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Tuesday, May 29, 2018

jOB vACANCY fOR Class Teacher at the RA International School (RAIS)

The RA International School (RAIS) is located in Nigeria LNG Residential Area Bonny Island, which houses both the school staff and families working for NLNG. The school runs a broad-based curriculum, following the English Curriculum for Mathematics, Literacy and International Primary Curriculum (IPC) for other subjects with local (Nigerian) content included.

We are seeking to recruit experienced, exceptional and internationally- minded individuals with ability to manage multi-cultural teams, using an inclusive multi-disciplinary approach. The position below is vacant:

Job Title: Class Teacher

Location:
Bonny Island, Rivers

Job Objectives
  • To plan and deliver teaching and learning using the International Primary Curriculum and English Curriculum for Maths and English and create a conducive learning environment within the classroom.
Duties and Responsibilities
  • Manage a class.
  • Develop and teach balanced learning in all subjects as specified in the curricula involving factual background material, materials on current events and other appropriate activities.
  • Teach any other assigned subjects to encourage pupils to develop skills and altitudes, draw conclusions, achieve improved interpersonal relationships, and make value judgments based on scientific methods of inquiry.
  • Establish and maintain standards of pupils’ behaviour needed to provide an orderly, and productive (learning focused) environment.
  • Keep and update appropriate class records.
  • Establish good relationship and communicate with parents and school coordinators on pupils’ progress, providing regular feedback on the development of the children.
  • Assess children’s learning, record and report to parents. Use assessment as a means of improving learning.
  • Assist with organising extra-curricular activities and in developing the school’s curriculum and other programs to enhance learning.
  • Identify pupils’ needs, and cooperate with other staff members in assessing and helping pupils solve health, attitude, and learning problems, to ensure all children reach their potential.
Job Requirements/Person Specifications
Education:
  • B.Ed. or B.A/B.Sc (PGDE / PGCE) in any discipline and minimum of 2nd class honours lower division.
Experience:
  • Minimum of 3 years’ experience in teaching in a primary school setting, ideally an international school.
  • Experience in teaching the International Primary Curriculum/National Curriculum of England is an added advantage.
  • Should be a person with high integrity and excellent character.
  • Not more than 45 years old by May 31st, 2018.
Application Closing Date
12th June, 2018.

Method of Application
Interested and qualified candidates should send in their recent Resumes to: RAISrecruitment.Online@nlng.com

Note
  • Any application received after the deadline will not be considered.
  • Only shortlisted candidates will be contacted.
  • Any false information provided during or after the application process will lead to the outright disqualification of such candidate.

APPLYING FOR JOB IN AREAS DIFFERENT FROM YOUR FIELD OF STUDY

APPLYING FOR JOB IN AREAS DIFFERENT FROM YOUR FIELD OF STUDY

With my little experience, I have discovered that many people work in organizations different from their course of study from higher institution.

Why?

After searching for job here and there and job seeker can’t find any position that relates to his discipline, they then accept any offer inorder to make ends meet. If you are in this category or you want to apply for any job that is not in your field of study, PLEASE NEVER put your academic qualifications before/ahead your experience. Let your working experience be the first.

Why?

Because by the time the HR go through your CV, and discovered that your course of study doesn’t go with the advertised job, he or she loses interest in going through your CV and therefore dump your cv somewhere. But if you put your experience in that advertised position ahead your academic qualifications, the HR would have been impressed and he won’t even mind your qualifications when he gets there because he knows you can perform.

Have a great day and a successful job search

Contact me for free CV/Resume review

Paraguay to have its first woman president

Paraguay to have its first woman president
source: AFP

AFP/File / Norberto DUARTE Alicia Pucheta is from the conservative Colorado Party, which has been in power for decades

Paraguay will have a woman president for the first time in its history, at least temporarily, after outgoing leader Horacio Cartes stepped down Monday ahead of schedule.

Vice President Alicia Pucheta, 68, will complete Cartes's mandate after he resigned to become a senator.

On August 15, fellow conservative Mario Abdo Benitez, elected in April 22 polls, will begin his five-year term as president of one of Latin America's poorest countries.

The parliament is due to confirm Cartes's resignation and proclaim Pucheta as interim president on Wednesday.

Opposed to the legalization of abortion, Pucheta is from the right-wing Colorado Party, which has been in power in Asuncion for decades.

Opposition Senator Desiree Masi said she does not see Pucheta's nomination as an advance for women in Paraguay.

"A woman who has shown her complete submission to those in power does not represent us," she said. "One day, a woman will be come to power as she should, through the ballot box."

But Lilian Samaniego, a senator from the Colorado Party, hailed the former lawyer's accession to the position as an example to "motivate Paraguayan women to continue to fight for real equality of opportunity with men."

Paraguay has just eight women among its 45 senators, and 11 among the 80 members of the lower house.

Cartes's resignation had been expected since he was elected to the Senate in the April elections. The new senators are to be sworn in on June 30.

Landlocked Paraguay -- sandwiched between Argentina, Bolivia and Brazil -- enjoyed consistent economic growth during tobacco magnate Cartes's five years in power, but failed to shake off persistent poverty, corruption and drug trafficking.

It remains a land of contrasts, still marked by the 1954-1989 dictatorship of general Alfredo Stroessner.

Despite an official campaign against endemic corruption, Paraguay remains 135th out of 180 countries on the 2017 corruption index of Transparency International.

