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news20090618BRT

2009-06-18 19:32:53 | Weblog
[Biography of the Day] from [Britannica]
June 18
Sir Paul McCartney
British rock star Sir Paul McCartney, born this day in Liverpool, England, in 1942, was a principal member of the Beatles, the leading rock band of the 1960s, and was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II in 1997.

[On This Day] from [Britannica]
June 18
1812: War of 1812 begun
On this day U.S. President James Madison signed a declaration of war against Great Britain, initiating the War of 1812, which arose chiefly from U.S. grievances over oppressive maritime practices during the Napoleonic Wars.

1983: The first American woman to fly into outer space, Sally Ride, was launched with four other astronauts aboard the space shuttle Challenger.

1979: The SALT (Strategic Arms Limitation Talks) II treaty was signed by U.S. President Jimmy Carter and Soviet leader Leonid Ilich Brezhnev.

1940: Broadcasting from London after France fell to the Nazis, French General Charles de Gaulle appealed to his compatriots to continue World War II under his leadership.

1815: Napoleon was defeated in the Battle of Waterloo, ending 23 years of recurrent warfare between France and the other powers of Europe.

1429: Joan of Arc led the French army against the English at Patay, France.


[Today's Word] from [Dr. Kazuo Iwata]
June 18
"Many cocks were crowing,crowing all night. I found the falsehood of poems: cocks crow at dawn."
Raymond Radiguet: The Devil in the Body

(多くの牡鶏がうたっていた。一晩中うたっていたのだ。僕は詩の嘘を発見したー牡鶏が暁に詩をつくる、なんて。)

news20090618JT

2009-06-18 18:06:36 | Weblog
[TODAY'S TOP STORIES] from [The Japan Times]

[NATIONAL NEWS]
Thursday, June 18, 2009
DPJ lawmaker tied to post scam
(民主党議員 郵便不正を働き掛け)
Diet member pushed for fake certificate: welfare bureaucrat


(Kyodo News) The former boss of a senior welfare ministry official who was arrested Sunday for alleged involvement in abusing a postage discount system for the disabled has indicated the ministry yielded to pressure from a lawmaker, investigative sources said Tuesday.

The former superior of Atsuko Muraki, 53, who was director general of the Equal Employment, Children and Families Bureau under the Health, Labor and Welfare Ministry, told prosecutors that ministry officials did a favor for a Democratic Party of Japan Diet member in exchange for backing legislation to promote self-support of the disabled, the sources said.

Neither the ex-boss nor the DPJ member were identified.

Muraki was arrested on suspicion of issuing a fabricated certificate in 2004 to falsely recognize an organization called Rin-no-kai, which has since been renamed Hakusan-kai, as a group for the disabled, thus enabling it to use the mail discount system.

The group is suspected of having been involved in a scam to defraud more than \3 billion in postage fees through the alleged abuse of the discount system for the disabled, involving clients that include electronics discount chain Best Denki Co.

The 57-year-old former superior of Muraki who formerly headed the ministry's health and welfare department for people with disabilities instructed subordinates to issue a certificate, but never imagined they would commit an unlawful act, the sources said.

The former boss was voluntarily questioned by the special investigation squad of the Osaka District Public Prosecutor's Office, they said.

Investigators suspect Muraki and her former superior were involved in the issuance of a bogus certificate in a bid to win support from the Diet member and groups for the disabled for legislation requiring the disabled to shoulder some financial burden for welfare services.

According to the sources, the former boss asked Muraki around February 2004 to "smoothly handle" the request by a member of the DPJ to issue a certificate for Rin-no-kai. The lawmaker allegedly made the request over the phone.

Tsutomu Kamimura, 39, a ministry official who was arrested last month, fabricated the certificate in June 2004 and the document was passed to Rin-no-kai, the sources said. Muraki was Kamimura's former boss.

The outline of the legislation concerning the disabled was set by the ministry in July 2004 and a bill was compiled in December that year. It cleared the Diet in October 2005.

The group for the disabled allegedly tied up with companies such as an Osaka-based ad agency to send direct mail from firms including Best Denki by abusing the discount system to save on postage fees.


[NATIONAL NEWS]
Thursday, June 18, 2009
Farm law friendly to business is passed
(企業の農業参入拡大へ一歩前進 改正農地法が成立)


(Kyodo News) The Upper House passed a revised farming law Wednesday to revitalize the agricultural sector by making it easier for corporations to lease farmland.

