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Tuesday, March 8, 2016

Days Of Illegal Migration To EU Over, Says Tusk

Turkish leaders have agreed to stem the flow of migrants and refugees who are reaching the EU through the Balkans.
Following talks in Brussels, European Council President Donald Tusk said "the days of irregular migration to Europe are over".
He added: "The flow of migrants passing from Turkey to Greece remains much too high and needs to be brought down significantly."
Turkey has confirmed it will begin to take back migrants who are apprehended in the Aegean Sea, where hundreds have drowned during desperate attempts to reach Greek islands.
It will also implement an agreement "to accept the rapid return of all migrants not in need of international protection crossing from Turkey into Greece".
A statement released after the meeting added: "The Heads of State or Government agreed that bold moves were needed to close down people smuggling routes, to break the business model of the smugglers, to protect our external borders and to end the migration crisis in Europe.
"We need to break the link between getting in a boat and getting settlement in Europe."
Mr Tusk said the EU has agreed to look at resettling some of the millions of refugees currently in Turkey.
A "one in, one out" system was proposed at the summit - where one Syrian refugee would be resettled in the EU for every person who was sent back to Turkey from Greece.
The European Commission's President, Jean-Claude Juncker, added that refugees who attempt to reach Europe illegally will be put on the bottom of the list for resettlement.
Sky's Europe Correspondent, Mark Stone, said clamping down on the well-trodden migration route will be "very difficult to try and put into place", as some EU courts may rule the measures proposed are not legal.
Another proposal will see Turkey and the EU work together to improve humanitarian conditions inside Syria, identifying "safe zones" where refugees can live.
Ahmet Davutoglu called for €3bn (£2.3bn) of EU funds already pledged for refugees to begin being used in the coming days - and warned Ankara will need a further €3bn to cope with Syrian refugees who have crossed the border into Turkey.
Greece's Prime Minister, Alexis Tsipras, said he believes many leaders were surprised at Turkey's "attractive proposals" for managing the migration crisis.
A two-day summit will begin on 17 March to finalise each commitment, but any agreement made with Turkey will come with conditions.
The country wants talks which advance its long-standing goal of joining the European Union, as well as visa-free travel for Turkish citizens travelling into the Schengen zone.

Somalia's al-Shabab: Toll of US air strikes exaggerated

There have been tensions within al-Shabab over whether it should remain affiliated to al-Qaeda or switch allegiance to ISIL [AP]
Mogadishu, Somalia - Somali rebel group al-Shabab has denied US claims that 150 of their fighters were killed in air strikes late on Saturday.
Washington said on Monday that it had carried out several strikes in southern Somalia that left the 150 of the al-Qaeda-linked group's fighters dead.
"The Americans are dreaming. We never gather that many of our fighters in one place. We know the security situation," Abdulaziz Abu Mus'ab, the group's military operations spokesman, told Al Jazeera in a phone call Tuesday.
"Yes, the attack happened and it happened at the location they mentioned but the number they are telling the world is a lie," Mus'ab added.
The armed group, which is fighting Somalia's internationally recognised government, has recently attacked and overrun military bases belonging to African Union troops.
The strikes occurred at 14:00 GMT on Saturday at a camp which is about 130km from Belidogle airport in the Lower Shabelle region - a major base AMISOM troops. American soldiers are also present at the Belidogle base.
Pentagon spokesman Captain Jeff Davis said: "The fighters were there training and were training for a large-scale attack ... We know they were going to be departing the camp and they posed an imminent threat to US and [African Union] forces.
"It was an air operation. Initial assessments are that more than 150 terrorist fighters were eliminated."
Al-Shabab on January 15 attacked and captured an AMISOM base home to Kenyan troops in El Adde, southwestern Somalia. The group killed dozens of Kenyan troops and captured several soldiers.
The group also carried out similar dawn raid on an African Union base in September 2015 killing 20 African Union soldiers.
They also overrun a Ugandan army-run base in Janaale, about 90km southwest of the Somali capital.
In June 2015, the group captured another African Union base in Lego, killing dozens of soldiers and seizing weapons and ammunition.
The group has lost control of most towns and cities in the country but continues to carry out attacks. They were pushed out of the Somali capital in August 2011.