Trump, Abe say 'imperative' to dismantle N. Korean weapons

Trump, Abe say 'imperative' to dismantle N. Korean weapons
source: AFP

GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP/File / JOE RAEDLE The White House said Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, left, and President Donald Trump will meet ahead of a much anticipated summit with North Korea's Kim Jong Un

President Donald Trump and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe agreed Monday that it is "imperative" to completely dismantle North Korea's nuclear weapons and ballistic missile program, the White House said.

The US and Japanese leaders will meet ahead of a much anticipated summit with North Korea's Kim Jong Un back on schedule for June 12 in Singapore just days after Trump announced he was canceling it.

The American president said the summit could go ahead as planned following a more appeasing statement from Pyongyang and productive talks with North Korean officials.

Japan, which has by far the hardest line compared to neighbors China and South Korea, has been left uneasy by the pace of events, and by what it sees as an unwarranted softening toward an untrustworthy Pyongyang.

Abe and Trump spoke by telephone a day after American and North Korean officials met at a border truce village to prepare for the summit.

During a telephone call, the pair "discussed recent developments in North Korea and confirmed they would meet again to continue close coordination in advance of the expected meeting between the United States and North Korea," a White House statement read.

"The president and prime minister affirmed the shared imperative of achieving the complete and permanent dismantlement of North Korea's nuclear, chemical and biological weapons and ballistic missile programs."

Washington wants North Korea to quickly give up all its nuclear weapons in a verifiable way in return for sanctions and economic relief.

Pyongyang has a different view of denuclearization and remains deeply worried that abandoning its deterrent would leave the country -- and its leader -- vulnerable, especially while the United States maintains a robust military presence in South Korea.

Still no home for controversial US art memorial for Paris attacks


Still no home for controversial US art memorial for Paris attacks



GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP/File / Jamie McCarthy US artist Jeff Koons is pictured in New York in 2012 with one of his previous artwork installations of flowers, called "Tulips"

A site for a controversial art installation and memorial to the victims of the 2015 Paris attacks by US artist Jeff Koons has still not been found, the culture ministry said Monday.

The brightly coloured "Bouquet of Tulips", which would stand 10 metres (35 feet) tall, donated by Koons to the city after the attacks that claimed 130 lives, has been the subject of tension for months.

The culture ministry confirmed that no decision had been made after a meeting with Paris city officials and the artist's representatives.

Koons is known for his brash, voluptuous works of pop art which come with stellar price tags.

He provoked an outcry when he said he wanted his work to be installed on the esplanade of the contemporary art museum Palais de Tokyo, which faces the Eiffel Tower.

But Culture Minister Francoise Nyssen told the Figaro newspaper on Monday that "we will offer him another place".

The tulips should be erected somewhere "popular, visible and shared by everyone," she added.

A park in the north of Paris has been tipped as a possible alternative, according to a source from the park's management.

A source familiar with the discussion said Koons' representatives were not happy to learn through the media that the Palais de Tokyo had been ruled out.

In January, artists, gallery owners and officials including former culture minister Frederic Mitterrand signed an open letter objecting to the planned memorial.

The letter described Koons as an "emblem of industrial art which is spectacular and speculative" and slammed the cost of installing the 35-tonne sculpture.

"We appreciate gifts, but free ones," they wrote.

Korean War hero doubtful of Trump-Kim peace prospects

Korean War hero doubtful of Trump-Kim peace prospects
source: AFP

AFP / Jung Yeon-je Choi Deuk-soo, 91, is one of just five people still alive to have been awarded South Korea's top military medal, the Taeguk, given for a suicidally brave charge he made up an enemy-held hill in the end stages of the 1950-53 Korean War

As a decorated war hero who once took out three machine gun nests with nothing but grenades, Choi Deuk-soo knows first hand what is at stake should US-North Korean peace talks fail -- and he is doubtful of an imminent breakthrough.

The wizened 91-year-old is one of just five people still alive to have been awarded South Korea's top military medal, the Taeguk, given for a suicidally brave charge he made up an enemy-held hill in the end stages of the 1950-53 Korean War.

"I hate any war," he told AFP from his apartment in Incheon, west of Seoul, apologising for his poor hearing, the result of firing a heavy machine gun for hours during a battle to repel Chinese troops that had come to the aid of North Korea's communist forces.

That war led to an armistice and the two Koreas divided by the demilitarised zone. It is a festering Cold War sore that lives on today, and US President Donald Trump has vowed to combat the threat posed by the authoritarian, nuclear-armed regime in Pyongyang either by talks with his North Korean opposite Kim Jong Un or "fire and fury".


AFP / Jung Yeon-je "Another war might have to break out sometime in the future, maybe hundreds of years from now, for the two sides to be reunified," said Choi Deuk-soo, a South Korean war hero


Choi -- who was speaking to AFP before Trump cancelled an upcoming summit with Kim only to suggest it might be back on -- is not convinced by the recent flurry of diplomatic detente.

"Another war might have to break out sometime in the future, maybe hundreds of years from now, for the two sides to be reunified," he said.

"I doubt whether any deal with Kim Jong Un would hold long because all the North is interested in is material rewards," he added, questioning whether Pyongyang was really committed to giving up its nuclear weapons or genuinely seeking peace.

- 'No retreat' -

The nonagenarian's cynicism was forged in the crucible of the Korean War and nurtured by decades of failed peace attempts that have seen North Korea's regime remain steadfastly in power and oversee its metamorphosis into a nuclear armed state.


