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Monday, 26 January 2015

Syriza win sets Greece on collision course with Europe

Syriza

© Rex/Rex

Syriza supporters in Thessaloniki celebrate as exit poll results show Syriza as a clear winner in the Greek election on Sunday.



European politics has been plunged into a volatile new era following a historic victory in Greece's general election by far-left radicals committed to ending years of austerity.

More than five years into the euro crisis that started in Greece in October 2009 and raised questions about the single currency's survival, Greek voters roundly rejected the savage spending cuts and tax rises imposed by Europe which reduced the country to penury.


The euro briefly slumped to an 11-year low in Asian trading on Monday morning, while the Greek stock market slumped 5% in volatile early trading.


Syriza

© Aris Messinis/AFP/Getty Images

Syriza party supporters celebrate in Athens.



Voters handed power to Alexis Tsipras, the charismatic 40-year-old former communist who leads the umbrella coalition of assorted leftists known as Syriza. He cruised to an eight-point victory over the incumbent centre-right New Democracy party, according to exit polls and projections after 99% of votes had been counted.

The result surpassed pollster predictions and marginalised the two mainstream parties that have run the country since the military junta's fall in 1974. It appeared, however, that Syriza would win 149 seats - just short of securing the 151 of 300 seats that would enable Tsipras to govern without coalition partners.


"The sovereign Greek people today have given a clear, strong, indisputable mandate," Tsipras told a crowd of rapturous flag-waving party supporters. "Greece has turned a page. Greece is leaving behind the destructive austerity, fear and authoritarianism. It is leaving behind five years of humiliation and pain."


Greece's incumbent prime minister, Antonis Samaras, whose conservative-dominated coalition had been in office since June 2012, conceded defeat early in the evening and admitted that "mistakes and injustices" had been made but insisted he was leaving office with a clear conscience. "I assumed charge of a country that was on the brink of collapse ... and we restored its international credibility," said Samaras.


Britain's prime minister, David Cameron, said the election result will increase economic uncertainty, while the chancellor, George Osborne, went further, saying that Syriza's promises will be "very difficult to deliver and incompatible with what the eurozone currently demands of its members".




On Monday morning Tsipras entered coalition talks with the leader of the small, populist rightwing party Independent Greeks. Syriza needs a coalition partner to secure a working majority, and the Independent Greeks won 13 seats.

Tsipras's victory, widely predicted, was nonetheless stunning in scale and in impact. Single-party majorities are very rare in parliamentary systems in Europe these days, in recent years occurring in only Hungary and Slovakia under strongman leaders of the right and left. For an upstart party such as Syriza, which has never been tested in power, the victory highlighted how five years of fiscal orthodoxy in Europe have turned politics upside down.


"I just voted for the party that's going to change Greece; in fact, the party that is going to change the whole of Europe," said Panagiotis, 54, a self-employed electrician voting in the Kipseli district of Athens. "There has to be change, big change. The economy has collapsed ... Syriza is Greece's hope."


The damning popular verdict on Europe's response to financial meltdown is a haunting outcome for the EU's political elite. For the first time, power has been handed to populist outsiders deeply opposed to Brussels and Berlin, albeit not anti-European, unlike their counterparts on the far right across the EU. For the first time a child of the European crisis, an explicitly anti-austerity party, will take office in the EU.


"There's a sense that these populist movements are led by people who didn't go to university with [the leaders] and that if you ignore them they will go away. They've been ignored and patronised," said a senior EU policymaker in Brussels. "The underlying causes are economic. We want a Europe that is delivering tangible benefits to citizens. That's not what it feels like at the moment."


The result throws into question whether Greece will remain in the eurozone and the union overall, sets a precedent for anti-austerity insurgents elsewhere in Europe - notably in Spain, which will hold elections this year - and underlines public rejection of the policies prescribed mainly if not exclusively by Berlin in recent years.


Tsipras now holds Greece's European fate in his hands. Athens and its creditors - the EU and the International Monetary Fund, which have bailed the country out to the tune of €240bn (£178bn) since 2010 - will spend weeks in wrenching negotiations over the terms of continued assistance and whether his new government will do enough in terms of further cuts and reforms to keep Greece in the euro.


Neither side wants Greece to crash out of the currency. But positions are very far apart, and currently unbridgeable. While the German central bank promptly declared that Greece needed more loans but only on eurozone terms, senior Syriza figures announced that the bailout diktat was "dead".


"Grexit is unthinkable," said a second senior Brussels policymaker involved in the negotiations. "It would be extremely bad. Europe is about irreversibility. If you start doubting that, you start pricing in the risk of fragmentation and soon you have no monetary union. The only chance of Grexit is if Greece defaults on its payments. Morally, that would be saying they want to leave." A default would trigger a run on the banks, capital flight and capital controls.


The clock is already ticking. When the German chancellor, Angela Merkel, French president François Hollande, British prime minister David Cameron et al assemble for an EU summit in Brussels in just over a fortnight, they will be joined at Europe's top table by Tsipras, probably the only man there not wearing a tie. The symbolism will be enormous. Europe's anti-mainstream mavericks and populists are no longer just hammering on the doors.


