Kamis, 17 Oktober 2019

Brexit deal on a knife edge but talks continue ahead of EU summit - CNBC

Efforts are continuing to hammer out a Brexit deal Thursday as European Union leaders gather for a summit at which they could approve a tentative withdrawal agreement.

But that could prove very difficult with the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), a group of politicians in Northern Ireland which are allied with the ruling U.K. Conservative Party, announcing that it couldn't support the deal as it stands.

That announcement sent sterling plunging more than 0.4% on Thursday morning, to 1.2765 against the dollar after trading near 1.2819.

The DUP said in a statement that it's unhappy with proposed customs and consent arrangements (designed to give Northern Ireland a say over its relationship with the EU post-Brexit) within the current proposals. The DUP has repeatedly opposed any plans that would see it treated differently from the U.K. after Brexit.

The U.K. government, which does not have a majority in the British Parliament, needs the DUP's support (and votes) if it is to have a chance to get a deal over the line when (and if) Parliament votes on Saturday to approve any deal.

United Kingdom Prime Minister Boris Johnson speaks at the United Nations (UN) Climate Action Summit on September 23, 2019 in New York City.

Spencer Platt | Getty Images News | Getty Images

Roller-coaster ride

Brexit talks on Wednesday resembled a roller-coaster ride with reports at times suggesting a deal had been reached only to be countered with others suggesting that stumbling blocks had been run into. This caused volatile moves in sterling and U.K. stocks.

As talks continued into Wednesday night, EU officials and leaders appeared positive that an agreement was possible, even as time was fast running out before an EU leaders summit in Brussels Thursday.

Michel Barnier, the EU's chief Brexit negotiator, said there had been "good progress" in talks Wednesday evening and European Council President Donald Tusk said that "the basic foundations of this agreement are ready and theoretically we could accept a deal." German Chancellor Angela Merkel also said she was slightly more optimistic a deal could be reached.

Even if the EU agrees to a deal, U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson still needs to gain domestic support for an agreement from the U.K. Parliament, which could happen in a special parliamentary session on Saturday.

'Fundamental shift'

Hopes for a Brexit deal were revived in early October when the British government tabled new proposals to circumvent the contentious Irish "backstop" — an insurance policy in the original Brexit deal designed to prevent a hard border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.

The backstop had been very unpopular among Brexiteers and the DUP who did not want Northern Ireland to be separated from the rest of the U.K. As such, Britain proposed new plans that would see Northern Ireland retain elements of EU single market membership but leave the customs union, necessitating customs checks.

To ensure the Irish border remained open, Britain suggested customs checks could take place away from the border but EU officials were skeptical about the practicality of those arrangements.

As talks continued this week, Britain was reported to have made more concessions over Northern Ireland, however, including suggesting that a customs border could be created down the Irish Sea — something that appeared to unnerve the DUP.

On Wednesday, the European Parliament's chief Brexit official, Guy Verhofstadt, said there had been a positive change in the U.K.'s position. Still, he recognized any deal still needs approval by the U.K. Parliament — and a majority of U.K. lawmakers rejected the last Brexit deal on offer three times over.

"There has been a fundamental shift (compared to) a week ago, where before, the proposals of Mr (Boris) Johnson were absolutely unacceptable," Verhofstadt told reporters Wednesday.

"(But) there has been a fundamental shift, that is clear. So, the question is now, can the outstanding issues on customs be resolved? And then the next step — but that is not in this parliament, it is in another parliament in Britain — is there a majority in the House of Commons for it?," he added.

If EU leaders can agree a Brexit deal, Johnson will then take it to the U.K. Parliament on Saturday. There is no guarantee that a majority of lawmakers will back the deal, however, with hard Brexiteers and Remain lawmakers poles apart on whether to back the deal or risk a no-deal Brexit on October 31.

If no deal is agreed on Saturday, Johnson has been legally bound by his parliamentary colleagues to ask the EU for an extension to the departure date. But the prime minister has said the U.K. must leave the EU on Oct. 31 come what may.

