Thursday, January 19, 2017

Meth now easier to get than cannabis in Northland, locals say

Methamphetamine has become easier to source in Northland than marijuana, according to locals.
Whangarei defence lawyer Kelly Ellis said according to her clients, P was soaring in availability over cannabis, which had long been considered the country’s preferred illegal drug.
“It makes sense, let’s get real about it,” she said.
“Meth is much more lucrative and much easier to do than having to carry smelly bags of cannabis around the place.”
Ellis deals with people at “the pointy end” of the drug trade, including meth users, dealers and manufacturers.
She said gang presence in the north had increased rapidly over the past five years, and what were once tinnie houses had converted to dealing the much harder drug.
The seizure of half a tonne of P from 90 Mile Beach in June was an indication of the size of New Zealand’s meth problem, she said.
“If you look at that as being a basic economic indicator of availability versus demand, it seems demand is not outstripping supply.”
Chris Fowlie, president of the New Zealand reform marijuana advocacy group NORML, said he too had heard meth was easier to come by than cannabis in Northland.
​”People can’t find cannabis but they know where to get meth from a tinnie house,” he said.
“Gangs really do run the show because of fear of people growing their own.”
Detective Inspector Kevin Burke said the take-down of 12 local labs last year, on top of the June bust, was another indication of the “significant problem” meth had become.
“It illustrates, in addition to the importation of methamphetamine, there’s still a demand clearly for homegrown methamphetamine,” he said.
“At the end of the day it’s profit-driven and people are prepared to run the risk.”
In October, then-Prime Minister John Key acknowledged meth had become “the drug of choice” for some Kiwis.
Police needed to do more to stop it entering the country through remote areas like Northland, he said.
Key said at the time that a $15 million boost for anti-drug initiatives was not an admission the Government was losing the war against P.
Source: http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/88297305/meth-now-easier-to-get-than-cannabis-in-northland-locals-say

China says can resolve trade disputes with new U.S. government


China and the United States can resolve any trade disputes through talks, the government said on Thursday, as a Chinese newspaper warned U.S. business could be targets for retaliation in any trade war ushered in by President-elect Donald Trump.
Trump, who is sworn into office on Friday, has criticised China’s trade practices and threatened to impose punitive tariffs on Chinese imports.
Billionaire investor Wilbur Ross, Trump’s choice for commerce secretary, voiced sharp criticism of China’s trade practices on Wednesday, telling senators he would seek new ways of combating them.
Chinese Commerce Ministry spokesman Sun Jiwen said the government was willing to work with the new U.S. administration to promote the healthy development of commercial ties.
“I believe China and the United States can resolve any disputes through dialogue and negotiation and that the China-U.S. commercial relationship will not significantly stray from the path of mutual benefit,” Sun told reporters.
“Both sides benefit with cooperation, and both are hurt with conflict,” he added.
But an influential state-run newspaper took a harsher line.
In an editorial, the Global Times said that as the United States has the stronger economy, China may suffer more once a trade war starts, but China “will take the U.S. on to the end”.
“There are few cases in modern history where only one party surrendered in a trade war; rather, the two parties ended up compromising with each other. How could Trump’s team believe China would surrender without any countermeasures?” it said.
“The arrogant Trump team has underestimated China’s ability to retaliate. China is a major buyer of American cotton, wheat, beans and Boeing aircraft,” the paper added in the editorial carried in its Chinese and English-language editions, without elaborating.
Boeing Co’s China office declined to comment.
Boeing anticipates China will need 6,800 new jetliners worth $1 trillion over the next 20 years.
In October, Boeing and Chinese planemaker Commercial Aircraft Corp of China Ltd signed an agreement to open a Boeing 737 completion facility in the Chinese coastal city of Zhoushan.
The widely-read Global Times, run by the ruling Communist Party’s official People’s Daily, is known for its stridently nationalist tone, but its editorials cannot be viewed as representing government policies or official statements.
In recent weeks, the Global Times and other state-run Chinese news outlets have issued several warnings of possible retaliation if the Trump administration carries out threats of tariffs or undermines Beijing’s claims on self-ruled Taiwan.
In November, the Global Times warned that China could switch large orders from Boeing to Europe, Apple phones would “essentially be crowded out” and U.S. soybeans and corn banished from China if Trump creates problems for China on trade.
China is the world’s top producer and consumer of cotton and top buyer of grains such as soybeans to feed its vast livestock industry.
Source: http://www.cnbc.com/2017/01/19/china-says-can-resolve-trade-disputes-with-new-us-government.html

