Sabtu, 11 Mei 2019

French hostage says ordeal in Burkina Faso was 'hell' - CNN

Laurent Lassimouillas was captured in Benin on May 1 along with another French man, an American woman and a South Korean woman.
The group were rescued in a French-led operation between Thursday and Friday, with the support of US military.
Speaking to press at the Presidential Palace in Ouagadougou, ahead of a meeting with the President of Burkina Faso Roch Marc Christian Kaboré, Lassimouillas said: "I want to thank French authorities and Burkina Faso ones."
Two soldiers killed in French-led rescue of four hostages in Burkina Faso
"Our thoughts are for the families of the soldiers and the soldiers who lost their life to free us from this hell," he added, according to CNN affiliate BFMTV.
Lassimouillas and his compatriot, Patrick Picque, will travel to Paris on Saturday to receive a full health examination, before meeting President Emmanuel Macron.
The pair were kidnapped on May 1 while in the neighboring West African country of Benin, according to the Elysee. Their safari guide was found dead in Pendjari National Park and their vehicle was burned, Reuters reported.
Four terrorists were killed in the rescue operation, the French Minister for the Armed Forces, Florence Parly, said on Friday
She added that investigations were taking place to identify the kidnappers, noting that networks affiliated with al Qaeda and ISIS are known to operate in the area.
French soldiers Cedric de Pierrepont, left, and Alain Bertoncello were killed in the mission.
The US military supported the French-led rescue operation to free the four hostages, according to two US officials. One of the officials said that the US support was in the form of overhead intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR).
French soldiers Cedric de Pierrepont and Alain Bertoncello, who were killed in the operation, will be honored in a "national tribute" on Tuesday, Macron said.
"They gave their lives to release others," he wrote on Twitter. "From now on, let us carry our thoughts to their families and brothers of arms."

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https://www.cnn.com/2019/05/11/africa/burkina-faso-french-hostage-intl/index.html

2019-05-11 14:33:00Z
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Gunmen attack hotel in Pakistan's Gwadar, kill security guard - Aljazeera.com

Islamabad, Pakistan - Gunmen have stormed a five-star hotel in Pakistan's port city of Gwadar, killing at least one person, according to the military.

In a statement, Pakistan's military said three armed men killed a security guard as they attempted to enter the Pearl Continental hotel in the southern city.

Security forces surrounded the attackers in a staircase leading to the top floor of the building, it said, adding that a security operation to clear the area was ongoing. 

There were conflicting reports about additional casualties. Zia Langove, the provincial home minister, said initial reports indicated some people at the hotel had been wounded in firing on the premises.

The military, however, said that all guests at the hotel, which has 114 rooms, were safely evacuated.

The Baloch Liberation Army (BLA), an ethnic Baloch separatist group fighting for independence for Balochistan province, claimed responsibility for the attack. 

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"Our fighters have carried out this attack on Chinese and other foreign investors who were staying in PC hotel," said Jihand Baloch, a BLA spokesperson, in a statement emailed to Al Jazeera.

Gwadar is the site of a major port built as the culmination of the China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), a trade corridor that links southwestern China to the Arabian Sea through Pakistan.

The $60bn CPEC project has seen massive investment in infrastructure across Pakistan, including major roads and the Gwadar port in Balochistan province.

Recent days have seen an uptick in violence in the province, with ethnic Baloch separatist groups ramping up attacks against security forces and civilians. 

On Thursday, at least five people were killed when BLA gunmen attacked a coal mine in the Harnai district of Balochistan.

The BLA and other armed groups have been fighting Pakistani security forces for more than a decade, demanding independence for the ethnic Baloch areas of Balochistan province, which they claim has been neglected by the Pakistani state and exploited for its mineral resources.

Balochistan, located in southwestern Pakistan, is the country's largest but least populated province, with rich deposits of natural gas, coal, metals and minerals.

Rights groups allege that Pakistani security forces have abducted hundreds of pro-freedom Baloch political activists and fighters in their fight to quell the rebellion.

