16 Feb 2017

World YWCA Paid Internship Programme for Young Women in African Countries 2017

Application Deadline: 23rd February 2017  
Offered annually? Yes
Eligible Countries: Mali, Djibouti, Sierra Leone, Namibia and Zambia
To be taken at (country): Geneva, Switzerland
Field of Internship: As part of the World Office team in Geneva, Switzerland, the internship provides opportunities to develop expertise on global issues particularly in the World YWCA’s global focus areas of:
  • Transformative young women and girls’ leadership
  • Violence against women and girls
  • Child, early and forced marriage
  • Peace and justice
  • Sexual reproductive health and rights
  • Economic empowerment and information and communication technology
  • Social, economic and environmental justice and faith and culture.
About the Award: Are you interested in women’s rights, economic empowerment, women’s health, peace and security? Do you come from Mali, Djibouti, Sierra Leone, Namibia and Zambia? Then you might be the right person to join our African Women Ambassador Internship programme in Geneva this spring.
These experiences are truly once-in-a-lifetime opportunities for young women to grow and to develop their leadership. Not only will they benefit personally, but the internship programme is intended to increase the number of globally experienced and trained young leaders who will return to their associations to share what they have learnt and to pass on their skills. We urge you to encourage the young women in your association to apply to World YWCA Internship Programme.
World-YWCA-Internship-Programme-2016
Offered Since: 2016
Type: Internship
Eligibility: Young Women from Mali, Djibouti, Sierra Leone, Namibia and Zambia between 22-29 with good written and oral English or French, a Bachelor or Master’s degree in international relations or similar studies. Applicants must also possess:
  • The ability to be flexible, independent and creative with a desire to learn
  • A willingness to take initiative and to manage multiple priorities simultaneously.
  • A strong commitment and passion in achieving women’s rights and leadership.
  • A good working knowledge of English or French, oral and written is essential.
  • Information Communication and technology competencies related skills will be an advantage
  • Applicants must be between 22-29 years of age.
  • ABachelor’s degree is required. Amaster’s degree will be an advantage
  • A clearly articulated motivational letter is also required
Number of Awardees: Not specified
Value of Programme: The Internship will provide various benefits for entrants of the two positions:
Short term Internship Programme:
  • Costs and Provisions
  • Travel: Participants must possess a valid passport. The World YWCA will assist with letters of invitation and advice to facilitate the visa process, however it is the responsibility of the intern and her national association to obtain a visa for the country concerned.
  • The World YWCA will cover the most economical and direct route airfare from and to the home country of the participant. Any additional contributions by the national association to the travel and accommodation costs would be greatly appreciated as funding for this programme must be continuously sought.
  • Accommodation and Health Care: The World YWCA is responsible for the accommodation, basic food allowance, local transport and health insurance.
Duration of Programme: 3 months
How to Apply:  Fill in the application form below, send your CV, motivation letter and degree specialization by email to the Human Resources Officer at: 
hresources@worldywca.org
Award Provider: Young Womens Christian Association

Brunei Darussalam Government Scholarships for Foreign Students 2017/2018

Application Deadline: 13th March 2017.
Offered annually? Yes
Eligible Field of Study: These scholarships are awarded for pursuing undergraduate and postgraduate degree program in various disciplines offered by the UBD, UNISSA and ITB at different levels.
About Scholarship: Applications are invited for Brunei Darussalam Government Scholarships available for foreign students to study at University of Brunei Darussalam [UBD], Islam Sultan Sharif Ali University [UNISSA], Brunei Institute of Technology [ITB] and Politeknik  Brunei (PB) in Brunei. These scholarships are awarded to the students of ASEAN, OIC, Commonwealth Member Countries and others. Scholarship award is normally tenable for the duration of the programme.
Type: Undergraduate and postgraduate degrees
Eligibility
  • Applicants must be citizens of ASEAN, OIC, Commonwealth Member Countries and others are eligible to apply.
  • Applicants must be between the ages of 18 – 25 for undergraduate programmes and not exceed 35 for postgraduate programmes on the 31 July 2017.
  • The award is not eligible, to Brunei Permanent Residents and foreigners residing in Brunei Darussalam.
Number of Scholarships: Several
Value of Scholarship: The scholars are exempted from paying tuition fees and other appropriate compulsory fees as determined by the university for the duration of the programme.
One return economy class air-ticket for the most economically viable route to Brunei Darussalam will be determined by the Brunei Darussalam Government. No additional assistance will be provided towards other travel expenses.
Allowances payable will include:
  • Monthly personal allowance of BND500.00
  • Annual Book Allowance BND600.00
  • Monthly food allowance of BND150.00
  • Upon completion of the program, Baggage allowance to a maximum institution of BND250.00 to ASEAN region and BND500.00 to non ASEAN region.
  • An accommodation at respective institution residential college is provided. If the scholar opts not to live in the provided accommodation, no additional allowance will be given in the lieu of board and transport.
  • Outpatient medical and/or dental treatment is at any Brunei government hospitals, However an administrative charge is payable for each consultation with the government general practitioner or specialist.
  • Should the scholar seek further medical or dental treatments at any private hospital or clinic, all expenses are to be borne by scholars themselves.
Duration of Scholarship: The scholarship award is normally tenable for the minimum period required to obtain the specific degree which is four years for a first degree with honours, one to two years for a master’s degree, three years for a doctoral degree at UBD, UNISSA and ITB, two and a half years for HND at ITB, three years for diploma of health sciences at UBD, all on a full time basis.
Eligible Countries: Students of ASEAN (Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Indonesia, Lao PDR, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Viet Nam), OIC (Afghanistan, Albania, Algeria, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Benin, Brunei, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Chad, Comoros, Ivory Coast, Djibouti, Egypt, Gabon, Gambia, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Guyana, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Kuwait, Kyrgyzstan, Lebanon, Libya, Malaysia, Maldives, Mali, Mauritania, Morocco, Mozambique, Niger, Nigeria, Oman, Pakistan, Palestine, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Somalia, Sudan, Suriname, Syria, Tajikistan, Togo, Tunisia, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Uganda, United Arab Emirates, Uzbekistan and Yemen), Commonwealth Member Countries ((Anguilla, Antigua and Barbuda, Bangladesh, Barbados, Belize, Bermuda, Botswana, Cameroon, Cayman Islands, Dominica, Falkland Islands, Gambia, Ghana, Gibraltar, Grenada, Guyana, India, Jamaica, Kenya, Kiribati, Lesotho, Malawi, Malaysia, Maldives, Mauritius, Montserrat, Mozambique, Namibia, Nauru, Nigeria, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, Rwanda, St Helena, St Kitts and Nevis, St Lucia, St Vincent and The Grenadines, Samoa, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, Solomon Islands, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Swaziland, Tanzania, Tonga, Trinidad and Tobago, Turks and Caicos Islands, Tuvalu, Uganda, Vanuatu, Virgin Islands (British) and Zambia) and others can apply for the scholarships.
How to Apply: Application forms can be obtained from the Brunei Darussalam Foreign Missions and representatives of Brunei Darussalam or from the Technical Assistance Division, Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade.
Visit the scholarship webpage for details to apply
Provider: Brunei Darussalam Government

