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Risk of mass starvation rising rapidly in Africa, Yemen — UN

By - Apr 11,2017 - Last updated at Apr 11,2017

This photo taken on March 15 shows a malnourished child being weighed by an aid worker for a UNICEF- funded health programme catering to children displaced by drought, at a facility in Baidoa town, the capital of Bay region of south-western Somalia (AFP photo)

GENEVA — The risk of mass starvation in four countries — northeast Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan and Yemen — is rising rapidly due to drought and conflict, the UN refugee agency said on Tuesday.

About 20 million people live in hard-hit areas where harvests have failed and acute malnutrition rates are increasing, particularly among children, it said. 

In South Sudan, where the United Nations declared famine in some areas in February, "a further 1 million people are now on the brink of famine", UNHCR spokesman Adrian Edwards said.

"We are raising our alarm level further by today warning that the risk of mass deaths from starvation among populations in the Horn of Africa, Yemen and Nigeria is growing," Edwards told a news briefing.

"This really is an absolutely critical situation that is rapidly unfolding across a large swathe of Africa from west to east," he said. 

People are on the run within their countries and greater numbers of South Sudanese refugees are fleeing to Sudan and Uganda, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) said.

A preventable catastrophe, possibly worse than that of 2011 when 260,000 people died of famine in the Horn of Africa, half of them children, "is fast becoming an inevitability", Edwards said. 

 

Too late

 

"Always the problem that we have with humanitarian crises in sub-Saharan Africa is that they tend to get overlooked until things are too late," he said. "A repeat must be avoided at all costs."

"There's acute malnutrition, very high rates, if you don't help people with worsening rates of malnutrition, people die."

Seven million people in northeast Nigeria and the Lake Chad basin are suffering from food insecurity, Edwards said.

Food security in 4 countries is expected to continue to deteriorate until at least mid-year, he said. 

UNHCR is scaling up its operations but has a funding shortfall, with some country programmes only funded at between 3 and 11 per cent, he said.

Overall the United Nations has appealed for $4.4 billion for the four countries but has received less than $984 million to date, Jens Laerke of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said.

In northeast Nigeria, especially Borno state, aid workers had "almost zero access" a year ago, due to Boko Haram militants, Laerke said. 

"Now that access is opening up. That is one of the reasons why the numbers have grown. Because as we have pushed into these areas we have simply discovered more and more need of an extreme nature including extreme food insecurity so that there is a risk of famine," he said.

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) warned in late March that the world had three to four months to stop starvation in the four countries.

 

David Hermann, ICRC operations coordinator for Somalia, told the briefing: "If it doesn't happen now, there will be no escaping a situation that this country already experienced a few years ago, meaning probably people are going to die from starvation and disease."

First 'Silk Road' train from Britain leaves for China

By - Apr 10,2017 - Last updated at Apr 10,2017

A freight train transporting containers laden with goods from the UK, departs from DP World London Gateway's rail freight depot in Corringham, east of London, on Tuesday (AFP photo)

STANFORD-LE-HOPE, United Kingdom — The first-ever freight train from Britain to China, laden with whisky, soft drinks and baby products, started its mammoth journey on Monday along a modern-day "Silk Road" trade route.

The 32-container train, around 600 metres long, left from the vast London Gateway container port on the River Thames estuary, bound for Yiwu on the Chinese east coast.

It was seen off on its 18-day, 12,000-kilometre journey with a string quartet, British and Chinese flags, and speeches voicing hope that it will cement a new golden age of trade between the two countries as the UK leaves the European Union.

The first train from China to Britain arrived on January 18, filled with clothes and other retail goods, and Monday's departure was the first journey in the other direction.

The rail route is cheaper than air freight and faster than sea freight, offering logistics companies a new middle option.

The driver gave a thumbs-up and tooted his horn as he got the wagons rolling at the port in Stanford-le-Hope, east of London.

The train will go through the Channel Tunnel before travelling across France, Belgium, Germany, Poland, Belarus, Russia and Kazakhstan before heading into China.

