Thursday, 26 June 2014

Lebanon's Arabic press digest – June 27, 2014



The following are a selection of stories from Lebanese newspapers that may be of interest to Daily Star readers. The Daily Star cannot vouch for the accuracy of these reports.


As-Safir


The journey of the Saudi bombers from Raqqa to Beirut


A leading chief of the Islamic State of Iraq and Greater Syria (ISIS) in the provincial city of Raqqa in eastern Syria, a Jordanian, gave the two Saudi bombers orders to fly to Lebanon via Turkey, where they were met by Monzer al-Hasan.


The Jordanian is the brother of Abdel-Malak Osman Abdel-Salam, who is a prisoner at Roumieh. General Security has released a photo of Hasan in connection with the bombers.


Al-Akhbar


Terrorist masterminds seeking to target World Cup fan gatherings


Al-Akhbar has learned that the masterminds behind terrorist attacks in Lebanon want to use the occasion of the World Cup to target gathering places at pubs and restaurants as well as iftar dinners that are usually held during Ramadan.


It has also learned that Hezbollah was considering canceling iftar dinners to avoid possible terrorist attacks.


Security sources told Al-Akhbar that the terrorist cell found at the Napoleon and the Duroy hotels were planning suicide attacks to flare-up the Lebanese arena.


An-Nahar


Salam stresses Gulf citizens should not be punished


An-Nahar has learned that Prime Minister Tammam Salam addressed ministers at the beginning of Thursday’s Cabinet session, telling them that Gulf nationals must not be “punished” due to terrorists.


Salam lamented requests by some officials to cancel the issuance of visas on arrival at the airport for Gulf citizens.



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EU deals could stoke growth, reform


On Friday, leaders from the 28-country European Union will sign broad trade and economic deals with non-member countries Ukraine, Moldova and Georgia.


The so-called "association agreements" have been a focal point in the region's turmoil. In Ukraine, deadly protests broke out this winter when the president decided not to sign the EU deal under pressure from Moscow. The protests drove pro-Russian President Viktor Yanukovych from office, but drew the ire of Russia and pro-Russian militants in the country's east.


Here is a look at the agreements and their likely impact.


PURPOSE: The EU uses them to increase trade and political cooperation with non-members. The document provides an extensive blueprint for adopting the same rules, standards and practices that apply in the EU.


TRADE: Most importantly, the agreements remove almost all tariffs on imports into the EU of goods and services. The aim is to increase trade, growth and jobs. The signing countries should benefit because the EU, with 506 million people, is a very large market to do business with, and because tariffs are being removed more quickly by the EU than by the signing countries.


REFORM: Beyond trade, the agreements set out a broad reform agenda to modernize the economies of all three countries and increase business investment. The countries fell behind economically while part of the Soviet Union and its state-run economy, and are still lagging amid corruption, poor business climates and civil strife. The signers agree to adopt EU rules on government contracts, fair competition and the intellectual property rights on ideas and inventions. They also agree to strengthen the rule of law and independent courts. Adopting EU standards on products and food safety will protect consumers and make trade easier.


RUSSIA: As an alternative, Russia is holding out membership in a customs union with itself, Belarus and Kazakhstan. It has warned that if Ukraine signs the trade deal, it could lose its current free trade arrangement with Russia and face new tariffs on its products. It's not clear how far Russia will go. Russian authorities have blocked some Ukrainian imports. Russia blocked wine imports from Moldova ahead of a summit in November, when the country was first expected to sign the deal with the EU but did not. Russia barred wine from Georgia from 2006 until 2013.


HOLD THE GARLIC: Although most trade is being opened up, the EU kept in place restrictions on some agricultural products to protect its farmers from low-cost competition. Chickens from Ukraine and garlic from Moldova face import limits.


Ukraine won a 15-year transition period during which it can use tariffs to support its domestic auto industry from competition. Moldova will gradually eliminate protections for its dairy, pork, poultry and wine producers over 10 years.


NAME GAME: The agreement gives Ukrainian producers 10 years in which they can still use protected EU product names for alcohol such as Champagne and Cognac. It's seven years for cheese names such as feta, Parmigiano Reggiano and Roquefort.


FOLLOW THROUGH: Further trade opening will depend on progress in actually implementing the new rules and standards, by passing them into law through parliament and then enforcing those laws. If countries fail to follow through, progress could stall — and that's not an unrealistic fear. Ukraine botched two aid deals with the International Monetary Fund in 2008 and 2010. Kiev pocketed the first payments of loan money and then did not follow through on reforms. The aid deals were cancelled and a third is just starting.


RATIFICATION: The EU has already lowered its tariffs on imports from Ukraine through Nov. 1 as a gesture of support. Since the agreement takes effect two months after ratification, Ukraine's parliament must ratify by late August and send the ratification documents to Brussels before the end of the month.


Otherwise, the tariffs will go up again Nov. 1 temporarily until Ukraine's lawmakers ratify the deal.



More countries adding graphic warnings to smokes


Indonesia became the newest country to mandate graphic photo warnings on cigarette packs on Tuesday, joining more than 40 other nations or territories that have adopted similar regulations in recent years. The warnings, which showcase gruesome close-up images ranging from rotting teeth and cancerous lungs to open tracheotomy holes and corpses, are an effort to highlight the risks of health problems related to smoking. Research suggests these images have prompted people to quit, but the World Health Organization estimates nearly 6 million people continue to die globally each year from smoking-related causes. The tobacco industry has fought government efforts to introduce or increase the size of graphic warnings in some countries. Here are a few places where pictorial health warnings have made headlines:


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INDONESIA:


THE LAW: 40 percent of pack covered by graphic photos.


TIMING: Deadline to be on shelves was June 24.


BACKGROUND: Many tobacco companies missed Tuesday's deadline to comply with the new law requiring all cigarette packs in stores to carry graphic warning photos. Indonesia, a country of around 240 million, has the world's highest rate of male smokers at 67 percent and the second-highest rate overall. Its government is among the few that has yet to sign a World Health Organization treaty on tobacco control.


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AUSTRALIA:


THE LAW: No cigarette brand logos permitted; graphic health warnings required on 75 percent of front and 90 percent of back.


