Friday, 2 May 2014

Delta says key revenue figure is up from last year


Delta Air Lines Inc. said Friday that traffic increased and a key revenue figure rose 6 percent in April partly because of the shift of the Easter holiday, which occurred in March last year.


The biggest traffic gains were on flights within the U.S. and to Latin America. Traffic to Europe and Asia rose only slightly.


Delta reported the increase in passenger revenue for each seat flown one mile. That's a closely watched number in the airline industry, and it rises when airlines fill more seats or sell tickets at higher average prices. The figure rose just 1 percent in March.


Passengers flew 16.57 billion miles on Delta last month, up 6.6 percent from April 2013. Including Delta Connection regional flights, the company increased passenger-carrying capacity by 3 percent.


Since traffic rose faster than capacity, the average flight was more full — 84.7 percent, up from 81.8 percent a year earlier.


Shares of Atlanta-based Delta fell 2 cents to $37.10 in midday trading. They began the day up 35 percent this year, as airline stocks have rallied on stronger earnings after recent mergers.



Journalists covering Ukraine detained, then freed


Journalists from CBS News, Buzzfeed and Sky News who were covering the unrest in eastern Ukraine have been freed Friday after being detained by pro-Russia insurgents.


CBS correspondent Clarissa Ward and her crew, and Buzzfeed Mideast correspondent Mike Giglio, were taken into custody after being stopped at a checkpoint outside the city of Slovyansk. Sky News said its four-person crew was similarly detained and released, but offered few details.


Friday's incidents came three days after the Committee to Protect Journalists expressed alarm at how reporters and media organizations were being targeted in the Ukraine.


Ward said she and her crew were bound with tape and transported to another location, and one of her male colleagues was beaten while being held captive. Ward and Giglio said they both heard discussions among their captors about keeping the journalists as hostages.


"Men who were holding us kept telling us not to be frightened and that everything would be OK," Ward said in an interview on "CBS This Morning." "Then another group of commanders appeared to come in and gave them instructions to release us, ultimately. But all in all, I think it's fair to say that it was an unpleasant and quite frightening experience."


The commanders who released them said the people who had taken them into custody were emotional because the Ukrainian Army had begun an offensive against the insurgents in Slovyansk, Ward said.


"It's fair to say that — when I was listening to the pro-Russian separatists speaking to each other — I can understand Russian and there was a lot of very strong anti-American rhetoric going on," she said. "One guy was shouting at me in Russian, you know, 'If President Obama was smart, he wouldn't be supporting the fascists in Kiev.'"


Giglio said via Twitter that his ordeal lasted about three hours. He said it appeared to be motivated by fear and panic among the militiamen.


"They were very spooked," he said.


He said he was unharmed, although one journalist had been beaten. It was not immediately clear if Giglio and Ward were referring to the same beating.


Giglio was asked to name the U.S. capital and pronounce the word 'garden' to prove he was an American. He said his belongings were taken and returned, except for his flak jacket and helmet.


Once it was decided they would be released "the pro-Russia militiamen politely served us tea," Giglio tweeted.


Late last month, correspondent Simon Ostrovsky from the Canadian-based Vice News was taken into custody and held for three days by pro-Russia insurgents in eastern Ukraine. He said later he was beaten and handcuffed and appeared to have been specifically targeted for his reporting: the men taking him captive in Slovyansk had a picture of him.


"I don't think they wanted to kill me," he said in an interview on NBC's "Today" show after his release. "They just wanted to put a scare in me. It was very scary."


Natalia Ligacheva, head of the Ukrainian media watchdog Telekritika, said as of Thursday, at least four Ukrainian journalists continued to be held hostage by pro-Russian insurgents in eastern Ukraine. She said Ukrainian media groups have recommended that journalists refrain from traveling to insurgency hotspots unless they have undergone security training.


"This situation is completely horrible and absurd because even during open military hostilities, journalists and medics and Red Cross workers are not subjected to violence," Ligacheva said. "And here journalists have become a key target."


----


Associated Press correspondent Maria Danilova in Kiev contributed to this report.


Giglio said via Twitter that his whole ordeal took three hours.



First-time unemployment insurance claims rise


First-time claims for unemployment insurance in Louisiana for the week ending April 26 increased from the previous week's total.


The Louisiana Workforce Commission said Friday that initial claims rose to 2,238 from the previous week's total of 1,951. There were 2,541 initial claims during the comparable week in 2013.


The four-week moving average, which is a less volatile measure of claims, increased to 2,188 from the previous week's average of 2,125.


Continued unemployment weeks claimed for the week ending April 26 decreased to 18,921 compared to 18,996 the previous week. The four-week moving average for such claims decreased to 19,095 from the previous week's average of 19,264.



Army arrests Syrians for illegally entering country


BEIRUT: The Lebanese Army detained seven Syrians on the outskirts of the border town of Arsal in the Bekaa Valley, an Army statement said Friday.


The military said the Syrians were arrested for attempting to enter the country illegally.


The state-run National News Agency said the arrest happened at an Army checkpoint in the mountainous outskirts of Arsal after soldiers were suspicious of the Syrians’ IDs. The detainees were transferred to the Arsal police station for further investigation.


The arrests come two days after unidentified gunmen ambushed an Army patrol in Rahwa, in the mountainous outskirts of the town. Five soldiers were wounded in clashes that followed and the Army launched a manhunt in the area.


In a separate statement, the Army said it arrested a kidnap for ransom gang in the Beirut suburbs of Hadath and Sibnay.


The statement said the gang faked a kidnapping of one of its female members and called her husband demanding a $ 25,000 ransom.



Residents demand funding for Jal al-Dib tunnel


BEIRUT: Residents of the Metn town of Jal al-Dib held a protest Friday calling for funds to install a tunnel project to be approved, threatening to close down the highway if their demands were not met.


The protesters gathered in front of the Mar Abda Church in Jal al-Dib Square as Cabinet held a meeting in Baabda Palace Friday afternoon.


The Jal al-Dib bridge, built after the start of the Civil War in 1975, was dismantled in 2012 after many officials warned it was at severe risk of collapsing, despite the opinions of a number of engineers that the bridge was in sound condition.


The bridge was dismantled before alternative plans for it were proposed, compelling many of the town’s residents to hold weekly protests.


Though a tunnel project was given the green light from the Cabinet, no deadlines or funding methods were set.



La. Bancorp reports higher first-quarter profit


Metairie-based Louisiana Bancorp Inc. reported first-quarter earnings jumped to $620,000, or 23 cents per share, compared with $500,000, or 19 cents per share, a year ago.


