday edition of TRUNEWS, host Rick Wiles greets New York Times Notable Book Author and Emmy-nominated TV Reporter and Screenwriter, Alex Abella. Mr. Abella is the first journalist to ever be granted full access to the elusively veiled RAND Corporation, the experience of which he meticulously detailed in, ‘Soldiers of Reason: The RAND Corporation and the Rise of the American Empire.’ Is RAND Corp. the heroic think tank which saved America during World War 2, or an agent behind our acceleration to World War 3?

 






Alex Abella | Official Site
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More Than One Million Migrants Registered in Germany in 2015 - from TRUNEWS

Germany will have registered just over a million migrants by the end of the year, a regional newspaper said on Wednesday, roughly in line with the latest predictions but still about five times more than last year.

Europe’s biggest economy, a magnet for migrants partly due to generous social benefits, is taking in more refugees from the Middle East and Africa than any other EU state, but authorities are struggling to house the dramatic influx of migrants.

Citing unpublished government figures, the Saechsische Zeitung reported that the authorities expect about 125,000 asylum seekers to have registered on Germany’s EASY system in December, down considerably from 206,000 last month.

That brings the overall figure to 1.09 million people.

A spokeswoman for the Interior Ministry declined to confirm the numbers which will be available in early January but Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere said in a statement the numbers were falling slightly.

Germany’s 16 federal states plan to spend about 17 billion euros to deal with the refugee crisis next year, a newspaper reported on Tuesday.

Chancellor Angela Merkel’s popularity has waned as a result of her open-door policy, with some of her own conservatives, especially in Bavaria which is the entry point for many seeking asylum, seeking a cap on numbers.

In a speech to her party this month she sought to silence critics by saying she would stem the flow of refugees..

De Maiziere said that creation of an orderly processing of refugee applications meant the situation was improving and that authorities were working hard to register and accommodate refugees.

Merkel’s government is putting measures in place to speed up deportations of those refused asylum. It is also pushing other EU countries to take more migrants and working with Turkey to ensure fewer people come to Europe in the first place.

But de Maiziere rejected demands by Merkel’s conservative Christian Social Union (CSU) in Bavaria to ban migrants from entering Germany unless they have valid identity papers.

“Regarding the CSU demands to send back refugees without valid identity papers, no further changes are planned,” he said.

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Syria Ceasefire Plan Struggles to Define a ‘Terrorist’ - from TRUNEWS

A U.N. plan to suspend Syria’s nearly five-year-old civil war calls for listing which militant groups may be fought despite an eventual ceasefire, one of the toughest issues vexing diplomats trying to end the conflict.

A U.N. draft discussion paper obtained by Reuters includes eight “framework principles” to be embraced by all countries and rebel groups that sign on to a ceasefire. The ceasefire plan also lists issues still to be negotiated, including defining “those terrorist organizations against whom combat is allowed.”

The paper’s authenticity was confirmed by two diplomats who spoke on condition of anonymity. The diplomats stressed that the document was a draft, originally prepared by the United Nations, and they said multiple versions of the draft have been passed back and forth among U.S., U.N. and other diplomats.

The ceasefire idea, endorsed by the U.N. Security Council on Dec. 18 at the urging of major powers and regional players that include the United States, Russia, Iran and Turkey, would exclude militant groups such as Islamic State, also known as ISIS, and al Qaeda-affiliated Nusra Front.

Diplomats say the result could be a messy, partial ceasefire in which government and acceptable rebel forces stop shooting at one another but still go after Islamic State militants and other groups branded as terrorist.

With Nusra Front fighters scattered across northern Syria rather than concentrated in any one place, attacks on them could harm civilians as well as groups who signed on to any ceasefire, diplomats and analysts said.

Identifying the groups still subject to attack is a diplomatic task delegated to Jordan’s government.

In a tangible sign of the difficulty, the Jaysh al Islam militant group has agreed to take part in the peace talks, yet its leader was killed on Friday in an air strike that rebel sources say was carried out by Russian aircraft.

The U.S. State Department said the killing had complicated efforts to achieve a political settlement, a point it said U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry made to Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in a phone call on Monday.

JAN. 25 IN GENEVA

Staffan de Mistura, the third U.N. envoy tasked with ending a civil war that has killed at least 250,000 people and driven millions from their homes, has taken the lead in laying out the possible dimensions of a ceasefire, diplomats said.

De Mistura has said he hopes to open talks between the Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s government and opposition groups in Geneva on Jan. 25.

Those talks will focus on trying to get the two sides to agree on a political transition for Syria.

Separate talks are underway about the shape of a ceasefire and the draft document obtained by Reuters addresses this.

Quick agreement seems likely on some framework principles, such as a recognition of Syria’s territorial integrity, but others will be vexing. Among these is one to require the withdrawal of “foreign fighters unlawfully present in Syria.”

That language could allow Assad to argue that fighters from Iran, Russia, Iraqi Shi’ite militias and others that support him are in Syria at his invitation and therefore lawfully present – a stance sure to be resisted by opposition and rebel groups.

‘DEVILISHLY DIFFICULT’

The document lays out three possible ceasefire models that could vary from one region of Syria to another:

– A ceasefire that excludes “undesired groups,” presumably those deemed to be “terrorist.”

– A ceasefire open to all who embrace the framework principles.

– A limited ceasefire that would reduce violence by barring the use of certain weapons.

Diplomats and analysts stressed the challenge of getting the Assad government and the opposition and rebel groups into talks, let alone to lay down their arms.

“This whole document does indeed reflect how devilishly difficult it’s going to be to implement a nationwide ceasefire in Syria and when I say nationwide, I am not including the area run by ISIS,” said Fred Hof, a former State Department official who worked on Syria now at the Atlantic Council think tank.

“It’s going to be impossible to have a one-size-fits-all set of arrangements,” he added.

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Operation Rescue Study Shows High Number of Abortion Clinics Closed in 2015 - from TRUNEWS

The number of abortion clinics in the U.S. has declined.

Operation Rescue conducted a study on abortion facilities and found 54 clinics closed 2015 and 28 others reduced services.

“We spoke with employees at every abortion clinic in the country in order to verify the information,” said Spokesperson Cheryl Sullenger.

Since 1991 there has been an 81% decline, which coincides with a report by the Centers for Disease Control that states the number of induced abortion has decreased to its lowest rate in 25 years.

The reasons for the drop include declining demand, an increasing number of abortionists retiring and changes in laws in some states.

Recent cases of abortion clinic abuses have made headlines, including the conviction of physician Kermit Gosnell who was found guilty of  first degree murder for cutting the spinal cords of several babies born alive during attempted abortions.

Earlier this year undercover videos showed Planned Parenthood officials negotiating the sale of baby body parts.

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Iran Denies Claims it Fired Rockets Near U.S. Warship in Gulf - from TRUNEWS

Iran denied on Thursday that its Revolutionary Guards launched rockets near a U.S. aircraft carrier in the Gulf on Saturday and condemned U.S. plans for new sanctions over its ballistic missile program.

The dispute comes after Iran and six world powers, including the United States, reached a deal in July that will remove certain U.S., European Union and U.N. sanctions on Tehran in exchange for Iran accepting curbs on its nuclear program.

“The naval forces of the Guards have not had any exercises in the Strait of Hormuz during the past week and the period claimed by the Americans for them to have launched missiles and rockets,” the Revolutionary Guards website quoted Ramezan Sharif, the Guard’s spokesman, as saying.

“The publication of such false news under the present circumstances is akin to psychological warfare,” Sharif said.

NBC News, citing unnamed U.S. military officials, said the Guards were conducting a live-fire exercise and the U.S. aircraft-carrier Harry S. Truman came within about 1,500 yards (meters) of a rocket as it entered the Gulf with other warships.

In Washington, Commander Kyle Raines said the action was “highly provocative, unsafe and unprofessional.”

Several Revolutionary Guard vessels fired the rockets “in close proximity” of the warships and nearby merchant traffic “after providing only 23 minutes of advance notification,” said Raines, spokesman for the U.S. Central Command.

Iranian and U.S. forces have clashed in the Gulf in the past, especially during the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s after the 1979 Islamic revolution.