Which Washington Crimes Matter Most?

David Swanson

Michael Flynn participated in mass murder and destruction in Afghanistan and Iraq, advocated for torture, and manufactured false cases for war against Iran. He and anyone who appointed him to office and kept him there should be removed from and disqualified for public service. (Though I still appreciate his blurting out the obvious regarding the counterproductive results of drone murders.)
Many would say that prosecuting Al Capone for tax fraud was a good move if he couldn’t be prosecuted for murder. But what if Al Capone had been funding an orphanage on the side, and the state had prosecuted him for that? Or what if the state hadn’t prosecuted him, but a rival gang had taken him out? Are all take-downs of major criminals good ones? Do they all deter the right activities by up-and-coming criminals?
Michael Flynn was not removed by public demand, by representative action in Congress, by public impeachment proceedings, or by criminal prosecution (though that may follow). He was removed by an unaccountable gang of spies and killers, and for the offense of seeking friendlier relations with the world’s other major nuclear-armed government.
Now, in a certain sense, he was taken down for other related offenses, just as Bill Clinton was not technically impeached for sex. Flynn lied. He may have committed perjury. He may have obstructed justice. He supposedly made himself susceptible to blackmail, although the logic of Russia wishing to reveal its own secret and punish those who help it seems weak. Flynn also dealt with a foreign government on behalf of an election campaign.
Some of these are very serious charges. If you removed all liars from the U.S. government, you’d suddenly have room in their empty offices to house all the homeless, but even the selective punishment of lying has a certain merit. And electoral campaign dealings with foreign governments has a nasty history including Nixon’s sabotaging of peace in Vietnam, Reagan’s sabotaging of the release of U.S. hostages in Iran, etc.
But what did Flynn supposedly talk about with the Russian ambassador, before or after the election? Nobody accuses him of trying to keep a war going or people locked up. He’s accused of talking about removing sanctions, possibly including sanctions used to punish Russia for things it did not do. The notion that Russia was the aggressor in Ukraine or invaded Ukraine and conquered Crimea on the model of the U.S. invasion of Baghdad is simply false. The idea that Russia hacked Democratic Party emails and gave them to WikiLeaks is a claim for which we have not been shown credible, non-ludicrous evidence. Despite somebody leaking it every time Donald Trump blows his nose, nobody has yet leaked actual evidence of this supposed Russian crime.
Then there’s what members of the U.S. public tell you that it’s obvious Flynn simply must also have talked about. Supposedly he must have arranged for Russia to steal the U.S. election for Trump, either by informing the U.S. public of the crimes and abuses of the Democratic Party in its members own words, which supposedly swayed huge numbers of voters — though there’s no evidence Russia did this or that it had this impact, and a better informed electorate is a stronger democracy, not one that has been “attacked” — or by somehow directly altering vote counts or manipulating our minds or something. If anything along these lines were proven it would be serious indeed, although it would be one of a great many fatal flaws in the U.S. electoral system alongside legalized bribery, corporate media, the electoral college, gerrymandering, unverifiable counting, open intimidation, purging of rolls, etc.
And then, finally, there’s what journalists and members of the public will tell you Flynn’s offense consists of, once it’s been established that Russia is evil. He was friendly with Russia. His colleagues in the White House love Russia. They’ve visited Russia. They’ve met with other U.S. business tycoons in Russia. They’re planning business deals with Russians. And so on. Now, I’m opposed to corrupt business deals, if they are corrupt, anywhere. And if Russian fossil fuels, like Canadian and U.S. fossil fuels, don’t stay in the ground, we’re all going to die. But the U.S. media treats U.S. business deals in other countries as ordinary respectable plundering. Any association with anything Russia has become a sign of high treason.
Coincidentally or not, that is exactly what weapons profiteers say they want. Is what they want good for us? Is there a legitimate reason to be taking their route toward punishing people in power, when other routes stand wide open with plush red carpets unrolled from massive golden doorways?

