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Monday, 26 January 2015

IBM prepares for company's largest corporate layoff of a quarter of its employees


© Flickr/ -heinecke-



In an enormous corporate bloodletting, IBM is preparing to lay off about a quarter of its employees, following a report revealing a continued decline in revenue.

Over 110,000 employees from around the world, or roughly 26 percent of its total roster, will be laid off by the end of February, in an IBM company reorganization code-named "Project Chrome," magazine reported Monday.


According to the magazine, IBM's US offices will be hit the hardest, but other locations in its global operations will also be affected by the cuts.


In the January 20 Q4 (fourth quarter 2014) report, IBM's stated its net operating income fell 11 percent to $5.5 billion compared with $6.2 billion in the same quarter of 2013. Revenue from continuing operations fell 12 percent, an 11th consecutive quarterly decline.


IBM president Ginni Rometty said the company was making significant progress in what he euphemistically termed a "transformation" to reposition the IBM hardware portfolio for "higher value."


The company is developing new business units for its CAMSS (Cloud, Analytics, Mobile, Social and Security) support services, which include improved data transfer capabilities.


According to , laid off employees will not be considered for IBM's new business units.


In mid-2014, IBM partnered with Apple Inc. to develop a set of business applications and cloud services focused on "industry-specific solutions to business clients worldwide."


According to , the layoff will purge valuable talent the magazine states is integral to any successful launch of new products by the company, and that IBM will incur further loses as a result.


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It's Russia's fault: EU threatens more sanctions after Mariupol attack


© Andreas Kontokanis

Lenin in Mariupol.



The EU has threatened to impose more sanctions on Russia following its new offensive in south-east Ukraine.

EU foreign relations chief Federica Mogherini on Saturday (24 January) said "further escalation ... would inevitably lead to a further grave deterioration of relations".

Her communique spoke of "offensives by Russia-backed separatists", adding, "I call therefore openly upon Russia to use its considerable influence over separatist leaders and to stop any form of military, political, or financial support".




The same day EU Council president Donald Tusk tweeted: "Once again, appeasement encourages the aggressor to greater acts of violence. Time to step up our policy based on cold facts, not illusions".

Foreign ministers are to discuss the situation at an emergency meeting in Brussels on Thursday.

Latvia's Edgars Rinkevics said on Twitter at the weekend: "Russia fully responsible to stop them [the attacks], if not, more isolation & sanctions to come".


His Lithuanian and Swedish counterparts issued similar warnings.


But German foreign minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said: "Efforts for de-escalation need to be continued. I hope that - even after the past three days - not everything is lost".


They spoke after Russia-controlled fighters seized the airport in Donetsk, east Ukraine, last week and, on Saturday, fired rockets into a market in Mariupol, in the south-east of the country, killing dozens of civilians.




Nato secretary general Jens Stoltenberg said after the Mariupol attack: "Russian troops in eastern Ukraine are supporting these offensive operations with command and control systems, air defence systems with advanced surface-to-air missiles, unmanned aerial systems, advanced multiple rocket launcher systems, and electronic warfare systems".

For its part, the UK also on Saturday proposed a UN Security Council (UNSC) resolution calling for violence to stop.

But Russia, a UNSC veto member, blocked it on grounds it didn't criticise the Ukrainian government.




One EU diplomat based in Kiev told EUobserver the snap FMs meeting is unlikely to agree on sanctions right away.

"The feeling among EU countries' diplomats here on the ground, even from the more Russia-friendly states, is that there should be some kind of reaction. But the feeling in the capitals is different", the contact said.


"Foreign ministers could meet but only to issue a strong statement".


The EU last year blacklisted dozens of Russian officials, oligarchs, and MPs. It also imposed sanctions on Russian banks, energy, and arms firms, and a ban on EU investments in Russia-annexed Crimea.


Its option papers say that in the worst case scenario it could stop Russian gas and oil purchases.




Some member states, including the UK, have also suggested excluding Russia from the Belgium-based "Swift" system of international wire transfers.

But for his part, Sergei Markov, the director of the Moscow-based Institute of Political Studies, who describes himself as an advisor to Russian president Vladimir Putin, indicated the Russian elite doesn't believe the EU threats.


He wrote on his Facebook page on Saturday that if the "New Army" takes Mariupol, the EU and US might impose some extra measures.


But he said if it also takes Kharkiv and Odessa, two cities in Ukraine, the EU would launch new talks with Russia and "gradually lift all sanctions ... in exchange for not taking Kiev".


The EU diplomat noted: "This is a message to the EU ... they think we'll do anything to avoid a full-scale war".




One EU, two voices

Meanwhile, the Mogherini and Tusk statements received a mixed reception.