The change is expected to take effect in December.

The number of farmers has declined significantly and total farmland acreage has shrunk by some 24 percent over the past 50 years.

The main purpose of the original law was to protect landowners. Now the emphasis is on promoting effective use of farmland. Leases will be extended to 50 years, up from 20 years.

The revision removes a limit that corporate entities can only lease land designated by municipal governments. This was a major factor making corporations reluctant to get into agriculture because the designated land was often in poor condition and abandoned by farmers.

Since it was enacted in 1952, the Agricultural Land Law contained a phrase saying it is "most desirable" that farmland is owned by people who actually engage in farming operations. This phrase was eliminated from the revised law.

Under the old version, a company could own no more than 10 percent in an agricultural concern. When the change takes effect, the limit will be raised to just under 50 percent. The company will be required to use its technology and sales network for the farming business.

The revision includes a new rule to prevent small farms from being pushed out of business. The rule states that a corporation leasing farmland should have at least one of its managers wholly involved in farming operations.

If a corporate leaseholder uses land for purposes other than farming, it could be fined up to \100 million, an increase from the maximum fine of \3 million.

The law was originally aimed at preventing disorderly diversion of and speculative investment in farmland.

Corporate leasing of farmland began in 2005. As of last September, there were about 320 farming corporations across the nation. The government aims to increase the number to 500 by the end of March 2011.


[NATIONAL NEWS]
Thursday, June 18, 2009
Police chief's apology to freed lifer accepted
(足利事件、栃木県警が直接謝罪)


UTSUNOMIYA, Tochigi Pref. (Kyodo) A man who was apparently wrongfully convicted for the 1990 murder of a 4-year-old girl in Ashikaga, Tochigi Prefecture, said Wednesday he forgives Tochigi Prefectural Police Chief Shoichiro Ishikawa after getting an apology from him.

"I forgive (Ishikawa) since I felt he sincerely apologized," Toshikazu Sugaya, 62, told reporters.

Ishikawa offered the apology when Sugaya visited the prefectural police headquarters in Utsunomiya.

"I apologize from the bottom of my heart for causing you pain for a long period of time," Ishikawa told Sugaya, referring to his arrest and imprisonment.

It is the first time investigative authorities have apologized face to face to Sugaya since his release from prison earlier this month.

A senior prosecutor and the National Police Agency chief had already expressed their apologies through statements or in press conferences.

Sugaya nodded twice when Ishikawa made the apology. Sugaya's lawyer told the press conference that Ishikawa offered the apology on behalf of all the investigators involved in the case. Sugaya, however, added he will only forgive other police investigators and prosecutors who interrogated him "if they say, 'I'm sorry,' in front of me."

Later in the day, Sugaya returned to Ashikaga, his hometown, for the first time in over 17 years.

"Memories of this town have never disappeared from my mind while I was in jail," Sugaya told reporters. "I can't think of any words to describe my feeling now that I'm back here."

His homecoming was highlighted by a visit to the spot by the Watarase River where Mami Matsuda was found slain on May 13, 1990.

"Both you and I are victims," Sugaya said as if he was speaking to the girl, after observing a moment for her. "I promise to you that I will get the real culprit who took your life."

Throughout his Ashikaga trip, Sugaya was a local hero. While he was accompanied by some of his supporters in his legal battle, local residents who had heard about his homecoming also gathered to see him near the murder spot.

"I hurried here after I learned about his visit on a lunch-break TV news program," said a 62-year-old woman who said she was Sugaya's classmate at a local junior high school. "I'm so happy to see him back in town."

In his meeting with Ashikaga Mayor Minoru Omamida, Sugaya was offered the town's full support in restarting his life, ranging from an offer to provide him with city housing to a plan to recruit him as a school bus driver for a public elementary school, city officials said.

The Tokyo High Court will decide next week whether to retry Sugaya, which would lead to him being cleared as prosecutors have already decided to seek an acquittal. He was freed June 4 after fresh DNA tests indicated Sugaya's did not match traces found on Matsuda's clothes, contrary to initial test results that led to his conviction.

news20090618LAT

2009-06-18 17:03:27 | Weblog
[Today's Newspaper] from [Los Angeles Times]

[Top News]
Wall Street isn't buying Obama's reform plan
Banks and other firms are quick to attack Obama's consumer-friendly overhaul of financial rules. The stage is set for a legislative battle, with Wall Street turning to allies in Congress.

