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Wednesday, June 13, 2018

Front Desk Officer at Stanex Consulting


Stanex Consulting delivers niche services and specialised best practice interventions for World Class Excellence, Business Transformation, Performance Management, Capability Development and Information Technology. Our Corporate Performance and Improvement Framework is built on the promise for excellency in corporate performance through transformation, innovation, performance improvement and continuous improvement.

We are recruiting to fill the position below:

Job Title: Front Desk Officer

Location: Lagos

Job Description
  • We are looking for a pleasant Front Desk Representative to undertake all receptionist and clerical duties at the desk of our main entrance
  • You will be the “face” of the company for all visitors and will be responsible for the first impression we make.
  • The goal is to make guests and visitors feel comfortable and valued while on our premises.
Responsibilities
  • Keep front desk tidy and presentable with all necessary material (pens, forms, paper etc.)
  • Greet and welcome guests
  • Answer questions and address complaints
  • Answer all incoming calls and redirect them or keep messages
  • Receive letters, packages etc. and distribute them
  • Prepare outgoing mail by drafting correspondence, securing parcels etc.
  • Check, sort and forward emails
  • Monitor office supplies and place orders when necessary
  • Keep updated records and files
  • Monitor office expenses and costs
  • Take up other duties as assigned (travel arrangements, schedules etc.)
Requirements
  • Proven experience as Front Desk Representative, agent or relevant position
  • Familiarity with office machines (e.g. fax, printer etc.)
  • Knowledge of office management and basic bookkeeping
  • Proficient in English (oral and written)
  • Excellent knowledge of MS Office (especially Excel and Word)
  • Strong communication and people skills
  • Good organizational and multi-tasking abilities
  • Problem-solving skills
  • Customer service orientation
  • Lower credit in any administrative/ managerial field; additional qualifications will be a plus.
Application Closing Date
30th June, 2018.

How to Apply
Interested and qualified candidates should forward their CV's to: admin@stanexconsulting.com.ng

jOB vACANCY fOR Sales Representative at Stanex Consulting


Stanex Consulting delivers niche services and specialised best practice interventions for World Class Excellence, Business Transformation, Performance Management, Capability Development and Information Technology. Our Corporate Performance and Improvement Framework is built on the promise for excellency in corporate performance through transformation, innovation, performance improvement and continuous improvement.

We are recruiting to fill the position below:

Job Title: Sales Representative

Location:
Lagos

Job Description
  • We are looking for a Sales Representative to provide excellent customer service and meet sales quotas for our business.
  • Candidates with strong communication skills who can make customers feel welcome in our store will stand out.
Responsibilities
  • Greet and direct customers
  • Provide accurate information (e.g. product features, pricing and after-sales services)
  • Answer customers’ questions about specific products/services
  • Conduct price and feature comparisons to facilitate purchasing
  • Cross-sell products
  • Ensure racks are fully stocked
  • Manage returns of merchandise.
Requirements
  • Minimum of B.Sc in Marketing or a related field
  • Proven work experience as a Sales Representative, Sales Associate or similar role
  • Familiarity with consumer behavior principles
  • Excellent communication skills, capable of building trusting relationships
  • Ability to perform in fast-paced environments.
Application Closing Date
30th June, 2018.

How to Apply
Interested and qualified candidates should forward their CV's to: admin@stanexconsulting.com.ng

Massive Graduate Graduate Trainee Recruitment at Stanex Consulting

Stanex Consulting delivers niche services and specialised best practice interventions for World Class Excellence, Business Transformation, Performance Management, Capability Development and Information Technology. Our Corporate Performance and Improvement Framework is built on the promise for excellency in corporate performance through transformation, innovation, performance improvement and continuous improvement.

We are recruiting to fill the position below:

Job Title: Graduate Trainee

Location: Lagos

Minimum Qualification Requirement
  • Minimum of an OND qualification from a reputable higher institution
Requirements and Skills:
  • Excellent communication skills
  • Time management
  • Ability to work with a team
  • Problem solving skill
Application Closing Date
30th June, 2018.

How to Apply
Interested and qualified candidates should forward their CV's to: admin@stanexconsulting.com.ng

Job Vacancy For Social Safeguard Officer at Mosra Enerji Limited

Mosra Enerji Limited (formally known as Dalkiranlar Enerji Limited) has been a market leader in energy transmission and distribution in Nigeria since 2010. In our few years of operations, we have expanded our capacity to undertake and deliver projects in Nigeria and other parts of Africa utilising our local strengths.

We are recruiting to fill the vacant position below:

Job Title: Social Safeguard Officer

Location:
Kaduna

Job Requirements

  • A minimum of Degree or equivalent in Social Works or any Social Science Subjects.
  • Must have 2-3 years’ experience on monitoring and managing risks related to Gender Based Violence (GBV), Sexual Exploitation and Abuse (SEA).
  • Proven competence on road project in similar work environment.
  • Must have HSE certification
Skills:
  • Computer Skills: Proficient in the use of Microsoft Office Applications
  • Team work
  • Communication skills
Application Closing Date
22nd June, 2018.

How to Apply

Interested and qualified applicants should email their CV's to: hr@mosraenerji.com using the job title as subject of the e-mail e.g. "Social Safeguard Officer"

Note: Note that multiple applications from the same applicant will not be condoned.

Health & Safety Officer at Mosra Enerji Limited

Mosra Enerji Limited (formally known as Dalkiranlar Enerji Limited) has been a market leader in energy transmission and distribution in Nigeria since 2010. In our few years of operations, we have expanded our capacity to undertake and deliver projects in Nigeria and other parts of Africa utilising our local strengths.

We are recruiting to fill the position below:

Job Title: Health & Safety Officer

Location: Kano

Job Requirements
  • A minimum of Degree or equivalent in Social Sciences Subjects.
  • Must have 5-6 years’ experience
  • Proven competence on road project in similar work environment.
  • Must have HSE certification
Skills:
  • Computer Skills: Proficient in the use of Microsoft Office Applications
  • Team work
  • Communication skills
Application Closing Date
22nd June, 2018.

How to Apply

Interested and qualified candidates should send their CV's to: hr@mosraenerji.com using the job title as subject of the e-mail e.g. "Health & Safety Officer".

Job Vacancy For Environmental Officer at Mosra Enerji Limited

Mosra Enerji Limited (formally known as Dalkiranlar Enerji Limited) has been a market leader in energy transmission and distribution in Nigeria since 2010. In our few years of operations, we have expanded our capacity to undertake and deliver projects in Nigeria and other parts of Africa utilising our local strengths.

We are recruiting to fill the vacant position below:

Job Title: Environmental Officer

Location:
Kaduna

Job Requirements

  • A minimum of Degree in Environmental Health Science.
  • Candidate should possess a minimum of 7-10 years on road project in similar work environment.
  • Candidate must have completed the mandatory National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) Scheme or obtained an Exemption letter.
Skills:
  • Computer Skills: Proficient in the use of Microsoft Office Applications
  • Ability to work with little or no supervision
  • Good communication skills
  • Team work
Application Closing Date
22nd June, 2018.

How to Apply

Interested qualified applicants should email their CV's to: hr@mosraenerji.com using the job title as subject of the e-mail e.g. "Environmental Officer"

Note: Note that multiple applications from the same applicant will not be condoned.

Preach! Indonesia's got Ramadan talent

Preach! Indonesia's got Ramadan talent
source: AFP

AFP/File / BAY ISMOYO Syiar Anak Negeri (The Country's Children Preach) is one of a string of programmes played during Ramadan in Indonesia that feature kids as young as three competing for TV stardom

It's a make or break moment for Indonesian high schooler Puteri Ara and her hijab-clad friends as they rap about religious tolerance to a cheering TV studio audience.

Can they beat a rival boy band singing about god's glory or the all-girl group calling on viewers to idolise the prophet Muhammad instead of Korean pop stars?

It's all up to the judges on Ramadan reality television -- a ratings bonanza watched by millions across the world's most populous Muslim-majority nation during the month-long fasting celebration.