TIMING: Plain packaging law went into effect in 2012.


BACKGROUND: Australia became the first country in the world to mandate plain cigarette packs with no brand logo or colors permitted. Instead, the packs are solid brown and covered in large graphic warnings. Tobacco companies fought the law, saying it violated intellectual property rights and devalued their trademarks, but the country's highest court upheld it. Figures released this month by the country's Bureau of Statistics found that cigarette consumption fell about 5 percent from March 2013 to the same period this year. The World Trade Organization has agreed to hear complaints filed by several tobacco-growing countries, but other governments have expressed interest in passing similar laws. Smokers make up 17 percent of Australia's population.


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UNITED STATES:


THE LAW: No graphic pictures on packs.


TIMING: The government stepped away from a legal battle with tobacco companies in March 2013.


BACKGROUND: There are currently no pictorial warnings on cigarette packs in the U.S. After the tobacco industry sued, a Food and Drug Administration order to include the graphic labels was blocked last year by an appeals court, which ruled that the photos violated First Amendment free speech protections. The government opted not to take the case to the U.S. Supreme Court, but will instead develop new warnings. About 18 percent of adult Americans smoke.


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PHILIPPINES:


THE LAW: Graphic warning legislation approved this month requires 50 percent of bottom of the pack to be covered by graphic warnings.


TIMING: Legislation awaits president's signature.


BACKGROUND: The Philippines is expected to join a handful of other countries that put graphic warnings at the bottom of their packs, meaning they are not visible when displayed on store shelves. Anti-smoking advocates say labels on the bottom of the packs are less effective, and have denounced tobacco industry involvement in the implementation process. Health officials said around 17 million people in the country of 96 million, or 18 percent, smoked in 2012.


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URUGUAY:


THE LAW: Graphic warnings cover 80 percent of packs.


TIMING: Regulations implemented in 2010.


BACKGROUND: Uruguay, a leader in strict tobacco controls, mandated the largest graphic warnings ever in 2010. Eighty percent of packs must be covered by the labels, including one depicting a person smoking a battery to show that cigarettes contain the toxic metal cadmium. Uruguay has backed Australia at the WTO, telling the trade body that smoking is "the most serious pandemic confronting humanity." Philip Morris International sued Uruguay over the law; the case is still pending.



Asia stocks slip as on poor US, China data


Asian stocks slumped Friday after a reports showed weak U.S. consumer spending and slowing Chinese industrial profit growth, casting doubts on whether the world's two biggest economies can rebound.


U.S. consumer spending, which accounts for 70 percent of economic activity, inched up in May at half the rate that economists had predicted. The poor reading disappointed investors who had been looking for stronger signs that the U.S. economy is bouncing back after shrinking 2.9 percent in the first quarter. Many had been predicting the contraction was a blip because of a harsh winter.


"The whole world is looking for a big (U.S.) GDP rebound in the second quarter. The whole world is likely to be disappointed," economists at Singaporean bank DBS said in a research report.


Adding to the pessimism, Chinese industrial profits grew 8.9 percent in May, the slowest rate this year, a sign that the No. 2 economy continues to struggle with an extended slowdown.


Japan's benchmark Nikkei 225 tumbled 1.6 percent to 15,063.19 while South Korea's Kospi shed 0.3 percent to 1,987.99.


Hong Kong's Hang Seng slipped 0.2 percent to 23,155.86 while the Shanghai Composite Index in mainland China lost 0.4 percent to 2,031.62.


On Wall Street, the Dow Jones industrial average dropped 0.1 percent to close at 16,846.13 and the Standard & Poor's 500 index sank 0.1 percent to close at 1,957.22. The Nasdaq was flat at 4,379.05.


In currencies, the dollar slipped to 101.32 Japanese yen from 101.66 yen in late trading Thursday. The euro rose to $1.3628 from $1.3615.


In energy trading, the price of U.S. benchmark crude for August delivery edged down 5 cents to $105.80 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract fell 47 cents on Thursday.



MP Michel Helou dies after protracted illness



BEIRIUT: Change and Refom bloc MP Michel Helou died early Friday after a long battle with illness.


A security source told The Daily Star Helou had been fightng cancer.


No other details were immediately available.



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Weapons seized in north Lebanon raid


BEIRUT: A quantity of mortar bombs and dynamite sticks have been discovered in a raid in north Lebanon associated with the ongoing crack down on terrorists.


In the northern Akkar village of Fnaidiq, a Lebanese Army raid on the home of Mohammad Kanaan resulted in 42 dynamite sticks, 34 mortar shells, 14 mortar propellant charges and 36 hand grenade detonators being seized, a military statement said.


It said Kanaan, who is wanted on multiple arrest warrants, was not home during the raid Thursday.




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Price of oil falls on some easing of Iraq worries


The price of oil fell Thursday as fears diminished somewhat over supply disruptions from Iraq.


Benchmark U.S. crude for August delivery slipped 66 cents per barrel to $105.85 on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Brent crude, used to price international oils, eased 79 cents to $113.21 a barrel in London.


While concerns linger about violence in Iraq affecting global crude supplies, oil production and exports from the giant fields clustered in the country's south remain unaffected. July exports are expected to average about 2.57 million barrels per day, Platts forecasts.


In other energy futures trading on the Nymex:


— Wholesale gasoline fell 1 cent to $3.09 a gallon.


— Natural gas fell 15 cents to $4.40 per 1,000 cubic feet.


— Heating oil fell 2 cents to $3.01 a gallon.



General Security releases photo of terror suspect



BEIRUT: The General Security has released the photo of a terrorist who has been hired to distribute explosive belts to the bombers found at a Beirut hotel.


In a statement late Thursday, General Security identified the suspect as Monzer al-Hasan, who hails from the northern province of Akkar.


It said Hasan, 24, also holds a Swedish nationality.


The statement said Hasan drives about in two cars, possibly rigged with explosives.


The cars were identified as an old beigeNissan and a 2005-model silver Mercedes Benz.


General Security said Hasan has provided the Saudi suicide bomber and his would-be suicide partner, who were staying at the Duroy Hotel in Raouche, Beirut, with explosive belts.



