Christmas Eve: Christians hope for better times

http://www.globalnewsnetwork.tk/2013/12/christmas-eve-christians-hope-for.html
A girl festoons the trees of a slum area in Islamabad with lights. PHOTO: ONLINE
PESHAWAR / LAHORE / KARACHI: As Christmas preparations reach their zenith, the Christian community in Pakistan expresses its grievances, apprehensions and hopes as it vows not to leave this country, their motherland, come what may.

“We consider Pakistan our own country,” said Alwin Edwin, the head of the English Department at Peshawar’s King Edward College, “and we are not going to leave it in spite of discrimination and violence.”

Edwin said it was not just the Christian community which was affected by terrorism. “No one is safe from terrorist attacks,” he said.

However, Edwin is hopeful of a better future. “If you read the history of great nations, you will find that every nation in the past has passed through worse situations.”

The leader of the Christain community in Mardan, Ilyas Masih said they were facing difficulties in Pakistan and particularly in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa. “We are not going to leave Pakistan even after the recent surge in violence against Christians,” he added.

Ilyas said he wanted the government to provide security on Christmas in view of the precarious law and order situation.

Nadeem Anthony from Lahore shared his disappointment at the condition of the minority, which, like other minorities, is denied the right to elect their own representatives, he said.
However, he refuses to leave the country, for which his forefathers sacrificed their blood.

“I am sure to get an asylum if I apply for it but I was born here and I want to die here,” Anthony said.
Napoleon Qayyum, on the other hand, highlighted the declining conditions of the community. “Christians used to be very strong in the health and education sectors but the situation has changed now,” he said.

“Since Zia ul Haq’s time, Christians think they are living like prisoners in some ways and can be booked at any instant,” Qayyum maintained.

“However, I don’t plan to leave because I believe in struggling for the rights of my community. I will live here and keep struggling for the betterment of my community,” he added.

Engineer and activist Roland de Souza of Karachi, also feels that “what Quaid-e-Azam said about rights and protection of other religions is no longer there”.

Principal of Karachi’s St Joseph’s College Professor Bernadette Louise Dean said she felt herself as much a Pakistani as others. “My association with it will remain always. This is the best place for me.”
She said she never thought of leaving because she wanted to make a difference in the education sector.  “What difference would I have made to the first world by going there? God chose me to be here and wants something from me.”

Published in GNN & Tribune, December 24th, 2013.

Exit control list: SHC disposes of Musharraf’s application

http://www.globalnewsnetwork.tk/2013/12/exit-control-list-shc-disposes-of.html
A division bench of the SHC headed by Justice Sajjad Ali Shah observed that the court at no stage issued directions to the federal government for placing Musharraf’s name on ECL. PHOTO: REUTERS/FILE
KARACHI: The Sindh High Court (SHC) on Monday disposed of the application seeking the removal of Musharraf’s name from the exit control list (ECL), clarifying that the court did not impose any restriction on his travelling abroad and the ban on his travel was imposed by the apex court.

A division bench of the SHC headed by Justice Sajjad Ali Shah observed that the court at no stage issued directions to the federal government for placing Musharraf’s name on ECL.

“In our opinion this application itself becomes a redundant and ancillary objection regarding jurisdiction of the court to review its order while exercising criminal jurisdiction becomes only of academic importance and does not require adjudication”, observed the bench.

“We may clarify that neither any observation nor any directions were recorded by this bench in its order for placing the applicant’s name on the exit control list,” the court ruled.

Published in GNN & Tribune, December 24th, 2013.

Saviour of Muslim middle-class: Sir Ziauddin Ahmad remembered 66 years after death

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Dr Asim Hussain addresses the condolence reference of Dr Ziauddin Ahmad at Ziauddin University in Karachi on Monday. PHOTO: PPI
KARACHI: Sir Ziauddin Ahmad, who is believed to have evolved a  Muslim middle-class in the Indian subcontinent by going out of the way to educate the youth at Aligarh Muslim University, was paid tributes on his 66th death anniversary.

The institution established after his name – Ziauddin University (ZU) – organised a seminar on Monday to commemorate the life and achievements of its ideological patron. ZU chancellor Dr Asim Hussain presided over the event.

“The educated Muslim middle-class that emerged amid the extremes of the aristocrats and the impoverished over a span of two decades ended up being the basic strength behind the All India Muslim League’s struggle for a separate homeland,” pointed out Shahid Aziz Siddiqui, a former vice-chancellor of ZU, as well as, the chairperson of Pakistan State Life Insurance Corporation.
http://www.globalnewsnetwork.tk/2013/12/saviour-of-muslim-middle-class-sir.html
For Siddiqui, any discussion on Dr Ahmad’s services would be deficient without keeping in view the tough times he lived in. “With modern education as his prime focus, Sir Syed Ahmed Khan being the precursor took upon himself the task of bringing Muslims back into the mainstream in a way that was consistent with new political realities,” he said. “Dr Ahmad being the culmination of Sir Syed’s struggle was one among the pillars of Aligarh Movement who carried the mission of his precursor forward as true followers of his ideology.”

The versatile educationist and political figure of the Indian subcontinent had remained the founding pro-vice chancellor of the Aligarh University and later its longest-serving vice-chancellor until a few months before his death in December 1947.

For a former Karachi commissioner, Shafiqur Rehman Paracha, the biggest service rendered by Dr Ahmad was shifting the focus of Indian Muslims toward achieving ‘intellectual ecstasy’ as opposed to ‘visual ecstasy’ that they inherited from the Mughal era. “One Taj Mahal was built by a Mughal emperor, Shah Jahan, to commemorate a dead loved one, while the Aligarh University, the intellectual Taj Mahal was built with endeavours to give life back to the nation,” Paracha made a stark comparison.