 AFP / Jung Yeon-je South Korean war hero Choi Deuk-soo questions whether Pyongyang is really committed to giving up its nuclear weapons or genuinely seeking peace

Breathing repeatedly through an inhaler to ease his asthma, Choi recalled his own horrifying experience the last time full-scale war broke out on the Korean Peninsula.

The memory that sticks with him the most was the night that won him the Taeguk.

On 30 June 1953 his unit was ordered to take back Hill 938 from a brigade of Chinese volunteers who had seized the strategic position earlier that month.

Choi's battalion was so depleted its ranks had dropped from 500 to just 30 men.

"The top commander gathered us together and handed out cigarettes. He then said: 'You only move on. No retreat'. The company installed a machine gun, threatening to shoot us if we tried to retreat," he recalled.


 AFP/File / Ed JONES The Korean war ended in an armistice with the two Koreas divided by the demilitarised zone. It is a festering Cold War sore and US President Donald Trump has vowed to combat the threat posed by the authoritarian, nuclear-armed regime in Pyongyang


To improve their agility, the soldiers were told to ditch their helmets and take only grenades -- the commanders noted that if they needed a rifle they could always grab one from the hundreds of bodies littering the hill side.

Under cover of darkness and a smoke screen Choi and his comrades inched towards the enemy.

"I crawled up to a machine gun post and hurled the first grenade. I finished a second one with another grenade and silenced a third machine gun nest with the remaining two grenades," he said.

With the enemy machine guns silenced, reinforcements successfully stormed uphill, bringing an end to the hour-long battle.

Somehow Choi emerged unscathed. But only five men from the original 30 survived the night, he recalled.

The war ended a month later with the armistice, though the two Koreas remain technically still at war.

- 'How long will it last?' -

Choi said he welcomes the fact that Trump was willing to talk to Kim.

But he worries about the more bellicose members of the US administration, particularly National Security Advisor John Bolton, a known North Korea hawk.


 AFP/File / SAUL LOEB "That guy with the thick moustache almost blew it up with reckless, unnecessary statements," South Korean war hero Choi Deuk-soo fumed, referring to US National Security Adviser John Bolton


Earlier this month Bolton -- and later Vice President Mike Pence -- raised the spectre of Libyan leader Moamer Khadafi, who gave up atomic weapons only to die years later at the hands of US-backed rebels.

That comparison drew angry responses from North Korea.

"That guy with the thick moustache almost blew it up with reckless, unnecessary statements," Choi fumed, referring to Bolton.

His hopes for peace are tempered by a cynical realism that comes from decades of witnessing the Korean conundrum, one of geopolitics' stickiest issues.


AFP / Jung Yeon-je South Korean war hero Choi Deuk-soo welcomes the fact that Trump was willing to talk to Kim but worries about the more bellicose members of the US administration, particularly National Security Advisor John Bolton, a known North Korea hawk

Last month, like millions of others, Choi watched on as South Korean president Moon Jae-in met Kim in the heart of the DMZ. They shook hands and, at the invitation of Kim, Moon briefly stepped into North Korea.

"I thought this was a good thing," Choi recalled thinking about the current detente. "But then the next moment, I wondered how long it would all last this time around."

Brazil, nine days into grinding strike, still a transport hell

Brazil, nine days into grinding strike, still a transport hell
source: AFP


 AFP / EVARISTO SA A fuel truck leaves a distrubution plant escorted by police in Brasilia

South America's economic giant, Brazil, remained almost in a transport stranglehold on Tuesday despite a pledge from the president that a nine-day strike will end soon.

Late Sunday, the deeply unpopular President Michel Temer caved in to intense pressure from strikers, and cut the price of diesel fuel. The truck strike has been crippling fuel, food and other freight across the continent-sized industrial and agricultural powerhouse.

Temer said he had "absolute conviction that between today and tomorrow" the crisis, would finally end. In a tweet, Temer gave a slightly longer horizon of "one to two days."

Despite the president's confidence, significant numbers of truck drivers stood firm and some appeared to be radicalized, calling for the government to step down.

A key Temer minister, Eliseu Padilha, spoke of unidentified groups "infiltrating the movement with different, essentially political goals."

Late Sunday, Temer gave in to their main demand for lower diesel costs, but Monday saw renewed disruption. Brazil is already suffering from the aftermath of a deep recession and political instability ahead of October general elections.

More than 550 road blockages by truckers were mounted across 24 of the country's 27 states, the federal highway police said.


AFP / Carl DE SOUZA People queue for fuel at a petrol station in Rio de Janeiro on the eighth day of a strike to protest rising fuel costs in Brazil


Shortages of aviation fuel shuttered eight airports. Traffic to the huge Santos seaport near Sao Paulo, which usually receives 10,000 trucks a day, shrank to a trickle.

Though there has been some improvement since the army was ordered to intervene Friday, with armed soldiers escorting fuel trucks on priority routes, enormous lines of cars were still forming at gas stations.

Many supermarkets around the country struggled to source fresh food. Producers reported having to slaughter stocks of chickens because they had no access to the feed, while others threw out thousands of liters of spoiled milk.

Hospitals in Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo had to cancel non-urgent surgeries and at least 13 states reported scrapping university classes.

Adding to the disruption in Rio, the key BRT commuter system operated at only 22 percent capacity, while in Sao Paulo the bus system ran at 70 percent capacity.

