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Monday, April 16, 2018

WORLD NEWS: North Korea commemorates birth of its founder

source: AFP
North Korea commemorates birth of its founder


AFP / Ed JONES People bow before the twin statues at Mansu hill

Thousands of North Korean devotees laid flowers before statues of the country's founder Kim Il Sung Sunday on the anniversary of his birth.

A constant stream of soldiers in brown uniforms, work unit personnel in suits, schoolchildren and families made their way to Mansu hill in the centre of Pyongyang, where giant statues of Kim and his son and successor look out over the capital.

"The great comrades Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il will always be with us," read a banner made of greenery.

In turn each group -- including the occasional set of tourists -- approached the bronze edifices, most people with single blooms, some carrying golden baskets of flowers, making their offerings before assembling in formation.

"Let us bow before the statues," intoned an announcer half-hidden by horticulture, prompting deep bows from civilians and salutes from military detachments.

In front of the images stood a giant floral arrangement on a golden stand from Kim Jong Un, Kim Il Sung's grandson and the third of the dynasty to head the isolated and impoverished but nuclear-armed country.

North Koreans are taught from an early age to revere their leaders, and portraits of the two late rulers gaze down in every home, school and workplace in the country.

The calendar is packed with anniversaries relating to them and their careers, and the accompanying rituals both demonstrate and reinforce loyalty to the regime.

April 15, known as the Day of the Sun, is unquestionably the most important anniversary and is sometimes marked with a military parade, as it was last year.

Visiting the statues reinforced her determination to "realise the reunification of our country which the great leaders wanted" and "uphold the leadership of the respected Marshal Kim Jong Un", said Second Lieutenant Ryu Yong Jong, 25, who has been in the army for nine years.

Ordinary North Koreans only ever express wholehearted support for their government when speaking to foreign media.

Later in the day, dancing parties -- choreographed spectacles where citizens step and twirl to patriotic songs -- were held, and crowds gathered on Kim Il Sung Square to watch fireworks light up the Juche Tower, the monument to Kim's "self-reliance" philosophy that is the world's tallest stone tower.

- Heavy medal -


AFP / Ed JONES Korean People's Army soldiers pay their respects


Authorities held a mass meeting of senior officials on Saturday to mark the anniversary, but Kim Jong Un has spent some of the period on the current spate of diplomacy involving the two Koreas.

A summit with the South's President Moon Jae-in is due later this month, ahead of talks with Donald Trump. On Saturday Kim met visiting Chinese envoy Song Tao, pledging to improve a traditional but battered relationship.

At a banquet for the delegation, one wall was decorated with a mural of Kim shaking hands with Chinese President Xi Jinping on his surprise trip to Beijing last month.

The journey was Kim's first overseas since inheriting power. It ensured that the first foreign head of state he met was the leader of the longstanding ally whose forces gave his grandfather crucial support in the Korean War.

Senior officials including ceremonial head of state Kim Yong Nam on Sunday visited Mangyongdae outside Pyongyang, where Kim Il Sung was born 106 years ago, the official KCNA news agency reported.

They "looked round the historical relics showing the noble traits of the President and his family members", it added.

Kim Il Sung remains the North's Eternal President despite dying in 1994. His son passed away in 2011 but is still Eternal General Secretary of the ruling Workers' Party of Korea.

The Day of the Sun has been described as "Like Christmas, but for Juche instead of Jesus".

Guides at Mangyongdae sometimes use religious terminology themselves, describing a well at the site as containing "holy water" and calling the day his "birthdaymas".

Retired senior colonel Kim Yong Won, 76, donned his old uniform to visit the statues at Mansu hill, his chest heavily bedecked with medals -– the most important, he said, being a gold star depicting a soldier, a sailor and an airman for 30 years of service.


AFP / Ed JONES People arrive at Mansu hill to pay their respects

"Every time I visit here, the feeling is special," he told AFP. "I cannot express my feelings in one word. The feeling like this is not only for me but also for all Koreans as well as the world's progressive people."

On the platform in front of the statues, a young girl in a red coat and carrying a straw broom carefully picked up a stray twig and took it away.

Trump, allies praise Syria strikes as Moscow seethes

source: AFP
Trump, allies praise Syria strikes as Moscow seethes



 AFP / LOUAI BESHARA A Syrian soldier inspects the wreckage of a building described as part of the Scientific Studies and Research Centre (SSRC) compound in the Barzeh district north of Damascus, during a press tour organised by the Syrian government after US-led strikes

US President Donald Trump and his British and French allies on Saturday hailed their joint strikes in Syria in response to its alleged use of chemical weapons, warning Damascus that any repetition would be met with renewed firepower.

Hours later, the allies signaled their resolve to return to diplomacy, launching a new bid at the United Nations to investigate the chemical weapons attacks.

They circulated a joint draft resolution at the Security Council that also calls for unimpeded deliveries of humanitarian aid and enforcement of a ceasefire and demands that Syria engage in UN-led peace talks, according to the text obtained by AFP.

The narrowly targeted pre-dawn military operation, which took aim at three alleged chemical weapons facilities, earned quick scorn from Russia, but a push by Moscow for condemnation of the strikes at the Security Council fell far short.

Trump and his allies ordered the mission in response to a suspected chemical weapons attack a week ago on the rebel-held town of Douma that left more than 40 people dead.

Washington believes both sarin and chlorine were used in the April 7 attack, a senior US administration official told reporters on Saturday.

Both the regime of Syria's President Bashar al-Assad and its ally Russia have denied all responsibility. Moscow slammed the "aggressive actions" of the Western coalition but has not yet responded militarily.

US ambassador Nikki Haley warned her UN counterparts that although the mission was designed as a one-off, that did not preclude further action against Assad.

"I spoke to the president this morning and he said: 'If the Syrian regime uses this poisonous gas again, the United States is locked and loaded,'" Haley said at emergency Security Council talks.

- Fresh diplomatic push -


AFP / HECTOR RETAMAL US Ambassador Nikki Haley warned her UN counterparts that although the mission was designed as a one-off, that did not preclude further action against Assad


Negotiations on the draft resolution put forward by the US, France and Britain are set to begin on Monday.

Among the contentious proposals, it would establish an independent investigation into allegations of toxic gas attacks in Syria with the aim of identifying the perpetrators.

On the humanitarian side, the measure demands medical evacuations and safe passage for aid convoys to be allowed to all areas.

Diplomats said it remained unclear when the council would vote on the proposal, and they were ready to allow time for negotiations to bring Russia aboard.

- 'Perfectly executed' -

Just before dawn on Saturday, the sounds of massive explosions and the roar of warplanes rang out across Damascus for about 45 minutes.

"A perfectly executed strike last night," Trump tweeted early Saturday.

"Could not have had a better result. Mission Accomplished!"


AFP / Thomas SAINT-CRICQ Western strikes in Syria

The targets included a scientific research facility near Damascus, and two chemical weapons facilities outside the city of Homs, the US military said, though reports said the buildings had been evacuated in recent days.

Syrian state media reported only three people injured, while Russia's defense ministry said there were "no victims" among Syrian civilians and military personnel.

According to US officials, the operation involved three US destroyers, a French frigate and a US submarine. The vessels were located in the Red Sea, the Gulf and the eastern Mediterranean.

British Tornado and Typhoon warplanes, American B-1 bombers and French Rafale jets also took part in the strikes.

- Assad defiant -

The strikes were the biggest foreign military action so far against Syria's regime.

On Saturday Trump, British Prime Minister Theresa May and French President Emmanuel Macron huddled by telephone to discuss their joint action.

"By working together, in a coordinated fashion, we can definitively prevent the Syrian regime from carrying out chemical attacks against its own people," Macron said on Twitter.

May has faced a backlash from her domestic opposition for launching the strikes without consulting parliament, while opposition lawmakers in the US warned Trump that any broader military campaign would require a well-formulated strategic vision -- and authorization from Congress.

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Syrian Presidency Twitter page/AFP / Handout An image grab taken from a video released by the Syrian presidency on April 14, 2018, shows Bashar al-Assad walking into an administrative building in the Syrian capital Damascus


Assad responded to the strikes with a defiant vow.

