Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Wednesday, December 26, 2018

Despite Rebound, Markets Remain Spooked by Trumpnomics

From the U.S. president’s embrace of tariffs to his war with the Fed, some are calling this the “Trump Slump.”

A trader rubs his face on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange in New York on Oct. 3, 2008. (Jeremy Bales/Bloomberg via Getty Images)A trader rubs his face on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange in New York on Oct. 3, 2008. (Jeremy Bales/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

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BY 
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It’s not that U.S. President Donald Trump was entirely wrong in blaming Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell for December’s market plunge. Many experts agreed with Trump that the Fed may have been misjudging economic conditions by continuing to signal that it will raise interest rates—including the Wall Street Journal, which wrote the week before Christmas: “Time for a Fed pause.”

No, the problem was more the way Trump went about voicing his unhappiness with Powell—at least at first. Last week he floated the idea of firing the chairman he’d nominated just a year earlier—before learning he probably couldn’t. Then Trump tweeted that the Fed was behaving like a golfer who “can’t putt.” The Dow Jones Industrial Average and S&P 500 plunged further. Finally Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin—who was said to have earned the president’s ire by picking Powell in the first place—was trotted out to “reassure” investors that the banks had enough liquidity and capital.

This led to yet another market drop, a 653-point cliff dive by the Dow on Christmas Eve, since until that moment no one was really questioning whether the banks did have enough liquidity or capital to tide them over. Mnuchin’s comment only served to remind investors of the nightmarish bank-generated crash of 2008 and the Great Recession it exacerbated.

The administration finally seemed to get the message right on Wednesday. After Council of Economic Advisors Chairman Kevin Hassett reassured the markets that Powell’s job was “100 percent” safe,  the Dow posted its largest point gain ever, soaring slightly more than 1,086 points to finish at 22,878. Other key indices posted similar gains. This also may have reflected sentiment that the Fed could now pause in its rate hikes and its policy of quantitative tightening so as to stem the downturn.

In addition—and this was no small thing—Trump’s Twitter feed remained quiet most of the day.
Despite the five-percent bounce on Wednesday, however, overall stock prices remain well down on the year. And perhaps the most pressing question of the day is: Does the leader of the free world really comprehend how markets and basic economics function? Underlying the year-end market turmoil is a sense that many things are coming home to roost at once for Trump.

The president’s no-end-in-sight trade war, the chronic turnover in his administration, his cavalier government shutdown over a wall with Mexico that many experts say can never be built, and above all his seemingly limited understanding of the way the global economy works are all starting to seriously spook investors, some economists and market experts say.

“Both reality and inexperience are catching up with the Trump Administration,” said Adam Posen, the president of the Peterson Institute for International Economics. “Realities that trade is good not bad for business (and the economy), that the Fed is independent legally for good reason, that the Great Wall of Xenophobia is infeasible, are all inescapable.

“Similarly, only those who are unaware of how governments interact with markets would think having a crisis call [Mnuchin’s consultation with the major banks on Sunday] when there is no crisis or taking credit to prolong an avoidable shutdown is a good idea. This also makes them look incompetent.”

In an interview with CNBC on Wednesday, former Wells Fargo CEO Richard Kovacevich called Wall Street’s December doldrums “the Trump slump.”

Kovacevich, like other market experts, said the problem is largely that Trump appears to think he can dictate monetary policy to fit his fiscal policy, which depends on higher deficits and a weaker dollar with which to wage his trade war with China. But that’s not the way the economy works. Instead, the markets have traditionally depended on an independent Fed and tend to go haywire if they believe the White House is interfering.

“It’s chaos, chaos, chaos,” Kovacevich said. “Every week, every day, he comes out with something.”
Since he launched his bid for the presidency, Trump has sown doubt over his understanding of modern economics. His zeal for a trade war with China and even U.S. allies in Europe—he called himself “Tariff Man” in a tweet—suggests that his basic view of world trade predates Adam Smith, the founder of modern economics. Trump appears to see trade as a zero-sum game, in which surpluses are in effect profits and deficits are losses, like the mercantilists (or “economic nationalists”) of two centuries ago who believed that countries are more prosperous when they export more than they import. Smith and his successors have spent the last two and a half centuries disproving that notion. The more trade is opened up, the more everyone gains (though some classes of workers—who happen to make up part of Trump’s base—can find themselves displaced).

Judging from his speeches and tweets, Trump also appears to believe in protectionism as a principle, not merely as a tool to open up China or force Canada and the European Union to further open their markets. “We must protect our borders from the ravages of other countries making our products, stealing our companies, and destroying our jobs. Protection will lead to great prosperity and strength,” Trump said in his inaugural address.

