Friday 3 April 2015

Iran intends to carry out the agreements reached in Lausanne

Photo: Iran intends to carry out the agreements reached in Lausanne - President / Politics
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani confirmed the country's intention to carry out the agreements reached with the "six" in Lausanne, reports RIA Novosti .
"Now I want to say that Iran intends to fully adhere to the agreements reached. The world must know that we are not going to cheat, we intend to fulfill all its promises," - said Rouhani on state television.
In this case, Rohani added that "Iran will fulfill the promises, if the other party (the agreement) will fulfill them", otherwise, will be possible "different way."
According to the agreement reached on April 2 in Lausanne between the "six" of international mediators and Iran, two-thirds of Iran's uranium enrichment will be suspended for ten years.In addition, Iran is obliged to supply all of its uranium enrichment program under international supervision for a period of 25 years.
Preparation of an agreement on the Iranian nuclear program, the parties intend to be completed by June 30th. EU agrees to terminate the sanctions against Iran in the fulfillment of the agreements reached. The US said that sanctions against Iran will be removed as the implementation of commitments.

Thursday 2 April 2015

Texas Cop in the DOGG House for taking picture with Snoop Dogg


Texas Cop Forced Into Counseling for Taking Instagram Photo With Snoop Dogg

snoop-trooper
Some people don’t care for rap music, but the Texas Department of Public Safety apparently hates it so much that they disciplined a state trooper last week for nothing more than standing next to Snoop Dogg in a photograph. 
The famous rap artist was in Austin for the South by Southwest music conference when he stopped a Texas State Trooper to ask for a quick Instagram photo with him. The trooper obliged him, even though he later claimed he didn't know anything about the man who approached him, other than that he was a famous musician.

Many Dead, Hostages Taken as Gunmen Attack Kenyan University




Fourteen are Dead with Hostages Taken as Gunmen Attack Kenyan University Thursday morning at the Garissa University College in Kenya firing at security forces for several hours.Campus with 815 students, But only 280 were accounted for roughly 9 hours following the attack, with scores wounded. The Kenyan Red Cross stated that 50 of the hostages had been freed though the actual number of students taken is still unknown.

Monday 30 March 2015

Russia prepares to respond to the US "strategy retreat"


Russian Security Council behind closed doors to President Putin presented their assessments and recommendations regarding the new US national security strategy. 

The conclusions are as follows: Its all an anti Russian smear campaign, Russia's US strategy paid a lot of attention to this, but it can also be called "exit strategy."

Russian Security Council believes that the US National Security Strategy of February 2015 "is directed against Russia."

 It 'also focus on continued US engagement with European allies for the purpose of political and economic isolation of Russia for its "interference in the affairs of Ukraine." President's press secretary, Dmitry Peskov, in turn, said that "all threats to Russia's national security will be considered and dealt with, and, if necessary, be amended in the founding documents."

This is not a delayed reaction, as one would think in a temper.

The main innovation of the US strategy - moving large share of the responsibility for what is happening in the world on the shoulders of the Allies. It's a neat move, which is conveniently combined with the election campaign. Earlier.

Barack Obama has been criticized for the "old" strategy in 2010 from the right ( the conservative camp) and left.

Republicans have reproached the president for a serious reduction in the military budget, which could, in their view, lead to the loss of US leadership not only in the production of arms, but in some elements of the military strategy.

Obama's response was quite clever: he proposed to shift some of the costs of military allies, especially in Europe, and the pre-accusing them of "lack of contribution" to the overall defenses. The military budget remains at a reduced level, but a moral responsibility to the White House like as withdrawn.


The events in Ukraine split the nationalist organizations in Russia


The Russian nationalist movement split in connection with the events in Ukraine.

Deputy Chief of the Ministry of Internal Affairs to combat extremism of Russia - Vladimir Makarov.

"In the Russian nationalist movement have seen splits in relation to the events in Ukraine," - he said at a meeting of the Council under the President of Russia in the development of civil society and human rights.

So, according to him, some went to participate in the fighting on the side of the Ukrainian nationalist battalions, others support the Donetsk and Lugansk.

According to the representative of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, adopted measures to prevent the exit of the Ukraine representatives of Russian nationalist organizations.

In Russia, he said, for the last three years reduced the number of extremist crimes of a violent nature from the nationalist organizations. "For three years failed to prosecute prominent nationalist ideologues and leaders of the autonomous pro-fascist groups to carry out attacks," - said Makarov.


In February, a report by the Moscow Bureau for Human Rights reported that the activity of the nationalists in Russia in 2014 decreased .

 Some of the nationalists supported the annexation of the Crimea and the "Russian Spring" in the Donbass, others were opposed to the "Russian Spring" and interpret Square as anti-criminal and anti-corruption protest, human rights activists explained. In their view, such a split minimize the potential for the nationalist movement as a whole. This was evident in the scale of mass actions in 2014, which were smaller in scale compared to the previous year.

OSCE found under Volnovaha unaccounted artillery APU


This is a direct violation of the Minsk agreements.

Found were Volnovaha artillery units of the Armed Forces of Ukraine.This was reported in the mission report, published on the website of the organization.
According to the document, five divisional self-propelled howitzers "MSTA-S" were not declared by the Ukrainian side. This is a direct violation of Minsk agreements.
Noted that, according to Ming agreements APU and militias must provide information about the number and location of ALL pieces of equipment, without exception. 
The responsibility for the control of this process are assigned to the OSCE.