"This aggression will only make Syria and its people more determined to keep fighting and crushing terrorism in every inch of the country," he said.

Assad's key ally Iran also slammed the attack, with supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei describing Western leaders as "criminals."

The targets appeared to steer well clear of any Russian personnel or equipment in Syria, where Moscow launched a military intervention in support of Assad in 2015.

The Russian military claimed Syrian air defense systems had intercepted 71 Western missiles, though the Pentagon flatly dismissed the claim and said all missiles hit their targets.

- Too little, too late? -

Despite the strikes, the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons said it was still pursuing its investigation into the Douma attack.

Thousands of rebels and civilians have been bussed out of the town under a Russian-brokered deal. Syrian internal security forces entered Douma on Saturday and later said the town had been fully retaken.

Jaish al-Islam, the group that held Douma, said it only abandoned the town because of the chemical attack.

Ahmad, a 25-year-old mechanic who had been displaced from Douma, told AFP the Western strikes were nevertheless too little, too late.

"Assad won't collapse. They'll bomb for a day or two and then the regime will take it out on us," he said.

burs-wd/sm

France has not declared war on Syria regime, says Macron

source: AFP
France has not declared war on Syria regime, says Macron

 AFP / FRANCOIS GUILLOT President Emmanuel Macron said France's air strikes in Syria in response to an alleged chemical attack were not a declaration of war against the Damascus regime

President Emmanuel Macron said Sunday that French air strikes in Syria were not a declaration of war against the regime of Bashar al-Assad, adding that Paris had convinced Donald Trump to stay engaged in the conflict "for the long-term".

A day after France joined the United States and Britain in launching unprecedented strikes against regime targets, Macron insisted the intervention was legitimate and urged international powers to now push for a diplomatic solution to the brutal seven-year war.

"We have not declared war on the regime of Bashar al-Assad," the 40-year-old centrist said at the start of a marathon two-hour interview with BFM television to mark almost a year in office.

But he again argued it had been necessary to send a signal that the use of chemical weapons against civilians would not go unpunished.

Saturday's strikes targeted three alleged chemical weapons facilities in response to what the West says was a gas attack on the town of Douma that killed dozens of people.

"What I want you to understand is that we have full international legitimacy in intervening in this case," Macron said.

He said the US, France and Britain targeted "extremely precise sites of chemical weapons use" in an operation that went off "perfectly".

And he further argued that the operation was legitimate despite not being sanctioned by the UN, retorting that under a 2013 UN resolution Syria was supposed to destroy its chemical weapons arsenal.

As for his allies, Macron suggested France played a pivotal role in changing Trump's mind on the need to stay involved in the conflict.

"Ten days ago, President Trump was saying the United States of America had a duty to disengage from Syria," Macron said.

"I assure you, we have convinced him that it is necessary to stay for the long-term," he told veteran journalists Jean-Jacques Bourdin and Edwy Plenel, charged with the two-hour grilling.


AFP / FRANCOIS GUILLOT President Emmanuel Macron said French air strikes in Syria were not a declaration of war against the regime of Bashar al-Assad, adding that Paris had convinced Donald Trump to stay engaged in the conflict "for the long-term"


And in a reference to Trump's raging on Twitter at Russia over the possibility of strikes, Macron added: "The second thing is that we have also convinced him that he must limit his strikes to chemical weapons, at a time when there was a media furore via tweet, as I'm sure you noticed."

Despite soaring tensions with Russia, Macron stressed the need to "talk to everyone" in pursuing a Syrian settlement, saying his plans to visit Moscow in May remain unchanged.

- 'I hear the anger' -

Like Trump and British Prime Minister Theresa May, Macron has faced a domestic backlash for striking Syria without consulting parliament, but he defended the move as well within his constitutional powers.

"This mandate is given democratically to the president by the people in the presidential election," he said.

Expected to focus on domestic politics, the interview was overshadowed by the launch a day earlier of Macron's his first major military intervention as president.

But Bourdin and Plenel made good use of their chance, prompting combative exchanges on the sweeping reforms he has been pursuing over the past year.

Macron acknowledged the anger that his reforms, including a loosening of France's famously rigid labour laws and a shake-up of heavily-indebted rail operator SNCF, have sparked in some sectors of society.

"I hear all this anger," he said, notably in reference to rail workers who have launched three months of rolling strikes.

He said he had promised on the day of his election to "reconcile the country", but said this "couldn't be done overnight".

Saudi king slams Iran, US Jerusalem move at Arab summit

source: AFP
Saudi king slams Iran, US Jerusalem move at Arab summit
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AFP / STR King Salman speaks at the 29th Summit of the Arab League at the Ithra center in Dhahran, Eastern Saudi Arabia, on April 15, 2018

Saudi Arabia's King Salman on Sunday slammed Iran's "blatant interference" in the region and lashed out at the US over Jerusalem as Arab leaders met in the kingdom for their annual summit.

The 82-year-old monarch dubbed the Arab League meet the "Jerusalem summit" as he took aim at Washington's decision to recognise the disputed city as the capital of Israel and transfer the US embassy from Tel Aviv.

The final statement released by the league declared the move "null and illegitimate".

Under the auspices of Riyadh, seventeen heads of state from across the Arab world -- not including Syrian President Bashar al-Assad -- gathered in the eastern Saudi city of Dhahran, home to Saudi oil giant Aramco, as world powers face off over Syria and tensions rise between Riyadh and Tehran.

The meeting opened only 24 hours after a barrage of strikes launched by the United States, Britain and France hit targets they said were linked to chemical weapons development in Syria, which was suspended from the league seven years ago.

A seat marked "Syrian Arab Republic" sat empty in the hall.


 Saudi Royal Palace/AFP / BANDAR AL-JALOUD A handout picture released by the Saudi Royal Palace on April 15, 2018, shows a general view of the 29th Arab League summit in Dhahran


Saudi Arabia's king turned his attention with long-time foe Iran -- only 160 kilometres (100 miles) across the Gulf from Dhahran.

"We renew our strong condemnation of Iran's terrorist acts in the Arab region and reject its blatant interference in the affairs of Arab countries," the king said.

And despite being a stalwart ally of the United States, the ruler also criticised US President Donald Trump's controversial decision to recognise Jerusalem as Israel's capital and shift the US embassy there.

"We reiterate our rejection of the US decision on Jerusalem," Salman said. "East Jerusalem is an integral part of the Palestinian territories."

- Donation diplomacy -

Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir however insisted Riyadh would maintain "strong, strategic" ties with Washington.

"There is no contradiction with having very strong strategic ties with the US while telling your friends where their policy should change," Jubeir said in response to a question by AFP.

"That's what friends are for."

At a preliminary meeting in Riyadh on Thursday, Arab ministers focused heavily on blocking the embassy move, unanimously condemning Trump's decision and moving to block Israel's bid to secure at seat at the UN Security Council this June.

King Salman, whose country has for decades declared a policy of support for the an independent Palestinian state with Jerusalem as its capital, on Sunday announced a $150 million donation for the maintenance of Islamic heritage in the eastern part of the holy city.

Saudi Arabia's powerful Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the 32-year-old son of the king and heir to the region's most powerful throne, had days earlier said Israel also had a right to its own state during a tour of the United States.

- Proxy wars with Iran -

Riyadh and Shiite rival Tehran back opposing sides in a range of hotspots across the mainly Sunni Muslim Middle East, including Lebanon, Syria, Iraq and Saudi Arabia's southern neighbour, Yemen.

Both parties in the Yemen war have drawn harsh condemnation from the United Nations. Saudi Arabia and its military allies landed on a UN blacklist last year for the killing and maiming of children.

A Security Council resolution aimed at Iran's failure to block supplies of missiles to Yemen's Huthi rebels, which the insurgents regularly fire at Saudi Arabia, was vetoed in February by Russia.

The summit also comes with Saudi Arabia and Qatar locked in a months-long diplomatic standoff, with Riyadh accusing Doha of supporting Islamist extremists and being too close to Iran.

Both states have supported US-led air raids against Syrian chemical weapons facilities.


