India to release 31 Pakistani fishermen

NEW DELHI: India on Thursday announced to release 31 Pakistani fishermen whose nationality has been confirmed by Pakistani authorities.

The fishermen would be repatriated to Pakistan via Attari on January 2.

The release of 19 more Pakistani fishermen, whose nationality has been confirmed by Pakistan, is under process and is expected to materialize in the near future, the Indian Ministry of External Affairs said.

“India hopes that Pakistan will take necessary steps at the earliest to release more than 500 Indian fishermen and over 400 Indian fishing boats still in Pakistan’s custody,” the announcement added.

As a goodwill gesture, Pakistan had already released 100 Indian fishermen. Pakistan expects that India will take steps to release 44 more Pakistani fishermen and over 700 Pakistani prisoners languishing in Indian jails.—APP

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U.S. Nigerians fear stereotyping

CAIRO — America's Nigerian community is haunted by the fear of stereotyping following a botched terror attack by a Nigerian Muslim similar to what happened to Muslims and Arabs after the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

"Profiling? When you look at 9/11 and what happened with the Arabic community, we cannot expect anything different," Joseph Ajiri, a Nigerian-born entrepreneur who lives in Detroit, told The New York Times on Wednesday, December 30.

"It is just unfortunate that one individual is going to ruin reputations for the rest of the Nigerians."

Umar Farouk Muttalab, a 23-year-old Nigerian Muslim, tried to blow up a trans-Atlantic Northwest Airlines plane over Detroit, US, last week.

"It was regretful that he was Nigerian, but that didn’t make us any more angry. We were all very happy that the explosion didn’t take place, that he wasn’t successful," says Ajiri.

The failed plot, claimed by Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, has triggered massive security measures at airports around the world.

"When we travel now, the system will make us pay, and I don’t feel good about it."

Only two days after the foiled attack a Nigerian man aroused the suspicion of fellow passengers, flight attendants and an air marshal for spending a long time in the plane’s lavatory.

He was taken into custody and questions but it eventually turned out he had simply been ill.

Nigerians are the single largest contemporary African immigrant group in the US, far outpacing immigrant groups from Ghana and Liberia.

Since the late 1960s and early 1970s, approximately one million Nigerians have immigrated to the US.

* Not us

The Nigerian community in Michigan, estimated at about 10,000, half of them in Detroit, distanced themselves from the attacker and his violent ideology.

"That’s just crazy ideology," said Kamol Bello, a Detroit resident who is a Nigerian Muslim and has lived in the US for 20 years.

"A truly religious person would not do that."

About 30 local Nigerian leaders met two days after the failed plot to draft a condemnation statement.

"We want to tell Homeland Security and the federal government that we are sorry about what happened," said Edwin Dyke, founder and board member of the Nigerian Foundation of Michigan.

"…this isn’t like our people, that we believe this is an isolated incident but that we will keep our ears open."

Salewa Ola, a Nigerian who founded the Detroit-based United African Community Organization, emphasized the same message.

"We are shocked and embarrassed," she told the NY Times.

"[This is] not what our community stands for. This has given all of us a black eye."

David Wiley, a sociology professor and director of the African Studies Center at Michigan State University, said the incident should not be used to smear Nigerians living in the US.

"Radicals are all over the world now," he said.

"No one is immune from it…and this person could have come from 100 other countries."

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Russia opens far east oil terminal

Russia has opened a new oil export terminal in the far eastern port of Kozmino, a key gateway for Russian energy exports to Asian markets including energy-hungry China.

Vladimir Putin, Russia's prime minister, pressed a button to fill a Russian tanker bound for Hong Kong on Monday, the first official export from the terminal.

"This is a strategic project that will let Russia into new Pacific Asia markets, where Russia was present insufficiently," Putin was quoted as saying by RIA Novosti news agency.

Russia has for a while sought to diversify its energy exports which until now have mainly been bound for Europe.

A 2,964km section of pipeline, also opened on Monday, links Taishet in eastern Siberia with Skovorodino in the Amur region of the Russian far east near the border with China.

A second pipeline section will run another 2,100km from Skovorodino to Kozmino Bay, near Nakhodka on Russia's Pacific coast, where the oil port has been built.

Until its completion the oil will be carried there by rail.

Putin said it cost 60 billion roubles, the equivalent of about $2bn, to build the Kozmino terminal.

Transneft and Chinese oil group CNPC have signed an agreement on the construction of a 67km branch line to China which will initially carry 15 million tonnes of oil a year and is due to become operational next year.

