Tuesday, November 10, 2015

China probes Shanghai vice-mayor for suspected graft

China probes Shanghai vice-mayor for suspected graft

[SHANGHAI] The vice-mayor of Shanghai in charge of its experimental free trade zone is being investigated for suspected "serious breaches of discipline", the antigraft watchdog of the ruling Communist Party said on Tuesday, using its usual euphemism for corruption.
The Central Commission for Discipline Inspection gave no further details of the investigation into Vice-Mayor Ai Baojun, the most senior official from China's finance hub to be swept up in an anti-corruption campaign launched by President Xi Jinping after taking power some three years ago.
It was not possible to reach Ai for comment and unclear if he has a lawyer.
Ai, a native of the northeastern province of Liaoning, became a vice-mayor of Shanghai in December 2007, according to an official online biography.
Ai has headed the committee that runs the Shanghai Free Trade Zone since its launch in September 2013, as part of a government effort to test a more open and streamlined environment for foreign firms to do business, along with the relaxation of policies for several service sectors.
He was also a director of the Shanghai International Tourism and Resorts Zone, where a new Disney theme park is being developed, the Shanghai Daily said.
Shanghai's party boss Han Zheng called the news"heartbreaking" but said he supported the investigation and a zero-tolerance policy on corruption, the newspaper reported.
"Every Party member and leader should reflect deeply on and learn from the case and take it as a grave warning. Government officials must be role models and regulate themselves, their relatives and staff," the newspaper quoted Han as telling a meeting of the city's party committee on the issue.
Before entering politics, Ai was a university professor and then worked his way up to the position of general manager of China's second-largest steel producer, Baosteel Group.
He is the most senior Shanghai official to be investigated for corruption since the city's then-Communist Party chief Chen Liangyu was jailed for 18 years for graft in 2008.
Dai Haibo, a deputy secretary of the Shanghai government and former deputy head of the free trade zone, was stripped of his post this year, following an investigation by the anti-corruption watchdog.
REUTERS

Japan's first commercial jet in 50 years makes maiden flight

Japan's first commercial jet in 50 years makes maiden flight

[TOKYO] Japan's first commercial jet in half a century made its maiden flight on Wednesday, in a breakthrough for the country's long-held ambition to establish an aircraft industry that can compete with some of the major players in global aviation.
The Mitsubishi Regional Jet (MRJ) took off on a one-hour return flight from Nagoya Airport to test Mitsubishi Aircraft Corp's ability to bring the 100-seat class plane into service after three years of delays.
The unit of Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, which built the World War Two-era Zero fighter, is hoping the US$47-million regional jet will help it oust Canada's Bombardier Inc as the world's second-biggest maker of smaller passenger jets behind Brazil's Embraer SA.
The MRJ is Japan's first commercial passenger aircraft since the 64-seat YS-11 entered service 50 years ago.
The first MRJ is slated for delivery in June 2017 to Japan's biggest carrier, ANA Holdings. Mitsubishi aims eventually to sell more than 2,000 aircraft in the competitive market segment.
So far it has secured 223 firm orders, most recently in January when Japan Airlines asked for 32 planes. The biggest single purchase, for 100 aircraft, was from US regional airline operator Trans State Holdings.
Mitsubishi says the MRJ burns a fifth less fuel than aircraft of similar size, thanks to new-generation engines from Pratt & Whitney, a subsidiary of United Technologies Corp.
Japan's last attempt to establish itself as a commercial aircraft maker ended in failure. Production of the YS-11, built by a consortium that included Mitsubishi Heavy, finished after only 182 planes were built.
That programme however helped Mitsubishi Heavy and other companies forge ties with Boeing Co, turning them into major suppliers and partners of the US aircraft maker and helping revive an aerospace industry that was dismantled after World War Two.
Those Japanese companies build 35 per cent of Boeing's advanced 787 carbon-composite jetliner, including the wings, the most complex part.
Japan's biggest carmaker, Toyota Motor Corp, and largest trading company, Mitsubishi Corp, each own a 10 per cent stake in the MRJ venture.
REUTERS