 AFP / STR A general view of the Ithra center during the 28th summit of the Arab League in Dhahran in Eastern Province, Saudi Arabia on April 15, 2018

Tensions have eased slightly in recent months but Qatar still only sent its representative to the Arab League to the Dhahran summit.

Among the leaders in attendance was Sudan's Omar al-Bashir, who walked the red carpet and was greeted by King Salman.

Bashir is wanted by the International Criminal Court for five counts of crimes against humanity, three counts of genocide and two counts of war crimes.

Summits of the Arab League, established in 1945, rarely result in action. The last time the bloc made a concrete move was in 2011, when it suspended Syria's membership over the Assad regime's role in the war.

Syria's war, the most complex of the region's conflicts, is the main point of contention pitting Riyadh and its allies, who mainly back Sunni rebels, against regime backer Iran and its Lebanese ally Hezbollah.

Gulf Arab states have made massive donations to Syria but have not officially offered asylum to Syrians.

LATEST WORLD NEWS: Chemical inspectors launch probe in Syria after Western strikes


source: AFP
Chemical inspectors launch probe in Syria after Western strikes

AFP / LOUAI BESHARA Syrian soldiers inspect the wreckage of a building described as part of the Scientific Studies and Research Centre (SSRC) compound in the Barzeh district, north of Damascus, on April 14, 2018

The world's chemical weapons watchdog is set to convene Monday to discuss the suspected toxic gas assault in Syria that prompted an unprecedented wave of Western strikes, as its inspectors probe the attack near Damascus.

As the on-the-ground investigation gets under way, the fallout from the US-led response continued to reverberate, with French President Emmanuel Macron claiming to have persuaded President Donald Trump to keep his troops in Syria.

And in London, British Prime Minister Theresa May was to face an emergency parliamentary debate Monday over her country's part in the operation.

The US-led strikes were the biggest international attack on President Bashar al-Assad's regime since the start of Syria's seven-year war.

They have risked a confrontation with Moscow, the Syrian regime's top ally, with President Vladimir Putin warning that fresh attacks would spark "chaos", while Washington vowed economic sanctions against Russia rather than further military action.

US, French and British missiles destroyed sites suspected of hosting chemical weapons development and storage facilities Saturday, in a move lauded by President Donald Trump as "perfectly executed" -- although the buildings were mostly empty and both Damascus and Syria's opposition rubbished its impact.


AFP / Thomas SAINT-CRICQ Western strikes in Syria


The Western trio swiftly reverted to diplomatic efforts, with leaders facing flak at home over the punitive attack.

But their unified stance appeared to be shaken Sunday when Washington knocked back French President Emmanuel Macron's claim that Paris had convinced Trump to stay engaged in Syria "for the long-term".

White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders said the US mission "has not changed" and Trump wanted troops home "as quickly as possible".

Saturday's strikes came just hours before a team of experts from the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons arrived in Damascus.

They have been tasked with investigating the site of the alleged April 7 chemical attack in the town of Douma, in the formerly rebel-held enclave of Eastern Ghouta, which Western powers said involved chlorine and sarin, and killed dozens.

The OPCW is set to meet in the Hague on Monday over the attack, although there have been no signs yet that the investigators have travelled to Douma to begin their fieldwork.

The inspectors will face a difficult task, with all key players having pre-empted their findings, including Western powers, which justified the strikes by claiming they already had proof such weapons were used.

- Inspection still useful? -

The team will also have to deal with the risk that evidence may have been removed from the site, which lies in an area that has been controlled by Russian military police and Syrian forces over the past week.

"That possibility always has to be taken into account, and investigators will look for evidence that shows whether the incident site has been tampered with," Ralf Trapp, a consultant and member of a previous OPCW mission to Syria, told AFP.


 SANA/AFP / Handout Men waive the Syrian flag on April 14, 2018 as they drive a motorcycle in a street in the Eastern Ghouta town of Douma after Syrian government forces retook the rebel bastion

The OPCW declared that the Syrian government's chemical weapons stockpile had been removed in 2014, only to confirm later that sarin was used in a 2017 attack in the northern town of Khan Sheikhun.

"We will ensure they can work professionally, objectively, impartially and free of any pressure," Assistant Foreign Minister Ayman Soussan told AFP.

Just hours after the Western strikes, the Syrian military declared it had fully retaken Eastern Ghouta, in a key victory for the resurgent regime, which had launched a blistering two-month assault on the opposition stronghold.

- 'Locked and loaded' -

US leader Trump exclaimed "Mission Accomplished" after the pre-dawn strikes that lit up the sky around Damascus in a tweet that drew swift derision from his critics and parallels with president George W. Bush's notoriously premature Iraq war victory speech on an aircraft carrier 15 years ago.

The Pentagon said no further action was planned but Washington's envoy to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, warned that the US was "locked and loaded" should another gas attack occur.

Haley later told CBS that sanctions would be announced, likely on Monday, against Russian companies supplying the Syrian regime.


US Department of Defense/AFP / Kallysta CASTILLO The guided-missile cruiser USS Monterey fires a Tomahawk land attack missile on April 14, 2018 as the United States, Britain and France carried out a wave of pre-dawn strikes against Syria's regime


Putin told his Iranian counterpart Hassan Rouhani, also an Assad ally, that any new Western strikes in Syria would provoke "chaos in international relations," a Kremlin statement said.

Assad denounced a "campaign of deceit and lies at the (United Nations) Security Council" after a push by Moscow on Saturday to condemn the strikes fell far short.

Macron insisted in an interview Sunday that France had "not declared war" on Syria, striving to underscore Paris' justification for the attacks.

Britain's May will also defend London's participation in parliament Monday, after opposition parties claimed the attacks were legally dubious and should have been approved by lawmakers.

Western leaders have called for a fresh diplomatic push, aiming to end a conflict that has killed more than 350,000 people and displaced half of Syria's population.

A Western draft resolution obtained by AFP at a meeting of the UN Security Council Saturday calls for unimpeded deliveries of humanitarian aid and enforcement of a ceasefire, along with demands that Syria engage in UN-led peace talks.

But Russia has blocked countless resolutions against its Syrian ally and the regime has appeared determined to continue its military reconquest of the country.

"For all the sound and fury of these strikes, their net effect is a slap on the wrist of Bashar al-Assad," said Nick Heras, an analyst at the Center for a New American Security.

Albania's pelicans return to their lagoon 'kingdom'

source: AFP
Albania's pelicans return to their lagoon 'kingdom'


AFP / Gent SHKULLAKU Dalmatian pelicans nesting in the Karavasta lagoon, part of the Divjaka Karavasta National Park in Albania

With feathers on its head that make it look like it is wearing a wig, it does not go unnoticed -- the Dalmatian pelican is back with a flourish in the Divjaka Lagoon in western Albania.

The expansive site is one of the most important wetlands in the Adriatic basin, key for migratory wildlife and as a breeding area for the large elegant pelican.

But like other spots in Europe, the picturesque lagoon has suffered extensive damage at the hands of man and the Dalmatian pelican came close to deserting it.

Now a return in force of the bird, whose wingspan reaches up to three metres (10 feet), is down to a proactive policy by Albanian authorities, often criticised for being passive on environmental issues.

"The king has returned this winter," said Fatos Jolla happily, a 67-year-old fisherman on the lagoon.

- 'A kingdom' -

Since the 1980s, Europe's bird population has declined by several tens of millions, according to ornithologists.


AFP / Gent SHKULLAKU The Dalmatian pelican (Pelecanus crispus) is on the International Union for Conservation of Nature red list of threatened species


The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) has included the Dalmatian pelican (Pelecanus crispus) on its red list as it believes that 80 percent of its breeding sites in Europe have disappeared.

At the Divjaka Lagoon, the pelicans had almost completely abandoned their nests, although previously "the Divjaka-Karavasta National Park was considered its kingdom," said its head, Adrian Koci.

"From 250 breeding pairs in the 1960s, we arrived at 17 in 2000-2001.

"We returned to 52 pairs and 57 births in 2017," he told AFP.

- Salvation island -

A small island of 22 square kilometres (eight square miles), in the middle of the lagoon, has been crucial to helping lure back the birds.