Australian government faces deep budget crisis

Mike Head 

Already beset by defections and rifts, the Turnbull government suffered another major political blow this week. An array of senators declared they would block the “omnibus” bill the government introduced last week to ram through sweeping social spending cuts that have stalled since 2014 in the face of widespread public opposition.
The Senate impasse throws into disarray the government’s plans for the May budget, just three months away, and further undermines its pledges to the financial markets to eliminate the budget deficit of nearly $40 billion a year by 2020–21.
Reduced to only 29 seats in the 76-member upper house by last week’s defection of right-wing Senator Cory Bernardi, it is now virtually impossible for the government to push through the cuts, worth $7.5 billion over four years, unless it can strike deals with the Labor Party or the Greens.
Both these parties helped the Liberal-National Coalition government pass billions of dollars in pension and other social spending cuts last year. But such is the depth of the popular hostility to the remaining 2014 budget measures that further such deals are seen as political suicide.
By unveiling the omnibus bill in the first parliamentary week for the year, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull sought to demonstrate to the financial elite that he could impose the cuts that his predecessor Tony Abbott, whom Turnbull ousted as Liberal Party leader in September 2015, failed to deliver.
The bill seeks to slash welfare payments, family tax benefits and pensions, with the most punishing cuts hitting young unemployed people, students, working-class households and aged pensioners. Over the past three years, the media has labelled these “zombie” cuts—languishing in a “twilight zone” between life and death.
Last week, Turnbull and Treasurer Scott Morrison sought to coerce senators into voting for the welfare provisions by tying them to supposed improvements in childcare subsidies and parental leave. In reality, these changes were designed to push more parents into low-paid jobs, and would have left thousands of working-class families worse off.
Over the weekend, Morrison only worsened the situation by seeking to blackmail senators into voting for the omnibus bill by declaring that $3 billion from the cuts was needed to finance the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS). The future of this scheme, which actually underfunds and privatises disability services, was thus thrown into doubt, along with the social security payments and family tax benefits on which most working-class people depend to survive.
Fearing an electoral backlash if he backed the bill, Nick Xenophon, one of the right-wing populists in the Senate, said his team of three senators would oppose it, at least in its current form. Several of the other 10 “cross-benchers” in the Senate, also declared their opposition to the bill, effectively killing it off.
They included Bernardi, who said he had been prepared to back the welfare cuts, but objected to diverting the savings into the NDIS, which he branded “another big-spending government program.” His stance underscores the fact that behind his bid to tap into the intense disaffection with the government, by emulating US President Donald Trump’s xenophobia and anti-Muslim witchhunting, is a brutal agenda of gutting social spending.
These declarations left only one three-member Senate “crossbench” group willing to vote for the omnibus bill—Pauline Hanson’s anti-immigrant One Nation. Hanson, who postures as an “anti-elite” political leader, said she would support the government’s efforts to “pull back” the welfare system.
However, in a transparent populist maneouvre, Hanson threatened to vote against the bill unless the government reduced the recently-revealed $5.6 million annual salary package of Australia Post chief executive Ahmed Fahour. As with Bernardi, Hanson’s enthusiasm for slashing welfare lays bare the anti-working class character of her bid to copy Trump.
If implemented, the welfare, pension and family tax cuts would further devastate the lives of millions of people. After decades of pro-corporate restructuring enforced by successive Liberal-National and Labor governments, they confront soaring housing, electricity, healthcare, childcare and education costs, worsened by the relentless corporate and public sector destruction of full-time jobs. The loss of a job, or a reduction in hours, can tip many families over the edge.
Recent reports provided some indication of the immense financial hardship being experienced. A survey of 500 households in New South Wales by the Wesley Mission charity found 44 percent were in financial stress, up 7 percent from 2010, with 38 percent spending more than they earn. Nationally, household debt now makes up 187 percent of total disposable income, the highest level in the world.
The blockage in the Senate is part of an underlying political crisis that afflicts not just the Coalition government but the entire political establishment. Over the past decade, it has become increasingly difficult for any government to push through parliament the austerity measures demanded by the corporate elite, which are so antithetical to the interests and basic social rights of the majority of the population.
Turnbull called a double dissolution election last July 2 in an attempt to break through the parliamentary logjam produced by the opposition parties’ fear of social unrest. Instead the election reduced the government to a majority of one seat in the lower house and saw a record vote against the main establishment parties—the Coalition, Labor and the Greens—in the Senate.
Turnbull’s government now looks set to unravel, as has each of its predecessors since John Howard’s Coalition government suffered a near-record electoral rout in 2007. Compounding the turmoil is a worsening economic crisis, with the collapse of the mining boom intensified by a sharp decline in corporate investment.
These pressures are being magnified by Trump’s presidency. Not only is his “America First” program of aggressive trade measures heightening the dangers of trade war and war. His proposed huge cuts to company taxes and social spending are driving the ruling class in every country to demand their governments match or outdo him—moves that will trigger convulsive social and class struggles.

India to become hub for US Seventh Fleet

Keith Jones 

Under a deal announced earlier this week, India will become a major service and repair hub for the US Seventh Fleet—the armada that is at the center of US war preparations against China.
The deal gives flesh and blood to a recent Indo-US agreement giving US warplanes and battleships routine access to Indian bases and ports for rest, refuel, and resupply. Signed last August, the Logistics Exchange Memorandum of Agreement (LEMOA) also allows the US military to “forward” deploy war materiel at Indian bases.
Reliance Defence and Engineering announced last Monday that it has signed a “Master Ship Repair Agreement” with the Pentagon to service and repair Seventh Fleet warships and supply and patrol vessels at its shipyard at Pipavav, in the western Indian state of Gujarat.
According to a Reliance official, the shipyard stands to carry out as much as 100 billion rupees (US$1.3 billion) worth of work for the US Navy over the next five years.
This is potentially a massive profit windfall for Reliance Defence, given that in 2014 the company’s total revenues were less than $50 million.
“Over 100 ships of US Navy operating in the Indian Ocean can now avail services at Pipavav shipyard,” crowed a company spokesman. He added that the US Navy “follows some of the most stringent standards, so we are hopeful that this deal would lead to us bagging similar projects in other countries as well.”
The Ship Repair Agreement comes close on the heels of the US Navy designating the Reliance shipyard an “approved contractor.”
The Seventh Fleet has responsibility for the western Pacific and the eastern stretches of the Indian Ocean up to the India-Pakistan border. As such it is at the center of US plans to wage war on China. These plans includes imposing an economic blockade on China by seizing control of the Straits of Malacca and other Indian Ocean/South China Sea chokepoints and mounting a massive bombardment of Chinese military installations, cities and infrastructure—what the Pentagon calls its “Air Sea Battle” plan.
Hitherto, maintenance and repairs on the Seventh Fleet have been carried out in Japan and Singapore.
The repair deal is driven by geostrategic considerations. Washington has long been seeking to harness New Delhi to its strategic agenda and make India the southwestern pillar of a quadrilateral anti-China alliance, led by the US and including its principal Asia-Pacific allies, Japan and Australia.
The Indian bourgeoisie, for its part, has tilted ever more sharply toward Washington, in the hopes of drawing on US support in pursuing its own predatory great power ambitions.
Narendra Modi and his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government have not only unabashedly declared the US to be India’s most important ally. Since coming to office in 2014, they have effectively transformed India into a “frontline” state in the US confrontation with China.
New Delhi has adopted Washington’s provocative stance on the South China Sea dispute that paints China as an aggressor and has enormously expanded bilateral and trilateral strategic ties with the US, Japan, and Australia.
Recently, the head of the US Pacific Command, Harry Harris, revealed that the US and Indian militaries are sharing intelligence on Chinese submarine and ship movements in the Indian Ocean.
Although this is all but unknown to the Indian people, under the LEMOA the US could use Indian military bases to wage war if New Delhi gives its consent.
Getting India to agree to a LEMOA type-agreement was a major foreign political goal of Washington ever since India and the US formed a “global strategic partnership” in 2005.
No doubt both Washington and New Delhi though it politic that the Pentagon’s first publicly proclaimed use of the LEMOA should bring, or at least appear to bring, significant economic rewards to India.
To help Reliance clinch its deal with the Pentagon, the BJP state government in Gujarat is giving the company tens of millions of dollars in aid to upgrade its shipyard. Modi was himself Gujarat’s chief minister until he became India’s prime minister in May 2014, and he continues to dominant the state BJP.
Reliance Defence and Engineering is owned by the multibillionaire Amil Ambani. Mukesh Ambani, his brother, is India’s richest man with a fortune of more than US$23 billion. Both Ambani brothers are strong supporters of Modi and helped spearhead corporate India’s push for him to become the BJP’s prime ministerial candidate in the 2014 elections.
India’s corporate media is staunchly in favor of the Indo-US alliance. Yet even it recalled that Washington used the Seventh Fleet to threaten India during the December 1971 Indo-Pakistani war. At the time, Pakistan was a major Cold War ally of the US, whereas India, spooked by Washington’s recent overtures to China, had just signed a Friendship Treaty with the Soviet Union.

