Daily Archives: June 16, 2017

Could Illinois be the first state to file for bankruptcy? – CBS News

Posted: June 16, 2017 at 3:52 pm

Illinois residents may feel some solidarity with the likes of Puerto Rico and Detroit.

A financial crunch is spiraling into a serious problem for Illinois lawmakers, prompting some observers to wonder if the state might make history by becoming the first to go bankrupt. At the moment, it's impossible for a state to file for bankruptcy protection, which is only afforded to counties and municipalities like Detroit.

Chapter 9 bankruptcy protection could be extended to states if Congress took up the issue, although Stanford Law School professor Michael McConnell noted in an article last year that he believed the precedents are iffy for extending the option to states. Nevertheless, Illinois is in a serious financial pickle, which is why radical options such as bankruptcy are being floated as potential solutions.

Ratings agency Moody's Investor Service earlier this month downgraded Illinois' general obligation bonds to its lowest investment grade rating, citing the state's growing pile of unpaid bills and its mounting pension deficit. Illinois, by the way, has the lowest credit rating of any state. Lower ratings mean higher borrowing costs, since lenders view such borrowers as riskier bets.

"Legislative gridlock has sidetracked efforts not only to address pension needs but also to achieve fiscal balance, allowing a backlog of bills to approach $15 billion, or about 40 percent of the state's operating budget," the agency noted.

As noted by the Fiscal Times, Illinois is the only state that's been operating without a balanced and complete budget for almost two years.

"We're like a banana republic. We can't manage our money," Gov. Bruce Rauner said after the Illinois Legislature failed to produce a full 2017 budget earlier this month.

The situation has prompted comparisons with Puerto Rico, which earlier this year announced a historic restructuring of some of its $70 billion in debt through courts after negotiations with bondholders failed.

Like Puerto Rico, Illinois has a massive pension crisis. Its unfunded pension liability for the state's five major plans grew 25 percent alone in one year, reaching $251 billion, according to Moody's. On a per-household basis, the state's pension debt burden stands at $27,000, according to the conservative-leaning Illinois Policy Institute.

So how did the state's pensions balloon into such a crisis? First, the pension problem has been a long time in the making. The state has more than 660 government pension funds, which are sometimes called defined benefit plans because they promise workers will receive a specific pension when they retire.

But critics say some of those pensions carried overly optimistic assumptions, especially given periods of market turmoil like the global financial crisis, which ate into investment returns. The state's general assembly wasn't required to fully fund pensions, which meant tax money was spent on other priorities such as schools or infrastructure.

The result? Growing unfunded liabilities, or money promised to workers in their pensions when they retire that the state doesn't have. Other contributing factors include inadequate employer contributions and benefit increases, according to the Civic Federation.

Adding to the state's financial pain is a shrinking tax base. For the last three consecutive years, Illinois has lost residents. Its population is now at its lowest in a decade. Tepid wage growth on top of fewer residents puts a strain on the state's ability to grow its tax revenue.

It's not unprecedented for a state to default on its debt. Arkansas defaulted in 1933 as it struggled to repay debt during the the Great Depression. Spending on an ambitious road-building project and a series of natural disasters heightened the Southern state's problems.

Bankruptcy is often seen as a last-ditch effort, but it also can help struggling cities or companies reinvent themselves on a stronger financial footing. Detroit serves an example of how a reorganization can help, at least in the near-term. The city is now paying its bills and is keeping up with maintenance, although it still has a looming pension payment that could spell trouble in just a few years, according to the Detroit Free-Press.

As Michigan Treasurer Nick Khouri told the publication, "We certainly know many people were hurt during the bankruptcy, but what would have been the alternative and how would they have been hurt under the alternative?"

As for Illinois, Rauner on Thursday called state legislators to a 10-day special session starting next week to hammer out a budget deal and end an unprecedented impasse that could soon enter a third year.

The Republican announced the news in a Facebook video and statement, accusing majority Democrats of "ignoring" his recommendations.

"We have tough, urgent choices to make, and the Legislature must be present to make them," he said.