By Walter Hamilton and Jim Puzzanghera
June 18, 2009

Reporting from Washington -- At its core, President Obama's overhaul of regulations for the financial industry seeks a fundamental change: Make the federal bureaucracy work for consumers, not just Wall Street. And Wall Street, not surprisingly, doesn't like it.

Striking a populist tone, Obama complained in a White House speech Wednesday that average Americans were often baffled by such intricacies as the terms of credit cards, home loans and other financial products. That confusion helped fuel the subprime mortgage meltdown that sent the U.S. and foreign economies reeling.

Much of his reform package involves complex changes to the inner workings of the financial system, but Obama said that better consumer protection -- a priority -- was a key to avoiding future financial crises.

Such safeguards could reach far down the line to such everyday matters as bank overdraft protection. A new agency would have the power to write federal rules that, for instance, prohibit prepayment penalties on loans, require better disclosures, order financial companies to offer easily understood options, and levy fines and penalties for lenders that don't comply.

"The most unfair practices will be banned," Obama said. "Those ridiculous contracts with pages of fine print that no one can figure out, those things will be a thing of the past. And enforcement will be the rule, not the exception."

Consumer groups hailed the plan.

"This is a dramatic shift in the focus of financial regulation, which should lead to a credit marketplace which is easier for consumers to understand and safer," said Travis Plunkett, legislative director for the Consumer Federation of America.

But banks and other Wall Street firms that earn billions of dollars on consumer financial products quickly attacked the proposal, setting the stage for what is likely to be a hard-fought legislative battle.

"We intend to take our case to Congress to explain why we believe adding new layers to a broken regulatory system is not the answer," said David Hirschmann, president of the Center for Capital Markets at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

The emphasis on consumer safeguards is part of the blueprint Obama unveiled formally Wednesday for the most dramatic changes in financial rules since the Great Depression.

It calls for tough new requirements on companies whose failure would threaten the economy, new oversight of complex financial derivatives and stepped-up rules for hedge funds and private equity firms.

One of its most controversial provisions is the creation of an independent Consumer Financial Protection Agency, which would assume the watchdog duties now spread across several regulatory agencies and that administration officials say are often ignored.

"It is an indisputable fact that one of the most significant contributors to our economic downturn was an unraveling of major financial institutions and the lack of adequate regulatory structures to prevent abuse and excess," Obama said.

Oversight gaps

Consumer protection now is fragmented, creating major gaps in oversight and inattention to those issues by regulators who "see the world through the lenses of institutions and markets, not consumers," according to the administration's 85-page regulatory reform plan.

The plan noted that federal regulators waited until December 2005 to propose warnings for consumers about subprime mortgages, which are home loans made to borrowers with little or no credit or bad credit.

The proposal, though, wasn't made final until June 2007, well past the time when the worst of those loans were written. One of the powers of the new consumer protection agency would be to set new rules for home lending, "so that the bad practices that led to the home mortgage crisis will be stamped out," Obama said.

The agency's reach could have a palpable effect on the everyday financial lives of millions of Americans, experts said, potentially extending to products such as car loans and even gift cards.

"Even the most financially astute" consumers can have trouble deciphering increasingly complex financial products, the administration said. The plan would require "clear and conspicuous" disclosure of costs and risks.

The administration has made passage of the regulatory reform plan a priority and tried to roll it out as quickly as possible, hoping Congress could pass it this year. But supporters are concerned that the issue has lost momentum as the economy has shown signs of improvement.

Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner begins the sales job on Capital Hill today with testimony at House and Senate hearings. Key lawmakers said they would work with the administration on the reforms. Congressional committees are likely to make many changes.

Democrats appear to support the effort to increase consumer protection, but agencies losing those powers, along with business lobbyists, are expected to fight the creation of the new watchdog agency. Many Republicans and Democrats also balk at increasing the power of the Federal Reserve, which they said failed to identify the warning signs of the deep recession.

Consumer advocates hailed Obama's proposal and the new watchdog agency as a wholesale shift in federal policy.

"This will be a go-to agency for Joe and Jane Consumer on the street," said Ed Mierzwinski, consumer program director at the U.S. Public Interest Research Group. "When they have a problem, they'll be able to call this agency."

More bureaucracy?

But business groups said such an agency would exacerbate the bureaucracy that consumer groups and others agree has hamstrung regulation over the years.