The truckers are angry over the rise in diesel costs from 3.36 reais (92 US cents) a liter in January to 3.6 reais before the strike. On May 26, it hit 3.8 reais per liter.

After urgent negotiations with representatives of the truckers, Temer agreed to cut the diesel price by 0.46 reais a liter for 60 days.

That concession hammered the value in state-controlled oil major Petrobras, one of Brazil's most dominant companies, which is due to face a strike by its own workers on Wednesday.

Shares dropped 14 percent Monday and another 14 percent last Thursday, while the Ibovespa index in Sao Paulo closed 4.5 percent lower.

- Bringing down government? -

There were some signs that the worst of the strike might be easing.

City hall in Rio announced that on Tuesday there would be enough diesel for the 100 percent return of the municipal bus fleet and the BRT system.

But a complete resolution of the crisis appeared some way off, with unions split on whether to stand down and some activists taking a more militant line.


AFP / EVARISTO SA A convoy of trucks carrying aviation fuel is escorted by the army to supply airports in Brasilia

At a road block set up by truckers outside Rio de Janeiro, an AFP reporter saw numerous signs calling for a military coup, while others spoke of bringing down Temer.

"We've had enough of all this corruption. If more people come out into the streets, the government will fall, it's sure," said Tango Roxa, an electrical appliances salesman who joined the truckers to express his support.

The president of the Brazilian Association of Truck Drivers, Jose da Fonseca Lopes, alluded to this hardening of opinions, saying that "it's no longer truckers who are on strike... It's people who want to bring down the government. I've got nothing to do with these people."

The crisis has exposed the surprising fragility of the giant economy and put Temer's lame duck administration on the defensive ahead of the October presidential and legislative elections.

A poll by Ideia BigData found that 95 percent of Brazilians disapproved of his handling of the situation, even if 55 percent opposed the strike itself.

Temer took power in controversial circumstances in 2016, following the impeachment and removal from office of his leftist predecessor Dilma Rousseff for breaking budget rules.

The president's market-friendly, center-right government launched into sweeping austerity reforms that have been widely praised by investors as a bid to return Brazil to fiscal health, but proved hugely unpopular with ordinary Brazilians.

Uproar as ex-deputy Australia PM plans to sell love-child story

Uproar as ex-deputy Australia PM plans to sell love-child story
source: AFP

AFP/File / WILLIAM WEST After making official complaints over the media's coverage of his extra-marital affair which gripped Australia, ex-deputy PM Barnaby Joyce is set to earn big in a tell-all TV interview

A decision by Australia's former deputy prime minister to sell his story about having a love child with a former aide sparked derision Tuesday and calls for politicians to be banned from paid interviews.

Scandal-hit Barnaby Joyce, who was forced to quit in February and move to the backbench over his affair with his 33-year-old former media adviser, will reportedly be paid Aus$150,000 (US$113,000) for a tell-all television appearance by the pair on Sunday.

Malcolm Turnbull said he planned to raise the matter privately with the married Joyce, whose smaller National Party rules alongside the prime minister's Liberals.

"It's certainly not... a course of action that I would've encouraged him to take, I'll put it that way," he told broadcaster ABC.

"I think you can understand how I feel about it but I'll just be circumspect, uncharacteristically circumspect, on this and leave it for a private discussion."

News that Joyce, 50, had left his wife of 24 years for Vikki Campion gripped Australia earlier this year, sparking debate about workplace culture amid the global #MeToo movement against sexual harassment.

The saga took another twist when Joyce questioned the paternity of the baby boy, who has since been born.

Best known outside Australia for threatening to euthanise Hollywood star Johnny Depp's two dogs when they were brought into the country illegally, Joyce claimed Tuesday that it was Campion's decision to accept payment for the interview.

He said the couple had tried to ride out the attention, but the paparazzi would not leave them alone.

"Remember there are other people in this interview being Vikki and (baby son) Seb, so if it was just an interview with me as a politician, sure, I am not going to charge for that," he told The Australian newspaper.

"But that is not what they wanted, they wanted an interview obviously to get Vikki's side of the story.

"Like most mothers, she said: 'Seeing as I am being screwed over and there are drones and everything over my house in the last fortnight, paparazzi waiting for me, if everybody else is making money then (I am) going to make money out of it.'"

But the decision to accept payment has prompted accusations of hypocrisy -- Joyce had previously made a formal complaint to the Australian Press Council over the media's coverage of the affair.

Nationals minister Darren Chester said serving politicians should be banned from giving paid interviews.

"I think the public is asking the question, is it appropriate for sitting members of parliament to receive money to do media interviews. I think we should have the conversation in the parliament. I'm hoping for that conversation to occur," he said.

Liberals minister Kelly O'Dwyer warned it could backfire for Joyce.

"Ultimately, it's a matter for him and his judgement. I personally wouldn't do it, I don't think it's right, and I think most Australians are pretty disgusted by it," she said.

Euro losses build in Asia as Italy plunges into political crisi

Euro losses build in Asia as Italy plunges into political crisis
source: AFP

AFP / Andreas SOLARO President Sergio Mattarella's veto of the new government's nominee for economy minister has sparked political uncertainty and the prospect of fresh elections

The euro extended losses in Asian trade Tuesday as political uncertainty in Italy stoked fresh fears about the eurozone.