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https://www.cnbc.com/2019/10/17/brexit-sterling-falls-as-dup-says-it-cannot-support-deal.html

2019-10-17 06:43:07Z
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Rabu, 16 Oktober 2019

Turkey's Erdogan snubs Pence, Pompeo by saying he will only talk to Trump about Syria - Fox News

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  1. Turkey's Erdogan snubs Pence, Pompeo by saying he will only talk to Trump about Syria  Fox News
  2. Turkish leader rejects U.S. push for ceasefire in Syria  CBS This Morning
  3. Turkey holding 50 US nuclear bombs 'hostage' at air base, report says  Fox News
  4. What does Erdogan have that Trump wants?  The Washington Post
  5. ‘You Are Leaving Us to Be Slaughtered’: Putting Out Trump’s Syria Fire  The New York Times
  6. View full coverage on Google News

https://www.foxnews.com/world/turkey-erdogan-snubs-pence-pompeo-trump-syria

2019-10-16 12:40:24Z
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Brexit Talks Grind On as Deadline Looms, but Hurdles Remain - The Wall Street Journal

EU chief Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier, who is locked in negotiations with U.K. officials, in Brussels. Photo: kenzo tribouillard/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

Talks between the U.K. and European Union toward a draft Brexit agreement dragged on Wednesday, with British doubts about whether Parliament would approve a deal proving to be a significant obstacle.

Officials from both sides said British negotiators were concerned that concessions needed to satisfy the EU wouldn’t receive the necessary backing from U.K. lawmakers—particularly Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s political allies in the Democratic Unionist Party from Northern Ireland.

With about two weeks until the U.K.’s scheduled departure on Oct. 31, both sides are trying to negotiate a new deal to smooth the country’s exit from the bloc ahead of a summit of EU leaders on Thursday and Friday.

The question of how to prevent a physical border from being rebuilt between Northern Ireland and EU member Ireland has been the toughest issue to resolve. Negotiators have been discussing a plan that keeps Northern Ireland legally inside the U.K.’s customs territory, but that gives it a special status so that businesses can trade freely with the EU.

Some anti-EU lawmakers in Mr. Johnson’s Conservative Party would likely base their support for a deal on backing from the DUP, which opposes measures that would leave Northern Ireland effectively outside of the U.K. customs area. A deal negotiated by Mr. Johnson’s predecessor, Theresa May, failed three times in Parliament in part because of DUP opposition.

Michel Barnier, the EU’s chief Brexit negotiator, told a meeting of EU commissioners “significant issues” needed to be resolved but that talks had been constructive, commissioner Dimitris Avramopoulos told reporters.

In London, Stephen Barclay, the British Brexit minister, said, “What is essential is we reach agreement with the EU. Then the question is whether that is deliverable within the U.K. Parliament. That is the task on which we are focused.”

A succession of DUP and Conservative lawmakers visited Mr. Johnson’s offices at 10 Downing Street on Tuesday and Wednesday, ahead of a cabinet meeting Wednesday afternoon.

A person familiar with DUP thinking said, “There are gaps in the potential agreement that we cannot go with. Are they big or small, I can’t say. But they do divide us.”

The U.K.’s border with Ireland has been a major sticking point since Britain started negotiating its exit from the European Union. WSJ’s Jason Douglas traveled to the country’s only land frontier to understand why the issue is so divisive.

The DUP has focused on two issues: It has resisted the prospect of Northern Ireland being in a different customs area to the rest of the U.K. and has insisted that Northern Irish parties give consent to any arrangement concerning the region.