Alstom wins 3b euro Indian railway contract

Alstom wins 3b euro Indian railway contract

[PARIS] French company Alstom said on Tuesday it has won a 3-billion-euro (S$4.6 billion) contract under which it will open a factory in India to supply the nation's rail operator with 800 electric locomotives.
Calling the deal "one of the strongest endorsements of the 'Make in India' policy of the government", Alstom said the freight locomotives to be delivered between 2018 and 2028 will play a crucial role in boosting the nation's transport infrastructure.
"This project, one of the biggest in Alstom's history, is a breakthrough for our presence in India and demonstrates the success of our global customer proximity strategy," Alstom's Executive Vice-President Henri Poupart-Lafarge said in a statement.
Under the deal an assembly plant will be set up in eastern Bihar state and two maintenance facilities will be built.
The first five locomotives will be imported and the remaining 795 made in the new factory, the Press Trust of India agency reported.
On Monday, General Electric said it had won a US$2.6 billion contract to supply 1,000 diesel locomotives to the Indian railway operator.
The Indian government has pledged to invest US$137 billion to modernise the country's vast rail network over the next five years.
AFP

Euro hits six-month low vs US dollar

Euro hits six-month low vs US dollar

[NEW YORK] The euro sank to a six-month low against the dollar on Tuesday as investors bet the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates next month, while its eurozone counterpart mulls further easing.
"Dollar bulls have re-emerged on expectations of a December rate hike from the Fed when all other central banks, including the Bank of England, aren't even on the tightening spectrum," said market analyst Jasper Lawler at CMC Markets UK The euro was under pressure from remarks by Erkki Liikanen, a member of the European Central Bank's governing council.
"ECB member Liikanen said that the central band stands ready and willing to act, firming speculation that a cut in the deposit rate is in the works for December," XE Market Analysis said in a blog.
The euro fell to US$1.0675, its lowest level since late April. It recovered to US$1.0727 around 2200 GMT, down from US$1.0748 at the same time on Monday.
Kathy Lien of BK Asset Management said that investors were preparing for dovish comments from ECB President Mario Draghi on Wednesday.
"If he doesn't waver from his recent comments, we could see the EUR/USD drop below the April spike lows near 1.0660 and make its way towards 1.05," she said.
AFP

Cameron lays out demands for Britain to stay in EU

Cameron lays out demands for Britain to stay in EU

[LONDON] British Prime Minister David Cameron warned on Tuesday that Britain could leave the EU if it does not get the reforms it wants, as he laid out demands that European leaders said would be "difficult" to meet in full.
But Mr Cameron said he was confident he could clinch an agreement to avert "Brexit" in a referendum due to be held by 2017, but would not rule out campaigning to leave the 28-member bloc if his demands are not met.
"The referendum... will be a once-in-a-generation choice," mr Cameron told an audience in London.
"This is a huge decision for our country - perhaps the biggest we'll make in our lifetime." The address came after mr Cameron sent a long-awaited letter to EU president Donald Tusk, laying out Britain's shopping list for change.
While the letter contained little new detail, it helped crystallise that the main fight Mr Cameron faces is over his plan to slash immigration by restricting state benefits to migrants from elsewhere in the EU for their first four years in Britain.
A European Commission spokesman called this idea "highly problematic" while German Chancellor Angela Merkel thought there were "some difficult (demands), others that are less difficult" while stressing she was "reasonably confident" of a deal.
Europe Minister David Lidington acknowledged "concerns" among other EU countries on the issue, adding it was the "outcome" that was important.
But eurosceptics in Britain accused Mr Cameron of already watering down his demands after he said that he was "open to different ways of dealing with" migration.
Several British newspapers reported Mr Cameron's speech as a climbdown on the demand for a four-year benefits residency qualification, which had been a manifesto pledge of his centre-right Conservative party.
"Cameron gives way on welfare barriers for EU migrants" read the front page of the Financial Times, while the Sun's read "the PM has wobbled on his election pledge".
Some analysts agreed. "My sense is that the line is softening," John Springford, senior research fellow at the Centre for European Reform, told AFP.
"The letter, and David Lidington's remarks, suggest that Britain will seek a compromise."
Mr Cameron also wants reform on three less disputed matters: improving competitiveness, greater "fairness" between eurozone and non-eurozone nations, and sovereignty issues including an exemption from the EU goal of ever-closer union.
But eurosceptics reacted with scepticism to his demands.
Conservative eurosceptic Jacob Rees-Mogg called Mr Cameron's speech "pretty thin gruel", while another, Bernard Jenkin, demanded: "Is that it? Is that the sum total of the government's position in the renegotiation?"
UKIP leader Nigel Farage said it was "clear that Mr Cameron is not aiming for any substantial renegotiation." He added: "His speech was an attempt to portray a new 'third way' relationship with Brussels that is simply not on offer." The campaign for Britain to stay in the EU called Mr Cameron's package of measures "sensible and sound".
Speaking in the United States, International Monetary Fund's chief economist Maurice Obstfeld said he was concerned about events threatening European economic integration.
"I worry a lot about the strong trend in Europe to pull back from market integration," Mr Obstfeld told AFP.
"One factor is the refugee crisis...Another obvious one is Britain wanting to possibly leave the European Union."
Mr Cameron's speech came nearly three years after he first pledged a referendum on whether Britain should remain in the EU, under pressure from eurosceptics in his Conservative Party and the anti-EU UK Independence Party.
Britain's turbulent ties with Brussels go back far further than the Cameron era.
The country joined what was then the European Economic Community in 1973 but has remained removed from the heart of Europe under successive prime ministers.
One of Mr Cameron's Conservative predecessors, Margaret Thatcher, became an icon for eurosceptics in 1984 by securing an annual budget rebate for Britain by banging the table and demanding: "I want my money back." Britain also notably stayed out of the euro when it was launched in 2002.
After Mr Cameron won May's general election, his promise of a referendum became reality. Senior Conservatives and experts predict it could be held as early as next year.
Mr Tusk will start consultations with member states on Britain's proposals next week, while December sees a crunch European summit in Brussels at which Britain's demands will be discussed.
Mr Lidington has played down the likelihood of getting a deal at that stage, while in Brussels, EU sources warned of trouble ahead.
"At some point they (the British) will have to climb down their tree," one told AFP.
AF
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Four indicted in massive hack of JP Morgan Chase, others