Mogherini's language is tougher than previously on Russia. But Ukrainian activists attacked her on social media for speaking of "Russia-backed separatists" and Russian "influence" in what appears to back Russia's claim that it isn't directly involved in the conflict.


Jacek Saryusz-Wolski, a Polish centre-right MEP, also tweeted: "Russia as aggressor should 'use its considerable influence' on itself, not its terrorists, [please] refrain [from] repeating RU [Russian] propaganda".


The Tusk tweet, which pointed to Russia as "the aggressor", was welcomed in Ukraine and by Russia hawks in Europe.


"Tusk nails it", Estonian president Toomas Hendrik Ilves said.


Chomsky: We Are All – Fill in the Blank.

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7 shocking facts about Saudi Arabia under ‘modernizing’ reign of King Abdullah



Taken aback by the fulsome praise the recently deceased King Abdullah has garnered from world leaders, RT has decided to assess whether his record stands up to scrutiny.


The majority of eulogies went beyond the requirements of diplomatic etiquette, while some epithets used by Western politicians made people believe they had stepped through the looking glass. UK Prime Minister David Cameron said the monarch, who died at 90, “strengthened understanding between faiths,” while IMF chief Christine Lagarde called him “a strong advocate of women,” albeit a “discreet” one. And almost all political grandees seemed to agree that the scion of the House of Saud, was – in the words of Tony Blair – “a skillful modernizer,” who “led his country into the future.”


One is invited to do a reality check and examine how far the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques really brought his country into the 21st century.


1. No elections, no parties, no parliament, no dissent


Continuing its consistent decades-long record, Saudi Arabia received the lowest possible marks for civil and political freedoms in the annual Freedom House rankings in 2014. The countries placed alongside it were North Korea, Turkmenistan, and smattering of the most brutal African dictatorships.


The regime’s disregard for any accountability to its people is brazen. There are no national elections, no parties, and no parliament – only a symbolic advisory chamber, known as Majlis al-Shura. Criticism is strictly forbidden: only last year, prominent opposition activist Abd al-Kareem al-Khoder joined hundreds of the country’s political prisoners, when he was sentenced to eight years for demanding the changeover to a constitutional monarchy. Just days before King Abdullah’s death, blogger Raif Badawi was given the first 50 of his 1,000 lashes – for calling for free speech on his blog.


King Abdullah introduced municipal elections upon his official ascension to the throne – as a largely symbolic valve mechanism. At the same time, high-profile petitions demanding greater reform a decade ago landed their authors in prison.


The country's sizable and restive Shia minority in the east - which led a series of public protests from 2011 onwards - is also systematically starved of political representation, somewhat inevitably, in a country led by a single Sunni family.


2. Equality: Jobs for the Saud boys – all 7,000 of them


The grip of the House of Saud on the country’s levers of power and purse strings would be the envy of any medieval court. More than 7,000 princes bearing that family name are alive – with some experts speculating that the real number of titled family members approaches 30,000. Every single one has to be allocated a job commensurate with his lineage – creating hundreds of sinecures – while conversely, all talented candidates are shut out from key jobs if they do not bear the correct surname.


3. Power transfer: Half Brezhnev-era USSR, half Game of Thrones


Ironically, with such a large pool of descendants to choose from, the House of Saud is crippled by particularly outdated succession laws. Instead of primogeniture – where the title is inherited by the first-born son of the ruler – Saudi Arabia uses agnatic seniority, or the passing of power across to one’s brothers. This means that the 90-year-old Abdullah has been succeeded by 79-year-old half-brother Salman, while Crown Prince Muqrin turns 70 this year.


Saudi King Salman (Reuters/Yuya Shino)


Underneath the geriatric cadre of leaders, there exists a viper’s nest of intrigue, as the exponentially bigger younger generation plans to stake its claim on the throne, with factions aplenty split among the different branches of the sprawling family. It is not obvious how such a system guarantees the increasing prosperity and stability of a 21st-century state, and King Abdullah did little to reform its basic tenets.


4. Law: Scimitars and whips


It may have become almost an online cliché to compare the legal systems of Saudi Arabia and the Islamic State, but the links between the two are fundamental. Both use the same ultra-conservative Hanbali school of jurisprudence, and many of the IS “judges” are Saudis, due to their familiarity with this concept of justice.


Among the punishments distributed is anything from hands and feet being chopped off for theft, lashes for adultery and other “social” misdemeanors, to beheading, which can be handed down for crimes as varied as sedition, carjacking, sorcery and drug smuggling.