The holding company for Bank of New Orleans said its results were improved by cutting its provision for bad loans by $99,000 and by lowering non-interest expenses.


The company also has extended its stock repurchase program until May 2, 2015. The company plans to buy back as many as 126,459 shares.


Lawrence J. LeBon III, chairman, president and chief executive officer, tells The Advocate (http://bit.ly/1fW0eOr ) Louisiana Bancorp also plans to redesign the Transcontinental Drive branch office, with work to begin this month.



Sales of Jeeps assembled in Belvidere climb


Sales of cars and SUVs assembled at Chrysler's plant in Belvidere climbed to more than 19,700 last month despite a big drop in the number of Dodge Darts that were sold.


The Rockford Register Star (http://bit.ly/ShlFo8 ) reports that the total U.S. dealership sales of the Dodge Dart, Jeep Compass and Jeep Patriot were 7.5 percent — or more than 1,500 — higher than April of last year.


The Jeep vehicles did much better than the Dodge Dart. Sales of the Patriot jumped 44 percent and the sales of the Compass assembled at the plant climbed 20 percent.


Sales of the Dart fell 24 percent compared to the previous April. Poor Dart sales prompted Chrysler Group LLC to temporarily lay off 325 workers several weeks ago.



News Corp. to buy Harlequin for $415M


News Corp. sees profit potential in the tales of princes, sexy soldiers and mysterious millionaires.


The publishing company controlled by media mogul Rupert Murdoch said Friday that it has agreed to buy romance novel publisher Harlequin Enterprises from Torstar Corp. for 455 million Canadian dollars ($415 million) in cash.


Harlequin will become a division of News Corp.'s HarperCollins Publishers subsidiary and remain based in Toronto.


Founded in 1949, Harlequin publishes its steamy tales in 34 languages and sells them in over 100 international markets. Its titles include the works of more than 1,300 authors and it releases more than 110 titles each month.


News Corp. said the deal will extend HarperCollins' global reach, especially in Europe and Asia Pacific. About 40 percent of Harlequin's revenue comes from books published in languages other than English. Currently, 99 percent of HarperCollins books are published in English.


The deal, which is expected to close by the end of the third quarter, remains subject to regulatory approvals and the approval of Torstar's Class A shareholders. News Corp. expects the addition to boost its profits and improve its free cash flow.


For 2013, Harlequin's revenue totaled 398 million Canadian dollars ($372 million). About 95 percent of its revenue comes from outside Canada



Obama Administration Lost Overseas?


The jobs report meant good news for the White House, but Secretary of State John Kerry is tending to a crisis in South Sudan. The Political Chat focuses on foreign and domestic challenges.



Obama praises jobs growth, says more work remains


President Barack Obama hails April jobs growth but says Congress must still do more to help American workers, including raising the minimum wage and creating more construction jobs by approving public works projects.


Obama spoke during a joint appearance with German Chancellor Angela Merkel.


The government reported Friday that employers added 288,000 jobs in April, the most in two years.


Obama praised the, quote, "grit and determination" of Americans for the economic improvement.


Obama also extended his thoughts and prayers to the people of Afghanistan for losses suffered in a massive landslide.



Earnhardt's team signs 3-year deal with Nationwide


Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s team has signed a three-year sponsorship deal with Nationwide Insurance.


The agreement with the No. 88 Hendrick Motorsports Sprint Cup Series team was announced Friday. Nationwide will be a primary sponsor for 12 Sprint Cup races in 2015 and 13 each during the two years after that. The company also will be an associate sponsor all three seasons.


Hendrick Motorsports owner Rick Hendrick says through the partnership "we'll build another program that moves the needle for their business. The opportunities are endless."


Earnhardt is a two-time Nationwide Series champion and has 20 Sprint Cup wins.


He won his second Daytona 500 in February. Earnhardt says the company has "built a strong reputation with NASCAR fans, and this opens up doors to do even more great things."



Grain mixed, cattle mixed and pork lower


Grain futures were mixed Friday in early trading on the Chicago Board of Trade.


Wheat for July delivery was unchanged at 7.0725 a bushel; July corn was 4.75 cents lower at 5.0225 a bushel; July oats were unchanged at 3.53 a bushel; while July soybeans was 1 cents higher at 14.62 a bushel.


Beef mixed and pork lower on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.


June live cattle was .45 cents lower at $1.3880 a pound; Aug feeder cattle was .73 cent higher at 1.9120 a pound; June lean hogs loss .30 cents to $1.2250 a pound.



The Employment Situation in April

Employment growth was solid in April, as businesses added jobs for the 50th consecutive month, and the unemployment rate fell. The employment data can fluctuate from month-to-month, and while this month’s report happens to be above expectations, it is still broadly consistent with the recent trends we have been seeing in the labor market. The President continues to emphasize that more can and should be done to support the recovery, including acting on his own executive authority to expand economic opportunity, as well as pushing Congress for additional investments in infrastructure, education and research, an increase in the minimum wage, and a reinstatement of extended unemployment insurance benefits. In fact, CEA estimates that because of the failure to continue extended benefits into 2014, the economy has already incurred the loss of 80,000 jobs so far this year. Failure to reinstate extended unemployment insurance benefits is expected to cost another 160,000 jobs over the balance of the year.


FIVE KEY POINTS IN TODAY’S REPORT FROM THE BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS


1. The private sector has added 9.2 million jobs over 50 straight months of job growth. Today we learned that total nonfarm payroll employment rose by 288,000 in April, driven by a 273,000 increase in private employment. Job growth in February and March was revised up, so that that over the past twelve months, private employment has risen by 2.4 million, or an average of 198,000 a month. This is slightly faster than the pace of job gains over the preceding twelve-month period (182,000 a month).



2. The level of April payrolls came in 0.05 percent above expectations—meaning the consensus forecast of the level of payroll employment was extremely accurate. Accounting for the revisions to March, the consensus forecast was for 138,182,000 nonfarm payroll jobs in April, which was only a tiny bit below the actual 138,252,000 nonfarm payroll jobs reported today by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Of course, the main focus is on the forecast for the change in jobs and in this regard the actual 288,000 jobs added was 32 percent higher than the consensus forecast of 218,000 jobs, a substantial prediction error. Forecasting the change in jobs is very difficult because anything that adds or subtracts just 0.05 percent to total jobs shows up as a 70,000 job swing that appears as a large difference from the consensus forecast, but actually may just be a transitory fluctuation, statistical sampling noise, or quirks in seasonal adjustment. That is why it is best to focus on the trend in jobs over longer periods of time as well as a range of other economic data.