Never mind that trade protectionism helped lead to the Great Depression and two world wars. Trump also seems to believe that, as he tweeted in November, billions of dollars are “pouring into the coffers of the United States” because of the tariffs he has put on Chinese imports. In truth, most of those tariffs end up being a tax American consumers have to pay. That in turn typically means less spending and fewer revenues.

In his book Fear, published in September, journalist Bob Woodward wrote that Trump’s then-National Economic Council chairman, former Goldman Sachs president Gary Cohn, was “astounded at Trump’s lack of basic understanding” when the president advised him during a discussion of the national debt: “Just run the presses—print money.”

“You don’t get to do it that way,” Cohn said, according to Woodward. “We have huge deficits and they matter. The government doesn’t keep a balance sheet like that.”

To be sure, there are many reasons for the current market correction—as is always the case with any broad change in market sentiment—that probably have little to do with Trump. After all, other major economies are very likely in more trouble than America’s, and investors are pricing that in as well.

“The initial market decline was because of the sharp slowdown that seems to be happening in China, possibly the worst growth recession they have had since Tiananmen Square,” Harvard University’s Kenneth Rogoff, the former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund, told Foreign Policy in an email.

“Trump’s trade war played a role in this, but more in giving Chinese leaders someone to blame than in actually being the main cause,” Rogoff said. “The next leg was the Fed’s latest tightening,
accompanied by a statement that embodied forecasts far more optimistic than that of private forecasters. Many economists argued that the Fed should have paused, as the risks of overtightening far exceed the risks of being too patient right now. But this latest stage seems mostly Trump.”

Trump shows no signs of acknowledging his role in any of this. On the contrary, he continues to advise millions of investors that they are wrong. The current downturn, he said Tuesday, “is a tremendous opportunity to buy.” On Wednesday, at least, it appeared the markets were listening to him.

There is always the temptation for a president to use the bully pulpit to send messages to the markets. Trump’s predecessor, Barack Obama, did exactly that in early March 2009, when he told a press conference: “What you’re now seeing is profit and earning ratios are starting to get to the point where buying stocks is a potentially good deal if you’ve got a long-term perspective on it.”

The stock market hit its low point less than a week later, on March 9, 2009, ushering in the 10-year boom that may now be in its final stages. Obama had called the bottom right.

What some economists fear now is that Trump will continue only to unnerve the markets—and as is his wont, blame everyone else if things go wrong. A year ago in January, after the Dow broke 25,000 for the first time, Trump boldly took credit for it. “I guess our new number is 30,000,” Trump told reporters.“There were those that said we wouldn’t break 25,000 by the end of the eighth year [of my administration], and we’re in the 11th month.”

“The reason our stock market is so successful is because of me,” Trump told reporters in November 2017.

If the downturn continues, will Trump take a new look in the mirror? His history is not a positive indicator, and some economists fear that with his administration now all but bereft of tough, experienced policy hands such as outgoing Defense Secretary James Mattis and chief of staff John Kelly, Trump will not adjust himself or his policies fast enough.

“This is about needing to be reality-based and open to hard-won knowledge when having public responsibility for economic management,” said Posen. “Citizens and businesses, not just markets, are right to be deeply concerned.”

'Not a lot of good news': Press freedom continues to suffer in Middle East in 2018


Palestinian paramedics and journalists carry wounded journalist during 'Great March of Return' protest in Gaza in October (AFP/File photo)


Jacob Powell's picture


From the kidnapping of journalists in Iraq and Syria to the jailing of reporters in Turkey and Iran and the targeted assassination of a Saudi columnist, press freedom groups have once again raised alarms over the dangers journalists reporting in the Middle East and North Africa have faced over the last year.
While the threats are not new, the past 12 months have been marked by a handful of critical events and an uptick in violence, which media rights organisations say have ushered in a heightened awareness of the challenges media workers deal with on a daily basis.
No incident was more shocking than the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, a Saudi government critic who was killed inside his country's Istanbul consulate in early October.
Khashoggi's death “struck a chord” with the international community, said Sherif Mansour, the Middle East and North Africa programme coordinator for the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ).
A 15-man Saudi team was sent to Turkey to kill the Washington Post columnist, where his murder took seven minutes, a Turkish source told Middle East Eye.
"Journalists, advocates and even international institutions said ‘this is where we draw the line' and where we need to have an international response to the targeting of journalists worldwide," Mansour told Middle East Eye.
"They’re hoping the Khashoggi case will be a stepping point to reverse that trend" of targeting journalists, he said, "by teaching accountability ... against those who kill journalists worldwide".