Lawmakers adjourned last month without a deal before a critical May 31 deadline, triggering the need for a three-fifths majority vote instead of a majority on a budget agreement. The new fiscal year begins July 1. Rauner has called for a special session running from June 21 to July 30.

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Could Illinois be the first state to file for bankruptcy? - CBS News

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Takata Shares Suspended Amid Reports of a Bankruptcy Filing – New York Times

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New York Times
Takata Shares Suspended Amid Reports of a Bankruptcy Filing
New York Times
TOKYO The Tokyo Stock Exchange suspended trading in shares of Takata, the beleaguered Japanese airbag maker, on Friday after a Japanese newspaper reported that the company was preparing to file for bankruptcy. Takata's future has been in doubt ...
Takata bankruptcy filings could come next weekCrain's Detroit Business
Airbag Maker Takata Will Reportedly File for BankruptcyNBCNews.com
Air bag maker Takata to file for bankruptcy this month: sourcesReuters
Fortune -Jalopnik -BBC News
all 52 news articles »

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Soup company that inspired Seinfeld’s ‘Soup Nazi’ files for … – CNNMoney

Posted: at 3:52 pm

Soupman, made famous by a beloved Seinfeld episode, filed for bankruptcy this week.

The Chapter 11 filing comes less than a month after Soupman's chief financial officer was arrested and charged with tax evasion.

The bankruptcy was caused by a "combination of legal liabilities and recent company developments," Soupman CEO Jamie Karson said in a statement.

Soupman's soups are made from the recipes of Al Yeganeh, a chef who inspired the angry Seinfeld character known to bark: "No soup for you!" to customers who didn't know what to order when it was their turn at the counter.

But customers don't need to worry about going soup-less. Soupman said its soups will remain on grocery store shelves because the company secured $2 million in financing to keep it afloat during the bankruptcy process.

"We anticipate that there will be no disruption in the quality of our product or service," Karson said.

Related: Seinfeld's "Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee" is heading to Netflix

Staten Island-based Soupman owes up to 100 creditors between $10 million and $50 million, according to the bankruptcy filing in Delaware. The company listed $1 million to $10 million of assets.

Last month, Robert Bertrand, Soupman's chief financial officer, was arrested for allegedly failing to pay nearly $600,000 worth of Medicare, Social Security and federal income taxes.

Bertrand, who denied wrongdoing and pled not guilty, also paid workers unreported cash and stock awards worth $2.8 million between 2010 and 2014, according to the indictment.

While the Soup Nazi was made famous by the 1995 Seinfeld episode, Yeganeh opened his first Manhattan store nearly a decade earlier in 1984. Today, the company sells soup to grocery chains and also at its New York-area restaurants under the brand name "Original Soupman."

CNNMoney (New York) First published June 15, 2017: 11:56 AM ET

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French oil services firm CGG files for bankruptcy | Reuters – Reuters

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PARIS, June 14 French oil services firm CGG said on Wednesday it had filed for bankruptcy in France and the United States as part of financial restructuring to reduce its debt burden.

The company, in which the French state public investment bank Bpifrance Participations owns a 9 percent stake, said the restructuring would eliminate $1.95 billion in debt from its balance sheet.

"CGG will continue normal business operations during this process, and the restructuring transactions will not affect relationships with our clients, business partners, vendors or employees," Chief Executive Jean-Georges Malcor said in a statement.

"We expect that our financial restructuring can move forward quickly to strengthen our balance sheet and to position the company well for the future," he added

With debt in excess of $3 billion, the restructuring could be one of the biggest France has seen in years. It calls for unsecured debt to be converted to equity, maturities on secured debt to be extended and $500 million in new money to be raised.

The company, which specialises in geo-seismic surveys and is listed in Paris and New York, struggled to keep up with payments on its debt as the big oil groups that use its services proved reluctant to lift exploration spending despite rising oil prices. (Reporting by Leigh Thomas; Editing by Bill Rigby)

* Signs contract with Empire State Development Corporation (ESD)and developers Related Companies and Vornado Realty Trust to convert farley post office building into transport hub in NYC, USA.