Diplomats have held out hope that the deal over Iran’s disputed nuclear program could ease decades of mistrust and reduce tensions in the Middle East.

The West has long suspected the program was aimed at creating a nuclear bomb, something denied by Iran, which sent a shipment of low-enriched uranium materials to Russia this month as part of the deal.

MISSILES

But ahead of the formal easing of international sanctions on Tehran set for the beginning of 2016, tensions have mounted.

Hardliners in Iran have carried out a wave of arrests of activists they accuse of promoting Western “infiltration,” while the United States passed a law restricting visa-free travel rights for people who have visited Iran or hold dual Iranian nationality, a measure Iran has called a breach of the deal.

Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Hossein Jaber Ansari on Thursday condemned as “arbitrary and illegal” U.S. plans for new sanctions on international companies and individuals over Iran’s ballistic missile program.

“As we have declared to the American government … Iran’s missile program has no connection to the (nuclear) agreement,” state television quoted Ansari as saying.

“Iran will resolutely respond to any interfering action by America against its defensive programs,” said Jaber Ansari.

In Washington, sources familiar with the situation said on Wednesday the U.S. government was preparing the sanctions, which the Wall Street Journal said would target about 12 companies and individuals in Iran, Hong Kong and the United Arab Emirates for their suspected role in developing Iran’s missile program.

A team of U.N. sanctions monitors said in a confidential report seen by Reuters on Dec. 15 that Iran tested a rocket on Oct. 10 capable of delivering a nuclear warhead, which Iran maintains was a convention missile.

U.S. officials have said the Treasury Department retains a right under the nuclear agreement to blacklist Iranian entities suspected of involvement in missile development.

Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has said such new penalties would nullify the nuclear accord.

“There may actually be a link between the accusations made by the United States (about the Gulf incident) and the new sanctions,” Mohammad Marandi, a Tehran University professor, told state-run PressTV. “The regime in Washington is trying to reimpose these sanctions by other means.”

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House Panel Seeks Information on NSA Spying Report - from TRUNEWS

A House of Representatives committee asked the National Security Agency on Wednesday for information about a media report that the agency, while spying on Israeli officials, also intercepted communications between the Israelis and members of Congress.

In a letter to NSA Director Michael Rogers, House Oversight Committee Chairman Jason Chaffetz and subcommittee Chairman Ron DeSantis said the story in Tuesday’s Wall Street Journal raised “questions concerning the processes NSA employees follow in determining whether intercepted communications involved Members of Congress.”

The Journal, citing current and former U.S. officials, said the NSA was targeting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and other Israeli officials when they launched their campaign on Capitol Hill to try to derail the Iran nuclear deal.

Along with capturing the communications of Israeli officials, the spying swept up details about their lobbying efforts, including the contents of some of their conversations with lawmakers and Jewish-American groups, the Journal reported.

The letter from Chaffetz and DeSantis, both Republicans, asked Rogers to provide information on how the agency determines whether lawmakers’ communications have been caught up in NSA eavesdropping and the latitude agency employees have in passing on the intercepts to other U.S. agencies and the White House.

The committee also requested a briefing by the NSA for its staff.

The Journal reported that the NSA followed rules that required its intelligence reports to remove names of any Americans, including lawmakers, referenced in the Israeli communications that were intercepted.

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Top Ten TRUNEWS Broadcasts of 2015 - from TRUNEWS

The year 2015 has been a time of significant change for the ministry of TRUNEWS.  Over the course of the past year, TRUNEWS host Rick Wiles has had the opportunity to speak with nearly 300 newsmakers and world-shakers, all in an effort to provide spiritual nourishment to the saints of God, even as the world grows darker.

What have been the significant TRUNEWS broadcasts of 2015?  Based on usage and viewer data, we present the ‘Top Ten TRUNEWS Broadcasts of 2015’.

At Number Ten: WALID SHOEBAT and LT COLONEL SARGIS SANGARI

In the aftermath of the attempted mass shooting by ISIS in Texas, Rick recaps his prophetic warnings uttered in 1998 that Islamic terrorists would strike in America. Former Palestinian radical-turned-Christian Walid Shoebat tells Rick why he thinks Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan is the most dangerous man in the world as he works to form a grand caliphate. In Part 3, retired Lt. Colonel Sargis Sangari gives Rick his perspective on the game of musical chairs in the Middle East as the U.S. dumps Saudi Arabia for Iran, and China moves in to dominate the region.

**

Number Nine: PASTOR JOHN KILIPATRICK

Rick covers the latest developments in the fast-spreading bird flu that is wiping out a substantial portion of our food supply. He also covers the volatility in the bond markets, and the real possibility Greek will be booted out of the Euro zone. Are these developments connected to Jade Helm? In Part 2, Pastor John Kilpatrick revisits the question he asked on Trunews last year: “Where is the urgency in the pastors’ messages today?”

**

NUMBER EIGHT: JIM WILLIE

It’s vintage Jim Willie – uncorked! Rick spends the full hour probing Jim Willie’s mind about the unprecedented global financial and geopolitical reset that is presently underway. This is a Jim Willie interview you can’t afford to miss.

**

NUMBER SEVEN: PERRY STONE

 

Is the Putin-is-dead rumor true? Rick talks about it. In Part 2, Bible prophecy teacher Perry Stone talks about America’s broken covenant with God.

**

NUMBER SIX: JIM WILLIE

Rick devotes the full one-hour to delivering a blockbuster interview with financial analyst Jim Willie, publisher of the Hat Trick Letter. Jim discusses the rapid drying of the Treasury bond liquidity market, the introduction of a new U.S. currency very soon, the BRICS challenge to the London-New York financial power base, criminal activity in financial markets, the global re-set of the financial system, a gold-backed global reserve currency, and many other hot-button topics.

**

NUMBER FIVE:  THE RETURN OF BETHLEHEM’S STAR

Is the celestial event of June 30th the reappearance of the Star of Bethlehem? TRUNEWS host Rick Wiles is joined by experts Jim Dodge and Dale Sides to discuss signs in the skies in 2015.

**

NUMBER FOUR:  JONATHAN CAHN – ‘THE MYSTERY OF THE SHEMITAH’

Rick’s special guest is author Jonathan Cahn, and together they discuss the impending race to the last days.

**

NUMBER THREE: MENA LEE GREBIN – PART 2

Rick interrupts the regular newscast for a two-part interview with Mena Lee Grebin, a Charlotte NC prophetic minister, who was given a series of dreams and visions about a massive economic collapse, martial law, and riots. She believes great trouble will start in September 2015. Today is Part 2.

**
NUMBER TWO: GERALD CELENTE ‘ANALYSIS 2015’

Rick looks at the tsunami of shockwaves sent out by the Swiss National Bank today by decoupling the Franc from the Euro. Trends Journal publisher Gerald Celente joins Rick to discuss the financial and political volatility that will grip the world in 2015.

**

and the most popular TRUNEWS broadcast at NUMBER ONE: MENA LEE GREBIN – PART 1

Rick interrupts the regular newscast for an interview with Mena Lee Grebin, a Charlotte NC prophetic minister, who was given a series of dreams and visions about a massive economic collapse, martial law, and riots. She believes great trouble will start in September 2015.

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Microsoft to Warn Email Users of Suspected Hacking by Governments - from TRUNEWS

Microsoft Corp said on Wednesday it will begin warning users of its consumer services including Outlook.com email when the company suspects that a government has been trying to hack into their accounts.

The policy change comes nine days after Reuters asked the company why it had decided not tell victims of a hacking campaign, discovered in 2011, that had targeted international leaders of China’s Tibetan and Uighur minorities in particular.

According to two former employees of Microsoft, the company’s own experts had concluded several years ago that Chinese authorities had been behind the campaign but the company did not pass on that information to users of its Hotmail service, which is now called Outlook.com.

In its statement, Microsoft said neither it nor the U.S. government could pinpoint the sources of the hacking attacks and that they didn’t come from a single country.

The policy shift at the world’s largest software company follows similar moves since October by Internet giants Facebook Inc, Twitter Inc and most recently Yahoo Inc.

Google Inc pioneered the practice in 2012 and said it now alerts tens of thousands of users every few months.