“In times when Europe was striving to establish universities and institutions, the Muslims of the Indian sub-continent had spent their time and energies in availing such visual delights.” Sharing anecdotes of Dr Ahmad’s commitment towards education, Paracha said that despite his high stature of serving as the vice-chancellor at Aligarh University, Dr Ahmad used to spare time to teach mathematics to high school students once or twice a week.

It was in one of those classes, narrated Paracha, when he found that someone had teasingly written a verse on the blackboard: “Malika bohat bara hai riazi mein aap ko … Tool-e-shab-e-firaq zara naap di jiye [You have gained a great mastery over mathematics ... Please quantify the length of the night of separation and longing].” In response, Dr Ahmad simply wrote “infinity” on the board and left.

For Dr Pirzada Qasim Raza Siddiqui, the ZU vice-chancellor, the 66th anniversary of the eminent educationist yet again calls for a change in the prevailing mindset.

“There is no point in losing hope in the face of adversities. If life seems messed up, rearrange it; if you have dreams, interpret them into an achievable reality; and if milestones appear hidden from the sight, discover them,” he advised, while addressing his young students.

“That’s the most significant lesson one could extract from the life of Dr Ahmad and in this way you will be able to struggle to add your best contribution to the society as well as the nation.”

Dr Aijaz Fatima, the daughter of Dr Ahmad, told the audience that her father was not only an educationist, but also a loving father. “He chose a life of toil and struggle to educate his own family and the Muslims of Indian subcontinent.”

Dr Naeem Aon Jafarey, another former ZU vice-chancellor, and Prof Viqaruddin Ahmed, Ziauddin Memorial Society president, also spoke at the event.

Published in GNN & Tribune, December 24th, 2013.

Spanish meats group Campofrio gets new foreign owners

http://www.globalnewsnetwork.tk/2013/12/spanish-meats-group-campofrio-gets-new.html
Campofrio brand products are seen in the display of a supermarket in Pontevedra, northern Spain, November 14, 2013.
Mexican frozen food company Sigma and Shuanghui International Holdings of China reached a deal on Monday to share ownership of Spanish meat processor Campofrio (CPF.MC) in a deal that values the company at 700 million euros ($957 million).

The deal gives Sigma an initial 44.7 percent of Campofrio, a household name in Spain, and allows Shuanghui to keep its 37 percent stake in the canned ham and hot dog group without having to launch a full takeover bid itself.

Sigma, part of Mexican conglomerate Alfa (ALFAA.MX), will launch a bid to delist the remaining 18 percent of Campofrio from the stock market following the agreement with Shuanghui, the two said in a joint statement on Monday.

Campofrio shareholders with 44.5 percent of the company had already backed Sigma's 6.8 euro per share bid last month, but the intentions of Shuanghui, which inherited its stake after buying U.S. Smithfield Foods in September, were unclear.

Under the deal made public on Monday, Shuanghui will sell shares to Sigma at 6.9 euros each to bring its stake below 30 percent, the legal requirement for launching a full bid, and then buy them back to become Campofrio's second largest shareholder.

Campofrio's shares, which had climbed in recent months on hopes for a takeover battle, fall 8.4 percent to 6.88 euros each by 1020 GMT. Trading in the shares, which had been suspended before the market opened, resumed after the announcement.($1 = 0.7315 euros)(Reuters)(GNN)

(Reporting by Tracy Rucinski; Editing by Fiona Ortiz)

Russia sends armored trucks to Syria to transport chemical arms

http://www.globalnewsnetwork.tk/2013/12/russia-sends-armored-trucks-to-syria-to.html
Russia's President Vladimir Putin attends a news conference with Turkey's Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan (not seen) in Strelna near St. Petersburg, November 22, 2013.
MOSCOW: Russia has sent 25 armored trucks and 50 other vehicles to Syria to help transport toxins that are to be destroyed under an international agreement to rid the nation of its chemical arsenal, Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu said on Monday.

In a report to President Vladimir Putin, Shoigu said Russian aircraft delivered 50 Kamaz trucks and 25 Ural armored trucks to the Syrian port city of Latakia on December 18-20 along with other equipment, state-run news agency RIA reported.

"The Defence Ministry has very swiftly implemented actions to deliver to Syria equipment and materiel to provide for the removal of Syrian chemical weapons and their destruction," Shoigu was quoted as saying.

Syria has agreed to abandon it chemical weapons under a deal proposed by Russia to avert potential U.S. military action after a deadly August 21 sarin gas attack the United States blamed on President Bashar al-Assad's government.

Damascus agreed to transport the "most critical" chemicals, including around 20 tons of mustard nerve agent, out of the northern port of Latakia by December 31 to be safely destroyed abroad away from the war zone.

Western powers has baulked at Syria's request for military transport equipment to transport chemical weapons material to Latakia because of concerns it could be used to fight Assad's opponents in the conflict or kill civilians.

Russia has been a major seller of conventional weapons to Syria and has given Assad crucial support during the conflict, blocking attempts to punish with sanctions and saying his exit must not be a precondition for a peace process.

Syrian government forces took control of a key highway connecting Damascus to the coast earlier this month, but the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons has voiced concern the deadline could be missed.(GNN)(Reuters)(GNN INT)

(Writing by Steve Gutterman; Editing by Toby Chopra)

Russia closes $3 billion Eurobond deal for Ukraine

http://www.globalnewsnetwork.tk/2013/12/russia-closes-3-billion-eurobond-deal.html
Russia's President Vladimir Putin (R) shakes hands with his Ukrainian counterpart Viktor Yanukovich during a signing ceremony after a meeting of the Russian-Ukrainian Interstate Commission at the Kremlin in Moscow, December 17, 2013.
Moscow: Russia closed a deal on Friday to buy Ukraine's newly-issued $3 billion Eurobond, part of a $15 billion bailout of its smaller neighbor, Russian Finance Minister Anton Siluanov said.