Monday, March 7, 2016

Government U-Turn On Commons Funding Cuts

The Government is to roll back on controversial funding cuts for opposition parties after what is being called the "shortest consultation in the history of the universe", Sky News understands.
The Short Money reforms, announced by the Chancellor at last year’s Spending Review, aimed to cut 19% of taxpayer funding for non-government parties at Westminster.
Short Money, named after Edward Short, is the common name given to the annual payment to opposition parties in the House of Commons to help pay their costs.
In a joint response to the consultation, opposition parties vowed to refuse changes to the existing formula for Short Money and the "policy development grant".
Labour would face an immediate cut of £1.3m if the measures are enacted in full, leading to 20 parliamentary staff losing their jobs.
The opposition parties have offered to discuss a reduction in the rate of increase in Short Money, by indexation to the CPI inflation measure rather than RPI.
This would save £2.32m over the course of the Parliament, they have claimed.
The memo also offered further transparency in how the Short Money is spent, through the publication of pay bands for opposition staff, saying: "We do not believe there is any compelling case for change to this mechanism or formula".
Labour sources suggest that Number 10 has been made aware that a prospective £1.3m cut to Labour Party funding would be frowned upon.
It also comes at a time when the Prime Minister is anxious to ensure the party mobilises its canvassers to campaign for the UK to stay in the European Union.
Labour frontbenchers have threatened to withdraw ordinary crossbench cooperation if the cuts go through.
A number of backbench Conservative MPs have also expressed disquiet about the cuts, raising fears in the Government that it might lose a required vote on the issue in the House of Commons.
Labour has also made a similar argument for the Government to pause its Trade Union Reform Bill.
A series of other controversial reforms are being put on hold as Westminster prepares for the EU referendum on 23 June.
The Queen’s Speech is also expected to be delayed until after the vote.

Nearly 1 in 3 New Uber Drivers in the U.S. are Female

It’s Women’s History Month and Uber is using this opportunity to push out statistics about how many of their drivers in the U.S. are female, though a TIME poll shows that men are still much more likely players across the on-demand economy.

The $62.5 billion startup made a pledge last year to have one million women providing rides through their platform by 2020, and on Monday evening the company emphasized that the percentage of new signups that are women is on the rise in the U.S. By the end of 2015, 19% of drivers using the app were women, up from 14% the year before. By February, the percentage of active UberX drivers who were female had climbed to more than one in every five (21%). And the company said that women account for nearly one third (29%) of new-driver signups, with roughly 230,000 women driving their first Uber fare in 2015.
By comparison, the latest report on New York City yellow cab drivers said that while women have been driving cabs since the 1940s, that industry remains male-dominated. As of 2014, about 99% of yellow cab drivers in the Big Apple were men. Late last year, the Independent dug into this ongoing disparity — which also applies to U.K. cabbies — and pointed to safety concerns, the kind that led cab companies to erect those partitions between driver and passenger back when all the transactions were cash.
According to Uber, factors leading to the rise in female participation likely include the flexibility of the gig and the increased comfort people have with the trust-based peer-to-peer economy (despite terrible scares in places like Kalamazoo, Mich.), especially when transactions are cashless. The company has also been actively recruiting women through partnerships with the likes of the Chicago Metro YWCA, where women seeking jobs are told about the platform.