"Muslims who are fasting have to be ready to stand with those who don't fast," belts out 16-year-old Ara.

"This is my country. It's built upon different religions but we're united in peace."

Part talent show and part sermon, the show Syiar Anak Negeri (The Country's Children Preach) is one of a string of similar programmes played during Ramadan that feature kids as young as three competing for TV stardom.

They compete for prizes including tickets to Islam's holiest city Mecca, cash of up to 100 million Rupiah (about $7,200) and university scholarships.

Ara's band has worked tirelessly on a set that meshes rap with beatbox and nasheed -- vocal music sung a cappella or backed by percussion instruments.


AFP/File / BAY ISMOYO The show was the brainchild of producer Ferdi Setiawan, who wanted to develop a show to keep young people away from the clutches of drinking, drugs -- and radicalism


A celebrity-studded panel of judges, which also includes members of the religious affairs ministry and Indonesia's top Muslim cleric body, decides who goes on to the next round.

The show featuring Ara's group was the brainchild of producer Ferdi Setiawan, who wanted to help keep young people away from the clutches of drinking, drugs -- and radicalism.

"Through this programme we're hoping they'll develop a positive spirit and values," Setiawan said of the participants.

"And we're sure that when they return to their respective hometowns they'll become preachers at school, their neighbourhood or at least at home."

- 'Troubling preachers' -

Indonesia's reputation for religious tolerance was once again tested last month by a series of church bombings that killed a dozen Christian parishioners during Sunday services.

The country has long struggled with Islamist militancy, including the 2002 Bali bombings that killed over 200 people -- mostly foreign tourists -- in its worst-ever terror attack.

But the church killings by two suicide bomber families reignited fears about Indonesia's lurch toward religious conservatism, which has handed hardline groups unprecedented political power.



AFP/File / BAY ISMOYO Performers prepare before going onstage to compete for prizes including tickets to Islam's holiest city Mecca, cash of up to 100 million Rupiah (about $7,200) and university scholarships

Spotting this shift, TV producers have tapped a growing demand for religion-inspired shows and marketed them to huge audiences during Ramadan, pushing once-dominant soap operas and prank TV shows to the sidelines.

But the renewed focus on religion has also opened the door to firebrand clerics who have taken to the airwaves to preach intolerance toward women, minority groups and non-Muslims.

"We've been seeing a lot of troubling preachers such as sexists and radicals," said Muhamad Heychael, an analyst at media monitor Remotivi.

They're not welcome on shows like The Country's Children Preach, however, and backers say the upbeat programmes could help push back against hardliners.

"This is a solution to counteract radicalism and increase tolerance," said Nanang Syaikhu, a lecturer in the communications department at Jakarta's State Islamic University.

Back in the studio, Ara's message of peace wasn't enough reach the next round.

Her group -- three girls and two boys -- were in tears at the loss, but they aren't giving up on the message.

"As the younger generation, we shouldn't divide people by saying 'Oh this person is a Muslim, this person is a non-Muslim' and constantly insult one another," Ara told AFP.

"We are different but we live in the same country," she added.

"Our differences will unite us."

All Blacks prop escapes red card for tour-ending tackle

All Blacks prop escapes red card for tour-ending tackle
source: AFP

 AFP / MICHAEL BRADLEY France's Remy Grosso (R) was their only try-scorer in a 52-11 thrashing by the All Blacks in Auckland

All Blacks prop Ofa Tu'ungafasi received an official warning Wednesday but escaped further sanction for a tackle which caused a double fracture to the face of Remy Grosso, ending the France wing's tour.

World Rugby, the sport's governing body, said the tackle was "just short" of the level of a red card, which probably would have seen Tu'ungafasi suspended for the rest of the series.

Grosso, France's only try-scorer in their 52-11 thrashing by the All Blacks in Auckland on Saturday, was taken to hospital after colliding with Tu'ungafasi's shoulder.

In the same tackle Grosso, who has been ruled out of the second and third Tests, suffered a high shot from All Blacks flanker Sam Cane.

French coach Jacque Brunel labelled the tackle as "dangerous" and "illegal", but in a statement World Rugby said there were "mitigating factors" which ruled out a red card.

"Having reviewed all available camera angles, the citing commissioner (South African Freek Burger) considered Ofa Tu'ungafasi to have executed a dangerous tackle 'just short of' red card level," the statement said.

Burger determined the mitigating factors included Grosso's body position lowering as he went into contact with Cane, who made the initial tackle immediately before Tu'ungafasi.

The All Blacks prop received a warning "issued for acts of foul play that are viewed by the citing commissioner to come close to but do not warrant the player receiving a red card," World Rugby said.

Tu'ungafasi tweeted an apology to Grosso after the match, saying the hit was unintentional.

"Remy, I hope you're recovering well. It was a physical game and it wasn't my intention to hurt you," he wrote.

"I'm also gutted that I didn't get to see u after the game and u weren't well for me to visit u in hospital this morning before we left but I hope to catch up soon brother."

Cane was penalised on field for his tackle, and World Rugby said no further action was warranted against the flanker.

The second match in the three-Test series is played in Wellington on Saturday.

Anger and grief as Britain marks Grenfell fire anniversary

Anger and grief as Britain marks Grenfell fire anniversary
source: AFP

 AFP/File / Daniel LEAL-OLIVAS Campaigners are seeking arrests over the deadly fire at the Grenfell Tower apartment block in London, as well as a ban on the cladding that helped spread the blaze

Anger and impatience for justice mix with raw grief as Britain prepares to mark the first anniversary of the Grenfell Tower disaster -- the deadliest domestic fire since World War II.

In a west London community still traumatised by the apartment block blaze that killed 71 people, many voiced frustration with politicians and the fire brigade ahead of Thursday's commemorations.

"I don't understand why as a country we're not in uproar, why we're not absolutely telling the government that things need to change now," said Tasha Brade, a local resident and campaigner with Justice4Grenfell, a support group for survivors.

Campaigners want some arrests from an ongoing investigation, as well as a ban on the cladding that helped spread the blaze.

They have criticised the fire brigade's "stay put" policy for tower residents, which was only lifted after two hours.

The slow effort to rehouse people has added to the anger, with 43 of the 203 households displaced still living in hotels.

"People who were affected did not receive the services they needed with respect to their health and well-being," said Vassiliki Stavrou-Lorraine, who has lived opposite the tower for 34 years.

"Unfortunately one year on we are still having this situation," she added, saying people are suffering from "depression and post-traumatic stress disorder".

- 'They were left to die' -


AFP / Thomas SAINT-CRICQ Factfile on the Grenfell tower block fire


Relatives of those who died have recently provided heart-rending testimony about their loved ones' final moments at the beginning of a public inquiry into the fire, reminding Britons of the shocking scale of the tragedy.

The fire, which broke out in the kitchen of a fourth-floor flat in the 24-storey tower in the early hours of June 14 last year, spread swiftly up the building.

Seventy-one people lost their lives, and a woman in the building later suffered a stillbirth blamed on the inferno.

The concrete block built in 1974 had undergone renovation between 2014 and 2016, when it was wrapped in a new cladding.


AFP/File / BEN STANSALL A memorial wall for victims of the Grenfell tower fire has been created in west London

The material had not been tested in fire conditions and did not comply with building-safety guidance, according to an expert's report commissioned by the inquiry.

But the London Fire Brigade told residents to "stay put" -- standard procedure in high-rise fires -- for nearly two hours, despite the fire reaching the roof within around half an hour.

The policy has been severely criticised by relatives of those who died.

"The fact is, our relatives are being remembered now because they were left to die," Karim Mussilhy, whose deceased uncle lived on the top floor of the Grenfell Tower, wrote last month in the Guardian.

Kerry O'Hara, a survivor from the sixth floor, told AFP: "I was glad that I didn't follow that advice and I just hate to think what would've happened if I'd stayed put."

- PM's apology -

The local council in Kensington and Chelsea, where Grenfell Tower is located, has been in the spotlight for its role in both the run-up to and aftermath of the fire.