More journalists killed

The past year also saw a marked increase in the number of journalists who were killed around the world as a result of their work, with the figure almost doubling from 2017 to 34.
That increase was largely the result of a jump in deliberate attacks on journalists in Afghanistan, CPJ reported earlier this month.
“It’s not a lot of good news, but we haven’t had a lot of good news for years,” said Mansour.
Two of this year's three most deadly countries for journalists are located in the Middle East.
While Afghanistan took the sombre top spot, Syria ranked second, according to Reporters Without Borders (RSF), as 11 journalists were killed there in 2018. Yemen ranked third, with eight journalists slain.
RSF's overall tally varies from CPJ's because the group takes into account the deaths of bloggers, citizen journalists and media workers; RSF said at least 80 journalists died worldwide in 2018.



Raed Fares, a Syrian civil society activist and head of Radio Fresh, an independent radio station, was killed in Idlib in November. The independent radio station was founded in 2013, earning Fares the ire of both President Bashar al-Assad's government and militants.
The death of 24-year-old freelance photographer Ahmad Abu Hussein also sent shock waves across the region after he succumbed to his wounds on 25 April, almost two weeks after he was shot by Israeli forces while covering the 'Great March of Return' protest in the besieged Gaza Strip.
Abu Hussein was one of several journalists and media workers to be targeted during the weekly protests in Gaza, which began at the end of March.
“Violence against journalists has reached unprecedented levels this year, and the situation is now critical,” RSF secretary-general Christophe Deloire said in a statement this month.
“The hatred of journalists that is voiced, and sometimes very openly proclaimed, by unscrupulous politicians, religious leaders and businessmen has tragic consequences on the ground, and has been reflected in this disturbing increase in violations against journalists,” he said.

Journalists imprisoned, kidnapped

Beyond threats to their lives, journalists across the region faced several other risks over the past year.
RSF said almost 37 percent of journalists imprisoned worldwide (127 of 348) are concentrated in just four countries in the region: Turkey, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Iran.
And all but one of the 59 journalists kidnapped by non-state actors in 2018 took place in Syria, Yemen or Iraq.
The ability of journalists to report on contentious issues also plummeted in several countries, with Syria ranking in the bottom five countries for news freedom worldwide, according to a RSF index, while Sudan ranked in the bottom 10.
In total, nine MENA countries – Egypt, Iraq, Libya, Iran, Bahrain, Yemen, Saudi Arabia, Sudan and Syria – ranked in the bottom 20 globally on the media freedom index.
Egypt and Turkey also remained among the world’s biggest jailers of journalists, a black mark they have maintained for several years, said Mansour.

Egypt

For years, press freedom groups have raised alarms about the situation in Egypt, where a 2011 uprising that unseated Hosni Mubarak, and then the election of Muslim Brotherhood candidate Mohammed Morsi in 2012 and his ouster by the military a year later, have led to a crackdown on the media.
The Egyptian authorities have also adopted one of US President Donald Trump’s favourite accusations - “fake news” – to detain and arrest journalists.
“In 2015, it was mainly Egypt and Ethiopia holding journalists worldwide on disseminating fake news charges,” Mansour told MEE.
Among those arrested was photojournalist Mahmoud Abu Zeid, widely known as Shawkan, who was awarded the UN culture agency's World Press Freedom Prize in April.
Even though he was detained in 2013, Shawkan was given a five-year sentence in September for being involved in a "terrorist group". The CPJ said that for time already served, he will be released within six months.
Shawkan has been in custody since his arrest in 2013 (AFP)
Middle East Eye reported in March that shortly before the most recent Egyptian presidential election, which saw Abdel Fatah el-Sisi win with 98 percent of the vote, journalists on the ground talked about operating within a culture of fear.
A number of journalists told MEE they have been forced to be selective about the topics they cover, in an attempt to protect themselves and their sources.
Egypt has banned more than 500 websites, including dozens belonging to news outlets and human rights organisations including independent news source Mada Masr and Human Rights Watch.
According to Amy Sanders, an associate professor of journalism at the University of Texas at Austin who specialises in media law and the Middle East, more world leaders are viewing "a watchdog press as a threat to their power and control over their countries".
"From Donald Trump in the US to Erdogan in Turkey and the monarchs of the Gulf, political leaders are criticising and cracking down on freedom of expression when it doesn’t align with their views," she told Middle East Eye in an email.

Turkey

In Turkey, an attempted coup in 2016 against President Recep Tayyip Erdogan led to a widespread crackdown on the media.
There are 169 journalists behind bars in Turkey, most of whom were arrested under a state of emergency imposed after the coup attempt, the P24 press freedom group said.
“As of 14 December 2018 at least 169 journalists and media workers are in prison in Turkey, either in pre-trial detention, or serving a sentence," the group said.
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Among those arrested in Turkey are staff from the opposition newspaper Cumhuriyet, which has been fiercely critical of Erdogan and has run front-page stories that have angered the Turkish head of state.
Turkey has used anti-state charges to “ban legitimate journalism work”, said Mansour. But it isn't alone.