The containers will be taken off and put on different wagons at the Belarus border, as the former Soviet Union countries use a wider rail gauge.

The containers switch back to standard gauge rails at the Chinese border, an operation that typically takes around two hours.

"We are proud to be able to offer the first ever UK to China export train," said Xubin Feng, the chairman of Yiwu Timex Industrial Investment.

"Restoring the ancient Silk Road as a means by which China, north Europe and now the UK can exchange goods is an important and exciting initiative.

 

"This is the first export train and just the start of a regular direct service between the UK and China. We have great faith in the UK as an export nation and rail provides an excellent alternative for moving large volumes of goods over long distances faster."

Fresh Gaza protests after Palestinian pay cut

By - Apr 08,2017 - Last updated at Apr 08,2017

Palestinian supporters of Islamic Jihad Movement take part in a protest against Israel's siege on Gaza and decisions by the West Bank-based Palestinian Authority to impose pay cuts on its civil servants in the southern Gaza Strip town of Khan Yunis on Friday (AFP photo)

GAZA CITY, Palestinian Territories — Fresh protests against civil service pay cuts broke out in Gaza on Saturday, as pressure builds on Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas to tackle the crisis.

The decision this week by the West Bank-based Palestinian Authority to slash the salaries of civil servants in the Gaza Strip has sparked days of protests.

Tens of thousands took to a square in central Gaza City on Saturday in the largest protest since the 30-per cent cut was announced, with demonstrators calling on Abbas to sack his government.

A handful of protesters announced they would begin a hunger strike, a spokesman told AFP.

Hamas, the Islamist movement that runs Gaza, has been at loggerheads with Abbas's Fatah Party since the former seized the Strip in a near civil war in 2007.

Fatah runs the West Bank, the other part of the Palestinian territories separated from Gaza by Israeli territory.

After Hamas seized power, around 70,000 PA employees in Gaza lost their posts but they were kept on its payroll, nevertheless.

Hamas set up its own parallel administration with 50,000 staff, whose salaries the PA refuses to pay.

The Fatah-run PA announced the pay cuts earlier this week, saying they were necessary because its budget has been hit by falling foreign aid.

In 2014, Fatah and Hamas agreed to form a unity government that was meant to resolve their dispute but it has remained stillborn, with no real control in either territory.

Local elections set for May have also been suspended in the Gaza Strip after infighting between Fatah and Hamas, though they are expected to take place in the West Bank.

UN Middle East envoy Nickolay Mladenov said he was "deeply concerned by the growing tensions in Gaza".

He said that while the Palestinian government faced difficult economic conditions, it should make spending cuts "with consideration to the harsh conditions under which people in Gaza live".

He urged both parties to work together to resolve the crisis and "bring about real national reconciliation that ends the division".

 

Israel has maintained a blockade of Gaza for a decade, severely damaging the enclave's economy.

Jordan Chamber of Industry, Chinese delegation discuss cooperation

By - Apr 08,2017 - Last updated at Apr 08,2017

AMMAN — Representatives of the Jordan Chamber of Industry met on Saturday with a Chinese delegation, comprising several representatives of Chinese food companies and discussed ways to increase commercial cooperation.

China is the third biggest commercial partner for the Kingdom. The chamber’s President Adnan Abul Ragheb called for further commercial cooperation and joint investment at the meeting that was hosted by the chamber, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported. 

Britain to help reform Saudi economy

By - Apr 05,2017 - Last updated at Apr 05,2017

Saudi Arabia's King Salman Bin Abdulaziz Al Saud honours British Prime Minister Theresa May in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on Wednesday (Reuters photo)

RIYADH — Britain said on Wednesday it would help Saudi Arabia to diversify its oil-dependent economy as British Prime Minister Theresa May visited the Gulf kingdom.

May and Saudi King Salman held talks focused on "bilateral relations and cooperation" as well as "regional and international developments", the official news agency SPA said.

A statement from May's office said she would discuss with the monarch "tax and privatisation standards to help Saudi Arabia diversify its economy and become less reliant on oil".