Last month, an alliance of Baloch separatist groups ambushed a passenger bus en route from Gwadar to Karachi, Pakistan's largest city, killing at least 14 people.

Asad Hashim is Al Jazeera's digital correspondent in Pakistan. He tweets @AsadHashim.

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https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/05/gunmen-attack-hotel-pakistan-port-city-gwadar-190511134034253.html

2019-05-11 15:06:00Z
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American hostage rescued as French commandos killed in Africa rescue raid - Washington Examiner

French military forces freed four hostages, including an American woman, during a rescue operation in Burkina Faso.

Two soldiers were killed during the rescue, according to France’s presidential palace.

The raid had been focused on retrieving two French tourists, Patrick Picque and Laurent Lassimouillas, who were abducted May 1 in Benin, a French-speaking country in West Africa, after leaving their hotel to go on a safari in a national park. Their safari guide was found dead.

During the overnight Thursday raid, French special forces discovered two other hostages, an American woman and a South Korean. It is unclear when or where they went missing.

U.S intelligence assisted in the rescue.

French President Emmanuel Macron said Friday the country plans next week to honor the two Marine commandos who died in the operation, Cédric de Pierrepont and Alain Bertoncello.

"They gave their lives to free others,” Macron said. “On Tuesday, we will pay a national tribute to the Invalides to Cédric de Pierrepont and Alain Bertoncello. From now on, let's bring our thoughts to their families and brothers in arms.”

Macron also thanked the Beninese and Burkinabe authorities for their cooperation in the rescue.

He assured them of “France's full willingness to help them in their fight against terrorism in the Sahel.”

There has been increasing level of terrorist activity in the region by groups linked to al Qaeda and the Islamic State.

The U.S. State Department has advised Americans to "reconsider travel" to Burkina Faso since April due to risk of "terrorism and kidnapping."

It warns that "terrorist groups continue plotting attacks and kidnappings in Burkina Faso and may conduct attacks anywhere with no warning."

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https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/american-hostage-rescued-as-french-commandos-killed-in-africa-rescue-raid

2019-05-11 13:59:00Z
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South Africa: ruling ANC party wins reelection - Vox.com

President Cyril Ramaphosa and his party, the African National Congress (ANC), have won reelection in South Africa, maintaining its control of government.

The ANC, which has led South Africa’s government since the fall of apartheid in 1994, was expected to prevail in these elections. But corruption and the country’s stagnant economy tested the party’s standing. In the end, it won slightly more than 57 percent of the vote — the first time in 25 years the party has failed to win at least 60 percent in national elections.

Even though the ANC still has no serious challengers — the main opposition party, the Democratic Alliance, came in second place with just 20 percent of the vote its dip in support is notable.

The ANC is unique in politics because of its history as the party of liberation in South Africa. The majority of black voters identify with the party, and it has dominated the political landscape since South Africa became a full democracy in 1994.

Yet the election indicates that a least a share of voters — which likely includes black South African voters — may be losing some trust in the ANC.

South Africa’s 2019 election shaped up to be a referendum on Ramaphosa’s promise to clean up the government and his party, and deliver a “new dawn” for the country.

The 66-year-old leader came to power in February 2018 after the scandal-plagued former President Jacob Zuma was forced to resign.

Ramaphosa himself remains fairly popular, and campaigned on the anti-corruption message that he first embraced when he took office in 2018. That may have helped limit ANC’s losses, as South African voters appeared willing to give Ramaphosa a full five-year term to make good on his reform efforts.

But he will face challenges in his new term on the major issues for voters: that anti-corruption push and the economy.

ANC officials tainted by scandals remain in government, and some officials within the ANC are less enthusiastic about his reforms. The damage done to institutions by his predecessor, Zuma, won’t be easily fixed.

South Africa’s economy is also struggling, and Ramaphosa has promised to tackle its current challenges. The unemployment rate is currently 27 percent, and it’s one of the world’s most unequal countries: White South Africans, who make up less than a tenth of the population, still control most of the country’s wealth.