3. Long-term unemployment continues to affect a demographically diverse group that is broadly similar to the group of workers that have been unemployed for shorter durations. As shown below, the educational attainment of the long-term unemployed is strikingly similar to that of the shorter-term unemployed. Additionally, as noted previously, long-term unemployment does not appear to be overly concentrated in a single occupation. These facts suggest that steps that have been proposed to support the long-term unemployed—including reinstating extended unemployment insurance—still have a critical role to play in helping to address this pressing issue.



4. The pattern of job growth across industries in April was highly consistent with the pattern observed over the past year. One way to evaluate whether the composition of job growth is in line with recent trends is to consider the correlation between the most recent one-month percent change and the average percent change over the last 12 months across various industries. Looking across the 17 industries shown in point #5, the correlation between the April change and the average percent change over the last 12 months was 0.87, suggesting that the distribution of employment gains last month was very much in line with recent trends. Since 2008, this correlation has averaged 0.63. Thus, it appears that the pickup in job growth observed in April does not reflect any outlier performance in a single industry or handful of industries.



5. Looking over the 50 straight months of private-sector job growth since March 2010, the 273,000 increase in private employment in April represents the 3rd strongest single month of job growth during this time. Construction rose by 32,000 in April, its 5th strongest month since March 2010. Over the last four months alone, the construction sector has added 124,000 jobs. Manufacturing added 12,000 jobs in April, in line with the average monthly gain over the last 50 months, during which time manufacturing employment has risen by 647,000.



As the Administration stresses every month, the monthly employment and unemployment figures can be volatile, and payroll employment estimates can be subject to substantial revision. Therefore, it is important not to read too much into any one monthly report and it is informative to consider each report in the context of other data that are becoming available.


Lebanon rejects Tunisia request to confiscate funds of Ben Ali's wife


BEIRUT: Lebanon’s Court of Cessation rejected Friday a request from Tunisia to confiscate funds in the Lebanese account of ousted president Zine El Abidine Ben Ali’s wife.


Headed by Judge Jean Eid, the court rejected the Justice Ministry’s request to execute a judicial decision taken by Tunisia’s Magistrates Court to confiscate the money belonging to Laila Trabelsi. The request sought to transfer the funds to the Central Bank in Tunisia.


The request was sent by Ali bin Fetais al-Marri who was appointed by the United Nations to head efforts to recover money from leaders overthrown during Arab uprisings. He is also Qatar’s attorney-general.


Trabelsi’s money was in a Lebanese-Canadian bank account which was closed down in 2011, making the Lebanese government responsible for it.


The Lebanese court justified its refusal, saying the Tunisian Magistrates Court intentionally gave a nonexistent address in Beirut’s Cornish al-Mazraa, saying it belonged to Trabelsi.


It added that the judicial request lacked legal conditions and that the decision itself “violated Lebanese procedures and Lebanese sovereignty.”


The court asked the Tunisian Justice Ministry to provide an accurate address within five days of receiving its notice or else it would be fined LL1 million per day if the deadline was not met.


Last year, Tunisia acquired $28.8 million from Trabelsi’s bank account in Lebanon.



US job gains send stocks higher in early trade


The biggest hiring surge in two years is sending the stock market higher in early trading.


The gains were muted early Friday as several U.S. companies reported weaker earnings.


The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose three points, or 0.2 percent, to 1,886 in the first few minutes of trading.


The Dow Jones industrial average rose 28 points, or 0.2 percent, to 16,584.


The Dow and S&P are near all-time highs.


Integrys Energy and Public Storage fell after their earnings missed investors' estimates.


The government reported that U.S. employers added 288,000 jobs in April, the most in two years and the strongest evidence to date that the economy is picking up after a brutal winter.


Bond prices fell. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose to 2.66 percent.



EU, Ukraine, Russia to hold gas price talks


The European Union energy commissioner says the bloc will hold gas price talks this month with Russia and Ukraine in an effort to avoid the disruption of deliveries.


Guenther Oettinger said Friday in Warsaw that common ground must be found in Russia's dispute with Ukraine. Moscow has significantly raised the price of gas for Ukraine and threatened to limit deliveries if Kiev does not repay a debt of $3.5 billion and pay the new, higher prices.


Oettinger spoke after talking with Ukraine's and Russia's energy ministers, Yuri Prodan and Alexander Novak.


He said further talks will be held in mid-May and at the end of May, in which the 28-country EU will mediate with the aim of establishing a just gas price.



Company signs deal for 4 acres at port


Natchez and Adams County officials aren't making public any details about the sale of four acres at the local port.


The county signed off on the agreement Thursday.


Natchez Inc. Executive Director Chandler Russ told The Natchez Democrat (http://bit.ly/1kAskmp ) the company is a major player in the Tuscaloosa Marine Shale development and could invest up to $5 million in the area and create 20 new jobs.


Russ said local officials are under a confidentiality agreement. An official announcement could come in 30 to 60 days.


"This company is looking to establish a presence and footprint in the port area for the movement of their liquids in and out of the TMS," Russ said. "We expect that to continue to grow and expand over the course of the play," he said.


Tuscaloosa Marine Shale formation is located in southwest Mississippi and central Louisiana. Experts have said the formation could hold 7 billion barrels of oil.


Supervisor Mike Lazarus said the agreement came with a reverter clause requiring that if the company did not develop the site in three years the land would revert with the county and the county would be allowed to keep the funds generated from the sale.



Berkshire Hathaway unit buying AltaLink for $2.92B


Berkshire Hathaway Inc.'s energy unit is buying the rest of Canadian power transmission provider AltaLink for 3.2 million Canadian dollars (about $2.92 billion).


Berkshire Hathaway Energy is buying SNC-Lavalin's equity stake in AltaLink. This will give Berkshire Hathaway Energy full equity ownership of AltaLink.


Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Energy owns and operates transmission and distribution lines in the U.S. The Des Moines, Iowa, company also owns or contracts more than 28,000 megawatts of electricity generation.


AltaLink will keep its name and continue to run as a separate company under Berkshire Hathaway Energy. Its headquarters will remain in Calgary.


The deal needs regulatory approval from the Alberta Utilities Commission. The regulatory process is expected to close later this year or in early 2015.



