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Tuesday, November 24, 2015

Hatton Garden Gang 'Buried Loot In Cemetery'


Valuables worth £14m, including jewels and gold, were taken from Hatton Garden Safe Deposit boxes in London's jewellery quarter on 5 April, in what prosecutors described as the "largest burglary in English legal history".
The gang stashed the jewellery, money and gold behind skirting boards, at houses and in several bags hidden under memorial stones at Edmonton Cemetery in north London, Woolwich Crown Court heard.
Among the items were ruby and emerald rings worth £15,000 each, Breitling, Omega, Tag Heuer and Rolex watches and three holdalls stuffed with a "vast quantity" of jewels including sapphires and diamonds.
Carl Wood, 58, of Cheshunt, Hertfordshire; William Lincoln, 60, of Bethnal Green, east London; and Jon Harbinson, 42, of Benfleet, Essex, are charged with conspiracy to commit burglary between 17 May 2014 and 7.30am on 5 April this year.
Hugh Doyle, 48, of Riverside Gardens, Enfield, north London, is jointly charged with them on one count of conspiracy to conceal, convert or transfer criminal property between 1 January and 19 May this year.
He also faces an alternative charge of concealing, converting or transferring criminal property between 1 April and 19 May this year.
Four other men - John Collins, 75, of Islington; Daniel Jones, 58, of Enfield; Terry Perkins, 67, of Enfield; and Brian Reader, 76, of Dartford - are described as the ringleaders and have all pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit burglary.
The jury of six men and six women heard that the gang initially tried to commit the burglary on 2 April, arriving in a white van and unloading their equipment.
Prosecutors say they used walkie talkies to communicate and, once inside, reached the basement via the lift shaft, disabled the alarm and drilled into the vault wall using a drill they had brought.
They failed to get into the vault on the first night and Reader, dubbed the Master, bailed out after that, the court was told.
On the second attempt, Wood was said to have lost his nerve and walked away before the thieves ransacked 73 of the 999 safe deposit boxes in the early hours of 5 April.
They then allegedly used wheelie bins to carry away the proceeds, struggling to move them because of the weight.
Police surveillance is later said to have heard Jones boast that the theft was "the biggest cash robbery in history" and Perkins saying the gold would be his retirement fund.
On 19 May, Harbinson took the loot in his taxi to a car park next to a pub in Enfield but police swooped soon after the gang arrived, the jury was told.
Police later dug up two bags of jewellery under the memorial stone for the grandfather of Jones's children in Edmonton Cemetery.
Jones took police to the same cemetery later and showed them another plot where they uncovered a smaller bag of stolen gold and jewels.
But prosecutor Philip Evans told jurors that Jones had kept the existence of another stash secret from the police, hoping he could keep that for his own use later.
The trial continues.