Four indicted in massive hack of JP Morgan Chase, others

[new york] Four people were indicted on Tuesday in a massive hacking scheme by a "diversified criminal conglomerate" that compromised data from millions of customers of JPMorgan Chase and other firms, officials said.
One indictment unsealed on Tuesday charged three people in the computer breach against the huge bank and other organisations. The fourth person was charged in an indictment for running a bitcoin scheme to launder the proceeds of the hackers.
The bank revealed last year that a hack had compromised data on 76 million household customers and seven million businesses, including their names, email addresses and telephone numbers - the largest theft of data from a US financial institution.
The indictment unsealed in New York federal court said the three defendants charged in the hacking led a "sprawling cybercriminal enterprise" which hit at least a dozen firms including banks and brokerages.
From the 12 companies, more than 100 million customers had personal information stolen or compromised, according to the Justice Department.
JPMorgan Chase was not mentioned in the indictment, but the bank confirmed the investigation was linked to the breach disclosed last year.
"We appreciate the strong partnership with law enforcement in bringing the criminals to justice," bank spokeswoman Patricia Wexler said in a statement.
"As we did here, we continue to cooperate with law enforcement in fighting cybercrime." Other firms previously identified as victims included the Dow Jones media group and online brokers ETrade and Scottrade.
Two Israeli nationals - Gery Shalon and Ziv Orenstein - and US citizen Joshua Samuel Aaron were charged with multiple counts of fraud, conspiracy and other charges related to the hack.
Among the various schemes alleged in the indictment, the defendants used the stolen data to send emails in an effort to artificially pump up the prices of certain "penny" stocks - a so-called "pump and dump" operation.
The hackers operated a wide range of other criminal activities including an Internet gambling scheme, an unlawful bitcoin exchange and an illicit payment processing operation for shady online pharmaceutical sellers and others, according to prosecutors who alleged the schemes netted "hundreds of millions of dollars" in illegal proceeds.
"We have exposed a cybercriminal enterprise that for years successfully and secretly hacked into the networks of a dozen companies, allegedly stealing personal information of over 100 million people, including over 80 million customers from one financial institution alone," said US Attorney Preet Bharara.
"The charged crimes showcase a brave new world of hacking for profit. It is no longer hacking merely for a quick payout, but hacking to support a diversified criminal conglomerate. This was hacking as a business model." In July, Shalon and Orenstein were arrested in Israel, and around the same time US officials detained Anthony Murgio, who was charged with operating an illegal money transfer service using the bitcoin virtual currency that helped launder the profits from the scheme.
Murgio was accused in a separate indictment of operating the Coin.mx service that was used to conceal the gains of the hackers.
Aaron, who is known to have ties to Russia, remains at large, according to officials. Shalon and Orenstein remain in custody in Israel pending an extradition proceeding.
The indictments include some 30 criminal charges carrying penalties of between five and 20 years each.
AFP
 
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