US stock futures rise as unemployment rate drops


U.S. stock futures are up slightly after the U.S. unemployment rate hit its lowest level in more than five years. The government reported the unemployment rate sank to 6.3 percent.


KEEPING SCORE: Futures wavered after the jobs report came out but held onto their gains. Dow Jones industrial average futures are up 26 points, or 0.2 percent, 16,514. Eastern time. Standard & Poor's 500 index futures are up three points at 1,881 and Nasdaq futures are up six points, or 0.2 percent, to 3,593.


JOBS: The Labor Department said employers added 288,000 jobs in April. They also added more jobs in February and March than earlier estimated, according to the report.


MISSED: Shares in CVS Caremark fell more than 2 percent in premarket trading Friday after it reported first-quarter results that fell short of analyst expectations. Still, earnings jumped 18 percent as generic drugs and an acquisition helped the drugstore weather a tough winter for most retail stores.


NO DEAL: The board of pharmaceutical company AstraZeneca on Friday rejected drug maker Pfizer's latest takeover offer, calling it inadequate. Pfizer, the world's second-biggest drugmaker by sales, had proposed a $100 billion acquisition, its third attempt at buying AstraZeneca.


GETTING BETTER: Further evidence emerged Friday to show that unemployment across Europe's 18-country currency zone is sliding. Eurostat, the European Union's statistics office, said unemployment across the eurozone fell to 18.91 million. The unemployment rate, however, was unchanged at 11.8 percent for the third month running.


EUROPE'S MARKETS: France's CAC-40 fell 0.5 percent, while Germany's DAX was unchanged. Britain's FTSE 100 rose 0.2 percent.


TREASURYS AND COMMODITIES: Government bond prices are little changed. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note was 2.62 percent, unchanged from late Thursday. The price of oil rose 34 cents to $99.76 per barrel.



US gains 288k jobs, most in 2 years; rate 6.3 pct.

The Associated Press



U.S. employers added a robust 288,000 jobs in April, the most in two years, the strongest evidence to date that the economy is picking up after a brutal winter slowed growth.


The Labor Department also said Friday that the unemployment rate sank to 6.3 percent, its lowest level since September 2008, from 6.7 percent in March. But the drop occurred because the number of people working or seeking work fell sharply. People aren't counted as unemployed if they're not looking for a job.


In addition to the burst of hiring in April, employers added more jobs in February and March than previously estimated. The job totals for those two months were revised up by a combined 36,000.


Employers have now added an average of 238,000 jobs the past three months, up from 167,000 in the previous three.


"Not only is job growth continuing, but it is accelerating," said Patrick O'Keefe, director of economic research at the accounting and consulting firm CohnReznick.


Sal Guatieri, an economist at BMO Capital Markets, said the surge in hiring "signals that American companies are optimistic the economy will snap back smartly after the largely weather-related slump in the first quarter."


Hiring last month was broad-based and included higher-paying jobs: Manufacturing gained 12,000, construction 32,000. Professional and technical services, which include accounting and engineering positions, added 25,100 jobs. The number of government jobs grew 15,000, mostly at the local level.


One sour note: Average hourly pay was unchanged at $24.31. Average wages have risen just 1.9 percent in the past 12 months, just above the annual inflation rate of 1.5 percent.


The fall in the unemployment rate was due mainly to the exodus of people who stopped looking for work. O'Keefe said he was surprised by the 806,000 drop in the number of Americans either with a job or seeking one. But he noted that that figure is volatile from month and month and that during the first three months of 2014, nearly 1.3 million people had poured into the labor force.


Investors responded to the surprisingly strong job growth by selling bonds, a sign that they think the economy is picking up. Prices of U.S. Treasurys fell, sending yields higher. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note, a benchmark for many loans including mortgages, rose to 2.67 percent from 2.62 percent shortly before the jobs report was issued.


Stock index futures were largely unchanged.


The jump in hiring comes after a spate of other data showed that the economy is improving. Consumers are ramping up spending, businesses are ordering more goods and manufacturers are expanding. The strengthening numbers show that harsh snowstorms and frigid cold in January and February were largely to blame for the economy's scant growth at the start of the year.


The economy barely expanded from January through March, eking out an annual growth rate of just 0.1 percent, down from a 2.6 percent rate in the final three months of 2013. Americans spent more last quarter on utilities and health care, but their spending on goods barely rose. Businesses also reduced spending, and exports fell.


Still, other data indicate that the economy was already rebounding in March and probably improved further in April. Consumers bought more cars and spent more at shopping malls. Overall consumer spending soared in March by the most in 4½ years.


Spending is up partly because Americans earned a bit more, and confidence has improved from the bleak winter months. Incomes rose 0.5 percent in March, the government said, the most since August.


And a private survey showed that manufacturing activity accelerated in April for a third straight month.


Businesses are also investing more in machinery and equipment after cutting back in those areas in January and December. Business orders for manufactured goods jumped in March, the government said last week.


All told, the positive news has led most economists to forecast a strong rebound in economic growth — to a 3.5 percent annual rate in the current April-June quarter. And growth should reach nearly 3 percent for the full year, up from 1.9 percent in 2013, they expect.



Blue Cross Blue Shield remains as administrator


The East Baton Rouge Parish School Board has voted to stay with Blue Cross Blue Shield of Louisiana to administer the system's self-funded employee health insurance plan for another three years.


The Advocate reports (http://bit.ly/1na1xi2 ) the new contract, which would take effect Jan. 1, would increase Blue Cross' charge from $29.47 to $33 per employee.


That works out to an almost $2.8 million in 2015, based on an estimated 7,000 active and retired employees whom Blue Cross would serve.


In 2013, the school system had more 9,500 employees using Blue Cross, which meant almost $3.4 million in administrative fees. About 2,800 retirees now are on a Medicare Advantage plan administered by Humana.


The vote on Thursday was 7-2.



Reach Higher for College

Ed. note: This is cross-posted on The Huffington Post. See the original post here.


It's easy to talk about the importance of college. But some folks really walk the walk.


I had the thrilling opportunity to meet some of them a few years ago, when I joined the college signing day at YES Prep in Houston, Texas. As I told the audience that day, I was moved nearly to tears as students announced their college plans to a cheering stadium, and signed letters committing to their college. It was the kind of unbridled enthusiasm we usually reserve for sporting events – and yet it was also like a family reunion. It was overwhelming.


Today, First Lady Michelle Obama will take that experience to a whole new level when she gives a name to her college access initiative, Reach Higher, at the culmination of a city-wide college celebration in San Antonio, Texas. All week, the entire city has been focused on the vital importance of getting a college degree. Today, the First Lady will witness an auditorium full of high school seniors committing to entering and completing college.