For two years, Microsoft has offered alerts about potential security breaches without specifying the likely suspect.

In a statement to Reuters, Microsoft said: “As the threat landscape has evolved our approach has too, and we’ll now go beyond notification and guidance to specify if we reasonably believe the attacker is ‘state-sponsored’.”

In a blog post published late Wednesday, Microsoft said: “We’re taking this additional step of specifically letting you know if we have evidence that the attacker may be ‘state-sponsored’ because it is likely that the attack could be more sophisticated or more sustained than attacks from cybercriminals and others. (here)

The Hotmail attacks targeted diplomats, media workers, human rights lawyers, and others in sensitive positions inside China, according to the former employees.

Microsoft had told the targets to reset their passwords but did not tell them that they had been hacked. Five victims interviewed by Reuters said they had not taken the password reset as an indication of hacking.

Online free-speech activists and security experts have long called for more direct warnings, saying that they prompt behavioral changes from email users.

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Puerto Rico to Default on Some Debts, Will Pay GO Debt - from TRUNEWS

Puerto Rico will default for the second time in five months, but will pay the bulk of $1 billion due on Jan. 4, including its most senior debt, Governor Alejandro Garcia Padilla said on Wednesday.

The Caribbean island’s biggest payment, $328.7 million in general obligation debt, will be paid, the governor told reporters at a press conference in San Juan. More than half of that payment was made by taking revenues from other commonwealth agencies, he added.

A default on general obligation (GO) debt would have been seen as a more serious stumble because those bonds have the strongest legal protections of any of the island’s obligations.

However, it also keeps alive the drama surrounding its deteriorating finances and $70 billion debt load as investors wait for the next shoe to drop.

The default opens the door to potential litigation from affected creditors, while the island must now turn its focus to trying to achieve a consensual debt restructuring with GO holders before its next big payment of $1.9 billion is due in July.

The governor said he is meeting with creditors in early January, though he did not give a specific date.

When asked about a shutdown of key government services, Garcia Padilla told reporters at a press conference: “We have to do all we can to avoid that situation.”

The U.S. Commonwealth, suffering from a near decade-long recession with a 45 percent poverty rate and a shrinking tax base due to people leaving the island, first defaulted in August when it failed to make the full payment on its Public Finance Corp (PFC) bonds.

One creditor source with significant GO holdings said Puerto Rico’s decision to pay GO debt buys it some credibility as debt restructuring talks continue. “I’m glad we can enjoy our holiday, because there’s going to be a lot of heavy lifting to do when we get back,” the source said.

David Tawil, co-founder of hedge fund Maglan Capital, said a default of GO bonds is also probably inevitable in the long-term, but that there is a slim possibility that either Congress will take action or a settlement could be reached with creditors ahead of a default. Either way, he warned that Puerto Rico is still in the very early stages of dealing with its massive fiscal challenge.

“Citizens need to know that necessary infrastructure and services are there and there is not going to be a government shutdown,” Tawil said.

The island will default on a $35.9 million payment due to its Infrastructure Finance Authority (PRIFA). It will also default on $1.4 million due to its Public Finance Corp, but will make payments to most other authorities. The island was facing a bill of about $1 billion had it made all payments.

Padilla said about $163 million of the GO payment came from clawing back revenues from several agencies, including the highway authority, the convention center authority and the island’s busing authority. Garcia Padilla on Dec. 1 granted the U.S. territory power to take revenues from those agencies to keep payments on GO debt current.

“The use of over $100 million in reserved funds to make debt service payments for several of the Commonwealth’s issuers should underscore that the Commonwealth is running out of options to pay its debt,” said Melba Acosta Febo, president of the Government Development Bank.

POTENTIAL LAWSUITS

The announcement now opens the door to litigation from holders of defaulted bonds. One creditor source with exposure at one of the clawed-back agencies told Reuters lawsuits are being considered and could be filed immediately, but creditors have not decided whether the cost of litigation is worthwhile.

Daniel Hanson, an analyst at Height Securities who follows Puerto Rico, said any litigation will focus on Puerto Rico’s credibility. Garcia Padilla has consistently said the island was on the brink of a humanitarian crisis, yet it is able to pay the bulk of its debt and dished out about $120 million in Christmas bonuses this month, Hanson pointed out.

Such questions could also hamper Puerto Rico’s efforts to convince U.S. Congress that it is in desperate need of legislative aid, Hanson said.

The U.S. Treasury has been pushing Congress to allow the island to restructure its debts under U.S. bankruptcy law. A Treasury spokesman said Wednesday that the latest default “demands swift Congressional action” for a restructuring with independent oversight.

The House is expected to hold a Jan. 5 hearing on Puerto Rico’s financial problems.

The source with significant GO exposure acknowledged that clawing back certain debt to pay GO holders is legal, but said a lawsuit would likely focus on whether Puerto Rico met the legal requirements needed to exercise clawbacks, namely proving it was cash-strapped and had no other choice.

Bond insurer Ambac Financial, which insures about $863 million in PRIFA bonds, on Tuesday wrote a letter to Garcia Padilla challenging whether the clawbacks were used properly under Puerto Rican laws.

General obligation bonds with an 8 percent coupon and maturing in 2035 were slightly higher on Wednesday, traded at an average price of 73 cents on the dollar compared to 71.726 on Tuesday. The average yield fell to 11.501 percent from 11.716.

The island owes about $400 million due February 1, mostly to Puerto Rico Sales Tax Financing Corp, or COFINA. The monies for this payment are already held in reserve, Garcia Padilla said.

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Trump: Bill Clinton Is ‘One Of The Great Abusers Of The World’ - from TRUNEWS

Donald Trump blasted Bill Clinton, insisting he “is one of the great abusers [of women] of the world.”

Speaking at a campaign rally in Hilton Head Island, South Carolina, Trump said he brought up Bill Clinton’s “tremendous abuse” of women because Hillary Clinton called him “sexist.”

Trump argued, “You cannot let them push you around… And then she [Hillary] came out with the sexism, which is so nonsense, and but she is playing the card. And then I had to hit her back, so I hit her back and I talked about her husband and the abuse of women and the tremendous abuse.”

“It’s tremendous. I mean, you look at it, it’s tremendous abuse,” Trump claimed. “And I talked about that. And now, today, the television is going crazy and she gets up and makes a speech and does not even mention anything about me with sexism or anything else. I wonder why. I wonder why.”

Later during the rally, Trump said that Hillary “wants to accuse me of things and the husband is one of the great abusers of the world? Give me a break, give me a break, give me a break. So the last person she wants to run against is me.”

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Al-Qaida Remarkably Successful Despite Being ‘Decimated’ By Obama - from TRUNEWS

The terrorist group al-Qaida has shown remarkable resilience in Afghanistan for an organization that President Barack Obama has described as “on the run” for the past three years.

The supposedly vanquished enemy has maintained a presence not only in Afghanistan, but much of the Middle East, despite being “decimated.” Al-Qaida camps have been popping up across Afghanistan, The New York Times reported Tuesday. Meanwhile, the Obama administration has refocused on countering the resurgence of the Taliban and rise of ISIS.

“I do worry about the rebirth of AQ [al-Qaida] in Afghanistan because of what their target list will be — us.” says Michael Morrell, former deputy director of CIA, reports the Times. The former intelligence official notes that al-Qaida’s resilience is why the U.S. needs to focus on extinguishing the Taliban’s resurgence; if the Taliban is able to provide safe haven for al-Qaida like they did in years past, the threat to the U.S. could increase exponentially.

Al-Qaida’s staying power was exhibited this October when 200 U.S. soldiers and their Afghan colleagues launched an assault on two massive training compounds in Afghanistan’s southern province of Kandahar, killing dozens of al-Qaida fighters. “The first site, a well-established training camp, spanned approximately one square mile. The second site covered nearly 30 square miles,” said U.S. Army Brig. Gen. William Shoffner in a statement regarding the operation.

Afghanistan’s troubles with al-Qaida and their Taliban brethren are hardly localized in Kandahar, according to Bill Roggio, editor of the Long War Journal. Roggio, a former U.S. Army infantryman and veteran journalist, has spent many years covering the war in Afghanistan both inside and outside of the country. He outlines the detrimental problems the Afghan government, and therefore the U.S., face in the southern Afghanistan province of Helmand in a Dec. 21 piece. Roggio notes that the district of Sangin, a key staging area for Afghan forces, was lost to Taliban forces on Dec. 21 despite U.S. support.