"You'll have much more effective consumer protection if you make current regulators stronger and much more effective at consumer protection than if you bifurcate the system and put consumer protection in a different place," Hirschmann said.

In addition, banks could get mixed signals if directives from the consumer agency conflict with those of another regulator that is concerned with an institution's safety and soundness, said Steve Bartlett, chief executive of the Financial Services Roundtable, a trade group.

For example, a consumer agency could oppose high interest rates charged on loans while another regulator could favor them as a way to improve an institution's financial stability, Bartlett said.

"The consumer protection agency is probably our largest concern at this point," he said.

But Plunkett of the Consumer Federation said banking regulators had dismissed consumer interests as running counter to the primary goal of preserving the safety and soundness of the institutions.

"Regulators often acted like if they restricted a particular financial institution in any way from offering any kind of financial product, it might negatively affect the bottom line . . . that was the culture," he said. "We need an agency with a different mind-set and a different culture."

Business interests are likely to find a sympathetic ear among Republican lawmakers, who were critical of the plan for increasing government involvement in the marketplace.

"The American people don't want Washington to get more involved in the private sector; they want an exit strategy to get Washington out of the bailout business," House Minority Leader John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) said.

The agencies that now share consumer responsibilities also are expected to fight against the loss of their power. Indeed, the Securities and Exchange Commission appears to have won a turf battle by preserving its oversight of mutual funds, one of the most popular consumer financial products.

news20090618NYT

2009-06-18 16:53:01 | Weblog
[Today's Newspaper] from [The New York Times]

[Middle East]
Protesters Defy Iranian Efforts to Cloak Unrest
By NAZILA FATHI
Published: June 17, 2009

TEHRAN — Iranians angry at the results of last week’s election pushed their protest forward on Wednesday, from tens of thousands who again flooded the streets here to six soccer players on the national team who wore opposition green wristbands at a World Cup qualifying game.

But there were signs of an intensified crackdown: The government worked on many fronts to shield the outside world’s view of the unrest, banning coverage of the demonstrations, arresting journalists, threatening bloggers and trying to block Web sites like Facebook and Twitter, which have become vital outlets for information about the rising confrontation here.

The senior prosecutor in the central province of Isfahan, where there have also been tense demonstrations, went so far as to say protesters could be executed under Islamic law.

As nations around the world urged Iran’s leadership to exercise restraint, Mir Hussein Moussavi, the opposition presidential candidate who the government said finished second, and one of Iran’s chief reformers, Mohammad Khatami, issued a joint letter urging an end to violence and arrests.

“We ask you to take all the necessary measures to put an end to today’s worrying situation, to stop the violent actions against people and to free those arrested,” they wrote in a letter on Mr. Moussavi’s Web site.

Mr. Moussavi also sought to continue the momentum of public protest, calling for a day of mourning on Thursday for at least seven people killed in the demonstrations.

The crisis — the gravest since the Islamic Revolution in 1979 — erupted after Iran’s Interior Ministry declared that the moderate Mr. Moussavi was defeated by the conservative incumbent, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, in Friday’s election by 63 percent to 34 percent. Mr. Moussavi, the demonstrators who represent a cross section of Iranian society and part of the clerical establishment have called the official results a fraud.

With the nation’s ruling class apparently divided by the results, the hard-liners in charge sought to portray the unrest as the work of outsiders. The powerful Revolutionary Guard said it had taken action against “deviant news sites” financed by American and Canadian companies.

The Foreign Ministry, meantime, summoned the Swiss ambassador, who represents American interests in Tehran, in protest of what it called “meddling” by the United States into its affairs because of statements by American officials on Iran’s elections. It also summoned the Canadian chargé d’affaires over the same accusations. Several other European ambassadors were summoned Tuesday.

America and Iran broke off diplomatic relations after the 1979 revolution.

No apparent ground was gained Wednesday in reaching a negotiated solution.

This week, Iran’s supreme religious leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has the final word on state matters and who certified Mr. Ahmadinejad’s re-election, apparently made two concessions to the protests, ordering an investigation into the election and calling for a partial recount.

But Mr. Moussavi and the protesters are rejecting anything less than new elections.

“It is a very complicated situation,” said Abbass Abdi, a political scientist in Tehran. “People feel humiliated because they came and voted in large numbers. On the other hand, it is very difficult for the establishment to admit fraud because its legitimacy would go under question.