Tensions mount in Chilean copper miners strike

Cesar Uco 

A week-old strike at Chile’s massive Escondida copper mine became more tense Wednesday after government mediation scheduled between the 2,500 striking workers union and BHP Billiton, the Anglo-Australian multinational mining conglomerate, were postponed until the weekend.
The talks, initially proposed by Chile’s state labor board, have now been put off until at least Saturday. The acceptance of the government intervention on the part of the copper miners union signals a willingness by the union to bow to BHP’s demands for wholesale concessions, including cuts in benefits and a two-tier system for new-hires. The workers had walked out demanding increased pay and bonuses. Last week, the union had rejected government mediation because of the company’s refusal to guarantee the same benefits to current and future workers.
According to the Chilean daily La Tercera, when the walkout began, workers were demanding “a seven percent salary readjustment, maintaining the benefits they currently have, a contract that lasts up to 36 months and a bonus of 250 million Chilean pesos (US$ 390,600), the highest amount for a bonus delivered in the mining sector.”
The delay in renewing the talks came after the mine’s management threatened legal action over alleged clashes last weekend, when it claimed that more than 300 people wearing hoods stormed into the mine site, forced contractors to flee and damaged the mine’s surveillance equipment. The union denied the charges, saying that 200 strikers had carried out a peaceful march at the mine site.
Escondida, located in northern Chile’s Atacama Desert, is the largest copper mine in the world, with an annual production of 1.14 million tons, 6 percent of the world supply. Strikers have set up a tent camp on the desert floor outside the mine, while throwing up road blocks to prevent the importation of scabs.
The strike at Escondida followed a similar walkout at the Las Bambas mine in Apurimac, Peru, where miners declared an indefinite strike, blocking all roads linking the facility to the rest of the country. Over the weekend, however, the Peruvian government sent its ministers of Health, Patricia García, and Housing, Edmer Trujillo, to negotiate a temporary lifting of the job action. Part of the deal was expected to be promises to local residents that their demand for the construction of a hospital, made under the government of former president—and now fugitive—Alejandro Toledo (2001–2006) would finally be met.
The Las Bambas mine was expected to produce 462,000 tons of copper in 2017.
So tense is the situation that the Peruvian government required 400 policemen to reopen the highways connecting Las Bambas to major Andean commercial centers like Cusco, Abancay and Chumbivilcas, which had remained blocked by stones for one week. The continuous presence of the police to enforce the opening of the roads and the declaration of a 30-day state of emergency in the region have created a feeling of indignation among the local population.
Altogether, the strikes have at least temporarily reversed a five-year downward spiral of copper prices, which went from US$3.80 per pound in 2012 to around US$2.10 per pound in 2016. The Escondida strike, which began February 8, had an immediate impact, hiking the the price of copper to US$2.68 per pound on the global markets after the strike was announced. Analysts predicted a price of US$2.35 to US$2.50 per pound this year.
Things may get worse for copper mine owners with 13 percent of the world’s supply subject to renegotiations this year. From the other side of the world, another conflict may develop at the Indonesian Grasberg mine run by Freeport McMoRan, which faces an export suspension by the Indonesian government.
One factor in the turmoil is the insecurity that President Donald Trump has created on the world markets. Sector analysts are divided in their opinions. The future price of copper is uncertain, and a large number of financial speculators are positioning themselves, betting on whether the copper price will go up or down in the short run.
What could become the biggest strike in the Chilean copper industry goes hand-in-hand with a deterioration of the Chilean economy. In a piece titled “Chile and the Economic Miracle that Never Was,” Telesur reports: “A Credit Suisse report shows that nearly 42 percent of Chile’s wealth is concentrated in the hands of the richest 1 percent. More than a third of Chileans say they routinely have trouble making ends meet. Chile is the first country to privatize its entire water supply, leading to shortages, and massive protests. Similarly, privatized education has made Chile’s per capita educational costs among the highest in the world.”
The economic deterioration goes hand-in-hand with rising social struggles. The streets of Santiago and major cities have been the scene of continuous mass protests, including by retirees opposed to the the private pension funds being exploited by speculators in the Chilean and global stock markets—a system imposed upon them under the ruthless watch of dictator Augusto Pinochet, back in the early 1980s—and Chilean high school and university students demanding free quality education for all.
These protests are aimed ever more directly against the government of Socialist Party President Michelle Bachelet. Brought back to power nearly three years ago with the support of the unions, the Communist Party and the pseudo-left, her government has failed to keep election promises and is mired in corruption scandals. Bachelet’s popularity rating has dropped from 54 percent when elected to her second term in March 2014 to 22 percent today. In addition, Chile is facing its worst “man-made” forest fire in its history. 
In neighboring Peru, a protracted conflict at the Las Bambas mine can have significant consequences for President Pedro Pablo Kucynski (better known as PPK), whose popularity has similarly plummeted amid continuing social crisis and a mushrooming scandal over bribes paid by the Brazilian construction giant Odebrecht in which all of the last four presidents, including PPK, are implicated.
According to Peruvian economists, the country expected 18 percent of national copper production to come from Las Bambas. In 2016, it is estimated that 60 percent of GDP came from mining.