Their embrace of that goal is part of changing our country's future. A generation ago, our young people were first in the world in their college completion rate – but now we are 12th in the world. President Obama has set a goal of reclaiming our world leadership.


And we are seeing some really important progress. Earlier this week, I had the pleasure of announcing our new cohort high school graduation rate, which at 80% is the highest in US history. And last month, we learned that attainment of college degrees last year saw its biggest rise since 2008.


read more


Lebanon patriarch confirms historic Jerusalem trip with pope: AFP

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Cedars tracks hopes to raise awareness


BEIRUT: ‘Cedars: The Remix’ may not be topping the charts yet, but a new initiative hopes tracks produced using the rhythm of the ancient trees will raise awareness about the need to preserve conifers.


“3,000 Years' is the first track in history created using a rhythm extracted from inside a Lebanese cedar tree. Composed by Beirut-based DJ ESC (Ribal Rayess), the track is the focal point of the 'Save the Music' campaign for cedar conservation in Lebanon,” reads the information on the website where three tracks, the original mix and two remixes, are available for download. The tracks were released by VL Records.


The Lebanese Ministry of Environment, in cooperation with the Education Ministry, is credited with this novel initiative which extracted the cedar trees’ rhythm and handed it over to some of Beirut’s top DJs who then added a beat and vocals.


Rayess was initially approached by Jad Hazim, stage named Jad Jazzy Jay, to collaborate on the project, which is intended to raise awareness, as well as money, to preserve the endangered cedar tree.


The cedar tree's rhythm was extracted by Derek Shirley, a Canadian bio-acoustics engineer based in Germany. Shirley assembled a synthesizer reading mechanism sensitive to electric movement in living organisms and hooked it up to the Lebanese cedar tree. By embedding special bio-electric sensors in the tree, he extracted the audio data.


“We’ve recently discovered that each tree species creates its own rhythm,” Shirley said in a Youtube video entitled Save the Music – Save the Cedars.


“As it turns out the Lebanese cedars are especially rhythmic,” he says.


After Shirley extracted the raw, rhythmic beat, he handed it over to Rayess who turned it into "something commercial and radio friendly".


"At the beginning of the [original] track you can hear about 20 seconds of raw footage that make base sounds," Rayess told The Daily Star. "It blew my mind."


Rayess said the lyrics, sang by Marlene Jaber, were "simple" with the intent to unite Lebanese, regardless of sect, under the symbolic cedar tree. "The words reminisce 3000 years of the cedars," he said.


"The track is housy and groovy, I hope people like it."


In addition to the original track, Rayess also made a radio edit and a dub mix. The tracks can be purchased for a dollar each or $3 for all three and all proceeds contribute to cedar conservation. However, as noted by renowned Lebanese blog Blog Baladi, the current online payment service PayPal is required to buy the tracks. PayPal is not currently offered in Lebanon, but Rayess said the track will be available on iTunes, Beatport and other online music stores after the official release later this month.


Following the official release, Rayess hopes the song will be played and remixed by other Lebanese DJs.


"These are the sounds from the symbol of a nation and it makes music for people to enjoy it," he said.



Saudi envoy returns to Lebanon


BEIRUT: Saudi Ambassador to Lebanon Ali Awad Assiri returned to Beirut Friday following a months-long absence, a source at the Rafik Hariri International Airport said.


Assiri left the country in mid of 2013, citing security concerns.


Riyadh renewed its travel advisory for Lebanon earlier this year in light of a spate of suicide bombings in the country, urging citizens to refrain from traveling to Lebanon.



Salam: Failing to elect president will bring crisis


BEIRUT: Prime Minister Tammam Salam warned Friday that Lebanon would plunge into crisis if lawmakers failed to elect a new president.


“When a president is elected, Lebanon will witness progress it hasn’t seen in years ... But if [we] fail to elect a new president, Lebanon will witness a new crisis,” Salam told a delegation of Lebanese ambassadors headed by Foreign Affairs Minister Gebran Bassil.


“We stand before a difficult phase and a great challenge which is the presidential election ... but until now, there is no sign indicating that this election will be held in an easy way,” he added.


“I think that the various Lebanese political forces have a pressing interest in reaching a consensus on the presidential election,” he added.


Lebanon has entered its two-month constitutional deadline to elect a new president but none of the candidates have succeeded in garnering the needed majority in two Parliamentary electoral sessions.


Salam also expressed hope that the presidential election would be held without foreign interference.


“It was the government’s priority to design for itself a short-term roadmap given its nature, a transitional government that begins its work when it’s granted Parliament’s confidence and ends when a president is elected,” he said.



Economy adds 288,000 jobs in April as unemployment drops

McClatchy Newspapers



Employers added a solid 288,000 jobs in April and the unemployment rate tumbled a sharp four ticks to 6.3 percent, the government said Friday in a report that’s sure to spark debate.


Mainstream economists had expected a number as high as 250,000, so the amount of new jobs in April was a positive surprise.


Under normal circumstances, the same would be true for the four-tenths of a percentage point drop in the unemployment rate, an outsized drop by any standard. But deep in the report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics was a number that showed the labor force shrunk by more than 800,000 workers and new entrants totaled far below that.


It suggests the unemployment rate fell because of workers exiting the labor market. Many of them are likely to be long-term unemployed workers who had reached the end of their jobless claims and completely left the workforce. The number of long-term unemployed fell by almost 300,000 in April.


Construction, manufacturing and government employment all bounced back in April, after posting very low numbers earlier in the year.



Proposed Maine wind farm suffers setback


A proposed $100 million wind farm in the Downeast Lakes region has suffered a serious setback after the Maine Board of Environmental Protection took a preliminary vote to reject the project.


The Portland Press Herald (http://bit.ly/1i0j1MH ) reports that the action Thursday on the Bowers Wind project, proposed by a subsidiary of First Wind, sets the stage for a vote next month in which the state would formally reject plans for a major wind energy project for the first time.


The board meets again June 5.


A study of the proposal found it would be visible from several scenic water bodies and have an adverse impact on camp owners, sportsmen and other visitors to the remote area.


First Wind said it was disappointed and would consider appealing to Maine's Supreme Judicial Court.



Yogi Berra's New Jersey home up for sale


It's not the house that Yogi Berra built. But it is the place in New Jersey that Berra, his wife and three sons called home for almost 40 years.