“About half of Helmand has been taken by the Taliban,” Roggio told The Daily Caller News Foundation.

“The [Obama] administration has made another ridiculous claim that there’s only 50-100 al-Qaida operatives in Afghanistan, they have used that number for four-plus years, [yet] at least 100-200 fighters were killed in the camp raid,” notes Roggio, referring to the October strike in Kandahar province– the “facts have never shown that al-Qaida has been defeated in Afghanistan.”

Al-Qaida’s presence elsewhere in the Middle East as a whole has been staunch. Al-Qaida in the Arabian Penninsula (AQAP) has been in control of several territories in Yemen for years and continues to be embroiled in the ongoing civil war in that country. Al-Nusra Front, al-Qaida’s Syrian branch, has been one of the major players in the Syrian civil war, fighting both ISIS and the Syrian government while training young boys to become jihadists and executing government soldiers en masse. In North Africa, al-Qaida-linked group al-Mourabitoun engaged in an attack on a hotel in Mali in late November, killing 20 people, including one former American Peace Corps worker.

“Facts have never shown that al-Qaida has been defeated in Afghanistan… [the administration’s] claims have not comported with reality,” says Roggio. Based on recent events, the terrorist group has not been defeat elsewhere as well.

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French Journalist Ejected by China For Negative Coverage of Muslim Uighurs - from TRUNEWS

A French journalist is being forced to leave China after the government said it would not renew her press credentials for the new year in response to a critical report on Beijing’s policies in the troubled western region of Xinjiang.

The departure of Ursula Gauthier, a reporter for the French current affairs magazine L’Obs, will mark the first time in more than three years that a journalist has been forced to leave China due to a refusal by authorities to renew accreditation.

China’s foreign ministry said on Saturday that Gauthier could no longer work in China because she did not make a public apology for an article she wrote on Nov. 18.

Hours after Chinese President Xi Jinping told his French counterpart, Francois Hollande, that China stood by France in the wake of the Paris attacks in November, the article said, China’s public security ministry announced the capture of suspects over a coal mine attack in September in Xinjiang.

On Nov. 20, the government announced that security forces in Xinjiang had killed 28 “terrorists” from a group that carried out a deadly attack at a coal mine in September under the direction of “foreign extremists”. The government has given no details of the composition of the group.

Reuters has not been able to independently verify that the suspects were Muslim Uighurs, or if they had a role in the mine attack due to tight government reporting restrictions in Xinjiang.

Hundreds of people have died in unrest in Xinjiang, home to the Uighurs, and other parts of China over the past three years.

“Beautiful solidarity, but not entirely free of ulterior motives,” Gauthier wrote in her article.

On Saturday, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang said Gauthier’s article “openly supports terrorist activity, the killing of innocents and has outraged the Chinese public”.

Gauthier said the government’s decision would mean that she would have to leave Beijing on a 1 a.m. flight on Friday to Paris.

When asked whether Gauthier would be allowed to return to China, Lu told reporters on Thursday it was “up to her”. He did not elaborate.

Gauthier, who has been based in China for six years, said she met officials from China’s foreign ministry three times starting in late November after the state-run Global Times published a commentary criticizing the article she had written on China’s policy in Xinjiang in the wake of attacks in Paris.

Gauthier, who said she had received death threats after her report, told Reuters she had told the foreign ministry that the Global Times had distorted the meaning of her article.

“They wanted me to apologize publicly for my wrongs,” Gauthier said. “But I said my wrongs were all invented by the Global Times. I cannot apologize for crimes I did not commit.”

When asked to confirm the meetings, Lu said that the ministry did not want to “publicize the situation”. He noted that Gauthier did not call the police.

“This is not that usual, unless she’s got other considerations,” he said at a briefing.

Gauthier said she did not report the death threats as she “did not expect the police to take the case seriously”.

The Global Times declined to comment when contacted by Reuters.

France’s ambassador to China, Maurice Gourdault-Montagne, has raised Gauthier’s case with China’s foreign ministry, said a spokeswoman for the French embassy in Beijing.

China requires all foreign journalists to renew their accreditation annually.

In May 2012, Melissa Chan, a reporter for Al Jazeera’s English language channel in Beijing, was forced to leave China after authorities refused to renew her press credentials over unspecified alleged violations of Chinese regulations – the first such case in 13 years at the time.

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Salon Deletes Article On Mosque Attack After Learning Attacker Was Muslim - from TRUNEWS

Update: The article has been posted once again, and modified to note Moore’s background.

Salon deleted an article on its website Wednesday about an arson attack on a Houston mosque, after news broke the alleged attacker was Muslim.

Authorities charged Gary Moore early Wednesday with setting fire to the Islamic Center of Houston on Christmas Day, shortly after Friday prayers. It’s not clear why Moore allegedly targeted the mosque, but authorities say there’s no evidence of a hate crime, according to the Associated Press. Rather, Moore himself is a Muslim who worshiped regularly at the center.

Salon published an article about Moore’s arrest Wednesday morning, along with many other media outlets. Writer Ben Norton prematurely suggested in the piece the attack was Islamophobic.

Norton’s article was apparently taken down later Wednesday, apparently after it became apparent the alleged attacker is Muslim. The link to the Norton’s piece returned a 404 error page as of Wednesday evening.

A cache of Salon’s articles reveals what the piece originally said.

“While Christians around the U.S. were celebrating Christmas, Muslims in Texas were terrorized,” Norton began in the article. “After Friday prayers, the Islamic Center of Houston was set on fire in a suspected arson attack.”

“Muslim community members say the attack was a hate crime,” he continued. “Texas mosques have previously been targeted by heavily armed anti-Muslim protesters. Many Texas Muslims have said they feel unsafe in the atmosphere of aggressive hate and bigotry.”

Norton then rattled off examples of crimes against Muslims and mosques around the U.S. in recent years.

Journalist Steve Krakauer pointed out Salon took down the piece Wednesday afternoon. “[Salon], why’d you take this down?” he tweeted, linking to the piece. “Because he was a devout Muslim who attended the Mosque?”

Norton did not immediately return a request for comment.

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CAIR Passes Off Mosque Bacon Prank As Hate Crime - from TRUNEWS

Somebody with an impish sense of humor wrapped bacon strips around three door handles of a Las Vegas mosque over the weekend.

The worshiper who found the stuff Sunday morning just threw it in the trash. And one mosque official even called the caper “comical.”

But the Hamas-friendly Council on American-Islamic Relations is demanding a federal and state hate crime investigation of the incident. The Las Vegas Police and FBI are both probing it that way.

And most news outlets, including Breitbart, are doubling as stenographers for CAIR’s latest attempt to exaggerate the degree of anti-Muslim bias in this country. But the reality is that the caper not by any stretch fall within the Nevada or federal law definitions of hate crimes. Both define hate crimes as inflicting bodily injury or harm on a person with discriminatory motives.

Yes, the perp was clearly bigoted. But, so are many of the people at CAIR and/or associated with the organization. Executive director Nihad Awad, has contended that Jews control American foreign policy. But nobody called for investigating Awad for hate crimes.

And just what crime was committed at the mosque anyway? It was not vandalized. There are no allegations of trespassing. The culprit or culprits did not enter the mosque.

Las Vegas defense attorney Michael Becker told the Washington Gadfly that authorities are ginning up a “sensational incident” to show they are determined to protect Mosques and Muslims from any conceivable harm.

“The bacon is harmless and the government is wasting [its] time to make a collateral point about this community,” he contended. “There was no damage done. It represents more of an agenda that they [want to] protect this community. It would be hard case to case to prosecute.”

Becker, who noted that he finds anti-Muslim bigotry awful, said if the perp, described as a white male, was his client he might argue at trial that the bacon caper was constitutionally protected speech.

In Nevada, vandalism is known as “malicious mischief.” The statute lists 21 definitions. They all expressly require the perp to have damaged something or trespassed.