Italy, one of the European Union's biggest economies, has been plunged into crisis after President Sergio Mattarella at the weekend vetoed the new government's nomination of a fierce eurosceptic as economy minister.

The move led the country's prime minister-elect to step down, meaning the populist Five Star Movement and the far-right League's bid to form a government collapsed.

Mattarella then named Carlo Cottarelli, a pro-austerity economist formerly with the International Monetary Fund, to lead a technocrat government, with another election likely in the autumn.

The chaotic developments have spooked investors, who fear another election could see a better result for the essentially anti-EU parties.

National Australia Bank said in a commentary: "Fears of a euro existential crisis are gathering momentum amid simmering political turmoil in Italy."

Yields on Italy's key 10-year bonds surged to 235 points above that of benchmark German bunds, its highest level in more than four years, in a sign of falling confidence among investors.

Stock markets in Milan, Paris and Frankfurt tumbled, while the euro sank against the dollar with the eurozone facing its biggest upheaval since the Greek debt crisis.

In early Asian trade the single currency continued to suffer, and was in danger of falling below the $1.16 level last breached in early November.

- Period of uncertainty -

Adding to selling pressure on the unit is a brewing crisis in Spain, where Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy faces a no-confidence vote after his party was found guilty of benefiting from illegal funds in a massive graft trial.

"We may now be in for an extended period of heightened uncertainty ahead of fresh elections" in Italy, Ray Attrill, head of foreign-exchange strategy at National Australia Bank in Sydney, said in a note.

Asian markets were mostly lower, with traders keeping an eye on oil prices, which have tanked since Saudi Arabia and Russia indicated they could lift output, having abided by a self-imposed cap for two years.

The comments come as supply worries increase, with major producer Venezuela hit by economic uncertainty, Iran facing painful export sanctions and demand seen picking up.

Tokyo ended the morning session more than one percent lower, while Hong Kong slipped 0.5 percent and Shanghai eased 0.2 percent.

Seoul dropped 0.6 percent, while Wellington, Taipei and Manila were also off. However, Sydney added 0.3 percent.

Attention is turning to the release Friday of US jobs data, which will be scoured for clues about the Federal Reserve's interest rate plans ahead of next month's policy meeting.

"While a 25 basis points hike is largely a done deal, the next focus is on whether the (policy board) will start to indicate the peak of policy rates as policy approaches neutral," Tai Hui, JP Morgan Asset Management chief strategist for Asia-Pacific, said.

- Key figures around 0230 GMT -

Tokyo - Nikkei 225: DOWN 1.1 percent at 22,245.23 (break)

Hong Kong - Hang Seng: DOWN 0.5 percent at 30,641.92

Shanghai - Composite: DOWN 0.2 percent at 3,129.72

Euro/dollar: DOWN at $1.1616 from $1.1624 late Monday

Pound/dollar: DOWN at $1.3302 from $1.3304

Dollar/yen: DOWN at 108.99 yen from 109.35 yen

Oil - West Texas Intermediate: DOWN $1.12 at $66.76 per barrel

Oil - Brent Crude: UP 13 cents at $75.43

London - FTSE 100: Closed for public holiday

New York - Dow: Closed for public holiday

Top North Korean general on way to US ahead of summit: report

Top North Korean general on way to US ahead of summit: report
source: AFP

Korea Summit Press Pool/AFP / Korea Summit Press Pool North Korean general Kim Yong Chol (left) also attended an inter-Korean summit at the truce village of Panmunjom last month

A top North Korean general is headed for the United States in what would be the highest-profile visit in years, reports said Tuesday as the two countries prepare for a momentous summit.

General Kim Yong Chol landed at Beijing airport on Tuesday and will journey on to New York the following day after talks with Chinese officials, according to South Korea's Yonhap news agency, which cited diplomatic sources.

The trip is part of a flurry of diplomacy as preparations gather pace for the on-again, off-again summit between US President Donald Trump and North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un in Singapore on June 12.

Trump cancelled the talks last week, citing "open hostility" from the North, but since then both sides have dialled down the rhetoric and the process appears to be back on track.

US negotiators, headed by Washington's current ambassador to the Philippines Sung Kim, met with North Korean counterparts in the truce village of Panmunjom that divides the two Koreas on Sunday.

The State Department said a separate team of White House officials has also headed to Singapore to sort out logistics for the historic meeting.

Chung Sung-yoon, an analyst at the Korea Institute for National Unification, said Kim Yong Chol would be the most senior North Korean official to step onto US soil since Vice Marshall Jo Myong Rok met President Bill Clinton in 2000.

The general has long been a right hand man to North Korea's leader, playing a front-seat role during recent rounds of diplomacy aimed at ending the nuclear stalemate on the Korean peninsula.


 AFP / AFP


He sat next to Trump's daughter Ivanka, who is also a White House aide, during the closing ceremony of the Winter Olympics in the South Korean resort of Pyeongchang which was a turning point in the nuclear crisis.

He also accompanied Kim Jong Un on both of his recent trips to China to meet President Xi Jinping and held talks with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo when he travelled to Pyongyang.

"Kim's official counterpart is Pompeo but he may also push for meetings with (National Security Advisor John) Bolton and even Trump if possible," Chung told AFP.

- Controversial figure -

General Kim is a deeply controversial figure in South Korea, where he is blamed for masterminding the 2010 sinking of the navy corvette the Cheonan, which killed 46 sailors, an attack North Korea denies playing any role in.

