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Wednesday, December 2, 2015

Chinese president to head to Africa

HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP) — Some immigration signs at Zimbabwe's main international airport are in Chinese, a sign of China's deep economic inroads in Africa, which Chinese President Xi Jinping will visit this week.
Xi arrives Tuesday in Zimbabwe before heading on Wednesday to South Africa. There, he will attend a forum on cooperation between Africa and China, whose investment on the continent has soared in the past decade. Zimbabwe, whose economy is faltering, would like to get a bigger piece of it.
China's overall trade with Africa topped $200 billion last year but has slowed over the past two years as the weakening Chinese economy demands fewer of the continent's oil, copper and other raw materials.
Chinese-built roads, bridges and power installations are found across Africa, often paid for in resources or through loans from China that must eventually be repaid.
Along with those looming debts, some African nations have expressed anger over Chinese companies' use of Chinese workers and other practices that fail to benefit local economies.
Inexpensive Chinese goods have long been popular in Africa, and in the last decade Chinese merchants have started eliminating the middle man and setting up retail outlets of their own, much to local merchants' chagrin. In 2011, riots in the Ugandan capital of Kampala largely targeted the city's foreign merchants.
There are about a million Chinese living in Africa, mostly engaged in commercial work, according to the Chinese General Chamber of Commerce in Africa.
Xi's visit to Zimbabwe is his first and he'll meet President Robert Mugabe, who has been quoted by Zimbabwean state media as saying they will discuss "some of the projects and programs we want China to assist us in undertaking."
Despite the collaboration, Mugabe has expressed concern in the past, telling the Chinese in 2012 to respect Zimbabwe's investment and labor laws.
"To our Chinese friends we say, 'You don't just come, you have to respect our rules," the Zimbabwean leader said at a gathering of the ruling party.
China pumped $600 million into Zimbabwe in 2013, making it the biggest foreign investor with interests ranging from gold, diamond and platinum mining to tobacco, nickel, chrome, construction, energy and telecommunications, said Chinese ambassador Huang Ping.
Zimbabwe's economy is battered by mass company closures, high unemployment, low liquidity and foreign direct investment and food shortages. The government has been struggling to raise money to pay its workers, often shifting pay dates. Over two-thirds of Zimbabweans survive on informal trade, according to the African Development Bank.

UK Cannabis Farms Linked To 'Modern Slavery'

The cannabis plants found in the raid
And a report by the National Police Chiefs' Council (NPCC) has linked the cultivation of the illegal plant to other crimes including money laundering, human trafficking and illegal immigration.
The study said commercial cultivation of cannabis "continues to pose a significant risk to the UK" with more than a quarter of a million plants seized every year.
Data used in the report said most of those caught commercially cultivating cannabis are white British men aged between 25 and 34.
"Reports suggest a new trend of cultivation sites being controlled by white British organised crime groups which employ Vietnamese nationals who are forced to work in cultivation," the report said.
It also found that nine out of ten cannabis farms - those with more than 25 plants - were based in residential properties.
NPCC lead on Cannabis, Temporary Assistant Chief Constable Bill Jephson said: "Tackling the criminals at the source of wholesale cannabis cultivation remains a key priority for us.
"The report highlights the links with violence, class A drugs and other serious criminality including human trafficking and modern slavery.

Guinea's ex-leader pleads guilty to smuggling

An African Union general and former transitional president of Guinea has pleaded guilty in the US to smuggling tens of thousands of dollars into the country.
Prosecutors say Sekouba Konate, 51, tried to sneak more than $64,000 (£42,400), much of it hidden in luggage, into the US on a 2013 flight from Ethiopia to Dulles International Airport. 
Gen Konate served as interim leader of Guinea during the political turmoil in the West African state in 2010, and was later appointed by the African Union as its "high representative" in efforts to establish a standby force to intervene in conflicts in Africa.

He had been due to go on trial on Tuesday in a US court. Instead, he entered a guilty plea that could result in a prison sentence of up to five years, the Associated Press news agency reports.

According to a statement he signed as part of his plea, the general called the searches improper given his status as the former president of Guinea and commanding general of the African Union forces, court documents show, Reuters reports.


U.K. Lawmakers Prepare to Vote on Air Strikes Against ISIS in Syria

BRITAIN-SYRIA-CONFLICT-POLITICS
Leon Neal—AFP/Getty ImagesProtesters stand behind a banner that reads "Don't Bomb Syria" during a demonstration against British military action in Syria outside the Houses of Parliament in London on Dec. 1, 2015
The U.K. Parliament is set to vote on whether the country will join an international coalition in carrying out air strikes in Syria against the Islamic State of Iraq and Greater Syria (ISIS), with a 10-hour debate on the issue in the House of Commons scheduled for Wednesday.
Although lawmakers are divided on whether the strikes are the right option, British Prime Minister David Cameron is expected to garner the support he needs to approve them, the BBC reports.
Divisions have emerged within the opposition Labour camp, whose leader Jeremy Corbyn is against air strikes but has given his party members a free choice, the BBC says. Cameron caused controversy on Tuesday by calling Corbyn and others opposed to the motion “a bunch of terrorist sympathizers.”
British forces are already providing surveillance, tactical and logistical support to countries like the U.S., Russia and France, and have also carried out thousands of aerial raids on ISIS targets in Syria’s neighboring country Iraq.