Russia offered a lifeline to Ukraine last week, helping revive the country's economy and keep it within Moscow's orbit.

Moscow is tapping its National Welfare Fund, a rainy day reserve, to buy $15 billion worth of Ukrainian Eurobonds. It is also offering Kiev relief on the price of gas exports.

"The deal was closed on Friday," Siluanov told journalists on Monday, referring to the $3 billion bond. He added that another tranche of help will be set next year.

The non-tradable Eurobond matures in two years and has a coupon of 5 percent.

Kiev needs cash to cover its external funding gap, while the central bank's currency reserves are depleted by efforts to support the hryvnia and repay foreign debt.

The government owes around $8 billion in foreign debt payments next year. The amount due for gas imports, another part of its external obligations, is now unclear.

Ukraine paid out $1 billion per month in 2013 for gas imports, although the sum may change next year depending on the volume required. Russia slashed the price Ukraine pays for gas deliveries by about one-third.

The National Welfare Fund is intended to cover pension fund imbalances, which amounts to 4.2 percent of gross domestic product.(GNN)(Reuters)(GNN INT)

(Reporting by Lidia Kelly, writing by Maya Nikolaeva, Additional reporting by Natalia Zinets, editing by Megan Davies and Toby Chopra)

Vimpelcom eyes sale, merger, refinancing for Italy's Wind: FT

MOSCOW: Vimpelcom (VIP.O), Russia's third largest mobile telecoms network operator, is considering selling, merging or refinancing its Italian unit Wind, which has debts of around $14 billion, the Financial Times newspaper said on Monday.

The company has been in discussions with Hong Kong-based Hutchison Whampoa (0013.HK), which owns 3 Italia, the paper said, citing sources familiar with the situation.

But the talks did not progress as far as negotiations on a deal, it added.

Telecom Italia (TLIT.MI) is the leading player in Italy's mobile phone market, followed by Vodafone Italia (VOD.L), Vimpelcom's Wind and Hutchison Whampoa's 3 Italia and there has long been speculation that companies will seek to consolidate in the face of fierce price competition.

Earlier this year Hutchison Whampoa tried but failed to do a deal with Telecom Italia, which also rejected approaches made by Wind's former owner Naguib Sawiris, the Egyptian business tycoon.

Vimpelcom, part-owned by Mikhail Fridman's Altimo and Norway's Telenor (TEL.OL), bought a 51 percent stake in Egypt-based Orascom Telecom (OTMT.CA) and all of Italy's Wind in 2011 for $6 billion.

Vimpelcom and a spokesman for the Italian mobile unit of Hutchison Whampoa did not respond to requests for comment.(GNN)(Reuters)(GNN INT)

(Reporting by Megan Davies in Moscow and Danilo Masoni in Milan; Editing by Greg Mahlich)

Muslams World Chat Room

Welcome to this chat room, the forum is free and free, Here you can promote your articles or blog with a chat facility of charoll, if there are friends or other relatives who want to participate go ahead.
http://www.gnnworld.tk/2013/12/muslams-world-chat-room.html

Facebook Eyeing Up A $10-$15M Acquisition Of India’s Little Eye Labs

We now have more details on Facebook’s plans to acquire Bangalore-based Little Eye Labs, an Indian startup whose primary product is a software tool for analyzing Android apps’ performance. Multiple sources have told us that the two companies exchanged the term sheets few weeks ago, and that a final announcement could be made by mid-January. The deal size is expected to be in the range of $10-15 million.

Overall, the Little Eye Labs acquisition fits right into in Facebook’s mobile ambitions, an area where it has lagged rivals like Twitter, despite having some 874 million of its 1.19 billion-strong (September figures) user base logged on via mobile devices. And Facebook has been on the lookout for startups that could potentially help it gain a greater foothold on mobile devices.

As part of its aggressive mobile strategy, Facebook acquired Parse, a mobile-backend-as-a-service startup in April of this year.

A Facebook acquisition of Little Eye Labs would mean a lot for an Indian startup that’s less than one-and-a-half years old, and it would mean much more for the Indian startup ecosystem as a whole, where acquisitions of this profile have been tough to come by. While exploring potential acquirers, Little Eye Labs also pitched to Twitter, but Facebook seemed to offer a better deal, another source added.

One of the sources who shared some details about this proposed acquisition said that if the deal closes, most of the Little Eye Labs’ founding team will move to Facebook’s U.S. headquarters, and work there as part of the mobile engineering team.

Little Eye Labs caught the attention of potential acquirer(s) in Seedcamp, London, where the startup was refining its product along with 20 other companies. Gaurav Lochan, who joined Little Eye labs from India’s largest e-commerce company, Flipkart, earlier this year, had this to say about using the startup’s tool for fixing a bug in Google’s official I/Q app at the event. Flipkart, was also the first customer for Little Eye Labs.

Kumar Rangarajan, co-founder of Little Eye labs, had even acknowledged that the company was in discussions with Facebook earlier this month, after reports of the acquisition first surfaced. However, Rangarajan could not be reached at the time of publication. A Facebook spokesperson, who had earlier declined to offer any comments, has also not responded.