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Senate panel OKs $47B homeland security budget


A key Senate panel Thursday gave swift bipartisan approval to a $47 billion budget for the Department of Homeland Security, boosting funding to cope with an influx of Central American children who arrive in the U.S. unaccompanied by their parents.


The Appropriations Committee approved the measure by voice vote after a brief hearing. The measure comes as the once-promising pace of the annual appropriations cycle is slowing. A procedural battle stalled an effort to bring a measure funding several other Cabinet departments to a floor vote and several contentious bills have seen committee consideration delayed.


The bill boosts the administration's request for the Customs Service and Border Patrol for initial handling of unaccompanied immigrant children arriving on the southern border by $77 million.


The measure also includes a provision to increase the fee paid by travelers who enter the U.S. by commercial sea and air carriers by $2 to $9, using the revenue to pay for 1,000 new customs agents.


The measure funds the government's newest Cabinet department and is free of contentious issues that dot many of the other 11 spending bills. It increases the budget for Customs and Border Protection by 4 percent and increases funding for detention of people entering the country illegally.


It also contains several provisions of interest to the bill's chief author, Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., who faces a difficult re-election campaign this fall, including $318 million to build six fast response Coast Guard cutters at Bollinger Shipyards in her home state instead of the two requested by the Obama administration. Landrieu also boosted funding for updating the maps used to determine flood zones in anticipation of a future re-write of the government's flood insurance program.



‘Prize-linked’ accounts offer cash prizes as incentive to save


A new type of savings account taps into the Powerball fantasies of Americans by giving customers the opportunity to win cash prizes every time they make a deposit.


Proponents of so-called “prize-linked” accounts hope that the prospect of a no-lose game of chance _ account holders get to keep their money even if they don’t hit the jackpot _ will entice Americans to save some of the $68 billion they spend on lottery tickets every year.


Marketed as special “Save to Win” certificates of deposit, prize-linked accounts already are available from 62 credit unions in Michigan, Nebraska, North Carolina and Washington state. But they aren’t likely to become widely available nationwide unless members of Congress change federal laws that prohibit banks and thrifts from participating in lotteries or gambling.


Legislation introduced by Republican Sen. Jerry Moran of Kansas and Democratic Rep. Derek Kilmer of Washington state would tweak the laws in order to create a narrow exemption for prize-linked accounts. The change would clear the way for states to authorize federally chartered financial institutions to offer such products.


Supporters of The American Savings Promotion Act say it will encourage more financial stability among Americans, only a quarter of whom said they could come up with $2,000 in 30 days, according to a 2011 study.


In a rare show of cooperation on Capitol Hill, the bill has united lawmakers who don’t often find themselves on the same side: In addition to Moran and Kilmer, co-sponsors include Rep. Tom Cotton, a Republican from Arkansas, Democratic Sen. Sherrod Brown of Ohio, and Elizabeth Warren, the liberal Democratic Massachusetts senator.


Moran said he sees prize-linked savings as a way to create stronger incentives for families to save, invest and navigate financial emergencies.


In his home state of Kansas, 32 percent of households do not have any savings account, and 34 percent are defined as being “liquid-asset poor,” meaning they lack savings to cover basic expenses for three months in the event of unemployment, a medical emergency, a car wreck or other crises.


The bill “is one bipartisan strategy we can all support to encourage higher personal savings rates, which enable increased financial security and upward mobility,” Moran said.


“The idea here is to make savings less of a chore, but also make it something people are excited to do,” said Kilmer, who passed a law as a state senator in 2011 that allowed credit unions to offer prize-linked savings accounts in Washington state.


The congressman said the idea appeals to Democrats because it’s an innovative way for people to save money, but also to Republicans, because it does away with what he considers an outdated government regulation.


“It kind of cuts across the partisan divide,” Kilmer said.


The basic concept is simple: For every $25 invested in a balance-building certificate of deposit, or CD, the account holder is entered in a drawing for a chance to win annual jackpots _ last year these ranged from $5,000 to $100,000 _ as well as smaller monthly prizes.


Participants can enter up to 10 times a month for the term of the CD, which also can accrue interest. Normal tax laws apply to the prize money.


The winnings are modest compared with Powerball’s Mega Millions. Even the biggest “Save to Win” grand prizes won’t make you an instant billionaire so you can quit your job, buy a yacht and move to Fiji.


But they can grow your nest egg exponentially overnight.


And unlike gambling or the lottery, your investment is never wasted: Win or lose, you keep your money.


“That’s why it’s brilliant: You still get the thrill (of playing the lottery), but you end up with savings at the end of the day,” said Ray Boshara, director of the Center for Household Financial Stability at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.


Since 2009, more than 50,000 people have saved a collective total of more than $94 million in prize-linked accounts in the four states where credit unions now offer them, according to Doorways to Dreams (D2D) Fund, a Massachusetts nonprofit dedicated to improving the financial security of low- and moderate-income households.


Five other states have enacted legislation to enable prize-linked savings accounts: Rhode Island, Maine, Maryland, Connecticut and Indiana. A similar bill in New York awaits its governor’s signature.


Until a federal bill passes, however, “Save to Win” accounts will be available exclusively from credit unions in a limited number of states, and not from banks or thrifts.


Despite bipartisan support, both the House and Senate versions of the bill have been stalled in committees since last year.


Congressional staffers tasked with rallying votes for the bill said it has been competing for attention with big-ticket items such as housing reform on Capitol Hill, where partisan gridlock has slowed the legislative process to a virtual halt. They said they’re hopeful the House version of the bill might move out of the Financial Services Committee for a floor vote later this summer.


Part of the reason for the legislation’s lack of traction may be because it hasn’t been endorsed by the American Bankers Association, the influential Washington-based trade association for the U.S. banking industry.


The banking association has yet to take a formal position on the bill, which would affect 14,000 banks and credit unions across the country, said James Ballentine, the association’s executive vice president of congressional relations and political affairs.


“It’s an interesting idea,” Ballentine said, but the concept hasn’t been proven to translate well from a few dozen state-chartered credit unions to a much bigger market nationwide, he said.