Saudi Arabia faces a significant budget deficit with billions of dollars in debts to private firms, largely in the construction business, after a drop in global oil prices by about half since 2014.

Britain will also assist Riyadh in "building a reformed Ministry of Defence" and reviewing defence capabilities, the statement said.

May's visit to the oil-rich kingdom came as she seeks to secure investment and trade after Britain officially started a two-year countdown to leave the European Union. 

The premier pitched the London bourse as a venue for the expected listing of oil giant Saudi Aramco, Bloomberg news cited an unnamed British official as saying.

May also held a private meeting with Energy Minister Khaled Al Falih, the official said. 

Back home, the premier has also come under harsh criticism for her visit to the ultra-conservative kingdom.

She has faced calls at home to raise rights issues with the kingdom's leaders, primarily over Britain's arms sales to a Saudi-led military coalition battling Iran-backed rebels in Yemen since March 2015. 

Saudi Arabia has bought more than $5 billion (4.7 billion euros) worth of arms from the United States and Britain since then, the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute think-tank says.

On Tuesday, May held talks with a string of officials including Saudi Crown Prince and Interior Minister Mohammed Bin Nayef and Defence Minister Mohammed Bin Salman, who is second in line to the throne.

The British premier also met Sarah Al Suhaimi, the first woman to head the Saudi stock exchange and a Saudi investment bank, and Princess Reema Bint Bandar, head of the women's section at the General Authority for Sports.

 

As part of its economic diversification strategy, Saudi Arabia has announced plans to increase women's participation in the workforce from 22 to 28 per cent by 2020.

Real estate trading reaches JD1.5b in Q1 2017

By - Apr 05,2017 - Last updated at Apr 05,2017

AMMAN — Real estate trading during the first quarter of 2017 amounted to JD1.505 billion, 6 per cent lower than the JD1.604 billion recorded during the same period of 2016, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported on Wednesday. 

The Department of Lands and Survey (DLS) said that the north Amman land registration directorate ranked first with a trading volume amounting to JD307 million, followed by the Amman land registration directorate at JD210 million, followed by the west Amman land registration directorate at JD177 million and fourth came south Amman land registration directorate at a trading volume of JD156 million.

Amman's land registration directorates and the main centre acquired 72 per cent of the total trading with a total of JD1.87 billion. 

Revenues in the first quarter of this year stood at JD78.5 million, 5 per cent less than the JD82.7 million in the same period last year, Petra reported, adding that real estate sales to non-Jordanian investors in the first three months of 2017 stood at 632 transactions, 479 were for apartments and the rest for land, at an estimated value of JD88.7 million.

Regarding nationalities, Iraqis ranked first in investment volume value, which stood at JD31.7 million, followed by the Saudis at JD30.5 million and the Lebanese at JD5.7 million. As for Syrians, they ranked fourth with a JD5.2 million investment volume.

European stocks, bond yields fall show investor caution

By - Apr 04,2017 - Last updated at Apr 04,2017

Trader Peter Tuchman works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange in the Manhattan borough of New York, New York, US, on Tuesday (Reuters photo)

LONDON — European shares edged lower on Tuesday, after falls on Asian bourses, and low-risk government debt yields fell as political risks from a meeting between the US and Chinese leaders to the French presidential election kept investors on edge.

Wall Street also looked set to open in the red, according to index futures.

The dollar edged up against a basket of major currencies but lost half a per cent against the safe-haven Japanese yen. Gold, another asset sought in uncertain times, hit a one-week high.

"There was a tragedy in Russia and there may be some hedging-type buying ahead of the French presidential debate and also French elections in three weeks," said Yujiro Goto, currency analyst with Nomura in London, on the yen's surge.

In emerging markets, the South African rand fell more than 1 per cent against the dollar and bank shares fell after S&P Global cut the country's credit rating to junk on Monday.

The pan-European STOXX 600 share index gave up early gains and was last down 0.1 per cent, after falling from a 16-month high on Monday.

Britain's FTSE 100 index, however, rose 0.4 per cent.