Voters were willing to give Ramaphosa and the ANC another chance to tackle corruption and the economy. But, as experts pointed out, voters — especially younger voters — may have limited patience.

Kealeboga Maphunye, chair of the department of political sciences at the University of South Africa, told me on Wednesday that South Africa’s younger generation, which grew up after apartheid ended in 1994, is more likely to vote “with a sense of caution and concern” not quite shared by the older generation, which lived through the struggle for liberation and are deeply connected to the ANC.

These younger voters, Maphunye said, “are not so optimistic that the future looks bright, that the ANC will deliver the goods.”

The ANC continues to dominate politics, and the results were mixed for the opposition party and smaller parties that also sought seats in South Africa’s National Assembly.

Ahead of the election, the radical Economic Freedom Fighters, or EFF, tried to capitalize on some of the disillusionment with the ANC. It embraced a far-left platform of state control of the economy and revolutionary rhetoric, and it has managed to push the ANC left on economic issues, including the thorny issue of land reform.

The EFF won a little more than 10 percent of the vote, That’s a big jump from its first national election (6.35 percent), but its 2019 showing fell short of some predictions.

The main opposition party, the Democratic Alliance (DA), won more than 20 percent of the vote, a decrease from 2014. The DA made big gains in local elections in 2016 under the leadership of Mmusi Maimane, the party’s first black leader, who took charge in 2015. But the party still has an image of mostly attracting liberal white voters, and though it’s changing, internal squabbles over that transformation have hampered the party.

But the DA may have also lost votes to a right-wing, conservative, and mainly white party called the Freedom Fighters Plus (FF+), which received about 2 percent of the vote. The party more than doubled its support since the last election.

Support for the FF+ likely grew over the issue of land reform in South Africa — programs that would redistribute land owned by the white minority, which many see as critical to remedying South Africa’s economic disparities. The issue has become a pet cause for the alt-right worldwide, and FF+’s small surge mirrors the rise of the right-wing in other countries in Europe and elsewhere.

These smaller parties, like the EFF on the left, or FF+ on the right, are influencing South Africa’s political landscape, at least for now. But the ANC remains strongly in power — though the next five years will be a test for it, and its leader, Ramaphosa.

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https://www.vox.com/world/2019/5/11/18563327/south-africa-election-anc-ramaphosa

2019-05-11 12:58:24Z
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French hostage says ordeal in Burkina Faso was 'hell' - CNN

Laurent Lassimouillas was captured in Benin on May 1 along with another French man, an American woman and a South Korean woman.
The group were rescued in a French-led operation between Thursday and Friday, with the support of US military.
Speaking to press at the Presidential Palace in Ouagadougou, ahead of a meeting with the President of Burkina Faso Roch Marc Christian Kaboré, Lassimouillas said: "I want to thank French authorities and Burkina Faso ones."
Two soldiers killed in French-led rescue of four hostages in Burkina Faso
"Our thoughts are for the families of the soldiers and the soldiers who lost their life to free us from this hell," he added, according to CNN affiliate BFMTV.
Lassimouillas and his compatriot, Patrick Picque, will travel to Paris on Saturday to receive a full health examination, before meeting President Emmanuel Macron.
The pair were kidnapped on May 1 while in the neighboring West African country of Benin, according to the Elysee. Their safari guide was found dead in Pendjari National Park and their vehicle was burned, Reuters reported.
Four terrorists were killed in the rescue operation, the French Minister for the Armed Forces, Florence Parly, said on Friday
She added that investigations were taking place to identify the kidnappers, noting that networks affiliated with al Qaeda and ISIS are known to operate in the area.
French soldiers Cedric de Pierrepont, left, and Alain Bertoncello were killed in the mission.
The US military supported the French-led rescue operation to free the four hostages, according to two US officials. One of the officials said that the US support was in the form of overhead intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR).
French soldiers Cedric de Pierrepont and Alain Bertoncello, who were killed in the operation, will be honored in a "national tribute" on Tuesday, Macron said.
"They gave their lives to release others," he wrote on Twitter. "From now on, let us carry our thoughts to their families and brothers of arms."