The nesting sites were raised so as not to be threatened by the rising water, barbed wire has been placed to prevent tourists from accessing and hunting was banned in 2016.

A pelican was shot in mid-February, but the hunters were identified and face two to four years in prison.

The recovery is fragile and saw a setback recently, Koci said.

"The trend was promising until February. But bad weather, snow and wind disturbed the colony.

"Some pelicans have even abandoned their nests and eggs," said Koci, who hopes to see the birds return in April.

- Urbanisation -

However, further determined steps are needed to ensure the long term nesting of the birds at the lagoon, he said.

There need to be channels created between the lagoon and the sea "which has not been done for 20 years, to allow the circulation of fresh water and oxygen... and the entry of fish", the basis of the pelicans' diet, Koci added.


AFP / Daniel LEAL-OLIVAS Environmentalists wrote to Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama asking him to veto a project to develop the wetlands

Nighttime fishermen, who are depleting the fish stock with their nets and electric lamps, should also be tracked down and banned, he suggested.

Sajmir Hoxha, coordinator in Albania of Noe, a French conservation association for the protection of biodiversity, said the authorities must tackle in particular rampant development of the coastline.

"We fear these major urbanisation projects that go against environmental laws and the natural balances," he said.

The Mediterranean Wetlands Alliance, a gathering of some 20 associations from 12 countries for the protection of wetlands, last year voiced concerns over the possible construction of a tourist complex in Divjaka.

It cautioned that the planned development could "destroy the natural wealth and biological diversity of the area".

- But fears remain -

Noting that 70 percent of the Balkan country's wetlands have already been destroyed, ornithologists and environmental activists wrote to Prime Minister Edi Rama asking him to veto the project.

It was suspended, but the activists fear that the halt may only be temporary.


 AFP / Gent SHKULLAKU There are 200 species of birds which inhabit or visit the lagoon, including at least 1,500 greater flamingoes


"It would mean the disappearance of the Dalmatian pelican and other species that make the diversity of this park," warned Koci.

He estimated that nearly half of the 200 species of birds inhabiting the lagoon could be affected.

The park's birds now include notably 1,500 to 1,600 greater flamingoes, said Dorian Nasi, a park employee.

But their presence, noted for the first time four years ago, may only be good news on the surface.

It could be down to global warming, which could in time prove fatal for the lagoon's ecosystem if urgent measures are not taken, Nasi lamented.

France convinced Trump to stay in Syria, says Macron

source: AFP
France convinced Trump to stay in Syria, says Macron


 AFP / FRANCOIS GUILLOT President Emmanuel Macron said France's air strikes in Syria in response to an alleged chemical attack were not a declaration of war against the Damascus regime

French President Emmanuel Macron said Sunday that Paris had convinced Donald Trump to stay engaged in Syria "for the long-term" -- but just hours later the White House responded by saying it wanted US forces there "to come home as quickly as possible".

A day after France joined the United States and Britain in launching unprecedented strikes against regime targets, Macron insisted the intervention was legitimate and urged international powers to push for a diplomatic solution to the brutal seven-year war.

"We have not declared war on the regime of Bashar al-Assad," the 40-year-old centrist said in a combative TV interview.

But Macron again argued his first major military intervention as president was necessary to send a signal that the use of chemical weapons against civilians would not go unpunished.

Saturday's strikes targeted three alleged chemical weapons facilities in response to what the West says was a gas attack on the town of Douma that killed dozens of people.


AFP / Foreign powers engaged in Syria


"We have full international legitimacy in intervening in this case," Macron said.

He said the US, France and Britain targeted "extremely precise sites of chemical weapons use" in an operation that went off "perfectly".

While this operation was not sanctioned by the United Nations, Syria was supposed to destroy its chemical weapons arsenal under a 2013 UN resolution, he said.

As for his allies, Macron suggested France had helped change Trump's mind on the need to stay involved in the conflict.

"Ten days ago, President Trump was saying the United States of America had a duty to disengage from Syria," Macron said.

"I assure you, we have convinced him that it is necessary to stay for the long-term," he told his interviewers.


AFP / HASAN MOHAMED The town of Douma was allegedly hit with a toxic gas attack that killed dozens of people on April 7, when it was under rebel control

Shortly after the interview aired, the White House said the US mission in Syria "has not changed".

"The President has been clear that he wants US forces to come home as quickly as possible," spokeswoman Sarah Sanders said.

She added that Washington was "determined to completely crush" the Islamic State group in the country "and create the conditions that will prevent its return".

"In addition we expect our regional allies and partners to take greater responsibility both militarily and financially for securing the region."

- Diplomacy push -

Despite soaring tensions with Russia, Macron stressed the need to "talk to everyone" in pursuing a Syrian settlement, saying his plans to visit Moscow in May remain unchanged.

In a reference to Trump's comments on Twitter over the possibility of strikes, Macron added: "We have also convinced him that he must limit his strikes to chemical weapons, at a time when there was a media furore via tweet, as I'm sure you noticed."

Like Trump and British Prime Minister Theresa May, Macron has faced a domestic backlash for striking Syria without consulting the legislature, but he defended the move as well within his constitutional powers.

"This mandate is given democratically to the president by the people in the presidential election," he said.

Latest World NeWS: May, Macron face lawmakers angry over Syria strikes

source: AFP
May, Macron face lawmakers angry over Syria strikes


POOL/AFP / SIMON DAWSON British Prime Minister Theresa May and French President Emmanuel Macron are facing anger from lawmakers for conducting air strikes with the United States in Syria in their first major military action since coming to power

British Prime Minister Theresa May and French President Emmanuel Macron on Monday faced anger from lawmakers for conducting air strikes with the United States in Syria in their first major military action since coming to power.

May was due to address MPs after proceeding with the joint strikes without prior parliamentary approval -- a sensitive subject in Britain where memories of participation in the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003 are still raw.

Jeremy Corbyn, leader of the main opposition Labour Party, has said the strikes were "legally questionable" and called for new legislation to stop governments launching military action without lawmakers' backing in most circumstances.

"I believe that parliament should have been consulted and voted on the matter. The UK prime minister is accountable to parliament, not to the whims of a US president," he wrote in a weekend letter to May.

Stop the War, a coalition once chaired by Corbyn, is holding a demonstration outside parliament later on Monday.


 POOL/AFP / CHARLES PLATIAU British Prime Minister Theresa May and French President Emmanuel Macron are facing anger from lawmakers for conducting air strikes with the United States in Syria in their first major military action since coming to power


The group said the strikes "will have done nothing to end the war" and "risked dramatically widening" the conflict.

The leaders of the opposition Scottish National Party and Liberal Democrats have also criticised May and there is the possibility of a vote in parliament later Monday that could embarrass the prime minister if she loses.

- 'International legitimacy' -

In France, Macron has faced similar criticism for attacking Syria without consulting the legislature but defended the move as well as his constitutional powers in a TV interview on Sunday.

"This mandate is given democratically to the president by the people in the presidential election," he said.

Macron also said he had convinced US President Donald Trump to stay engaged in Syria "for the long-term".

Macron has been criticised from both right and left.

National Front leader Marine Le Pen has accused Macron of failing to show any evidence on the use of chemical weapons by the Syrian regime to justify the strikes.

Jean-Luc Melenchon, head of the hard-left France Unbowed party, has also condemned the strikes, while the leader of the centre-right Republicans party, Laurent Wauquiez, said he "did not believe in punitive strikes".

But at a press conference in Paris on Monday, Macron said that France had acted with "international legitimacy".

He argued the operation was legitimate despite not being sanctioned by the UN since under a 2013 UN resolution Syria was supposed to destroy its chemical weapons arsenal.

- 'Humanitarian' intervention -

Ahead of May's speech in parliament, Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson on Monday said the strikes were "right for the UK and right for the world" ahead of talks with EU foreign ministers.

"It was the world saying that we have had enough of the use of chemical weapons, the erosion of that taboo that has been in place for 100 years has gone too far under (Syrian President) Bashar al-Assad," he said.

But a poll showed scant public support for the move.