* U.S. May housing starts weaker than expected * Data compounds doubts over third Fed rate hike in 2017 * Treasuries broadly post weekly declines (Updates prices) By Sam Forgione NEW YORK, June 16 U.S. Treasury yields edged lower on Friday, with all maturities posting weekly declines, after weaker-than-expected U.S. housing data fueled doubts that the Federal Reserve will be able to raise interest rates again this year. U.S. housing starts dropped 5.5 percen

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Prof. Guy Standing: Every country can afford Universal Basic Income … – EURACTIV

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99% of people want to improve their lives. And the UBI wont prevent them from wanting it. So if such projects prevent them from having to do terrible jobs, this is positive, Guy Standing told EURACTIV Poland.

Professor Guy Standing is a professorial research associate at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London and co-president at the Basic Income Earth Network (BIEN).

Standing spoke to EURACTIV.pl Editor-in-Chief Karolina Zbytniewska.

Universal basic income (UBI) means money received unconditionally by everyone in a community. How do we afford such a universal social benefit?

UBI can be justified morally and philosophically, which outweighs any arguments from the field of economic efficiency. It is a matter of eradicating poverty, and more generally of ensuring social justice.

Many liberal economists would argue that at least in Western democracies we live in open, classless and casteless societies, where everyone can rise from rags to riches, as the American dreams slogan goes. It is social justice, theoretically.

However, the truth is that our wealth and income are much more influenced by our parents and older generations than by our own actions. Since so much depends on private inheritance there is a need for a social dividend.

We are not born equal, both in terms of talents and socio-economic background, which determines our situation. But also setting where we develop is determined externally.

And so we move to another fundamental argument for UBI ecological justice. Rich people make money by polluting and depleting natural resources, while poor people and more generally the precariat are the ones who experience this pollution. Taking this into account, UBI would constitute compensation for suffering from profit-making side effects.

Social justice is not the end of positives, however. UBI enhances freedom, which is lacking especially today in the times of ubiquitous control. And the essence of republican freedom is the right to say NO. NO to a humiliating job I dont want. NO to a nasty boss or inhuman conditions. NO to controlling bureaucracy at a social security office.

This is the emancipatory effect of UBI. Not having to humiliate oneself every month to receive unemployment benefit or other social support in situation of poverty.

Theres also the third fundamental advantage of implementing UBI it simply increases human capacity and social capital. The feeling of insecurity diminishes intelligence and its impossible to make rational decisions if you feel insecure. And reversely, the feeling of security increases our mental competence, our general understanding, our tolerance and altruism.

UBI has been now implemented as a pilot project in Finland 2,000 randomly chosen unemployed Finns are receiving 560 euros a month for a 2-year-period since 1 January.

The Finnish experiment does not test UBI.

Because it is not universal but, designed only for the unemployed.

Indeed. And I can already tell the results will be positive it will confirm that it is not necessary to press people to take a job. However, there were and are going on other pilots around the world, much closer to being pure UBI experiments, including three in India. Those programs were so successful that the Indian government is considering UBI implementation on a regular basis. According to the governmental study India can afford it, reverting present subsidies that dont reach the poor today.

Another experiment held in Ontario is also closer to the original idea of UBI, as the sampling method gathers the whole community and measures collective effects. It is very important, as if you give special treatment just to some in a given community, the others brother, uncle, neighbor will come to you for share.

They feel treated unjustly. And its not UBI then, just BI basic income.

This is the case in Finland. But if everyone receives UBI in the community, this imposes a moral pressure on people to act responsibly also on the children. So in my opinion it is important to design pilots as close to the real UBI as possible.

Still the experiment in Finland is a step in the right direction, as it removes the poverty trap, increases security, as well as provides incentive to take low-paid or part-time jobs without any bureaucratic pressure or reducing the benefit. Because under the present-day social security structure the unemployed, the poor are under pressure to do what bureaucrats want.

Is it not so that UBI is not a solution for every culture? In Poland we have one of the lowest levels of social capital in Europe, with minimal public and private trust, which often translates into low social responsibility. Decades of Communism are to blame. So when we see men drinking cheap wine outside a shop theres a tendency to think that alcohol is paid by benefits.