"The pipeline's launch will strengthen Russia's energy security," Nikolai Tokarev, the president of Transneft, said.
Source: Agencies

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The Bubble Decade

It is befitting that Time magazine made Bernard Bernanke, the chairman of the Federal Reserve, the US central bank, as its "Man of the Year" for 2009.

Surely, the decade of 2000-09 will go down in history as the decade of the forming and bursting of one of the biggest financial bubbles ever.

Though this was the decade of 9/11, followed by the US invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq, the economic ups and downs may have put more of a signature on the decade 2000-09 than even those world-altering events.

The decade of 2000-09 began with an economic smarting due to the dissipation of the personal computer-internet boom.

The PC-internet boom was a major technological epoch covering more than the previous decade.

It had brought about high and sustained economic growth to the US and most of the world. But by 2000, not only was the technological epoch over, but the financial bubble that had accompanied the real growth had also burst.

As the US economy was floundering around aimlessly, the only policy issue being talked about was the Bush tax cuts, which once implemented transformed the US government's annual budgets from surpluses to deficits.

And then came 9/11. Wall Street crashed in the ensuing days, and there was a serious concern that the US would go into a downturn.

In response, the Fed [the US federal bank] under Alan Greenspan started creating money at an unusually high rate.

This brought the Fed's lending rate to commercial banks to one per cent and sometimes even below.

The Fed continued to pump money into the banking system for a long period of time, making it one of the longest binges of money creation in it's history.

Where was all this liquidity supposed to go? As mentioned before, there was nothing happening in the real economy once the PC-internet boom was over.

Most of this money found its way into the real estate sector, and by 2003 a real estate boom had begun in the US.
The boom was not driven by construction as it was in China, India and Dubai, but mostly by Americans turning over the existing stock of housing among each other.

This artificial boom was the cause of the financial crisis in the latter part of the decade.

Real growth

However, while financial booms were the order of the day in the US, and as we shall explain below also in western Europe, most of the rest of the world was enjoying real economic growth.

China, which had already achieved 10 per cent growth rates of GDP in the1990s, continued its turbo-charged growth rates into the first decade of the 21st century.

What was really new in this decade was that even India managed to raise its growth rates to about 7-8 per cent per annum.

While South Korea did not have the same high growth rates as China and India(having had its share in the 1990s), it recovered rapidly from the so-called East Asian Financial Crisis of 1998, and established itself as a leading manufacturer of high-end industrial products.

The rest of East and South-East Asia also did very well, with Vietnam achieving high enough growth rates to herald itself as yet another successful newly emerging country from that region.

Even Indonesia, the fourth-most populous country in the world, finally recovered from the east Asian crisis and achieved high growth rates.

In Asia, only Japan stagnated, or worse still, declined.

Good news came from many sources. In fulfillment of our hopes and wishes, sub-Saharan Africa started growing at an average annual rate of 5 per cent, outperforming their population growth rate of 2 per cent.

The Aids situation in Africa started improving thanks to the efforts of many: the WTO; the US and European governments; pharmaceutical companies from not only the West, but also from Brazil and India; private charitable trusts like the Bill Gates and the Clinton foundations; and several others.

Latin America also poised itself for economic "take-off". Brazil, under the new leadership of Lula, laid the foundation for the latest economic miracle - the unfolding of which we are witnessing now, and will most definitely continue into years to come.

The Middle East, especially the oil and natural gas exporting countries, performed remarkably well too. Qatar, for instance, became one of the richest countries in the world.

It also became evident that the Russian economy’s performance was also tied to the price of oil.

The oil-exporting countries were buoyed both by the world-wide real economic growths and also by the financial mania that started from the US financial sector and infected the oil futures markets, resulting in the orgy of speculation which drove the price of a barrel of oil up to $140 in spite of Opec's publicised desire to keep the price of a barrel at $70.

The speculators in the oil futures were the same entities who were betting in the real estate markets - Goldman Sachs, for example.

The insane rise in the price of oil did some real damage to the world economy.

The precipitous rise in the cost of jet fuel bode disasters for many airlines companies.

In the US, this artificial rise in the price of oil put the last nail in the coffin of General Motors, which had mistakenly bet on gas guzzlers like many models of SUVs and the unforgettable "in your face" Hummer.

However, the speculative mania of the last decade took the strongest hold in Dubai. The emirate came to represent the worst aspects of economic activities which took inordinate risks with cheap money.

Regional economic integrations made a lot of news in the last decade. The European Union (EU) kept on expanding in membership, but more importantly, established a common currency - the euro.

The euro was introduced at the beginning of the decade at a denomination at par with the dollar, but can now buy one-and-a-half dollars.

