Wednesday 6 July 2016

Probe: Companies Worth $200M Linked to Cambodian PM's Family

An investigation by London-based Global Witness has uncovered an intricate network of Cambodian companies with a listed value of about $200 million, all tied to the family of the country's autocratic prime minister, Hun Sen.

“This is likely just the tip of the iceberg,” the report, Hostile Takeover, said.

The report does not include the family's real estate assets, which are extensive, but quotes experts as saying the clan's total value could be between $500 million and $1 billion.  

It's an enormous sum, given Hun Sen insists he makes just $13,800 a year as prime minister and head of the Cambodian People's Party (CPP).

Gap between rich and poor

About 40 percent of Cambodians live near or below the poverty line, another 40 percent of children are malnourished, and the wealth divide between rich and poor is emerging as a major social issue.

The oldest sons, Manet and Many, were mentioned in the report, along with the prime minister's wife, Bun Rany, who heads the Cambodian Red Cross — which Hostile Takeover says does little to hide its political allegiances and is often referred to as the “humanitarian wing” of the CPP.

FILE - The Cambodian Red Cross, led by Prime Minister Hun Sen’s wife, Bun Rany, has been criticized in the past for its close ties to the ruling Cambodian People’s Party.
FILE - The Cambodian Red Cross, led by Prime Minister Hun Sen’s wife, Bun Rany, has been criticized in the past for its close ties to the ruling Cambodian People’s Party.

But it was the eldest daughter, Mana, who emerged as the most successful of the clan. She is just one of two people whose companies have controlling interests in television, radio and newspaper outlets. The other is CPP Senator Ly Yong Phat, a close ally of Hun Sen.

Hostile Takeover sheds light on a huge network of secret deal-making and corruption that has underpinned Hun Sen’s 30-year dictatorial reign of murder, torture and the imprisonment of his political opponents,” Global Witness said.

Company ties

The report found the Hun Sen family held interests in 114 companies that spanned nearly every facet of the Cambodian economy, including the mining, agriculture, electricity, media, garment, forestry and transport industries.

Of these, 103 companies counted a family member as chairperson; 44 companies included family members as a significant owner, with a minimum 5 percent stake; and 33 companies had a family member listed as the sole owner.

It said those companies held links to many international brands such as Apple, Visa, Procter & Gamble, Tommy Hilfiger and Polo Ralph Lauren, and much of the data was garnered online from the government's own companies registry. Access, however, has since been restricted.

“That $200 million figure represents the listed asset value of the companies, and we believe that the true figure is likely to be much higher for a couple of reasons,” said Global Witness co-founder Patrick Alley. “One of which is the listed asset value, which is the value when the companies were created, is very likely higher than that — and also we can only talk about the companies which we have definitely found links to.

“And we believe that the family very likely own lots of companies which are hidden behind nominee directors — anonymously owned companies which we obviously can only stab at. We've heard over the years figures of $500 million and $4 billion, but we can't verify that.”

Members of the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party raise joined hands for photographs at their party headquarters in Phnom Penh, May 27, 2016. A Cambodian court had convicted three military commandos of beating up two CNRP lawmakers outside the parliament in the previous year and had sentenced them to one year each in prison.
Members of the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party raise joined hands for photographs at their party headquarters in Phnom Penh, May 27, 2016. A Cambodian court had convicted three military commandos of beating up two CNRP lawmakers outside the parliament in the previous year and had sentenced them to one year each in prison.

Crackdown on opposition

The report landed at a critical point in Cambodia, where supporters of the opposition Cambodian National Rescue Party (CNRP) have faced arbitrary arrest and jail. Last year, two CNRP members of parliament were viciously bashed outside the National Assembly.

The CPP crackdown came as both parties begin gearing up for the campaign trail, with commune elections due this time next year and national elections a year later.

Hun Sen and his CPP were stunned by an electoral backlash in 2013, when the government was returned to power but with a sharply lower majority amid CNRP claims the government had rigged that poll while intimidating the electorate into voting its way.

Stephen Peel, former senior partner at private equity firm TPG Capital and a Global Witness board member, said too many company officials viewed corruption as a legal challenge and as an issue to get around as opposed to dealing with it from a moral and ethical standpoint.

“Companies should think hard and deeply before they get engaged in any sort of business relationship, be it investment or be it joint ventures, franchise agreements, distribution agreements, with these types of regimes,” he said.

Alleged ties to crime

Hostile Takeover also mentioned the prime minister's nephew, Hun To, who has denied allegations that he was involved with a heroin-smuggling and money-laundering ring targeting Australia.

“The Hun family includes members once implicated in a $1 billion heroin-smuggling operation, shootouts, a fatal hit-and-run, and land grabs that have caused mass displacements and destitution among Cambodia’s rural poor,” it said.

A government spokesman was unavailable for comment, and Global Witness said letters were sent to 25 members of the prime minister’s family asking for a response. One response was received, but Global Witness said it failed to address any of the allegations.

Global Witness said the the report should serve as a warning to investors who are urged to conduct stringent due diligence in Cambodia and report any evidence of corruption to international authorities. It has also called on the Hun family to make a full and public disclosure of its assets.

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Colombian Rebel Unit Says It Will Not Disarm Under Peace Deal

A unit of Colombia's FARC rebel group says it will not lay down arms or demobilize under a potential peace deal with the government, the first public sign of opposition to an accord from within the rebel ranks.

The statement by the Armando Rios First Front, a 200-strong rebel unit in the southeastern jungle province of Guaviare, comes nearly two weeks after leaders of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) and the government announced a cease-fire deal at their more than three-year-old peace talks.

"We have decided not to demobilize, we will continue the fight for the taking of power by the people for the people, independent of the decision taken by the rest of the members of the organization," the unit said in a statement Wednesday.

The unit, which famously held ex-presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt and three American contractors hostage, said the deals being reached at the talks will not solve the social and economic problems which first motivated rebels to take up arms more than five decades ago.

President Juan Manuel Santos has said the peace talks, aimed at ending a conflict which has killed more than 220,000 and displaced millions, may conclude as early as this month. Any deal will be put to Colombians for approval in a plebiscite vote.

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US Ministry Set to Unveil Noah's Ark Replica

A replica of the ark that saved Noah and his menagerie of animals from Biblical floods is set to open in the central U.S. state of Kentucky, and thousands are expected to visit the attraction, though not necessarily two-by-two.

The ark, said to be built to the proportions specified in the Bible, is 155 meters long and seven stories high, and cost an estimated $100 million. 

"I believe this is going to be one of the greatest Christian outreaches of this era in history,'' said Ken Ham, president of Answers in Genesis, the ministry that built the ark. But critics say the attraction will be detrimental to science education and shouldn't have won Kentucky state tax incentives.

Ham said the massive ark was entirely based on the tale of Noah, the man who the Bible says received a warning from God about a massive flood. Inside are museum-style exhibits: displays of Noah's family along with rows of cages containing animal replicas, including dinosaurs.

A visitor looks into a cage containing a model dinosaur inside a replica Noah's Ark at the Ark Encounter theme park during a media preview day in Williamstown, Kentucky, July 5, 2016.
A visitor looks into a cage containing a model dinosaur inside a replica Noah's Ark at the Ark Encounter theme park during a media preview day in Williamstown, Kentucky, July 5, 2016.

The group believes that God created everything about 6,000 years ago — man, dinosaur and everything else — so dinosaurs still would have been around at the time of Noah's flood. Scientists say dinosaurs died out about 65 million years before man appeared.

‘Lying about science’

An ark opponent who leads an atheist group called the Tri-State Freethinkers said the religious theme park will be unlike any other in the nation because of its rejection of science.

"Basically, this boat is a church raising scientifically illiterate children and lying to them about science,'' said Jim Helton.

Critics also have slammed the state and local governments for giving the project tax incentives worth $80 million over the next 20 years.

Ham's group anticipates the ark will draw more than 2 million visitors a year. It is situated close to the Creation Museum, which was opened by the same group nine years ago.

According to a 2012 Gallup poll that surveyed 1,012 adults, 46 percent of Americans can be described as creationists for believing that God created humans in their present form at some point within the last 10,000 years.

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Mauritania Imprisons Anti-Slavery Activists

A wave of arrests in Mauritania have landed anti-slavery activists behind bars.

Authorities arrested at least nine activists between June 29 and July 3 and denied them access to their families and lawyers, according to Amnesty International.

The activists are part of the Initiative for Resurgent Abolition Movement (IRA), one of the main organizations that have shone a spotlight on the persistence of slavery in Mauritania.

They were arrested following a protest against the forced removal of a group of about 20 Mauritanians who had been living in a shantytown on the outskirts of the capital, Nouakchott, and were relocated by security forces to a more remote area. The protests over relocation became violent and resulted in injuries to demonstrators and members of the security force and damage to property.