Basic income experiments around the world, whether in South or North America, or in Africa, or in India, or in Japan demonstrate that when people have basic security when they know they will be able to pay their rent and get food they become more responsible, and actually spend less on alcohol, drugs and tobacco.

Such a kind of drunkard lumpenisation you mention has many reasons. It is a symptom of a social illness, of having dealt with failures throughout ones life arriving at the dead-end with no sense of belonging.

They dont drink BECAUSE of benefits. And also giving them benefits without providing help to recover is completely irresponsible, as then those people will collapse indeed. This shop-drinking picture shows that your system is bad that it rejects its own people.

And blames them for effects of this rejection.

Still of course, its impossible to cure everyone with the same medicine. But if it doesnt work on scarce individuals, you dont resign from this medicine penalizing the majority.

In Poland, the present government introduced a Family 500+ program, under which every family receives 500 PLN (120) a month for a child. The condition is that its a family not a single parent. According to market research, it has reduced employment among less educated people, as well as among women aged 35-44. Theres also a rise in passive people who neither work nor look for employment.

Indeed its a controversial program paternalistically imposing conservative Catholic customs. Still, if giving poor people income support leads them to stop doing a job of cleaning public lavatories or doing dangerous works without proper safety measures it is just great. In the long run it may lead to the improvement of employment conditions rising wages, improving job setting, providing training.

You know, 99% of people want to improve their lives. And UBI wont prevent them from wanting it. So if such projects stop them doing terrible jobs, then this is actually a positive outcome. And everyone should ask himself or herself if they would like to do those jobs before criticizing those people or given projects results.

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Late Matanzima celebrated as a visionary- Education, development described as his legacy – Daily dispatch

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Former Transkei homeland leader and Western Thembu king Kaizer Daliwonga Matanzima was praised by senior government leaders and his own children for having left an indelible mark in education, business and agriculture.

Matanzimas life was remembered through song and dance during a colourful commemoration event held at the Qamata Great Place near Cofimvaba yesterday.

The event was organised by the AmaDlomo royal family.

Among those who came to celebrate his life were Eastern Cape premier Phumulo Masualle, AmaXhosa King Mpendulo Sigcawu, representatives of the Eastern Cape House of Traditional Leaders, UDM leader Bantu Holomisa and ANC provincial secretary Oscar Mabuyane.

Matanzima died on June 15 2003, at the age of 88.

Chris Hani district mayor Kholiswa Vimbayo referred to a contemporary buzzphrase when he told the hundreds of people who attended the event that Matanzima had in fact practised radical socio-economic transformation during his tenure as a bantustan leader.

But it was Matanzimas daughter Xoliswa Jozana who took a subtle dig at the current generation of government leaders for failing to build on some of the infrastructure put in place by her father. She said her father was passionate about education and development.

He initiated several agricultural projects as well as construction of the University of Transkei, which later merged with other tertiary institutions to form Walter Sisulu University.

Some of his agricultural projects could have been inherited by the current government, said Jozana.

Regrettably, all those projects were left to collapse.

In hindsight, we should have built on that.

We are now paying the price. Now we are paying millions and millions to revive irrigation schemes.

She said her father had paved the way for black people to own factories and businesses and manage large hotels.

Matanzima believed in having highly skilled people in government positions.

Leaders with that drive tend to be disciplinarian to an extent that they are viewed as authoritarian, added Jozana.

Masualle, on the other hand, boasted that Matanzima had been the first traditional leader to earn a university degree.

He said there was a need to strengthen working relations between traditional leaders and government as both played a pivotal role in the development of communities.

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What Do We Celebrate? – The Runner

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Remembering 150 years of violent colonialism through the erasure of Indigenous peoples Justin Bige, Contributor

Nicole Kwit

Would you celebrate the existence of a culture that claims to own the land that you and your people have lived on for 10 times longer than those who colonized it? How about 100 times? Or 1000?

The first of July this year will mark the 150th anniversary of Canada existing on Native land. Brandon Gabriel from the Kwantlen First Nation calls this anniversary posturing by political parties to frame Canada as devoid of any political or economic structures.