West African Force Poised to Ensure Gambian Transfer of Power


West African troops are gathered at Senegal’s border with Gambia poised to intervene to ensure President-elect Adama Barrow’s inauguration goes ahead Thursday, as the leader of Mauritania spearheaded last-ditch efforts to negotiate a settlement to the crisis in the tiny country.
Nigeria and Ghana committed troops and aircraft to the buildup that’s centered in Senegal, which surrounds Gambia on three sides. Mauritanian President Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz flew between the capitals of the two countries in the early morning hours, meeting in Dakar with Barrow and Senegalese President Macky Sall before leaving again.
The United Nations Security Council is scheduled to vote later Thursday on a resolution that would urge the Economic Community of West African States to enforce the outcome of last month’s elections in which Barrow defeated Yahya Jammeh, who’s ruled Gambia since a coup in 1994 and refused to leave office.
“If Ecowas does not intervene, its ability to maintain political order among its member countries would lose credibility,” Adeline van Houtte, Africa analyst for the Economist Intelligence Unit, said by e-mail. “And if Mr. Jammeh manages to cling onto power, it would also damage the credibility of so-called democratic elections in the region.”

State of Emergency

The regional states decided to take the action after Jammeh, 51, declared a 90-day state of emergency late Tuesday. The African Union has said it will no longer recognize Jammeh as president as of Thursday.
“The regional body Ecowas has reiterated its determination to take all necessary measures to ensure the transfer of power to President-elect Barrow,” Farhan Haq, the deputy spokesman for the UN Secretary-General, said in a statement. “The UN supports regional efforts aimed at resolving the crisis.”
The Nigerian Air Force said on its Facebook page that it’s deploying 200 men, fighter jets, transport aircraft and a helicopter to Senegal, which surrounds Gambia on three sides, for the operation. Ghana sent more than 200 troops to bolster the intervention force, presidential spokesman Eugene Arhin said in an e-mailed statement.
Jammeh has been criticized by human rights groups for jailing opponents and cracking down on journalists. Gambia, a nation of fewer than 2 million people, depends on tourism for the bulk of its revenue.
The U.S. Embassy closed all non-emergency services on Wednesday and will remain shut on Thursday.
Ecowas previously sent 600 troops to Guinea-Bissau following a coup in April 2012. The soldiers are due to be withdrawn this year.
The regional group also sent soldiers to Ivory Coast in 2002, when a failed coup split the country into a rebel north and a government-run south. The troops were deployed to patrol the dividing line between the warring parties and were later redeployed as UN troops.
Source: https://www.bloomberg.com/politics/articles/2017-01-19/west-african-force-poised-to-ensure-gambian-transfer-of-power

Wednesday, January 18, 2017

Brexit will ‘not be positive all along and without pain’, IMF’s Christine Lagarde warns


Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Christine Lagarde, has warned that the UK’s separation from the European Union is going to be complicated. She also said that it would not be all positive and would come with some pains.
The IMF chief’s warning comes after Prime Minister Theresa May on Tuesday (17 January) presented a 12-point plan for Britain and said that the country would leave the single market.
Lagarde welcomed May’s speech as it provided clarity. “Better clarity, less uncertainty is certainly better for the UK economy and for the rest of the European Union,” she said.
However, she warned that there were still many questions that needed answers. “The terms under which the [agreement] will be facilitated, over what period of time – question mark.
“Over what kind of transition period – question mark. It is only when those questions are better clarified that we will understand how the UK economy is going to pan out.
“We are still of the view that it will not be positive all along and without pain.”
Interestingly, Lagarde’s comments come just days after IMF upgraded the UK’s growth forecast for 2017 as it admitted that it had been too pessimistic about the UK’s growth after the June Brexit vote.
Speaking on the same, Lagarde told the BBC at the World Economic Forum in Davos that the UK had performed better than expected amid Bank of England’s decision to cut interest rates. She, however, said that despite this upgrade there were still some downside risks ahead.
“Once uncertainty clears and if people feel that their ability to set up shop in the UK and their ability to operate throughout the geographical area that is the European Union is not working as well as it did – the investment decision will change.
“In the same vein, if exports are subject to significant tariffs, restrictions and so on, the ability of the UK to activate that trade engine is going to be reduced. So while we have upgraded our forecast for 2017, we have downgraded for 2018,” she said.
Lagarde added that any deal that the UK would sign with the EU would not be as good as being a member. “When you belong to a club, whatever that is, the members of the club have a degree of affinity and particular terms under which they operate. Someone outside the club has different access,” she explained.
Source: http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/brexit-will-not-be-positive-all-along-without-pain-imfs-christine-lagarde-warns-1601881

Mosul: Shia soldiers in Iraqi army boast of revenge killing in war of words with Isis militants


Amid heavy exchanges of gunfire and grenades between Iraqi soldiers and Islamic State (Isis) militants during the offensive in eastern Mosul, Shia soldiers are reportedly also engaging in a war of words with the Sunni militants.
“They chanted calling us rawafiz [apostates],” Ammar Hasan, an Iraqi soldier, told Rudaw. “And we chanted saying ‘We are Ali-Shiites’.”
Isis, which comprises of Sunni Muslims, considers Shias non-Muslims. There have been reports of Isis brutality on minority Shia Muslims living in Iraq and Syria. The ensuing hatred has driven Shia soldiers to seek revenge from the jihadists.
Hasan, who hails from the predominantly Shia city of Hilla in central Iraq, narrated his heated exchange with an Isis fighter during a gunfight to capture the site of the Prophet Jonah’s tomb, which was destroyed by the militants in late 2014.
Narrating the incident, Hasan recalled: “He [the Isis militant] said ‘I will behead you like a sheep’. I told him ‘Woe, woe betide you. We are Ali-Shiites’ and I threw a grenade and killed him.”
Ahmad Jasm al-Zuhair from Karbala, Iraq, admitted to taking revenge from an Isis militant they captured alive. “We arrived here. They numbered about eight or 10,” Zuhair said of an encounter with the militants on a street located in Nabi Younis district.
“They were chanting ‘Allahu Akbar’. They were in that house, and we were in that one. We threw grenades at them. We killed two of them, and this one here was afraid. He surrendered,” he said pointing at a dead body next to him.
“We shot a rocket at that house, and he turned himself in with his gun. But we took revenge for our friends and killed him,” Zuhair added.
Yasr Hussein, another Iraqi soldier, said he too had a war of words with the militants: “We told them ‘Ali is with us’,” referring to Shia leader Ali ibn Abi Talib. “Who is with you?” Hussein reportedly told the militants.
The rift between Shia and Sunni Muslims goes back centuries and it is believed that they split when Sunnis chose to follow Abu Bakr as-Siddiq, after the death of the Prophet Muhammad, while Shias opted to follow Ali, Muhammad’s cousin and son-in-law.
Some Shia soldiers are currently fighting against the terrorists as part of the elite Iraqi Counter Terrorism Service (ICTS) and are mainly concentrated in eastern and northeastern Mosul. A separate Iran-backed Shia militia – Popular Mobilisation Forces (PMF) – is also assisting Iraqi forces to rid the country of the terrorists.
The inclusion of Shia militias in the battle for Mosul was hindered initially – when the soldiers offered to liberate Isis stronghold Tel Afar in west Mosul – primarily because of their anti-Sunni stand.
Meanwhile, Iraqi forces announced on Wednesday (18 January) that east Mosul was liberated and they are now advancing towards west Mosul. The offensive in Iraq’s second city began in October 2016.
Source: http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/mosul-shia-soldiers-iraqi-army-boast-revenge-killing-war-words-isis-militants-1601876