Russia suspends military cooperation with Turkey

Russia's defence ministry has announced suspension of military cooperation with Turkey and Sergey Lavrov, foreign minister, has cancelled a planned trip to Turkey following the downing of a Russian warplane near the Turkey-Syria border on Tuesday.
The Russian Sukhoi Su-24 warplane was  shot down  for violating Turkish airspace, angering Russia's President Vladimir Putin, who compared the incident to being "stabbed in the back".
Russia also warned its citizens not to travel to Turkey, saying it was unsafe, and deployed a warship to the coastline near where the plane crashed.
The plane crashed in Syrian territory in Latakia's Yamadi village.
Russia has confirmed one of the pilots has died.
A Russian helicopter was also shot at as it took part in the search for the two pilots near the Turkish-Syrian border, opposition groups in Syria said.
Turkey, Russia and their respective allies have entered a war of words after the incident, raising tensions in a region struggling to cope with the ongoing Syrian conflict.
Putin sharply criticised Turkey for establishing contact with NATO to discuss the incident, prior to contacting Russia.
"Today's loss is linked to a stab in the back delivered to us by accomplices of terrorists. I cannot qualify what happened today as anything else," Putin said in televised comments.
"Our plane was shot down over the territory of Syria by an air-to-air missile from a Turkish F-16 jet. It fell in Syrian territory four kilometres from the border with Turkey. Our pilots and our plane did not in any way threaten Turkey.
"Instead of immediately establishing contacts with us, as far as we know Turkey turned to its NATO partners to discuss this incident - as if we had hit their plane and not the other way around," he said.
Russia has been carrying out air strikes in Syria since September, saying it is targeting ISIL and al-Nusra Front.
The Syrian opposition and Western powers, however, say the Russian strikes have mainly targeted rebel groups fighting the Syrian government - an ally of Russia.
Ahmet Davutoglu, Turkey's prime minister, said Turkey had a duty to act against anyone violating its borders.
"Everyone must know that it is our international right and national duty to take any measure against whoever violates our air or land borders," he said in Ankara.
"Turkey will not hesitate to take all steps to protect the country's security."
The US also backed Turkey's right to defend its territory.
President Barack Obama said while the US did not have enough information to form conclusions about the incident, similar confrontations could be avoided if Russia stopped attacking "moderate" Syrian rebels who are battling forces loyal to the government of President Bashar al-Assad.
"This points to an ongoing problem with the Russian operations in the sense that they are operating very close to a Turkish border and they are going after moderate opposition that are supported by not only Turkey but a wide range of countries," Obama said.
Meanwhile, the Syrian government backed its key ally Russia, with a military official telling the state SANA news agency that by shooting down the Russian plane, Turkey had committed "a gross violation of Syrian sovereignty".
"The desperate acts of aggression will only increase our determination to continue the war against the terrorist organisations with the support and help of Syria's friends, mainly Russia," the official said.
A major point of contention is whether the Russian jet crossed into Turkish airspace, with the two nations releasing their own satellite images showing conflicting views of the jet's final flight path.
A Turkish military statement said the plane violated Turkish airspace in Hatay province and was warned "10 times in five minutes" before being shot down at 9:24am local time.
A US official told Al Jazeera that the penetration of Turkish airspace by the Russian jet lasted "only a matter of seconds" as it crossed a roughly 3km wide section of Turkey that took only 20 seconds to traverse. 
Russia, however, vehemently denied that its plane ever crossed into Turkish airspace.


Cash For Homes Despite Osborne Planning Cuts

The Chancellor will announce plans to build 400,000 new homes in England, claiming it will be the "biggest affordable house building programme since the 1970s".
In his Autumn Statement in the Commons, he will say: "In the end, spending reviews like this come down to choices about what your priorities are. And I am clear: in this spending review, we choose housing. Above all, we choose homes that people can buy.
"For there is a crisis of home ownership in our country."
The housing blueprint was foreshadowed by the Prime Minister in his Tory conference speech when he spoke of turning "generation rent into generation buy".
Many of his announcements, which follow a slump in house building in the past five years, have been trailed by the Chancellor before.
But the Autumn Statement and Spending Review will also detail some of the deepest cuts to public spending in years.
Some area are protected - these include health, schools, defence and international aid.
But the Chancellor has said he is looking to make £20bn cuts from spending and £12bn from welfare.
Police chiefs in England and Wales are bracing for cuts of up to 25% and have warned the attacks in Paris should force the Chancellor to think again.
Other areas where cuts are expected to hit include mental health and disability services, and programmes for people with drug and alcohol addiction as well as transport, environment and prisons.
It all comes as Mr Osborne aims to meet his commitment to balance the nation's books in five years.