For example, graffiti is described as “any unauthorized inscription, word, figure or design that is marked, etched, scratched, drawn, painted on or affixed to the public or private property, real or personal, of another, which defaces the property”.

“Deface” is generally defined as altering or disfiguring something — like graffiti. You can’t just throw graffiti away, like you can bacon. It needs to be removed.

The law does prohibit, “damage of property used for purpose of religion.” But again, damage means some kind of physical alteration.

The damage here seems to be limited to hurt feelings. Masjid Tawheed Mosque board member Fayyaz Raja told the Las Vegas Sun that some worshipers were offended when the bacon was discovered. But, it’s not as offensive as you might think. “According to our religion, yes, we can’t touch it, we can’t eat it. That I understand. But to me, it’s comical.”

This is not the only reported incident of somebody bringing home the bacon to a mosque. In April, a mosque in Edmond, Oklahoma, reported somebody put bacon on their door handles.

 

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Iran Denies It Fired Rockets Near U.S. Warship - from TRUNEWS

Iran denied on Thursday that its Revolutionary Guards launched rockets near a U.S. aircraft carrier in the Gulf on Saturday and condemned U.S. plans for new sanctions over its ballistic missile program.

The dispute comes after Iran and six world powers, including the United States, reached a deal in July that will remove certain U.S., European Union and U.N. sanctions on Tehran in exchange for Iran accepting curbs on its nuclear program.

“The naval forces of the Guards have not had any exercises in the Strait of Hormuz during the past week and the period claimed by the Americans for them to have launched missiles and rockets,” the Revolutionary Guards website quoted Ramezan Sharif, the Guard’s spokesman, as saying.

“The publication of such false news under the present circumstances is akin to psychological warfare,” Sharif said.

NBC News, citing unnamed U.S. military officials, said the Guards were conducting a live-fire exercise and the U.S. aircraft-carrier Harry S. Truman came within about 1,500 yards (meters) of a rocket as it entered the Gulf with other warships.

In Washington, Commander Kyle Raines said the action was “highly provocative, unsafe and unprofessional.”

Several Revolutionary Guard vessels fired the rockets “in close proximity” of the warships and nearby merchant traffic “after providing only 23 minutes of advance notification,” said Raines, spokesman for the U.S. Central Command.

Iranian and U.S. forces have clashed in the Gulf in the past, especially during the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s after the 1979 Islamic revolution.

Diplomats have held out hope that the deal over Iran’s disputed nuclear program could ease decades of mistrust and reduce tensions in the Middle East.

The West has long suspected the program was aimed at creating a nuclear bomb, something denied by Iran, which sent a shipment of low-enriched uranium materials to Russia this month as part of the deal.

MISSILES

But ahead of the formal easing of international sanctions on Tehran set for the beginning of 2016, tensions have mounted.

Hardliners in Iran have carried out a wave of arrests of activists they accuse of promoting Western “infiltration,” while the United States passed a law restricting visa-free travel rights for people who have visited Iran or hold dual Iranian nationality, a measure Iran has called a breach of the deal.

Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Hossein Jaber Ansari on Thursday condemned as “arbitrary and illegal” U.S. plans for new sanctions on international companies and individuals over Iran’s ballistic missile program.

“As we have declared to the American government … Iran’s missile program has no connection to the (nuclear) agreement,” state television quoted Ansari as saying.

“Iran will resolutely respond to any interfering action by America against its defensive programs,” said Jaber Ansari.

In Washington, sources familiar with the situation said on Wednesday the U.S. government was preparing the sanctions, which the Wall Street Journal said would target about 12 companies and individuals in Iran, Hong Kong and the United Arab Emirates for their suspected role in developing Iran’s missile program.

A team of U.N. sanctions monitors said in a confidential report seen by Reuters on Dec. 15 that Iran tested a rocket on Oct. 10 capable of delivering a nuclear warhead, which Iran maintains was a convention missile.

U.S. officials have said the Treasury Department retains a right under the nuclear agreement to blacklist Iranian entities suspected of involvement in missile development.

Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has said such new penalties would nullify the nuclear accord.

“There may actually be a link between the accusations made by the United States (about the Gulf incident) and the new sanctions,” Mohammad Marandi, a Tehran University professor, told state-run PressTV. “The regime in Washington is trying to reimpose these sanctions by other means.”

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U.S. Muslim Students Demand Total Ban on All Islamophobic Speech - from TRUNEWS

The Muslim Student Association at San Diego State University is calling on officials at the public, taxpayer-funded school develop a formal policy outlawing political speech they dislike.

The demand to suppress free speech is part of a larger list of demands that is similar to the various lists proposed in recent months by black leftists on campus around the country, reports The College Fix.

The highlight of the extensive list of demands from “We the Muslim Student Association at San Diego State University” is a call for a ban on “Islamophobic speech” and, in fact, “bigotry towards any other identity group.”

“We demand that the SDSU administration enact a zero tolerance policy explicitly for Islamophobic speech and actions as well as targeted bigotry toward any other identity group,” reads the first demand of the SDSU administration.

The San Diego State Muslim Student Association originally cooked up the demands — eight in total — last month after an unidentified female Muslim student claimed she was attacked by a white male in a parking lot on campus.

The attack allegedly occurred on the afternoon of Thursday, Nov. 19 — six days after a series of coordinated terrorist attacks in Paris, France.

The white assailant allegedly ran up behind the Muslim student and grabbed her hijab, she claimed. He then called her a terrorist, “choked her with the hajib” and said she should “get out of this country,” according to a contemporaneous report by The San Diego Union-Tribune.

Witnesses — also unidentified — failed to intervene, the hijab-wearing student said.

A police investigation commenced. A police sketch was composed. However, police have yet to find any attacker.

In late November, San Diego State’s Muslim Student Association organized a protest concerning the alleged hijab-grabbing. A few hundred people attended.

The group debuted its eight demands at the protest.

In addition to a ban on certain offensive speech, the Muslim Student Association is also clamoring for the state-supported school to “make bystander training mandatory for faculty, staff, and students.” (“Bystander training” is instruction to encourage people to report crimes and problems.)

San Diego State’s Muslims also demand more coursework “offered on Islam,” “substantially more funding for The Center for Intercultural Relations” and the complete elimination of “systems of oppression that disproportionately target students of color, womyn, and all marginalized students on campus.”

The Muslim Student Association purposefully misspells the word “women” with the letter “y” so that the word “men” is absent.

The goal of the far-reaching demands, Muslim Student Association members say, is to prevent anyone from grabbing a hijab in the future.

Anthony Berteaux, a San Diego State student and vice president of public relations for Students Supporting Israel, noted earlier this month that Students for Justice in Palestine, a pro-Palestinian outfit, had protested the pro-Israel group’s signature endorsing the Muslim group’s eight demands.

Berteaux is — and will always and forever be — famous because he lectured Jerry Seinfeld on comedy this summer in a widely belittled Huffington Post manifesto. Berteaux championed political correctness because college students are now ultra-sensitive, which is their “job as learners.” Many people disagreed and took to Twitter, calling Berteaux “Little Nancy” and “Liberal Boy.”

None of the eight demands of the San Diego State’s Muslim students have been met. School officials are “meeting internally and with the students to discuss their concerns,” according to an email from SDSU spokeswoman Beth Chee.

A policy banning “Islamophobic speech” at a state-funded university in California would be unlikely to withstand constitutional scrutiny.

The California state constitution states: “Every person may freely speak, write and publish his or her sentiments on all subjects, being responsible for the abuse of this right. A law may not restrain or abridge liberty of speech or press.”

The First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution prevents the federal government from making any law prohibiting free speech. (The 14th Amendment has consistently been held to extend this limitation to state governments.)

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China Confirms Building Second Aircraft Carrier - from TRUNEWS

After months of speculation, China confirmed on Thursday it is building a second aircraft carrier to go with an existing one bought second-hand, as neighbors worry about Beijing’s new assertiveness to claims in the South China Sea.

Defense Ministry spokesman Yang Yujun said the carrier had been designed in China and was being built in the port of Dalian. Foreign military analysts and Chinese media have for months published satellite images, photographs and news stories purporting to show the second carrier’s development.