Indigenous Erasure

The Department of Canadian Heritage is contributing $200 million for events to commemorate the 150th anniversary of Canada. The previous government allocated $150 million for infrastructure for these events to be run, and our current government doubled that amount to $300 million, according to a report from Global News. In total, $500 million has been budgeted for events and celebrations to mark the anniversary.

I had no idea there was that much money allocated for the celebrations, says Gabriel. Despite the fact that a portion of the money was set aside for celebrating Indigenous culture, Gabriel says that he hasnt seen that money go back into his community.

[The money for Indigenous people] is really tokenisticthe window dressing to this big celebration, he says. Its an afterthought.

Gabriel believes that Canadas 150 celebration contributes to the erasure of the Canadian governments crimes against First Nations. The event will encourage people to think of a wholesome, whitewashed Canada instead of the Canada responsible for atrocities.

Nobody will say, Im celebrating 150 years of Genocide. They say, Im celebrating 150 years of fur trade, free market capitalism, resettling of the land, says Gabriel.

The 150 celebration is just the latest Canadian effort to ignore the existence of the Indigenous people who have lived on this land for tens of thousands of years, perhaps even longer. One archaeological dig in North America found the bones of mastodons turned into anvils and stone tools an entire 130,000 years ago. Though there was no evidence of human bones, who else could create tools such as this?

What about the discovery of a 14,000-year-old village on Triquet Island, 500 kilometers northwest of Victoria, by UBC anthropology students? And recently, The Vancouver Sun interviewed Paulette Steeves, a Cree-Metis woman who has been digging into the oral histories of Indigenous peoples in North America and discovered that they trace back over 100,000 years.

So what exactly is Canada celebrating with its 150 event? According to Keara Lightning, a 21-year-old activist from Samson Cree Nation, its a manufactured identity for people who have given up their actual backgrounds, who feel lost and have nothing of actual richness and strength to feel proud of.

[Theyre celebrating] the usual stuff: genocide, colonialism, perpetuating the myths of Canada. It all seems self-evident but its really not to most people, says Lightning.

Though the nation continues with its tradition of Indigenous erasure, the province of British Columbia has added one element to their celebration. They call it Canada 150+, hoping that the plus sign is enough to acknowledge thousands of years of Indigenous existence.

Aboriginal Students Representative for the Kwantlen Student Association, Samantha Davis, believes the plus sign used by the province to be a continuation of the colonial institution, which goes against all of this decolonization that they like to tack onto everything that theyre doing.

150 years doesnt cover everything thats happened in so-called Canada. Its been way over 150 years that our peoples have been oppressed, says Davis.

Lightning echoes Davis frustration over the use of the plus sign.

Some of us dont want to be Canadian, she says. To take Indigenous culture and resistance, which are so many years old, and to include Indigenous peoples in that celebration is just insulting.

Celebrating Genocide

Many Canadians see their country as a long-standing refuge for multiculturalism and inclusivity. But most overlook the fact that establishing this nation required the genocide of Indigenous people.

The colonial wars of the fur trade and the germ warfare of smallpox predates the nationhood of Canada by a long shot. Later, to make Indigenous people desperate enough to sign treaties and move to reserves, the early Canadian settlers enacted starvation policies, not allowing the trade of food to their communities. When treaties were signed, the agreements were often about agriculture to recover from the disease and famine that colonialists imposed on them. Instead of honouring the treaties, the government banned communities from using newer farming implements and technology.

Then there are the more recent policies of cultural genocide as noted by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. Much of this began with the Indian Act of 1876, which pushed an assimilationist policy on Indigenous people and forced remaining Indigenous people onto Canadian reserves. Colonial government systems uprooted traditional Indigenous governance structures, replacing them with band councils. To ensure compliance, Indian Agents were dispatched to restrict Indigenous people leaving their own reserves, devastating trade and culturally important journeys.

Lets not forgot the removal of 150,000 Indigenous children from their homes, 6,000 of which died in the Indian Residential School System. These schools were meant to kill the Indian in the child, according to John A. Macdonald, the alcoholic forefather of this 150-year celebration.