The stock market is rigged


When I started making that claim years ago — and provided solid evidence — people scoffed. Some called it a conspiracy theory, tinfoil hats and that sort of stuff. Most people just ignored me.
But that’s not happening anymore. The dirty secret is out.
With stock prices rushing far ahead of economic reality over the last six or so years, more experts in the financial markets are coming to the same conclusion — even if they don’t fully understand how it’s being rigged or the consequences.
Ed Yardeni, a longtime Wall Street guru who isn’t one of the clowns of the bunch, said flat out last week that the market was being propped up. “These markets are all rigged, and I don’t say that critically. I just say that factually,” he asserted on CNBC.
Yardeni’s claim is the most basic one: that the Federal Reserve won’t do anything that will upset Wall Street and, in fact, is doing all it can to help the stock market.
But there are other recent claims that come closer to the bull’s-eye, even if the archers don’t quite see what they are hitting.
The Wall Street Journal carried an intriguing story on March 11 about how the Bank of Japan was “aggressively purchasing stock funds.” (The Journal is owned by News Corp., the parent of The Post.)
“By directly underpinning the market, [Bank of Japan] officials have tried to encourage private investors to follow suit and put more money in stocks in the hope of stimulating the economy and increasing inflation,” read the report with a Tokyo dateline.
That’s called rigging the market for a higher purpose, or hoping people who can afford to invest in stocks will make lots of money and spend it. The benefits, Japan’s central bank believes, will then trickle down to the rest of the economy.
The Journal provided lots of details that I won’t get into here. But the paper also presumed that all these central bank stock purchases were being done on the Tokyo market and that only the shares of Japanese companies were being rigged.
That’s not necessarily the case. The Bank of Japan — and other central bankers around the world — could easily be purchasing shares of American companies to help out the US stock market.
And Japan could even be doing it with the blessing of Washington, which is afraid any direct intervention in equities on its part would be discovered by nosy people like me.
Last fall, we learned that one American exchange has made intervention in — rigging — foreign governments easier and cheaper to accomplish. In October, it emerged that CME Group, the Chicago exchange that trades options and commodities, had an incentive program under which foreign central banks could buy stock market derivatives like the Standard & Poor’s futures contracts at a discount.
As I’ve reported many times, S&P futures contracts are the vehicle of choice for rigging the market. They are a cheap and very powerful way to cause an artificial buying frenzy.
After the market’s sizeable drop on Wednesday — the Dow alone lost 292.60 points — be on the lookout today for aggressive S&P futures buying today. It could start in Asia or Europe, but it almost always occurs.
Foreign central banks, of course, really don’t need a discount to buy S&P futures contracts. That’s like billionaires clipping cents-off coupons. But what the CME’s discount tells us is that the Bank of Japan and other central banks are probably already customers.
So the rigging of US stock markets by foreign entities has likely been going on for some time.
Has the US ever directly rigged the stock market? I’m sure it has. The sloppiest attempt seems to have occurred in 2008 during the financial crisis, when Washington was sure our whole financial system was toppling.
Phone logs that I received showed numerous calls between Treasury secretary Hank Paulson and Wall Street banks — Goldman Sachs, in particular — that seemed to coincide nicely with stock market rallies.
Unlike the Bank of Japan, Washington would have been coy about rigging the stock market and probably would have used proxies. The New York Federal Reserve Bank, for instance, would wink and nod at its favorite banks, and trades that turn the stock market upward would suddenly be made.
There’s another kind of market rigging that is also going on. This is being done by companies themselves.
Since corporate profits and revenues aren’t growing enough to justify current high stock prices, companies have been aggressively buying back massive quantities of their own shares.
By doing this, companies reduce the number of their shares owned by the public. This accounting trick boosts the calculation of profit-per-shares because the numerator of the equation (earnings) remains the same while the denominator (outstanding shares) is reduced.
Okay, so the markets are rigged. Basically everyone now agrees on that. But should we care?
America was built on capitalism and free and fair markets. Today’s markets aren’t fair. In fact, they are unfair because they are putting lots of money into the pockets of a small number of Americans.
The bigger problem is this: If stock prices are artificially inflated, nobody can tell what a company is really worth. And banks are going to be hesitant to lend money to companies with fuzzy valuations.

Sunday 29 March 2015

Smart meter scheme could be IT disaster, says IoD



Smart meter
Nearly 1.4 million UK households have already had a smart meter fitted
The government's smart meter scheme could be an "IT disaster", the Institute of Directors (IoD) has said.
The risks involved with "the largest UK government-run IT project in history" were "staggering", a report said.
It recommended that the government drastically scale back the programme or abandon it altogether.
Smart Energy GB, the independent body set up to publicise smart meters, said the IoD wanted to take the UK "back to an analogue dark age".
Energy-saving digital smart meters, designed to replace existing analogue gas and electricity meters, should help householders to monitor their energy-use far more accurately, and energy companies to do away with estimated bills.

'Technological innovation'

By some estimates, the new meters could save us £17bn on our energy bills.
But the IoD believes the government's plan to roll out smart meters to all 30 million UK households by 2020 is far too ambitious.
"The pace of technological innovation may well leave the current generation of meters behind and leave consumers in a cycle of installation, de-installation and re-installation," it said.
Under the scheme, energy companies must begin offering free smart meters to their customers from the autumn. Despite the £11bn estimated cost to the industry, it will not be compulsory to have one.
Responding to the IoD report, Sacha Deshmukh, chief executive of Smart Energy GB, said: "The IoD does not understand what's needed to secure Britain's energy infrastructure for the future.
"The smart meter rollout must be for everybody. It will only deliver the national transformation Britain needs if every home is part of this national upgrade."
Nearly 1.4 million households have already had a smart meter installed, he added.

Costly mistake?

But the IoD isn't the only body concerned about the smart meter programme.
Earlier this month, the Parliament's Energy and Climate Change Committee said the project was in danger of becoming a costly mistake.
The MPs are concerned that allowing each energy company to come up with its own smart meter solution, rather than adopting an industry-wide approach, could lead to inefficiency and further delay.