Saudi Arabia

When Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the country’s de-facto ruler, began a purported anti-corruption drive in November 2017, he detained two prominent media moguls - Alwaleed bin Talal, who owns Rotana media company and has a stake in News Corporation, and Waleed al-Ibrahim, who owns MBC and Dubai-based Al Arabiya.
While both were released in January, Talal had to agree to an unspecified financial settlement with the kingdom before he was freed, while Ibrahim agreed to give 60 percent ownership of MBC to Saudi Arabia.
Blatantly false stories have been published in major Middle East media outlets throughout Egypt, Saudi [Arabia] and the [United Arab Emirates] ... as a means of persuading Gulf nationals to maintain loyalty to a particular side of the dispute
- Amy Sanders, University of Texas at Austin
Speaking to Al Jazeera last year, Middle East Eye chief editor David Hearst said the Saudis are “very media minded, and they think, in a very old-fashioned way, that the media can be bought".
“That's the classic Arab state way of thinking about the media. They don't think that the Arab world - and they've said so - is ready for free speech and they want to control it," he said.
Misinformation has also been used to discredit political rivals in the region, as seen during the diplomatic dispute between Qatar and other members of the Gulf Cooperation Council, including Saudi Arabia, said Sanders, who previously worked as a journalism professor at Northwestern University in Qatar.
"Hackers posted inflammatory and false statements attributed to Qatar’s emir on the country’s official news agency site, and it set off an international incident," she said, referring to the start of the diplomatic spat last year.
"Since then, blatantly false stories have been published in major Middle East media outlets throughout Egypt, Saudi [Arabia] and the [United Arab Emirates] about conditions and life in Qatar as a means of persuading Gulf nationals to maintain loyalty to a particular side of the dispute."

Some good news

However, not all the news has been bleak.
For the first time in several years, there were no reported deaths of members of the media in Iraq in 2018, RSF said.
That marks the first year no journalists were killed in Iraq since 2012, Mansour said.
Still, he stressed that “there are still many cases of journalists who have gone missing and have been kidnapped” by non-state actors, such as the Islamic State (IS) group.
“To this day we don’t know anything about them,” he said.
Even if Egypt continues to be one of world’s largest jailers of journalists, at least many of those who were jailed are free today
- Sherif Mansour, Committee to Protect Journalists
Another bright spot has been the release of several jailed journalists, particularly in Egypt.
“Half of the journalists who were jailed in Egypt in 2017 were released," Mansour said, explaining that some had already served their jail time, while others were granted early release.
"Ten journalists that we know of and reported on in 2018 alone have been released,” he said.
“This is why we celebrate the small victories. Even if Egypt continues to be one of world’s largest jailers of journalists, at least many of those who were jailed are free today."

Tunisia protests spread after journalist sets himself on fire

Clashes with security forces in further towns as anger grows at self-immolation in Kasserine and unfulfilled pledges of 2011

Riot police and protesters in Kasserine, Tunisia, on 25 December 2018. Photograph: Stringer/Reuters

Agence France-Presse in Kasserine-
Clashes between Tunisian protesters and security forces spread from an impoverished city overnight, the authorities said on Wednesday, as anger grew over the death of a journalist who set himself on fire over economic conditions.

In the western city of Kasserine police fired tear gas at youths throwing stones during a second night of unrest.

Clashes also broke out in the eastern town of Jbeniana, where a police officer was injured, and in Tebourba, in the north, where at least five people were arrested, said Walid Hkima, a national security spokesman.

The unrest follows the death of the journalist Abderrazk Zorgui, 32, on Monday after he set himself ablaze in Kasserine.

The interior ministry said one person had been arrested for alleged involvement in the desperate act of protest, which triggered an outpouring of anger in the city with protesters setting tyres on fire and blocking roads. Thirteen people were arrested in Kasserine for “acts of destruction” during the unrest, said Hichem Fourati, an interior ministry spokesman.

In a video before his death Zorgui said “for the sons of Kasserine who have no means of subsistence, today I start a revolution”.

The self-immolation of a street vendor in Tunisia, late 2010, in protest at police harassment sparked Tunisia’s revolution and the Arab Spring uprisings across the rest of the region the next year.

Kasserine was one of the first cities to rise up after the death of the vendor – Mohammed Bouazizi – in protests where police killed demonstrators. The unrest spread across the country and led to the overthrow of the long-time dictator, Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali.

Despite the country’s democratic transition since then, authorities are still struggling to improve poor living conditions in the face of rampant inflation and persistent unemployment.