Are we celebrating this institutionalization and theft of Indigenous children who were violently abused physically and sexuallywho were beaten for speaking their Indigenous language in institutions where there were graveyards on campus for students to bury their classmates? This system only ended 21 years ago, in 1996.

Of course, there was the strong-arm assimilationist policythe Sixties Scoop of Indigenous children into care in the 1960s up through the 1980s. This affected 20,000 Indigenous children who were taken from their families to be adopted or fostered.

Intergenerational trauma from both grave and despondent acts of genocide is still affecting communities today. The Canadian government has fought every lawsuit over the Residential School System and The Sixties Scoop, and the Conservatives even destroyed evidence of the Residential Schools during the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. Is legal power established through a court system set up on Native land also something that were celebrating?

One of the things that will be celebrated will be the railroad from coast-to-coast, and it will only be the sanitized version of it, says Gabriel. It wont show entire communities that were thrown off their land and waters to make way for this intrusive governing body.

Whats more, these communities were thrown off their land by the marginalization of other groups as well, such as the Chinese railroad workers who dealt with the Chinese head-tax.

Broken Treaties

So what about the treaties? Many talk about the treaties that lent out the land in much of Canada, but what do they mean?

They were comprehensive agreements made between the provincial and federal governments with different Inuit, First Nations, and Metis people that obligated the government to assist them in terms of education, medical services, trade, and economic benefit for and from the land.

Treaty Four, for example, says, The promises we make will be carried out as long as the sun shines above and the water flows in the oceans.

Today, the lack of adherence to these obligations shows in Indigenous communities. The government still neglects their critical infrastructure, causing long-term boil water advisories in 98 reserves and short-term advisories in 28 reserves. Houses are condemned but people are still living in them. Schools are built on contaminated land, and go unused while alternatives are not planned. Suicide crises have impacted reserves from coast-to-coast, especially for Indigenous youth.

In January of last year, The Canadian Human Rights Tribunal found Canada guilty of discriminating against Indigenous children by underfunding reserves. Although Canada continues to do this, the tribunal has no ability to force them to change.

Despite representing less than 10 per cent of the population, Indigenous children account for 62 per cent of the 7,000 children-in-care in B.C.. This happens when Aboriginal agencies are underfunded and running under confusing agreements.

Theres nothing confusing about the need to acquire Free and Prior Informed Consent for resource extraction projects on Indigenous land, as outlined by the United Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples that Canada helped create but failed to adopt. Mining, fish-farming, dam-building, oil fracking, and anything else the resource economy can devour happens across the country, despite opposition from Indigenous peoples. Imperial Metals mine in Mount Polley Secwepemc territory, Site C Dam in Peace River Treaty 8 territory, and Kinder Morgans Trans Mountain expansion have and will continue to be major issues for Indigenous people.

Kinder Morgan has a pipeline running from Alberta through the West Coast and ending in Burnaby. It crosses through traditional unceded Indigenous territories and was built without the consent of many Nations along its path, including Kwantlen First Nation. The expansion of this pipeline will triple its capacity for transport from 300,000 to 890,000 barrels of oil a day.

When it comes to resource extraction, 150 years later, Canada has found its new gold rushes and fur trades to celebrate in the fossil fuel industry.

Dismantling Colonization

So what alternatives are there? What would be a better way to commemorate Canada 150+? For Lightning, the answer is simple.

Dismantle Canada, she says. I dont know what else there is.

If that cant be, the actions she would like to see would be actually stopping extraction projects and giving land back.

Canada is celebrating 150 years, but all of us come from generations and generations of people, she says. Dont come here and call yourself Canadian, because what is that? Dont give up over six generations of who you are for 150+ years.

Gabriel says, Ive come to recognize that I cant seek restitution from the colonizer, and their colonizing ways have no respect for our position. I seek nothing from them. Im not seeking anything from them. One of the things were doing here is starting a hashtag at Kwantlen events which is #Kwantlen12000.

He hopes the message will connect with a wide audience. Thus, he maintains his pride in his community and wants to celebrate excellence within the Kwantlen First Nation instead.