Watches Are Bad Investments

There’s a tendency for people to refer to expensive purchases as investments. “I’m going to invest in a new TV,” someone might say. Yet televisions hold their value about as well as a Cosmo Kramer business idea holds oil. Televisions are not investments. Neither is a phone or a car, unless it’s a rare vintage one that will be kept in a garage and never touched. 
Clearly, pretty much anything with a technological expiration date is a bad financial investment. This is why many skeptics have voiced concerns about the priciest Apple Watches–because it makes little sense to drop thousands of dollars on a gadget-fashion piece that will be outdated and lose value as time passes.
But what about mechanicalwatches? You know, the ones that don’t use electricity and are technologically static, immune from cutting-edge developments? People don’t buy mechanical watches for hi-tech features, so they’re not at risk of becoming obsolete.
Like wine, art, or other hard assets like diamonds, gold, and real estate, people sometimes do refer to watches as “investments” without completely misusing the word. And yet it would be silly to view a watch, or a collection of watches, as a core component of your investment portfolio.
“Don’t think about them as financial investments,” says Ariel Adams, the founder of ABlogtoWatch.com, a prominent horology website. “Buying low and selling high doesn’t typically work so well in the watch world.” 
A large part of the reason, Adams says, is the fickle and emotional nature of the watch market. A single collector alone has the power to influence the tastes, trends, and values of the entire market. Pop culture plays a role too: There’s no doubt that James Bond propelled Rolex even higher when it debuted on Sean Connery’s wrist in Dr. No. Essentially, it’s really hard to predict where the market will go, even where tried-and-true marques are concerned, which makes watches troublesome as investment fodder.
Stephen Pulvirent, who writes about watches for Bloomberg, agrees: “If you’re looking for an easy, safe, blue-chip investment, put your money into a mutual fund.”
Part of this is because the ultra-high-rolling watch world may also be in the midst of a bit of a bubble, according to Adams, who points to the huge watch auctions that are reminiscent of the art world. But in the more down-to-earth watch market ($4,000-8000), the growth feels more meaningful. 
“Vintage collecting has always been big, but in the last five years, it’s exploded,” says Paul Altieri, awatch expert and CEO of leading pre-owned and vintage Rolex dealer Bob’s Watches. Elbow-deep in that market every day for years, he’s noted bubble-like growth (20% in the past two years; 50% in the past four), but he attributes it to the Internet and social media, which has jumpstarted global interest in watches. To him, that boom was just the world catching up.
So what watches best hold their value?
Certain relatively attainable ($4,000-$9000) watches are known to hold their value extremely well—even appreciating in some cases. Interestingly, they’re almost all made by Rolex. “I hate to say it, but in this price range, vintage Rolex—and now vintage Tudor, ‘the working man’s Rolex’—are the best game in town if you’re looking for an investment-grade piece that doesn’t have to sit in the safe,” says Adam Craniotes, a watch writer, collector, and founder of Red Bar, a group of watch aficionados.
Everybody seems to agree on this. “Along with Patek Philippe [a brand typically outside of this price range], it’s the only brand that is able to maintain the high resale value with the majority of its products,” says Adams. “Rolex has spent decades creating the marketing image that a Rolex watch is a sign of success—it also happens to be a good watch.”
Rolex’s dominance on the second-hand market is the reason why Altieri structures his whole business around a single brand. According to Altieri, “They’ve held their value the best. 90% of what Bob’s Watches does is Rolex. They dominate the new market and the old market.”
Not all Rolexes mature equally, however.
“In general the watches that have done the best over time have been the sport watches: The GMT, the Submariner, and the Daytona,” says Altieri, who chalks this up to the more casual nature of a watch designed for a job or use, not a formal occasion. 
One of the reasons for Rolex’s success in value retention, according to Adams, is that it has kept the product line small, enabling many of these watches to become household names. Omega, in comparison, does okay on the second-hand market, but has hurt itself by peppering the field with so many different models over the years.
How to at least break even on a watch as an investment
While you shouldn’t count on a watch to produce a solid ROI, you can do a few things besides just getting a Rolex to give yourself the best chance at making a profit in 10 or 20 years.
One option is going vintage. So when does a watch become vintage and not merely “pre-owned”? According to Altieri, the line is a little blurry: “After 20 or 30 years it starts to appreciate gradually in value—that’s what’s happened to almost all Rolex watches. So we’re starting to see the 16800 become collectible. That’s the last Submariner made before the current one now.”
As for why vintage models are most likely to keep going up in value, well, the limited supply is key. “They’re not making any more old watches,” says Altieri. “They’ve only made so many 5512s, one of the first Submariners with a crown guard, and there’s a finite amount of those left and every year more and more die off.”
The other advantage of vintage, says Adams, is increased visibility of the market. “You already know everything which happens with that product, you know the demand, how well they’ve aged, the competition. You can look back on a watch and see its complete history and make a conclusion. You know generally how it’s held up. With new stuff you never know.”
Watches that fall into the “pre-owned” category—anything that’s not new, yet not considered vintage yet—are far more affordable, and they can often represent good deals for someone who wants a high-quality model to wear for the long haul. Much like a car, a new $10,000 Rolex driven off the lot is suddenly worth about half, considering the dealer probably paid $6,000 for it. On the pre-owned market, you may be able to acquire the same watch for a heavy discount of 20% or more off the original price, giving you a smaller target to hit if your goal is to break even in the future. 
The real reason you should buy a luxury watch
While the world of watches is unapologetically aware of value, money, and prestige, almost everyone in the industry—and everyone interview by Money—agreed on one thing: Buying one should be about your enjoyment of the watch itself, not the possibility of getting a return on your investment. Above all, it’s piece of jewelry you wear, something emotional and personal, not something soulless like an index fund or cache of bullion.
“I always tell people to buy something they like, not something for an investment,” says Altieri. “It’s not a bar of gold, you get to enjoy and wear it.”
“People should buy watches they want to wear,” agrees Adams. “Don’t ever get a watch that’s just going to sit somewhere.”