Shares have hit record highs across the globe in recent months, partly in anticipation of US President Donald Trump cutting taxes, easing regulation and raising infrastructure spending in the world's largest economy. 

However, Trump's struggles to push other legislation through Congress has led some to question whether he will be able to fully make good on his campaign pledges.

"People are not so worried about inflation, they don't think the Fed is behind the curve. People are not so optimistic about Trump being able to deliver quickly on his election promises about taxes and infrastructure," said Guy Wolf, analyst at commodities broker Marex Spectron. 

Geopolitical issues, including Trump's meeting this week with Chinese President Xi Jinping and the Monday's bomb attack on a metro train in Russia's second-largest city of St Petersburg, which killed 14 people and wounded 50, also weighed on markets. 

In Asia, Automaker stocks, which helped pull Wall Street down on Monday after sub-par US car sales data, were the main drag on Tokyo shares on Tuesday; the Nikkei fell 0.9 per cent to a 10-week low.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell 0.4 per cent, having hit a 21-month high last week.

Yields on low risk US and German government bonds fell. falls. Benchmark 10-year US Treasury yields were down 3 basis points at 2.32 per cent after falling as low as 2.31 per cent, its lowest in more than a month, in Asian trade.

German 10-year yields touched their lowest level since March 1 and last stood at 0.24 per cent, down 4bps.

Italy's bonds outperformed the rest of the euro zone on the prospect of help for two struggling Italian lenders. 

Benchmark 10-year yields fell 7.5bps to 2.25 per cent after a European Commission spokesperson said late on Monday said there could be a solution on a bailout.

"Italy's banking sector has been a never-ending story, so any news pointing towards state support reduces the risk of a more severe development that could be the beginning of a banking crisis," said DZ Bank strategist Daniel Lenz.

French yields also fell, before a TV debate between presidential election candidates later on Tuesday.

 

Dollar up

 

The dollar inched up 0.1 per cent against its currency basket but fell to as low 110.24 yen.

The euro fell 0.2 per cent to $1.0650 and sterling fell 0.4 per cent to $1.2432.

The Australian dollar was 0.7 per cent weaker at $0.7546 after the central bank held rates steady at a record low 1.5 per cent as expected, and said growth in household borrowing, largely for housing, was outpacing rises in household income.

South Africa's rand fell as much as 1.9 per cent before recovering to trade down 0.6 per cent at 13.76 per dollar while bank shares tumbled after the credit rating cut in response to President Jacob Zuma's dismissal of his finance minister, Pravin Gordhan, last week.

Gold hit a one-week high around $1,260 an ounce.

 

Oil prices steadied: Brent crude rose 37 cents a barrel to $53.49. 

Textile company places rare bet on Turkey's Kurdish southeast

By - Apr 03,2017 - Last updated at Apr 03,2017

Workers are seen in front of a product line in a textile factory in Diyarbakir on March 21 (Reuters photo)

DIYARBAKIR, Turkey — In Turkey's mainly Kurdish southeast, deeply scarred by conflict between state forces and militants, a textile firm that supplies companies across Europe plans three new factories — a rare bet the government can deliver on a vow to regenerate the region.

The government announced a $2.8 billion investment scheme for the area in September, hoping to win over the population with the prospect of economic revival before a referendum later this month on expanding President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's powers.

The Iskur group, a supplier to fashion brands including Zara, Adidas and Nike, sees its $100 million investment as showing the way for other companies from western Turkey to take advantage of government incentives and lower wages in the east.

Undaunted by the militant Kurdistan Workers Party's (PKK) decades-old insurgency, it has been operating a $30 million cotton thread plant outside the region's biggest city Diyarbakir since 2014 but few others have followed its lead.

"We have opened a door in Diyarbakir, creating an example for other investors in the west," plant manager Ekrem Kul told Reuters as workers tended to rows of machines spinning thread.

Iskur halted expansion plans in 2015 with the outbreak of some of the worst fighting since the PKK took up arms in 1984, but Kul said it revived them after the government initiative. It aims to employ more than 2,000 people in the new Diyarbakir plants, up from just 330 now.