“I think you need to see some results before you implement it across the board,” he said. “It’s a huge leap to jump from an effort in two to four states to 14,000 institutions. I think the pilot concept, which is working state by state now, may be a better approach to this until we get some real feedback.”


Ballentine said banks are always looking for ways to encourage savings, and they likely would see prize-linked accounts as an attractive model, he said.


“This is another innovative idea which, once it gets some history behind it to determine if it is indeed effective or not, could be broadened,” he said, “but right now it’s an early concept.”


Economists point out that the prize-linked model has a long record of success overseas, where banks from Germany to Japan have been offering such products for years.


In Britain, one in every four households invest in premium bonds that pay out lottery prizes instead of interest. In South Africa, “Million a Month” accounts became so popular that the nation’s lottery board sued to shut them down as unlawful competition.


For Americans considering a “Save to Win” account, experts say it’s important to understand what you’re investing in. A prize-linked account typically charges a fee if you withdraw money before the CD’s full term expires, at which point you can roll over the funds or take them out.


“The concerns would be just how much liquidity you want to have without having to pay penalties,” said Boshara of the St. Louis Fed.


“Having the funds ready when you need them is really, really critical, so I can see them as a little bit of a barrier for families managing increased volatility on the income and expense side,” Boshara said. “Some people may not want penalties at all and prefer just a plain vanilla savings account.”


On the other hand, some restrictions on the money actually would be preferable for a lot of people who struggle to save, he said.


“If it’s too easy to withdraw, there’s a lot of temptations to get at the money,” he said.



Chipotle founder agrees to talk beef with Staples


Chipotle Mexican Grill's founder has agreed to talk over Texas Agriculture Commissioner Todd Staples' beef with the chain's decision to import some of its grass-fed beef from Australia.


Steve Ells' letter says he'd "be more than happy" to provide information about Chipotle's beef protocols to Staples and Texas ranchers.


In a letter to Ells last week, Staples says it's "misguided" and "irresponsible" for Ells to believe that Australian meat is raised more responsibly than cattle in Texas, the nation's leading producer, or other states.


Ells last month defended the company's move by writing for the Huffington Post that Chipotle was having difficulty getting beef it prefers from U.S. producers because the lingering drought has led to the smallest herd in decades, the lowest total since 1952.



IRS announces program to certify tax preparers


The Internal Revenue Service announced a voluntary program Thursday to certify paid tax preparers who complete annual training and pass a test.


A majority of taxpayers pay someone to help them file their tax returns, but most preparers are unregulated. The goal of the program is to help consumers know which tax preparers have at least a minimum level of competency, said IRS Commissioner John Koskinen.


Attorneys, certified public accountants and others who represent clients before the IRS are exempt because they already undergo training.


"It helps lessen the risk to taxpayers from preparers who have no education in federal tax law or filing requirements," Koskinen said. "And it allows preparers without professional credentials to stand out from the competition by giving them a recognizable record of completion that they can show to their clients."


Starting in 2015, tax preparers would have to complete 18 hours of training each year and pass a test showing that they understood the material to be certified for the upcoming filing season.


The IRS tried to make training and testing mandatory a few years ago. But earlier this year a federal appeals court upheld a ruling that the IRS didn't have the legal authority to impose the new rules without congressional authorization.


Koskinen is pressing Congress for that authority.


Tax giant H&R Block issued a statement supporting the new program.


But the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, which represents people in the accounting profession, questioned whether the IRS has the legal authority to administer the program.


Nina E. Olson, the national taxpayer advocate, said she supports competency requirements for tax preparers, but she is concerned that the testing in the new program won't be rigorous enough. Olson runs an independent office within the IRS.



Experts in American Air bankruptcy could get $371M


Lawyers and other specialists who worked on the American Airlines bankruptcy case could get $371 million plus expenses.


The biggest haul: $74.5 million in fees for Weil, Gotshal & Manges, American's lead bankruptcy law firm.


American hired lawyers, accountants, aircraft-finance specialists and other professionals during the two years that it spent in bankruptcy court. It left Chapter 11 protection in December under a plan that included a merger with US Airways. Creditors were repaid in full, and American's previous shareholders received stock in a new company formed by the merger, American Airlines Group Inc.


In a report to the bankruptcy judge who handled the case, fee examiner Robert Keach said the experts "collectively achieved a remarkable outcome." He said that a preference for negotiations over litigation saved more money than any scrutiny of the specialists' fees and expenses.


After Weil Gotshal, the next biggest fee recipients were the law firm of Debevoise & Plimpton, $53.7 million; Deloitte Financial Advisory Services, $32.6 million; financial advisers Rothschild Inc., $29.5 million; Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom, a law firm that represented unsecured creditors, $27.8 million; and Paul Hastings law firm, $26.2 million. Six other firms would get at least $7 million each under the examiner's recommendations.


Fees paid to aircraft-value consultant SkyWorks Capital were confidential, the fee examiner said.


The examiner recommended paying expenses for all firms that would total $16.3 million.


The recommendations in the report, filed late Tuesday, go to federal bankruptcy Judge Sean Lane in New York. The judge scheduled a hearing for Tuesday.



California lawmaker heads to Texas to lure jobs


A California state lawmaker is heading to Texas to poach jobs.


Sen. Ted Gaines plans to visit the state Capitol in Austin on Monday and meet with businesses to promote California's business climate.


The Republican from Roseville is taking a page out of Gov. Rick Perry's playbook. The Texas governor recently visited Sacramento and test drove a Tesla electric car.


California and Texas are among a handful of states competing for Tesla Motors' planned battery plant, which will represent a $5 billion investment from the California-based car company and its partners.


Gaines and Senate leader Darrell Steinberg, a Democrat from Sacramento, have introduced a bill to expedite construction of the Tesla plant if the company chooses to expand in its home state.


Gaines is running for state insurance commissioner.



How states fared on unemployment benefit claims


The number of Americans seeking unemployment benefits declined last week, the latest evidence that a sharp economic slowdown earlier this year hasn't caused employers to cut jobs. The Labor Department says weekly unemployment benefit applications fell 2,000 to a seasonally adjusted 312,000.