Eighty-seven people are thought to have been beheaded in 2014, which is in line with the national average over the past five years, despite ever-growing external pressure on Saudi Arabia. Only this month, a video emerged online, showing an executioner repeatedly hacking away at the neck of a screaming condemned woman, as people looked on open-mouthed. Unlike solving some of Saudi Arabia’s deep-seated problems, the curtailing of such “justice” would have just required one firm intervention from King Abdullah. It is clear, this was not a priority for him.



5. Human rights: Torture and gavel


There is no legal code in Saudi Arabia, leaving it to individual judges to set the punishment for a crime in accordance with their interpretation of Islamic scriptures. This gives them unlimited power, creating arguably one of the most inconsistent justice systems in the world, in which crimes and punishments are simply made up, leaving the convicts no obvious way to appeal.


In addition, much of the legal process hinges on a “confession” from the defendant, which in turn encourages torture. In practice, the information obtained this way is even less reliable than that received from inmates at Guantanamo, as instead of trying to extract provable data, the torturers are merely demanding admissions of guilt – by all means available.


King Abdullah attempted to rationalize the system, by creating more appeal courts, and introducing a stricter selection of judges. However, he did not question the value of the legal system as a whole, and all judges that have been appointed in the past two decades have been personally approved by him.


6. Women’s rights: Female (non-)drivers


Over the past decade, the battle lines have been drawn on the symbolic issue of women drivers in Saudi Arabia. The Gulf monarchy is the last country in the world, where women are still not allowed to drive.


The issue is not near resolution, and women caught behind the wheel – whether during a symbolic protest, or an ordinary drive – can still end up sentenced to lashings. In fairness, King Abdullah did intervene in at least one case in 2011, to commute a punishment.


But of course, for the majority of Saudi women, driving is the least of their problems.


Many would prefer to be able to leave the house, make a purchase, sign any legal document – in fact perform almost any official action, from agreeing to surgery, to signing up to a class – without the consent of a guardian, either the husband or the father. Yet, even these suffocating measures give only scant impression of the status of Saudi women in a society where even their court testimony is worth half of that of a man.


King Abdullah encouraged more women to go into education, and allocated them a fifth of the seats in his advisory chamber, also allowing them to vote and run in the 2015 municipal elections. As with other reform areas, these are top-down symbolic gestures that have done little to affect most Saudi women, who - outside of warzones - remain some of the most disadvantaged anywhere in the world. Still, Abdullah’s admirers can hope that his first steps will lay the foundation to profound change, not patronizing concessions.


7. Terrorism fight: Friend or foe?


A voluntary $100 million donation to the UN’s counter-terrorism center last year was a show of generosity from Riyadh, but what the Saudis give with one hand, they seem to take away with the other.


According to the diplomatic cables published by Wikileaks in 2010, the US regards Saudi Arabia as the biggest source of Sunni terrorism funding in the world, and a “crucial” piggy-bank for Al-Qaeda and other radical groups. While much of its funding comes from private individuals, their identity is unlikely to have been a secret to King Abdullah, who did nothing to rein in his family members.


In fact, one could be tempted to feel that the House of Saud is only against the “wrong” kind of terrorist – mostly Shia, but also splinter Sunni groups that threaten its hegemony over the region. When the “right” kinds of terrorist – Russia’s Chechen militants, or anti-Assad rebels – appear, then those in Riyadh palaces not only support them with funds, but see them as a legitimate tool for spreading influence and the favored Wahhabi ideology.




Need more fear: 3 more planes evacuated in Seattle and Dallas after fake bomb threats


© Reuters/Lucas Jackson



There seems to be no stopping of fake bomb threats directed at US airlines: two passenger jets landing in Seattle, Washington were evacuated and searched for explosives, while another flight was diverted to Dallas, Texas for similar safety procedures.

A JetBlue flight from Long Beach, California, and a regional SkyWest jet from Phoenix were both isolated and searched for explosives by security teams with dogs at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport on Sunday. Passengers of JetBlue flight 1006 reportedly had to exit the plane, which had been sent to a far end of the airfield, using portable stairs, while their luggage was examined by detection dogs. The evacuation lasted for about 45 minutes.


Meanwhile, Delta/SkyWest flight 4741 from Phoenix was also detained at the same airport. The pilot said that three bomb threats were received, according to local media. Jenna Luthman, an executive producer at Northwest Cable News described the threats as "low credibility," adding that it was unusual to get three of them at once.

Following the search, both planes were and the people were eventually taken to the terminal by bus.


The third plane, Delta Air Lines flight 1061, flying from Los Angeles to Orlando, did not reach its destination and had to be diverted to Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport after multiple passengers reported a bomb threat made in connection with the flight.


The people were similarly evacuated and questioned and the plane inspected. It was eventually also given the all-clear by the authorities.