The Little Eye founders Kumar Rangarajan, Satyam Kandula, Lakshman Kakkirala and Giridhar Murthy, all worked together previously at IBM. They started Little Eye Labs in August 2012 and were part of the GSF Accelerator’s batch from October to December of the same year. In March of this year, the startup raised seed funding of around $300,000 from GSF and Venture East.
http://www.sarkarworld.tk/2013/12/facebook-eyeing-up-10-15m-acquisition.html
A Little Eye Labs acquisition would not be the hugest deal for Facebook, especially when compared with its $85 million acquisition of Parse. But it would be an important enough piece in the social network’s overall mobile strategy. I know of several Indian startups working in the mobile space who hope acquisitions like these will raise the profile of the ecosystem.

iOS 7 Untethered Jailbreak Now Available

http://www.sarkarworld.tk/2013/12/ios-7-untethered-jailbreak-now-available.html
A team of iOS programmers called Evasi0n have jailbroken that latest iPhone/iPod/iPad operating system, iOS 7.0.4. Jailbreaking allows uses to install home-brew software and run unapproved apps from the Cydia software repository.

The jailbreak takes “5 minutes” and works on Windows and OS X. Users at 9to5mac have expressed dismay that this jailbreak came too early – many are worried it won’t work on the next few releases including the major 7.1 that they expect in coming months. Most are reporting that the jailbreak works seamlessly on devices that support iOS 7.x.

Interestingly, this release coincided with fears that the iOS 7 jailbreak had been secretly sold to a third party who would monetize it. Traditionally most jailbreaks have been free but even offering a jailbreak for a brief window on a paid site could be a very lucrative proposition. That is clearly no longer the case.

As with all jailbreaks please remember two words: be prepared. Backup your data and prepare to spend a few hours on a bricked phone if things don’t work correctly. The process has gotten much better over the past few years but there could be bugs. Also remember that this is a jailbreak, not a SIM unlock. This will not allow you to move from carrier to carrier, only install home-brew software.

Samsung Galaxy S5 may come with an Eyeball scanner and more

New rumours starting to roll out about new generation smartphones for the next year, specially aiming on Apple and Samsung that what they will introduce next.

We already witness how Samsung overcome on Apple since the launch of Galaxy S3 and Galaxy S4, but Apple once again emerge with iPhone 5S to take some market share and to break the smooth track of consecutive success of Android device.
http://www.sarkarworld.tk/2013/12/samsung-galaxy-s5-may-come-with-eyeball.html
Now things have changed since the launch of Apple iPhone 5S with finger scanner. Samsung once again try a bit different with its upcoming device Samsung Galaxy S5.

According to reports, Samsung is planning an Eyeball scanner instead of finger print scanner found in iPhone 5S and HTC One Max.

Samsung Galaxy S5 is in the rumors circle for months, but since the confirmation of its camera by the company it make it even interesting.

Samsung is eyeing to change the regular design and material of its Galaxy S series. According to reports the new device will feature a metallic body instead of regular plastic.

If Samsung introduce the handset with a metal body, smartphone will have solid base a more protected from inner and outer sides.
http://www.sarkarworld.tk/2013/12/samsung-galaxy-s5-may-come-with-eyeball.html
The processor of the device is even more interesting. Apple iPhone 5S is running on a quad core 64bit A7 processor. But Samsung have a different plan, according to report Samsung is working on a 14nm 64bit octa-core processor based on ARM.

In addition to 64-bit processors, the phones are also expected to ship with WQHD (2,560 by 1,440 pixel resolution) displays.

Samsung already confirms that company’s upcoming device likely Samsung Galaxy S5, will feature a 16 megapixel camera.

The Samsung Galaxy S5 will make its appearance in the first quarter of the next year, according to sources.

As far as the operating system is concerned Samsung have the two choices that whether it will go with recently launched Android 4.4 KitKat or look towards co-created Tizen. The time will tell Samsung chose Android or go with a new operating system Tizen.

کَلر کہار٬ پاکستان کا خوبصورت سیاحتی مقام

http://www.sarkarworld.tk/2013/12/Kallar-Kahar-Beautiful-Tourist-Destination-of.html

Snub of Boeing-made fighter rattles Missouri manufacturers

http://www.globalnewsnetwork.tk/2013/12/snub-of-boeing-made-fighter-rattles.html
A F/A 18 E/F Super Hornet fighter jet is seen in its hanger during ceremonies celebrating the 35th anniversary of the F/A18 Hornet fighter jet at Naval Air Station Patuxent River Maryland December 9, 2013.
GNN: Brazil's decision not to buy the American F/A-18 Super Hornet fighter jet, and instead purchase an untested plane from a Swedish rival, hit the rural Missouri town of Alton this week, where Chet Sisco's family-owned company has made parts for Boeing Co planes for nearly four decades.

The Super Hornet, supplied by vendors across Missouri, looked sure to win Brazil's $4 billion-plus contract. But revelations that the U.S. National Security Agency spied on Brazil's president helped to kill the deal at the last minute.

Brazil's snub of Super Hornet, and the loss of a major F-15 deal in Korea last month, threaten St. Louis-area production lines that support Boeing employees, suppliers and municipal credit ratings.

At current production rates, the Super Hornet would run out of production in 2016, and the F-15 two years later. Boeing and its contractors had been counting on foreign military deals to extend the life of the two planes, but budget pressures are delaying contract decisions in some key foreign markets and also curbing U.S. purchases.

"We're certainly worried how this will play out," said Chet Sisco, general manager of Central Ozark Machine Inc, which employs 25 people and derives about 85 percent of its work making aluminum and titanium parts for Super Hornets and F-15s.

Sisco said Brazil would have gotten more plane for its money with the Super Hornet than with the Swedish Gripen, made by Saab AB, which has never seen combat.