Residents argue the wealthy borough neglected the less affluent northern section that is home to Grenfell and surrounding public housing.

They also accuse it of cost-cutting on the refurbishment and bungling its overall response.

A council spokesman said it had committed £235 million (267 million euros, $315 million) to secure new homes for people to choose from.


 AFP/File / Chris J Ratcliffe The Grenfell Tower fire in London in June 2017 killed 71 people


Prime Minister Theresa May has also faced criticism, including over her government's hesitation to ban the cladding involved, after a report said that alone would not stop a repeat of the tragedy.

She apologised on Monday in a newspaper article for only meeting members of the emergency services and not residents when visiting the still-smouldering tower last June.



- 'Really unified us all' -



In the face of perceived inaction, the community has banded together, with several organisations taking root.

Samia Badani, who lives opposite Grenfell, helped form a new residents group now operating a drop-in centre offering everything from health and housing advice to food and drink.

"You simply couldn't go home and pretend it never happened," she said.


AFP/File / Daniel LEAL-OLIVAS Several demonstrations have been held calling for justice for the victims of the Grenfell Tower fire in London

"We witnessed terror, devastation, destruction and what followed that was a complete collapse of the support system from the local authorities," she said.

Among the many memorial events happening across west London this week, the group will close a local street and hold a remembrance Wednesday night.

They plan to mark the moment the fire broke out by laying 72 white roses nearby and holding a 72-second period of silence.

"It's a really bittersweet thing," said Brade of Justice4Grenfell.

"Of course this was the most devastating thing to happen to our community but it's really unified us all and it's made us realise that we do have a voice."

Top Nicaragua civic group calls strike as anti-Ortega fury grows

Top Nicaragua civic group calls strike as anti-Ortega fury grows
source: AFP

AFP / Inti Ocon A man runs from the smoke of burning tires, in the city of Sebaco, Nicaragua

Nicaragua's top civic alliance called Tuesday for a nationwide 24-hour strike to protest "extreme conditions" under President Daniel Ortega, who has yet to decide on reviving talks over the crisis that has left at least 148 dead.

The day-long strike was set to begin Thursday at noon (1800 GMT) "in solidarity with the victims" of the two months of unrest, which has seen brutal clashes between anti-government activists and security forces loyal to Ortega.

"This is a national and peaceful civil strike that covers the entire country and all economic activities, except those related to the preservation of life and the coverage of basic services for the population," announced the National Alliance for Justice and Democracy, a key player in the now stalled crisis talks.

The coalition also demanded an "immediate" decision from Ortega on the prospect of reviving negotiations mediated by Nicaragua's influential Catholic bishops.

The country has not heard from its leftist leader since last week, when he met with top clergy members, who presented him with a plan to expedite the poll and institute electoral and constitutional reforms -- key activist demands.

"Dialogue is the way to review the political system of Nicaragua from its root to achieve an authentic democracy and justice," the civic alliance said.

The announcement comes after the country underwent a sharp escalation in violence in recent days, as police and pro-government paramilitaries attacked activists wielding slingshots and homemade mortars in an attempt to trample the uprising against Ortega.

The din of rifle blasts and mortar explosions echoed overnight and into the morning throughout the streets of Managua, even after government security forces forcefully cleared the barricades.

- Economic upheaval -


AFP / INTI OCON Anti-government demonstrators prepare to attack the police station during clashes with riot police at a barricade in the town of Masaya


Activists have erected the blockades on more than two thirds of the country's roads in a bid to fend off anti-riot forces and pressure Ortega into dialogue.

But the makeshift roadblocks also have wreaked economic havoc: even in the unlikely scenario that the government "accepts an early negotiated exit" by the end of July, the Nicaraguan Foundation for Economic and Social Development (FUNIDES) estimates the country would post losses of $404 million and bleed 20,000 jobs.

Assuming Ortega continues determined to stay, FUNIDES anticipates Nicaragua would lose $916 million in added value and 150,000 jobs by December.

The protests that began April 18 over controversial pension reforms have exploded into a mass effort to pressure the president's exit.

At least 148 people have died in clashes with security forces and armed gangs loyal to Ortega, according to the Nicaraguan Center for Human Rights (CENIDH), which also said well over 1,000 had been injured.

Nicaraguan politician Edmundo Jarquin, who in the past had formed political coalitions with Ortega, called it "foreseeable" that the leader would refuse certain "concessions in terms of justice and democratization" from the bishops.

Then "it will only be possible for Ortega to resign," he wrote in an analysis of the crisis, "and all the forces within Nicaragua -- Sandinistas and non-Sandinistas, institutional and non-institutional -- must converge, and seek to end the massacre."

- 'Staggered civil war' -

But some Nicaraguans appear ready to take up arms.

"For me, what is happening is a staggered civil war," said a student leader known as "El Gato" who is among the hundreds who have occupied Managua university grounds in protest for more than a month.

"Most of us don't want to see it like that, but personally I think there is going to have to be a moment in this story when we're going to have to arm ourselves to be on the same level as them," he said.

"We cannot continue to lose brothers' lives."

The situation is particularly acute in Ortega's former stronghold Masaya, a city of some 100,000 people just southeast of Managua.

The department of the same name birthed the country's famed rebel Augusto Sandino, who launched a popular uprising against US military occupation in the 1920s and 30s.


AFP/File / DIANA ULLOA Friends and relatives of women who lost their sons in the recent protests hold a banner that reads "We demand justice, we want peace, we want them to leave... to leave" during a protest demanding justice in Managua

He in turn inspired Ortega's guerrilla army -- the Sandinistas, today the name of Ortega's party -- which overthrew dictator Anastasio Somoza in the 1970s.

But activists across the country are now turning on Ortega in a similar fashion, in a mass movement that kicked off with strong university student leadership.

El Gato says before the protests, Nicaragua was teetering at a breaking point.

"For many years, I have been observing and keeping silent for fear of reprisals," the 25-year-old said.

"I believe that this fight is just -- we are fortified in here to pressure the government and speak out against what it's been doing against Nicaraguans."

Asked how long he would stay, the student's eyes narrowed beneath the bandana masking the rest of his face: "As long as it takes."

S. Korea newspapers welcome summit as 'first step' toward peace


S. Korea newspapers welcome summit as 'first step' toward peace



AFP/File / Jung Yeon-je The drama of the on-off Trump-Kim summit has provided South Korean newspapers with copy for weeks

Most South Korean newspapers reacted with cautious optimism Wednesday to the historic meeting between Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un in Singapore, although one conservative daily denounced the agreement it produced as "absurd".

The centrist Hankook daily noted that the post-summit joint statement signed by the US president and North Korean leader on Tuesday had omitted Washington's demand for a "complete, verifiable, irreversible" denuclearisation of the North and lacked a concrete timetable to achieve that goal.

Instead the statement commits Pyongyang to "work toward complete denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula".

"In terms of the key issue... it may appear that the result failed to meet expectations," Hankook said in an editorial.

But it added that the concrete steps of dismantling the North's nuclear arsenal would be handled during follow-on negotiations, and that negotiations for a nuclear-free Korean peninsula and permanent peace between Seoul and Pyongyang had "just begun".

The pro-business Joongang daily was cautiously optimistic, even though the timetable for the dismantling of Pyongyang's nuclear weapons remained vague.

"We can't dismiss the summit as a failure. It is already a historic event that the leaders of two foes have met. The first step to end decades of hostilities since the Korean War has been made", Joongang said.

However, the conservative Chosun daily lambasted the agreement signed by Trump and Kim.

"The June 12 agreement is so outrageous and absurd that we could hardly believe our eyes," it said in an editorial.

The paper attacked Trump for promising to stop annual US-South Korea joint military drills before the North had started dismantling its nuclear arsenal.

Its view was echoed by the conservative opposition Liberty Korea Party, whose leader Hong Joon-Pyo castigated the summit as a "great failure".

But an editorial in the left-leaning Hankyoreh praised the summit as opening a new chapter for a "great change" in US-North Korea ties.