UK think tank warns of fall in economic growth and rising inequality

Margot Miller

A new study by the Resolution Foundation, “Living Standards 2017—the past, present and possible future of UK incomes,” predicts a rise in inequality and poverty in the UK over the next four years.
The study calculates that incomes for the poorest half of households in the UK will fall by 2 percent, while the richest fifth will see an increase of five percent.
According to the report, “Our projected combination of weak average growth, falling incomes for the bottom half and rising inequality is perhaps without precedent.” This, they say, would make the present parliament from 2016 to 2021 the worst on record for income growth for the bottom half and the worst since the 1980s for rising inequality.
The projection, as the report explains, is only the least-worst-case scenario, wholly dependent on external factors in the European and global economy—such as the danger of increasing inflation and the slowing growth in world trade.
Grim though this forecast is, that it comes from the Resolution Foundation makes it all the more alarming.
The Resolution Foundation is a think tank founded in 2005 “to improve the living standards of low to middle income (LMI) families.” It is led by former Conservative MP David Willetts, and Torsten Bell, a senior adviser to Ed Miliband when he was leader of the Labour party. They applaud Prime Minister Theresa May’s phony “focus on supporting just-managing families” as “absolutely right.”
Resolution Foundation Director Bell said in an interview, “Britain has enjoyed a welcome mini-boom in living standards in recent years,” adding that this is coming to an end.
Reiterating this assessment, Adam Corlett, economic analyst at the Foundation, declared, “The healthy growth in household incomes of recent years was driven by historically low inflation and fast-rising employment.”
According to the Foundation’s own current figures on the incomes of the six million LMI family households, who range from £12,000 to £36,000 annually, 48 percent of them live on incomes of no more than £14,000 a year.
The consumer spending-fuelled growth spurt of the past few months was not a sign of any economic vigour but largely based on borrowing. With Brexit negotiations between the May government and the European Union (EU) about to get under way, the attendant economic uncertainty is leading consumers to rein in spending. “On January 31st the Bank of England revealed that consumer-credit growth in December fell to £1bn from £1.9bn the month before,” declared the Economist.
The Foundation’s report describes the five percent projected gains to be enjoyed by the top 25 percent as “small income gains.” Hardly. For an upper-class family making one million pounds per annum, a five percent increase would translate to £50,000!
Included in the study are disparities and changes in household income, but not wealth as expressed in stock portfolios or real estate. The real measure of inequality is therefore muted.
In 2012-2014, there was not so much “mini-boom,” but a staggering increase in wealth for just one section of society—the top 10 percent. They saw their wealth grow three times faster than the bottom 50 percent. In the same period, there was a 60 percent increase in the number of poor households.
The report describes the economic outlook as very worrying, with “income growth set to slow to extremely low levels and in a way that is highly regressive, with income falls for poorer households.” The immediate causes, it says, are the impact of welfare benefit cuts already in place and yet to come and the prospect of rising inflation.
The report points to “very significant cuts to working-age welfare benefits of over £12bn,” including a three-year freeze in working-age benefits and housing allowances, cuts in the amount that can be allowed before the Universal Credit benefit begins to taper, and other cuts that impact on families with more than two children.
Planned changes to the tax and benefit system means that the poorest 10 percent in society will be 3.1 percent worse off, which translates to £314 a year.
The report notes that the cuts in the benefit system will negate any positive impact of the introduction of the national living wage—set at just £7.20 an hour.
Regarding the impact of the Brexit referendum result, the report says that the value of sterling has declined by 15-20 percent, raising import costs. Liquid fuel rose 22 percent from June to December last year, air travel costs rose 20 percent in the same time frame and fruit by six percent. These cuts have hit the poorest disproportionately.
While inflation at 1.6 percent is still below the Bank of England’s target of two percent, the report expects this to rise as currency changes feed through into costs of production and consumer prices.
The section in the report dealing with the government’s planned tax cuts explains that raising the tax threshold slightly will do nothing to benefit the majority of households.
The report hints at longer-term trends of growing poverty and inequality. It notes that since 2008 average wages have still not caught up to their pre-crisis peak, and that incomes for the younger age groups may not have recovered fully. The average income of a typical pensioner is now higher than that of a typical working household. This points to the fact that while unemployment has fallen, the bulk of the jobs available tend to be low-paid on temporary contracts.
Analyzing data on incomes since 1994-1995, the report says that the “great recession has cast a long shadow, with typical incomes £3,100 below where they would have been if pre-crisis growth trends had continued.”
This is in line with international trends, which indicate that the world economy is smaller by a sixth than it would have been without the 2008 banking collapse.
The report ends by noting that the government is “actively choosing to increase inequality.” This, it predicts, is “likely to ensure that the proceeds of growth are shared unequally and that many families are made worse off.” The government should “alter the projected trajectory through policy choices,” such as changes to the tax and benefit system, and investment in training.
Such appeals will fall on deaf ears.
In a speech on Brexit last month, May threatened to “change the basis of Britain’s economic model” if the UK was not granted unlimited access to European markets after it exits the EU. May is travelling the globe in search of new trade deals, pledging that Britain will become “globally competitive.” This is premised on creating a tax haven for the rich, lowering wages even further and eradicating the employment rights of millions of workers.
To attract inward investment into the UK and sell competitively abroad, corporation tax is to be lowered to 17 or even as low as 10 percent by 2021. To put this figure into perspective, in 1965 the standard rate of income and corporation tax was 50 percent. In 2008, the Labour government lowered corporation tax to 28 percent, while the Cameron Conservative government lowered it further to 21 percent in 2014. The subvention to the super-rich now proposed signals the end for National Health Service funding and what remains of the social safety net.
The findings of the Resolution Foundation reflect not just of the failure of capitalism, but the bankruptcy of the trade unions which have overseen decades of attacks on wages and conditions. Their Labour allies have either imposed the same agenda in government or implemented, in opposition, every austerity cut demanded.
Speaking on the Resolution Foundation’s findings, Labour shadow chancellor John McDonnell called on Chancellor Philip Hammond to stopping cutting in-work benefits and taxes for the rich. The reality concealed by such statements is that McDonnell, in a joint letter with party leader Jeremy Corbyn, instructed Labour run councils nationally—including in the major towns and cities it controls—to set legal budgets and continue to implement austerity measures.