Here are the states with the biggest increases and decreases in applications. The data is for the week that ended June 14, one week behind the national figures:


States with the biggest decreases:


Georgia: Down 2,245, due to fewer layoffs in manufacturing, administrative services, health care, and hotels and restaurants


Missouri: Down 2,130, due to fewer layoffs in manufacturing, hotels and restaurants, and health care


New York: Down 2,078, due to fewer layoffs in restaurants, construction and information


Tennessee: Down 1,494, no reason given


Texas: Down 1,341, no reason given


States with the biggest increases:


Pennsylvania: Up 7,120, due to layoffs in transportation, restaurants, construction and education



Senate president urges support for river ports


Republican Senate President Robert Stivers says he wants to improve the infrastructure of the state's seven river ports, an important piece of the state's economy, after visiting several in western Kentucky last week.


The Elvis Stahr Harbor in Fulton County handles more than 1 million tons of cargo each year on the Mississippi River, but it has struggled to stay open when the water level dips to 10 feet or less.


Port officials say they need to dredge the harbor every year. But state and federal funding shortfalls mean they can only do it once every two or three years.


"Most of your counties don't have a port and they are not familiar with the significance of ports," Fulton County Judge Executive David Gallagher said. "There is not a lot of funding into the port area and they have to really compete for every dollar."


Stivers said he saw the importance of the ports, including several barge companies that employ hundreds of people. He said state lawmakers should discuss improving the ports' infrastructure as a way of expanding the state's economic opportunities. The state has lost thousands of jobs because of declines in the coal industry.


"That is such a huge part of the western Kentucky culture," said Stivers, who is from the eastern part of the state. "The rivers are as big a transportation issue in many instances as is just building a road or a railroad."


Officials say the port needs to be dredged once a year at a cost of $1 million. The port received $525,000 in federal grant money and $25,000 in state money for dredging this year, enough to work on the mouth of the harbor to make sure it does not have to close when the river depth falls to 10 feet or less, according to Keleia McCloud, assistant port director for the Hickman-Fulton County Riverport Authority.


"Not being done yearly, it takes more time. So in reality, we're not getting all of our money's worth because we're having to spend so much time getting the silt out every two years instead of every year," McCloud said.


With the legislature in recess, many of its leaders are laying the groundwork for the 2015 governor's race and Stivers' trip to western Kentucky for Stivers looked to be a precursor for a campaign. But Stivers told The Associated Press he is not running for statewide office, saying he used the trip to learn more about an area he says often feels is disenfranchised from the rest of the state.


"I enjoy the position I'm in. I'm a realist. It's hard to run from a legislative position," he said, noting he has such a long voting record people can find things to use against him.



APNewsBreak: Oil train dangers extend past Bakken


The dangers posed by a spike in oil shipments by rail extend beyond crude from the booming Bakken region of the Northern Plains and include oil produced elsewhere in the U.S. and Canada, U.S. safety officials and lawmakers said.


Acting National Transportation Safety Board Chairman Christopher Hart said all crude shipments are flammable and can damage the environment — not just the Bakken shipments involved in a series of fiery accidents.


Hart cited recent derailments in Mississippi, Minnesota, New Brunswick and Pennsylvania of oil shipments from Canada. He said those cases exemplify "the risks to communities and for the environment for accidents involving non-Bakken crude oil."


Hart's comments were contained in a letter to U.S. Sens. Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley obtained by The Associated Press. They add to growing pressure on federal regulators to improve oil train safety in the wake of repeated derailments, including in Lac-Magentic, Quebec, where 47 people were killed in a massive conflagration last July.


Citing the highly volatile nature of Bakken oil, Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx last month ordered railroads to notify states of shipments from the region so firefighters and first responders can better prepare for accidents.


But Wyden and Merkley told Foxx on Thursday that the order leaves emergency personnel in the dark on oil shipped from outside the Bakken region.


The Oregon Democrats urged Foxx to expand his order to cover crude from all parts of the U.S. and Canada. They also pressed for the 1 million-gallon minimum threshold in Foxx's order to be lowered to include smaller shipments.


"With the exception of the Lac-Megantic accident, every accident involving crude oil, ethanol and other flammable materials since 2006 has resulted in a hazardous materials release of less than 1,000,000 gallons," Wyden and Merkley wrote to Foxx in a letter.


They said the derailments cited by the transportation safety board show that trains carrying non-Bakken crude or less than 1 million gallons pose the same "imminent hazard" that Foxx has asserted for Bakken oil.


Bakken oil on average travels more than 1,600 miles to reach its destination, transportation officials said. That's much further than oil from some other parts of the country.


U.S. transportation officials said the lengthier journey increases the overall risk exposure for Bakken oil — and is one reason it's being treated differently than other hazardous cargos.


Representatives of the oil industry and officials in North Dakota also have complained about Bakken oil being singled out by regulators — although for opposite reasons. The American Petroleum Institute and American Fuel and Petrochemical Manufacturers have argued Bakken oil is no more volatile than other light, sweet crudes.


The concerns aired Thursday by the NTSB and Oregon senators essentially flip that argument on its head, to say different types of crude and other hazardous liquids such as ethanol also pose a significant safety risk.


"Accidents involving crude oil or flammable liquids of any kind, especially when these liquids are transported in large volumes, such as in unit trains or blocks of tank cars, can have disastrous consequences," Hart said.


Association of American Railroads spokeswoman Holly Arthur said the rail industry is complying with Foxx's original order. She said the group would have to see the specifics of any proposed changes before commenting further.


About 700,000 barrels of oil a day — enough to fill 10 "unit trains" of 100 tank cars each — is coming out of the Bakken by rail, according to the North Dakota Pipeline Authority. That's about 70 percent of crude-by-rail shipments nationwide, according to federal officials.


Yet the same hydraulic fracturing — or "fracking" — technology that has helped drive the boom in the Bakken region during the past decade is being employed on shale oil fields elsewhere. Crude from the tar sands of western Canada is also fueling the surge in North American production.


Charles Drevna, president of American Fuel and Petrochemical Manufacturers, said he supports getting more information on oil trains to first responders so they're ready for potential accidents.


According to an analysis done for the U.S. State Department, more than half the loading capacity of oil train facilities built in recent years is in parts of the U.S. and Canada outside the Bakken region. That includes loading terminals in Colorado, Ohio, Oklahoma, Texas, Wyoming, New Mexico, Utah and parts of western Canada.