The stoppage of the US-South Korea drills, which the North says are rehearsals for aggression against it, will serve as "a catalyst" in improving ties between the two Cold War foes and denuclearisation of the North, it said.

Lights, camera, summit: critics pan White House Kim film

Lights, camera, summit: critics pan White House Kim film
source: AFP

 AFP / Anthony WALLACE Donald Trump's movie made specially for Kim Jong Un has received mixed reviews

A Hollywood-style trailer US President Donald Trump played for North Korean leader Kim Jong Un at their Singapore summit has received decidedly mixed reviews.

The four-minute film was specially made by the National Security Council for its one-man audience, reports said.

"I thought it was good," Trump told reporters, adding he showed it to Kim on an iPad. "I think he loved it."

But many other viewers did not share his enthusiasm.

It was played on big screens ahead of his news conference, Korean version first. "No-one really knew what was going on," said one photographer in the room. "It felt like a propaganda film by the Koreans."

But when it was followed by a version with English sound, "it kind of hit us", he added. "People were quite surprised as to the tackiness of it."

Opening with a shot of Mount Paektu, the spiritual home of the Korean people and the supposed birthplace of Kim's father Kim Jong Il, the images rapidly spanned the globe to take in Rome, Egypt and Seoul.

A gravelly voice -- straight out of Central Casting -- proclaims that out of seven billion people on Earth, "only the very few will make decisions or take actions that renew their homeland and change the course of history".

Black and white pictures of the Demilitarized Zone that divides the Koreas were followed by images of prosperity -- food, a high-speed train, electricity pylons.

"The past doesn't have to be the future. Out of the darkness can come the light," the trailer-style voice continues.

"Destiny Pictures presents a story of opportunity."

But there is a real Destiny Pictures.

"We had nothing to do with Singapore video. Woke up to 100's of e-mails and calls from all over the world," tweeted founder Mark Castaldo.

"Now we're trying 2 find out why they used my company name," he added. "Crazzzzy day..."

The New York Times made a spoof version of the trailer, its voiceover declaring: "No, really, this actually happened. Trump made a fake movie trailer to deal with an actual nuclear threat."

The paper's film critic James Poniewozik said the original had a "totalitarian kitsch" style.

"It's surreal but it's no more surreal than the host of the Apprentice negotiating a nuclear deal with North Korea. This is the world we live in now," he said.

But "in a weird way" it could be appropriate, he added.

"Looking at it objectively as a piece of film and a video being used in diplomacy, it's kind of hilarious, there's so many cornball, cliched images. But in political kitsch, often corniness and cliche is the point."

- 'Be the hero' -

In the film, the voice proclaims: "Two men, two leaders, one destiny," to images of Kim and Trump. "A story about a special moment in time, when a man is presented with one chance that may never be repeated.

"What will he choose? To show vision and leadership?" -- cue images of Kim's summit with the South's Moon Jae-in -- "Or not?" -- cue fire consuming celluloid film, a metaphor for the destruction of North Korea.

The moment recalled Bergman's "Persona" or "The Muppet Movie", wrote Troy Patterson for the New Yorker, slamming the trailer for "its grandiosity, its gaudiness, its chaotic logic, its indiscriminate idiocy".

As the second half of the movie unfolds, the narrator says, "there can only be two results: one of moving back, or one of moving forward".

The four missiles the North launched simultaneously in March last year fly back to their pads in reverse, and the dark, electricity-starved half of the Korean peninsula in a satellite photograph light up, railway lines criss-cross a map of the North, and a horse runs through shallow water.

Would the leader "be the hero of his people?" it asked, transliterating Kim's name into English using South Korean style.

He and Trump were taking part "in a meeting to remake history", it concluded. "To shine in the sun. One moment. One choice. What if? The future remains to be written."

Peter Bradshaw, the film critic for Britain's Guardian newspaper, was scathing.

The Kim family, he pointed out, are movie buffs. Kim's father and predecessor was a prolific director and kidnapped a top South Korean filmmaker to help develop the North's moviemaking, said the reviewer, musing that his son "might well be a bit offended by the crudeness of this trailer".

"We're getting sold an exciting action-adventure in which the good guys (America) convince the bad guys (North Korea) to come over to the side of decency," he wrote.

But the film, he added, could be closer to "Wag the Dog", Barry Levinson's 1997 satire "about cynical politicos who concoct a big foreign sideshow to distract everyone's attention from problems on the home front".

Tight squeeze for Hong Kong's young professionals

Tight squeeze for Hong Kong's young professionals
source: AFP

AFP / ISAAC LAWRENCE Michelle Chau sits on her bed in a co-sharing building in the Mong Kok district of Hong Kong, where spiralling housing prices have forced young professionals into ever-shrinking spaces

As housing prices spiral in Hong Kong, young professionals are living in ever-shrinking spaces, with box-like "nano-flats" and co-shares touted as fashionable solutions.

Blocks of sleek miniature apartments packed with mod cons are springing up around the densely packed city, pitched as an attractive and more affordable lifestyle choice, but still at an eye-watering cost.

Finance worker Adrian Law, 25, paid more than HK$6 million ($765,000) two years ago for his tiny studio apartment in a new development in the gentrified Sai Ying Pun neighbourhood.

The slim glass building squeezes four apartments onto each floor and includes "nano-flats", a new term for homes of under 215 square feet (20 square metres).

Law's studio is a fraction bigger at 292 square feet, with a price per square foot of nearly HK$20,000.

He has adapted to the limited space by buying transformable furniture -- his bed folds away against the wall to reveal a desk tucked underneath -- and he keeps most of his belongings at his parents' home.

But with a fingerprint-activated door lock, washing machine, TV, fridge and even curtains, Law says the flat came with everything he needed.


 AFP / ISAAC LAWRENCE Jezz Ng in a small living space in a co-sharing building in Hong Kong, where box-like 'nano-flats' and co-shares have been touted as fashionable solutions to eye-wateringly high property prices


"Property developers are marketing the concept to buyers that they only need a place to sleep and can do anything else outside," he told AFP, admitting he eats mostly take-away food as the kitchen is too small for cooking.

Law's parents helped him put down a 30 percent deposit when he bought the apartment and he sees it as an investment. He pays HK$24,000 per month for the mortgage, around 40 percent of his salary.

"One can only get into a winning position by owning a place," he said.

"If you're renting, you are spending all your money without gaining anything at the end."

- Health threat -

Hong Kong's real estate is the most expensive in the world, with median house prices at 19.4 times median incomes -- the worst ratio globally according to the Annual Demographia International Housing Affordability Survey 2018.

Property prices have been fuelled by an influx of money from wealthy mainland Chinese investors and developers, and the city government stands accused of failing to control the red-hot property market.

More than 60 percent of new flats under 430 sq ft are taken up by investment buyers, according to government figures.

With the ability to buy a flat increasingly out of reach for the majority of Hong Kong's 7.4 million residents, developers are creating smaller spaces to reach a wider market.


AFP / Anthony WALLACE Finance worker Adrian Law, 25, paid more than US$765,000 for his 292 square foot (27 square metre) studio flat

Under Hong Kong law there is no limit to how small a flat can be.

Ryan Ip, senior researcher at public policy think tank Our Hong Kong Foundation, describes it as an "unhealthy" trend with developers putting profit above quality of life.

"If you count the per-square-foot price for smaller-size flats, it is even higher than larger flats," said Ip, who believes mental and physical health will suffer if properties continue to shrink.

Rental prices have also rocketed and the wait for government-subsidised public housing can be five years.

Ip says expanding land supply by any means, including reclamation from the sea, is the only way to solve the affordable housing shortage.

But other local land research groups argue Hong Kong should develop under-utilised brownfield sites and idle government land first.

The government is considering a host of options, from new artificial islands to developing the city's cherished country parks.

Designers are also putting forward their own new concepts, including converting concrete pipes into living spaces and transforming shipping containers into homes.

- Sharing space -

Many poorer Hong Kong residents resort to renting dingy "subdivided" flats -- apartments carved up into multiple living spaces.