“There is no legal solution to this dilemma and, we need a solution that neither side would lose face.”

For the third day in a row, supporters of Mr. Moussavi massed in silence, from Hafteh Tir Square, with photographs and samizdat video showing a sea of people at least tens of thousands strong. Many protesters wore black to honor those slain in recent days, a witness said. Some carried flowers and wore green ribbons to show their support for Mr. Moussavi.

“We are becoming stronger,” said Abolfazl, 36, a cab driver. “The only way we can win is to stick together and keep coming back.”

Mostafa, 26, a businessman, who had gone to the rally on the back of a friend’s motorcycle, said he did not fear the violent clashes that killed protesters. “The student protests failed because people left the students alone,” he said, referring to the student protests in 1999 and 2003. “This time they cannot defeat us because everybody has joined.”

Surprise support for the protesters came from members of Iran’s soccer team, with several wearing the bright green ribbons, now the signature for Mr. Moussavi’s supporters, during a game with South Korea.

The national football team is controlled by the government, and their defiance demonstrated the deepening divide.

It was unclear whether clashes erupted between security forces and protesters later Wednesday evening, as has happened during other protests this week.

The government had announced that seven people were killed Monday and 15 others were injured after a Basij militia, loyal to Mr. Ahmadinejad, opened fire on people. On Wednesday, a student group, the Office for Consolidating Unity, said in a statement on its Web site that five students were killed in an attack on a Tehran University dormitory and two other students were killed in a separate attack at the dormitory in the southern city of Shiraz.

Iran’s Interior Ministry on Thursday ordered an investigation into the episode at Tehran University, which has been widely denounced inside Iran.

Meanwhile, the government expanded its crackdown with more arrests and pressure against journalists to limit coverage of the protests.

Saeed Leylaz, an economist and political analyst, was arrested Wednesday at his home. Mohammad Reza Jalaipour, a sociologist and university professor, was also arrested. Reporters Without Borders said that at least 11 Iranian journalists had been arrested.

Because of continued intimidation and pressure on journalists, at least one newspaper, Khabar, said Wednesday that it would stop publishing. A representative from the office of the prosecutor general in Tehran on Friday began screening newspapers before publication to block what it called “provocative” material.

In an effort that appeared to limit reporters’ access, foreign news outlets were warned by the Ministry of Culture not to “participate in or cover” the rallies because the ministry said it “had received specific threats against reporters.” One photographer, Amin Kiani, was stabbed at a protest on Tuesday. The ministry expanded its restriction on Wednesday to covering any news conferences linked to Mr. Moussavi.

News agencies reported that Mohammadreza Habibi, the senior prosecutor in the central province of Isfahan, had warned demonstrators that they could be executed under Islamic law.

“We warn the few elements controlled by foreigners who try to disrupt domestic security by inciting individuals to destroy and to commit arson that the Islamic penal code for such individuals waging war against God is execution,” Mr. Habibi said, according to the Fars news agency.

news20090618GDN

2009-06-18 14:44:31 | Weblog
[Environment] from [guardian.co.uk]

[Climate Change]
Met Office to map UK climate change forecast
Results expected to show that temperatures could rise by 3-5C by the end of the century

David Adam, environment correspondent
guardian.co.uk, Thursday 18 June 2009 11.54 BST
Article history

Scientists have produced a detailed map of how climate change is expected to strike every part of the UK over the next century. Experts from the Met Office used sophisticated computer models to build up a picture of how temperature and rainfall are likely to change across 600 different locations.

The results, to be announced by Hilary Benn, environment secretary, later today, are expected to show that temperatures could rise by 3-5C by the end of the century. If carbon emissions continue to rise, temperatures in the south-east could rise by 8C or more. Rainfall could decrease by up to 60% in the summer.

The results are aimed at industries and organisations that need to make long-term investment decisions that could be influenced by a changing climate. They come as scientists urge politicians to focus on adapting to inevitable climate change alongside efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

The new predictions follow a similar exercise in 2002, that produced maps of likely changes across Britain for the 2020s, 2050s and 2080s. They showed the UK faced drier, warmer summers and wetter, milder winters. Experts say the new results are more powerful, because they present the relative probabilities of a range of possible outcomes. They cover three different possible futures, in which carbon emissions are low, medium or high. Which path the world economy follows will depend heavily on how ambitious the global climate deal to be negotiated in Copenhagen in December turns out to be.