The government hasn’t officially responded, and the Mauritanian Embassy in Washington didn’t respond to VOA’s request for comment on the arrests. However, one of the governors of Mauritania’s capital, Mahy Ould Ahmed, said the IRA arrests were “provoked by a movement known for its extremism,” according to Reuters.

The people removed are of a darker-skinned ethnic group who have historically been discriminated against in the country, according to Sadibou Marong, Amnesty International's West Africa press officer.

Marong said the land was private and did not belong to those who were living there, but unconfirmed reports said Mauritanian officials were trying to clean up the capital in advance of hosting an Arab League summit this month.

He said the jailed activists have been held incommunicado, and "even the family members don’t know" where they are. “We are calling for the government of Mauritania to free them."

Marong said the anti-slavery activists are being targeted as troublemakers by security forces, even though they are only exercising constitutionally protected rights of freedom of expression and association. The longtime repression of these people "has started to really become violent ... and we are calling on the Mauritanian government to stop that.”

Awarded in U.S.

The IRA's president, Biram Dah Abeid, and vice president, Brahim Bilal Ramdane, who were not among those arrested, were recently invited to Washington by the U.S. State Department. They were awarded the Trafficking in Persons Heroes Award on June 30, 2016.

Biram Dah Abeid has been arrested several times in the past for fighting slavery. He told his story from Aleg prison in Mauritania last year, saying: “In the past five years, I have been imprisoned three times. I have been locked up during key events of my adult life, including the birth of my daughter. I celebrated my 50th birthday behind bars on 12 January 2015.”

Siikam Sy, a member of the board of directors of IRA-USA, said he is concerned for the safety of the activists. He said Mauritania’s heavy-handed approach is counterproductive to addressing the issue of modern slavery.

“The government is making a huge mistake by aiming or seeking to basically decapitate IRA-Mauritania, when in fact what it should have done is look at IRA-Mauritania as a partner in ending slavery,” he said. “We continue to demonstrate, and each one of those demonstrations is met with unbelievable violence from the police. We will continue because we think this is a human rights issue.”

He pointed out that although the organization is recognized and supported around the world, it is not recognized in Mauritania itself.

“The fact is that you can still buy and sell human beings in Mauritania, and this is backed by facts on the ground,” he said. “On one side you have a government that denies, denies, denies, and on the other side you have the IRA that will continue to push so that the government could take tangible steps toward eradicating, eliminating the practice of slavery in Mauritania.”

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Defenders, Critics Stand Their Ground Following British Iraq Report

Western reaction to Britain's 6,000-page report on the Iraq war reflects the remorse of hindsight, but leaders who played a part in going to war are standing by their decisions.

White House spokesman Josh Earnest said Wednesday that the president and his staff have not yet read all the way through the lengthy document, but he said President Barack Obama "has been dealing with the consequences of that fateful decision for the entirety of his presidency." He also said it is important that the United States "learn the lessons of those past mistakes."

The decision to go to war was fueled by the belief that former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein had a store of weapons of mass destruction that could have been used on the United States and its allies. That intelligence assessment was later proved to be mistaken.

A spokesman for former U.S. President George W. Bush, who ordered the invasion of Iraq in 2003, released a statement Wednesday saying, "Despite the intelligence failures and other mistakes he has acknowledged previously, President Bush continues to believe the whole world is better off without Saddam Hussein in power."

Expert: Not all alternatives exhausted

Public policy expert William Galston of the Brookings Institution told VOA on Wednesday that he agrees with the report that the international community had not yet exhausted all other options to eliminate the Iraqi threat.

FILE - U.S. Marine Corp Assaultman Kirk Dalrymple watches as a statue of Iraq's President Saddam Hussein falls in central Baghdad, April 9, 2003.
FILE - U.S. Marine Corp Assaultman Kirk Dalrymple watches as a statue of Iraq's President Saddam Hussein falls in central Baghdad, April 9, 2003.

He noted that U.N. arms inspector Hans Blix has maintained that the U.N. sanctions regime "was not as weak as was represented, and was not in eminent danger of crumbling, that the inspections regime was very robust, and that Saddam couldn't have done anything major without being detected or without expelling the international inspectors."

Galston says one of the big questions the report raises is "whether the status quo was as untenable as the international community said it was."

Paul Bremer, who led the occupational authority in Iraq after the invasion in 2003, wrote in Britain's The Guardian that the risks incurred by invasion were far less than those of leaving Saddam in power. He said the 9/11 attacks on the United States intensified pressure to confront international threats.

"After 9/11," he writes, "no American president could dismiss the possibility that a state sponsor would provide devastating weapons to terrorist groups, or use them itself." He notes that Saddam's government had used biological weapons against Iraqi Kurds in 1988.

Bremer concluded his piece with the assertion that "it was the correct, if difficult, decision to remove Saddam Hussein. Had we not done so, today we would likely confront a nuclear armed Iraq facing off against a nuclear armed Iran. Bad as the unrest in the region is today, that would be worse."

Threat estimates

Former U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. John Bolton, now a senior fellow at the conservative think tank American Enterprise Institute, wrote in London's The Telegraph Wednesday that the decision to invade was defensible. He said, "Intelligence can underestimate as well as overestimate a threat. … Saddam lied about his capabilities and about trashing them. Had he stayed in power, he would today have even larger chemical stockpiles."

FILE - Then-President George Bush declares the war over in Iraq, May 1, 2003. Behind him on board the carrier USS Abraham Lincoln is a banner reading: "Mission Accomplished."
FILE - Then-President George Bush declares the war over in Iraq, May 1, 2003. Behind him on board the carrier USS Abraham Lincoln is a banner reading: "Mission Accomplished."

But those opposing the decision to go to war at the beginning are also sticking to their positions. U.S. foreign policy analyst David Rothkopf of the journal Foreign Affairs tweeted his response to the report Wednesday, saying, "Somehow 'sorry' doesn't seem like enough, does it? OK after a small traffic accident maybe. A catastrophic war, no."

French Ambassador to the United States Gerard Araud tweeted, "May I remind everybody how France was abused and denigrated for opposing the war? France was right!" He continued, "Not only a geopolitical disaster, not only distortion and manipulation, but also a human tragedy."

And the Russian Embassy in London uncharacteristically made a joke. Playing on a British slogan from World War II, the embassy posted an image saying, "Keep calm, but I told you so."

And in Washington, the U.S. State Department renewed its travel warning on Iraq. The new warning tells U.S. citizens that travel in Iraq remains "very dangerous."

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ECB Threatens Legal Action Against Slovenia After Police Raid

The European Central Bank threatened to take legal action against Slovenia on Wednesday after police seized documents from the country's central bank in a rare conflict between authorities and one of the eurozone's most respected institutions.

ECB President Mario Draghi said he deplored the seizure, which infringes on the ECB's legal privileges and immunities, and called on European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker to intervene.

Slovenian police conducted an investigation Wednesday in four locations in Ljubljana, including at the central bank, collecting evidence in a pre-criminal investigation related to possible irregularities during a bank overhaul in 2013.

"Seized equipment contains ECB information and such information is protected under directly applicable primary EU law," Draghi said in a letter to the Slovenian State Prosecutor General. "The ECB will also explore possible appropriate legal remedies under Slovenian law."

FILE - European Central Bank President Mario Draghi speaks during a news conference in Frankfurt, Germany, June 6, 2013.FILE - European Central Bank President Mario Draghi speaks during a news conference in Frankfurt, Germany, June 6, 2013.

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FILE - European Central Bank President Mario Draghi speaks during a news conference in Frankfurt, Germany, June 6, 2013.
FILE - European Central Bank President Mario Draghi speaks during a news conference in Frankfurt, Germany, June 6, 2013.

The ECB said police seized information on the computers of Bank of Slovenia Governor Bostjan Jazbec, who sits on the ECB's rate-setting Governing Council, as well as a former deputy governor and some staff members.

Slovenian police said the investigation related to an assessment of one of the banks rescued by the state in 2013, which meant the bank could scrap its obligations toward holders of subordinated bonds and subordinated debt in the value of 257 million euros.

In 2013, the previous government had to pour more than 3 billion euros ($3.33 billion) into local banks to prevent them from collapsing under a large amount of bad loans. The move helped the country narrowly avoid an international bailout.

As part of the bank overhaul, about 600 million euros of subordinated bonds were scrapped in five banks.

In 2014, the Slovenian Association of Small Shareholders filed several court cases against the Bank of Slovenia and local banks, claiming the subordinated bonds and shareholders' capital in rescued banks should not have been erased. None of the cases have been finished yet.

The Bank of Slovenia had repeatedly rejected allegations that it mishandled data used when putting together a rescue package for Slovenia's banks.