Chris Brown Cancels Oz Tour After Visa Denied


Chris Brown
The cancellation was confirmed in a statement by the hip hop star's promoters but no details were given.
In the statement, Brown thanked his fans and said he remained hopeful he could tour "in the near future".
It had been widely expected that Brown would not perform for his fans Down Under after struggling to obtain the visa.
Australian immigration minister Peter Dutton said in September that his office intended to refuse Brown a visa to perform because of the singer's history of domestic violence.
A person has 28 days after a visa rejection to lodge an appeal, but it is not known if Brown did this.
New Zealand said Brown had voluntarily withdrawn his application.
"Immigration New Zealand can confirm that Chris Brown withdrew his application for a work visa to travel to New Zealand. No decision had been made on the application," a spokesperson for Immigration New Zealand told Reuters.
Brown's visa troubles stem from a conviction in 2009 for assaulting the singer, his then-girlfriend. He was sentenced to five years' probation, which was lifted in February.
Brown had been scheduled to perform shows in Perth, Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane this month.

Suu Kyi Meets Burma’s Outgoing President


(NAYPYITAW, Burma) — Nearly a month after her party’s crushing election win, Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi held closed-door talks with Burma’s outgoing president Wednesday to discuss what both hope will be a “smooth” transition of power.
Because it took so long for the two to meet, there were some concerns the still powerful military would not easily accept the results.
Suu Kyi was expected to meet with Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, the commander-in-chief, later Wednesday.
The Southeast Asian nation started moving from a half-century of dictatorship toward democracy in 2011, when military rulers inexplicably agreed to hand over power to a nominally civilian government headed by President Thein Sein, a general turned “reformist.”
Aung San Suu Kyi Press Conference
The Asahi Shimbun—Getty ImagesBurma's opposition National League for Democracy (NLD) leader Aung San Suu Kyi speaks during a press conference ahead of the general election on Nov. 5, 2015 in Rangoon, Burma
Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy easily won the Nov. 8 vote, securing enough seats in both the lower and upper parliament to form a government. Though a clause in the 2008 military-drafted constitution bars her from the presidency, she has vowed to rule by proxy.
Presidential spokesman Ye Htut told reporters the meeting at Thein Sein’s residence in the sprawling capital, Naypyitaw, lasted about 45 minutes.
“The main point was to talk about a smooth transition and transfer of power to the newly elected government,” he said, “and to discuss mutual cooperation in the future.”
Another goal, he said, was simply to “ease people’s concerns.”
Despite the NLD’s landslide victory, most analysts agree, it would be almost impossible to govern without the support of the military establishment. By law, the military still controls a quarter of the seats in parliament, giving it veto power over all constitutional amendments. It also has a grip on all key security portfolios.
Ye Htut told reporters the meeting between Suu Kyi and Thein Sein was amicable.
The president congratulated “The Lady,” as she is popularly known, for leading her party to victory. And Suu Kyi said she was thankful that the elections were free and fair, as promised.
The transfer of power should take place in February after the new Parliament meets and votes on a new president, along with two vice presidents.
The NLD will face a variety of challenges, not least of which is the huge tide of pent-up expectations evidenced by the vote. Its lack of experience in public administration is another big question.
But the victory is a sweet second chance for the party, which also won a landslide victory in the first election it contested, in 1990, only to see the results annulled by the military, and many of its leading members harassed and jailed.
Suu Kyi was put under house arrest prior to the 1990 election, and spent 15 of the next 22 years mostly confined to her lakeside villa in Rangoon. She was under house arrest when she won the 1991 Nobel Peace Prize.

UN says ISIL exploiting Libya security vacuum

ISIL has conducted several high-profile atrocities in Libya and holds parts of Sirte [Al Jazeera]
The UN has given warning that the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) group is exploiting the political instability in Libya to expand its influence there.
Since 2013, the group's Libyan affiliate experienced "several waves" of reinforcements, including Libyan returnees from the wars in Syria and Iraq and foreign volunteers, the report published on Tuesday said.
"While currently concentrated in its stronghold in Sirte, ISIL could seek local alliances to expand its territorial control, also entailing the risk of motivating additional foreign terrorist fighters to join the group in Libya," the report says.
The report says the weakened security situation in the country had given ISIL's commanders in Iraq and Syria their "best" opportunity to expand its control beyond those two states.
ISIL's commander in the region, Abu al-Mughirah al-Qahtani, is quoted citing Libya's strategic and geographic benefits.
"Libya has a great importance because it is in Africa and south of Europe ... it is also a gate to the African desert stretching to a number of African countries," Qahtani said.
The group has about 2,000 to 3,000 fighters in the country and controls large parts of two different cities, Derna and Sirte.
An estimated 800 of the group's fighters in Libya are believed to have fought in Syria and Iraq before returning home. The group's leadership in the country include Iraqi, Yemeni and Libyan members.
After initially taking a "soft" approach to win over locals, ISIL has implemented its strict interpretation of religion; prohibiting tobacco, imposing veils and forcing underage girls into marriage.
"However, viewed as an outsider group, ISIL is not embedded in local communities and has not succeeded in gaining the population's support," the report says.
The group is currently fighting on multiple fronts against the Tripoli and Tobruk-based governments, as well as factions affiliated with al-Qaeda.
ISIL's presence in Libya came to international attention when it broadcast footage of its fighters murdering Christians from Egypt and East Africa.