To produce the new predictions, the scientists ran 300 versions of their sophisticated climate computer model, and pooled the results to see which outcomes were most likely. The results cannot be used to predict specific weather on future dates, but they indicate broad trends.

Andy Brown, climate change and environmental performance manager with Anglian Water, said the results would help the company plan key infrastructure such as reservoirs. "The increased resolution and probabilities will help to give us more focus. The decisions won't be based purely on climate change projections, but they are a factor." The breakdown into small regions, just 25km across, will help too. "Rainfall can be very localised so it will help us make plans to deal with events."

Ahead of the publication of the results, green campaigners called for stronger action on emissions to avoid the damaging impacts the UK will face from climate change. Friends of the Earth executive director Andy Atkins said: "This valuable new research will highlight the damaging impact that climate change will have around the UK and show the need for urgent action to cut emissions. The UK government must take tougher action on climate change, and show real leadership by example ahead of crucial climate negotiations in Copenhagen in December."


[Business <Drax]Carbon capture plans threaten shutdown of all UK coal-fired power stations
Radical proposals to require existing plants, including Drax, to fit the technology would force their closure, government admits

Tim Webb and Terry Macalister
guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 17 June 2009 18.54 BST
Article history

All of Britain's coal-fired power stations, including Drax, the country's largest emitter of carbon, could be forced to close down under radical plans unveiled by government today.

Ed Miliband, the energy secretary, is proposing to extend his plans to force companies to fit carbon capture and storage technology (CCS) onto new coal plants – as revealed by the Guardian – to cover a dozen existing coal plants.

The consultation published by his Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) conceded that if this happened "we could expect them to close".

A spokeswoman said that no decision had yet been made. The government could instead decide to allow coal plants still open in 2020 to operate for a limited period or to keep them in reserve to stop the lights going out.

A spokesman for a company operating several coal plants in the UK said that even if Miliband did not carry out his threat and force existing coal plants to fit expensive CCS equipment, any further restrictions on their operation would be likely to result in their closure. It will probably prove too difficult and expensive to fit CCS to plants nearing the end of their lifespan.

Drax is the UK's newest and biggest coal-fired station. The Yorkshire plant, which provides about 8 per cent of Britain's electricity, is technically able to continue to operate into the 2030s. But since it is 40 miles from the coast, transporting captured carbon for storage in the North Sea would be particularly difficult.

Dorothy Thompson, chief executive of Drax, accepted that the plant might eventually need to fit CCS but did not say when this would be feasible or economic.

David Porter, head of trade body the Association of Electricity Producers, said he welcomed CCS as a way of making coal plants environmentally acceptable, but said existing stations which could not fit the equipment should not be forced to close. "There are already quite enough coal-fired plants coming off the system. Security of supply should be taken seriously," he warned.

The Guardian has also learnt that E.ON's controversial plans to build a new coal-fired station in Kingsnorth – the first in the UK for more than 20 years – are likely to be delayed by several years at least. It would represent a temporary victory for environmental campaigners, who staged last summer's climate camp near the Kent site. The Kingsnorth plans could be scrapped altogether.

E.ON has entered the new station into a government competition to build the first commercial-scale CCS demonstration project. DECC has now admitted that the decision to pick a winner has been delayed and will not take place until the autumn of 2010 at the earliest. Miliband reiterated the government's ambition to have the winning project operational in 2014.

E.ON is becoming increasingly concerned about the tight schedule of four years to build its first highly efficient coal plant in the UK which is also equipped with experimental CCS technology. The delay in the competition could favour Scottish Power's entry at Longannet, which involves attaching CCS to an existing coal station.

Miliband told the Guardian that the short space of time for E.ON to build a new plant was "one of the factors" which would influence the decision but declined to comment further.

Paul Golby, E.ON's chief executive, has admitted the firm would not build Kingsnorth if it did not win the competition. Under Miliband's plans announced in April, all new coal plants must fit CCS to part of the operation. Golby said it would not be economic to do this without government subsidies and added that E.ON could build a gas plant instead.

John Sauven, executive director of Greenpeace UK, urged the government to make all existing coal plants fit CCS: "If we fail to act, Drax will remain one of the largest sources of carbon dioxide in the world for decades," he said. "The government's own advisors on climate change have stated that all emissions from coal must cease by the early 2020s.