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Pope Francis to Canonize Mother Teresa

On September 4, the Vatican will hold a ceremony, officiated by Pope Francis, to canonize Mother Teresa, the Roman Catholic nun and missionary of Albanian descent whose work to help the poor of Calcutta (now Kolkata), India, and ease their suffering earned her numerous honors, including the Nobel Peace Prize.

To many, Mother Teresa was a humble person with an unlimited capacity to offer unconditional love to people.   

“There are two kinds of poverty. There is the poverty of material, for example, in some places like India, Ethiopia or some other places, where people are hungry for bread, real hunger. But there is much deeper hunger and that is hunger for love,” she once said.

Giving comfort to the suffering, offering shelter to the homeless, and helping the poorest of the poor was Mother Teresa's life work.
 
Mother Teresa was born Anjeza Gonxhe Bojaxhiu on August 26, 1910, the third child of Albanian parents, in Skopje, Macedonia. She was raised in a middle class family, and at 18 decided to become a nun.

She joined the Loretta Order, first as a student and then as a teacher at a Roman Catholic girls’ school in Calcutta, India.

FILE - In this Oct. 25, 1979, photo, Mother Teresa (L) talks with and blesses orphans at her Sishu Bhavan (Children's Home) in Calcutta (now Kolkata), India.
FILE - In this Oct. 25, 1979, photo, Mother Teresa (L) talks with and blesses orphans at her Sishu Bhavan (Children's Home) in Calcutta (now Kolkata), India.

Blending with the poor

Professor Gëzim Alpion says she later left her teaching post to devote her life to working among the poor in the slums of that city - and to start a new order, Missionaries of Charity.  

"What Mother Teresa put in practice was different from the European orders in Calcutta and India at that time. She believed she could serve the ‘human debris’ better by living like them, in the poorest areas of Calcutta. And she did this with that kind of integrity, which is impossible not to admire," Alpion says.

Mother Teresa had to fight hard – first with the authorities of the Roman Catholic Church to get permission for her humanitarian work, and then with locals in India who thought her mission was to spread Christianity.

But they soon realized she wanted nothing more than to live among the poor and ease their suffering.

According to Alpion, Mother Teresa's work reflected a unique philosophy of life.

“There are two sides of Mother Teresa - the religious aspect of her work, as well as the humanitarian aspect. Both of them are linked together, and Mother Teresa had the ability to express her philosophy of life, her theology, through simple words that have a deep philosophical meaning.”

FILE - A portrait of Mother Teresa is seen on her tomb in Kolkata (formerly Calcutta), India, Sept. 5, 2015. The Nobel Peace Prize winning Catholic nun who spent 45 years serving for the poor, sick, orphaned, and dying, died in Kolkata Sept 5, 1997, at age 87.
FILE - A portrait of Mother Teresa is seen on her tomb in Kolkata (formerly Calcutta), India, Sept. 5, 2015. The Nobel Peace Prize winning Catholic nun who spent 45 years serving for the poor, sick, orphaned, and dying, died in Kolkata Sept 5, 1997, at age 87.

Tributes

Mother Teresa was awarded the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1979. At the ceremony, she spoke of the joy of spreading peace, of loving one another, and of the joy in acknowledging that the poorest of the poor are "our brothers and sisters."

In 2003, Mother Teresa was beatified by Pope John Paul II, marking her first step toward canonization or elevation to sainthood.

The head of the Archdiocese Convention of Albania, Archbishop Engjëll Masafra, calls the canonization a great honor.

“That a small woman physically, but in fact a great person, who has been called the Mother of Humanity, of the World, becomes a saint - it’s a great honor, as well as an obligation for us Albanians, that in spite of the religion they belong to, to be like Mother Teresa - a model for the love of God and to help others,” the archbishop said.

The Missionaries of Charity, the organization she launched with only 20 nuns, today is active in more than 130 countries, with more than 4,500 sisters offering free services to the poorest of the poor.

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Chile's New Labor Laws a Mystery for Country's Lawyers

Two weeks after Chile's government completed work on a landmark labor reform, leading lawyers in the world's top copper exporter say the bill is filled with gaping regulatory voids that have replaced many laws with question marks.

The reform, aimed at strengthening organized labor in the South American country, was initially passed by Chile's Senate in March after a bruising battle that opened up divisions within the governing coalition.

However, key parts of the bill, touted as a central element of leftist President Michelle Bachelet's broad reform program, were later struck down by a constitutional court.

The government, whose fractured coalition could not produce the votes needed to replace the removed parts, responded by excising the reform's unconstitutional sections in June, thus letting the unchallenged provisions become law.

The removed parts, however, contained a huge chunk of the laws that define the nation's collective bargaining framework. Lawyers now say bargaining outside established unions has been left essentially unregulated, meaning the nation's courts, not its legislators, will establish many of the new rules.

Some see deja vu with the country's recent tax reform, which had to be simplified last year because of its complexity. All see an uptick in court cases, at least in the short term.

"When morning comes and a company goes to negotiate with a group [of workers outside a union], they're going to ask, 'Well, how is it regulated?' " said Juan Vergara, a labor adviser and member of pro-labor group ProSindical.

"What rights do they have? These are the questions that exist, and this is where the uncertainty is."

Changes in bargaining units

Unions worry that the laws could encourage the use of bargaining units that are less formal and that would weaken established organized labor in the long term.

Business-affiliated lawyers fear that small bargaining units will proliferate, because there is no longer an enforceable floor for the number of workers who can band together to bargain collectively. Questions have also arisen about the enforceability of some contracts, and several pro-labor parts of the original bill, such as restrictions on replacing striking workers, will still go into effect because they were never challenged in court.

Still, while many executives and business lawyers are apprehensive, others see opportunity in the new laws.

"There are many who say this project is very negative," said lawyer Felipe Saez, who has advised heavy industry group Sofofa. "But for companies with decent labor relations, less regulation might not be the worst thing."

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Snapchat Launches New Save Function for Photos, Videos

Snapchat announced a new feature that enables users to save and share their content, a big change for the popular social messaging app widely used for sending photos and videos that disappear in a day.

The new feature, called "Memories," is an album within the app where users can save photos and videos which they can later upload to their "Story," a slide show of contents that disappears after 24 hours. Until now, photos and videos had to be immediately uploaded after being recorded.

The move could signal that Snapchat, known for immediacy, spontaneity and simplicity, is taking a shot at more mainstream social networks like Facebook.

In recent years, Snapchat added advertising and sponsored content as the company's valuation grew to around $18 billion.

Its user base has also gotten older, with nearly 40 percent of users now between 25 and 34 years old in the United States. About 14 percent of users are above 35, according to digital measurer comScore.

"It's fun to celebrate an anniversary or birthday by finding a few old snaps and stringing them together into a new story," Snapchat said in the announcement made on its blog Wednesday.

Snapchat has 150 million daily users, according to a Bloomberg report last month, surpassing Twitter, which has less than 140 million daily users.

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Peru's Kuczynski to Try to Reopen La Oroya Smelter

Peru President-elect Pedro Pablo Kuczynski vowed Wednesday to make his "strongest effort" to reopen the polymetallic smelter at La Oroya, part of his goal of wringing more value out of the country's key mineral exports.

The former operator of the smelter, Doe Run Peru, owned by U.S.-based Renco Group Inc., halted operations at La Oroya in 2009 when it ran out of money to buy concentrates. The company also lacked financing needed to finish an environmental cleanup and to pay for upgrades to curb pollution.

Now controlled by Doe Run's former creditors, the smelter faces liquidation on August 27 unless a new buyer is found.

"La Oroya is dying and we have to change that. We have to give it oxygen, oxygen from investors," Kuczynski said in televised comments before a crowd in La Oroya, where former workers have held rallies to demand operations resume.

"You have my word that I'll make my strongest effort to push this out!" Kuczynski said to cheers. The former investment banker, 77, takes office July 28.

March to Lima

Kuczynski asked La Oroya residents to march to Lima to help him press the incoming opposition-controlled Congress to extend the liquidation deadline. He did not say what he would do to make the smelter, which opened in 1922, more attractive.

Kuczynski's party will have just 18 lawmakers in the 130-member Congress, threatening his proposed reforms. The party of his defeated rival, Keiko Fujimori, will hold 73 seats.

Kuczynski wants Peru to become a refining and smelting hub to boost its copper, zinc, tin, gold and silver exports as slumping prices drag on growth. His first trip abroad as president will be to China to talk with officials about potential partnerships on refineries.

La Oroya, 140 kilometers (87 miles) from Lima in central Peru, could process concentrates from several nearby mines, Kuczynski said. Toromocho, operated by Chinese miner Chinalco Mining Corp. International, is the biggest copper deposit near the La Oroya smelter.

"When minerals are refined here, their value will go up. There's a margin of about $400 million that we can recover," Kuczynski said.