Google Executive: 6 Ways to Win Your Next Interview

Recently, a new Googler stopped me in one of our on-campus cafes. He told me, “I read every one of your articles about resumes and what Google looks for, did what you said, and just started at Google last week. I just want to thank you for helping me get hired by Google.” That was the coolest moment—more than anything I want all of us to have meaningful jobs in workplaces where we feel like owners, not replaceable cogs in a machine.
So first, my thanks to the millions who have read my advice. Thanks for the tens of thousands of posts, and for sharing your success stories with me and one another. I can’t wait to hear more of them!
Let’s assume, like my Noogler friend (new + Googler), you’ve got an awesome resume. You’ve avoided the errors that plague almost 60% of resumes, nailed the right keywords, and your accomplishments burst from the page. (And if your resume isn’t awesome – yet! – read my earlier articles about getting it right here and avoiding getting it wrong here and here.)
Now you’ve got the interview. How do you convince the person on the other side of the table to hire you? How do you win the interview?
You use the fact that most of us aren’t very good at interviewing to your advantage.
I write about hiring in Work Rules!, but here’s an abridged preview from the book:
“You never get a second chance to make a first impression” was the tagline for a Head & Shoulders shampoo ad campaign in the 1980s. (A couple of cringe-worthy examples are hereand here.) This unfortunately encapsulates how most interviews work. Tricia Pricket and Neha Gada-Jain, two psychology students at the University of Toledo, collaborated with their professor Frank Berieri to report in a 2000 study that judgments made in the first 10 seconds of an interview could predict the outcome of the interview. They videotaped interviews, and then showed thinner and thinner “slices” of the tape to college students. For 9 of the 11 variables they tested—like intelligence, ambition, and trustworthiness — they found that observers made the same assessments as the interviewers. Even without meeting the candidates. Even when shown a clip as short as 10 seconds. Even with the sound turned off.
In other words, most of what we think is “interviewing” is actually the pursuit of confirmation bias. Most interviews are a waste of time because 99.4 percent of the time is spent trying to confirm whatever impression the interviewer formed in the first ten seconds. “Tell me about yourself.” “What is your greatest weakness?” “What is your greatest strength?” Worthless.
There’s much more in the book demonstrating that, on average, we’re pretty crummy at assessing candidates. I write about how to get better. And how at Google we’ve applied 100 years of science to radically upgrade the quality of our assessments (still not perfect, though!).
But if you’re a job seeker (and who isn’t?), the fact that most of us don’t know how to interview well is a huge opportunity. Because that weakness lets you control the encounter. It lets you win. Here’s how:
1. Predict the future. You can anticipate 90% of the interview questions you’re going to get. Three of them are listed above, but it’s an easy list to generate. “Why do you want this job?” “What’s a tough problem you’ve solved?” If you can’t think of any, Google “most common interview questions.” Write down the top 20 questions you think you’ll get.
2. Plan your attack. For EVERY question, write down your answer. Yes, it’s a pain to actually write something. It’s hard and frustrating. But it makes it stick in your brain. That’s important. You want your answers to be automatic. You don’t want to have to think about your answers during an interview. Why not? Keep reading.
3. Have a backup plan. Actually, for every question, write down THREE answers. Why three? You need to have a different, equally good answer for every question because the first interviewer might not like your story. You want the next interviewer to hear a different story. That way they can become your advocate.
4. Prove yourself. Every question should be answered with a story that proves you can do what you’re being asked about. “How do you lead?” should be answered with “I’m a collaborative/decisive/whatever leader. Let me tell you about the time I ….” Always tell a story or have facts to prove you are what you say you are. More on how to construct and tell these stories in a future article.
5. Read the room. All that brainpower you’re not using to desperately come up with answers to questions? Look around. Focus on the interviewer. In the first 10 seconds, is there anything in their office, or about them, you can notice and use to forge a connection? A book on a shelf? A family photo? A painting? Read the interviewer: is their body language open or closed? Are they tired and should you try to pep them up? Do they like your answer or should you veer in another direction?
6. Make it to Carnegie Hall. How do you get to Carnegie Hall? Practice. Same goes for getting a job. When I was in my second year of business school, I practiced my interview answers — out loud — until I could tell each story smoothly, without thinking about it (but not so smoothly that I was bored with the re-telling). My roommate walked in one day to find me sitting on the futon reciting why I thought I was a great leader again and again. He figured I was stuck in some kind of Stuart Smalley-like self-help loop. But I got 7 job offers from 5 companies (that’s another story) and was on track to get another 6 before I stopped interviewing. How is that possible? Practice.
Everyone deserves an amazing job. I hope this helps you get one.