Reports: Russian Jet Shot In Syrian Airspace

A US official told the Reuters news agency, speaking on condition of anonymity, that the assessment was based on detection of the heat signature of the jet.
It comes as  Barack Obama and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan discussed the need to contain escalating tensions with Russia over the incident which has triggered a major diplomatic confrontation.
Turkish officials said two Russian planes approached the Turkish border and were warned before one of them was shot down, adding their information shows Turkish airspace was repeatedly violated.
NATO said the incursion into Turkish airspace lasted 17 seconds, but Moscow claims its plane was over Syria when it was hit.
Russia has also claimed one of the aircraft's pilots was killed by gunfire from the ground as he parachuted from the plane.
But a Turkish official has claimed the two pilots are still alive and is working to secure their release from Syrian rebels.
Russia's president Vladimir Putin said the jet "did not in any way threaten Turkey" and the incident will have "serious consequences" for relations between the two countries.
A Russian soldier was also killed while searching for the pilots after his helicopter was shot at in Syria, the Russian military said.
Sky News Foreign Affairs Editor Sam Kiley said claims the pilots are still alive "is in direct contradiction with what the Turkish-speaking rebels on the ground have said".
"This may be good news for the families if they have survived - but we have seen published videos of what appears to be the bodies of two different men ... I think the assumption remains (they are dead) and that the Turks might be a little bit behind with their information," he said.
The downing of the jet is the first time a NATO member's armed forces have shot down a Russian or Soviet military aircraft since the 1950s.

Amazon turns N.Y. subway into Nazi train

“What if the Nazis won World War II?” That’s the premise of a new Amazon Prime show, but an ad campaign to promote it is backfiring with some New York subway riders.

To promote “The Man in the High Castle” — which envisions an alternate history of the United States occupied by Axis powers — the retail behemoth wrapped New York subway cars and outfitted their interiors in a décor that mixes the stars and stripes with symbols of the Third Reich and Imperial Japan, such as the Iron Cross and the Rising Sun. (They did, wisely, forgo using a swastika.)

The ads caught New Yorkers’ eyes, all right. But they also outraged some riders, the New York Post reported. The Anti-Defamation League’s New York chapter issued a statement criticizing the ad campaign as tone deaf but acknowledging that it was within First Amendment protections.

“This ad campaign has a feel of exploiting things that are so sensitive to so many people,” Evan Bernstein, New York regional director for the Anti-Defamation League, said in a written statement. “We’re not saying that people don’t have a right to express themselves. We’re just saying that it has a level of insensitivity. We would hope that the people who distributed it will think twice about putting these symbols on more public transportation.”

Bernstein said part of the problem is that the ads just come at you, without context. The show is an adventure in alternative history, and it’s based on a story by Philip K. Dick, the futuristic writer whose tales also formed the basis of “Bladerunner,” “Total Recall,” “Minority Report” and other science fiction movies. But the ads conjure too much history for some. (NOTE: Amazon chief executive Jeff Bezos owns The Washington Post.)

“On the television program, which explains this is the notion of an America controlled by Hitler, you get that context,” Bernstein says. “On the train, seeing the American flag paired with a Nazi symbol is viscerally offensive, because there is no context as to what it means. The fact that the flag is spread across the seats only compounds the effect.”

The Metropolitan Transportation Authority, which oversees subway and rail lines in the greater New York metro area, found that the ads were within the bounds of its commercial advertising guidelines.

“The ads do not violate our content-neutral ad standards  ‎and thus we have no grounds to reject them,” MTA spokesman Kevin Ortiz said in an e-mail. “The MTA is a government agency and can’t accept or reject ads based on how we feel about them; we have to follow the standards approved by our board. Please note they’re commercial ads — they promote an original Amazon TV series, an alternative history show, based on a Philip K. Dick story.”