Fire Emblem becomes the latest Nintendo franchise to get a mobile game


First came the flurry of colorful monsters in the augmented reality hit game Pokemon Go.
Then came the world famous plumber Mario, who made his smartphone debut in Super Mario Run, which saw 40 million downloads in the first four days on the iOS platform.
On Thursday, Nintendo flexed its massive intellectual property muscles further to announce the imminent arrival of a mobile game from another one of its long-running franchises: Fire Emblem.
While the franchise does not have the same international clout as Pokemon and Mario, it has been around since the early 1990s, when the first game – Fire Emblem: Shadow Dragon and the Blade of Light – was released in Japan.
Shareholders had a lukewarm response to the announcement on Thursday, with Nintendo shares closing up 1.43 percent at 23,800 yen.
Fire Emblem Heroes is a tactical role-playing strategy game about two warring kingdoms locked in a bitter clash. Users can build their army by summoning popular characters from the Fire Emblem series, and lead them using touch-and-drag controls on maps designed to fit smartphone screens.
The goal of the game will be to defeat every enemy on a given map in order to progress. There will also be a player-versus-player mode, where users can fight one another in what Nintendo defined as Arena Duels on the game’s Google Play page.
The game will be available on Android and iOS platforms starting Feb. 2.
It will be free-to-play, with regular updates introducing new characters, content and additional hours of gameplay, and the option to make certain in-app purchases.
This could turn out to be a key feature for investors as it can theoretically attract more casual gamers to the game. Super Mario Run, on the other hand, is available for free for the first few levels before users have to shell out $9.99 for the rest of the game on the App store.
Unlike its competitors, Nintendo’s foray into the mobile gaming space came as late as 2015, when it partnered with DeNA to develop several gaming titles.
But success in the mobile space has been visible. In the first 30 days of its launch, Pokemon Go bagged $143 million in worldwide gross revenue, while the in-house developed Super Mario Run is set to garner more than $71 million for the same period, according to forecasts made in December by analytics firm SensorTower, which tracks app data. Nintendo is set to release its nine months earnings on Jan. 31, 2017.
Analysts believe Nintendo’s vast intellectual property library is a competitive advantage, and one that the company can benefit from if it is able to convert it into successful mobile games.
But the gaming giant is not ditching its legacy console business, despite struggling in recent years with the disappointing run of the Wii U consoles, which sold only 13.36 million units as of September 2016 since its launch in late 2012, compared to the original Wii’s lifetime sales of 101.63 million units between 2006 and September 2016.
Earlier this month, Nintendo unveiled more details about its next-generation hybrid console, the Nintendo Switch. It is part gaming console, part handheld device and part tablet, and will be released on March 3, costing $300.
On Thursday, Nintendo also announced several Fire Emblem titles for the Switch and the existing 3DS console. It also said that Super Mario Run will be available on the Android platform in March.
Based on Nintendo’s previously reported plans, it is likely the next title to make its smartphone debut will be the anthropomorphic animal-themed game, Animal Crossing.
Source: http://www.cnbc.com/2017/01/19/nintendo-news-fire-emblem-heroes-will-be-available-on-android-and-ios-platforms-starting-february-2.html

