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Archive for the ‘World’ Category

London Journal: Briefly Ascending to the Spotlight, Britons Take Their Place Among Giants

 

“One & Other” is a grand art project that places 2,400 people on Trafalgar Square’s usually vacant fourth plinth, for an hour apiece, from now through Oct. 6.

July 9th, 2009 , 14 : 54 : 18 , Share it, No Comments

In Russia, Obama’s Star Power Does Not Translate

 

Unlike other capitals, Moscow has greeted President Obama as just another dignitary passing through.

July 9th, 2009 , 14 : 54 : 18 , Share it, No Comments

Tribunal Says Bosnian Serb’s Trial Must Proceed

 

The decision is expected to clear the way for the trial of Radovan Karadzic, who faces charges of war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide.

July 9th, 2009 , 14 : 54 : 18 , Share it, No Comments

Murdoch Papers Said to Pay to Settle Hacking Cases

 

Targets of cellphone message hacking by reporters were said to include public figures, including cabinet members.

July 9th, 2009 , 14 : 54 : 18 , Share it, No Comments

In Europe, a Regulator Penalizes Two Utilities

 

Europe’s antitrust commission accused E.On and GDF Suez of anticompetitive practices that were costing consumers more.

July 9th, 2009 , 14 : 54 : 18 , Share it, No Comments
 

Archive for the ‘World’ Category

Mixed blessing

 

A triumphant Viktor Yanukovich is inaugurated in Ukraine, but his problems have only just begun

EVEN in Ukraine, elections can end. After two rounds of voting and weeks of legal rumbles, Viktor Yanukovich was inaugurated on Thursday February 25th as Ukraine’s fourth democratically elected president. In November 2004 he tried and failed to steal the crown. Now he has played (mostly) by the rules—and won. Although Yulia Tymoshenko, his charismatic rival (and Ukraine’s prime minister), refuses to recognise Mr Yanukovich’s victory, she withdrew her legal appeals this week. Ukraine’s highest office has thus moved from an incumbent to an opposition leader: a rare achievement in an ex-Soviet republic.

Mr Yanukovich’s legitimacy is now accepted by the world’s leaders, and not just by Russia’s prime minister, Vladimir Putin, who rashly congratulated him on his rigged victory in 2004. This time Moscow made no such crude statements. Instead, it asserted its feelings of fraternity towards Kiev by dispatching Patriarch Kirill, head of the Russian Orthodox Church, to bless Mr Yanukovich before his inauguration. This says as much about Mr Yanukovich’s piety as about Moscow’s tactic of using the church to extend its influence. Rarely have the Russians used soft power so well. Yet Mr Yanukovich, conscious of his pro-Russian image, tried to downplay the patriarch’s visit, and is planning his first foreign visit to Brussels, not Moscow. ...

The end of history, revisited

 

The ex-communist states of eastern Europe are leaving their pasts behind

WHERE would they be without their past, the ex-captive nations? (Or "ex-communist countries", "former Soviet satellite states", "the old Eastern block": so much history even in the category). The region between the Baltic and the Black Sea is so shaped by history that at first sight the question seems absurd. Trianon, Yalta, Molotov-Ribbentrop, Munich—the gloomy echoes of past betrayals and atrocities are inescapable.

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Smoke signals

 

A history of America in cigar consumption

THE smoking of a fat cigar is a sign that things are going well for Americans and shifts in cigar consumption are an accurate barometer of the national mood. Puffing on a stogie went into sharp decline after the Wall Street crash. President Kennedy signed the Cuban trade embargo in 1962 but not before sending a lackey to purchase 1,200 fine Cuban cigars on his behalf. At the time, American males smoked around 150 large cigars every year, three times more than at present. But smoking went into decline after the first surgeon-general's report on the dangers of tobacco in 1964. With the onset of the credit crunch cigar smoking took another dive. But with talk of Barack Obama lifting the world’s longest-standing trade embargo, imports of fine Cuban smokes might give cigars another boost.

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Out of time

 

Italy's statute of limitations saves Silvio Berlusconi's former lawyer from going to prison

ITALIAN courts may be slow. But no one could claim that they were arbitrary. Defendants get the right to a trial (sometimes after a pre-trial), and then up to two appeals: one on the merits of the case, and another on points of law. Often, the result is that a case will be timed out by a statute of limitations before it can run that long course.

On Thursday February 25th, Italy’s highest appeal court decided that that is what had happened in the politically explosive trial of David Mills, a British lawyer who once advised Italy’s prime minister, Silvio Berlusconi, on offshore finance. Mr Mills had been convicted by a lower court of having taken a $600,000 bribe, allegedly supplied by Mr Berlusconi, for holding back evidence at two trials involving the prime minister in the 1990s. ...

A waste of breath?

 

Barack Obama’s bipartisan summit on health policy accomplishes more than meets the eye

IT IS tempting to dismiss the bipartisan health-reform summit convened by Barack Obama on Thursday February 25th as a colossal waste of time. After all, the gabfest involving senior Congressional leaders from both parties lasted well over six hours, with no tangible results. Neither side moved one jot on any issue of substance and not one vote is likely to have changed on either side as a result of the summit.

And yet, the televised gathering was not pointless. For one thing, the sight of America’s leading politicians sitting together amiably for an entire day to discuss a matter as inflammatory as health reform (think “death panels”) was itself heartening. Surprisingly, given the bitter partisan wrangling of late, they did so in a manner that was mostly civil and substantive. Towards the end of the long day, Joe Barton, a House Republican from Texas, even declared that he had never seen “so many members of the House and Senate behave so well for so long before so many television cameras.” ...

 
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