Its optimism is rare in a region where, according to the United Nations, the upsurge in violence between July 2015 and December 2016 killed around 2,000 people, devastated whole neighbourhoods and drove half a million people from their homes.

The ruling AK Party, founded by Erdogan, owed much of its early success to its stewardship of the economy after coming to power in 2002, improving roads, building bridges and hospitals.

The pro-Kurdish HDP says the government has, however, failed to solve the problems of the southeast, where more than 40,000 people have been killed in three decades of conflict.

The government counters it has boosted per capita income in the area to $5,000 from $800 with extensive state investment.

Prime Minister Binali Yildirim promised new factories, housing, hospitals and sports stadiums under the investment plan. Urbanisation Minister Mehmet Ozhaseki told reporters on Saturday state investments have so far focused on reconstruction of buildings damaged in the conflict.

Alican Ebedinoglu, president of one Diyarbakir trade association, is sceptical private investment will follow.

"Every new government has made fresh legislation to provide incentives for investment in the region. But without peace and calm, these incentive packages don't mean much. If there is peace, the region hardly needs any incentives," Ebedinoglu said.

 

‘Business evaporated’

 

Erdogan won support among Kurds for spearheading a peace process in 2013, the first time Kurdish political demands had been addressed, and for easing some restrictions on them.

But after a ceasefire with the militants collapsed in July 2015 he has ruled out a return to negotiations, saying security forces will "annihilate" the PKK, which is considered a terrorist organisation by Turkey, the United States and Europe.

In events echoed in other towns in the southeast, armed youths dug trenches and laid explosives in Diyarbakir's ancient Sur district that is encircled by towering, Roman-era walls. Security forces fought back with tanks.

Security operations ended in Sur a year ago, but there are checkpoints all across the city and concrete blocks placed in front of buildings deemed vulnerable to the sporadic bombing attacks on security forces that have taken place since.

Ebedinoglu said the fighting caused 500 businesses to shut down completely, while shopkeepers were forced to close their stores for weeks or months at a time when the violence surged, meaning they fell behind on rent and debt payments.

"The government has said it will provide interest-free loans but that's a myth. You wouldn't be able to find 100 people around here that the banks would lend to unless their credit background is entirely erased."

Mustafa Avcilar, owner of a cafe in a 16th century courtyard once popular with tourists, closed it for months as clashes raged nearby.

"Once the fighting began, business evaporated in the blink of an eye. A wave of tension swept over the city," said the 52-year-old, speaking as trade was picking up in the Sur district.

The industrial zone where the Iskur thread factory is based is 20km north of the city, far from the focus of the fighting, but it was not immune. "It affected our workers' ability to come to work easily — their psychological states, their productivity. We experienced difficult days," Kul said.

Household disposable incomes are around half the national average of $4,500 in the southeast and official unemployment in some provinces is 28 per cent, more than twice the national average, a figure some local business say is an underestimate.

In the four provinces, including Diyarbakir, most affected by the recent conflict, the pro-Kurdish HDP won around three quarters of the vote at the last parliamentary elections in November 2015. However, the AK Party attracts greater support in less troubled provinces of the southeast.

Diyarbakir, a city of more than 1.5 million, is better off than rural areas. Apartment blocks have mushroomed and modern shopping malls add to the appearance of growing prosperity, but Ahmet Sayar, head of the Diyarbakir Chamber of Commerce said there is a long way to go.

"For there to be a leap forward in achieving the economic potential as a region there needs to be an environment of predictability, stability, peace and confidence," he said.

For workers too, a return of the ceasefire is vital.

"We did not have these troubles during the peace process, we could come to work easily," said Ramazan Yildiz, an employee at the Iskur plant.

 

"We go home in fear in the evenings; we come to work in fear, thinking, 'Will there be any problem or clashes on the road?"