The Super Hornet, whose biggest customer is the U.S. Navy, supports about one-third of Boeing's 15,000 employees in Missouri. The plane and other Boeing business provide about $1 billion in annual orders for nearly 700 Missouri suppliers.

Some U.S. lawmakers and Boeing are pressing hard for support for the jet programs.

"Keeping that line open and extended in St. Louis is ... obviously an important thing for our state," U.S. Sen. Roy Blunt, a Missouri Republican, told reporters on a conference call after Brazil announced its decision. "I'm certainly disappointed by this."

Blunt said the loss of the Super Hornet contract underscores "a weakened position" in U.S. foreign policy, partly because of the NSA spying revelations.

Documents leaked by former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden enraged Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff, changing her mind about choosing Boeing's Super Hornet combat plane, several Brazilian officials told Reuters. Snowden's documents revealed that Washington had spied on Rousseff's personal communications.

In Hazelwood, a suburb north of St. Louis, where the $50 million Super Hornet is made, Boeing is the largest employer and accounts for 6.0 percent of the tax base. Analysts at Moody's Investor Service have warned that any downsizing to Hazelwood's chief taxpayer could hurt its "Aa3" municipal bond rating.

With the future of Boeing's fighter jets in question, Hazelwood City Manager Matt Zimmerman said his small city is doing everything it can to support Missouri's bid for building Boeing's next advanced commercial airplane, the 777X.

But at Central Ozark Machine in Alton, it's not easy switching gears to make structural components for commercial planes, which are now demanding composite materials, Sisco explained.

"It's hard to teach an old dog new tricks. It's a whole new style of manufacturing," Sisco said.(Reuters)(GNN)

(Reporting by Tim McLaughlin, editing by Martin Howell)

Analysis: Lost Brazil order raises threat to Boeing fighter jets

http://www.globalnewsnetwork.tk/2013/12/analysis-lost-brazil-order-raises.html
Brazilian Air Force Commander, Lieutenant-Brigadier Juniti Saito, writes a text message to an unidentified person named Araujo to celebrate the government's decision to purchase fighter aircraft from Sweden's Saab, as he attended a ceremony at the National Congress in Brasilia, December 18, 2013.
GNN: Brazil's decision to buy Swedish fighter jets instead of F/A-18 Super Hornets from Boeing eliminates its most promising foreign-sales prospect just as the U.S. company faces critical decisions about extending the jet's production line past 2016.

The loss of the $4.5 billion contract for 36 planes is the latest blow to Boeing's defense division, whose F-15 fighter jet last month lost a potential 60-plane order from South Korea to Lockheed Martin Corp's next-generation F-35 fighter.

Without new orders, both programs, based in St. Louis, Missouri, could fold in several years, effectively putting Boeing out of the fighter-jet business until a next-generation plane is developed, a decade or more in the future. The closures would follow the shuttering of Boeing's C-17 military transport plane production, in Long Beach, California, set for 2015, also because of sagging sales.

All these prospects present a near-term threat to Boeing's defense business. Fighters and C-17s accounted for 40 percent of Boeing's military aircraft deliveries so far this year. Military aircraft sales totaled $11.5 billion in the first nine months of 2013, down from $11.9 billion a year ago. (Boeing does not break down revenue by product line.)

Spokesman Conrad Chun said Boeing was disappointed about the loss in Brazil but remained confident about the Super Hornet's prospects in Europe and the Middle East.

The outlook for new domestic or foreign contracts is also diminished by budget cuts in the United States and financial constraints abroad, leading to delays in contract decisions in some key foreign markets.

Without fighters and the transport planes, Boeing's military aircraft business would be largely reliant on Apache and Chinook helicopters and the P-8 antisubmarine plane.

Boeing's lucrative after-sale market would be undermined as well. More than 80 percent of the money earned on a fighter jet comes from sales of spare parts, upgrades and support services over the jet's lifespan of 30 years.

SLOWING PRODUCTION TO MAKE ORDERS LAST

Boeing executives deny they are in a dogfight with Lockheed's F-35, and say the two jets will be compatible for defense needs on board U.S. aircraft carriers for decades.

But even before the Brazil loss, Boeing was boosting its lobbying efforts to get U.S. lawmakers to buy more F/A-018s or EA-18G electronic attack planes, known as "Growlers."

It also is cutting costs on the production line, investing in automation and slowing output of the F/A-18 to make the orders last longer as it tries win more sales against the F-35.

Boeing still has orders for 73 more F/A-18s and 45 more EA-18Gs, which will carry it to the end of 2016. For Saudi Arabia it is building 84 F-15s, enough to keep production running through 2018.

F/A-18 production is slowing from four planes a month to three to preserve the line, said Mike Gibbons, F/A-18 program manager. Boeing needs to build around two planes a month to maintain it, he said. [ID:nL2N0JT03T] That would require orders for 60 additional planes from the Navy to carry production through 2020, when countries in the Middle East and others such as Canada and Denmark would need to replace their jets.

Boeing had hoped orders from Brazil, Malaysia and other countries could fill the gap. Now Brazil is a lost cause, and Malaysia recently said it was postponing its fighter competition.

The Gulf holds promise, but Boeing's F/A-18 could face rivalry there from the F-35 around 2020, when the Pentagon is considering allowing sales to the region.

The U.S. Navy is a different story. Officials laud the jet's performance and the ease of maintenance. They say Boeing's reliable F/A-18 deliveries have allowed the fleet to maintain enough fighters on carriers to cover delays in the F-35C, which is not slated to be ready for operational use until 2018 or 2019.

They say they are studying options to keep the Super Hornet line running, although there is no formal requirement to replace older Hornets and no money to pay for new planes.

That is why Boeing is turning to lawmakers to add funding for extra F/A-18 planes, which they have done in the past.