“There’s a rupture between the political class and young people, especially those living in insecurity in Tunisia’s interior who see their future as uncertain,” said Messaoud, president of the Tunisian Forum for Economic and Social Rights.

In recent months, political life in Tunisia has been paralysed by power struggles ahead of presidential elections set for 2019. Tunisia’s national union of journalists called for a general strike on 14 January to mark the eighth anniversary of the revolution.

Zorgui’s self-immolation was “a sign of rejection of a catastrophic situation, regional imbalances, high unemployment among young people and the misery in which our fellow citizens live in the interior regions”, said the Tunisian newspaper Le Quotidien. “No one can deny today that all the leaders of this country are responsible, responsible for the distress of our youth, their despair and their frustration.”

Fraud probe opens into EU police mission for West Bank

The Palestinian Authority’s police have used repressive tactics against protesters on many occasions. 
Ahmad Al-BazzActiveStills

David Cronin - 26 December 2018
Is it possible to have a relaxing holiday if you are being investigated for fraud?
The European Union’s policing operation in the occupied West Bank faces exactly that challenge. A few days before many of its personnel left for a Christmas break, some less than welcome visitors came to see their new Ramallah headquarters.
Representing an anti-fraud office called OLAF, the visitors conducted a search, quizzed some staff and took various documents and electronic equipment away for further inspection.
The investigation has been unreported until now. Yet it is not the first time that the EU’s policing operation has been under suspicion.
In December 2016, the Union’s diplomatic service opened a probe into claims of nepotism and harassment at the operation’s headquarters.
Both OLAF and the management of the policing operation refused to comment about the latest investigation.
While it is correct that accusations of irregularity should be examined, the probe will almost certainly avoid the real scandal behind the EU’s activities in Palestine – how they enable repression.
OLAF is not an independent body by any stretch of the imagination. Based in Brussels, it is very much part of the EU’s bureaucracy.
When OLAF’s staff undertake probes into the EU’s own institutions, they are investigating their own colleagues.
OLAF’s work is confined to addressing allegations of fraud, corruption or serious misconduct.

Criminal

The term “corruption” is usually applied to dishonest behavior, particularly if someone abuses a position for personal gain. The basic problem with the EU’s policing operation in Palestine is that it has been set up to assist Israel, an oppressive and racist state.
The whole operation, therefore, is criminal, without necessarily being corrupt – at least not in the way OLAF appears to interpret that term.
The extent to which the EU operation is criminal was exposed a decade ago.
In December 2008 and January 2009, Israel bombarded Gaza for three consecutive weeks. Palestinians outside Gaza joined many demonstrations against the attack. The response from the Palestinian Authority’s forces in the West Bank was to beat up protesters.
In Hebron, such protesters were blocked from receiving medical attention after they had been beaten.
None of this thuggery seemed to bother Javier Solana, then the EU’s foreign policy chief. Solana praised the Palestinian Authority forces – many of them trained by the EU – for how they handled the situation.
Solana cited the episode as an example of the “progress” made by the EU’s policing operation since it was established in 2006.
A decade later, PA forces continue to violently repress Palestinians for demanding their rights.

Britain’s malign influence

The EU’s operation was initially financed by Britain and reflects ideas supported by Tony Blair when he was prime minister of that country.
A key idea was that the Palestinian Authority’s forces would act in the interests of the Israeli occupation. That idea has remained central to the EU’s activities.
The operation can be regarded as one of the more malign contributions that Britain has made towards developing the EU’s foreign and “security” policies. To date, most of the operation’s chiefs have been nominated by Britain.
Most have previously worked with the Royal Ulster Constabulary, a Protestant-dominated force which sought to subjugate the Catholic community in the north of Ireland.
As things stand, Britain is scheduled to leave the European Union within the next 100 days.
Once the British are out, some of the harm they have caused ought to be rectified. Winding up the policing operation in Palestine would be a good first step.
Sadly, things do not work like that in the real world. We can, therefore, expect the EU’s operation to continue with its deceptive “public relations.”
In one recent video, the operation suggests it has schooled prison officers working for the Palestinian Authority about how Swedish jails are run.
A Human Rights Watch study offers a less rosy view. Among other things, it documents a case where a journalist who was detained by the Palestinian Authority had his arms tied to a door.
The door was then pulled slowly so that pressure would be applied to his arms as he was interrogated about alleged connections with Hamas. The pain was so much that the prisoner passed out – only to have his feet beaten when he woke up.
The EU has been mentoring the Palestinian Authority’s police and prison officers for a number of years, but torture and ill-treatment have persisted. This begs the questions: Has the EU connived in the abuse of Palestinian prisoners?
Has the EU helped turn the West Bank into a police state?
That is the real scandal.