Sammy Wilson, the party’s Brexit spokesman, said Wednesday that any changes to Northern Ireland’s status would require the support of both unionist and Irish nationalist parties in Northern Ireland’s legislature to take effect.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has pledged to leave the EU on Oct. 31 without or without a deal. Photo: andy rain/Shutterstock

Mr. Barnier is due to meet with ambassadors from EU members Wednesday afternoon to say whether he will recommend that EU leaders sign off on an agreement when they meet in Brussels on Thursday and Friday. However, officials warned that talks, which ran until 1:30 a.m. local time on Wednesday morning, could continue through the day, potentially forcing Mr. Barnier to delay that decision until close to the summit.

The pound was down 0.3% against the dollar Wednesday, having surged more than 1% a day earlier on optimism about a deal.

If there is a deal this week, or if talks collapse, Parliament is expected to sit on Oct. 19 for only the fourth Saturday since the outbreak of World War II. European leaders would only formally back an accord if it passes the U.K. and EU parliaments.

The U.K. Parliament has passed a law requiring the government to ask for a three-month delay to Brexit if there isn’t an agreement by Oct. 31—though it isn’t clear how this will happen given Mr. Johnson’s insistence that the U.K. will leave at the end of October irrespective.

U.K. lawmakers will begin to scrutinize any deal, with some pro-EU lawmakers maneuvering to make an accord subject to another Brexit referendum. Plus, an extension beyond Oct. 31 may be needed even if an agreement is secured this month, to write the deal into a treaty and make it legally operational in both the EU and U.K.

Write to Laurence Norman at laurence.norman@wsj.com and Max Colchester at max.colchester@wsj.com

Copyright ©2019 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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https://www.wsj.com/articles/brexit-talks-resume-as-deadline-looms-but-hurdles-remain-11571212464

2019-10-16 11:51:00Z
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Kim Jong-un: North Korean leader rides horse up sacred mountain - BBC News

North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has climbed the country's highest mountain on horseback, according to state media.

A series of photos released by KCNA show Mr Kim astride a white horse on a snow-covered Mount Paektu.

This is not the first time he has scaled the 2,750-metre peak and analysts say such gestures have been known to precede major announcements.

The mountain holds a special place in the country's identity and is feted as the birthplace of Kim Jong-un's father.

"His march on horseback in Mt Paektu is a great event of weighty importance in the history of the Korean revolution," said a KCNA report released on Wednesday.

"Sitting on the horseback atop Mt Paektu, [he] recollected with deep emotion the road of arduous struggle he covered for the great cause of building the most powerful country, with faith and will as firm as Mt Paektu."

In 2017, he visited the mountain a few weeks before his new year's address, where he hinted at a diplomatic thaw with South Korea.

A play to attract attention?

First let's talk about those epic photos.

Nothing evokes an image of power quite like a leader astride a white steed, taming the first snows of winter while galloping through one of the Korean peninsula's most sacred places.

This may be an attempt to project the strength and authority of the "Paektu bloodline" - the Kim family line. A not-so-subtle reminder for the North Koreans of their leader's power, as well as his prowess on a horse.

But there are a few quotes in the soaring state media prose that should give us pause for thought.

The last line in particular is striking. We are told that the officials with Mr Kim were convinced "there will be a great operation to strike the world with wonder".

Kim Jong-un's previous visits to Mount Paektu have come ahead of major decisions.

There's speculation that this time Kim could be rethinking his promise to refrain from testing long-range missiles and nuclear weapons. Talks with the US are currently at a stalemate and Donald Trump is a little distracted by other domestic and foreign affairs.

The North Korean leader may be using the brisk mountain air to consider ways of attracting the attention of the Trump administration.

Pyongyang has given the US until the end of this year to come up with a denuclearisation deal. Kim has repeatedly called for sanctions relief upfront before making any moves to dismantle his nuclear programme, but he has so far failed to convince Washington.

Perhaps he feels it's time to turn up the pressure with a few more launches?

Or just maybe the North Korean leader just fancied enjoying the first snow of the winter?

I have a feeling we will find out which one it may be within the coming months.

Mr Kim has reportedly climbed Mount Paektu at least three times, and made a joint visit to the mountain with South Korean president Moon Jae-in in 2018.