But even for those on a good salary, a decent home is often unaffordable.

Jezz Ng, 29, earns a monthly wage of HK$32,000 as a teacher and has chosen to live in a new co-share housing set-up, rather than shelling out for her own rent. At weekends she goes home to her parents.


 AFP / Anthony WALLACE Adrian Law, 25, has adapted to the limited space by buying transformable furniture -- his bed folds away against the wall to reveal a desk tucked underneath and he keeps most of his belongings at his parents' home


Ng shares a unit with seven other women where she has her own small room, which can fit a single bed and a desk.

Housed in a revitalised residential building in the working class neighbourhood of Yau Ma Tei, privately owned Bibliotheque offers 166 bed spaces across 15 units, with monthly rents ranging from HK$3,500 to HK$6,200.

All tenants have access to communal facilities, from shower areas and a kitchen to activity rooms and study rooms.

"When I started to look for places to rent, my maximum budget was $8,000 including utilities, but a simple, decent studio room could easily go over this price," Ng told AFP.

She now pays $5,600 per month, which she says allows her to support her parents financially and pay her sister's tuition fees for a master's degree -- a common practice for young adults who are working.

Ng adds she feels less cramped than when she lived at home.

Founder of the co-share, Keith Wong, says it is designed for young professionals who need time to "accumulate wealth" by limiting their outgoings.

For now it is an ideal solution, says Ng.

"I want to strive for an apartment, but at the moment, there's no way for me to achieve that goal," she explained.

"Even though I have a stable job and the salary goes up steadily, it will never catch up with the increase in property prices."

ZTE stocks collapse at resumption of trading in Hong Kong


ZTE stocks collapse at resumption of trading in Hong Kong
source: AFP

 AFP / JOHANNES EISELE Trading in ZTE's shares was suspended in April

Shares in Chinese telecoms equipment maker ZTE collapsed more than 40 percent Wednesday as trading in the company resumed after it reached a settlement with the United States over its handling of a sanctions violation.

Dealing in the firm was suspended in April after Washington said it had banned US companies from selling crucial hardware and software components to it for seven years.

The decision came after US officials said ZTE had failed to take action against staff who were responsible for violating trade sanctions against Iran and North Korea. The company was fined $1.2 billion last year for those violations.

The move in April put the company's future in doubt and it became a key issue in a wider trade spat between Washington and Beijing.

And soon after the sanctions were announced US President Donald Trump said he was working with Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping to prevent the firm from going out of business, tweeting "Too many jobs in China lost. Commerce Department has been instructed to get it done!"

The two sides then worked together and last week reached a deal to replace the sanctions with a $1 billion penalty, plus another $400 million in escrow to cover possible future violations.

Shenzhen-based ZTE will also be required to change its entire board of directors and hire outside legal compliance specialists who will report to the US Commerce Department for 10 years.

Despite the firm's future being ensured, it dived 41.56 percent to end at HK$14.96 in Hong Kong, while it also plunged by its 10 percent daily limit to 28.18 yuan in Shenzhen.

"While the nightmare is now over, ZTE will likely have to deal with many changes," analysts Edison Lee and Timothy Chau at Jefferies wrote in a note. "We expect significant near-term selling pressure and a volatile stock price."

However, there are already fears over the deal after a cross-party group of senators voted to include an amendment in the National Defense Authorization Act that will keep the seven-year ban in place. The lawmakers say ZTE's access to the US market endangers national security.

The settlement came days after Beijing reportedly offered to ramp up purchases of American goods by $70 billion to help cut the yawning trade imbalance with the United States -- moving part-way towards meeting a major demand of Trump.

Trump has demanded a $200 billion reduction in the trade deficit with China over two years.

Despite the settlement, there was no sign Trump had veered from plans to impose billions of dollars in tariffs on Chinese imports to punish Beijing for its alleged theft of US technology and know-how.

"The US agreement with ZTE with fine and change of management, in other words, is a political deal," said analyst Dickie Wong at Kingston Securities.

"If the US didn't 'free' ZTE in this way, US companies would find it very difficult in any moves in China, including decisions on mergers and acquisitions," Wong added.

Citi analyst Bin Liu warned in a note that the firm "should have a significant loss" in its full-year earnings because of the penalty as well as the impact of its management changes.

-- Bloomberg News contributed to this story --

Lopetegui sacked by Spain on eve of World Cup

Lopetegui sacked by Spain on eve of World Cup
source: AFP

AFP/File / GABRIEL BOUYS Spain have sacked coach Julen Lopetegui on the eve of the World Cup

Spain dramatically sacked coach Julen Lopetegui on Wednesday -- just two days before the team's opening game against Portugal at the World Cup.

In a surprise announcement on Tuesday, Real Madrid appointed Lopetegui as Zinedine Zidane's successor to take over after the tournament in Russia, sparking outrage among the federation and Spanish fans at the timing of the announcement.

At a severely delayed press conference at Spain's World Cup base in Krasnodar, Spanish football federation (RFEF) chief Luis Rubiales expressed his dismay at the timing of events that threaten to derail Spain's World Cup chances.

"The national team is the team for all Spaniards and there are some decisions we feel obliged to take to protect some values," said Rubiales.

"Negotiating is legitimate but it took place without the RFEF being informed until five minutes before a press statement was released. There has to be a message for all workers in the federation that there is a right way to do things."

Lopetegui had signed a contract extension until 2020 just last month and never tasted defeat in his 20 games in charge as Spain boss.

No decision has yet been made over who will take charge in Russia, with Spain due to face European champions Portugal in Sochi on Friday before taking on Iran and Morocco in Group B.

Former Real Madrid captain Fernando Hierro, who is currently Spain's sporting director, and Spain under-21 coach Albert Celades have emerged as the principal candidates.

"We are going to change as little as possible and once we have something to communicate we will," added Rubiales.

- Players support -

There were fears Lopetegui's appointment by the European champions could open up old divisions between the Real Madrid and Barcelona factions in the Spain squad.

For the first time since 2006, there are more players from Madrid in a Spanish squad for a major tournament, with a six-strong Real contingent and just Gerard Pique, Jordi Alba and Sergio Busquets from Barca.

However, according to reports in the Spanish media, the players tried to intervene at the last minute to prevent Rubiales sacking Lopetegui.

"I have spoken with the players and what I can guarantee is that the players will do everything in their power, along with the new technical team to take the team as far as possible," said Rubiales.

La Roja were among the favourites to lift the trophy this summer but the astonishing developments of the past two days could have a devastating affect on their chances.

Lopetegui had a short playing career at both Madrid and Barcelona as a reserve goalkeeper.

However, his coaching career had been far from distinguished before being handed the role as Spain coach after a last-16 exit at Euro 2016 brought Vicente del Bosque's eight-year reign to an end.

After short spells at Rayo Vallecano and with Madrid's youth team Real Madrid Castilla, Lopetegui enjoyed a successful time with Spain's under-19s and under-21s.

He then spent 18 months in charge of Porto but was sacked after exiting the Champions League at the group stage in his second season.

US, Mexico and Canada to host 2026 World Cup

US, Mexico and Canada to host 2026 World Cup
source: AFP

 AFP/File / Patrik STOLLARZ North America has won the race to host the 2026 World Cup

The United States, Mexico and Canada won the right to host the 2026 World Cup after easily beating Morocco in a vote by FIFA member nations on Wednesday.

The joint North American bid received 134 of the 203 votes, while Morocco polled 65 in the ballot at a FIFA Congress held in Moscow on the eve of the 2018 World Cup.

Global football's showpiece event will return to the North American continent for the first time since 1994 when the United States hosted the tournament.

Bid leader Carlos Cordeiro said his team was "humbled by the trust our colleagues in the FIFA family have put in our bid" and his tournament had an opportunity to put football "on a new and sustainable path for generations to come."

It will be the first World Cup to be expanded to 48 teams, posing an enormous logistical challenge for the hosts.