Pew's Latest Look At Voters Finds Many Who Defy Party Labels



Some voters are a lot more complicated than is commonly understood, a new Pew Research Center study suggests. In Denver, an election worker collects a mail-in ballot from a voter on Tuesday.i i


hide captionSome voters are a lot more complicated than is commonly understood, a new Pew Research Center study suggests. In Denver, an election worker collects a mail-in ballot from a voter on Tuesday.



Ed Andrieski/AP

Some voters are a lot more complicated than is commonly understood, a new Pew Research Center study suggests. In Denver, an election worker collects a mail-in ballot from a voter on Tuesday.



Some voters are a lot more complicated than is commonly understood, a new Pew Research Center study suggests. In Denver, an election worker collects a mail-in ballot from a voter on Tuesday.


Ed Andrieski/AP


Following up on its recent report on the ever-widening ideological gulf between Americans, the Pew Research Center unveiled its latest sorting of voters into categories based, in part, on the relative strength or weakness of their partisan attachments.


Not only that, Pew also has an online quiz of 23 questions that allows you to find out where you fit among its eight categories or types (Pew uses the fancy word "typologies"). They are: Steadfast Conservatives, Business Conservatives, Young Outsiders, Hard-Pressed Skeptics, Next-Generation Left, Faith and Family Left, and Solid Liberals.


Some of the questions used to sort respondents seem to employ intentionally black and white framing in order to force respondents to pick a side that may not necessarily represent their true views.


Take Question 3, for example: "Which of the following statements comes closest to your view? This country should do whatever it takes to protect the environment, or This country has gone too far in its efforts to protect the environment." It's possible to disagree with the second choice without fully embracing the first.


Question 14 does something similar: "Which of the following statements comes closest to your view? The best way to ensure peace is through military strength, or Good diplomacy is the best way to ensure peace." What if you believe that good diplomacy and a strong military are equally essential? That's a very American view, actually. The eagle on the Great Seal of the United States grips arrows in one talon, a peace offering of an olive branch in the other.


That said, the typologies provide a new way to understand some old and some new cleavages in both the liberal and conservative camps.


Probably the two most interesting types are groups Pew calls "wildcards," because their attachment to the major parties is noticeably weak; the Young Outsiders lean right, the Hard-Pressed Skeptics left. One reflection of that is the surprisingly large percentage in either group (it's a majority in both) who hold both liberal and conservative values.


Michael Dimock, Pew's vice president of research, suspected many political observers would find the Young Outsiders' rightward tendencies surprising because the stereotype of voters their age (about half were between 18-39 years old) is that they're Democratic-leaning.


"They had a slightly Republican profile in 2012 and even more so in 2014," Dimock told It's All Politics. "That puts them well outside the caricature of that generation, the millennials who tend to, in a lot of ways, be more left of center."


The challenge for the Republican Party going forward, however, is that many of these Young Outsiders don't like it.


"They're clearly an uncomfortable fit for the party," Dimock said. "Most of them tell us they have an unfavorable view of the party, for crying out loud. They really don't seem to have a particular affinity in terms of identity or the broad sweep of what the party stands for. So they become a wildcard group."


Meanwhile, Democrats have their own challenges with the Hard-Pressed Skeptics. Like the red-leaning Young Outsiders, this Democratic-leaning group distrusts government.


But here's the weird thing: They trust the government when it comes to its ability to help the poor, which has a lot to do with these voters being in households with less than $30,000 in income.


"The best way to characterize these folks is they really dislike government; they think government can't do anything right, partly reflecting the fact that things aren't going right for them, so somebody must be messing up, right?" Dimock said. "But they don't want to cut the programs; they don't want to reduce the safety net. They're the ones who are in need of it."


The tension for them is that their conservatism is at odds with their personal finances. That group voted strongly for Obama in 2012 and were likely turned off by Mitt Romney's "47 percent" comment.


But in 2014, while a majority — 51 percent — say they intend to vote for Democrats in the midterm congressional races, 37 percent say they intend to vote for Republicans. "I think there's a lot of traction for the Republican Party to potentially pick up support from this group because of their level of frustration.


"This is a group that's probably going to be the biggest anti-incumbent voters because they're so frustrated that they just want change," Dimock said.


Perhaps the third most interesting group would be the Next Generation Left who, while reliably Democratic, mostly don't subscribe to the view that racism is what holds back the majority of African-Americans.


"They just aren't animated by the kind of Great Society vision so at the core of the Democratic Party's identity [especially Baby Boomers]," Dimock said. "Whether it be the battle for equal rights for African-Americans and poverty assistance programs, they're like, 'Done and done. Whatever.' Given the choice of paying for some of these programs and reducing the deficit, their priority would be reducing the deficit."


This is the 27th year Pew has conducted its typologies research in order to better understand the ideological nuances that go beyond simple Democratic and Republican categorizations.



Ruling limits president's recess appointments


The Supreme Court on Thursday limited the president's power to fill high-level administration posts with temporary appointments, ruling in favor of Senate Republicans in their partisan clash with President Barack Obama.


But the justices stopped short of a more sweeping decision that would have effectively ended a president's power to make recess appointments when the Senate takes a break.


It was the high court's first case involving the Constitution's recess appointments clause, ending with a unanimous decision that Obama's appointments to the National Labor Relations Board in 2012 without Senate confirmation were illegal.


Obama had argued that the Senate was on an extended holiday break and that the brief sessions it held every three days — what lawmakers call "pro forma" — were a sham intended to prevent him from filling seats on the NLRB.


Rejecting that argument, Justice Stephen Breyer said in his majority opinion that the Senate is not in recess if lawmakers actually say they are in session and retain the power to conduct business. He said a congressional break has to last at least 10 days to be considered a recess under the Constitution.


The impact of the decision may be less important since Senate Democrats changed the rules to make it harder for the chamber's minority party — currently the GOP — to block Obama's nominations.


White House spokesman Josh Earnest said the administration disagreed with the court's ruling. But he said that while the White House was reviewing the decision, "we'll honor it."