DEFENSE HAWKS DOWN

Behind closed doors on Capitol Hill, congressional aides briefed on the program say Boeing is pushing a proposal to replace 44 of the 280 F-35 C-models the Navy plans to buy with Super Hornets, a move it argues could save the Navy $2.3 billion over several years.

Boeing has stepped up marketing activities over the past year, bringing a trailer-sized simulator to Capitol Hill, showcasing the Hornet at a variety of foreign air shows and helping organize a 35th anniversary party for its first flight at a Maryland naval air base this month.

The company is also promoting what it calls the "Advanced Super Hornet," a package of upgrades that would improve the plane's range, avionics and other capabilities. But company officials say upgrades alone will not support the production line.

Earlier this month, Randy Forbes, a Virginia Republican and member of the House Armed Services Committee, urged Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel to keep the F/A-18 line running, calling reliance on a single tactical aviation supply line too risky. [ID:nL2N0JL00N] Other lawmakers have sent similar letters.

How much traction the Boeing proposal will ultimately get in Congress remains unclear.

U.S. lawmakers, keen to maintain well-paying jobs in their home districts, have often added funding to weapons programs, frequently defying the Pentagon's wishes and even an occasional presidential veto threat. Such earmarks have grown rarer, however, in the current budget environment, and military officials say training, maintenance and staffing shortages are putting lives at risk.

Boeing's support in Congress has also waned in recent years after the deaths of some key backers, including Senator Ted Stevens and Representative John Murtha. Others lost their seats to Tea Party candidates who care more about cutting federal deficits.

F-35 PICKING UP MOMENTUM

Another obstacle is the Pentagon's $392 billion commitment to the F-35 fighter and its efforts to lock in U.S. and foreign orders that will help drive down the cost of the most expensive U.S. arms programs.

The new warplane is several years behind schedule, and its cost is nearly 70 percent higher than projected, but government officials say Lockheed is now making progress, completing flight tests and resolving technical problems. The Marines are slated to start using the plane in combat in 2015.

Pentagon leaders have made clear that the F-35 is their top acquisition priority, and that they will resist any Navy moves to order more legacy warplanes like the F/A-18.

The cost of the F-35 is also dropping, according to program manager Lorraine Martin. Last week she said a conventional takeoff A-model would cost around $75 million in 2019, putting it on par with current planes like the F/A-18 and negating one of Boeing's key selling points.

Boeing says the F/A-18 costs about $51 million, including engines and radar, but congressional aides say the price is closer to $70 million when targeting pods and other equipment that is standard on the F-35 are added.

In the end, one of Boeing's biggest problems may be one faced by all companies as they near the end of production of a product, said one industry executive.

"When buyers think you are wounded they run away. No one wants to be the last buyer of any particular airplane."(Reuters)(GNN)

(Reporting by Andrea Shalal-Esa; Editing by Alwyn Scott and Prudence Crowther)

Brazil may wait over four years for new fighters, says Saab

http://www.globalnewsnetwork.tk/2013/12/brazil-may-wait-over-four-years-for-new.html
A Saab JAS 39C Gripen jet performs during an aerial show in Eslov in this June 5, 2011 file photo.
GNN Brazil/SAO PAULO: Brazil is not likely to receive the first of its new fighter jets from Saab AB (SAABb.ST) for more than four years, the head of the Swedish company's aerospace unit told Reuters on Friday, underscoring the need for stopgap aircraft in coming years.

Brazil's Gripen NG should arrive after Sweden takes the first deliveries of the next-generation aircraft in early 2018, said Lennart Sindahl in a telephone interview.

"Everyone expects the national air force to take the first deliveries, before we start exporting," he said.

That will leave the Brazilian air force waiting to replenish an old, shrinking fleet. Military officials said on Wednesday they expected to sign a $4.5 billion final contract for the 36 new jets within a year, with the first deliveries arriving four years after that.

While Brazil waits, the country is negotiating with Sweden to lease existing Gripen C/D, Sindahl said, in order to offset the loss of a dozen Mirage fighters at the end of this year.

The Swedish air force is flying 98 Gripens, according to Saab's website, and has ordered the upgrade of 60 Gripen C to the next-generation model, with deliveries beginning in 2018.

The Swiss armed forces have also ordered 22 of the newest Gripens, pending a national referendum next year.

(Reporting by Brad Haynes; Editing by Jonathan Oatis)(Reuters)(GNN)

(This story corrects fourth paragraph to reflect officials expect deliveries four years, not two years, after signing contract)

Insight: For Chinese farmers, a rare welcome in Russia's Far East

http://www.globalnewsnetwork.tk/2013/12/insight-for-chinese-farmers-rare.html
A man walks past the gates of the ''Armada'' farming project run by Dongning Huaxin Group near the far eastern Russian town of Ussuriysk November 13, 2013.
GNN USSURIYSK/Russia: Fourteen years ago, Chinese businessman Li Demin was asked to help bail out a struggling pig farm in the Russian trading city of Ussuriysk, close to the Pacific coast in the Far East.

Li, chairman of the Dongning Huaxin Group, a private trading firm based in Heilongjiang province across the border, reluctantly agreed - but on one condition.

"At the time I was trading and wasn't at all interested because I knew nothing about raising pigs. So I said I would only buy if they threw in 500 hectares," Li told Reuters.

In the end, the local government offered to lease Li more land than he asked for, and more was to come. Now stretching 40,000 hectares and expected to expand further, Li's farm near Ussuriysk is the biggest in Russia's Far East and one of the largest foreign-invested agricultural projects in the country. It raises 30,000 pigs a year and grows soybeans and corn that is sold in local markets or shipped back to China.