West African bloc vows Gambia intervention at midnight


DAKAR, Senegal • After more than two decades in power, Gambian President Yahya Jammeh faced the prospect of a military intervention by regional forces, as the man who once pledged to rule the West African nation for a billion years clung to power.
After a midnight deadline passed for him to step down, there was still no word from Jammeh. But Mauritania’s leader appeared to be making a last-ditch diplomatic effort, meeting with Jammeh and then flying to Senegal to meet with its leader and Gambian President-elect Adama Barrow.
Earlier, a military commander with the regional bloc known as ECOWAS announced that troops were positioning along Gambia’s borders with Senegal.
“The mandate of the president is finished at midnight,” declared Seydou Maiga Moro, speaking on Senegalese radio station RFM. “All the troops are already in place,” he added, saying they were merely waiting to see whether Jammeh would give in to international pressure to cede power to Barrow.
As midnight approached, Jammeh met with Mauritanian President Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz on the crisis. The Mauritanian leader left Gambia shortly before midnight, telling Gambia state television that “I am now less pessimistic [Jammeh] will work on a peaceful solution that is in the best interest for everyone.” He then went to the meeting at the Dakar airport in Senegal, state television there reported.
Thousands of Gambians have fled the country, including some former cabinet ministers who resigned in recent days. Hundreds of foreign tourists evacuated on special charter flights, though some continued to relax poolside despite the political turmoil. Gambia is a popular beach destination in winter, especially for tourists from Britain, the former colonial power.
The downtown area of the Gambian capital, Banjul, was empty late Wednesday, with all shops closed. But there was no visible military presence apart from a checkpoint at the entrance to the city.
Tiny Gambia is surrounded by Senegal and the Atlantic Ocean. Late Wednesday, witnesses reported Senegalese soldiers deploying in the Senegalese Kaolack region, north of Gambia, and in the southern Senegalese region of Casamance.
In another sign of the international pressure, Nigeria confirmed a warship was heading toward Gambia for “training,” and RFM radio reported that Nigerian military equipment had begun arriving in Dakar. Ghana also has pledged to contribute militarily.
The regional bloc was seeking the U.N. Security Council’s endorsement of its “all necessary measures” to remove Jammeh. “There is a sense that the whole situation rests in the hands of one person, and it’s up to that person, the outgoing president of Gambia, to draw the right conclusions,” said Sweden’s U.N. Ambassador Olof Skoog, the current council president.
The opposition has vowed to go ahead with Barrow’s inauguration. It was unclear whether Barrow would take the oath at a Gambian Embassy outside the country or if he would return.
“Those who resist peaceful change, effective 12 midnight tonight, shall face definite consequences, to their peril,” said Mai Ahmad Fatty, Barrow’s special adviser, in a Facebook post Wednesday in which he urged Gambians to stay indoors. “Anyone with firearms tonight shall be deemed a rebel, and will certainly become a legitimate target.”
Jammeh, who first seized power in a 1994 coup, has insisted that his rule was ordained by Allah. He initially conceded defeat after the December vote, but after reports emerged suggesting he could face criminal charges linked to his rule, he reversed himself a week later. He said voting irregularities invalidated the results, and his party went to court seeking a new round of voting.
The case has stalled because the supreme court currently has only one sitting judge.
Human rights groups have long accused Jammeh of arresting, jailing and killing political opponents, and there has been widespread fear for Barrow’s safety. Tension has been so high that Barrow has remained in the Senegalese capital since last weekend, at the advice of ECOWAS mediators. He was not even able to return to Banjul for his 7-year-old son’s funeral Monday after the child was fatally mauled by a dog.
As other longtime West African strongmen have died or been forced to step down in recent years, Jammeh has remained a rare exception — even launching a campaign to anoint himself “King of Gambia.”
In 2007, he claimed to have developed a cure for AIDS that involved an herbal body rub and bananas. Alarming public health experts, he insisted AIDS sufferers stop taking antiretroviral medications.
Two years later, his government rounded up nearly 1,000 people it accused of being witches, forcing them to drink a hallucinogen that caused diarrhea and vomiting. Two people died, according to Amnesty International.
More recently, Jammeh seemed bent on increasing Gambia’s isolation on the world stage. In 2013 he exited the Commonwealth, a group made up mostly of former British colonies, branding it a “neo-colonial institution.”
He also issued increasingly virulent statements against sexual minorities, vowing to slit the throats of gay men and saying the LGBT acronym should stand for “leprosy, gonorrhea, bacteria and tuberculosis.” And in October, Jammeh said Gambia would leave the International Criminal Court, which he dismissed as the “International Caucasian Court.”
Source: http://www.stltoday.com/news/national/west-african-bloc-vows-gambia-intervention-at-midnight/article_160d4663-e7b4-51b9-ba54-a7d2034f0281.html
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