The poll by Survation for the Mail on Sunday showed 36 percent in favour of Britain's participation in the air strikes, 40 percent against and the remainder undecided.

Out of the 2,060 respondents in the survey, 54 percent also agreed with the statement that May "should have held a parliamentary debate and vote before intervening militarily in Syria".

In her speech in parliament, May will stress that Britain acted for humanitarian reasons and with wide international backing.

"We cannot wait to alleviate further humanitarian suffering caused by chemical weapons attacks," she will say, according to extracts from the speech released by her office.

"It is in our national interest to prevent the further use of chemical weapons in Syria -- and to uphold and defend the global consensus that these weapons should not be used," she is expected to say.

Latest World News: China's 'Hawaii' to allow horse racing, sports lotteries

source: AFP
China's 'Hawaii' to allow horse racing, sports lotteries

AFP / STR Hainan has not proven an international draw so far, attracting fewer than a million foreign visitors in 2016

China is encouraging its southern island of Hainan to develop horse racing and introduce a raft of reforms as Beijing pushes the tropical tourism destination as a beacon of openness.

The province will be urged to explore opening new types of lotteries connected to sports and international competitions, according to the guiding opinion jointly issued by the Communist Party Central Committee and State Council which was published Saturday by state news agency Xinhua.

It marks a change of tack for the Communist government which has long banned most forms of gambling in mainland China and comes against the backdrop of its massive campaign against corruption.

But those concerns appear to be taking a back seat as Beijing looks to ramp up consumption to fuel China's economy and rebalance away from the investment and exports that have led the way for four decades.

The plan aims to make Hainan, an island off China's southern coast, a "trial free trade zone" to try out the reforms Beijing has pledged to bring to the mainland for years with few tangible successes.

The outline comes days after President Xi Jinping pledged a "new phase of openness" for China at Hainan's annual Boao Forum for Asia, a Davos-like meeting of international leaders.

We will "build Hainan into an important open door for China onto the Pacific and Indian oceans", the plan says.

Sectors to open up to further foreign investment include healthcare, education, sports, communications, internet, culture and finance.

Beijing also wants to to position Hainan as a "centre of international tourism consumption", a goal which has faced halting progress despite sandy beaches and massive spending on plush resorts.

The province has not proven an international draw so far, attracting fewer than a million foreign visitors in 2016 -- compared with over seven million in Thailand's Phuket, according to data compiled by Bloomberg News.

As part of making the island green and sustainable, the reform package will push the introduction of electric vehicles and "gradually prohibit sales of gasoline-powered vehicles", Xinhua said.

Development of a gaming and tourism industry in Hainan could also create a new rival for semi-autonomous Macau, the world's largest gaming market and the only part of China where casino gambling is legal, dwarfing Las Vegas.

Russia has 'not tampered' with Douma site: Lavrov

source: AFP
Russia has 'not tampered' with Douma site: Lavrov

AFP/File / Yuri KADOBNOV Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov denied that Moscow was interfering with evidence of a suspected chemical weapons attack in Syria after Britain said international inspectors were not being allowed into the site in Douma

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on Monday denied that Moscow was interfering with evidence of a suspected chemical weapons attack in Syria after Britain said international inspectors were not being allowed into the site in Douma.

"I can guarantee that Russia has not tampered with the site," Lavrov told BBC's Hardtalk programme.

He also said that the evidence of a chemical attack carried out by Syrian forces cited by Britain, France and the United States had been based "on media reports and social media".

Lavrov denied that any chemical attack had taken place, telling the BBC: "What did take place was the staged thing".

Russia has accused Britain of being involved in staging the attack.

The Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) was holding a closed-door meeting at its headquarters in The Hague on Monday to discuss the alleged chemical attack, following air strikes on Syria by London, Paris and Washington on Saturday.

Britain's embassy to the Netherlands earlier on Monday said Russia and Syria have not yet allowed a fact-finding mission from the world's chemical weapons watchdog to enter Douma.

British ambassador Peter Wilson also urged the meeting "to act to hold perpetrators to account", saying failure to do so "will only risk further barbaric use of chemical weapons, in Syria and beyond".

Seven killed, 17 injured in South Carolina prison riot

source: AFP
Seven killed, 17 injured in South Carolina prison riot

AFP / US prison riot

Seven inmates were killed and 17 others injured in a riot at a maximum security prison in South Carolina, one of the deadliest in decades in the United States, authorities said Monday.

Fights among inmates erupted Sunday evening at the Lee Correctional Institution in Bishopville, South Carolina and was brought under control at 2:55 am on Monday.

"The incident at Lee CI resulted in 17 inmates requiring outside medical attention and seven inmates were killed," the department said on its Twitter account.

All prison guards and law enforcement authorities who responded were "safe and accounted for," it said.

The department had initially described the riot as an "ongoing incident," only revealing the scope of the problem hours after its start at 7:15 pm Sunday.

"The incident involved multiple inmate on inmate altercations in three housing units," the department said.

Lee Correctional Institution, which is reported to have capacity to hold nearly 1,800 inmates, is a maximum security facility built in 1993 to house violent offenders and inmates who exhibit behavioral problems.

Deadly prison riots have been relatively rare in the United States, despite some notable exceptions.

In 1993, nine inmates and a corrections officer were killed in the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility, a maximum security prison in Lucasville, Ohio.

A two-day riot and hostage-taking at the New Mexico State Prison in 1980 left 33 inmates dead and 200 injured, one of the worst in modern US history.

Probably the most famous was the 1971 rebellion at New York's Attica prison.

After a four day standoff with inmates holding 42 hostages, New York state police moved in to retake the prison on orders of governor Nelson Rockefeller. By the time it was over 43 people were dead, including 10 guards and prison employees and 33 inmates.

Detained US pastor rejects terror charges in Turkey trial

source: AFP
Detained US pastor rejects terror charges in Turkey trial


DHA/AFP/File / STR Brunson was present in court in the town of Aliaga for the hearing

An American Christian pastor who has spent the last one and a half years in jail in Turkey strongly rejected terror-related charges on Monday as his trial got underway, in a case that has raised tensions with Washington.

Andrew Brunson, who ran a protestant church in the western city of Izmir, was detained by Turkish authorities in October 2016. If convicted, he risks up to 35 years in jail.

Brunson -- wearing a black suit, speaking in fluent Turkish and at one point bursting into tears -- was present in court in the town of Aliaga north of Izmir for the hearing, an AFP correspondent said.

In an indication of the importance of the case for Washington, also in court were Sam Brownback, the US ambassador at large for religious freedoms, and Senator Thom Tillis.

"I want the whole truth to be revealed. I reject all the accusations in the indictment. I haven't been involved in any illegal activity," Brunson told the court.

"I haven't done anything against Turkey. On the contrary, I love Turkey. I have been praying for Turkey for 25 years," added Brunson, who moved to the country in 1993 and opened his Izmir church in 2010.


AFP / OZAN KOSE Turkish soldiers guard the Aliaga court and prison complex as the trial of US pastor Andrew Brunson got underway


Turkish prosecutors have charged Brunson with engaging in activities on behalf of the group led by Muslim preacher Fethullah Gulen -- who Ankara says is behind a failed 2016 coup -- and the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK).

Both are banned by Turkey as terror groups. Brunson is also accused of espionage for political or military purposes.

- 'Want him released' -

The Brunson case has further hiked tensions between NATO allies Turkey and the United States, with US President Donald Trump raising the issue in talks with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Relations are already strained over American backing for a Kurdish militia in Syria despised by Ankara and the jailing of two employees at American missions in Turkey.


AFP / OZAN KOSE Sam Brownback, the US ambassador at large for religious freedoms attended the trial in a show of White House support for Andrew Brunson

"That relationship is going to have difficulty in moving forward as long as Andrew Brunson is incarcerated," Brownback told reporters at the courthouse.

He said the whole US administration, from President Donald Trump down, was engaged in the case. "We want to see it resolved and we want to see him released," Brownback added.

In September last year, Erdogan suggested that Turkey could free Brunson if Washington handed over Gulen.