The smelter was once the world's most diversified, churning out gold, silver, lead, zinc, copper and a dozen specialty metals. But it turned La Oroya into one of the 10 most polluted places in the world, according to a 2007 report by the Blacksmith Institute, an environmental organization.

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Two Leading Republicans Shy Away From Role of Trump VP Pick

Republican Donald Trump's list of potential vice presidential candidates got a little shorter on Wednesday when one prominent U.S. senator withdrew
from consideration and a second said she wanted to focus on her home state.

The moves by Bob Corker of Tennessee and Joni Ernst of Iowa could complicate Trump's efforts to rally establishment Republicans behind his presidential bid.

With Trump looking at a self-imposed July 15 deadline to announce his pick, there was no indication that the wealthy businessman was anywhere close to reaching what is perhaps the most important decision he will make as the presumptive Republican nominee.

In New York, Trump met with a potential candidate, Republican veteran Newt Gingrich, and told Fox News he has 10 candidates on his list, including two generals.

One source said Indiana Governor Mike Pence is being pushed internally by some members of Trump's inner circle. A former congressman, Pence met with Trump on Saturday.

Corker, a Tennessee senator who is chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, had privately wrestled with whether to be a contender for the No. 2 position, telling friends he had never been a surrogate for another politician.

Corker, who spent eight hours at Trump Tower on Tuesday then campaigned with Trump in Raleigh, North Carolina, told reporters he withdrew because "I just felt like I was far more suited for other types of service."

"You know, it's a highly political role for the next four months," he said. "I view myself as deep in substance and policy, and I just think there are better ways for me to serve in the public arena."

A fairly vocal supporter of Trump, Corker has not shied away from criticizing some of Trump's bellicose rhetoric. His withdrawal takes away an important party establishment figure as Trump tries to broaden his appeal with plans to visit Republicans in the Senate and House of Representatives on Capitol Hill on Thursday.

"Corker's withdrawal could be considered a canary in the coal mine with establishment Republicans who are convinced that Trump cannot stay on message and can't stay focused on attacking (Democrat) Hillary Clinton without doing some type of damage to his campaign," said Republican strategist Ron Bonjean.

Some Republicans felt Trump erred by not taking full political advantage of FBI Director James Comey statement on Tuesday that Clinton was "extremely careless" with classified emails.

In Raleigh, Trump sharply attacked Clinton but strayed from the message by saying the late Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein had done a good job cracking down on militants.

Trump has been spending time with potential running mates to get a feel for them. One of his most loyal supporters has been Gingrich, the former speaker of the House of Representatives who has been an influential adviser to Trump.

Gingrich was to campaign with Trump on Wednesday night in Cincinnati, Ohio. Some in the Trump camp feel Gingrich would be the best choice.

Ernst, a rising figure in the Republican Party, spent part of the Fourth of July holiday meeting with Trump. She seemed to be leaning against the vice presidential position, and told Politico, "I made that very clear to him that I'm focused on Iowa. I feel that I have a lot more to do in the United States Senate. And Iowa is where my heart is."

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Brazil's Rousseff Assails Impeachment Proceedings in Stirring Defense

Brazil's President Dilma Rousseff presented her written defense to a Senate impeachment trial Wednesday, denouncing the proceedings as a farce and saying her alleged crimes were no more than "routine acts of budgetary management."

"Everybody knows that you are judging an honest woman, a public servant dedicated to just causes," the suspended leftist leader said in a document read aloud by her lawyer and former attorney general, Jose Eduardo Cardozo. "I've honored those who voted for me."

Rousseff's removal would end 13 years of leftist rule over Latin America's largest economy by the Workers' Party that began under her mentor, former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

Her defense made clear she is sticking to the strategy of refuting the impeachment process as a soft "coup" led by her onetime vice president, Michel Temer, a conservative who has taken over since mid-May when the Senate voted to try Rousseff.

Rousseff has repeatedly said her impeachment is an attempt by Temer and other right-leaning members of her onetime governing coalition partner, the Brazilian Democratic Movement Party, to remove her because she did not impede a sweeping probe of corruption at state-run oil company Petrobras.

That investigation has ensnared dozens of top politicians, including the former speaker of the lower house of Brazil's Congress, who led the impeachment campaign against Rousseff.

Rousseff herself is not directly accused of corruption. But Brazil's chief prosecutor has asked for her to be investigated for obstructing justice in the Petrobras case. She has denied wrongdoing.

Alleged fiscal violations

Her impeachment is technically focused on accusations that she broke fiscal laws by disguising the size of the budget deficit to make the economy look healthier in the runup to her 2014 re-election.

Rousseff has said her budget maneuvering was no different than under previous presidents. But critics have said Rousseff borrowed far more money from state banks than her predecessors to plug budget gaps and hide the real state of Brazil's economy.

Rousseff's suspension in May had ample political support because her popularity had plunged amid Brazil's worst recession since the 1930s and public outrage over a string of corruption scandals involving her government. A recent poll showed interim President Temer is also highly unpopular.

"What most hurts right now is the injustice," Rousseff said in her written defense Wednesday. "What hurts most is to perceive that I am the victim of a judicial and political farce."

Rousseff said she believes she is being targeted because she "never gave in to blackmail. I never accepted ... the backroom deals so well-known in the traditional politics of our country."

Rousseff warned that should the Senate vote to find her guilty, as it is widely expected to do next month, her permanent removal would result in a Temer government that would shift Brazil's politics to the right without a win at the ballot box.

She said that would turn back democratic gains made during the fight against the nation's long dictatorship, during which Rousseff herself was arrested and tortured while spending three years in prison.

"A government that was not directly elected by the people will not have the legitimacy to propose solutions to our crises," Rousseff's defense read. "A government without popular support will not solve a crisis because it itself will always be the crisis."

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Pope Francis to Canonize Mother Teresa

Laura Konda

Published July 06, 2016

On September 4, the Vatican will hold a ceremony to canonize Mother Teresa, the Roman Catholic nun and missionary of Albanian descent whose work to help the poor of Calcutta (now Kolkata), India, and ease their suffering earned her numerous honors, including the Nobel Peace Prize. As VOA's Laura Konda reports, Mother Teresa was a humble person with an unlimited capacity to offer unconditional love to people.

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British Inquiry on Iraq Finds Blair Overstated Threat Posed by Saddam

Henry Ridgwell

Published July 06, 2016

Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair overstated the threat posed by Saddam Hussein in the runup to the invasion of Iraq in 2003, according to an official British inquiry into the war. The report says the intelligence on the Iraqi president’s weapons of mass destruction did not support taking military action, and it also questioned the legal basis of the conflict. VOA's Henry Ridgwell reports.

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NASA's Juno Orbits Jupiter

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NASA's Juno Orbits Jupiter

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Saturn’s Moon, Titan, Could Support Life

Titan, one of Saturn’s moons, could support a very different kind life, according to a new study.

Writing in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, researchers from Cornell University say that despite the moon’s harsh environment, a “prebiotic chemical key” likely exists in the form of hydrogen cyanide. The compound is produced when sunlight interacts with the moon’s “toxic” atmosphere made up of nitrogen and methane.

The conclusion was reached based on data from NASA’s Cassini and Huygen’s missions.

Hydrogen cyanide is an organic chemical capable of reacting with other molecules, “forming long chains, or polymers, one of which is called polyimine. Polyimine is flexible, which helps mobility under very cold conditions, and it can absorb the sun’s energy and become a possible catalyst for life,” researchers said.

“Polyimine can exist as different structures, and they may be able to accomplish remarkable things at low temperatures, especially under Titan’s conditions,” said Martin Rahm, postdoctoral researcher in chemistry and lead author of the new study. This paper is a starting point, as we are looking for prebiotic chemistry in conditions other than Earth’s. “We are used to our own conditions here on Earth. Our scientific experience is at room temperature and ambient conditions. Titan is a completely different beast.”

Other moons in the solar system have also been identified as having conditions that could support life, including Saturn’s Enceladus and Jupiter’s Europa.

While both Earth and Titan have flowing liquids in the form of lakes, rivers and oceans, on Titan they are filled with liquid methane and ethane, not water. Also, the moon is too cold to have liquid water.

“We need to continue to examine this, to understand how the chemistry evolves over time. We see this as a preparation for further exploration,” said Rahm.

“If future observations could show there is prebiotic chemistry in a place like Titan, it would be a major breakthrough. This paper is indicating that prerequisites for processes leading to a different kind of life could exist on Titan, but this only the first step,” he added.

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Two Dutch Soldiers Killed in Mali Peacekeeping Accident

Two Dutch soldiers were killed and another seriously injured during a training exercise in Mali on Wednesday afternoon, the latest casualties in a mission that has become the most deadly place for United Nations peacekeepers to serve.

More than 11,000 soldiers are serving in the Mali mission, which aims to support the Bamako government in its fight against Islamist militants in northern Mali, who have staged assaults in the capital, as well as in Burkina Faso and Ivory Coast.