“China has a long coast line and a vast maritime area under our jurisdiction. To safeguard our maritime sovereignty, interests and rights is the sacred mission of the Chinese armed forces,” Yang said.

The design draws on experiences from the country’s first aircraft carrier, the Liaoning, bought from Ukraine in 1998 and refitted in China, Yang said.

Yang said the conventionally powered carrier has a displacement of 50,000 tonnes, will be able to operate the Shenyang J-15 fighter and, unlike the 60,000-tonne Liaoning, have a ski-jump take-off.

Little is known about China’s aircraft carrier program, which is a state secret.

Yang would not say when the second carrier would enter service, saying it depended on progress in the design process.

A Shanghai-based naval expert who asked not to be identified because of the sensitivity of the matter said tensions in the South China Sea made the carrier particularly necessary to furthering Chinese interests.

“The U.S. has many aircraft carriers that are traveling all over the place in the South China Sea, which has caused problems for us,” he said. “Having a second aircraft carrier reduces the pressure on us. It will keep us from being bullied.”

China claims almost all the South China Sea, believed to have huge deposits of oil and gas, through which about $5 trillion in ship-borne trade passes every year, and has been building up military facilities like runways on the islands it controls.

Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam also have claims.

China says it has no hostile intent and wants to manage the dispute through bilateral talks with the other claimants. Yang also announced the defense ministry had just set up a new hotline with Vietnam, as it seeks to manage the tensions.

But Beijing has been involved in a diplomatic spat with Washington too over ship and aircraft patrols in the region.

Asked whether China was thinking of a third carrier, Yang said that “relevant authorities” would take various factors into consideration about future carrier plans.

The Pentagon, in a report earlier this year, said Beijing could build multiple aircraft carriers over the next 15 years.

Taiwan’s Defense Ministry said in September China was building two aircraft carriers that would be the same size as the Liaoning.

Successfully operating the Liaoning is the first step in what state media and some military experts believe will be the deployment of domestically built carriers by 2020.

The Liaoning has taken part in military exercises, including in the South China Sea, but is not yet fully operational.

Last week, the military said the Liaoning had made a “key breakthrough” in shifting from the testing phase to being able to operate ship-borne aircraft, as the country’s navy chief paid a visit.

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Lockheed Wins More Than $1bn Contract For C-130J Aircraft - from TRUNEWS

Lockheed Martin Corp has been awarded a contract worth more than $1 billion for 32 C-130J aircraft, the Pentagon said on Wednesday. 

The work is expected to be completed by April 2020, the Department of Defense said in its daily digest of major contract awards.

Earlier this year, Lockheed announced that it had reached a verbal agreement with the U.S. Air Force for a five-year contract to build up to 83 C-130J Super Hercules transport planes for the Air Force, Coast Guard and Marine Corps through 2020.

The planes are able to touch down on austere landing zones – essentially makeshift runways – and often used for humanitarian relief missions, special operations, aerial refueling, close air support and search and rescue.

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Billionaire Carl Icahn to Buy Pep Boys For $1bn - from TRUNEWS

Carl Icahn’s Icahn Enterprises LP has agreed to buy Pep Boys-Manny Moe & Jack for about $1 billion, the companies said on Wednesday, hours after Bridgestone Corp quit the race for the U.S. auto parts retailer.

Japanese tire maker Bridgestone said on Tuesday it would not raise its latest cash bid of $17 per share to counter Icahn’s raised offer of $18.50 per share in cash.

Pep Boys shares fell 3 percent in late morning trading on Wednesday, while Icahn Enterprises shares declined 2 percent.

Pep Boys’ retail auto parts business will be a perfect fit for Auto Plus, an auto spare parts company that Icahn Enterprises bought in June, Carl Icahn said in a statement.

“We think rising and aging (averaging about 11.4 years old according to the U.S. Department of Transportation) vehicle populations and increased miles driven bode well for demand for the automotive replacement parts industry,” S&P Capital IQ analyst Efraim Levy wrote in a note.

Icahn Enterprises has been focusing on its auto business, its second largest by revenue, as a slump in crude prices slows growth in its energy business, which accounted for nearly half of its revenue in 2014.

Icahn Enterprises bought Auto Plus from Canada’s Uni-Select Inc and the company also owns an 82 percent stake in auto parts maker Federal-Mogul Holdings Corp.

Icahn Enterprises, which expects to close the Pep Boys acquisition in the first quarter of 2016, will pay $39.5 million termination fee to Bridgestone.

Pep Boys shares were trading at $18.39 and Icahn Enterprises shares at $60.19.

Up to Tuesday’s close, Pep Boys shares had risen about 93 percent this year, while Icahn Enterprises shares had fallen about 33.5 percent.

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U.S. Grain Prices Soar as Floods Shut Waterways, Threaten Crops - from TRUNEWS

U.S. grain farmers scrambled to find shelter for their crops and handlers hunted for alternative transportation routes, as widespread floods shut waterways from Illinois to Missouri and spurred a surge in physical prices of corn and soybeans.

The sudden jump in prices could complicate a months-long stand-off between farmers who are unwilling to sell their bumper crop at low prices and buyers who have refused to budge on their cash offers amid plentiful supplies.

It could also further curb export demand, with U.S. traders struggling to compete with their cheaper Latin American rivals.

Cash premiums for soybeans GRYM in the U.S. barge market, jumped to as high as 70 cents per bushel on Wednesday, their loftiest since mid-November as the rapidly rising waters forced the Coast Guard to shut a five-mile section of the Mississippi River, including the harbor at St. Louis, traders told Reuters.

Surcharges for corn GRYN hit 49 cents on Wednesday, up almost a third from 37 cents a week ago and the highest in nearly three weeks. Premiums are paid on top of the benchmark futures prices for physical delivery.

Fear of flooded fields and soggy grain piles had some farmers rushing to sell their grains to local buyers, or deciding it would be worth the monthly fees to move it off their farms and store it at grain elevators with bins built on higher ground.

Some grain elevators in southeastern Missouri and southwestern Illinois were having a tough time keeping up with truck traffic this week, according to farmer tweets. “‘Lines are crazy today. U would think it’s ten dollar corn’ quote of the day while hauling from potential flooded area to elevator,” tweeted Danny Brewer, a corn, wheat and soybean farmer in Southwestern Illinois.

Further south, near the U.S. Gulf Coast, some elevators and cooperatives were so worried about interruptions to barge grain deliveries they tried to secure local grain supplies by offering to pay more for them. It is not known if they found any buyers.

Cash bids for soybeans rose by 10 cents per bushel, and corn bids increased by 5 cents per bushel, at some grain handlers in the Louisiana and southern Mississippi River areas, said Mike Steenhoek, executive director of the Soy Transportation Coalition.    “Everyone’s coming up with contingency plans,” Steenhoek said. “The elevators and cooperatives, they have all these orders they’re obligated to fulfill. … They’re worried about filling these orders.”

Even food manufacturers may be feeling the pain of the sudden flooding.

Two Illinois flour mills near the Mississippi River operated by Ardent Mills, the largest U.S. flour miller, were closed because of flooding.

Ardent, operated jointly by Cargill Inc, ConAgra Foods Inc and CHS Inc, told Reuters on Wednesday it is working to supply customers’ needs. But the mills in Chester and Alton will remain closed until the waters recede, a spokeswoman said.

That is unlikely to happen this week. On Wednesday evening, the U.S. Coast Guard said high waters will force it to close a 76-mile (122.3 km) stretch of the Mississippi River downstream from Chester, near one of the mills.

TRAINS, BARGES With much of the river north of St. Louis already shut for the season, grain companies have been unloading trains at St. Louis and then using barges bound for the Gulf. With the harbor now temporarily closed, shippers are diverting trains from St. Louis to other terminals in Cairo and Metropolis, both in Illinois.

Shippers there are loading barges on the lower Ohio River, and then traveling to a still-open part of the Mississippi River at the confluence at Cairo, traders said. On Wednesday, waters were continuing to rise on the Ohio and on the Mississippi south of Cairo, even as the waters had started to recede further upstream. Still, said Christopher Pince, public affairs officer with the Coast Guard in Louisville, Kentucky, “we’re dealing with extremely high waters so the Coast Guard is recommending (vessels) proceed with extreme caution.”