FIFA President Gianni Infantino was believed to have strongly backed the North American bid behind the scenes because the trio of countries involved backed him in 2016 when he took over after the corruption-tainted reign of Sepp Blatter.

- Clear choice -

Delegates had been faced with a clear choice in the 2026 vote.

The joint North American bid boasted modern, established stadiums and well-developed transport links underpinned by Mexican football fervour.

Morocco, on the other hand, promised a "European" World Cup in Africa, playing on its proximity to Europe and an appeal to take the tournament back to the African continent for just the second time.

But compared to North America, Morocco's bid existed largely on paper -- many stadiums and roads would have had to have been built and critics questioned how it would have coped with expanded tournament.

FIFA inspectors classified the north African nation's stadiums, accommodation and transport as "high risk", awarding it just 2.7 out of five in an evaluation report, with concerns raised over several critical aspects.

They warned "the amount of new infrastructure required for the Morocco 2026 bid to become reality cannot be overstated".

The report made the US-Canada-Mexico bid the clear favourite after rating it four out of five, and Morocco was not able to bridge the gap.

The 1994 World Cup in the United States set an attendance record that still stands, with nearly 3.6 million spectators for only 52 matches.

- $11 billion profit pledge -

That suggests that North American bid leaders' promises to deliver a record $11 billion profit for the 2026 tournament are feasible.

The North American bid had feared it could lose out if the FIFA vote became a referendum on the popularity of US President Donald Trump.

Trump had tweeted threats that if countries did not support the North American bid, they could not expect US support on other issues.

That prompted Cordeiro to urge FIFA members ahead of the vote to make their decision on the "merits" of the bid, "not geopolitics".

The decision will be a shot in the arm for football, or soccer, in the US, after the national team failed to qualify for the 2018 finals in a huge setback for the game there.

Football-crazy Mexico hosted in 1970 and in 1986, the tournament remembered for Diego Maradona's "Hand of God" goal.

The vote result was a bitter blow for Morocco after a fifth failure to win the right to host the World Cup. In 2010 it lost out to South Africa as the African continent hosted for the first time.

The US was defeated by Qatar in 2022 in a vote now tarnished by corruption allegations that spelled the beginning of the end of the once all-powerful FIFA president Blatter.

It prompted an overhaul of the rules. Whereas previously the 24 members of the FIFA Executive Committee used to determine World Cup races, the host is now decided by a vote of individual FIFA member nations.

Morocco bid leader Hicham El Amrani argued its 12 host cities are "very close to each other, with for example Casablanca a maximum 500 kilometres (310 miles) from another venue" compared to the vast distances involved in North America.

The Moroccan bid had enlisted the support of the British communications agency that helped London and Paris land the 2012 and 2024 Olympics.

France, in particular, lobbied behind the scenes for French-speaking Morocco and the bid had the support of most African nations.

Trump accuses OPEC of driving up oil prices

Trump accuses OPEC of driving up oil prices
source: AFP

 AFP/File / Nicholas KAMM "Oil prices are too high, OPEC is at it again. Not good!" President Trump wrote on Twitter

US President Donald Trump on Wednesday accused the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries of driving up oil prices, in a fresh swipe at the cartel's agreement to cap production.

"Oil prices are too high, OPEC is at it again. Not good!" he wrote on Twitter.

Oil prices peaked in late May, hitting the $80 per barrel ceiling on the Brent futures contract and $72.24 on the West Texas Intermediate.

Traders are holding their breath for the June 22 meeting of oil ministers from OPEC member states in Vienna.

In April Saudi Energy Minister Khaled al-Faleh said the global market has the capacity to absorb higher oil prices -- a remark that drew a swift reaction Trump.

"With record amounts of Oil all over the place, including the fully loaded ships at sea, Oil prices are artificially Very High! No good and will not be accepted!" Trump tweeted on April 20.

OPEC producers and non-OPEC countries struck a deal in 2016 to trim production by 1.8 million barrels per day to reduce a global glut of oil.

The deal, which is due to run out at the end of 2018, has succeeded in boosting oil prices above $70 a barrel from below $30 a barrel in early 2016.

Pro-European MPs hold May to compromise on Brexit vote

Pro-European MPs hold May to compromise on Brexit vote
source: AFP

 AFP / Ben STANSALL British Prime Minister Theresa May leaves 10 Downing Street for parliament and another tense day of debate on her plans for Brexit

Pro-Europeans in British Prime Minister Theresa May's Conservative party warned Wednesday she must keep promises to give parliament a greater say over the final Brexit deal or risk a truce she needs to avoid a damaging defeat.

May narrowly avoided losing a major vote on the EU (Withdrawal) Bill in the House of Commons on Tuesday by offering last-minute concessions to Tory MPs who fear the government could decide on its own to leave the bloc with no deal.

But there is a dispute over what exactly she promised, with eurosceptics warning that there must be no question of allowing lawmakers the opportunity to undo Brexit.

May's Downing Street office said she would publish a compromise amendment on Thursday, which will go to the upper House of Lords for debate on Monday, and then back to MPs.

Leading pro-European Tory MP Dominic Grieve said he hoped a compromise would be found, but warned that if not, "this isn't the end of the matter".

May, who leads a minority government propped up by the small Northern Irish Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), conceded on Wednesday that "we need parliamentary support" to implement Brexit.

But while ministers must be accountable to lawmakers, she told MPs that "the government's hand in negotiations cannot be tied by parliament".

She added: "I cannot countenance parliament being able to overturn the will of the British people."

- A 'real say' on Brexit -

The Brexit talks are progressing painfully slowly, but both sides still hope to reach a deal in October ahead of Britain's withdrawal from the EU in March 2019.

May has promised to give the British parliament a vote on the final deal, but the question is what happens if lawmakers decide to reject it.

On Tuesday, MPs overturned an amendment made by the Lords which would have given parliament the power to decide whether to leave the EU without a deal, keep negotiating -- or stay in the bloc.

It followed a last-minute meeting with the prime minister and more than a dozen Tory MPs who considered supporting the motion.

One pro-European Tory, Nicky Morgan, told the BBC that May "understood that parliament wants to have a real say, in all circumstances, in relation to what's going to happen in the Brexit deal".

One compromise plan put forward by the rebels would ensure that if there was no Brexit deal by the end of November, ministers must seek parliament's approval for its plan to proceed.

Eurosceptics urged the government to hold firm.

The rebels "seek a further parliamentary vote with the intent of overturning the decision of the British people," Conservative MP John Redwood tweeted.

May has made an art of holding together the factions in her divided party, but it remains to be seen if she can find an amendment that prevents a rebellion from either side.

"We hope for support from all wings of the party when we bring forward Brexit policy," a government source said.

- Scottish nationalist ejected -

MPs on Wednesday continued discussing Lords amendments on the EU (Withdrawal) Bill, with possible flashpoints on proposals to keep Britain closely aligned with the EU economy after Brexit.

In chaotic scenes before they started, Scottish National Party (SNP) MP Ian Blackford was ejected from the Commons after demanding an emergency debate on the impact of Brexit on devolution.

His party's MPs walked out with him and he warned of a "constitutional crisis" with London.

The Scottish Parliament has refused to approve the Brexit bill, which it says would see London take back powers -- albeit temporarily -- from Brussels after Brexit that should by rights go to Edinburgh.

World can 'sleep well' after N.Korea summit, Trump says

World can 'sleep well' after N.Korea summit, Trump says
source: AFP

AFP / Mandel Ngan US President Donald Trump steps off Air Force One upon arrival at Andrews Air Force Base

A jubilant-sounding President Donald Trump declared Wednesday that his "deal" with Kim Jong Un has ended North Korea's nuclear threat and made the world safer, as he returned to Washington following the historic talks.

Even as experts weighed the implications of Trump's Singapore summit with Kim, the US president struck a typically bullish note in a series of announcements.

"There is no longer a Nuclear Threat from North Korea," he asserted on Twitter.

Trump added that everybody "can now feel much safer than the day I took office" and people could "sleep well tonight!"