Corporal Kevin Roggeveld, 29, and sergeant Henry Hoving, 24, were killed by an exploding mortar shortly after 1130 GMT, the acting head of the Dutch armed forces told a news conference. At least 103 peacekeepers have died since the start of the mission in April 2013.

"A terrible accident took place in Mali where our soldiers are participating in the U.N. peacekeeping mission," vice-admiral Rob Bauer told reporters. A 23-year-old soldier was operated on in a field hospital before being evacuated.

Some 450 Dutch soldiers are participating in the mission to the West African country, which is meant to help implement a peace deal signed last year between Mali's government and separatist groups.

Last month, the Security Council voted to increase by 2,500 the number of peacekeepers deployed to the country, with European countries promising to send special forces and intelligence experts to support the operation.

French forces intervened in 2013 to drive back Islamist fighters who had hijacked the Tuareg uprising to seize Mali's desert north in 2012. But it has since proved difficult to prevent Islamists staging deadly attacks.

Al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) has claimed an attack on two U.N. sites in northern Mali at the end of last month, in which a peacekeeper from China and three civilians were killed and over a dozen others wounded.

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France Sentences 2 to Life in Prison for 1994 Genocide in Rwanda

France on Wednesday sentenced two former Rwandan mayors to life in prison for genocide and crimes against humanity committed in the African country in 1994.

Tito Barahira, 65, and Octavien Ngenzi, 58, were tried over attacks against ethnic Tutsis in the town of Kabarondo, where they both have been mayor. They denied any wrongdoing.

Ethnic Hutu extremists killed more than 800,000 Tutsis and politically moderate Hutus in a three-month rampage in 1994 while the world largely stood by.

A number of Rwandan genocide-related crimes have been tried in recent years in Rwanda and other countries. This was the second such trial in France, which can rule on such cases since parliament adopted a law that gives it universal jurisdiction over cases of crimes against humanity.

Rights groups welcomed the decision but called for faster trials in other, ongoing investigations.

"We need to speed things up, it's high time, it's been 22 years," said Dafroza Gauthier from CPCR, a rights groups of Rwanda victims. "We need procedures to accelerate while there are still witnesses."

Philippe Meilhac, a lawyer for Barahira, said the accused were likely to appeal the decision.

France was an ally of the Rwandan government that ruled before the genocide.

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Chile President Bachelet's Approval Rating Falls to All-time Low

Chilean President Michelle Bachelet's approval rating fell to an all-time low in June amid widening student unrest, the resignation of her Cabinet chief and a sluggish economy, a survey by pollster GfK Adimark showed Wednesday.

Her support slumped to 22 percent in June, down from 24 percent in May. It was the lowest level for any president since Adimark started the polling series in 2006, when Bachelet first assumed that office for a four-year term.

In June, Interior Minister Jorge Burgos, who also led the Cabinet, resigned after policy disputes, while a student protest ended with violent confrontations with police.

Widespread unease over meager economic growth and a rising jobless rate have also weighed on how residents viewed Bachelet, who took office for a second term in 2014.

The survey polled 1,064 people from June 3 to 30, with a margin of error of 3 percentage points.

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Pope Accepts Resignation of Brazilian Bishop in Sex Abuse Case

Pope Francis has accepted the resignation of a Brazilian bishop who was accused of turning a blind eye to suspected pedophile priests in his diocese, the Vatican said Wednesday.

The Vatican said Francis had accepted the resignation of Bishop Aldo di Cillo Pagotto of Paraiba, 66, citing a section of Church law under which bishops are obliged to tender their resignation if they are ill or if there is "grave cause."

Under normal circumstances, he would have remained bishop until he turned 75.

Last year, the Church stripped Pagotto of his power to ordain priests while the accusations against him were being investigated.

Pagatto had been accused of allowing men into seminaries in his diocese to become priests even though they had been rejected from other places in Brazil because they were suspected child abusers.

In a letter posted on the diocese's website, Pagotto said: "I welcomed priests and seminarians with the intention of offering them new opportunities in life. Some were later suspected of committing serious wrongdoings. ... I made mistakes by trusting too much, with naive mercy."

Last month, Francis issued a new decree saying bishops found to have been negligent when dealing with cases of sexual abuse could be investigated and removed from office if they did not offer to resign.

The decree requires the Vatican to launch an investigation if "serious evidence" of negligence is found. The bishop is given the opportunity to defend himself. Ultimately, the Vatican can issue a decree to remove him or ask him to resign within 15 days.

A Vatican spokesman said Pagatto's case was handled under the previous procedures.

The Catholic Church has been rocked over the past 15 years by scandals over priests who sexually abused children and were transferred by bishops from parish to parish instead of being turned over to authorities and defrocked.

In some developed countries, particularly in the United States, the Church has paid tens of millions of dollars in settlements to victims.

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Fourth Gold a Rio Lure for US Beach Volleyball’s Walsh Jennings

The omens look bright for Kerri Walsh Jennings as the American beach volleyball champion targets a rare fourth consecutive Olympic gold medal in Rio de Janeiro after producing barnstorming form on the 2016 AVP Tour.

Walsh Jennings and her new partner, April Ross, have gone unbeaten on the Association of Volleyball Professionals circuit this year, extending their impressive run together to 56 consecutive matches and 11 successive titles.

This can only augur well for the 37-year-old Californian, who is nicknamed 'Six Feet of Sunshine', as she aims to join an exclusive and very small Olympic club after undergoing her fifth shoulder surgery in September.

Should Walsh Jennings mine gold in Rio, she would emulate long jumper Carl Lewis and discus thrower Al Oerter, both fellow Americans, as the only athletes who have won four consecutive Olympic golds in the same individual event.

"I don't know if I can even put what it would mean into words," Walsh Jennings told Reuters about the prospect of landing a fourth gold medal.

"To prove to myself I had it in me, to represent the U.S. and to share that experience with my family would mean the world."

"I was pregnant with my third, Scout, during the last Olympics in London and it'd be incredible to have her see what she was a part of and the boys are older now so it'd be special for them too."

Walsh Jennings, who has two sons and a three-year-old daughter, won gold at the 2004 Athens Games, the 2008 Beijing Games and the 2012 London Olympics alongside Misty May-Treanor.

Hard work pays off

With May-Treanor announcing her retirement shortly after the London Games, Walsh Jennings paired up with Ross the following year and, following a lot of hard work in practice, they have certainly flourished together.

"When you start playing with a new partner, you have to learn their strengths, weaknesses, how you can support one another," Walsh Jennings said via email.

"With my shoulder, we've had to make some adjustments and April has been awesome. She is such a strong athlete and I knew I wanted to play with her."

"Back in London in 2012, playing against each other in the gold medal match, we shook hands and I was the one to tell April, 'Let's go win gold at Rio'. A little less than a year later, we became official partners."

Asked how her new partnership matched up to her pairing with May-Treanor, Walsh Jennings replied: "It's tough to compare. Misty was an amazing partner. We went through a lot together, personally and professionally, and had our run of success."

"April and I are in our third year playing together and we're feeling really good. My shoulder injuries and surgery late last year were a bit of an obstacle but we've found an incredible rhythm."

"We both want gold in Rio so bad and we are in it to win it. Sharing that and competing well pushes us even more. It's been a wild and exciting year so far and I can't wait to see what we can accomplish over the next few months."

Asked if she had suffered any setbacks following her shoulder surgery, Walsh Jennings replied: "Not really. Mentally, it's been a bit challenging, because you just never know how you're going to recover and this was a new injury for me."

"On the court, I've had to adjust to use my left arm more to give my right shoulder a break and April has been great at helping me compensate," said Walsh Jennings, who is a brand ambassador for Blue Diamond Almond Breeze.

"Other than that, coming back since the surgery has been smooth. We've both stayed really positive and honestly, I think it was a blessing in disguise - when you tackle obstacles like that, you see how truly strong you are."

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Kenyan Lawyers Protest Alleged Police Killings of Colleague, Two Others

Traffic stopped Wednesday in parts of Nairobi as hundreds of Kenyan lawyers, wearing purple ribbons, marched to protest the alleged police killings of a colleague and two other men.

The march, which brought demonstrators to the Supreme Court and police inspector general's office, was the second in Nairobi this week against the death of lawyer Willie Kimani; his client, Josephat Mwenda; and their taxi driver, Joseph Muiruri.

The three men’s bodies were found in a river about 70 kilometers from Nairobi last week, several days after police had taken the men into custody.