It seems to be a natural fit. Russia's Far East Federal District, a region two-thirds the size of the United States, has a population of just 6.3 million and wide swathes of unfarmed fertile land.

China is next door, its 1.4 billion people have an insatiable appetite for crops and produce, and its companies have gone as far as Australia, South America and the Pacific island of Vanuatu to lease farmland.

Unlike most other parts of the world, the local population, cut off from Russia's western-facing economy, mostly welcomes Chinese investment, which has provided a lifeline following the collapse of the Soviet Union. Chinese firms already lease or control at least 600,000 hectares of land in the Far East, which is equivalent to the size of a small U.S. state like Delaware.

The investments could surge if the political masters in Moscow were more accommodating.

"When the Soviet Union collapsed, the local people didn't really know what to do, so they started encouraging us to take over the land at very cheap prices," Li said. "They would pay us to clear the forests - they gave us a lot of support."

Pavel Maslovsky, who represents the Amur region near the Chinese border in Russia's upper house, the Federation Council, said the region needs investment and fears of an influx of Chinese were misplaced.

"To fear that investors would come to the wrong sector and in a manner which we do not like is like selling a bear's skin before you have caught the bear," he said.

But there remains considerable ambivalence in Moscow about the region's growing dependence on China. Relations between the two nations have been improving since a border war in 1969, but some tensions remain.

"It is no longer necessarily the fears that the Russians are going to be swamped by gazillions of Chinese," said Bobo Lo, associate fellow at Chatham House and an expert in Sino-Russian relations.

"Now it is slightly different, and more that the Chinese are a rising economic power, that part of Russia is struggling and China will inexorably take over."

FEARS OF CHINA

Russian fears of Chinese encroachment in its underpopulated Far East have eased since the 1990s, but while Russia has vowed to rejuvenate the impoverished region, it is still reluctant to rely entirely on China. Unfortunately for Moscow, the Chinese remain the only ones willing to invest.

"There is already a feeling (from the Russians) in the bilateral relationship that they are being outmatched, and this makes them anxious," said Lo.

"It is bad enough being a resource appendage to the West and it is worse if you are a resource appendage to a country to which you have felt superior for the last 300 years."

The Far East received $9.9 billion of foreign investment in 2011, according to Russia's Federal Statistics Service, accounting for just 5 percent of the amount received by Russia as a whole. More than three quarters of the total was spent on the development of oil and gas in Sakhalin, a resource-rich island off the Far East coast, north of Japan.

Ussuriysk, about 100 km (62 miles) north of Vladivostok and 60 km (37 miles) east of the Chinese border, was once controlled by a succession of Chinese dynasties and built over the last century from the proceeds of logging and food production.

One of the first areas in Russia to open up to Chinese business in the 1980s, it has also benefited from the establishment of a free trade zone that has brought investment from 26 Chinese firms since its foundation in 2006.

Widespread fears about the region being flooded by Chinese migrants have not come to pass.

The city has a permanent population of around 150,000 and a floating population of a few thousand Chinese traders and workers selling textiles and electronic goods. There is no Chinatown, and no indication that the Chinese want to settle permanently.

"Some say China is 'swamping' or 'yellowfying' Russia's Far East but this isn't actually happening - the Chinese just want to do business and go home," said a Chinese businessman who has been based in Ussuriysk for more than a decade.

But the population imbalance still causes anxiety. The Far East's population is smaller than an average Chinese city and just a fraction of the 90 million living in China's three border provinces of Jilin, Heilongjiang and Inner Mongolia.

Dongning Huaxin's Li said his company has been doing its utmost to ease the concerns and ensure that local labor is used on farms. He said local Russian farmers now make up around 60 percent of a total workforce of 600.

GRIND TO A HALT
But the problem was that the local population had dwindled, and those left behind were mostly unwilling to do agricultural work, Li said.

"This is how I see it: if Chinese labor left the Russian Far East, the region would grind to a halt," he said. "Take our pig farm: Russians don't like pigs and we can't find people to work on it and we can only hire Chinese to do it."

The Chinese businessman, who did not want to give his name, said local residents and government officials understood the necessity of cooperation, but Moscow continued to impose visa restrictions that made it harder to resolve the significant labor and skills shortages in the region.

"We think these rules shouldn't apply to the Far East - we really find it hard to get visas for qualified staff, drivers, traders who understand our business, and it is impossible to find skilled local workers. Russia wants to develop its Far East but it cannot do it without Chinese workers."

"I think the Russians need to understand that if they don't allow Chinese investment or Japanese investment or Korean investment here, they will actually lose the place," he said.

Despite the problems, Chinese investment still seeks to come to the Far East. Moscow itself would prefer a more diversified range of investors, but firms from Japan or South Korea are much more reluctant to get involved.

Li said local authorities in the region understood the leading role that Chinese investment and Chinese labor needed to play in development.

"The Russians understand that if the Chinese don't come, then who?" he said. "Would the Japanese come, or the Koreans?"(Reuters)(GNN)

(Additional reporting by Polina Devitt in MOSCOW, Niu Shuping in BEIJING; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)

Texas jailhouse cobbler's short walk on freedom road

http://www.globalnewsnetwork.tk/2013/12/texas-jailhouse-cobblers-short-walk-on.html
Inmate Arnold Darby speaks during an interview in a holding area at the Goree Unit prison in Huntsville, Texas December 5, 2013.
GNN: Lawmen would come from across Texas just to walk a few miles in the boots made by inmate Arnold Darby.

Darby, 64, soft-spoken, bespectacled and tattooed, was once one of the most prodigious bootmakers in the Texas prison system, turning out more than a thousand pairs of custom-made footwear for police, FBI agents and the governor's office, prison officials said.