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Facebook Uses India as Global Test-Case For Free Internet - from TRUNEWS

India has become a battleground over the right to unrestricted Internet access, with local tech start-ups joining the front line against Facebook Inc (FB.O) founder Mark Zuckerberg and his plan to roll out free Internet to the country’s masses.

The Indian government has ordered Facebook’s Free Basics plan on hold while it decides what to do.

The program, launched in more than 35 developing countries around the world, offers pared-down web services on mobile phones, along with access to the company’s own social network and messaging services, without charge.

But critics say the program, launched 10 months ago in India in collaboration with mobile operator Reliance Communications (RLCM.NS), violates principles of net neutrality, the concept that all websites on the internet are treated equally. It would put small content providers and start-ups that don’t participate in it at a disadvantage, they say.

“India is a test case for a company like Facebook and what happens here will affect the roll out of this service in other smaller countries where perhaps there is not so much awareness at present,” said Mishi Choudhary, a New York-based lawyer who works on technology and Internet advocacy issues.

Also at stake is Facebook’s ambition to expand in its largest market outside the United States. Only 252 million out of India’s 1.3 billion people have Internet access, making it a growth market for firms including Google (GOOGL.O) and Facebook.

In a letter seen by Reuters, the heads of nine start-up including Paytm, backed by China’s Alibaba Group (BABA.N), and dining app Zomato, have written to the watchdog Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) urging it to ensure Internet access was allowed without differential pricing.

The executives said in the letter, dated Tuesday, that differential pricing for Internet access would lead to a “few players like Facebook with its Free Basics platform acting as gate-keepers”.

“There is no reason to create a digital divide by offering a walled garden of limited services in the name of providing access to the poor,” they wrote.

Zuckerberg has got personally involved.

“We know that for every 10 people connected to the Internet, roughly one is lifted out of poverty,” he wrote in The Times of India newspaper this week. “We know that for India to make progress, more than 1 billion people need to be connected to the Internet.

“What reason is there for denying people free access to vital services for communication, education, healthcare, employment, farming and women’s rights?”

BOTH SIDES

A company spokesman said the aim of Facebook’s Free Basics initiative was to give people a taste of what the internet can offer. And Facebook has issued a series of full-page newspaper advertisements and set up billboard banners in an unusual and aggressive campaign to counter the protests.

“Free Basics is at risk of being banned, slowing progress towards digital equality in India,” said an advertisement published in Mumbai newspapers on Wednesday, urging Internet users to support the initiative.

Launched last year in Zambia, Free Basics, earlier known as internet.org, has run in to trouble elsewhere on grounds that it infringes with the principle of net neutrality. Authorities in Egypt effectively suspended the service when a required permit was not renewed after it lapsed on Wednesday.

The regulator, TRAI, has asked Facebook and Reliance Communications to suspend Free Basics until a final policy decision is made next month.

“In a democracy you have both sides – you have Facebook spending so much on the campaign and on the other side you have internet activists making their own efforts,” TRAI chairman Ram Sevak Sharma told Reuters.

“Our job is to make a policy that is in the interest of telecom operators and end users in India.”

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Apple to Pay Italy €318M in Tax Delinquency Deal - from TRUNEWS

Apple Inc will pay Italy’s tax office 318 million euros ($348 million) to settle a dispute over allegations it failed to pay taxes for six years, a source with direct knowledge of the matter said on Wednesday.

The maker of iPhones and iPads will also sign an accord next year on how to manage its tax liabilities from 2015 onward, the source said.

The deal comes as the European Union and national governments take a tougher stand against profit-shielding arrangements used by multinational companies.

Italian prosecutors have been investigating allegations that Apple failed to pay corporate taxes to the tune of 879 million euros in 2008-2013 by reducing its taxable income when it booked profits generated in Italy through its Irish subsidiary, sources told Reuters earlier this year.

“Apple will pay the tax agency 318 million euros and will sign a new tax accord for fiscal years 2015 onwards early next year,” the source said.

The tax office earlier confirmed a report in La Repubblica newspaper that it had reached a deal with Apple, but declined to say how much the U.S. company had agreed to pay.

The source said that while the judicial probe, which also involves three Apple managers, remained open for now, the settlement with the tax agency would likely have a positive impact on the investigation.

Apple could not immediately be reached for comment. Previously the company told Reuters that it is one of the largest taxpayers in the world and paid every euro of tax it owed wherever it did business.

The global financial crisis spurred cash-strapped governments to crack down on tax avoidance and prompted complaints that companies cutting their tax bills to the bare minimum were getting an advantage in breach of EU rules.

The agreement with Italy comes as an EU tax ruling on Apple’s dealings with Ireland is looming. The EU last year accused Ireland of swerving international tax rules by letting Apple shelter profits worth tens of billions of dollars from revenue collectors in return for maintaining jobs.

The ruling could have a “material” impact on Apple if it was determined that Dublin’s tax policies represented unfair state aid, forcing the U.S. company to pay past taxes for up to 10 years, it has said.

Apple is one of several companies, including Google and Amazon, to become the target of tax inquiries in Europe and beyond.

The European Commission has already ordered Dutch authorities to recover up to 30 million euros from U.S. coffee chain Starbucks and Luxembourg to do the same with Fiat Chrysler for their tax deals.

Apple is also facing criticism on its home turf in the United States because of the so-called inversion deals, whereby a company redomiciles its tax base to another country.

Apple holds $181.1 billion in offshore profits, more than any other U.S. company, and would owe an estimated $59.2 billion in taxes if it tried to bring the money back to the United States, a recent study based on SEC filings showed.

In a recent interview with the CBS television news show “60 Minutes,” Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook dismissed as “total political crap” the notion that the tech giant was avoiding taxes. He also dismissed the idea of bringing profits back to the United States because of the cost to the company.

“I don’t think that’s a reasonable thing to do,” he said.

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The Worst Ways Uncle Sam Wasted Your Money In 2015 - from TRUNEWS

While many Americans are making hopeful New Year’s resolutions for 2016 like losing weight, learning a new skill or saving more money, federal agency officials could focus on being more productive with the trillions of tax dollars they collect every year. There is no shortage of ways to do so.

The Government Accountability Office (GAO), for example, claims federal officials could save $80 billion a year by implementing the cost-saving measure they propose every week. But agencies don’t follow through with most of those suggestions, and there’s more waste out there than GAO detects.

From solar-powered beer to President Barack Obama’s Hawaii vacation, here are the top 10 wasteful expenditures of 2015:

10. Space camp for Pakistani teenagers — $250,000
The Department of State spent $250,000 to send 24 Pakistani teenagers to the U.S. Space & Rocket Center in Huntsville, Alabama, so they could practice their English skills, according to the latest “Waste Report” by Kentucky’s Republican Sen. Rand Paul.

“Space Camp to learn English?,” Paul wrote. “By that standard, doing almost anything in an English-speaking country like the U.S. must qualify. Why not a trip to an amusement park?”

9. Hawaii’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit costs 10 times more than it recovers
Hawaii’s federally funded Medicaid Fraud Control Unit costs 10 times more to operate than its agents recover from Medicaid fraud investigations.

The unit reclaimed about $337,000 from 2011 to 2013, but spent $3.9 million running its operations in that same time period, according to the U.S. Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General.

“On the basis of our findings, OIG is concerned about the unit’s ability to carry out its statutory functions and meet program requirements,” the HHS IG said.

8. Empty buildings: $1.7 billion
Americans are spending $1.7 billion each year to maintain empty federal buildings, the Office of Management and Budget estimates. That’s about $53 per person in the U.S., per year. OMB claims there could be as many as 55,000 vacant or underutilized federal properties in the country.

7. Smokey Bear Laundromat: $25,000
The U.S. Forest Service spent $25,000 building a Smokey Bear Laundromat at the Lincoln National Forest in Ruidoso, New Mexico, when the closest privately owned laundromat was a mere one-fifth of a mile away. The price tag only includes the facility costs, not the washers and dryers, according to Paul’s Waste Report.

“Maybe you have anguished over a coffee stain on your pants or prayed an errant blotch of marinara sauce would come out of a white shirt,” Paul said. “Well, it seems the U.S. Forest Service is concerned about laundry too, which is why earlier this year they spent almost $25,000 to build the Smokey Bear Laundromat at the Lincoln National Forest in Ruidoso, New Mexico.”