If I were approached tomorrow by Kwantlen youth, as in a young person in our community, and I asked them what we should be doing in our Canada 150 celebrationswe have always been doing it. We have always been protecting our water, our spirituality and culture and we dont need people outside our community to acknowledge that, he says.

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Okinawa base activist describes five months of alleged Japanese … – The Japan Times

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GENEVA A prominent Okinawan activist told the U.N. Human Rights Council on Thursday that the Japanese government has committed clear human rights violations against those opposed to the relocation plan for U.S. Marine Corps Air Base Futenma.

Civilians are protesting the militarization every day. The government of Japan dispatched large police forces in Okinawa to oppress and violently remove those civilians, Hiroji Yamashiro, head of the Okinawa Peace Action Center, said in a speech to the council in Geneva.

Yamashiro, who was detained for five months starting last October for what he and his supporters call minor offenses during base protest activities on Okinawa, said he was forced to confess and give up the protest activity.

These are clear human rights violations by the authorities, he said.

Yamashiro, currently on trial, led a group of protesters who are opposed to the long-delayed Futenma relocation plan, which will shift the base from Ginowan to less populated Henoko, a coastal area of Nago further north.

He was arrested in October for allegedly cutting barbed wire at a U.S. military training area in Higashi and was released on bail in March. During his detention, Yamashiro was not allowed to see anyone except lawyers, not even his family, he said.

However, I and the Okinawan people will never bow to oppression, he said. I demand the government of Japan stop human rights violations, and respect the Okinawan peoples will against the construction of new U.S. and Japanese military bases.

The first arrest was followed by two retroactive arrests that kept him in jail for five months.

Yamashiro and others are suspected of piling some 1,480 blocks in front of the gate to Camp Schwab in January 2016 to prevent the delivery of equipment and materials needed for the relocation work.

He is also suspected of injuring a local defense bureau official by grabbing his shoulder and shaking him last August near the U.S. military training area in Higashi.

The high-profile case prompted human rights groups including Amnesty International Japan to call for Yamashiros immediate release.

The bulk of U.S. military facilities in Japan are situated in Okinawa.

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In Miami, Trump toughens Obama Cuba policy ‘like I promised’ – McClatchy Washington Bureau

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McClatchy Washington Bureau
In Miami, Trump toughens Obama Cuba policy 'like I promised'
McClatchy Washington Bureau
Last year I promised to be a voice against oppression ... and a voice for the freedom of the Cuban people, he said. You heard that pledge. ... To the Cuban government I say, put an end to the abuse of dissidents. Release the political prisoners ...
Donald Trump announces new Cuba restrictions: 'We will not be silenced in the face of communist oppression'The Independent
Trump Addresses Cuba, Warmbier, ScaliseU.S. News & World Report
Trump rolls back Obama admin's Cuba policy: 'Will not be silent in the face of communist oppression'Washington Times
KGMI -Roll Call -Los Angeles Times
all 347 news articles »

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Trump says ‘canceling’ Obama Cuba policy, restricts travel and trade – Reuters

Posted: at 3:51 pm

MIAMI President Donald Trump on Friday ordered tighter restrictions on Americans traveling to Cuba and a clampdown on U.S. business dealings with the Caribbean islands military, saying he was canceling former President Barack Obama's "terrible and misguided deal" with Havana.

Laying out his new Cuba policy in a speech in Miami, Trump signed a presidential directive to roll back parts of Obamas historic opening to the Communist-ruled country after a 2014 diplomatic breakthrough between the two former Cold War foes.

But Trump left in place many of Obamas changes, including the reopened U.S. embassy in Havana, even as he sought to show he was making good on a campaign promise to take a tougher line against Cuba, especially over its human rights record.

"We will not be silent in the face of communist oppression any longer," Trump told a cheering crowd in Miamis Cuban-American enclave of Little Havana, including Republican Senator Marco Rubio of Florida, who helped forge the new restrictions on Cuba.

"Effective immediately, I am canceling the last administration's completely one-sided deal with Cuba," Trump declared as he made a full-throated verbal assault on the government of Cuban President Raul Castro.