Washington brushed off the offer but has been working intensely to secure the release of Brunson, one of several American nationals caught up in the crackdown after the failed coup against Erdogan in July 2016.

The US authorities in November and February quietly dropped all charges against 11 bodyguards of Erdogan accused of attacking protesters during the Turkish strongman's visit to Washington last year.

Two supporters of Erdogan jailed in the same case are due to be freed in the next weeks after a plea deal.

But Senator Tillis said Monday there was "no deal", adding: "What we are doing is going through the judicial process here."

- 'Insult to my religion' -

If convicted, he faces two separate terms of 15 years and 20 years in prison, Brunson's lawyer Cem Halavurt told AFP.

In his statement to the court, Brunson rejected the accusations of links to Gulen's group, saying: "That would be an insult to my religion. I am a Christian. I would not join an Islamic movement."

Gulen, who lives in self-exile in the US state of Pennsylvania, firmly denies any role in the failed coup and says his Hizmet (Service) movement promotes a peaceful form of Islam.

Brunson also denied aiding any PKK suspects and dismissed as a "lie" suggestions he had preached in favour of Kurdish independence.

His wife Norine, who was detained with him and then released in December 2016, was also present in court for the hearing.

In scenes of heavy emotion, Brunson at one point broke down in tears after greeting his wife and complaining of being tired out by the constant prison transfers.

Numbering just several thousand, the protestant community in overwhelmingly Sunni Muslim Turkey is extremely small, largely comprising converts from Islam, expatriates and refugees.

Representatives repeatedly complain of harassment. The Turkish Association of Protestant Churches said in a report that 2017 was marked by continued hate crimes and physical attacks.

Buffon should watch his mouth, says Italian ref chief


Buffon should watch his mouth, says Italian ref chief



AFP/File / OSCAR DEL POZO A furious Gianluigi Buffon was sent off for vehemently protesting the decision to award Real Madrid a late penalty in their Champions League tie

Italian referees' chief Marcello Nicchi said Monday that Juventus goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon should think before lashing out at officials as he did during last week's Champions League defeat by Real Madrid.

Buffon was sent off for dissent by English referee Michael Oliver after he awarded Real Madrid a stoppage-time penalty which sent the Spaniards into the semi-finals.

The 40-year-old Italian icon later called Oliver "a murderer" with "a rubbish bin" in place of a heart.

"Buffon is a great champion who I hope will go on to have a great managerial career," Nicchi told Italian radio.

"But at certain levels you have to be careful about what you say. There are always kids listening.

"If it happened in Italy? I would have defended the referee. They can't be threatened either before, during, or after the game.

"After that, there are the appropriate bodies which must judge the conduct of all players on the pitch."

Meanwhile, Nicchi warned of a repeat of the 2006 Calciopoli match-fixing scandal if referees lose their right to vote at the top of the game in Italy.

The Italian Referees' Association (AIA) could lose its two percent voting allocation in the Italian Football Federation's Federal Council.

And AIA president Nicchi believes this could open the door to behind-the-scenes meddling like during the Calciopoli scandal that rocked Serie A and Serie B in 2006.

"To undermine the independence and impartiality of our referees could mean the start of a new Calciopoli," said Nicchi.

"I'm doing everything to calm the referees, but if one day someone goes out on the pitch and doesn't find the referee, I wouldn't be surprised," he added of possible strike action.

Chemical arms probe in Syria stalled due to 'security concerns'

source: AFP
Chemical arms probe in Syria stalled due to 'security concerns'


AFP / HASAN MOHAMED The global chemical arms watchdog held emergency talks at its headquarters in The Hague on April 16, 2018 as a team of experts was set to begin field work in the Syrian town of Douma, site of an alleged regime chemical attack

Russia and Syria have stalled access to Douma by international experts seeking to probe an alleged poison gas attack there, citing security concerns, a British diplomat said Monday.

The claim came as the global chemical arms watchdog held emergency talks on the alleged atrocity, which prompted Western air strikes on Syria on Saturday.

The head of the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), Ahmet Uzumcu, told the closed-door meeting his inspectors had failed to gain access to the site so far, the British ambassador to the Netherlands told reporters.

Uzumcu said "the Syrian regime and the Russians were citing security concerns," ambassador Peter Wilson told a press conference.

The Russians and Syrians "have not been able to guarantee the security of the delegation to go to Douma at this point," Wilson added, saying no timeline had been given for when they could visit.

The talks at the OPCW's headquarters come two days after a wave of punitive missile strikes in Syria launched by Western powers after the alleged April 7 toxic arms attack on Douma.

The team had been expected to begin their field work on Sunday, but they met with officials at their Damascus hotel instead and a strict media blackout was imposed on their schedule.

The Kremlin dismissed claims that Russia was impeding access.

"We consider such accusations against Russia to be groundless," President Vladimir Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov said, adding that Moscow was in favour of "an impartial investigation".


AFP / Thomas SAINT-CRICQ Syria strikes


The missiles that US, French and British warships fired on suspected chemical facilities Saturday constituted the biggest Western attack against the regime in the seven-year war.

The targeted sites were largely empty, and were all said to be facilities for chemical weapons storage or production.

- 'Obscene lies' -

In the Syrian capital, thousands of people gathered on the main Umayyad square to express their support for President Bashar al-Assad in the aftermath of the missile strikes.

But at the OPCW, France urged nations to boost the organisation's work so it can dismantle Syria's "secret" toxic weapons programme.

Following recent alleged attacks, "we all know, Syria has maintained a secret chemical programme since 2013," French ambassador Philippe Lalliot said.

"The facts are there, and they defy the most obscene lies and the most absurd denials," he said.

He added that priority must be given to helping the OPCW "complete the dismantling of the Syrian programme".

The limited scope of the weekend strikes and the fact that Damascus had time to remove key assets thanks to prior warning given by the West to the Syrian regime's ally Russia, have drawn scepticism however.


Cnes 2017, Distribution Airbus DS/AFP / Handout Pictures created on April 15, 2018 with handout satellite images dated April 11, 2018 (top) and April 14 (bottom) and provided by Distribution Airbus DS on April 15, show the scientific research centre near Damascus, before and after US-led strikes

The trio of Western powers that carried out the strikes warned they would repeat the operation if Damascus used chemical weapons again, while Putin warned any fresh strikes would "provoke chaos".

With no further strikes planned for the time being, the West already appears to be shifting its focus to renewed diplomatic action, with a new resolution to be debated at the UN Security Council on Monday.

"The bottom line for me is that this latest strike changed nothing," said Nabeel Khoury, a former US diplomat and currently a fellow at the Atlantic Council think tank.

"In my opinion, it was a staged drama, orchestrated by Trump and Putin, for each to save face," he said.


AFP / HO An image grab taken from a video released by the Syrian civil defence in Douma shows unidentified volunteers giving aid to children at a hospital following an alleged chemical attack on the rebel-held town where local medics say 40 people were killed


The attack on Douma, in which most experts say chlorine as well as an agent such as sarin were used, killed at least 40 people, according to local medics.

Holdout fighters from the Islamist group Jaish al-Islam subsequently surrendered their heavy weapons and left, saying that the chemical attack forced them to accept a Russian-brokered transfer deal.

- No interference -

Regime forces have since entered Douma and declared the entire Eastern Ghouta region around it fully retaken, ending a five-year siege and reclaiming an opposition bastion on the edge of the capital.


AFP / Zein Al RIFAI A rebel fighter from Eastern Ghouta kisses a child after arriving in Qalaat al-Madiq in central Hama province after Russian-brokered evacuation deals

Damascus and Moscow have vehemently denied that any chemical weapons were used in Douma and alleged instead that grim videos showing civilians foaming at the mouth after the attack were staged.

Syria's Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal Mekdad said several coordination meetings were held with the OPCW team, but he did not provide any further details about their schedule.

"Syria reiterated its full readiness to coordinate and to facilitate the delegation's work," he said, quoted by the official state agency SANA.


 ANP/AFP / Koen van Weel Syrian regime ally Russia says it will not obstruct the fact-finding mission by the global chemical arms watchdog in Douma but experts will face a difficult task as all key players have de facto preempted its findings


Russia also promised Monday it would not obstruct the fact-finding mission.