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, speaking to reporters in Seoul, said the US hopes to see "major disarmament" of North Korea by the end of 2020.

Critics said the unprecedented encounter between Kim and Trump was more style than substance, producing a document short on details about the key issue of Pyongyang's atomic weapons.


AFP / John SAEKI Kim-Trump historic summit


In a joint statement, Kim pledged to "work toward the complete denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula" -- a stock phrase favored by Pyongyang that stopped short of longstanding US demands for North Korea to give up its atomic arsenal in a "verifiable" and "irreversible" way.

But Trump confidently described the outcome -- a joint statement with no binding terms -- as a "deal" with North Korea and tweeted that there would be "no more rocket launches, nuclear testing or research!"

In North Korea, state media praised Kim for "opening a new chapter" in relations with the United States, and said Trump had accepted an invitation to visit the North.

Just months ago, Kim and Trump were trading threats and personal insults as the North conducted its sixth and most powerful nuclear test.

Adam Schiff, a top US Democrat and staunch Trump critic, warned the standoff with Pyongyang was far from resolved.

"North Korea still has all its nuclear missiles, and we only got a vague promise of future denuclearization from a regime that can't be trusted. North Korea is a real and present threat.

"So is a dangerously naive president," Schiff said.

But Victor Cha, a former US pointman on North Korea, gave Trump more credit, writing in The New York Times: "Despite its many flaws, the Singapore summit represents the start of a diplomatic process that takes us away from the brink of war."

- 'Meeting of the century' -

Pyongyang has reason to feel confident after the meeting, where Kim stood as an equal with Trump in front of their nations' flags.


AFP / Ed JONES North Korean commuters read the latest edition of newspapers showing images of leader Kim Jong Un and US president Donald Trump at their Singapore summit

In North Korea, the official KCNA news agency described the summit as an "epoch-making meeting" that would help foster "a radical switchover in the most hostile (North Korea)-US relations."

KCNA also asserted Trump had "expressed his intention" to lift sanctions against the North -- something the US president had said would happen "when we are sure that the nukes are no longer a factor."

With the headline: "Meeting of the century opens new history in DPRK-US relations," the North's ruling Workers Party official daily Rodong Sinmun splashed no fewer than 33 pictures across four of its usual six pages.

In Pyongyang, commuters crowded round the spread of images -- the first most of them had seen of the summit.

U Sung Tak, 79, said the future was looking "bright" because Kim was "leading the world's political trend on the Korean peninsula, steering the wheel of history."

Ordinary North Koreans consistently voice unequivocal support for the leadership when speaking to foreign media.

- 'War games' -


POOL/AFP / Anthony WALLACE In its first report on the landmark summit, the official KCNA news agency ran a glowing dispatch on the talks, describing them as an "epoch-making meeting" that would help foster "a radical switchover in the most hostile (North Korea)-US relations"


The Singapore summit was a major coup for an isolated and heavily sanctioned regime that has long craved international legitimacy, and whose autocratic leader stands accused of murdering opponents and members of his own family.

"Kim Jong Un got what he wanted at the Singapore Summit: the international prestige and respect of a one-on-one meeting with the American president, the legitimacy of North Korean flags hanging next to American flags in the background," said Paul Haenle, director of the Carnegie-Tsinghua Center.

In his post-summit press conference, Trump made the surprise announcement that the US would halt joint military exercises with its security ally Seoul -- something long sought by Pyongyang, which claims the drills are a rehearsal for invasion.

He defended that decision Wednesday, tweeting: "We save a fortune by not doing war games, as long as we are negotiating in good faith - which both sides are!"

The Pentagon could not immediately provide an estimate of how much the drills cost.


AFP / Ed JONES North Korean state media were glowing about the Trump-Kim talks, describing them as 'epoch-making'

Both Seoul and US military officials have said they had no idea the announcement was coming, while Japan's Defense Minister Itsunori Onodera warned the drills played a "vital role in East Asia's security."

Japan has nevertheless joined fellow world powers from China to the European Union and Russia in welcoming the summit -- while cautioning it was only a first step towards resolving the stand-off with Pyongyang.

Echoing that stance, Akira Kawasaki of the ICAN anti-nuclear group said the summit was "a great photo-op," but that "the substance needs to be followed up."

burs-wat/ec

All eyes on OPEC as Trump gripes over prices


All eyes on OPEC as Trump gripes over prices
source: AFP

 AFP/File / Nicholas KAMM "Oil prices are too high, OPEC is at it again. Not good!" President Trump wrote on Twitter

Just nine days before a big OPEC meeting, US President Donald Trump joined the oil-market fray Tuesday, blaming the group for high prices.

"Oil prices are too high, OPEC is at it again. Not good!" the US president said on Twitter.

Trump's grousing follows reports suggesting the oil exporters group was already planning to open the spigots, an outcome the International Energy Agency hinted at in its monthly report released earlier Wednesday.

"Statements by several parties suggest that action in terms of higher supply could be on the way," said the IEA, which represents the US and other oil-consuming nations.

The IEA suggested the June 22 OPEC meeting in Vienna would need to boost output because of a political crisis in Venezuela that has pinched petroleum output and Trump's decision to exit the Iran nuclear pact, which is expected to result in lower production from the Middle Eastern country.

Under one scenario weighed by the IEA, output from Venezuela and Iran by the end of 2019 could be 1.5 million barrels per day lower than it is today.

"To make up for the losses, we estimate that Middle East OPEC countries could increase production in fairly short order by about 1.1 mb/d and there could be more output from Russia on top of the increase already built into our 2019 non-OPEC supply numbers," the IEA said.

OPEC flows were already higher in May, led by Saudi Arabia, the IEA said, adding that the oil kingpin was still in compliance with the Vienna deal caps.

Citing "people briefed on the discussions," Bloomberg on Wednesday said Saudi Arabia had floated several oil output hike plans to fellow cartel members.

On the sidelines of the opening match of the World Cup on Thursday, President Vladimir Putin and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman will meet to discuss oil policy, Bloomberg added.

- higher gasoline prices -

Trump's complaints about OPEC come amid expectations of a more costly US summer driving season. A gallon of regular gasoline is currently $2.91, up 25 percent from the year-ago level.

Analysts attribute the rise in prices in part to OPEC's action to defend prices.

OPEC and non-OPEC producers struck a deal in late 2016 to trim production by 1.8 million barrels per day to reduce a global glut that had sent prices crashing. Key producers, including Saudi Arabia and Russia, have reaffirmed the deal since then.

But Matt Smith, director of research at ClipperData, said Trump himself is responsible for some of the pressure due to the decision to exit the Iran deal.

"It's confusing why the president would come out with a statement like this now," Smith said. "The real catalyst for the recent rise in prices is the sanctions on Iran."

While the world turns its eyes on the Vienna OPEC meeting, oil market watchers are also monitoring activity in Trump's home market, where higher prices are feeding more production of American shale oil.

US production of oil came in at 10.9 million barrels per day last week, according to data released Wednesday by the US Energy Information Administration, up nearly 17 percent from the year-ago level.

OPEC itself spotlighted US output in its own monthly report on Tuesday, citing the growth of non-OPEC supply as one of several question marks hanging over the situation.

Various sources show that "considerable uncertainty as to world oil demand and non-OPEC supply prevails," OPEC said, leading to a wide range of estimates for the remainder of 2018.

Italy, France tensions spiral over rejected migrant ship


Italy, France tensions spiral over rejected migrant ship
source: AFP


MSF/SOS MEDITERRANEE/AFP / Karpov This handout picture from Medecins Sans Frontiers shows rescued migrants onboard an Italian coastguard ship following their transfer from the French NGO's ship Aquarius

Italy postponed high-level talks with France on Wednesday after Paris branded Rome irresponsible for refusing to take in a migrant rescue ship.

Italy's new economy minister postponed a meeting with his French counterpart in Paris as their countries traded barbs over the treatment of more than 600 migrants rescued off the Libyan coast at the weekend.

The migrants were stranded on the Aquarius vessel until Spain said the ship could land at its port of Valencia. It is expected to arrive there later this week.