Trumps revised approach calls for stricter enforcement of a longtime ban on Americans going to Cuba as tourists, and seeks to prevent U.S. dollars from being used to fund what the Trump administration sees as a repressive military-dominated government.

But facing pressure from U.S. businesses and even some fellow Republicans to avoid turning back the clock completely in relations with Cuba, the president chose to leave intact some of his Democratic predecessor's steps toward normalization.

The new policy bans most U.S. business transactions with the Armed Forces Business Enterprises Group, a Cuban conglomerate involved in all sectors of the economy. But it but makes some exceptions, including for air and sea travel, according to U.S. officials. This will essentially shield American airlines and cruise lines serving the island.

"We do not want U.S. dollars to prop up a military monopoly that exploits and abuses the citizens of Cuba," Trump said, pledging that U.S. sanctions would not be lifted until Cuba frees political prisoners and holds free elections.

SOME OBAMA POLICIES LEFT IN PLACE

However, Trump stopped short of breaking diplomatic relations restored in 2015 after more than five decades of hostilities. He will not cut off recently resumed direct U.S.-Cuba commercial flights or cruise-ship travel, though his more restrictive policy seems certain to dampen new economic ties overall.

The administration, according to one White House official, has no intention of disrupting existing business ventures such as one struck under Obama by Starwood Hotels Inc, which is owned by Marriott International Inc, to manage a historic Havana hotel.

Nor does Trump plan to reinstate limits that Obama lifted on the amount of the islands coveted rum and cigars that Americans can bring home for personal use.

While the changes are far-reaching, they appear to be less sweeping than many U.S. pro-engagement advocates had feared.

Still, it will be the latest attempt by Trump to overturn parts of Obama's presidential legacy. He has already pulled the United States out of a major international climate treaty and is trying to scrap his predecessor's landmark healthcare program.

When Obama announced the detente in 2014, he said that decades of U.S. efforts to achieve change in Cuba by isolating the island had failed and it was time to try a new approach.

Critics of the rapprochement said Obama was giving too much away without extracting concessions from the Cuban government. Castro's government has clearly stated it does not intend to change its one-party political system.

Trump aides say Obamas efforts amounted to "appeasement" and have done nothing to advance political freedoms in Cuba, while benefiting the Cuban government financially.

"It's hard to think of a policy that makes less sense than the prior administration's terrible and misguided deal with the Castro regime," Trump said in Miami, citing the lack of human rights concessions from Cuba in the detente negotiated by Obama.

International human rights groups say, however, that again isolating the island could worsen the situation by empowering Cuban hard-liners. The Cuban government has made clear it will not be pressured into reforms in exchange for engagement.

The Cuban government had no immediate comment, but ordinary Cubans said they were crestfallen to be returning to an era of frostier relations with the United States with potential economic fallout for them.

"It's going to really hurt me because the majority of my clients are from the United States," said Enrique Montoto, 61, who rents rooms on U.S. online home-rental marketplace Airbnb, which expanded into Cuba in 2015.

Trump announced his new approach at the Manuel Artime Theater in Little Havana, the heart of the United States' Cuban-American and Cuban exile community. The venue is named after a leader of the failed U.S.-backed Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba in 1961 against Fidel Castros revolutionary government.

(Graphics: Boom or bust for Cuban tourism click tmsnrt.rs/2rBfMTI)

(Additional reporting by Matt Spetalnick, Lesley Wroughton and Patricia Zengerle in Washington, and Sarah Marsh and Marc Frank in Havana; writing by Matt Spetalnick; Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe and Jonathan Oatis)

MOSCOW/BAGHDAD Moscow said on Friday its forces may have killed Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi in an air strike in Syria last month, but Washington said it could not corroborate the death and Western and Iraqi officials were skeptical.

LONDON/DUBLIN Britain is likely to enter arduous talks on its exit from the European Union without a deal to keep Prime Minister Theresa May in power as negotiations with a Northern Irish "kingmaker" party grind into a second week.

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Trump says 'canceling' Obama Cuba policy, restricts travel and trade - Reuters

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