#RespectMyPM: Online war breaks out in Malaysia

A social media war has broken out in Malaysia between supporters of embattled leader Najib Razak - and those demanding his resignation.
The hashtag #RespectMyPM began to trend on Twitter on Sunday. It has now shot to the top of Malaysia's Twitter chart.
It is unclear if the hashtag started out as an official campaign.
But Johor politician Azalina Othman Said provoked an early outcry from netizens after she tweeted her support for Mr Najib along with her state flag. 
"I am from #Johor, and I #RespectMyPM," she said in a tweet.
Other political figures, including Youth Chief Tan Keng Liang, also came out in defence of Mr Najib. "Criticism is fine but don't damage our own country," he tweeted. "We are all Malaysians. It's our country!"
"This is a good campaign," tweeted Adibah Baharum, "Even if you hate someone, it doesn't mean you have the right to insult them. Don't let your hate blind you."
Malaysia's Prime Minister Najib Razakhas been plagued by serious corruption allegations regarding his reported involvement in a high-profile financial scandal over the misuse of state funds.
While he has denied all charges and has been officially cleared, calls for his resignation continue to grow louder, especially among Malaysia's vocal netizen community. 
Mr Najib has since issued a stern warning to netizens, urging them to refrain from abusing social media and "causing disharmony" in the country.
But that has not stopped thousands of his critics from stepping in to voice their anger, turning the hashtag into a battleground against the prime minister.
"Why should we respect our leader when he's actually destroying the image and the status of Malaysia?" asked student Leong Jia Meng.
"I'm sorry but I just don't respect my prime minister," said a Twitter user in the capital Kuala Lumpur. "Surely this is some kind of satire," another user remarked. 
One Twitter user, student activist Dorian Wilde, pointed out the revision of the hashtag, which was used by Indian supporters by then-newly elected leader Narendra Modi in 2014. 
"Oh the irony. Go back far enough and you'll see that #RespectMyPM was used by Modi supporters in 2014," he observed in a tweet. 
The hashtag also gathered momentum on Facebook, where Malaysians flooded Mr Najib's official page with posts, including hashtags and comments criticising his role as leader of the country.
This movement has happened on his page several times before

'Respect Malaysia, not the prime minister'

Calls demanding Mr Najib's resignation also continued to grow louder, with the addition of a second hashtag, #RespectMalaysia.
Malaysian netizens then began to retaliate against the pro-establishment voices on social media. 
strongly worded tweet from Syed Saddiq read: "Respect cannot forced. It must be earned. Respect Malaysia, not the prime minister." 
"I firmly believe respecting Malaysia is a lot more important than respecting the prime minister," said another. 
"I choose to respect Malaysia rather than any individual," tweeted another Malaysian user.

China won't budge on South China Sea sovereignty

Filipinos protest reports that China deployed a surface-to-air missile system in the South China Sea [Francis R Malasig/EPA]
China's foreign minister took a hard line on Tuesday on the country's claims to virtually all the South China Sea, saying Beijing won't permit other nations to infringe on what it considers its sovereign rights in the strategically vital area.
Wang Yi, speaking to reporters at an annual news conference in Beijing, said another nation's claim to freedom of navigation in the region doesn't give it the right to do whatever it wants - an apparent reference to the United States, which has sent naval ships past reefs where China has engaged in island-building.
ght to deflect allegations China is militarising the region by building military facilities on the artificial islands. He said China's development there was defensive and that other nations were being militaristic - not China.
China has conducted a massive programme in the South China Sea over the past two years of land reclamation, piling sand atop reefs then adding airstrips and military facilities.
When asked whether China would allow foreign journalists to visit those islands, Wang stressed they also were intended for civilian uses and that once they are completed, foreign journalists would be invited.
Beijing claims nearly all of the South China Sea, including small islands that are hundreds of kilometres from its southern coast.
Four countries in Southeast Asia have unresolved territorial disputes with China over the South China Sea, which has important shipping lanes and potential oil and other natural resources.
In January, a US warship sailed into the area of sea containing the Paracel Islands group.
Officials in the US and Taiwan last month accused China of deploying an advanced surface-to-air missile system to one of the disputed islands. 
Wang responded by saying news reports were being exaggerated by Western media outlets.