Google, Amazon eye Toshiba's chip unit — report

Japanese conglomerate seeks bidders to cover huge losses

By - Apr 01,2017 - Last updated at Apr 01,2017

Toshiba has reportedly completed the first round of bidding for its prized memory chip business, seen as key for the cash-strapped company to turn itself around (AFP file photo)

TOKYO — Google and Amazon joined a list of potential buyers eyeing Toshiba's lucrative memory chip business as the Japanese conglomerate seeks bidders to cover huge losses, a newspaper said on Saturday.

Toshiba has reportedly completed the first round of bidding for its prized memory chip business, seen as key for the cash-strapped company to turn itself around.

Some 10 foreign companies and funds, including Google and Amazon, tendered bids, the mass-circulation Yomiuri Shimbun said, quoting unnamed sources.

The two US tech giants are expected to use Toshiba's memory chips for their cloud services, the daily said.

Taiwan's Hon Hai, which acquired Japanese electronics maker Sharp last year, has apparently bid more than 2 trillion yen ($18 billion), the daily said.

Immediate confirmation of the report was not available.

Toshiba shares jumped more than 5 per cent on Friday after local media reported that bidders included Apple, US private-equity firm Silver Lake Partners and American chipmaker Broadcom.

Toshiba is expected to negotiate with individual candidates this month.

Local media said any foreign buyer would need to pass a Japanese government review, given concerns about security around systems already using Toshiba's memory chips.

Toshiba is the world's number two supplier of memory chips for smartphones and computers, behind South Korea's Samsung, and the business accounted for about a quarter of its 5.67 trillion yen in revenue last fiscal year.

The news report came after angry investors lambasted Toshiba executives at a shareholders meeting over its warning that annual losses could balloon to more than $9 billion.

 

The red ink is largely tied to huge cost overruns and construction delays at its US nuclear power unit Westinghouse Electric, which filed for bankruptcy protection late March.

German inflation plunges in March

By - Mar 30,2017 - Last updated at Mar 30,2017

The Frankfurt skyline with the Commerzbank headquarters is photographed in Frankfurt, Germany (Reuters file photo)

FRANKFURT am MAIN — Inflation in Europe's largest economy Germany fell back sharply in March, preliminary official data showed on Thursday, after overshooting the target of the European Central Bank (ECB) the previous month.

Prices rose 1.6 per cent compared with March 2016, figures from federal statistics authority Destatis showed, a 0.6-percentage point decrease from February's figure and below analyst forecasts of 1.8 per cent.

Inflation reached 1.5 per cent as measured using the Harmonised Index of Consumer Prices — the ECB's preferred yardstick.

German economists and politicians had called on the central bank to raise interest rates after inflation jumped past its target of close to but below 2 per cent, believed to be most favourable for growth.

For their part, ECB policymakers argued they should continue their policies of low rates and cash injections into the economy, choosing to "look through" the spike in price growth.

Higher inflation across the 19-nation eurozone since December has been a temporary effect of higher energy prices this year compared with the first months of 2016, top central bank figures believe.

Meanwhile, core inflation — excluding volatile items like energy and food — remains sluggish.

"Today's German data and tomorrow's eurozone data should help the ECB in getting rid of rate hike expectations," said economist Carsten Brzeski of ING Diba bank.

Looking to individual elements in Germany's inflation basket, energy price growth slowed to 5.1 per cent from February's 7.2 per cent, while food inflation fell from 4.4 to 2.3 per cent.

Goods prices grew 2.5 per cent, down from February's 3.2, and services inflation reached 0.7 per cent after 1.3 per cent the previous month.

"We suspect that underlying price pressures will remain very subdued in future... there are still few signs of strong upward pressure on wage growth," analyst Jennifer McKeown of Capital Economics commented on regional inflation figures released earlier Thursday. 

Workers are likely to spend more and power growth when they have more cash in their pockets, making higher salaries "the linchpin of a self-sustained increase in inflation" ECB President Mario Draghi said earlier in March.

 

Economists at the Frankfurt-based institution expect headline inflation to reach 1.7 per cent in 2017 and 1.6 per cent in 2018.

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