6. Injecting monkeys with cocaine and other experiments: $150 million
Federal bureaucrats spent $150 million on “scientifically unjustifiable” experiments on animals, according to a report from Animal Justice Project USA and the Taxpayers Protection Alliance.

Included in the $150 million was a $249,000 grant to the University of Kentucky to determine whether monkey behavior changes when they are injected with cocaine. The National Institute on Drug Abuse also gave $1.6 million to the University of California, Santa Barbara, to see if female rats are more likely to become addicted to cocaine than male rats.

5. Solar-powered beer: $200,000
The U.S. Department of Agriculture gave grants totaling about $200,000 to a handful of breweries to make beer while using solar panels, according to Sen. Jeff Flake’s Wastebook. Flake is a Republican from Arizona.

The lucky taxpayer-funded breweries include Bitter Root Brewing in Montana, Short’s Brewery in Michigan, the Snake River Brewing Company in Wyoming, and Maine Beer Company in Maine.

4. Obama’s Hawaii vacation: $3.7 million+
President Barack Obama’s annual trip to Hawaii with his family will cost taxpayers $3.7 million in airfare alone, since it takes $206,000 per hour to fly Air Force One, according to Judicial Watch. Last year, the first family’s vacation cost $8 million in total, according to documents obtained by the non-profit government watchdog group.

3. Afghanistan’s useless $43 million gas station
A $500,000 gas station project begun in 2011 in Afghanistan turned into a $42.7 million natural gas station — 8,000 percent over budget — by the time contractors finished the job, according to a report from the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction.

Special Inspector General John Sopko called the project “ill-conceived.” People in Afghanistan have little use for the station, since it costs about $700 to convert a car for natural gas use in a country where the average annual income is $690.

2. Salaries and pensions for VA employees who did unspeakable things on the job
The top watchdog responsible for overseeing Veterans Affairs masturbated in a glass conference room over multiple days in 2009, according to police reports and teachers who said they observed the whole thing.

But a federal prosecutor declined to charge then-Acting Inspector General Jon Wooditch. The former watchdog was being paid $172,000, plus bonuses and benefits, at the time. He is now retired with his full pension. The VA IG recently refused to release the investigative report on Wooditch, citing the Freedom of Information Act’s privacy exception.

Another VA employee, Frederick Kevin Harris, is still on the payroll at a Louisiana VA hospital as he awaits manslaughter charges in the death of a 70-year-old military veteran who died of an apparent beating. An internal investigation absolved Harris of any wrongdoing, but Louisiana prosecutors claim witnesses saw Harris hitting the man.

1. Animas River spill: $28 billion
Taxpayers could fork over as much as $28 billion to clean up the Animas and San Juan rivers after an Environmental Protection Agency contractor spilled millions of gallons of toxic waste under circumstances that remain less than fully understood.

Yellow mine waste has spread hundreds of miles downriver since the initial spill in August, and experts say it could take decades to clean up the mess left throughout the Navajo Nation. The EPA helped send 185 people to prison in 2015 over environmental-related crimes, but has yet to punish anyone over the spill that’s wreaked havoc on an entire region’s environment.

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Putin’s Son-in-Law Boosted by $1.75 billion Russian State Loan - from TRUNEWS

The son-in-law of Vladimir Putin stands to benefit from $1.75 billion in cheap finance from the Russian state, a Reuters examination of public documents shows. The money will help fund a petrochemical project at a company in which Kirill Shamalov, husband of Katerina Tikhonova, the Russian president’s younger daughter, has a significant interest.

Shamalov is a major shareholder in Sibur, Russia’s largest processor of petrochemicals. This month Sibur obtained $1.75 billion from Russia’s National Wealth Fund to help build a huge new plant in Tobolsk, Siberia.

According to corporate documents, Sibur was able to borrow the money at a current interest rate of 2 percent. That is a bargain, according to financial analysts. Artyom Usmanov, an analyst at investment firm BCS, said borrowers on the Russian bond market would expect to pay over 7 percent interest for such a loan. Irina Alizarovskaya, an analyst with Raiffeisenbank called the financing “quite cheap.”

Shamalov did not respond to a request for comment.

In a statement by Sibur on Dec. 9, Dmitry Konov, its chief executive, described the state finance as having “favorable terms.” A Sibur spokesman said the company had no information “about family relations or relations between the company’s shareholders and the president of Russia.” The state loan, he said, “underwent all necessary procedures and was approved in strict accordance with the … laws.”

The country’s National Wealth Fund, which was valued at the start of 2015 at 4.8 trillion roubles (then $72 billion), typically invests in national infrastructure projects such as railways, nuclear technology and major roads. Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev issued a decree in October to add the petrochemical plant to the list of projects in which the fund can invest. The decision, Medvedev said, would reduce “dependence on imports” and create up to 15,000 jobs.

The state money forms part of the overall $9.5 billion cost of Sibur’s Siberian project, which is known as ZapSibNeftekhim, or ZapSib. Sibur has said in public announcements that the plant will be the “largest modern petrochemical facility in Russia” and create a world-class facility for making chemical products from Siberian gas supplies.

The development is central to Sibur’s future – and to the value of Shamalov’s stake in the company. In 2012, when design work began, Sibur’s chairman Leonid Mikhelson said ZapSib would “change the image of the company and the Russian petrochemical sector.”

After Shamalov married Putin’s daughter in 2013, he increased his stake in Sibur five-fold and the company invested more heavily in the ZapSib project. As Reuters detailed earlier this month, Shamalov acquired a 17 percent stake in Sibur in September 2014, making him the second largest shareholder in the company, with a total stake of 21.3 percent.  That investment is now worth $2.85 billion, judging by recent share deals.

Later in September 2014, Sibur said capital expenditure on the ZapSib project would increase from 53 billion roubles ($1.4 billion at the time) to 74 billion roubles.

In February this year, Sibur said the foundations for the plant had been laid. On Dec. 4, the company raised $1.75 billion from the state by issuing 15-year bonds with an interest rate of either 2 percent or the U.S. annual consumer price inflation plus 1 percent, whichever is higher. Annual U.S. consumer price inflation in November was 0.5 percent.

The bonds were all bought by the state via the National Wealth Fund. The decision to make the loan was made by the state-controlled Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF), which said the project “fully complies with the rules for investing NWF money in infrastructure projects” and gives the fund, whose loan is less than 20 percent of the project’s total cost, “maximum protection and corresponding profitability.” RDIF said ZapSib “is one of the most promising projects in the world.”

A spokeswoman for the Russian Ministry for Economic Development, which nominates projects for NWF funding, said the Sibur bonds would be profitable in rouble terms, and that the state investment helps attract foreign investment as well.

Sibur has also borrowed $3.3 billion from European banks.

To develop ZapSib, Sibur is working with Linde Group, a gas and engineering company based in Germany, and INEOS, a chemical company based in Switzerland. Neither company responded to requests for comment.

The plant is designed to produce 1.5 million tons of ethylene, which is used to make consumer and industrial products, from kitchenware to water pipes. Analysts at Moody’s estimate the project could boost Sibur’s revenues by 25 to 30 percent to about $11 billion a year.

Another major shareholder in Sibur is the billionaire oil-trader Gennady Timchenko, who is an old friend of Putin. Timchenko is also a major shareholder in another company – Novatek – that has gained finance from the National Wealth Fund. A Wealth Fund list shows Novatek and Sibur as the only private companies that have been able to raise money this way.

Novatek did not respond to a request for comment.

Following Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014, Kirill Shamalov’s father, Nikolai, was sanctioned by the European Union for being “a long-time acquaintance” of Putin and for benefitting from his links with “Russian decision-makers.” The sanctions restrict travel rights and freeze assets within the EU. Timchenko was sanctioned by the United States.

But Kirill Shamalov and Sibur have not been sanctioned.

The U.S. Treasury did not respond to a request for comment on whether it had considered sanctioning Sibur and Kirill Shamalov. EU officials told Reuters earlier this month that there had been no discussion about expanding the Union’s sanctions list.

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