Russia "will not interfere in its work," the Russian embassy in The Hague said in a tweet.

With all key players having anticipated its findings, the chemical arms watchdog faces a difficult task and the team may have arrived too late on the ground.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said however: "I can guarantee that Russia has not tampered with the site."

The Latest World News: Trump alleges ex-FBI chief Comey committed 'many crimes'

source: AFP
Trump alleges ex-FBI chief Comey committed 'many crimes'


AFP / MANDEL NGAN Donald Trump says that fired FBI director James Comey, whose new memoir portrays the US president as morally unfit for the office, is guilty of 'major crimes'

Donald Trump fired back Monday at James Comey, saying he is guilty of "many crimes," as the former FBI director opened a book tour with an interview in which he labelled the US president "morally unfit" for office.

Trump accused Comey of lying to Congress and exonerating Hillary Clinton in a 2016 investigation because of her strong poll numbers in the presidential race.

"Comey drafted the Crooked Hillary exoneration long before he talked to her (lied in Congress to Senator G)," Trump fired in an early morning tweet.

"Then based his decisions on her poll numbers. Disgruntled, he, [former FBI deputy director Andrew] McCabe, and the others, committed many crimes!"

Late Sunday, Comey launched a publicity tour for his new memoir, "A Higher Loyalty: Truth, Lies and Leadership," with an ABC television interview in which he branded Trump a serial liar who will "stain everyone around him."

Comey's book, which leaked out last week ahead of its official release Tuesday, takes on the president who fired him in May 2017 over the troubling Russia election meddling investigation, a probe that poses a deep threat to Trump's 15-month-old presidency.

- Trump 'morally unfit' -

Comey is schedule to give interviews on the book to major television networks this week and travel to a dozen cities to promote the book in person.

"I think he's morally unfit to be president," Comey told ABC.

Trump "talks about and treats women like they're pieces of meat" and "lies constantly about matters big and small and insists the American people believe it."

Comey also said that serving in Trump's administration poses a serious ethical dilemma.

"The challenge of this president is that he will stain everyone around him," he told ABC.

"And the question is, how much stain is too much stain and how much stain eventually makes you unable to accomplish your goal of protecting the country and serving the country?"

- Republicans: 'Lyin' Comey' -

Trump and the Republicans have sought to stifle the impact of his book by accusing Comey of leaking classified materials and of corruptly handling the 2016 investigation into Clinton.

The Republican Party set up a website to attack the book, branding him "Lyin' Comey."

Trump called Comey an "untruthful slime ball" and said it was his "great honor" to fire the veteran Justice Department prosecutor.

"Slippery James Comey, a man who always ends up badly and out of whack (he is not smart!), will go down as the WORST FBI Director in history, by far!" Trump said Sunday.

In a separate ABC interview, White House press secretary Sarah Sanders reiterated the charges of lying and divulging classified materials.

"Look, it's been very clear that James Comey is a self-admitted leaker. He lied to Congress," she said.

- Trump's legal troubles -


GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP / CHIP SOMODEVILLA In a new book, former Federal Bureau of Investigation director James Comey says Donald Trump is immoral and unfit to be US president


In his book, Comey likens Trump to a dishonest, ego-driven mob boss and says he demanded the then FBI chief's personal pledge of loyalty.

That damning account has infuriated the president at a moment of intensifying legal pressure on other fronts.

The probe into possible collusion between the Trump campaign and Russians during the 2016 presidential race, now led by independent special prosecutor Robert Mueller, increasingly menaces Trump's inner circle.

And last week federal agents in New York raided the office and hotel room of Trump's longtime personal lawyer and fixer Michael Cohen, possibly in connection with secret hush payments he made to women claiming they had affairs with Trump.

In his interview Sunday, Comey said Trump could be guilty of obstruction of justice in the way he tried to get the FBI to drop a probe of one of his staff in early 2017.

But Comey said he could not confirm suspicions that Moscow possesses compromising material -- an alleged lurid video of the president with prostitutes -- or evidence of collusion during the election that could be used to blackmail the US president

"I think it's possible. I don't know," Comey said.

Massive Graduate Job Vacancy For Contact Centre IT Support Engineer at Invent Alliance Limited

Invent Alliance Limited is a company specialized on creation of multi sector and multi discipline business platform with specialist partnerships for value co-creation in each of the different business segments through modern co-petition business principles. 

We are recruiting to fill the position below:

Job Title: Contact Centre IT Support Engineer

Location:
 Lagos

Job Description

Do you want to be a part of a collaborative team for a growing Contact Centre company? We are looking to grow our Call Center IT Support Team by bringing on talented, motivated individuals looking for a broad scope of technical support.

Responsibilities
  • Provide First level support to our Contact Centre employees for all IT-related concerns and technologies such as: Windows desktops and Windows Server, Exchange Server, Skype for Business, Active Directory, DNS, DHCP, File/Print Services, Spam/Virus Protection, VOIP telephony, Cisco networking, Google G Suite, Cisco VPN, and our own proprietary software
  • Maintain, analyze, and troubleshoot hardware, software, and computer peripherals
  • Ensure Call Center personnel are able to utilize their hardware and software; Cisco phones both hardphones and softphones, Cisco Finesse, Calabrio Call Recording, and Headsets.
  • Utilize Microsoft SCCM to image PCs and deploy software
  • Support conference room equipment and prepare rooms for vendors.
  • Deploy, configure, and maintain loaner equipment.
  • Above average communication skills and the ability to effectively communicate via phone, email, instant message and in person.
  • Troubleshoot and support our Ethernet networks (LAN/WAN) and VPN connectivity
  • Help seek out and implement ways to make all system and process more efficient
  • Above support may be for employees on-prem and/or remote workers
Qualifications
  • B.Tech or B.Sc degree in Computer Science, Computer Engineering, IT or related fields
  • 1-2 years of current IT support experience in a Call Centre
  • Previous on-site experience with direct end-user interaction
  • A high degree of technical aptitude and troubleshooting skills
  • Solid understanding of Microsoft technologies - Active Directory experience, including user/computer, user profile, and Group Policy Object management
  • A strong sense of customer service, attention to detail, and desire for organization
  • Ability to multitask and work in a team setting
  • Experience in a helpdesk or other service-oriented IT role is a large plus
  • Scripting/automation experience with Powershell, VBScript, PHP, or Bash, a huge plus
Other traits we look for:
  • Excellent interpersonal and team building skills – willingness to work as part of a large group
  • An easy-going attitude and strong sense of humor
  • A positive, people-oriented and energetic attitude
  • An analytical, creative, and innovative approach to solving problems
  • An interest in working hard and being challenged in a fast-paced environment, and having fun while doing it
  • Lekki-Ajah residence is required
Application Closing Date
30th April, 2018.

Method of Application
Interested and qualified candidates should send their CV's and Applications to: admin@inventallianceco.com using the "Job Title" as the e-mail subject.

Note: Only shortlisted candidates will be contacted

Massive Job Vacancy For Contact/Call Centre Supervisor at Invent Alliance Limited



Invent Alliance Limited is a company specialized on creation of multi sector and multi discipline business platform with specialist partnerships for value co-creation in each of the different business segments through modern co-petition business principles. 