The six-bedroom, 3½-bathroom colonial in Montclair is for sale for $888,000. The baseball Hall of Famer wore No. 8 on his jersey when he played for the New York Yankees.


The 88-year-old and his wife moved into the house in 1974. Carmen Berra died in March at age 85. Their children have their own homes.


According to The Star-Ledger of Newark (http://bit.ly/1hWQpzn ), the home was built in 1902 and offers views of the New York City skyline. Its property taxes were $28,727 in 2013.



CVS Caremark 1Q profit jumps 18 percent


CVS Caremark says its first-quarter earnings jumped 18 percent as generic drugs and an acquisition helped the drugstore and pharmacy benefits manager weather rough winter storms and a later Easter holiday.


It topped profit and revenue expectations, sending shares higher in premarket trading Friday.


The Woonsocket company reaffirmed its 2014 forecast for adjusted earnings of between $4.36 and $4.50 per share.


CVS Caremark Corp. earned $1.13 billion, or 95 cents per share. That compares with earnings of $954 million, or 77 cents per share, in last year's quarter. Revenue climbed 6 percent to $32.69 billion.


Adjusted results totaled $1.02 per share.


Analysts expect earnings of $1.04 per share on about $32.3 billion in revenue.


Generic drugs have improved the profitability of drugstore operators like CVS Caremark for several quarters.



Royal Bank of Scotland profits triple


Royal Bank of Scotland's first-quarter profit more than tripled as the one-time global powerhouse benefited from efforts to transform itself into a smaller institution focused on Britain.


The bank said Friday that net income rose to about 1.2 billion pounds ($2 billion) from 393 million pounds in the year-earlier quarter, a better than expected result. RBS lost 8.7 billion pounds in the fourth quarter last year.


Shares rose 11 percent on the news to 333.80 pence.


Britain's government saved RBS in 2008 with a 45 billion-pound bailout after its move to become the world's largest bank through a massive spree of debt-fueled acquisitions. The rescue left the taxpayer with an 81 percent stake.


CEO Ross McEwan says RBS is focused squarely on earning the "trust of our customers."



AutoNation April new vehicle sales up 14 pct.


AutoNation's new vehicle sales climbed 14 percent in April from the prior-year period, the best performance for the month in eight years.


The nation's largest automotive retailer said Friday that it sold 25,669 new vehicles in April.


Domestic vehicle sales rose 4 percent to 7,860 and sales of imported vehicles increased 18 percent to 12,857. Premium luxury vehicle sales surged 22 percent to 4,952.


Last month the company's first-quarter results topped analysts' expectations, thanks in part to a late-March surge in car and truck buying.


AutoNation Inc., which is based in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, anticipates reporting its May new vehicle sales results on June 4.


Its shares finished at $52.82 on Thursday. Its shares are up more than 6 percent so far this year.



Head of bankers' association supports pay hike, reform


BEIRUT: The head of the Association of Banks in Lebanon, Francois Bassil, said Friday he supports a controversial pay hike as long as it is accompanied by reforms.


“We support the salary scale on the condition it is accompanied by reforms, as well as the distribution of taxes according to proportion,” Bassil said following a meeting with Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea.


"These additional expenses on the Treasury can be covered by improving tax collection and job performance, and radical reforms," he added.


Bassil said the raise does not require more taxes.


Lebanon’s Central Bank Governor Riad Salameh has called for an installment plan to pay the wage hikes in a bid to ease pressure on the Treasury’s finances and avoid inflation.


A special parliamentary committee tasked with studying the salary scale is expected to finalize its report by the end of this week.



Army raids Baalbek areas in search of suspects


BAALBEK, Lebanon: The Lebanese Army carried out several raids Friday in Baalbek, east Lebanon, in search of suspects, a security source told The Daily Star.


Backed by armored vehicles, soldiers raided Brital and the Sharawneh neighborhood to apprehend wanted individuals as part of the military's security plan in the Bekaa Valley to restore law and order.


In Brital, the Army cordoned off the village and closed off its entrances as soldiers launched their manhunt, said the source, speaking on condition of anonymity.



Groups unhappy about GM CEO's graduation speech


Two groups are objecting to the University of Michigan's decision to invite General Motors CEO Mary Barra to deliver the commencement address on Saturday.


The Graduate Employees Organization passed a resolution that calls on the Ann Arbor school to rescind Barra's speaking invitation.


The group cites her leadership in the delayed recall of millions of vehicles for faulty ignition switches tied to at least 13 deaths. The resolution was supported by the Student Union of Michigan.


GM spokesman Jim Cain tells The Detroit News the automaker has no comment.


Michigan says it has no plans to rescind Barra's invitation.


According to The Ann Arbor News, school spokesman Rick Fitzgerald says Michigan is "honored to have Mary Barra" and looks "forward to hearing her remarks on Saturday."



Rockville, United banks complete merger


Rockville Bank has completed its merger with United Bank and will lose the name it has used for 156-years.


The combined institution will be called United Financial Bancorp and will have assets of about $5 billion.


Bank officials tell the Journal Inquirer of Manchester (http://bit.ly/1fzQXBb ) the merger, which was completed on Wednesday, will not have an immediate impact on Rockville Bank customers. They will still be able to use their current checks and debit cards with the Rockville name on it.


The deal, announced in November, was valued at $369 million. The combined bank will operate 50 branches in Connecticut and Massachusetts and have its headquarters in Glastonbury. United Bank was based in West Springfield, Massachusetts.



More charged over clashes in north Lebanon


BEIRUT: Lebanon’s Military Prosecutor Saqr Saqr Friday charged five more Lebanese nationals over armed clashes in the northern city of Tripoli.


A judicial source told The Daily Star all five suspects are from the pro-Assad, mainly Alawite Jabal Mohsen neighborhood, who are suspected of fighting rival gunmen in nearby Bab al-Tabbaneh, a majority Sunni district that supports Syrian rebels.


Violence in Tripoli has significantly decreased since the beginning of April in a sign the security plan for Lebanon's second-largest city has taken hold.


Saqr charged the five men with forming an armed ring aimed at “committing crimes against people, undermining the authority of the state, opening fire and acts of sabotage.”


He referred the suspects to Military Investigative Judge Riad Abu Ghayda.



Minister: Tinted windows license only for security


BEIRUT: Interior Minister Nouhad Machnouk said Friday licenses for tinted windows would only be approved for medical and security reasons.