Exclusive: New allegations against Ghosn concern payments to Saudi businessman - sources

FILE PHOTO: Carlos Ghosn, Chairman and CEO of the Renault-Nissan Alliance, reacts during a news conference in Paris, France, September 15, 2017. REUTERS/Philippe Wojazer/File Photo

Norihiko Shirouzu-DECEMBER 26, 2018

BEIJING (Reuters) - Fresh misconduct allegations brought by Tokyo prosecutors against ousted Nissan (7201.T) Chairman Carlos Ghosn centre on the use of company funds to pay a Saudi businessman who is believed to have helped him out of financial difficulties, two company sources with knowledge of the matter said.

Prosecutors arrested Ghosn for a third time on Friday, accusing him of aggravated breach of trust in transferring personal investment losses to the automaker.

The prosecutors’ statement said they believe that around October 2008, Ghosn was trying to deal with losses on paper of 1.85 billion yen ($16.6 million) incurred on a swap contract he had with a bank which it did not name.

A person helped arrange a letter of credit for Ghosn and a company run by the person later received $14.7 million in Nissan funds in four installments between 2009 and 2012, the statement said, adding that the payments were made in Ghosn’s and the person’s interests.

“By doing so, (Ghosn) behaved in a way that breached trust, and inflicted damage on the property of Nissan,” the statement said. The statement also said Ghosn had earlier sought to have Nissan shoulder the appraisal losses directly.

According to the Nissan sources who have knowledge of the company’s probe into its former chief, the person who helped Ghosn is Khaled Al-Juffali, vice chairman of one of Saudi Arabia’s largest conglomerates, E. A. Juffali and Brothers, and a member of the board at the Saudi Arabian Monetary Authority.

He is also majority owner of a company called Al-Dahana which owns half of a regional joint venture called Nissan Gulf with the other half held by a wholly owned unit of Nissan Motor.

Sheikh Khaled Juffali has no comment on this subject, according to an emailed statement from E. A. Juffali and Brothers.

Ghosn’s Tokyo-based lawyer, Motonari Otsuru, was unavailable for comment on this article, according to a person who answered the phone at his law office. A representative for the Ghosn family declined to comment.

Other media have said Ghosn has through a lawyer denied that he shifted losses to Nissan and has told investigators that the four payments were for legitimate business purposes, including a reward for handling problems at Nissan dealers in Saudi Arabia.

Tokyo prosecutors declined to comment. Asked about Ghosn’s reported comments, a Nissan spokesman said: “We cannot comment on matters related to Ghosn’s arrest for breach of trust.

Nissan’s own investigation is ongoing, and its scope continues to broaden.”

‘PROSECUTORS KNOW MORE’

Ghosn’s re-arrest – the latest twist in a saga that has jolted Nissan’ alliance with France’s Renault SA (RENA.PA) – came a day after a Tokyo court unexpectedly rejected a request from prosecutors to extend Ghosn’s detention.

Unlike his previous arrests on allegations of under-reporting his compensation which he faced together with former representative director Greg Kelly, prosecutors have levelled these latest accusations against Ghosn only.

The Nissan sources with knowledge of the matter said the automaker’s investigators concluded that Ghosn was unsuccessful in his attempt to have Nissan shoulder the losses directly.

Japan’s Securities and Exchange Surveillance Commission had at some stage flagged Ghosn’s attempt to have Nissan directly shoulder the losses as illegal, one of the sources said. It was not immediately clear what the SESC deemed illegal. A SESC spokesman said he could not comment on specific cases.

The sources declined to be identified as the results of Nissan’s internal investigation have not been made public yet.

Ghosn then gained help from Al-Juffali who used his personal assets to provide collateral for a bank to issue a letter of credit that Tokyo-based Shinsei Bank had required of Ghosn, the sources said. A spokesman for Shinsei said he could not comment on specific cases. Reuters was not able to determine the identity of the bank which issued the letter of credit.

The four payments arranged by Ghosn were made through a Nissan internal discretionary fund,
known within the company as the ‘CEO Reserve’, to a Nissan unit which then paid a company owned by Al-Juffali, one of the sources said, without specifying the names of the companies.

The first payment of $3 million was made in fiscal 2009, followed by payments of $3.6 million, $3.9 million and $4.2 million in the three subsequent years, the sources added.

The sources said the Nissan investigators initially had not been looking at the transactions with the urgency prosecutors displayed last week.

“Prosecutors know more about this than we do,” one of the sources said.

E. A. Juffali and Brothers was founded in 1946. The company set up electric power supply and telecommunications to some of Saudi Arabia’s major cities and expanded into construction, insurance, vehicle manufacturing and distribution.