We are recruiting to fill the position below:

Job Title: Contact/Call Centre Supervisor

Location: 
Lagos

Responsibilities
  • Manage a team of Contact Centre agents.
  • Be available to affect the entirety of the team’s operations.
  • Manage by walking around. Be visible to answer questions.
  • Take calls that your agents can’t handle and be available when an agent appears to need assistance.
  • Monitor queue and track inbound calls. Keep agents aware of inbound calls, calls waiting, abandonment rate, etc.
  • Motivate and encourage agents through positive communication and feedback
  • Assist in hiring and training employees, monitoring representative progress, and coaching them to cultivate the knowledge and skills to provide excellent service to customers.
  • Ensuring agents understand and comply with all call center objectives, performance standards, and policies.
  • Answering agent questions regarding best practices or difficult calls.
  • Identifying operational issues and suggesting possible improvements.
  • Monitoring and evaluating agent performance, providing learning or coaching opportunities, and taking corrective action, if necessary.
  • Preparing reports and analyzing data to assist management as they determine call center goals.
  • Working with other supervisors and management team members to support agents and maximize customer satisfaction.
Job Requirements
  • Minimum of HND/B.Sc in English, Mass Communication or equivalent, but more education, especially in management, is preferred.
  • Call center, customer service, or supervisory experience is required.
  • Proficiency with technology, especially computers, software applications, and phone systems.
  • Exceptional verbal and written communication skills.
  • Strong understanding of company products, policies, and services.
  • Ability to coach, train, and motivate employees and evaluate their performance.
  • Excellent problem solving, leadership, and customer service skills.
  • Analytical, efficient, and thorough.
  • Ability to remain calm and courteous under pressure and navigate tense situations, especially during busy hours.
  • Lekki-Ajah residence is required
Application Closing Date
30th April, 2018.

Method of Application
Interested and qualified candidates should send their CV's and Applications to: admin@inventallianceco.com using the "Job Title" as the e-mail subject.

Note: Only shortlisted candidates will be contacted

Massive Job Vacancy For Graduate Contact Centre Marketing Officer at Invent Alliance Limited

Invent Alliance Limited is a company specialized on creation of multi sector and multi discipline business platform with specialist partnerships for value co-creation in each of the different business segments through modern co-petition business principles. 

We are recruiting to fill the position below:

Job Title: Contact Centre Marketing Officer

Location:
 Lagos

Responsibilities
  • Demonstrate the ability to understand, provide face to face (f2f) demo capability, as well as sell and negotiate contact centre as a service and related solutions.
  • Demonstrate customer experience in selling, progressing and closing complex, and often transformational solutions.
  • Engage directly with line of business executives to understand their key challenges and demonstrate and price solutions that fit their needs, building solutions using Contact Centre portfolio.
  • Develop and execute tactical and strategic sales strategies that leverage existing client relationships, drive win plans that capitalize on or create compelling events and highlight Invent Alliance's differentiation to ultimately win the business.
  • Lead cross discipline teams towards a common vision while operating effectively in a matrixed environment.
  • Consistently deliver on assigned revenue targets and objectives.
  • Create and drive revenue within a specified region or list of named accounts
  • Generate business opportunities through professional networking and cold-calling
  • Drive brand awareness, campaigns, and lead generation via networking, associations, etc.
  • Meet and exceed all quarterly and annual sales quotas
  • Own the sales cycle - from lead generation to closure
  • Develop strategic territory business plan
  • Maintain account and opportunity forecasting within our internal SFA system
  • Generate leads from tradeshows and regional networking events
  • Ensure 100% customer satisfaction and retention
Key Attributes:
  • Knowledge of Invent Alliance Contact Centre Services portfolio in addition to proven knowledge of the Contact services marketplace.
  • Technical skills sufficient to enable quality Contact Centre offering portfolio selection and conceptual solutioning.
  • Ability to maintain positive Invent Alliance internal relationships with a matrixed set of peer sales and support organizations will be required in order to maximize Invent Alliance (Contact) overall Contact sales efforts.
  • Must be able to manage a specific sales territory and work with other sales and support teams to achieve territory sales.
  • Must be able to perform prospecting, demand generation and opportunity harvesting in assign territory.
Educational Qualifications and Experience
  • At least 1 year experience in selling and demonstrating Call/Contact Centre Solutions or other Contact services
  • Minimum of HND/B.Sc in Marketing, Telemarketing, Business Administration or related fields.
Application Closing Date
30th April, 2018.

Method of Application
Interested and qualified candidates should send their CV's and Applications to: admin@inventallianceco.com using the "Job Title" as the e-mail subject.

Note: Only shortlisted candidates will be contacted

Massive Job Vacancy For Call Center/Customer Service Agent at Invent Alliance Limited

Invent Alliance Limited is a company specialized on creation of multi sector and multi discipline business platform with specialist partnerships for value co-creation in each of the different business segments through modern co-petition business principles. 

We are recruiting to fill the position below:

Job Title: Call Center/Customer Service Agent

Location: 
Ajah, Lagos
Slot: 50

Call Center/Customer Service Agent Job Duties
  • Obtains client information by answering telephone calls; interviewing clients; verifying information.
  • Determines eligibility by comparing client information to requirements.
  • Establishes policies by entering client information; confirming pricing.
  • Informs clients by explaining procedures; answering questions; providing information.
  • Maintains communication equipment by reporting problems.
  • Maintains and improves quality results by adhering to standards and guidelines; recommending improved procedures.
  • Updates job knowledge by studying new product descriptions; participating in educational opportunities.
  • Accomplishes sales and organization mission by completing related results as needed.
Job Requirements/Qualifications
  • Skills: Verbal Communication, Phone Skills, Listening, Data Entry Skills, People Skills, Informing, Customer Focus, Customer Service, Attention to Detail, Professionalism, Multi-tasking
  • Educational Qualifications: Minimum of HND/B.sc in English, Mass Communication, Social Sciences or equivalent.
  • Lekki-Ajah residence is required
Application Closing Date
30th April, 2018.

Method of Application
Interested and qualified candidates should send their CV's and Applications to: admin@inventallianceco.com using the "Job Title" as the e-mail subject.

Note: Only shortlisted candidates will be contacted

Latest Graduate Job For Sales Operations Executive at Ernst & Young (EY)

EY is a global leader in assurance, tax, transaction and advisory services. The insights and quality services we deliver help build trust and confidence in the capital markets and in economies the world over. We develop outstanding leaders who team to deliver on our promises to all of our stakeholders. In so doing, we play a critical role in building a better working world for our people, for our clients and for our communities.

We are recruiting to fill the position below:

Job Title: Sales Operations Executive
Ref No: NIG0002U 
Location: Nigeria

Job Summary

  • The Sales Operations Executive is responsible for providing operational leadership to the Sales Team.
  • This includes defining sales strategy, developing and executing the sales team’s Operational Plan, defining and tracking sales targets, overseeing sales budgets and expenditure, honing sales processes and maintaining the CRM.
  • This role is aimed at improving operational effectiveness, while allowing the existing Sales Executive to focus on partnership and sales support. Knowledge of Sales cycles and Sales strategies is imperative for this role.
Key Responsibilities
  • Expertise in managing forecast/budget/quota, revenue and cost to have better P&L, GP.
  • Delivered many Presentations across West Africa face-to-face and over web to Internal employees and external clients/partners on the new corporate initiatives/tools/concepts, Go-To-Market Activities and Initiatives.
  • Identifying the revenue risk in a quarter/month and escalating/closing the loop across LOB and Product line in the region.
  • Focusing on the Forecast and Pipeline from all the aspects to ensure smooth business/revenue flow across LOB and Product line in the region.
  • Partner enablement for new tool/technology/organizational initiatives in the region and ensuring that the new initiatives have been implemented successfully.
  • Rich corporate experience in Distributor Relations and Multi-tasked Sales & Back-office operations.
  • Totally service and client relations oriented, with the ability to successfully network with leading decision-makers and all levels of management and personnel.
  • Engagement with the sales team, client rep team until the deal is closed. Seek feedback from the client at the end of the delivery with a view to improve service levels.
  • Core competency across Operations, Team Building, Software for Operations and MIS.
  • Regular review of the existing services and make sure that the services are getting delivered on time.
  • Ability to compare and analyse the data for Business Intelligence.
  • Proven leadership skills and consistent record delivery.
Qualifications and Experience
  • Strong project management skills, with flexibility regarding tasks undertaken and the ability to prioritise a number of conflicting demands to meet deadlines
  • Good written and verbal communication skills
  • Self-starter who takes initiative
  • Influencing skills; can impact & challenge senior level discussions
  • Problem solving mindset; enjoys working through challenges
  • Excellent excel and PowerPoint skills
  • Ability to develop strong relationships with key stakeholders both within the organization and in the Markets
  • A minimum of 8 years of relevant sales operation experience is a must
Application Closing Date
Not Specified.

How to Apply
Interested and qualified candidate should:
Click here to apply online now >>>

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