The campaign with wrapped subway cars started Nov. 15 and runs through Dec. 14 on the 42nd Street crosstown shuttle. Ortiz said 260 subway station posters have been up since Nov. 9 and will be in stations until Dec. 6. He declined to say how much Amazon laid out for the campaign.

We have a call in to Amazon’s press office. We’ll update when we learn more.


COP21: Malawi's battle to hold on to forests

In a one-room house in rural Malawi, the little face of six-year-old Rachel is framed in a soft white halo.
On a bamboo mat lies a maths book alongside a bundle of fine twigs that she shuffles to help her arithmetic.
The rest of the village is in total darkness but thanks to the lamp - bought with the help of UK government aid - Rachel’s school grades are improving now she can study at home.
In a nearby village, solar panels on a school roof - donated by the Scottish government - have improved results, as well as providing an extra income source from charging phones and car batteries.
“Please thank people in Scotland,” the head teacher asks me. “Thanks to the solar panel we even had one pupil go to national school.”
But these are rare examples of electricity in rural Malawi. This is one of the world’s poorest countries. Just 10% of people are on the grid. And around 90% of power is produced by hydro-electric stations, which are beset by erratic rains caused - Malawian meteorologists say - by climate change.
Malawi’s own greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuels are minuscule. But the nation has one of the highest deforestation rates in the world as people desperate for fuelwood hack into the once-rich forests.
Deforestation reduces the ability of forests to soak up CO2. It also loosens soil, which then releases carbon dioxide.
What’s more, in heavy rains, the loosened soil cascades down the hills. This means aquifers don’t get replenished, rivers burst their banks, and silt and branches clog up the hydropower plants.
Escom, the body that owns the hydro dams, says reservoir capacity has been reduced by two thirds as a result of siltation from forest felling. There are constant black-outs for the few people and businesses who have grid electricity at all.
So what’s Malawi’s answer to its climate and energy crisis? Well, it is bidding to build two coal-fired power stations. Its politicians realise these will swell the global emissions which are already cranking up temperatures, but they say Malawi needs the power for development. Its emissions up to 2040 are projected to increase by 38%.
Coal, they say, is the least bad option because it offers the opportunity for the country to address deforestation.
Malawi, like most other nations has submitted its pledge on energy and climate (known as an INDC) to the United Nations. It has offered to reforest its hills, expand the use of clean cookstoves and get more solar energy – conditional on help from rich nations as part of the Paris deal.
But no-one should underestimate the scale of Malawi’s challenge. The water catchment above the capital Lilongwe is under such severe assault from wood-cutters that the Army is on stand-by.
The authorities accept that they can’t punish the poor charcoal sellers but their efforts to catch the masterminds of the trade are said to have been bedevilled by corruption.
Part of Malawi’s solution is to have two million efficient cookstoves in operation by 2020. The population is booming and this won’t fulfil national demand.
But each stove, made at low cost of clay by local women, is said to use less than half as much wood as a traditional three-stone open fire.
Another gizmo on trial – a thermoelectric generator developed with Irish aid - can be bolted on to a cookstove to create electricity for charging phones and LED lights. The current is created by the differential in temperature between two metal parts.
This invention will only make a small dent in Malawi's energy needs, though. Lord Stern’s team of international experts on climate economics have concluded that climate change can’t be tackled in countries like Malawi where the population is still 80% rural and where people degrade the land to meet their needs.
The only solution, the team says, is for developing countries to plan densely-packed cities with excellent public transport, powered by renewables – Malawi has an excellent solar resource.

And the same shortcomings are disbarring the country from attracting large-scale investments in renewables. Paddy Padmanathan, a businessman installing solar thermal power on an epic scale in North Africa, told us Malawi’s development was not sufficiently advanced for that sort of project.
“It's the institutional capacity in many of these countries. There are not enough people who can manage these things in the government structures, who know how to put in place the right policies and procedures and procurement programmes," he said.
Meanwhile despite the campaign against coal by environmentalists in the West, the pressure to burn coal in Malawi is growing.
We visited the Kukoma cooking oil factory which burns huge quantities of wood for its boilers. The owner Mohamed Ameen Nathanie is considering whether to install coal-fired boilers for a more consistent burn.
He asks me: “Do you want me to burn the wood from the countryside – or the coal… you choose!”