Before that summit on 12 February, Tsipras, say people involved in the negotiations, will want to have already fleshed out the contours of a deal. Berlin and Brussels have been quietly sending envoys to Syriza, including Tsipras, for weeks. He has been "perfectly reasonable", say senior Brussels sources.


Greece's current bailout expires at midnight on 28 February. Without agreement to extend that programme, probably until the summer, Greece's banks will be unable to borrow normally and will depend on emergency liquidity, effectively living on an overdraft. There is up to €7bn available to Greece if it strikes a deal.


"They have to ask for an extension of the programme. If they don't, they go belly up," said a second policymaker. "We're counting on their seeing their enlightened self-interest and getting the money to pay the bills."


But another senior figure in Brussels was less optimistic: "Do we know that Germany or Finland will agree to a new programme?"


Tsipras has pledged to rewrite the terms of the bailout that dates from 2012 by trying to ease the fiscal orthodoxy defined by Berlin and achieving some form of writedown or relief on the country's national debt of €320bn or 175% of GDP.


It is not clear how he can achieve this in the time available. Tsipras and Samaras both reject the EU terms. Samaras has been stalling since last June on the EU-IMF review of the Greek shakeup tied to the bailout.


Ironically, the eurozone is asking Tsipras, who won on a hard-left, anti-austerity rejectionist ticket, to go further than Samaras was prepared to go. Samaras and Tsipras want an end to the "humiliating" rescue programmes and their oversight by the hated troika of officials from the European commission, European Central Bank and IMF. But it is not clear how, without the creditors writing off much of the loans. This is rejected by the IMF and the ECB and is politically unacceptable to Merkel who fears it will encourage other ailing eurozone economies to shirk their sides of the bailout bargains while boosting Germany's own growing anti-euro movement.


Besides, if freed of what it sees as the tyrannical terms of the bailout conditions, Greece is not in a position to fund itself. Its borrowing costs are currently nudging 10%, way beyond the affordable. The German government initiated parliamentary procedures last month with a view to setting up a "precautionary" fallback programme for Greece under which the country would try to fund itself on the markets, but have a eurozone cushion if that was not possible.


The German move, extremely unwelcome in Athens where the political imperative is liberation from bailouts, was seen as clumsy interference in the election. In return, the Greek outcome will now affect German domestic politics.


Tsipras's triumph - itself a direct result of the EU's austerity policies, although those were preceded by three decades of cronyism, nepotism and corruption which became the system in Greece - will resonate strongly beyond the Balkans, throwing up sharp questions about the policy shortcomings of the elites and their failure to get to grips with the new populist forces challenging their right to rule.


The Podemos upstarts in Spain, the Five Star anti-establishment mavericks of Beppe Grillo in Italy, and Gerry Adams's Sinn Féin in Ireland will all relish the Syriza victory.


Other mainstream figures in the EU will also be quietly hoping that Tsipras can mount a credible challenge to the Merkel ascendancy and secure a shift in eurozone policymaking - leaders on the centre-left such as Hollande in France and the Italian prime minister, Matteo Renzi.


The result will also chasten mainstream leaders, many of them facing elections this year across the EU as they seek to neutralise their own domestic Eurosceptic and anti-establishment forces.


"Everyone knows Europe today is a continent with no growth, no inflation, high unemployment. It's very hard to tell people that Europe is the solution, that it has the answers. What is Europe for?" asked one of the three senior figures in unusually pessimistic remarks.


"The results of the European elections [last May] have seen anti-European parties raging everywhere. That's discontent with the European project. There is always an economic basis. The next election could be rejection of the project and there's nothing left."


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US Busts Alleged Russian Spy Ring In Manhattan



Federal prosecutors in New York charged three men in an alleged Russian spy ring centered in Manhattan and the Bronx, according to a Jan. 23 complaint unsealed today by the office of Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara. According to CNN's Shimon Prokupecz, Evgeny Buryakov, working with Igor Sporyshev and Victor Podobnyy, was trying to recruit NYC residents as intelligence sources for the Russian Federation.





While pure speculation, this gentleman - a New York-based Russian banker with the same name - appears to be the recruiter...





Russia considering extending stay for Ukrainians of conscription age


ukraine

© ITAR-TASS/Dmitry Rogulin



Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Monday that Moscow might extend the period of sojourn in Russian territory for Ukrainians of conscription age who can be drafted into the Ukrainian army.

"Many people, by the way, do not want to be mobilized. They are trying to move into Russia and lie low for some time. And they are absolutely right because they are simply being sent under bullets like cannon fodder," Putin said at a meeting with the students of the "Gornyi" University of Mineral Resources.


At the same time, the president said Ukrainian nationals can not stay in Russia longer than for a period established by the law.


"Under a new law, Ukrainian citizens cannot stay in Russia for more than 30 days. After that they have to return to Ukraine where they are being caught and sent under the bullets again. That is why I think that we are going to change something in that law," Putin said adding the sojourn of some categories of people, especially those of conscription age, could be extended within legal framework.