Established in October 2008, the Nissan Gulf joint venture was originally responsible for Nissan’s marketing and sales strategy and dealer development in Saudi Arabia, Abu Dhabi, Kuwait, and Bahrain but the scope of the business has since been reduced to Kuwait and Bahrain for reasons that weren’t immediately clear, one of the sources said.

Kelly was released on bail late on Christmas day but Ghosn remains in detention. After the latest allegations, prosecutors were granted permission to hold him for 10 days on Dec. 23 and will typically ask for another 10 days, which is usually approved.

Japanese prosecutors often arrest individuals repeatedly on different allegations linked to the same case. The practice allows them to hold suspects while they pursue their investigation and also means they can continue interrogations without the presence of a lawyer.

Reporting by Norihiko Shirouzu in Beijing; Additional reporting by Marwa Rashad in Riyadh, Saeed Azhar in Dubai, Tim Kelly, Kiyoshi Takenaka and Taiga Uranaka in Tokyo; Editing by Edwina Gibbs

South Korea’s property prices are expected to dip next year


 
SOUTH KOREA’S property market is expected to experience a downturn next year, experts said, although some predict an increase in prices in Seoul.
A survey released on Wednesday showed an overwhelming majority of 112 people specialising in the industry believe the housing market will slump in non-metropolitan regions, with a more than five percent price drop forecast by nearly 20 percent of the people polled, Yonhap reported.
The results of the survey, which was included in a report from KB Financial Group’s research institute found that 70.5 percent of the people polled predicted a decline in home prices next year.
The largest group (31.3 percent) expected prices to drop between one and three percent, while 17 percent of those polled predicted a drop of three to five percent.
However, in Seoul, the country’s capital, 58.9 percent of the experts said the prices were expected to increase.
Home transactions were also expected to cool in 2019, with 64.3 percent of those polled agreeing with the prospects. For non-capital regions, 77.7 percent of the experts believed the same.
shutterstock_1243825360
An apartment complex under construction. Condominiums and apartment buildings make up the majority of living spaces in densely populated South Korea. Source: Shutterstock
Other surveys revealed similar results such as KB Financial’s canvass of 512 realtors.
In the separate poll, 76.3 percent said home prices were expected to fall.
The only difference in the second poll was that the majority of realtors (70.2 percent) said they expected to see prices in Seoul drop in 2019.
In terms of the volume of transactions, a majority of realtors (72.5 percent) said it would downsize in Seoul, a figure which was higher than the rest of South Korea.
According to Yonhap, another poll of 72 private bankers who service the rich (73.6 percent) said home prices will fall for all parts of the country.
One-third of the bankers believe the prices would drop more than three percent.
Some 11 percent of South Korean households are multiple real estate holders, while 35 percent do not own any, according to a survey of 3,000 residents in the capital.

Tectonic shifts


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Sanjana Hattotuwa-

I first saw the Cathedral in Christchurch through satellite imagery. This perspective, from space, didn’t give a sense of the building’s grandeur, evident at ground level. Neither had I visited New Zealand when I saw it, nor at the time, did I have any plans to either. Late February 2011, a new web platform was set up to assess the damage to the city after an earthquake devastated it on the 22nd. Part of a wider range of technologies that pioneered crowd-sourced disaster relief, the platform was the first of its kind at the time, allowing anyone, anywhere in the world, help in vital post-disaster damage assessments through their browser. I spent about three to four days glued to my laptop, going through tile after tile, recording what I saw. Hundreds, if not many more at the time, joined me in what was a global effort to help Christchurch ascertain which areas of the city were most badly in need of urgent assistance. Thousands of man hours contributed to an effort the city and government couldn’t manage themselves, creating a template and setting a foundation for many disaster relief efforts that followed.

Visiting in person, for the first time, the city last week and seeing the Cathedral in its present condition requires a column of its own. It is, even in ruin and an advanced state of decay, a majestic building to behold, retaining a dignity unblemished by the disaster. 185 people died that fateful February day. Christchurch was changed irrevocably. Everywhere, the city still carries the scars of the devastation - from the plethora of parking lots where once buildings stood, to structures taken over by bracken and adorned by graffiti that visually contribute to a wonderful character and feel, yet also serve as reminders of how massive and widespread the disaster was. I could also write about the discovery of and walking down Colombo Street, one of the oldest roads in the city and now its main thoroughfare, named after the Anglican bishopric of Sri Lanka.

I could write about community-led urban rejuvenation of neighbourhoods or how old, colonial buildings, now repurposed as hip cafes or trendy restaurants, carefully preserve key architectural features and facades, seamlessly yet intentionally merging history with modernity. The inevitable consequence of having to pay for what is almost an entirely new city, I could focus on the branded shopping that has almost entirely crowded out once vibrant local businesses, forcing many from the city and area to look for cheaper rent in less frequented suburbs or just shutter their business, unable to afford the high rent and associated taxes. All this and more colours a city still grappling with their tsunami-moment.