A Kenyan holds a placard in tribute to fellow lawyer Willie Kimani, who allegedly died at the hands of police in late June. Kenyan lawyers marched in protest in Nairobi's streets, July 6, 2016. (J. Craig/VOA)
A Kenyan holds a placard in tribute to fellow lawyer Willie Kimani, who allegedly died at the hands of police in late June. Kenyan lawyers marched in protest in Nairobi's streets, July 6, 2016. (J. Craig/VOA)

“We want to raise awareness that this is a no-go area. You cannot attack lawyers,” said Charles Kanjama, chairman of the Nairobi branch of the Law Society of Kenya, the group that organized the march. “If you attack lawyers, you are attacking all the citizens. You are attacking the country. It means you are saying that no one is safe.”

The three victims disappeared following a court appearance June 23, in which Kimani was defending Mwenda against what they said were trumped-up police charges following an April 2015 traffic stop. Police apparently shot Mwenda in the arm by accident during the stop, and the incident escalated into a series of additional encounters with police.

After the court appearance,  the attorney, his client and their driver were allegedly taken to a police administration compound. Their bodies were found just over a week later. The men had been beaten and strangled before they were killed, according to an autopsy.

Compound set ablaze

Outrage has been spreading in Nairobi as more information about the case comes to light. Human rights activists held a protest in Nairobi on Monday, and on Wednesday a mob set fire to the compound where the men are believed to have been taken. 

“We are, in a manner of speaking, the high priests of constitutionalism and the rule of law, and basically the justice system,” said D.K. Githinji, a Nairobi-based attorney who participated in the lawyers’ march. “And we do not want to degenerate to a situation where you will need to be looking behind your shoulders before you can represent a client.”

Githinji’s comments were echoed by several of his colleagues at the protest.

“You cannot silence people because you have that power, because now the police have been given so much power that nobody will be seeking justice,” said attorney Faye Shirekuli.

Three police officers have been arrested and another is in custody in connection with the deaths of lawyer Willie Kimani and two other men, which prompted this protest march by lawyers in Nairobi, July 6, 2016. (J. Craig/VOA)
Three police officers have been arrested and another is in custody in connection with the deaths of lawyer Willie Kimani and two other men, which prompted this protest march by lawyers in Nairobi, July 6, 2016. (J. Craig/VOA)

Three police officers have so far been arrested in the case and another is in custody. Kenya’s attorney general and the inspector general of police have told the public that they will bring those responsible to justice.

Attempts to reach the police spokesman for additional comment were unsuccessful.

The Office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights released a statement Wednesday condemning the killing of the three men. It called on the Kenyan authorities to “strengthen efforts toward accountability" as well as "take urgent measures to prevent extrajudicial executions and police brutality and other serious violations.”

Human rights activists have decried alleged extrajudicial killings by Kenyan police for years. One group recorded nearly 300 police killings over 22 months.

Other activists say the real number is higher, as many victims’ families make only token efforts to pursue justice because of a lack of resources or fear of police, or both.

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NATO-Russia Council to Meet in Possible Move to Ease Tensions

NATO envoys will hold a further formal meeting with Russia on July 13, days after the alliance's summit in Warsaw, in a sign Washington and Moscow want to defuse tensions in Europe.

The forum bringing together Russia and its former Cold War adversary NATO last met in April after an almost two-year hiatus as relations sank to their lowest level in decades over Russia's annexation of Ukraine's Crimea peninsula.

The NATO-Russia Council will meet again at ambassadorial level in Brussels next week following the NATO summit in Warsaw in which Western leaders will cement a new deterrent against what they say is Russian aggression in Ukraine.

The West and Russia remain at odds over Ukraine, but the Russia-NATO Council session hints at a willingness to patch up diplomatic ties and avoid any accidental clashes in the region.

"Our discussions will focus on the crisis in and around Ukraine and the need to fully implement the Minsk Agreements," NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said in a statement.

He was referring to the peace deal signed in Belarus last year that aims to end the conflict involving pro-Russian separatists in eastern Ukraine.

"We will also look at military activities, with a particular focus on transparency and risk reduction, as well as the security situation in Afghanistan," the statement said.

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Zimbabwe Makes More Arrests in Connection with Protests

Tensions are climbing in cash-strapped Zimbabwe.

Civil servants took heed for a call to strike Wednesday after their wages went unpaid for a third time in the past year. 

A court released former ZANU-PF official Acie Lumumba on $400 bail Wednesday on charges of publicly insulting President Robert Mugabe last week.

His lawyer, Arshelie Mugiya, said free speech was under attack in Zimbabwe, despite it being guaranteed in the country's constitution. Mugiya wants the law struck down that protects the 92-year-old Zimbabwean leader from being insulted.

"The [law], under which [Lumumba] is charged from, is not only incompetent but also unconstitutional,” he said.

Dozens of arrest

For the past week, Zimbabwe has been rocked by protests. More than 100 protesters who were arrested Monday in Harare won’t know the outcome of their bail application until Thursday.

Armed Zimbabwean police battle rioters in Harare, July, 4, 2016. The violence came amid a surge in protests in recent weeks because of economic hardships and alleged mismanagement by the government of President Robert Mugabe.
Armed Zimbabwean police battle rioters in Harare, July, 4, 2016. The violence came amid a surge in protests in recent weeks because of economic hardships and alleged mismanagement by the government of President Robert Mugabe.

On Wednesday, Zimbabwe police spokesman Charity Charamba told journalists that about 50 people had been arrested in connection with the "Shutdown Zimbabwe 2016" campaign, which called for Zimbabweans to stay away from work to push the government to address the current economic meltdown. Among those arrested was an Australian in the resort town of Victoria Falls.

"Police officers were firmly on the ground and were in uniform around towns and cities,” Charamba said. “Obviously the military is not there because, in our assessment, for now the situation has not deteriorated to warrant the presence of the military. If we require the military, we will call them."

Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights said it is assisting several protesters.

The government issued a statement Wednesday asking Zimbabweans to stop "abusing" social media by posting photos or messages about the unrest.

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US Expands Duty-Free Access for Travel Goods Made in Cambodia

The United States trade representative has announced a major expansion of trade preferences to Cambodia that it said could bring "significant benefits" to the country.

Under the new U.S. Generalized System of Preferences, Cambodia — along with other developing countries that produce travel goods such as luggage — will be able to export those products to the United States duty free.

The expansion will give Cambodia access to the $10 billion import market in travel goods, further encouraging the development of Cambodia's textile industry, according to a statement from the U.S. Embassy in Phnom Penh.

"This announcement ... has the potential to open up an entirely new market for Cambodian exporters and to create thousands of jobs for Cambodians," U.S. Ambassador to Cambodia William Heidt said. "We encourage Cambodian manufacturers to take advantage of this new opportunity, which would help to diversify Cambodia's economic base, spur economic growth, and alleviate poverty."

The GSP is a 40-year-old trade preference program under which the United States provides duty-free treatment to imports from beneficiary developing countries.

"We have used these programs to give some of the poorest countries in the world a vital leg up vis-à-vis more advanced competitors," said U.S. trade representative Michael Froman.

Mey Kalyan, senior adviser to Cambodia's Supreme National Economic Council, called it good for the economy.

"When we have the market, I believe that more investors will come to invest in Cambodia," he said. "It will allow our economy to progress, allow the people to have jobs and, more importantly, it will give more added value."

Cambodia exports more than $5 billion annually to its two major textile export markets: the United States and European Union.

Under the GSP program, approximately 5,000 products from 122 beneficiary developing countries and territories, including 43 least-developed countries, are eligible for duty-free treatment when exported to the United States. In 2015, the value of duty-free imports to the United States under the GSP was $17.4 billion.

This report was produced in collaboration with VOA's Khmer Service.

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Obama Urges Protection of US Muslims Against Bigotry, Xenophobia

U.S. President Barack Obama called on Americans to "recommit" to protecting Muslim Americans against bigotry and xenophobia in a message marking the end of the holy month of Ramadan.

"Muslim Americans are as diverse as our nation itself - black, white, Latino, Asian, and Arab. Eid celebrations around the country remind us of our proud history as a nation built by people of all backgrounds; our history of religious freedom and civil liberties, and our history of innovation and strength, Obama said in his Eid al-Fitr message issued Wednesday.

He noted that that this past month the U.S. and the world endured heart breaking “challenges and senseless violence,” when “hundreds of innocent lives, many of them Muslim” were taken in places like Orlando, Istanbul, Dhaka, Baghdad, and Medina.

"Here at home, we’ve also seen a rise in attacks against Muslim Americans. No one should ever feel afraid or unsafe in their place of worship," Obama said. "In the face of hate, it’s our American values and strength that bring us together to stand in solidarity and protect one another—thereby, making our nation stronger and safer."

Obama praised the contribution of Muslim Americans around the country, including the late boxing legend Muhammed Ali, "to whom we bade farewell this Ramadan."

Eid al-Fitr celebrates the purification achieved by a month of sunrise-to-sunset fasting, one of the five pillars of Islam that ends with several days of festivities in many countries around the world.