Munich Security Conference chairman advocates European rearmament

Peter Schwarz

Three high-level meetings scheduled to take place this week express the deepening conflicts and crisis within Europe following the election of US president Donald Trump.
The defence ministers of NATO are meeting in Brussels Wednesday and Thursday, the foreign ministers of the G20 will meet Friday in Bonn, and the 53rd Munich Security Conference will be held over the weekend. Participants from the US will include Vice President Mike Pence, Defence Secretary James Mattis and several senators.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel will also participate in the conference, as well as several dozen heads of state, 50 foreign ministers and 30 defence ministers from other countries.
In the lead-up to the meeting, Wolfgang Ischinger, the chairman of the Munich Security Conference, sharply criticised the new US president and called upon the European Union to show unity and begin a military build-up. The 70-year-old diplomat has 45 years of foreign policy experience behind him and is among the most influential voices in German politics.
“The US is unfortunately no longer suitable as the symbolic political-moral leader of the West,” Ischinger told the Berlin-based Tagesspiegel last Saturday. “The arrival of Trump means the end of the West, in which the US was the torch-bearer that the others sought to emulate. Europe’s task now is to replace this loss.”
In 40 years, Ischinger said he had never experienced such “a maximum destabilisation” as has emerged “since the US [called into question] the elements of world order, NATO, European integration.”
He added, “Until now, foreign and security policy was basically a static activity with firm guidelines and regulations. We are now dealing with new aggregate conditions, with a maximum degree of unpredictability. That is extraordinarily dangerous.”
Ischinger proposed defending the “Western order of values” by means of a massive military build-up in Europe and particularly in Germany. He demanded in the Tagesspiegel that German military spending not merely be increased from its current level of 1.2 percent to the 2 percent called for by the US, but to 3 percent of GDP. This amount should incorporate the development budget, and diplomatic and humanitarian assistance, which would thus become part of the military budget. “This approach,” Ischinger said, “would not be opposed by all lefts from the outset.”
Ischinger told the press on Monday that such an increase in military spending was not in America’s, but in Germany’s interests. “The issue here is therefore not what some third-rank boy comes up with in the Pentagon,” he said. The issue was much more what was required by the Bundeswehr (German army) to protect the country.
To strengthen the strike capability of the German army, Ischinger is pushing for closer cooperation within the European Union in the areas of the military and armaments industries.
“If the EU members purchase their jets or weapons together, they would only pay half per piece,” he calculated to Tagesspiegel. “We have six times as many weapons systems than the US with just half as much spending, but our fighting ability is less than 10 percent.” With an end “of regionalism…connected with the ability to take decisions in foreign policy we Europeans would be a political-military power which would in fact make an impression.”
In contrast to other European politicians, who “would rather write off the US as an ally today than tomorrow,” Ischinger wants to drag out a potential open break as long as possible, as he wrote in a guest piece for the Süddeutsche Zeitung on Thursday. “Instead of turning away decisively from the United States, we should cooperate with all of those interested in the retention of the Transatlantic community of values.”
Ischinger named potential partners as “Trump’s opponents in Congress” and “also members of the new government.” One had to try to “integrate the new US government as much as possible,” he said. “Integrate, secure influence—this is precisely the realpolitik now required.”
Ischinger is placing his hopes above all on Defence Secretary “Mad Dog” Mattis, Vice President Pence and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, who unlike Trump have thus far expressed support for the EU and NATO.
The resignation of National Security Adviser Michael Flynn, who was also originally supposed to have attended the Munich Security Conference, was taken note of by EU supporters with relief. Flynn was seen as an opponent of the EU and an ally of Moscow, while many European politicians consider it necessary to pursue a course of confrontation with Russia in order to prevent a further breakdown of the European Union.
In his Süddeutsche Zeitung piece, Ischinger left no doubt about the fact that his policy of “integrating and securing influence” was about buying time to rearm the military. “In the short and medium term,” he noted, the Europeans could “not abandon the American security guarantee.” He evidently views this differently over the long-term.
At the same time, he drew red lines, “the violation of which would provoke a grave Transatlantic crisis.” First, he warned, “If there is in fact a new government policy under Donald Trump which views the EU as an opponent and hopes for its speedy breakup, and backs right-wing populists, that would be a disaster for mutual relations.” He had previously described such a policy as “a declaration of war without weapons.”
Ischinger named his second red line as a deal between Russia and the US at the expense of Europe, and the third as new sanctions against Iran, which Germany would not support.
Ischinger urgently called on the European states to show unity and act with self-assertion, because Trump would “hardly be able to realise his plans” against Europe. At the same time, he noted that “especially we Germans must significantly heighten our efforts in the areas of foreign, development and defence policy in light of the fragile world situation.”
Ischinger’s advocacy of a huge military build-up demonstrates that his criticism of Trump and right-wing opponents of the EU in Europe has nothing to do with the defence of “a community of values.” Three years ago, the Munich Security Conference served as the stage for the German government to proclaim “the end of military restraint.” The then Foreign Minister and current President Frank-Walter Steinmeier stated at the time, “Germany is too large to merely comment on world politics from the sidelines.” He was supported by his predecessor, President Joachim Gauck, and Defence Minister Ursula Von der Leyen.
The rise of Trump, just like the return of German militarism, is the result of the insoluble crisis of global capitalism. The ruling class in every country has no other response to deepening social and economic tensions than to take up a bitter struggle for the global redivision of political and economic power. Germany’s attempts to reorganise Europe militarily under its leadership will also inevitably incite the conflicts within Europe that provoked two world wars in the last century.