The euro has indeed become a currency on par with the British pound and the Japanese yen for providing the world with an alternative to US dollar.

The EU also introduced free internal movement of labour and capital which integrated the economies of the member countries even more in the last decade - an integration which bore fruit in a strong co-operation between France, Germany, and the United Kingdom that withstood the financial crisis.

Countries like Iceland, which stayed away from the EU on a rationale of "small is beautiful", found out the virtue of being a part of the union when it went bankrupt in 2008.

Multilateral gains

Multilateralism did not do so badly either. Even though the Doha Round has all but collapsed, there were notable achievements in multilateral agreements.

Meeting in Cancun in 2003 under the auspices of the Doha Round, the WTO allowed many poor African countries to import affordable generics to cure Aids by extending waivers to circumvent international patent agreements.

But at the same time, the US and the EU failed to lower agricultural subsidies which they had promised to do by the end of the Uruguay round in 1994.

Four African countries, Benin, Burkina-Fasso, Mali, and Zambia, known as the "Cotton-4", came to symbolise the hardships of the African farmers who could have improved their standards of living under free trade.

But free trade made progress in the past decade, too.

China joined the WTO starting in 2001, and has dramatically changed its policies toward protecting the intellectual property of foreign firms.

The US has formally abolished the massive garment import quota system called the Multi Fiber Agreement.

India has joined the international patenting system, and both Brazil and India have lowered tariffs on industrial goods as they had promised under the Uruguay Round.

Surely the biggest multilateral achievement of the decade is the Copenhagen Accord where the US with the help of BASIC (Brazil, South Africa, India and China) pulled out a victory from the jaws of defeat, or more aptly, something from nothing. A nice way to end the decade!

Saving United States

Lastly, we come to the US where we started.

The financial crisis has caused a deep recession in the US and while there are signs that the recession is bottoming out, by the time the US regains full employment and thereby starts producing its potential GDP, it could be three years all told.

During the same time period China will have grown at a compound rate of 40 per cent!

With all their shenanigans, the financial sector did create the perfect bubble, because when it burst it became clear that it was full of only air.

The Dow Jones was at 10,000 in the year 2000, it is at 10,500 now. The latest news is that housing prices have fallen back to their pre-mania levels. Finally, the hourly wage rate in the US, allowing for inflation, had hardly changed during the last decade.

But getting back to the low levels of unemployment and the higher growth rates of the GDP of 2000 will take some time, and when it does happen we should thank Bernanke, the Fed chairman.

Unlike during the Great Depression when the Fed sat on its hands, it is the activism of the Fed during 2009 which has saved the US.

Adhip Chaudhuri is a professor of international economics at Georgetown University in Washington, DC.
Source: Al Jazeera

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Bangladesh: A Brave Face

Every year, Bangladesh records hundreds of cases of people being attacked with acid.

Hydrochloric and nitric acid used in jewellery workshops across the country is cheap and readily available. But as a weapon, acid is devastating, causing irreparable damage.

Women's groups say that as many as 70 per cent of women suffer sexual and physical violence in Bangladesh.

Earlier this month, it was reported that a 12-year-old girl had acid splashed over her face by a man she refused to marry.

While laws pertaining to the crime have been strengthened in recent years, the Acid Survivors foundation, an NGO, claims that as few as 10 per cent of cases result in jail time for the perpetrator.

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Gunman kills four people in Finnish shopping mall

HELSINKI: Four people were killed when a gunman opened fire at a Finnish shopping mall on Thursday, police said, in the country's third multiple shooting incident in as many years.

A 43-year-old suspect, Ibrahim Shkupolli, was still at large and considered armed and dangerous, they said in a statement.

The victims of the attack, staged in the town of Espoo near Helsinki as shoppers stocked up for the New Year holiday, were three men and a woman, they added.

National newspaper Helsingin Sanomat reported on its website that a fifth victim, which it identified as the suspect's ex-wife, had been found dead in an Espoo apartment.

Finland was rocked by two school shootings in 2007 and 2008, after which it tightened gun control regulations.

A Reuters reporter at the Sello Mall in Espoo saw helicopters overhead and fire trucks around the entrances of the shopping centre, which was now closed.

“When we were going out I heard sounds like shots from the third floor, and then I left,” said a mall employee, who declined to give her name.

“I paid for my groceries and I wanted to go to my car when I was told that you cannot go there,” shopper Jorma Romo told Reuters outside of the mall. “They were hurrying people out and people were asking (why).”

Ilta-Sanomat newspaper said on its website that at least seven shots were fired, but gave no source for the information. -Reuters

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