The outcome was the least significant loss possible for the administration. The lower court had gone further, ruling that the only recess recognized by the Constitution is the once-a-year break between sessions of Congress. It also said that only vacancies that arise during that recess could be filled.


Justice Antonin Scalia, writing for himself, Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas, said he would have upheld the reasoning of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit.


"The only remaining practical use for the recess-appointment power is the ignoble one of enabling presidents to circumvent the Senate's role in the appointment process, which is precisely what happened here," said Scalia, who took the unusual step of reading his concurrence from the bench.


The ruling's impact may be keenly felt by the White House next year if Republicans capture control of the Senate in the November election. The potential importance of the ruling lies in the Senate's ability to block the confirmation of judges and the leaders of independent agencies like the NLRB.


Republican leaders in both houses of Congress, House Speaker John Boehner and Sen. Mitch McConnell, praised the court for rejecting what they described as Obama's unconstitutional power grab. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said the decision underscores the importance of the Senate rule change to make sure that a small number of senators cannot block qualified nominees.


Several hundred decisions the NLRB made with the recess-appointed members will now have to be re-decided by the current board. However, the result in most cases is likely to be the same, given similar pro-labor leanings of the current majority.


Obama has made relatively few recess appointments — 32 in his five-plus years in office, according to the Congressional Research Service. President George W. Bush made 171 such appointments over two terms and President Bill Clinton filled 139 posts that way in his eight years in office.


But Obama was the first president to try to make recess appointments when Congress explicitly said it was not in recess. The Constitution requires that the Senate and House must get the other's consent for any break lasting longer than three days. At the end of 2011, the Republican-controlled House would not give the Democratic-led Senate permission for a longer break.


The partisan roles were reversed during Bush's presidency, when Senate Democrats sought ways to prevent the president from making recess appointments.


In fact, the very basis on which the justices decided the case — that the Senate can use extremely brief sessions to avoid a formal recess — was a tactic devised by Reid to frustrate Bush.


On a practical level, there may be little difference between how the court decided the case and the way Scalia wishes it had been decided, said Andy Pincus, a veteran Supreme Court lawyer in Washington.


"The recess appointment power has receded into practical irrelevance," Pincus said, pointing to the now-common Senate practice of blocking recess appointments by convening for pro forma sessions. "Today's decision likely cements that reality."


A recess appointment can last no more than two years. Recess appointees who subsequently won Senate confirmation include Chief Justice Earl Warren and Justice William Brennan, Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, two current NLRB members and Consumer Financial Protection Bureau director Richard Cordray.


The case challenging the appointments was brought by Noel Canning, a soft drink bottling company in Yakima, Washington. The company claimed an NLRB decision against it was not valid because the board members were not properly appointed and that the board therefore did not have enough members to do business.


Noel Canning prevailed in the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, and two other appeals courts also had ruled against recess appointments.



Associated Press writers Mark Sherman and Jessica Gresko and AP White House correspondent Julie Pace contributed to this report.


ITW opening TrusSteel plant


ITW TrusSteel is opening a new 150,000-square-foot roll-forming and distribution facility in Pontotoc in north Mississippi.


Kevin Viravec, ITW Building Components Group vice president and general manager, says in a news release the factory will begin operating in the fourth quarter of 2014 and initially employ about 10 people.


Viravec says the plant will manufacture the chords and webs for the company's TrusSteel product line. TrusSteel systems are utilized in a wide range of applications ranging from light-commercial and institutional buildings to retail facilities, medical clinics and multifamily housing.


ITW Building Components Group is renovating an existing facility in Pontotoc to convert it to the factory.


ITW Building Components Group, headquartered in Earth City, Missouri, is a provider of building component software, metal connector products and equipment.



Iron Mountain and Barclays are big market movers


Stocks that moved substantially or traded heavily Thursday on the New York Stock Exchange and the Nasdaq Stock Market:


NYSE


Iron Mountain Inc., up $5.97 to $35.75


The information management company increased its profit outlook as it plans to convert to a real-estate investment trust.


Steelcase Inc., down $1.89 to $15.77


The workplace equipment maker reported weaker-than-expected first-quarter profit and issued a disappointing second-quarter outlook.


Barclays PLC, down $1.16 to $14.55


New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman filed a securities fraud lawsuit against the British banking and financial firm.


General Motors Inc., down 19 cents to $36.90


The automaker is preparing to recall about 33,000 Cruze compact cars because the air bags might fail to inflate properly.


Nasdaq


Bed Bath & Beyond Inc., down $4.41 to $56.70


The home furnishings retailer reported weaker-than-expected first-quarter profit and lower-than-expected second-quarter guidance.


Canadian Solar Inc., up $1.28 to $29.79


The solar power company closed a deal expected to bring in $300 million in revenue for work on Canada's largest solar energy farm.


Elizabeth Arden Inc., down $4.59 to $22.41


A Korean cosmetic company said it is no longer interested in buying the U.S. cosmetic firm, which is restructuring its business.


Nature's Sunshine Products Inc., up $1.04 to $16.71


The natural health and wellness company signed a deal to form a joint venture that will fuel an expansion into the Chinese market.



Howard Baker's Legacy: Political, But Not Partisan



Sen. Howard Baker, R-Tenn., vice chairman of the Senate Watergate Investigating Committee, questions witness James McCord during hearing in Washington, D.C., on May 18, 1973.i i


hide captionSen. Howard Baker, R-Tenn., vice chairman of the Senate Watergate Investigating Committee, questions witness James McCord during hearing in Washington, D.C., on May 18, 1973.



AP

Sen. Howard Baker, R-Tenn., vice chairman of the Senate Watergate Investigating Committee, questions witness James McCord during hearing in Washington, D.C., on May 18, 1973.



Sen. Howard Baker, R-Tenn., vice chairman of the Senate Watergate Investigating Committee, questions witness James McCord during hearing in Washington, D.C., on May 18, 1973.


AP


Howard Baker, who died Thursday at age 88, was a former Senate majority leader and chief of staff to President Reagan. Both his father and stepmother served in Congress; one of the Senate's office buildings is named for Baker's father-in-law, Everett Dirksen.