From 2009 to 2016 he was also director of North Korea's General Reconnaissance Bureau, the unit tasked with cyber warfare and intelligence gathering.

During that period North Korea ramped up its hacking programmes, including a hugely costly penetration of Sony Pictures that was seen as an attempt to stop the release of an American comedy film poking fun at the Kim Jong Un regime.

His journey to the US would cap a frenetic few days of meetings between North Korean and American officials.

Japanese broadcaster NHK reported that Kim Chang-son, Kim Jong Un's de facto chief of staff, arrived in Singapore on Monday, showing footage of him at the airport escorted by three bodyguards.


AFP / Since the US cancelled the planned summit last week, both sides have dialled down the rhetoric

Also on Monday, a US government aircraft carrying a delegation including Joe Hagin, the White House deputy chief of staff for operations, departed from the Yokota air base in Japan en route for Singapore, NHK added.

The Washington Post reported that talks inside the Demilitarised Zone would continue this week between US and North Korean officials.

South Korean media broadcast footage of US embassy vehicles, including one carrying ambassador Sung Kim, leaving a Seoul hotel on Tuesday but there were no details on whether the convoy was heading back to the DMZ.

Officials have only a fortnight left to finalise thorny protocol details such as where in Singapore the talks will take place and how internationally sanctioned North Korean officials will travel there.

Another key task is to settle the agenda for the meeting. The main stumbling block is likely to be the concept of "denuclearisation" -- both sides say they want it, but there is a yawning gap between their definitions.

Washington wants North Korea to quickly give up all its nuclear weapons in a verifiable way in return for sanctions and economic relief.

But analysts believe North Korea will be unwilling to cede its nuclear deterrent unless it is given security guarantees that the US won't try to topple the regime.

French family of rescued boy thanks hero Malian 'Spiderman'

French family of rescued boy thanks hero Malian 'Spiderman'
source: AFP

POOL/AFP/File / Thibault Camus 22-year old Mamoudou Gassama won global acclaim for rescuing a boy dangling from a balcony in France

The family of the young boy saved by "Spiderman" Mamoudou Gassama in a daring rescue that won him global acclaim and a promise of French citizenship has thanked the Malian youth for his quick thinking.

Gassama, 22, scaled four storeys of an apartment bloc in France on Saturday to rescue the four-year-old who was spotted dangling from a balcony. On Tuesday, French authorities began the first steps towards making him a citizen in recognition of his bravery.

The boy's father, who had been living alone with him in Paris, had left him alone to go out to the shops and then remained on the street to play Pokemon Go, according to French investigators.

The boy's mother learned the news of the rescue on Reunion Island -- the French Indian Ocean territory where she and the father were born and where she still lives.

Reacting to Gassama's intervention on Antenne Reunion radio late Monday, the woman, who was not identified, said: "We can only thank him and thank heaven he was so reactive."

She said French police phoned her to tell her the news. "Then I saw video on the internet. But I should not have watched it because you know it's your son in the video."


 POOL/AFP/File / Thibault Camus Mamoudou Gassama told French President Emmanuel Macron he 'did not think twice' before scaling a building to rescue the child


Just half an hour earlier she had spoken to both father and son in a video call, she said.

"Things could have turned out much worse so I am relieved," she said, adding that she was impatient to be reunited with her son and husband.

- 'Profound regret' -

The boy's paternal grandmother, who also lives in Reunion, told RMC radio Tuesday that she was "very moved" by the images of the rescue and sent "huge thanks" to Gassama.

"He's really a hero," she said. "He did not stand by and watch, he saved my little sweetpea."

Gassama, who had been living in France illegally since September 2017, arriving via the Mediterranean migrant route, told President Emmanuel Macron on Monday that he "did not think twice" before springing into action.

The video of his rescue has been viewed millions of times online.

On Tuesday, he was to visit a fire station after being offered a job with the fire service.

The child's mother, who had planned on moving to Paris in June along with the couple's second child, aged one, is due to travel on France on Tuesday, the BFM news channel reported.

The father, who was arrested on charges of neglecting his parental duties, was released from custody and reunited with his son on Monday under the supervision of social services.


AFP / Thomas SAINT-CRICQ, Laurence SAUBADU Main paths to French nationality, with conditions and high-profile examples

The mother said her husband, who is in his 30s, was "shaken" by the incident.

While saying she could not justify his actions she said "it could have happened to anyone".

The Paris prosecutor's office said he had admitted his guilt and expressed "profound regret".

Showdown looms in Italy as caretaker PM assembles team

Showdown looms in Italy as caretaker PM assembles team
source: AFP

 AFP/File / Andreas SOLARO Italy's caretaker prime minister Carlo Cottarelli is a former IMF economist

Italy's caretaker prime minister was assembling a cabinet lineup on Tuesday despite almost certain rejection by populist parties whose bid for power collapsed at the weekend.

Fresh elections are now looming as the most likely outcome of the long-running political saga sparked by an inconclusive poll in March.

Carlo Cottarelli, a former IMF economist known as "Mr Scissors", was tasked with naming a technocrat government on Monday after President Sergio Mattarella blocked a cabinet proposed by the far-right League and anti-establishment Five Star Movement (M5S).

The president vetoed their pick for economy minister, fierce eurosceptic Paolo Savona, throwing the eurozone's third largest economy into a fresh crisis.

Savona has called the euro a "German cage" and said that Italy needs a plan to leave the single currency "if necessary".