"That's all coal, not just new coal, so it's vital that Ed Miliband's new policy doesn't ignore the inconvenient truth that we need to deal with the reality of Drax every bit as urgently as the threat of Kingsnorth."

news20090618SLT1

2009-06-18 09:55:38 | Weblog
[Today's Paper] from [Slate Magazine]

Iran Tries To Arrest Its Way Out
By Daniel Politi
Posted Thursday, June 18, 2009, at 6:42 AM ET

The New York Times (NYT) leads with the Iranians who continued to take to the streets yesterday even as the government stepped up its efforts to quell the unrest by detaining high-profile reformers. For the first time, the Iranian government accused the United States of "meddling" in its internal politics. Meanwhile, the government increased its efforts to prevent Iranian news from getting to the outside world by blocking Web sites, banning journalists from covering the demonstration, and threatening bloggers.

The rest of the papers lead with, and the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) banners, President Obama's plan to reform financial regulations, which he officially unveiled yesterday. The proposals put forward by the White House "would affect nearly every aspect of banking and markets," notes the WSJ. The administration urged Congress to act before the end of the year and, among other things, give more power to the Federal Reserve and impose more oversight of the derivatives market. Most of the papers focus on the proposed creation of a new agency "that would thin the alphabet soup of agencies that keep companies from abusing borrowers, savers and debtors," explains USA Today (USAT). The Los Angeles Times (LAT) calls the creation of an independent Consumer Financial Protection Agency one of the "most controversial provisions" in Obama's proposal. The Washington Post (WP) points out there is such strong opposition to this new agency that it sets up "a high-stakes contest between the industry and the White House for the loyalty of a few moderate senators who increasingly hold the balance of power."

Partly due to the continuing crackdown on reporters, no one really knows how many demonstrators took part in the mostly silent demonstration yesterday to support Mir Hossein Mousavi. Most papers go with "tens of thousands," but the WSJ goes out on a limb and says there were "hundreds of thousands" of demonstrators. Moussavi called for a day of mourning today for the people killed in the demonstration. On his Web site, Mousavi called the killing of seven protesters by a government-backed militia "an appalling murder." The NYT points out that the senior prosecutor in the central province of Isfahan has warned that demonstrators could be executed under Islamic law.

How many people have died in Iran since Friday's election? Unsurprisingly, no one seems to know. Beyond the seven deaths that have been officially confirmed, there have also been what the WP characterizes as "persistent but unconfirmed reports" that five students were killed during a raid at Tehran University's dormitories. There are also reports that two other students were killed during a similar raid in the southern city of Shiraz. Iran's Interior Ministry ordered an investigation into Sunday's attack.

The WSJ publishes a hair-raising account of one medical student's experience in the Tehran University raid. He and his roommate apparently barricaded their doors and hid in the closet when they heard the militia approaching. He then heard the militia break down doors and screams from students. "When he came out after the militia had left, friends and classmates lay unconscious in dorm rooms and hallways, many with chest wounds from being stabbed or bloody faces from blows to their heads," writes the WSJ's Farnaz Fassihi.

Many Iranians thought they could get a break from politics by watching their national soccer team play South Korea. But, in a surprise move, six of the Iranian players, including the captain, wore green wristbands, a color that has now become synonymous with support for Mousavi. The LAT points out that while the move demonstrated how support for Mousavi has grown, the newscaster on Iran's state-controlled television tried to espouse a different lesson from the game. "During the game today between Iran and South Korea, it doesn't matter which player scores a goal, so long as Iran wins," he said. The WP reports that Iranian state television aired a program called The Green Wave that accused foreign media of fomenting unrest.

In a front-page analysis, the NYT points out that the man many now refer to as "the Gandhi of Iran" is "in some ways an accidental leader." Mousavi gained huge popularity only at the last minute, and it's not even clear "how far he will be willing to go in defending the broad democratic hopes he has come to embody." He was an insider in Iran's political machine and close to the leaders of the 1979 revolution, until he became a member of the opposition for reasons that "remain murky." His contentious relationship with Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, is well-known, particularly since they clashed often when Mousavi was prime minister and Khamenei was president. But accidental or not, Mousavi has displayed "steadiness" since the election results were announced, which "has helped solidify his role as a leader and has heartened his followers," notes the paper.

In the LAT's op-ed page, Babak Rahimi writes from Tehran and argues against the government claim that while urban Iranians may support Mousavi, the countryside strongly supports Ahmadinejad. Rahimi did "preelection fieldwork" in several southern provinces and "saw far lower levels of support for the president" than he had expected. "In fact, I heard some of the most ferocious objections to the administration in the rural regions, where the dwindling economy is hitting the local populations hard."