Oroville Dam crisis highlights deteriorating state of US infrastructure

Ben McGrath

While the immediate danger to residents living around Oroville Dam in California’s Central Valley seemed to subside Tuesday, the threat from damaged infrastructure there will continue to persist, as will that stemming from the breakdown of the nation’s infrastructure in general.
With rain and snow expected to drench the area for another week beginning Wednesday night, President Donald Trump approved the use of federal emergency aid for California Monday evening.
Even with the evacuation order rescinded on Tuesday, an evacuation warning remains in effect, meaning there is still a clear danger that one of the dam’s two spillways could collapse. Butte County Sheriff Kory Honea stated at a press conference, “People who have special needs or require extended time to evacuate should consider remaining evacuated.”
Many evacuees remained in the shelters that had been rapidly set up over the weekend. For workers and residents living in or near poverty--the majority of the population around Oroville Dam--the ability to simply get in a vehicle and uproot their lives at a moment’s notice is not possible without great hardship. Lack of access to transportation to and from shelters highlights the struggle to meet daily needs, since things like medical care are out of reach when a family cannot afford a car or gas to go to a doctor’s office or hospital.
Lake Oroville continues to be drained in the hopes of bringing it down to 850 feet in preparation for the coming storms. It is hoped that water levels can be dropped an additional 10 feet by next week, down to the normal level for flood management. From a peak of 901 feet when water began to flow over the emergency spillway last weekend, the lake was at 878 feet by Wednesday afternoon.
Officials claimed that they did not expect the impending storms to represent a threat, but still went on to question the integrity of the dam’s main spillway, in which a 250-foot by 45-foot deep hole was discovered last week. Bill Croyle, acting director of California’s Department of Water Resources (DWR), which owns the dam, claimed the spillway was holding up, but raised the possibility that water being released could be causing additional unseen damage.
Despite the hole in the primary spillway, it is still being used to lower water levels; the emergency spillway, which is unpaved, began to erode when it was put into use for the first time in the dam’s 48-year history on Sunday, generating fears it would collapse and flood nearby cities and towns with a 30-foot-tall wave of water.
Workers continued overnight and into Wednesday to work to repair the emergency spillway before the next storms arrive. Bags of rocks were dropped from helicopters to fill in the hole generated by erosion, while crews on the ground filled it in with 1,200 tons of rock and slurry each hour.
The storms which began Wednesday night are predicted to drop 5 to 12 inches of rain, potentially adding billions of gallons of water to Lake Oroville. Looking to the future, the spring thaw will add more water through runoff from the nearby Sierra Nevada Mountains, where the current snowpack level is 183 percent above normal.
Officials are doing their best to deflect blame for the present crisis. Despite a clear warning from environmental groups twelve years ago pointing out the need to pave the emergency spillway, Croyle of the DWR incredulously stated on Monday “I’m not sure anything went wrong [with the emergency spillway],” claiming that the situation was an unforeseen event.
In reality, the crumbling state of dams around the country, not just at Oroville, is a looming and predictable danger. The average age of dams in the United States exceeds 50 years, while much of the material used to build them has a life span of that same period, according to the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). Oroville Dam, 48 years old, is one of nearly 90,000 dams around the United States. In total, approximately 3,000 dams in the US were built before 1900.
In California, an earthquake-prone state, 17 dams are listed as being in poor condition by the National Inventory of Dams kept by the Army Corps of Engineers. In Michigan, all but six of the 88 dams in the state are approaching the 50-year mark and received a D grade in 2009 for the conditions of the dams overall from the American Society of Civil Engineers. By 2020, more than 90 percent of its dams will exceed their lifespan. Dams around the country received the same D grade in 2013.
In Minnesota, repairs on the 107-year-old Byllesby Dam have been put off for lack of funding. This dam is one of 15,000 around the country that have been classified as “high hazard potential,” a term used to describe a structure whose collapse could cost human life.
The Association of State Dam Safety Officials (ASDSO) reported in 2014 that 1,627 high-hazard potential dams in the US were in need of repairs. In 2008, that number stood as high as 2,047. Only 186 and 140 dams were repaired in those years respectively. The ASDSO also stated in 2015 that $54 billion was needed for all dam repairs in the country, a drop in the bucket compared to the $619 billion annual military budget Congress approved in December. ASDSO also noted that 65 percent of dams are privately owned, by companies unwilling to take on the costs of repair.
While there are no genuine plans to address dam safety, the Trump administration on Tuesday highlighted the crumbing Oroville Dam in order to push its phony infrastructure plans.
“The situation is a textbook example of why we need to pursue a major infrastructure package in Congress. Dams, bridges, roads in all parts around the country have fallen into disrepair,” White House spokesman Sean Spicer stated. “In order to prevent the next disaster we’ll pursue the President’s vision for an overhaul of our nation’s crumbling infrastructure.”
Not yet concrete, Trump’s so-called infrastructure plan is designed to further privatize public infrastructure and utilities while slashing existing safety regulations, claiming this would streamline the construction and repair process. Private companies would invest in rebuilding and maintenance projects, receive government subsidies, and then take over operations in order to make significant profits.
The threat to the nearly 200,000 people living under the Oroville Dam has not been generated by incompetence or mere stupidity. It stems from the subordination of safety and lives to the interests of the capitalist system. In this regard, the working class in Northern California has far more in common with workers internationally, such as those in China who are regularly employed and forced to live in unsafe conditions in the drive for profit.