Mattarella said that an openly eurosceptic economy minister was counter to the parties' joint promise to simply "change Europe for the better from an Italian point of view".

Cottarelli said Italy would face new elections "after August" if parliament did not endorse his team, a near certainty given that Five Star and the League together hold a majority.


 AFP / Vincenzo PINTO Italy's President Sergio Mattarella vetoed the nomination of a fierce eurosceptic as economy minister


The parties' approved nominee for prime minister, lawyer and political novice Giuseppe Conte, stepped aside following the decision to reject Savona, crashing the proposed government after nearly three months of convoluted horse-trading.

- 'Italian democracy's darkest night' -

Mattarella's veto and subsequent nomination of Cottarelli as caretaker prime minister sparked angry calls for his impeachment, since most lawmakers backed Savona.

League leader Matteo Salvini, a fellow eurosceptic who was Savona's biggest advocate, said the anti-establishment government failed because of pressure from the "powers-that-be, the markets, Berlin and Paris".

"This isn't democracy, this isn't respect for the popular vote. It's the latest slap in the face," Salvini said, from those that say "Italy should be a slave, scared and precarious".

Five Star chief Luigi Di Maio called on party supporters to attend a rally in Rome on Saturday, the anniversary of Italy's transformation into a republic in 1946, after what he called "Italian democracy's darkest night".


AFP / William ICKES Carlo Cottarelli was director of the IMF's fiscal affairs department and became known as "Mr Scissors" for his public spending cuts in Italy

The latest chapter in the drawn-out political saga sent Italian stocks tumbling more than two percent on Monday and bond yields surging, with Italy's debt risk premium hitting its highest level since November 2013.

The euro also fell in Asian trade on Tuesday and was in danger of falling below the $1.16 level last breached in early November.

Cottarelli, 64, was director of the International Monetary Fund's fiscal affairs department from 2008 to 2013 and became known as "Mr Scissors" for his public spending cuts in Italy.

He said that should his technocrat government win parliamentary approval, it would stay in place until elections at the "start of 2019".

But if parliament fails to approve his government, a new election would be held "after August" -- the most likely outcome given the populists' strength in parliament. Only the centre-left Democratic Party has announced that it would vote in favour.

- 'Beyond his prerogatives' -

Salvini and Di Maio furiously denounced the presidential veto, blasting what they called meddling by Germany, debt ratings agencies, financial lobbies and even lies from Mattarella's staff.

"Paolo Savona would not have taken us out of the euro. It's a lie invented by Mattarella's advisors," Di Maio said in a live video on Facebook. "The truth is that they don't want us in government."


 FACEBOOK/AFP/File / HO From left: Five Star chief Luigi Di Maio and League leader Matteo Salvini meet with Giuseppe Conte, their approved pick for prime minister before he stepped aside


Elections could benefit Salvini, however, as recent polling by IndexResearch put the League at 22 percent, five points up from its vote share in the March 4 ballot.

Under the Italian constitution, the president nominates both the prime minister and, following proposals from the premier, the cabinet.

The most famous example of a president denying a PM's choice was in 1994 when Eugenio Scalfari refused then prime minister Silvio Berlusconi's choice of his own lawyer -- Cesare Previti -- as justice minister.

However, Di Maio said that Mattarella, a former constitutional court judge, had "gone beyond his legal prerogatives".

He said an impeachment trial for Mattarella, 76, would be "almost a certainty".

Most analysts however say such calls have little chance of success as impeachment is only possible in cases of "high treason" or constitutional breaches.

"President Mattarella has only exercised his constitutional powers", said Massimo Luciani, president of the Italian Constitutionalists Association.

US search firm says to end MH370 hunt in 'coming days'

US search firm says to end MH370 hunt in 'coming days'
source: AFP

AFP/File / TONY ASHBY US firm Ocean Infinity used the Norwegian research vessel Seabed Constructor to scour for MH370 wreckage in the Indian Ocean

A private search for Flight MH370 will end in the coming days, an exploration firm said Tuesday, some four years after the plane disappeared in one of the world's greatest aviation mysteries.

The Malaysia Airlines jet vanished in March 2014 with 239 people -- mostly from China -- on board, en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.

No sign of it was found in a 120,000-square kilometre (46,000-square mile) Indian Ocean search zone and the Australian-led hunt, the largest in aviation history, was suspended in January last year.

After pressure from families, the Malaysian government struck a deal with US exploration firm Ocean Infinity to restart the search in January on condition it would only be paid if the Boeing 777 or its black boxes were found.

The firm stood to make up to $70 million if successful but found no sign of the airliner despite scouring the seabed with some of the world's most high-tech search equipment.

The hunt was officially meant to end in late April but was extended. However, the new Malaysian government of Mahathir Mohamad, which came to power after a shock election win this month, announced last week the search was set to end.

Texas-based Ocean Infinity said in a statement Tuesday that "its current search for the wreckage of... Flight MH370 is shortly coming to an end".

A spokesman added the hunt would end in the coming days, without giving a precise date.

- 'Nothing hidden' -

Ocean Infinity chief executive Oliver Plunkett said the failure to find the wreckage was "extremely disappointing" but he hoped that his company would be able to "again offer our services in the search for MH370 in future".

Malaysia's new government has not indicated that it wants to revive the search but has pledged to be more open about the mystery. Transport Minister Anthony Loke said Monday that a full report into MH370's disappearance would be published soon.