What I do want to write about in some detail may not immediately seem to be connected with home. T?ranga, opened on October 12, is the city’s new public library. I have been to and love spending time in the British Library, the Boston Public Library and the New York Public Library, which defy easy or comprehensive capture for those who haven’t experienced them. All these libraries are nothing like anything in Sri Lanka that we know and associate with the term. T?ranga is, even in comparison to these buildings, quite extraordinary. The architecture, developed in collaboration with the Maori, incorporates communal motifs and is designed in such a way as to face culturally important points in the region. It is absolutely breathtaking from outside, and equally so from inside. A quote from the Danish lead architect Carsten Auer from the firm schmidt hammer lassen is worth repeating as frame that captures the ethos of the building,

"Libraries have moved on from being repositories of books to being multi-media hubs and social hubs. The modern library is the ‘third space’ between home and work. It’s a place where you can meet people or be ‘alone together,’ enjoying sharing a social and recreational space with others, even if you are not engaging directly with them."

With over 180,000 books and magazines to start with, a mind-boggling number of Lego pieces, free WiFi, free meeting spaces better equipped than most offices in Colombo I have seen, an audio and video production studio, maker-spaces for kids to print their own 3D creations, an entire floor devoted to young adults and children to play and read, two excellent cafes, floor to ceiling glass enclosed, sound-proofed quiet rooms, completely digitized catalogues, equipment that I had to ask staff about because they were so alien (something that looked and sounded like a Geiger counter, hooked up to a smart phone, when run across shelves, does inventory and identifies misplaced books) to the seating, which ranged from bean bags and lounge to ergonomically designed chairs paired to communal or individual work tables, I’ve never seen anything remotely like this building.

Membership is,

astonishingly, free

On the first floor, as I walked through the building, I saw unaccompanied children - in groups or entirely alone, in various contortions and corners (one was upside down on a bean bag), immersed in reading. That touched a chord, and of all things in the world, made me tear up. A short while later, as I was taken around the library by a volunteer guide who, as luck would have it, was a gentleman with over 30 years of experience in journalism and had retired as the Editor of a leading regional newspaper, I was able to articulate to myself and him why that image touched a nerve I didn’t realize was raw. We talked about Ondaatje, literature, journalism, the earthquake and obviously, on reading. When the conversation turned, invariably, to contemporary politics, I had to encapsulate in a nutshell the catastrophic and enduring consequences of the President’s actions on October 26. Recalling Will Durant’s quote on how civilization exists by geological consent, subject to change without notice, I said that not unlike the earthquake which struck his city, the tectonic political shift in Sri Lanka would reverberate for some time to come, with after-shocks, anxiety and the slow but undeniable recognition that the country would not be the same again, or could revert to what once was. As I said this, we were surrounding by children, reading. I went on to say that so much he took for granted - access to and an appreciation of the arts, culture, literature, for free, from childhood, was precisely what was marginal, devalued, de-funded or under-funded back home. Coming out of the experience of documenting the coup, what struck me was how our appreciation of what happened is limited, in a temporal sense. Aside from what little we know about the significant economic implications, even our concern about the fallout of the coup is limited at best to a few years hence and to macro-economic indicators.

And yet at T?ranga I saw the kind of long-term investment we never really see in Sri Lanka - public spaces for learning, information and knowledge, encouraging children to critically question, experiment, roam and think free. A library as a space for public congregation and interaction just doesn’t exist in Sri Lanka. Heck, even the importance of a basic library is lacking. Some weeks ago I spoke to some intrepid young students in Sri Lanka who were behind a campaign to collect book donations to establish and populate a library in a fairly large out-station school which I was told hadn’t one. For me, that is beyond astonishing - it borders on the criminal.

That wonderful image of a child, upside down, immersed in his reading, struck a chord because it captures in a single frame every single thing in Sri Lanka we do not yet and have for decades never invested meaningfully in - children, public spaces, community, the arts, culture, reading, education, innovation and the development of critical thinking. I realized that I teared up not only because I sorely missed my son in that moment, but also because I was reminded - beyond the tens of millions of social media data points I’ve engaged with over eight weeks - of how tragically under-developed we are as a country, writ large. The five levels of T?ranga are anchored to Maori concepts of connection, community, identity, discovery and creativity. Precisely the things we have for decades neglected and continue to marginalize. And that is why for all our chest-thumping patriotism and priapic nationalism, we will in reality, continue to languish behind even our South Asian sisters.