In a statement, the minister apologized for turning down requests for tinted windows and special license plates, saying: "I will not approve any such requests unless they are purely for medical or security reasons.”


He also urged citizens to refrain from pressuring the ministry’s team with such requests.



No role for US, external powers in Lebanon vote: Hale


BEIRUT: External powers, including Washington, are not playing a role in the Lebanese presidential election, U.S. Ambassador David Hale was quoted as saying Friday.


"We have no role in picking or choosing a candidate, nor should any other foreign power. It is only the right and the responsibility of the Lebanese," Hale told reporters after meeting Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri.


"Many ask about the role of the international community, including the United States, in this election. It is very simple: our role is to assist the Lebanese to protect this process, so that a Lebanese president is elected by the Lebanese, according to the constitution, and on time," he added.


Hale stressed that both the presidential election and parliamentary elections this fall are "entirely Lebanese processes."


"The Lebanese must choose their leaders. And those leaders will have serious work ahead of them," he said.


"Lebanon is facing a variety of economic, security, and social issues. If they are to be properly addressed, all three arms of the government should be functioning," Hale said. "The international community, and certainly the U.S., need representative Lebanese partners if we are to help this country."


Hale said he discussed a range of issues, including the presidential election, with Berri.


"I want to commend him [Berri] and other Lebanese political leaders for the seriousness with which they are addressing the issue of the election," the U.S. envoy said.


Hale also met Prime Minister Tammam Salam.



Acting Beirut governor resigns: report


BEIRUT: Beirut’s acting Governor Nassif Qaloush resigned from his post Friday, weeks after a former employee accused him of sexual harassment, local media reported.


Last month, a former employee Hoda Sankari publicly released a covertly filmed video appearing to show Qaloush making inappropriate overtures.


In the video, Sankari speaks to a camera and accuses Qaloush of sexually harassing her before showing footage of an incriminating conversation between them.


Qaloush has filed lawsuit against her for fabricating the allegations against him.



Death Penalty Fades As Hot Button Issue



Death penalty opponents set up signs April 23 at the Florida State Prison near Starke, Fla., just hours before the execution of Robert Eugene Hendrix, 47, who killed his cousin and his cousin's wife to prevent him from testifying in a burglary case against him.i i


hide captionDeath penalty opponents set up signs April 23 at the Florida State Prison near Starke, Fla., just hours before the execution of Robert Eugene Hendrix, 47, who killed his cousin and his cousin's wife to prevent him from testifying in a burglary case against him.



Phil Sandlin/AP

Death penalty opponents set up signs April 23 at the Florida State Prison near Starke, Fla., just hours before the execution of Robert Eugene Hendrix, 47, who killed his cousin and his cousin's wife to prevent him from testifying in a burglary case against him.



Death penalty opponents set up signs April 23 at the Florida State Prison near Starke, Fla., just hours before the execution of Robert Eugene Hendrix, 47, who killed his cousin and his cousin's wife to prevent him from testifying in a burglary case against him.


Phil Sandlin/AP


It's almost hard to remember how dominant an issue the death penalty was a generation ago.


Crime and drugs were the top issues for voters in 1994. Not coincidentally, support for the death penalty peaked that year, at 80 percent, according to Gallup polling.


Opposition to the death penalty once cost prominent politicians their jobs, from New York Democratic Gov. Mario Cuomo to California Supreme Court Chief Justice Rose Bird.


The safest stance was clear: support for capital punishment.


But all that has changed. Contemporary politicians appear to have paid very little price, if any, for supporting recent moratoriums on capital punishment, or voting to abolish it altogether.


"It just hasn't been a salient issue here, despite the governor declaring a moratorium on the death penalty," says Thomas Ridout, a professor of government and public policy at Washington State University, referring to Democratic Gov. Jay Inslee's announcement earlier this year.


Once A Major Issue


The death penalty was a centerpiece of the 1988 presidential campaign. Democratic nominee Michael Dukakis was widely criticized that fall for not reacting emotionally when a debate moderator asked him if he would favor execution if his wife were raped and murdered.


Four years later, Democratic frontrunner and eventual winner Bill Clinton burnished his credibility on the crime issue by returning from the campaign trail to Arkansas and presiding as governor over the execution of Ricky Ray Rector, a cop killer who was brain damaged.


But crime has declined steadily and dramatically since the 1990s, when the death penalty peaked both in popularity and practice. A majority of Americans still favor the death penalty, but its support reached a 40-year low in a Gallup poll conducted last fall.


As violent crime and murder rates have dropped over the past couple of decades, so has political support for capital punishment.


California voters in 2012 rejected a ballot measure that would have ended the death penalty in that state. It lost by only a 4-percentage-point margin, however — a big change from the 71 percent to 29 percent result when a similar vote took place back in 1978.


"We are at a point today where the number of people in strong support of the death penalty has declined," says Elizabeth Theiss Smith, a death penalty expert at the University of South Dakota.


Problems With The Death Penalty


Meanwhile, the death penalty itself has come to seem more problematic. DNA evidence and other methods have helped exonerate 144 individuals who had been sentenced to death row, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.


A study released Monday by a team of legal scholars and statisticians found that more than 4 percent of all those condemned to death over the past 40 years had likely been wrongfully convicted.


The Supreme Court, with a series of recent decisions, has pretty much limited the death penalty to cases involving murders committed by mentally sound adults. Although many people would like to see the most heinous criminals "get what they deserve," says Smith, statistics show that death sentences have more to do with race, class and the quality of the defense attorneys involved than the crime itself.


Where a life sentence might once have meant a criminal would spend only 15 years behind bars, jurors now know that life without the possibility of parole is a sentence that will stick. They've increasingly embraced it as an option.


Issues Of Cost


As the death penalty has declined in use, some politicians are less convinced of its value as a deterrent. Instead, as states seek to trim their corrections costs, the sheer amount of money spent on death penalty cases has become a concern.


"We have a responsibility to stop doing the things that are wasteful and ineffective," Democratic Gov. Martin O'Malley said last year as he signed a bill abolishing the practice in Maryland.


Concerns about this week's botched execution in Oklahoma will fit within with the pragmatic line of argument politicians are now using to oppose the death penalty, says Frank Baumgartner, co-author of The Decline of the Death Penalty and the Discovery of Innocence.


"There is a new way a politician can move away from it," he says. "No matter how angry you might be about the horrific crime that occurred, we can't trust the government to handle it appropriately."


An Emerging Democratic Issue


Maryland was the sixth state to abolish the death penalty in as many years. Inslee's moratorium in February followed a similar move taken in 2011 by Oregon Gov. John Kitzhaber and a de facto moratorium imposed last year by Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper.