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https://www.cnn.com/2019/05/11/africa/burkina-faso-french-hostage-intl/index.html

2019-05-11 12:55:00Z
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Trump: It would be 'appropriate' for me to talk to DOJ about investigating Biden | TheHill - The Hill

President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump officials considering using court-ordered removals to deport migrant families: report Dem senator calls for Senate to investigate Giuliani's planned Ukraine trip Ocasio-Cortez says 'vote your values' after finding Trump supporter sign outside office MORE said Friday it would be “appropriate” for him to discuss opening an investigation into former Vice President Biden and his family with Attorney General William BarrWilliam Pelham BarrNadler accuses Trump of 'direct assault on the constitutional order' in letter to DOJ Nadler says Mueller will not testify next week Former FBI lawyer defends agency's probe into Trump campaign officials MORE.

Trump told Politico in an interview Friday that he hasn’t talked with Barr about investigating Biden and his family's business dealings but said it would “certainly it would be an appropriate thing" to bring up with the attorney general. 

“Certainly it is a very big issue and we’ll see what happens. I have not spoken to him about it. Would I speak to him about it? I haven’t thought of that. I mean, you’re asking me a question I just haven’t thought of,” he told the outlet.

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The president noted that it could be a “very big situation” for Biden, who has so far led the Democratic presidential primary field in polling since he launched his campaign last month.

“Because he’s a Democrat it’s about 1/100 the size of the fact that if he were a Republican, it would be a lot bigger,” Trump alleged.

Trump’s personal attorney Rudy Giuliani last week called for an investigation into Biden for his previous ties to Ukraine after The New York Times reported that while Biden was vice president in 2016, he allegedly threatened to withhold $1 billion in U.S. loan guarantees unless the country removed a top prosecutor. The prosecutor, ho had been accused of ignoring corruption in his own office, was later voted out. 

Biden’s younger son, Hunter Biden, was a board member of an energy company that the prosecutor had been looking into, according to the newspaper. 

Giuliani initially planned to travel to Ukraine to encourage Ukraine's president-elect to launch investigations into Biden and the origins of special counsel Robert MuellerRobert (Bob) Swan MuellerSasse: US should applaud choice of Mueller to lead Russia probe MORE's Russia investigation. 

However, Giuliani changed course late Friday, announcing that he had cancelled his trip. The reversal came after Democrats on Capitol Hill accused him of seeking aid from a foreign government.

Biden, the frontrunner among a crowded field of Democrats vying for the White House in 2020, had a 32-point lead over his competitors, according to a Hill-HarrisX poll released earlier this week. 

Biden also surpassed Trump by six points in the first poll published after the former vice president officially announced his candidacy in April.

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https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/443234-trump-it-would-be-appropriate-for-me-to-talk-to-doj-about-investigating

2019-05-11 11:37:34Z
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China Holds Fire in Latest Trade Skirmish With U.S. - The Wall Street Journal

Chinese Vice Premier Liu He speaks with U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin after trade negotiations in Washington on Friday. Photo: saul loeb/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

BEIJING—China held back from immediate retaliation for higher U.S. tariffs, unlike in past rounds, taking time to weigh its options amid uncertainty over how the Chinese economy would weather a full-bore trade conflict.

A failure to break an impasse in talks in Washington on Friday opened a new phase in the trade fight after more than five months of back-and-forth negotiations. This time, some economists and analysts said, Beijing is taking stock of potential economic damage from higher tariffs.

The U.S. raised punitive tariffs to 25%, from 10%, for $200 billion in goods leaving China on Friday and thereafter. President Trump also ordered staff to begin the paperwork to impose levies on the more than $300 billion worth of everything else China sells to the U.S.

While Beijing has met previous volleys of tariffs from the U.S. by raising duties on American goods—and the government has promised to retaliate—it held its fire. Though China has more limited tariff options, since it imports fewer products from the U.S. than the other way around, the Chinese leadership is also constrained by an economy that is in a shaky recovery from a sharp slowdown.