The threats come just a day after two flights were escorted by fighter jets and then evacuated and searched for explosives in an Atlanta airport due to bomb threats on Twitter which authorities had deemed

While the connection was not officially acknowledged by officials, threats to both Delta and Southwest Airlines were apparently made via Twitter by user @kingZortic, who then bragged on his page that he was by the police even posting an address at which he claimed he could be found.


At least one of the Sunday threats could also be connected to a post on Twitter, which claimed that there was a bomb on JetBlue flight 1006 Two fighter jets were also reportedly scrambled to escort the plane due to


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Plan C: The top secret Cold War plan for martial law in the USA







Michael from Muckrock sez, "Starting on April 19, 1956, the federal government practiced and planned for a near-doomsday scenario known as Plan C. When activated, Plan C would have brought the United States under marshal law, rounded up over ten thousand individuals connected to 'subversive' organizations, implemented a censorship board, and prepared the country for life after nuclear attack. There was no Plan A or B."



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Kiev junta introduces state of emergency in Donbass, high alert across Ukraine

Ukrainian servicemen

© Reuters / Nikolai Ryabchenko

Ukrainian servicemen stand guard on a street in Mariupol, eastern Ukraine, January 24, 2015



The Ukrainian government has introduced the state of emergency in the war-torn south-eastern Donetsk and Lugansk Regions, and put all other territories on high alert, Prime Minister Arseny Yatsenyuk announced.

"In accordance with the Ukrainian Code of Civil Protection, the Cabinet of Ministers has adopted a decision to recognize an emergency situation at a state level. The Ukrainian government has decided to impose the state of emergency in the Donetsk and Lugansk Regions," Yatsenyuk is cited as saying by Interfax-Ukraine.


According to the PM, the move is aimed at providing the most efficient coordination of all government agencies in order to ensure civil protection and the safety of the population.


The statement was made after the field meeting of the Cabinet of Ministers, which took place at the headquarters of the State Emergency Service of Ukraine in Kiev on Monday.


Yatsenyuk also said that the state of emergency in the southeast will be overseen by a special government commission.


It will be headed by the PM himself, with Deputy-PM Gennady Zubko and Emergencies Minister Sergey Bochkovsky being his deputies.


eastern Ukraine

© Reuters / Alexander Ermochenko

A man walks near a damaged residential building in Donetsk, eastern Ukraine January 19, 2015





Kiev's troops and Donbass militia forces are locked in renewed hostilities in southeastern Ukraine after a shaky ceasefire reached by the sides in September utterly collapsed.

Ukrainian forces launched a massive offensive in mid-January, but failed to gain any ground despite employing tanks, artillery and aviation.


On Saturday, a residential area in the port city of Mariupol, which has remained relatively insulated from violence throughout the majority of the conflict, was shelled.


The Kiev forces and the militias have been trading blame for the incident, which took the lives of at least 30 people and saw another 100 injured.


Russia's foreign minister, Sergey Lavrov, has blamed Kiev for trying to "derail the peace process" in the Donetsk and Lugansk Regions.


"Time and time again, we're seeing attempts by the Kiev authorities to solve the problem by violent suppression of the southeast. These are blind-alley attempts, leading to even more casualties among the civilian population," he said.


Lavrov gave a reminder of an agreement to start withdrawing heavy weaponry reached at a meeting of the foreign ministers of France, Germany, Russia and Ukraine on January 21. Several days later President Poroshenko announced the renewal of warfare.


"It would've been naive to expect that the militia forces will remain idle when on the Ukrainian president's orders populated areas are being shelled ... and come to term with the fact that they'll be bombed out," Lavrov noted.


The foreign minister said that according to his understanding the rebels began acting "in order to eliminate those positions of the Ukrainian military from where their towns and villages were being shelled with heavy weaponry."


The Ukrainian conflict began last April when Kiev launched a military operation in the southeastern Donetsk and Lugansk Regions, after they refused to recognize the country's new, coup-imposed authorities.


The death toll in the Ukraine conflict has exceeded 5,000 people. Over 10,000 have been injured, according to UN estimates.


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Wild boar smashes up restaurant in South Korea


This is the moment terrified diners ran for their lives when a wild pig smashed its way into a service station restaurant in South Korea.


Dozens of customers fled in terror as a rampaging wild boar broke into the Highway Rest Stop cafe, smashing windows and slamming into walls.


The angry animal attacked the glass door of the cafe at full speed before wreaking havoc inside as punters scrambled to avoid a pummelling - with some even standing on tables to get out of the way.


[embedded content]




Another customer picked up a chair in case he had to fend off the fearsome beast.

And the whole thing was captured in terrifying video footage from surveillance cameras in the restaurant.


The incident was broadcast on Korean news channel CCTV, which showed the hole left by the peeved porker in a low window before it laid the place to waste and escaped through a sliding door.


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