KCNA previously released photos of Mr Kim atop the mountain, after apparently climbing it in black leather shoes.

Mount Paektu, an active volcano, is said to be the birthplace of Dangun, the founder of the first Korean kingdom more than 4,000 years ago.

The mountain is hundreds of kilometres from the capital Pyongyang, and sits right on the border between North Korea and China.

Earlier this month, North Korean officials held talks with US officials in Sweden, the first since US President Donald Trump and Mr Kim met briefly at the inter-Korean border zone in June.

North Korea's top nuclear envoy Kim Myong-gil said the negotiations had "not fulfilled our expectation and finally broke off".

However, the US maintained that "good discussions were had".

Before the talks, North Korea fired a new type of ballistic missile, its 11th test this year.

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https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-50064893

2019-10-16 08:28:38Z
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Erdogan asks Arab League: 'How many Syrians did you accept?' - Al Jazeera English

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xH397zyTCvc

2019-10-16 10:12:44Z
CCAiC3hIMzk3enlUQ3ZjmAEB

These Sure Are Photos of Kim Jong-un on a Horse - The New York Times

Let us not think too deeply about this one. Kim Jong-un did a photo shoot on a horse.

The North Korean dictator rode the white steed through snowy fields, galloping between dusted trees, pausing for an aw-shucks-I’m-on-a-horse smile at the camera. His servants in the state media said on Wednesday that his eyes “were full of noble glitters.”

While Mr. Kim has no shortage of obviously posed propaganda photos, “world leaders on horseback” has been a very special genre at least since Vladimir Putin’s famous bare-chested entry in 2009. This doesn’t come along every day.

The geopolitical impact of the news was limited. Unless, that is, you trust the North Korean state media, which called Mr. Kim’s horseback ride up Mount Baekdu “a great event of weighty importance in the history of the Korean revolution.”

Mount Baekdu is considered a sacred mountain laden with symbolism, the mythical birthplace of the Koreans. A volcano that straddles the Chinese and North Korean border — the Chinese call it Changbaishan — it is a central setting for North Korean propaganda, a place where soldiers are sent on pilgrimages to swear loyalty to their leader. North Korea insists that Mr. Kim’s father and predecessor, Kim Jong-il, was born in a log cabin there, despite proof that he was born elsewhere.

In the past, Mr. Kim has visited Mount Baekdu before making major decisions, giving rise to speculation that this latest trek could portend a shift in policy toward the United States. An attempt to revive denuclearization talks between the two countries broke down this month.

“Having witnessed the great moments of his thinking atop Mount Paektu, all the officials accompanying him were convinced with overflowing emotion and joy that there will be a great operation to strike the world with wonder again and make a step forward in the Korean revolution,” reported the North Korean state news agency, which spells Baekdu that way.

Anyway, here’s Mr. Kim riding through a forest.

Though Mr. Kim chose not to go full Putin, keeping his torso covered with a parka in the cold, he is part of a somewhat exclusive club of current world leaders to have been photographed on a horse. (A much less majestic horseback photo of Mr. Kim from 2012 suggests that he has grown into the role.)

That club includes Justin Trudeau of Canada, which you maybe could have guessed. Yep, Boris Johnson, the British prime minister, saddled up. President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey fell off a horse in 2003 but summoned the courage to hop back on one 14 years later. Other confirmed riders include Narenda Modi of India, Joko Widodo of Indonesia and Andrés Manuel López Obrador of Mexico.

To our knowledge, President Trump has not been photographed on a horse, though he did get near one recently. Of the Democratic hopefuls for president, Bernie Sanders appeared on a horse in a 1987 video, and Tulsi Gabbard was photographed on one for a New York Times article in August.

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https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/16/world/asia/kim-jong-un-horse.html

2019-10-16 07:44:00Z
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Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam forced to abandon speech after lawmakers protest - The Telegraph

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9IkfSRk5imY

2019-10-16 07:08:51Z
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