All these politicians are Democrats. The states that are getting rid of the death penalty are blue, while the practice continues most regularly in Republican-dominated states such as Texas, Florida, Ohio and Missouri.


It's no wonder. Opinions about the death penalty, as with so many issues, are split along partisan lines. According to Gallup, 80 percent of Republicans support capital punishment, compared to 47 percent of Democrats.


Some Republican politicians have sought to make the death penalty an issue when running against abolitionist Democrats. It's not a strategy that meets with great success anymore.


"The people who primarily support the death penalty are Republicans — men, whites and the wealthy," Matt Manweller, a political scientist and GOP state legislator in Washington. "Those are not groups that vote for Jay Inslee anyway."


Those political dynamics could change, if the murder rate spikes upward and crime becomes more of a concern. Political support for the death penalty has undergone a long decline, but such trends can often reverse themselves.


"There is still substantial support for the death penalty," says Smith, the South Dakota professor. "Nobody loses an election by being tough on crime."



Experts question ice wall at Japan nuclear plant


Experts on Friday expressed skepticism about a plan to build a costly underground frozen wall at Japan's crippled nuclear plant, a development that could delay the start of construction on the project.


The experts and Japanese nuclear regulatory officials said during a meeting in Tokyo that they weren't convinced the project can resolve a serious contaminated water problem at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant, which suffered multiple meltdowns following the 2011 earthquake and tsunami.


The frozen wall is a 32 billion yen ($320 million) government-funded project to surround the plant's four crippled reactors and their turbine buildings with an underground ice wall to block groundwater from flowing into the buildings' basements and mixing with highly radioactive water leaks from the melted cores.


Government officials say a feasibility test at the plant, run by Tokyo Electric Power Co., proved successful and that they hope to start construction in June, though the project could be delayed because of the experts' concerns.


Toyoshi Fuketa, a commissioner with Japan's Nuclear Regulation Authority, said the hydrological impact of a frozen wall to the area was unclear.


"We need to know if a frozen wall is really effective, and more importantly, we need to know whether a frozen wall may cause any trouble," Fuketa said.


International experts have raised similar concerns.


Dale Klein, a former U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission chairman who now heads a supervisory panel for TEPCO, said he was not convinced the frozen wall is the best option and is worth the high cost. He also suggested that the government and TEPCO review the plan to balance risk and benefit and see whether they should spend the money elsewhere.


"Any time you make a decision, it should be based on current, relevant science, and you have to strike a balance between science and policy," Klein said in an interview Thursday in Tokyo. "At the end of the day, it may be a good alternative. But I'm just not convinced."


Experts have said that while a frozen wall is a proven technology, the size and planned duration of use at Fukushima is unprecedented.


TEPCO is setting up a bypass system to pump up groundwater before it hits the contaminated reactor area as a way to reduce the amount of underground contaminated water. The plant is also installing another groundwater drainage system around the reactor buildings, which some experts say could serve as a sufficient alternative to an ice wall.


More than three years after the March 2011 meltdowns, the plant is still plagued by a massive amount of contaminated water. Repeated water leaks from storage tanks and other mishaps at the plant have hampered a decommissioning effort that is expected to take decades and caused environmental concerns among local fishermen.



Eurozone jobless down again in March


Further evidence emerged Friday to show that unemployment across the 18-country eurozone is falling on a consistent basis and that the region is now firmly on the road to economic recovery.


Eurostat, the EU's statistics office, said unemployment across the eurozone fell to 18.91 million in March from 18.94 million the month before. Though not a dramatic fall, it is a further improvement from last April's peak of 19.24 million.


The unemployment rate, however, was unchanged at 11.8 percent for the third month running following downward revisions to previous data due to Spanish census data. Again, as in the number of unemployed, the rate is down on the eurozone's record, reached in 2013, of 12 percent.


Most economists expect unemployment to carry on falling over the months ahead as the economic recovery gathers pace — unemployment figures often lag growth.


Figures later this month are set to confirm that the eurozone grew in the first three months of the year, for the third quarter running. A number of surveys have indicated that the pick-up may be gathering steam from the 0.2 percent quarter-on-quarter rate in the last three months of 2013, partly because the financial stresses are easing in a number of the more indebted countries, such as Greece and Spain.


The overall figures continue to mask huge discrepancies that are found both across the region and between generations — and likely to take years to unwind. Despite the more favorable economic backdrop, many governments will have to continue to keep government spending tight for many more years to improve public finances.


Greece and Spain are the two countries that have the most work to do, but even here improvements were evident.


In Greece, the first eurozone country to descend into the debt crisis abyss, unemployment rate in January was 26.7 percent, down on the previous month's 27.2 percent. Greek figures are compiled on a delayed basis. And among workers under the age of 25, the jobless rate was 56.8 percent against 57.1 percent.


In Spain, which unlike Greece did not need an international bailout but has suffered as the government pursued an austerity policy following the collapse of a property bubble, unemployment was steady at 25.3 percent in March, down a full percentage point from a year ago. Among the young, the rate was unchanged from a month earlier at 53.9 percent, but down on last year's rate of 55.4 percent.



Lebanon’s Tripoli seeks aid for conflict-affected areas


TRIPOLI, Lebanon: Officials from the northern city of Tripoli sought Friday emergency assistance for people affected by recent armed clashes.


“Implementing the security plan must coincide with the immediate implementation of a relief assistance program for those affected, particularly those who need emergency medical and social care,” said a statement issued after a meeting at the home of former Prime Minister Saad Hariri’s north Lebanon advisor, Abdul-Ghani Kabbara.


Nevertheless, the statement hailed the security plan for Tripoli as successful and praised former Prime Minister Saad Hariri for pledging to support a road rehabilitation plan.


Hariri has vowed to repair the damaged Syria Street, which separates the warring Tripoli neighborhoods of Jabal Mohsen, a predominantly Alawite area that supports Syrian President Bashar Assad, and mainly Sunni Bab al-Tabbaneh, which backs the Syrian uprising.


The Tripoli meeting – attended by Future MPs Ahmad Fatfat, Samir Jisr, Mohammad Kabbara, Khaled Daher, and Moeen Merhebi as well as Justice Minister Ashraf Rifi – also urged the government to finalize development projects for north Lebanon.


They also called on the government to speed up the appointment of governors for Akkar and Hermel “due to the positive effects that will have on [economic] growth.”