Trump, Netanyahu dismiss “two-state solution,” threaten Iran

Bill Van Auken 

In a White House press conference Wednesday with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, US President Donald Trump backed away from a decades-old pretense by Washington of a commitment to the pursuit of a “two-state solution” to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Instead, echoing remarks by Netanyahu, Trump advanced a “much bigger deal, a much more important deal” that “would take in many, many countries and…would cover a very large territory.” While vague in the extreme, in the context of the evolving foreign policy of the Trump administration, the statement suggested plans for a closer US-Israeli alliance of militarist aggression against Iran, combined with an attempt to bring Arab Sunni regimes such as Saudi Arabia, the other Gulf monarchies and others on board.
In the course of the 2016 election campaign, Trump vowed to become the “most pro-Israel president in history,” promised to move the US embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem and followed up by naming his personal bankruptcy lawyer, David Friedman, a prominent US supporter of Zionist settlements in the occupied West Bank, as his nominee for US ambassador to Israel.
At Wednesday’s press conference, which was scheduled before he and Netanyahu met, thereby precluding any questions as to the content of their discussions, Trump indicated a significant shift from the public policy that has been put forward by Washington for decades: that the solution to the conflict in the Middle East required the creation of a Palestinian mini-state on at least some of the territory occupied by Israel since the 1967 war.
The pursuit of this supposed “solution” through so-called peace talks that invariably break down has been a longstanding charade, designed to portray Washington as some kind of even-handed broker even as it arms Israel to the teeth and subsidizes its economy. The continuous encroachment of settlements and security areas have long since reduced and divided the territory that would supposedly be ruled by a Palestinian state, rendering any such entity politically and economically unviable.
Nonetheless, Trump’s statement at the press conference that, as far as a two-state or one-state solution, “I could be happy with either one” is a signal to the Israeli government that it can proceed as it sees fit in the continued occupation and oppression of the Palestinian people without facing even the pretense of pressure from Washington.
Trump said Wednesday that he would “love to see” the US embassy moved to Jerusalem, but gave no indication that such a decision, which would spark intense hostility throughout the Arab world, was imminent.
On the issue of Israel’s settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, Trump gave what might be best described as a “wink and a nod” to the Israeli prime minister, telling him, “I’d like to see you hold back on settlements for a little bit,” while adding, “We’ll work something out.” To laughter from the White House audience, he added, peering at Netanyahu, “both sides will have to make compromises--You know that, right?”
Earlier the administration had put forward a formal opposition to the creation of new settlements and the geographical expansion of existing ones, leaving open the building of new settler housing within those that already exist.
For his part, Netanyahu, who in the weeks following Trump’s inauguration approved plans for more than 3,000 new homes in West Bank settlements and East Jerusalem, made it clear that he was reading the green light from the White House. He dismissed the questions on settlements, saying that they were not the “core of the conflict,” and voiced confidence that he and Trump would “arrive at an understanding so we don't keep on bumping into each other all the time on this issue.”
Trump also denounced what he characterized as “one-sided actions against Israel at the United Nations, which has treated Israel in my opinion very, very unfairly.” Last December, then-president-elect Trump denounced the Obama administration for not using its veto in the UN Security Council to defeat a toothless resolution criticizing Israel’s expansion of settlements in the occupied territories.
Both Trump and Netanyahu have promoted a conception that Israel was neglected and mistreated by the Obama administration. In point of fact, last September the Obama White House concluded a $38 billion, 10-year arms aid deal with Tel Aviv, the largest such agreement in history, expanding on the massive US assistance to the Israel, a country which takes in roughly one third of all US aid worldwide, while accounting for just .001 percent of the world’s population.
The reaction of the Israeli right to the press conference was ecstatic. Naftali Bennett, Netanyahu’s extreme right-wing education minister, praised Trump’s shift from the two-state solution. “A new era. New ideas. No need for 3rd Palestinian state beyond Jordan & Gaza. Big day for Israelis & reasonable Arabs. Congrats,” he said on Twitter. He added in Hebrew: “After 24 years, the Palestinian flag has come down from the mast and the Israeli flag has taken its place,” referring to the 1993 Oslo accords calling for the creation of an independent Palestinian state.
Both Trump and Netanyahu issued bellicose warnings to Iran, suggesting that Washington and its main client state in the Middle East are preparing for a redoubling of the provocations and aggression that have repeatedly brought the region to the brink of a war that would have incalculable consequences.
Netanyahu made reference to “a regional approach involving our newfound Arab partners,” while Trump responded by saying, “So, I didn’t know you were going to be mentioning that, but that’s—now that you did, I think it’s a terrific thing and I think we have some pretty good cooperation from people that in the past would never, ever have even thought about doing this.”
These statements follow a report from Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas over the weekend that a senior Egyptian official, apparently acting in cooperation with Israel, had put forward a proposal for a transfer of the Palestinian refugee population to the Sinai Peninsula and the annexation of the Gaza Strip, leaving Israel in control of the West Bank.
Trump’s CIA Director Mike Pompeo held secret talks with Abbas on Tuesday in Ramallah. The US intelligence agency has played a major role in shaping and assisting the Palestinian Authority as an instrument for containing and repressing the resistance of the Palestinian people.
The reaction of the Palestinian Authority leadership was to plead with Washington to continue the two-state charade on the grounds that abandoning it would undermine “American interests.” The renunciation of the two-state solution would strip the last shred of legitimacy from the PA leaders, who have become millionaires off of CIA payments and foreign aid grants.
More broadly, the emerging US-Israeli strategy appears to be aimed at securing the support of reactionary Sunni Arab regimes for a military buildup against Iran, with the Palestinians to be used as a bargaining chip in a new and bloody imperialist carve-up of the Middle East.
While calling on two obscure right-wing US news outlets—Pat Robertson’s Christian Broadcasting Network and the Townhall website—to avoid any hostile questions, Trump was asked by an Israeli reporter to respond to a sharp rise in anti-Semitic incidents in the US since his election, and the perception that behind it, “your administration is playing with xenophobia and maybe racist tones.”
Trump made a rambling reply referring to the number of electoral votes he won in the 2016 election and adding that “there’s tremendous enthusiasm out there.” He made no mention, much less any condemnation, of anti-Semitic attacks; instead he merely stated, “As far as people, Jewish people, so many friends; a daughter who happens to be here right now; a son-in-law, and three beautiful grandchildren,” referring to his daughter Ivanka and her husband Jared Kushner.
Netanyahu jumped in, declaring: “There is no greater supporter of the Jewish people and the Jewish state than President Donald Trump. I think we should put that to rest.”
That the Trump White House has as its “chief strategist” Stephen Bannon, until recently the head of Breitbart News, which serves as a platform for white nationalists and anti-Semites, is not an issue for the Israeli leader. His only concern is that Washington provide unconditional support for the predatory interests of the Israeli state and capitalist ruling elite.