The tariff escalation is worrisome for Chinese officials, who are watching potential ripple effects, from weakening of the currency to crimping future foreign investment. Raising existing tariffs or imposing new ones could hit products China’s economy needs, like semiconductors, pork, oil and passenger jets.

A wider-scale trade conflict could also force Beijing to further ease credit and boost government spending to shore up growth, doubling down on the stimulus used last year at a time some analysts say it should be ratcheting back such measures.

“China doesn’t want to fan the flames,” Mark Wu, an international trade professor at Harvard University, says. “It wants to be seen as the reasonable party and open to compromise.”

China’s lead negotiator, Vice Premier Liu He, told Chinese reporters before leaving Washington that the domestic economy is in better shape than last year, with sufficient policy tools and business confidence to withstand pressure and “maintain smooth, healthy development.”

In the aftermath of Friday’s impasse, Mr. Liu stressed that negotiations haven't broken down—a message amplified by state media. Rather, according to video clips posted online by state media, Mr. Liu said negotiations “encountered unavoidable complications” and the two sides have agreed to meet in Beijing in the future.

Negotiations between the U.S. and China seemed to be heading toward an agreement earlier this month when, according to Mr. Trump and U.S. officials, Beijing backtracked on commitments made in earlier rounds. Those included listing specific laws in the agreement that China would change covering intellectual property protection, subsidies and forced technology transfers, according to people in the U.S. and China following the talks.

Mr. Liu, in remarks reported by the Hong Kong news site Phoenix New Media Limited, didn’t specify what caused the negotiations to founder. He disagreed that the Chinese side backtracked, saying in any negotiation changes are natural before a final agreement is reached.

How Beijing moves ahead in coming weeks is likely to depend on its reading of the economy and on the U.S.’s willingness to negotiate, the economists and analysts said.

“The most important thing is to not appear weak and cave into the U.S.,” says Arthur Krober, founding partner at research firm Gavekal Dragonomics. A likely scenario for Beijing, he says, is to “look like you’re staying the course, offer some discreet support if necessary, [and] hope they can get this thing resolved in next month.”

The higher U.S. tariffs on $200 billion of Chinese goods will slow China’s economy by 0.2 to 0.3 percentage points this year, according to Barclays Research. Fresh 25% levies on the remaining $325 billion in Chinese goods could further drag down growth by up to 0.5 percentage points in the next 12 months, after tariffs go into effect, it said.

“The moment Trump announces a date for tariffs on all Chinese goods, that’s the moment the yuan will drop,” says Bo Zhuang, an economist at research firm TS Lombard. He estimates authorities would allow the currency to swing to as weak as 7.6 yuan to the U.S. dollar, a level that would roughly offset the impact of 25% tariffs on all Chinese imports.

In the next few weeks, China watchers think the leadership will hold back from drastic moves such as reducing banks required reserves to give them more money to lend. Though the two sides haven’t set a date to resume talks, President Xi Jinping and Mr. Trump are both scheduled to attend a Group-of-20 meeting in Japan at the end of June, giving negotiators a target to work toward.

For now, Beijing has only hinted at more stimulus. The central bank on Monday announced a small cut to the amount of reserves certain banks have to keep with it, a show of policy support just after the U.S. threatened tariffs. On Friday, central bank deputy director Zou Wei said in a media briefing that financial support for the property sector would be stable this year.

Previously, Beijing had been expected to ease up on stimulus after the economy grew at a stronger-than-expected 6.4% in the first quarter. Now, “Beijing cannot afford to roll back stimulus,” said Lombard’s Mr. Zhuang. “They’ll have to continue to boost to make less concessions in the trade deal.”

—Chunying Zhang contributed to this article

Write to Chao Deng at Chao.Deng@wsj.com

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https://www.wsj.com/articles/china-holds-fire-in-latest-trade-skirmish-with-u-s-11557571638

2019-05-11 10:47:00Z
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