Soaring
Spanish unemployment hits record highs
27
July, 2012
"Spanish
unemployment hit its highest level in the second quarter since the
Franco dictatorship ended in the mid-1970s, succumbing to a crisis of
confidence among business and consumers that looks likely to escalate
as the country's recession drags on.
The
jobless rate rose to 24.6 percent from 24.4 percent in the three
months to March, the National Statistics Institute said on Friday.
The
number of unemployed Spaniards hit 5.7 million, giving the country
the highest proportion of people out of work in the European Union."
China
censors aftermath of deadly Beijing storm
28
July, 2012
The
storm that ravaged Beijing nearly a week ago and killed at least 77
people remains a sensitive topic in China, with a newspaper ordered
to cut its coverage and online discussions curtailed.
Directed
by propaganda officials, mainstream media have been focusing on
positive aspects of the storm, such as rescue efforts, heroic
civilian acts and sacrifices by uniformed officials. But those who
want to raise questions on the city's handling of the disaster and
its drainage system have come under pressure.
Southern
Weekly -- an influential newspaper known for its edgy reporting --
canceled four pages of storm coverage this week, and the newspaper
itself, together with Beijing's ex- and acting mayors, and the deaths
in Fangshan -- the hardest-hit district in Beijing -- were all
blocked on China's most popular microblogging site, Sina Weibo, on
July 27.
The
censorship comes during a personnel reshuffling in the city
government of the capital as China braces for the once-in-a-decade
power handover to the next generation of leaders. That takes place
when the Communist Party holds its congress later this year, with
banners around the city already calling for the creation of a stable
environment for the meeting.
Officials
have kept information tight, mindful that any failure to cope with
the flooding could reflect badly on the country's leadership. China's
communist government has justified its one-party rule in part by
delivering economic growth and maintaining stability and acting
quickly to manage disasters like the June 21 flooding...
Japan
soil issue buried for lack of storage
27
July, 2012
"At
a hamlet in a mountainous area where decontamination was attempted
last autumn, airborne radiation was recently found to have returned
to 2 microsieverts per hour, the same as it was beforehand and too
high for human habitation, local officials said.
"I
imagine it's cesium dust coming from the hill behind the village,"
a local chief lamented. "All we can do is decontaminate the area
again, but there is nowhere to store the soil."
Minamisoma,
one of the municipalities most affected by the nuclear crisis, is
among 111 municipalities in eight prefectures designated in January
by the central government as a "priority area" for
decontamination.
Anticipating
a storage space shortage, the central government has been advocating
the "upside-down" method of storage — which actually
means burying the tainted topsoil below that excavated from further
down, instead of collecting it for storage.
This
method has been strongly criticized, especially by those who were
forced to leave their hometowns behind.
"This
is simply a measure to reduce (radiation)," an official in the
deserted Fukushima village of Katsurao angrily said. "It's
nothing more than an attempt to conceal radioactive substances."
Saudi
Arabia protest followed by arrests in Qatif
Security
forces have detained a number of protesters in eastern Saudi Arabia,
state media report.
in 5 yrs
BBC,
27
July, 2012
The
arrests took place in the city of Qatif after "rioters" set
tyres on fire during an overnight demonstration, an interior ministry
statement said.
It
said there were no casualties, but witnesses said several people were
wounded when police opened fire.
Among
those detained was Mohammed al-Shakouri, described by the interior
ministry as a wanted fugitive.
In
January, he was among 23 men named as suspects in connection with the
disturbances in Eastern Province.
They
were accused of possessing illegal weapons, opening fire on the
public and police, and of serving "foreign agendas".
The
demonstration in Qatif was organised to demand the release of
political detainees, including the Shia cleric, Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr.
Two
people were killed at a rally against his arrest earlier this month.
Witnesses said they were protesters who had been shot dead by police,
but the interior ministry denied that there had been any clashes.
The
oil-rich Eastern Province is home to a Shia majority that has long
complained of marginalisation at the hands of the Sunni ruling
family.
Protests
erupted in the region in March 2011 when a popular uprising in
neighbouring Bahrain, which has a Shia majority and a Sunni royal
family, was crushed with the assistance of Saudi and other Gulf
troops
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