But freedom put an end to that.

After 37 years behind bars, serving time for robbery and murder, Darby was released on parole in 2011.

The highly skilled bootmaker was looking to open his own shop in a state that loves its boots. But lacking start-up cash, he settled for making boxes at a food-processing plant.

After only a year on the outside, Darby violated parole by driving while intoxicated and was sent back to prison.

This time, however, he has not been in the new unit long enough to earn what is considered a privileged position in a workshop, and the once-vaunted jailhouse cobbler is not sure if he will ever make boots again.

"I was working six or seven days a week, and I started drinking a little bit. That is what brought me back," said Darby in an interview from the Goree Unit prison in Huntsville, about 70 miles north of Houston.

The Texas parole board said in an emailed statement: "Mr. Darby was revoked on August 29, 2012, after he waived his hearing for DWI, failure to stop and render information and violation of the GPS monitor."

His next parole review is in March 2015, and Darby does not expect to be at a bootmaking bench until then.

"He was once a model prisoner and he made boots for everybody" said Larry Fitzgerald, a longtime spokesman for the Texas Department of Criminal Justice who has since retired.

"You have to be, to work in the craft shop - because you are surrounded by weapons of all kinds," he said.

Fitzgerald himself owns three pairs of Darby's boots.

Darby went to prison in 1974 for aggravated robbery. He later received life sentences for killing two fellow inmates in gang violence. There was also an attempt to escape along the way, where he was shot in the head.

"My biggest regret of all was getting in the game," Darby said.

A CELL NEAR THE DEATH CHAMBER

About 14 years into his jail term, Darby met a bootmaker who taught him the trade. He started out small but soon discovered he was cut out to be a cobbler.

The work mellowed Darby and he turned out a lot of boots.

Customers made boot sizing appointments at the Walls Unit in Huntsville, the prison where Texas implements the death penalty. They met Darby in a cell set aside for visits that was also near the death chamber.

Buyers had to sign a contract with the state for the use of prison labor, for which Texas received a cut and Darby a smaller cut. The money was paid into a fund because Darby was not allowed to receive cash directly or profiteer.

Yet Darby was spending about $2,000 a year from the fund to buy goods at the commissary, burning through money almost as fast as it came in.

Financial planning was not a priority for Darby, who was serving life terms and had already been turned down for parole 22 times.

The 23rd time was the charm and Darby was paroled - with the fund was mostly depleted, he said.

If Darby gets out again, he plans to settle down with his former wife and enjoy life in a tiny Texas town, and perhaps to make the pair of tall red boots with butterfly inlays that she has always wanted.

After decades of estrangement, Darby's former wife saw a story about him in True West magazine and got in touch with the man she had last seen in the 1970s.

They rekindled their romance during parole and pledged to stay together when he gets out again.

Given his age and record Darby isn't sure if he can ever get the funds to open a shop. But he already has the sign - in cut glass - made by one of his prison buddies at a workshop.

"Making boots has made me happy," Darby said. "It was something I could see and I could take pride in."(GNN)(Reuters)(GNN INT)

(Reporting by Jon Herskovitz; editing by Gunna Dickson)

At least two killed as storms tear through Arkansas, Mississippi

http://www.globalnewsnetwork.tk/2013/12/at-least-two-killed-as-storms-tear.html
A storm system moving across the United States is pictured in this NASA handout satellite photo taken December 20, 2013.
At least two people were killed as wild storms and suspected tornadoes tore through parts of Mississippi and Arkansas on Saturday, injuring several others, damaging homes and sweeping trucks off a highway, authorities said.

Two adults died when the car they were driving in struck a fallen tree in the road in Jasper County, Mississippi, county coroner Randy Graham told Reuters.

Local television reports said a man was killed in Coahoma County when his mobile home blew over in high winds, but authorities could not be reached for confirmation early on Sunday.

Widespread damage from the storm system was also reported near Dermott, Arkansas, in the southeast corner of the state, where five homes were badly damaged, 15 suffered minor damage and four trucks were blown off a highway, said National Weather Service meteorologist David Cox in Jackson, Mississippi. Two people were injured, he said.

"We are thinking it was a tornado," Cox said. "We had quite a bit of rotation and quite a bit of damage." The storm hit at about 5 p.m. local time, he said.

The same weather system crossed the state line into Boliver County, Mississippi, where winds clocked at 64 mph downed power lines and trees and damaged some buildings, Cox said. No injuries were reported.

A possible tornado injured several people and damaged a few homes on Saturday near the town of Hughes in eastern Arkansas, officials said.

The windstorm struck at about 4 p.m., said dispatcher Lynn Morgan of the Saint Francis County Sheriff's Office. Ambulances were called to the scene, another dispatcher said.

Tommy Jackson, spokesman for the Arkansas Department of Emergency Management, said one person was seriously hurt and two suffered lesser injuries. Two homes were destroyed and three damaged in the storm, he said.

The storm has not yet been classified as a tornado by the National Weather Service, he said.

The possible tornado struck a few miles west of Hughes, a town of 1,400 people about 20 miles southwest of Memphis near the eastern border of Arkansas, officials said.

A turbulent weather system was moving late Saturday from the south central United States into the Midwest, according to the National Weather Service.

The National Weather Service has posted tornado watches on the southern end of the system and winter storm warnings to include ice, sleet and 4 to 8 inches of snow from eastern Kansas into Michigan late Saturday and early Sunday.(GNN)(Reuters)(GNN INT)

(Reporting by Kevin Murphy in Kansas City, Missouri and Chris Michaud in New York; Editing by Andrew Heavens)