Some of the papers try to insert some perspective by pointing out that while Twitter, and other social networking sites in general, have been playing an important part in the demonstrations, that doesn't seem to be how most Iranians hear about what's going on. "Word of mouth is the main way for Iranians to get information about the protests," notes the Post. "All the websites are shut down," a 21-year-old student tells the LAT. "The phones never work. We find out through word of mouth."

The LAT goes on to explain that there is "a loose network of organizers," mostly made up of students and women's rights activists, who guide demonstrators and urge them to remain quiet and not engage the militias. In an effort to make the resistance as inclusive as possible, these organizers also urge demonstrators to refrain from chanting against the Islamic Republic in general. So far, the government doesn't seem eager to carry out a massive crackdown. "Not only would a Tiananmen Square-style massacre sully officials' claims to popular legitimacy, it would create a whole new set of martyrs who could further galvanize a popular movement," notes the LAT. "Such killings paved the way for the 1979 Islamic Revolution."

Stateside, Obama struck "a populist tone" (LAT) when presenting his plan for changes in regulations for the financial industry. The president said the financial industry often surrounds its financial products with such hard-to-understand jargon that the average American has no option but to be left confused. "The most unfair practices will be banned," Obama said. "Those ridiculous contracts with pages of fine print that no one can figure out, those things will be a thing of the past. And enforcement will be the rule, not the exception."

While Democratic leaders on Capitol Hill vowed to get this done by the end of the year, it's clear there are already doubts about some aspects of the president's plan. First, there's the objections to the creation of the new consumer protection agency that business lobbyists are expected to fight. But some lawmakers from both parties have also said they don't feel quite comfortable giving so much power to the Federal Reserve, particularly considering the central bank failed to pick up signs that there was a recession brewing.

The WSJ says many in Wall Street breathed a sigh of relief that the White House proposal wasn't as hard-hitting as many had feared. In a front-page piece that looks into how the plan was developed, the WP says that coming under pressure from lawmakers, regulators, and lobbyists, the "chief architects held firm to a few reforms they deemed the most fundamental to averting another financial crisis while giving ground on nearly everything else." It's clear the White House wants the public to believe it was tough with industry insiders—Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner "silenced" a discussion between lobbyists "with a string of obscenities"—and wasn't influenced by their concerns. So why is the plan so much more favorable to Wall Street than what was initially envisioned? Well, because officials listened to banking regulators and congressional leaders, of course.

The NYT's Joe Nocera characterizes Obama's plan as "little more than an attempt to stick some new regulatory fingers into a very leaky financial dam." Although the breadth of the plan is no doubt astonishing, the president is proposing "additional regulation on the margin, but nothing that amounts to a true overhaul."

ONTINUED ON news20090618SLT2

news20090618SLT2

2009-06-18 09:48:58 | Weblog
[Today's Paper] from [Slate Magazine]

Iran Tries To Arrest Its Way Out
By Daniel Politi
Posted Thursday, June 18, 2009, at 6:42 AM ET

CONTINUED FROM news20090618SLT1

The LAT gets its hands on a new report by the Government Accountability Office that states the United States doesn't have a strategy to stop weapons smuggling into Mexico. More than 90 percent of the firearms captured by Mexican authorities that could be traced have come from the United States. Although individual agencies have taken up disparate efforts to combat the problem, "they are not part of a comprehensive U.S. government-side strategy for addressing the problem," states the report that will be released today.

In the WP's Style section, Monica Hesse talks to crisis management professionals who say Sen. John Ensign's admission that he had an affair isn't really that big of a deal and might blow over quickly if he handles it properly. "The message is: Senator, if you want to shock us, you are going to have to do worse than that." More details could certainly come out that would make the whole thing less palatable, but compared with Larry Craig's adventures in bathroom stalls, Mark Foley's exchanges with underage pages, and Eliot Spitzer's visits to prostitutes, Ensign's affair "is really vanilla," as one expert put it.

Speaking of political scandals, John Edwards gives the WP his "first extended interview since confirming the affair" with Rielle Hunter. Of course, he declined to talk about Hunter or whether he was the father of her baby. Edwards didn't rule out returning to politics some day and refused to declare that running for president was a mistake, stating that it's a "very complex question."