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FBI Director to Testify on Capitol Hill in Clinton Email Controversy

Angry Republicans in the House of Representatives are set to grill FBI Director James Comey Thursday over his decision not to recommend criminal charges against presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton over her use of a private email server for government business while she served as secretary of state.

Comey has been called to testify before the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, while Attorney General Loretta Lynch is scheduled to go before the House Judiciary Committee next week.

Republican House Speaker Paul Ryan Wednesday said Clinton may have received preferential treatment from the FBI in its investigation of the former top U.S. diplomat.  "It looks it to me," he told reporters when asked.  

After Comey announced his decision Tuesday, Ryan said the public should know "how and why" Comey reached that conclusion. "What bothers me about this is the Clintons really are living above the law. They're being held by a different set of standards." Ryan added, "And this is why we're going to have hearings, and this is why I think that Comey should give us all the publicly available information."

Ryan has also questioned whether Clinton should receive classified briefings as a presidential candidate, given Comey's rebuke of the way she handled sensitive material.  

‘Surprising and confusing’

Jason Chaffetz, the Republican chairman of the oversight and reform committee, also has questioned the FBI's decision.  

"The FBI's recommendation is surprising and confusing," said Chaffetz. "The fact pattern presented by Director Comey makes clear Secretary Clinton violated the law.  Individuals who intentionally skirt the law must be held accountable."

The FBI's recommendation Tuesday lifts a major political and legal hurdle for Clinton's candidacy.

FILE - Then U.S. secretary of state Hillary Clinton checks her mobile phone aboard a C-17 military plane, Oct. 18, 2011.
FILE - Then U.S. secretary of state Hillary Clinton checks her mobile phone aboard a C-17 military plane, Oct. 18, 2011.


In announcing his decision, Comey sharply reprimanded Clinton, who served as the country's top diplomat from 2009 to 2013, and her colleagues at the State Department for what he said was their "extremely careless" handling of classified material they sent to each other via a private email server she established at her home in New York.

Comey, however, said FBI investigators, in an extensive probe of thousands of Clinton's emails, could not find evidence that she "clearly, willfully" sought to violate U.S. laws and that "no reasonable prosecutor would bring such a case" against her based on the evidence uncovered in the weeks-long investigation.

The FBI's probe of her use of the private server, instead of a government server with tight security controls, culminated last Saturday with investigators and government prosecutors questioning her for 3-1/2 hours at FBI headquarters in Washington.

Attorney general under fire

Comey's statement came a week after a political uproar over an encounter Clinton's husband, former president Bill Clinton, had with the country's top law enforcement official, Attorney General Loretta Lynch, on an airport tarmac in Phoenix, Arizona.  Both Bill Clinton and Lynch said they chatted for half an hour, although not about the email case, but subsequently regretted doing so while Lynch was overseeing the email investigation.

Republicans and Democrats alike criticized Lynch's airport get together with Bill Clinton.

Following Comey's announcement, Hillary Clinton's spokesman said the campaign is pleased the FBI will recommend no charges; but during a rally in North Carolina, presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump called the FBI's conclusion "disgraceful."

FILE - Republican Presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks at a rally in Raleigh, North Carolina, July 5, 2016. Trump has called the FBI's decision not to recommend charges against Clinton "disgraceful."
FILE - Republican Presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks at a rally in Raleigh, North Carolina, July 5, 2016. Trump has called the FBI's decision not to recommend charges against Clinton "disgraceful."


"I don't know about you, but I've always felt that Hillary Clinton would escape criminal charges for her dangerous and illegal behavior because I always knew, and I always see, and it's so sad, that our system is in fact rigged," Trump said.  "It's totally rigged.  It's corrupt."

When she first acknowledged use of the private email server more than a year ago, Clinton said she did so for "convenience," so that she would not have to carry two phones - one to handle government business and one to use for personal matters.  She quickly acknowledged that mixing official State Department business with personal emails was "a mistake."

Long after she left office in early 2013, Clinton deleted about 30,000 emails she and her lawyers deemed personal and turned over another 30,000 official government-related emails to the State Department, as she was required to do in any event because of government record-keeping regulations.  Comey said many more emails were discovered as well.

Classified emails uncovered

Clinton said she never sent or received emails that were marked as classified documents but Comey said FBI investigators found that 110 emails in 52 email chains contained classified information at the time they were sent, with eight of the chains having top secret information.

Comey said investigators do not believe that Clinton's emails were hacked by hostile, foreign interests; however, he said "hostile actors" gained access to private commercial interests that Clinton corresponded with and that her extensive use of personal email outside the United States and in the territories of "extensive adversaries" makes it possible they gained access to her personal accounts.

Clinton is not the first high-ranking U.S. official to run into trouble over mishandling classified information.

The State Department found that both of Clinton’s predecessors, Colin Powell and Condoleezza Rice, also had emails containing classified information sent to their personal accounts, in violation of the department’s policy.  Powell said the two flagged emails sent to him were not judged to contain confidential information at the time they were sent to him.  A representative for Rice said the 10 emails sent to her aide did not contain intelligence information.

FILE - Lieutenant General David Petraeus testifies to the Senate Armed Forces Committee about his nomination to be general and commander of the Multi-National Forces in Iraq at a hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, Jan. 23, 2007.
FILE - Lieutenant General David Petraeus testifies to the Senate Armed Forces Committee about his nomination to be general and commander of the Multi-National Forces in Iraq at a hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, Jan. 23, 2007.

David Petraeus resigned as CIA director in 2012 over an extramarital affair with his biographer, journalist Paula Broadwell, whom he provided with classified material.  Petraeus pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge of mishandling classified material.  He was sentenced to two years' probation and fined $100,000.

In 2007, congressional investigators looking into the dismissal of eight U.S. attorneys discovered that not all internal White House emails were available.  Administration officials had been using email accounts hosted on a server run by a Republican Party political committee, instead of the government accounts.  Investigators said that using those servers, which did not archive emails, meant that as many as 5 million emails were lost.  No charges were filed in the incident.  

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July 6, 2016

2

Buddhist monks take shelter under a tarpaulin sheet to protect themselves from the rain as they attend the birthday celebrations of the Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama (unseen) at Drepung Loseling Monastery in Mundgod, in the southern state of Karnataka, India.

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US Gun Control Debate at Center Stage in Washington Again

The U.S. debate over gun control is on center stage in Washington again this week, but the political battle lines appear hardened against passage of any new restrictions.

Last month's mass shooting at a gay nightclub in Orlando, Florida that left 49 people dead pushed gun control to the forefront in the contentious 2016 political election season, even as fractious Republican and Democratic lawmakers remain as divided as ever.

Leaders of the Republican-controlled House of Representatives said Wednesday they would vote later this week on a measure to try to prevent terrorists from buying guns. But Democrats are opposed to the details of the legislation, with a similar proposal already defeated in the Senate.

Republican Congressman Lee Zeldin of New York said the proposal would "prevent terrorists from purchasing firearms or explosives while protecting the due process rights of Americans." It would require the Justice Department to prove that there is "probable cause" that someone is involved in terrorism before blocking a gun sale, a process that would have to be completed within three days.

But conservative Republicans said that would go too far, imperiling the rights of people to buy guns, and leaving the fate of the legislation in doubt.

A photo shot and tweeted from the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives by Rep. Katherine Clark shows Democratic members of the House staging a sit-in on the House floor "to demand action on common sense gun legislation" on Capitol Hill in Washington.
A photo shot and tweeted from the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives by Rep. Katherine Clark shows Democratic members of the House staging a sit-in on the House floor "to demand action on common sense gun legislation" on Capitol Hill in Washington.

Too limited

Meanwhile, House Democrats, about 100 of whom staged a sit-in on the House floor last month to demand action on gun control legislation, say the Republican proposal is too limited and are calling for votes on their proposals to bar anyone on the U.S. no-fly list from buying a gun. Republicans say that idea, also defeated by the Senate, will not even be put to a vote.

Zeldin accused Democrats of opposing the Republican legislation "for no good reason because they only want the political fight."

House Speaker Paul Ryan rejected Democratic calls for votes on their proposals, saying, "We are not going to pass legislation that infringes on anyone's constitutional rights."

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi staged a rally on the Capitol steps calling for passage of new restrictions on gun sales. She has described the Republicans' measure as "toothless ... that will do nothing to keep our communities safe." She told supporters Democrats want "real action, not a bill written by the gun lobby."

Larry Pratt, executive director emeritus of the Gun Owners of America, contended in an interview with VOA that Democratic lawmakers are "making a play for our guns right after we celebrated our independence," the country's annual July 4 holiday. But he also said it was "very disappointing" that Ryan is proceeding to go ahead with a gun control vote.

People visit a vigil for the victims of the shooting at the Pulse gay nightclub in Orlando, Florida, U.S. June 14, 2016.
People visit a vigil for the victims of the shooting at the Pulse gay nightclub in Orlando, Florida, U.S. June 14, 2016.