French President Emmanuel Macron accused Italy's new populist government of "cynicism and irresponsibility" for closing its ports to the 629 migrants.

Rome called his comments "unacceptable" and summoned France's ambassador on Wednesday.


AFP / Paz PIZARRO The migrant rescue ship Aquarius is bound for Spain after being barred from docking in Italy


"Such statements are undermining relations between Italy and France," Italy's foreign ministry said in a statement.

Macron later appealed for the two sides not to "give in to emotions that certain people are manipulating".

In a speech in the western French town of Mouchamps, he insisted that France was "working hand in hand with Italy" to handle migration.

- Italy demands apology -

Italy's far-right Interior Minister Matteo Salvini had suggested that a planned meeting between the leaders of the two countries should be cancelled if France did not issue an "official apology".

Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte and Macron are due to hold talks on Friday ahead of a European summit focussing on migration.


 AFP / Alberto PIZZOLI Italy's Interior Minister and deputy PM Matteo Salvini said France should apologise for its leader's comments in the Aquarius migrant boat dispute

"If an official apology doesn't arrive, Prime Minister Conte would be right not to go to France," Salvini told reporters.

A French presidential source said the country had not received any formal demand from Italy for an apology.

Italy's new Economy Minister Giovanni Tria said he was cancelling a meeting with his French counterpart Bruno le Maire in Paris. The French economy ministry later said the ministers had "agreed that Mr Tria will come to Paris in the coming days".

- 'Axis of the willing' -

European Union member states are divided over how to deal with asylum seekers.

Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz on Wednesday hailed cooperation between the hardline interior ministers of Austria, Germany and Italy on the issue.

"I think it marks very sensible cooperation that will contribute to reducing illegal migration to Europe," said Kurz, whose country assumes the EU's rotating presidency on July 1.

"We believe an axis of the willing is needed to fight illegal migration."


 Médecins sans Frontières (MSF)/AFP / Lauren King Hundreds of thousands of migrants make the dangerous journey across the Mediterranean from Africa to reach the European Union


EU leaders in December set an end-June deadline for an overhaul of rules to create a permanent mechanism to deal with migrants.

The International Organisation for Migration on Tuesday warned against the closing of EU borders.

"I fear a major tragedy if states start refusing to accept rescued migrants," its director general William Lacy Swing said.

- 'A sign of generosity' -

Salvini has repeatedly accused fellow EU members of abandoning Italy as it struggles to cope with migrants making the perilous journey from Africa across the Mediterranean.

The country has seen more than 700,000 migrants arrive on its shores since 2013.

Under EU rules, migrants must apply for asylum in the European nation where they first arrive.

Speaking to the Senate Wednesday, Salvini accused France of only receiving 640 of the 9,816 migrants it had promised to take from Italy.

He said that between January and May, France had sent 10,249 migrants back to Italy.

He demanded that France move from "words to action and offer a sign of generosity" by taking more in.

Salvini has accused charities that rescue migrants of working with human traffickers but said Italy would not stop rescuing migrant boats itself.


 MSF/SOS MEDITERRANEE/AFP / Karpov Some rescued migrants were transferred from the NGO-chartered ship Aquarius to an Italian coastguard vessel

An Italian coastguard ship carrying more than 900 migrants was allowed to dock in Sicily on Wednesday.

"Closing ports, whoever does it, threatens rescue at sea, as we have seen in the case of the Aquarius, and therefore is not the right solution," UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi told reporters in Geneva.

But he stressed that "the reason why Italy said it had closed ports is something we need to listen to".

Yemen forces launch assault on rebel-held port city


Yemen forces launch assault on rebel-held port city
source: AFP

 AFP/File / NABIL HASSAN A pro-government Yemeni soldier fires a machine gun on June 7, 2018 near the town of Al Jah southeast of Hodeida

Yemeni forces backed by a Saudi-led coalition launched a major offensive Wednesday to retake the rebel-held port city of Hodeida, a key aid hub, sparking calls from the United Nations for restraint.

Pro-government troops began the assault despite mounting international fears about the humanitarian fallout, pressing toward Hodeida airport south of the city after receiving a "green light" from the coalition.

The Red Sea port, controlled by the Iran-backed Huthi rebels who hail from northern Yemen, serves as the entry point for 70 percent of the impoverished country's imports as it teeters on the brink of famine.

The UN envoy for Yemen, Martin Griffiths, said he was continuing to hold negotiations on keeping the key port open to aid deliveries.


 AFP / AFP Yemen


"We are in constant contact with all the parties involved to negotiate arrangements for Hodeida that would address political, humanitarian, security concerns of all concerned parties," he said in a statement.

Hodeida residents were in a state of anxiety, waiting for the fighting to reach their neighbourhoods. Those contacted by AFP said Huthi fighters had fanned out across the city.

Coalition sources said the alliance carried out 18 air strikes on Huthi positions on the outskirts of Hodeida on Wednesday.

According to medical sources in the province, 22 Huthi fighters were killed by coalition raids, while three pro-government fighters were killed in a rebel ambush south of Hodeida.

The city, home to 600,000 people, was captured by the insurgents in 2014 along with the capital Sanaa.

Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and a bloc of other countries intervened in Yemen the following year with the goal of restoring the government to power.

The coalition accuses the Huthis of using the port to secure Iranian arms, notably the ballistic missiles the militants have increasingly fired into Saudi territory.


AFP / NABIL HASSAN A pro-government Yemeni soldier looks through binoculars on June 7, 2018, near the city of Al Jah in Hodeida province, 50 kilometres (30 miles) from the port city of Hodeida

Yemen's government said on Tuesday that negotiations had failed to force the rebels from Hodeida, and that a grace period for UN-led peace efforts was over.

"All peaceful and political means of removing the Huthi militia from Hodeida port have been exhausted," the government said in a statement carried by Yemen's state news agency Saba.

The United Nations on Monday withdrew its international staff from Hodeida.

- Lifeline in peril -

The UAE, a pillar of the anti-Huthi coalition, says crucial aid will not be halted by the offensive.

"Hodeida port remains open to shipping," Emirati State Minister for Foreign Affairs Anwar Gargash tweeted Wednesday.

"We have also put contingency plans in place to move aid by other methods to Hodeida and points beyond," he said.

The high-ranking UAE diplomat insisted that similar large-scale offensives had improved the lives of Yemenis in Aden and elsewhere.

The International Committee of the Red Cross warned however that any battle for Hodeida would exacerbate the suffering of the population, already "weakened to extreme levels".

"Life-saving items cannot be given to those in need while fighting is ongoing," ICRC Middle East director Robert Mardini said in a statement.

"Lifelines to the outside world must be maintained."

Yemeni forces massing around Hodeida are a mix of local fighters, those loyal to President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi, and supporters of the ex-head of state, Ali Abdullah Saleh.

They are backed on the ground by the UAE, while Saudi Arabia has been leading a campaign of air strikes.

Analysts say anti-rebel forces are determined to drive the Huthis from the key port, having failed to score any major victories since the first year of the war.

- Children in the crossfire -

The UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) has raised alarm over the plight of Hodeida's 300,000 children and the risk that drinking water supplies will be disrupted.

"UNICEF has pre-prepositioned supplies in Hodeida: over 20,000 basic hygiene kits (one kit per family). 40,000 additional kits are in the pipeline. We hope we don't need to use them," UNICEF Yemen representative Meritxell Relano said on Twitter.

The Huthi leadership on Tuesday called on the international community to "pressure a halt to the escalation", warning an assault on Hodeida would put Red Sea navigation at risk.

On Wednesday, the Huthis said they targeted a coalition warship off the coast of Hodeida with two missiles, with rebel outlet Al-Masirah claiming a direct hit.

As the offensive got under way, Saudi Arabia's ambassador to Yemen was defiant.

"Hodeida will be liberated, and the Yemeni people will gain back a major artery of life. An essential lifeline that was previously plagued by the Iranian backed Huthi militia," he tweeted.

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