"There will not be any edits, nothing will be hidden," he told reporters.

Ocean Infinity said it had scoured over 112,000 square kilometres of seabed, including 25,000 square kilometres north of the original search zone which scientists later identified as the most likely crash site.

The ship conducting the hunt, Seabed Constructor, was a Norwegian research vessel carrying 65 crew, including two members of the Malaysian navy as the government's representatives.

It used eight autonomous drones equipped with sonars and cameras, able to operate at depths up to 6,000 metres (20,000 feet).

Only three confirmed fragments of MH370 have been found, all of them on western Indian Ocean shores, including a two-metre wing part known as a flaperon.

The jet's disappearance remains one of the most enduring aviation mysteries of all time and has spawned a host of theories, with some blaming a hijacking or even a terror plot.

Scepticism as France convenes Libya peace conference

Scepticism as France convenes Libya peace conference
source: AFP

 POOL/AFP / Etienne LAURENT Before the conference started, French President Emmanuel Macron met Libya's UN-backed Prime Minister Fayez al-Sarraj at the Elysee Palace in Paris

Rival Libyan leaders vying for influence in the fractured, war-scarred country met in Paris on Tuesday for a major peace conference seen as a risky French-backed push for a political settlement in the country.

Many analysts are sceptical that the initiative, which brings together four senior figures representing Libya's factions as well as neighbouring countries and regional powers, will achieve any significant progress.

Years of mediation by the United Nations, as well as former colonial power Italy, have failed to bring stability to the north African nation which descended into chaos after the ousting of dictator Moamer Kadhafi in 2011.

"The period that we are in... requires decisions," Macron said as he welcomed Prime Minister Fayez al-Sarraj, head of the UN-backed unity government in Tripoli, to the presidential palace on Tuesday morning.

Macron stressed there was a "desire for reconciliation while leaving a sovereign people to decide for themselves".

His remarks pointed to the main focus of the meeting: agreeing a political roadmap which will commit all parties to parliamentary and presidential elections this year -- an approach not favoured by everyone.

"I believe that elections are a big risk in a country armed like Libya," Federica Saini Fasanotti, an analyst with the Washington-based Brookings Institution, told AFP.

There is also disagreement over what should come first: voting for a new constitution, or presidential and parliamentary elections.

"While the Italians, Turkish, Qataris and to a large extent the Americans believe the constitution comes before elections, on the other side, the French, Egyptians and Emiratis want elections first," Mohamed Eljarh, from the Libya Outlook consulting firm said.

Also, despite French efforts to convene all the leading players from the oil-rich country, militias from the city of Misrata have boycotted proceedings, leaving western Libya under-represented at the talks.

- Big guest list -

The Libyan invitees include Prime Minister Sarraj from the Tripoli government in the west, as well as 75-year-old military strongman Khalifa Haftar, whose rival Libyan National Army dominates the country's east.


 AFP/File / MAHMUD TURKIA Libya descended into chaos after the ousting of dictator Moamer Kadhafi in 2011


They arrived on Tuesday morning along with Aguila Saleh Issa, the parliament speaker based in the eastern city of Tobruk who opposes the UN-backed administration, as well as Khalid Al-Mishri, newly-elected head of the High Council of State.

"We're hoping for a commitment from Libyan leaders to a way out of the crisis," a French presidential aide said on condition of anonymity.

Representatives from around 20 countries involved in the Libya crisis have also been invited -- an acknowledgement that the problems can only be resolved if regional powers agree on a common roadmap.

These include Egypt, Russia and the United Arab Emirates which have backed Haftar and the rival administration in Tobruk not the UN-recognised government based in the capital Tripoli.

Qatar, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Turkey, as well as neighbours Algeria and Tunisia and west African leaders from Niger and Congo will also attend.

- Competing interests -

European leaders see stabilising Libya as key to tackling jihadist threats and migration from the country, which has become the main departure point for hundreds of thousands of Africans trying to reach Europe.


AFP / ludovic MARIN France's top diplomat Jean-Yves Le Drian meets Libyan military strongman Khalifa Haftar (left) who has fought Islamist militias and was recently treated in Paris for an undisclosed ailment

Macron threw himself into finding a solution shortly after his election in May 2017, inviting Sarraj and Haftar to Paris in July -- a move that irked former colonial power Italy, which was blindsided by his diplomacy.

Stabilising Libya is also complicated by diverging interests among Middle Eastern countries, which have sometimes backed opposing sides in the fighting, as well as the competition between Europeans.

Macron is suspected by some in Italy of organising the conference at a time when France's southern neighbour, which has major oil interests in Libya, is embroiled in a deep political crisis.

"It's as if Macron wanted to make the most of this moment of absence by Italy on the Libyan dossier," Italian newspaper La Repubblica wrote last week, citing diplomatic sources.

France is also suspected by some rivals within Libya of favouring Haftar, a military strongman who has fought Islamist militias and who was recently treated in a Parisian hospital for an undisclosed ailment.

"There is clear apprehension among many in western Libya that the French initiative is an attempt to reinforce the position of Khalifa Haftar as the key power broker in Libya," Eljarh from Libya Outlook added.

The International Crisis Group, an NGO that studies conflict zones, also voiced caution about the French conference.

"Much more work remains to be done for a peace-building effort in Libya to succeed," it said on Monday. "For this reason, Crisis Group believes that France should not request that its four Libyan guests sign an accord."

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