Pratt said the Orlando massacre occurred in a so-called "gun-free zone," where guns are supposedly prohibited. He said such zones should be eliminated and that "arguably if people have firearms there is the possibility" that someone with a gun inside the club might have stopped the carnage sooner. He complained that Republicans, among the staunchest gun rights supporters in the United States, have declined to advance a proposal to prohibit gun-free zones across the country.

With national lawmakers stalemated over new gun legislation, some states have acted on their own, either loosening restrictions on gun ownership, such as permitting gun owners to openly display their weapons in holsters on their hips, or adding new regulations.

FILE - California Gov. Jerry Brown.
FILE - California Gov. Jerry Brown.

California law

In the western state of California, Governor Jerry Brown recently signed a package of laws that added to the list of some of the tightest laws in the country. Among other measures, one new law would require ammunition purchasers to undergo background checks.

Gun control rights are one of many issues that sharply divide the two leading 2016 U.S. presidential contenders, Democrat Hillary Clinton and Republican Donald Trump.

Clinton, seeking to become the first female U.S. president, says she supports an individual's right to own a gun, but has called for new gun sale restrictions to curb mass shootings. She supports ending gun manufacturers' immunity from lawsuits from family members whose relatives have been killed by gun violence.

Trump has been much more vocal in saying he supports the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution that upholds individual gun owner rights.

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Cambodian Opposition Marks 1997 Coup

It has been 19 years since the Cambodian People’s Party seized control of the country in a violent coup.

On Wednesday, two opposition parties — the Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP) and the Khmer National United — held separate commemoration services in Phnom Penh to mark the coup, which was led by Prime Minister Hun Sen.

The clashes in July of that year saw Hun Sen oust his co-premier, Norodom Ranariddh, with dozens killed and disappeared in the violence.

Kem Sokha, the CNRP’s deputy leader, made a rare public appearance at a religious event at the party’s headquarters after keeping largely out of the public eye for a month since an attempt was made to arrest him.

He called on people to learn the lessons of the coup and not to take revenge on one another. “Non-violent solutions are the only way. No revenge, no violence, we only wish for peace and the stability,” he said.

More than 100 people were killed in the 1997 coup, many of whom were commanders or soldiers loyal to Prince Norodom Ranariddh, the then co-prime minister, and Funcinpec, the royalist political party. They were either killed in fighting in Phnom Penh, or extrajudicially executed in the coup’s aftermath.

Nhek Bun Chhay, president of the Khmer National United Party and the military commander who led royalist forces during the 1997 coup, told VOA Khmer earlier this week that mistrust among politicians at that time created the bloodbath and led to instability.

Cambodian People's Party spokesperson Sok Eysan refused to call the fighting a coup, claiming instead that the royalists were arming themselves for a military takeover and were defeated in a preemptive strike.

“Prince Norodom Ranariddh created a mistrustful friendship between the co-premier [and the premier]," he said. "He bought weapons and also brought in the Khmer Rouge to Phnom Penh; therefore, [Prime Minister] Hun Sen had to crack down to maintain stability and peace.”

Eysan added that the government was ready to act now against any attempts to overthrow Hun Sen.

This report was produced in collaboration with VOA's Khmer Service.

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American ‘Sriracha’ Tests Thai Tastebuds

With sales exceeding $80 million annually, Huy Fong Food’s Sriracha brand has made a coastal Thai city a household name in America and propelled an Asian chili sauce to a condiment nearly as ubiquitous as ketchup.

Sriracha sauce now flavors numerous other American-made products from popcorn to beer. It is lauded in songs and the sauce has spawned several cookbooks — all the more remarkable considering Huy Fong Foods has never advertised.

American made spicy sauce

Made with red jalapeño peppers exclusively from a farm encompassing more than 800 hectares (2,000 acres) in adjacent Southern California counties, Huy Fong’s Sriracha is hot on the tail of America’s traditional best-selling spicy sauce, Tabasco.

Tabasco, a nearly 150-year old Cajun-style vinegary pepper sauce, is spicier (on the Scoville scale as tested by the American Chemical Society) and about five times as expensive as Huy Fong’s Sriracha, created by David Tran, an ethnic Chinese from Vietnam who immigrated to California.

  • VOA Correspondent Steve Herman pours Sriracha hot sauce onto a spoon for Aree Khajonrungruang to try in the Si Racha central food market. (Z. Aung/VOA)

  • There are various claimants to the title of the original "Sriracha" sauce, also spelled Si Racha after the Gulf of Thailand city. (Z. Aung/VOA)

  • Restaurant owner and cook Matcharee Kedpathum appears nonplussed after trying the American Sriracha sauce. (Z. Aung/VOA)

  • Despite its prominent Vietnamese and Chinese writing Huy Fong's Sriracha sauce is from the United States. (Z. Aung/VOA)

  • Si Racha municipal government officer and art director Booncherd Nilsonthi glances at a bottle of American-made "Sriracha sauce." (Z. Aung/VOA)

  • Food writer Wanvida Jiralertpaiboon tries the American Sriracha sauce. (Z. Aung/VOA)

  • The town of Si Racha, Thailand is well known for its seafood dipping sauces. (Z. Aung/VOA)

  • Nida Khajonrungruang, a purveyor of hot sauces in the Si Racha central food market, opines that the American sauce bearing the city's name is spicier and saltier than the local varieties. (Z. Aung/VOA)


The Louisiana-based McIlhenny Company, maker of Tabasco, has begun marketing its “Premium Sriracha Sauce” while other mass market imitators and boutique brands in the United States also sell their own Sriracha sauces.

Tran, a major in the South Vietnamese army, created his first hot sauce in 1975, the year his country fell to the Communist North.

Hand bottling a new sauce five years later for restaurants in Los Angeles’ Chinatown, Tran co-opted but did not copyright the Sriracha name, a variation of the spelling of the Thai town of Si Racha.

In the seaside community on the east coast of the Gulf of Thailand, famed for its seafood dipping sauce, Thais can be disillusioned if confronted with a “Sriracha” sauce manufactured 13,000 kilometers away.

“What do you mean it’s from America? Its name is Sriracha,” exclaimed Booncherd Nilsonthi, a uniformed Si Racha municipal government officer when shown the American sauce in the green-capped red bottle emblazoned with a white rooster.

Si Racha municipal government officer and art director Booncherd Nilsonthi glances at a bottle of American-made "Sriracha sauce." (Z. Aung/VOA)
Si Racha municipal government officer and art director Booncherd Nilsonthi glances at a bottle of American-made "Sriracha sauce." (Z. Aung/VOA)

Food writer Wanvida Jiralertpaiboon of ipick.com agreed, saying, “because of the name it’s obvious that it should be from Thailand.”

And how does it translate on local tongues?

“This American one is way saltier and spicier. But the Thai sauce is more sweet and sour,” commented Nida Khajonrungruang, a purveyor of hot sauces in Si Racha’s central food market. “However, Si Racha [sauce] has to be produced in Si Racha.”

American versus Thai

Her adult daughter, Aree, who also sampled the California concoction brought to the market by VOA, compared it to ketchup, speculating it is a better match for the meaty dishes preferred by foreigners, such as steaks, than the Thai original.

Thais, she explained, prefer a thinner sauce to eat with their typical dry noodle dishes.

“Both are good,” but the American variety is “too hot,” Aree concluded.

An owner-cook of the small, outdoor Nong Pim restaurant near the city’s jetty was having none of it. Her face did not reflect enjoyment when sampling the Sriracha sauce from abroad.

“I prefer our traditional Thai sauce as its flavor is more mellow, well rounded and smooth,” declared Matcharee Kedpathum. “The American one has some flavor, but it’s sharp, strong and not well rounded.”

Thai brands, relying on roasted chilis, tend to use more salt than sugar for their “Si Racha” sauces while Tran’s California recipe lists sugar as the number two ingredient behind ground chilis.

Nida Khajonrungruang, a purveyor of hot sauces in the Si Racha central food market, opines that the American sauce bearing the city's name is spicier and saltier than the local varieties. (Z. Aung/VOA)
Nida Khajonrungruang, a purveyor of hot sauces in the Si Racha central food market, opines that the American sauce bearing the city's name is spicier and saltier than the local varieties. (Z. Aung/VOA)

There are several dueling claimants in Thailand to the origins of the original Si Racha sauce. Its creation is attributed to different people circa 1930, including a Thai woman and Burmese immigrant sawmill workers.

“Some of my acquaintances conducted research about the sauce’s history, but they could not prove its origin,” Matcharee told VOA.

But one thing on which discerning palates in Si Rachi agree — the foreign upstart – widely known among Americans as “the rooster sauce” due to its cock logo and hard-to-pronounce name — has flown off in a different culinary direction.

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