Comment: It looks like the Russians care more for Ukrainian soldiers than Kiev. Donetsk treats wounded Ukrainian soldiers, feeds them, doesn't torture them, and sends them home to their mothers. Kiev lies to them, sends them to die in suicide missions, lies about their deaths, leaves their bodies to rot, conscripts young men, poorly trains them, and sends them to die on their first engagement. Now Russia is considering allowing them to stay in Russia to avoid such a fate. See how the prime minister of Donetsk treats his POWs, and the warnings he gives one mother. He's right.

[embedded content]



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Amazing images from space capture lightning in the centre of tropical cyclone Bansi




An Italian astronaut on the ISS captured images of a cyclone on Earth.



Amazing images of lighting in the eye of a cyclone have been captured by an astronaut on the ISS.

The incredible views of tropical cyclone Bansi were spotted in the Indian Ocean near the island of Mauritius, when the ISS was east of Madagascar.


The calm 'eye' of the storm can be seen illuminated by lightning and surrounded by swirling clouds as it made its way across the ocean


The images were taken by Italian European Space Agency astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti aboard the ISS earlier this month.


They show the swirling motion of the storm around the central blue eye.


According to Nasa, the wall of the eye is being illuminated by a flash of lightning in the centre of the storm - which also lights up nearby clouds.


The low-light settings of the camera used to take the image accentuate the contrast.


'It looks like the storm is powering up some sort of weapon!' said Phil Plate at Slate.


One image also shows a thin green line over the horizon known as airglow, which occurs when oxygen atoms are energised by the sun.





Another image by Cristoforetti (shown) also revealed a green line of 'airglow' above Earth near the cyclone, with part of a Russian spacecraft also in the image.



The camera again accentuates this effect, which is an atmospheric phenomenon frequently seen by astronauts.

Stars appear above the airglow layer, and the solar panels of a docked Russian spacecraft jut into the image.


Tropical cyclone Bansi formed in the southwestern Indian Ocean on 11 January this year.


By the time Cristoforetti's photos were taken, on the following day, Bansi had achieved tropical cyclone strength, with sustained maximum winds over 115 miles (185km) per hour.


The cyclone would reach category 4 strength before becoming a weak extra-tropical system on 19 January.





On 15 January at 6.15am UTC (1.15am EST), Nasa's Terra satellite captured this visible picture of tropical cyclone Bansi east-northeast of the island of Mauritius



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Strange animal behaviour: Hippo cannibalism caught on camera in South Africa




Scientists have captured one of the first cases of cannibalism in hippopotamuses on camera.



In times of famine, some animals go to desperate measures to stay alive, including eating members of their own species.

Now scientists have captured one of the first cases of cannibalism in hippopotamuses on camera.


The grisly photographs show a hippo eating a corpse of another floating in a river in South Africa's Kruger National Park.


They were taken by biologist Leejiah Dorward while on safari last year.


He told National Geographic: 'I was completely amazed. It was something I had never heard of.'


Having returned to London, the PhD student discovered that cannibalism in hippos has only been described once before, in 1999.


While hippos are herbivores, other scientists have seen them deviate from their diet of grasses and the occasional aquatic plant to feast on impala - a medium-sized antelope.


The other instance of hippo cannibalism occurred during a severe drought.


Dr David Pfenning, a biologist at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, explained that cannibalism is one way for creatures to get all the nutrients they need in one convenient package.





When Mr Dorward recorded the act of cannibalism, he noticed that the region had lush grass (seen in this image) which makes up the bulk of a hippo's diet.



For example, Mormon crickets migrate on mass during food shortages and if one stops marching, others will devour it, because their fellow katydid is a good source of protein and salt, needed by the insects.

However, animals that feast on their own species run the risk of catching a disease.


Most animals usually only resort to eating their own species during times of extreme hardship, when the risk of catching a disease is less then starving to death.


Crocodiles, for example, are known to eat their young when there is no other food available and sometimes scavenge corpses.


However, when Mr Dorward recorded the act of cannibalism, he noticed that the region had lush grass. The event was documented in the


To solve the mystery of why the hippo ate the corpse, he wants to document other cases of cannibalism in the species in Africa.


'Because the behaviour is so rare, we are relying on others to report it,' he said.



WHAT DO HIPPOS EAT?


Hippos leave water at dusk to travel up to six miles (10km) inland to graze on grasses. They spend almost all the rest of the time in rivers and lakes.


Grass is their main source of food, and they consume around 150lbs (68kg) of it every night, over around five hours.


They occasionally eat aquatic plants.


There have been reports of hippos eating impala and carrion but their stomachs are not suited to a meaty diet and meat eating is thought to be driven by drought and desperation.


Hippos are born with sterile intestines and require bacteria obtained from their mothers' faeces to digest vegetation.



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'It's Russia's fault!' EU threatens more sanctions after shelling of civilian targets in Mariupol


© 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.


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Need more fear! 3 more planes evacuated in Seattle and Dallas after 'low-credibility 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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