When he retired, Baker took up residence as one of the capital's most respected and well-liked wise men. Even in a time when Washington and its insiders are widely reviled, Howard Baker will be remembered as a Washington insider who was widely revered.


That may be because Baker was not regarded as a partisan — even when he held some of the most political jobs in town. His most famous moments came as the senior Republican on the Senate Watergate Committee in the summer of 1973, when he framed the essential question: "What did the president know, and when did he know it?"


That lawyerly formulation was critical to the process that led to Republican President Richard Nixon's resignation a year later.


Baker came to politics naturally, a product of a political family in East Tennessee. He could have inherited the Knoxville-based seat in Congress, representing a historically Republican part of the state, but chose at 38 to run for the Senate instead in 1964. He lost in that Democratic year but won two years later, becoming the first Republican from Tennessee in the Senate since Reconstruction.


Once in the Senate he was immediately a candidate for leadership, seeking to succeed Dirksen, his father-in-law, as GOP leader. After two false starts, he won the post late in 1976, becoming the first Republican Senate leader from the South.


In that role, he helped President Jimmy Carter win the super-majority needed to approve the Panama Canal Treaty, transferring the canal to Panama. That cost him the support of many conservatives and hobbled his bid for the party's presidential nomination in 1980.


Baker dropped out relatively early in that sweepstakes, but the man who won the presidency that year, Ronald Reagan, carried into office a new Republican majority in the Senate – the first since the mid-1950s. Suddenly, Baker found himself the majority leader, charged with enacting the new president's ambitious new program.


Baker may never have been a true Reaganite, but he proved adept at working with the president's team and reaching agreements with the House – which despite its nominal Democratic majority was actually dominated by a bipartisan, conservative coalition with its center of gravity in the South.


Baker understood that coalition instinctively, having dealt with deeply traditional Southern Democrats throughout his life. Beyond that, he had an excellent relationship with Speaker Tip O'Neill, whom he personally liked. Most important, Baker could find the fulcrum on which to turn the Senate, working with committee chairs and senior members of both parties.


In 1983, journalist Michael Barone would write that Baker had "become the balance wheel of government" in Washington.


Yet Baker chose to end his Senate career after three terms, retiring in 1984 while still in his late 50s. It was generally assumed he would run for president whenever Reagan retired. Instead, Baker went to work for Reagan in February 1987, at a time when the White House was in serious trouble.


The Senate majority won in 1980 had been lost in 1986, even before the contours of the Iran-Contra scandal were known. When the country learned the Reagan administration had been selling arms to Iran in exchange for hostages and using the profits from the sale to aid rebels in Nicaragua in defiance of Congress, Chief of Staff Donald Regan stepped down and Baker stepped in.


Baker helped his president right his ship, survive the protracted congressional investigation and change the subject with a breakthrough on arms control with the Soviet Union (as it was then still known). Reagan left office on a high note, popular with the public and much of the political class as well.


Baker's later years were less momentous. His name was mentioned for president in 1988 and even in 1996 but he did not run again. He took care of his first wife, and after she died he married a former Senate colleague, Nancy Landon Kassebaum of Kansas.


He also practiced law and served on many boards and commissions. With three other former leaders of the Senate majority he formed the Bipartisan Policy Center, devoted to finding the kinds of compromises he had often had forged in his own career.


One of his co-founding partners in that venture, former Democratic leader Tom Daschle of South Dakota, had this salute earlier today. "Howard Baker's distinguished career as senator and statesman is a product of his unique capacity to win the confidence and trust of even those with whom he fundamentally disagreed."


That capacity has always been a special gift in politics, and few would disagree it is rarer yet today than it was in Baker's prime.



Hariri, Kerry highlight need to end void


BEIRUT: Former Prime Minister Saad Hariri and U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry highlighted the need to elect a new Lebanese president during a meeting Thursday, when they also discussed means to support Lebanon’s security services.


Meanwhile, the Cabinet approved a mechanism to govern its work during the presidential void.


“The meeting, which lasted for an hour and included breakfast, tackled the latest developments in Lebanon and the region, particularly the need to put an end to presidential vacuum in Lebanon and exert all efforts to elect a president as soon as possible,” said a statement by Hariri’s press office after his meeting with Kerry.


“The meeting also focused on the necessary steps to ensure Lebanon’s stability and boost security and military services.” Lebanon plunged into a presidential vacuum on May 25, when the term of former President Michel Sleiman ended. Parliament has failed in seven attempts to elect a successor.


Hariri and Kerry, who met at the U.S. ambassador’s residence in Paris, touched on the impact of the Syrian refugee crisis on Lebanon and efforts needed from the international community to help the country cope with the presence of over a million Syrian refugees.


The meeting was attended by a number of U.S. officials including Vice Admiral Kurt Tidd, the assistant to the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.


According to Agence France Presse, Hariri and Kerry also discussed an explosion that rocked a Lebanese hotel Wednesday when a suicide bomber blew himself up to avoid arrest during a General Security raid. Twelve people were wounded in the bombing.


There was obviously “concern for spillover from Syria and Iraq,” said a U.S. official who attended Kerry and Hariri’s talks.


Hariri’s meeting with Kerry comes two days after the former prime minister held talks with French Foreign Affairs Minister Laurent Fabius in Paris.


Visitors of Speaker Nabih Berri quoted him as saying that he was not optimistic that a president would be elected soon.


Berri revealed that he telephoned Hariri after the latter extended his greetings to him for the advent of Ramadan via cable.


The speaker said he discussed developments with Hariri and they both agreed that it was necessary to elect a president as soon as possible.


Berri praised the performance of Prime Minister Tammam Salam and hailed the agreement reached by Cabinet parties on its work mechanism although he said it had some constitutional flaws.


“Energizing the work of the Cabinet should be accompanied by Parliament fulfilling its legislative and monitoring role,” Berri was quoted as saying.


The Cabinet approved a mechanism Thursday to govern its work in light of the presidential void, as Salam stressed that all government decisions would be consensus based.


The agreement on the mechanism came after a month of negotiations.


Speaking after chairing the Cabinet session at the Grand Serail, Salam said that none of the Cabinet’s decisions would be put to vote, but all should win unanimous backing by all government parties.


“We cannot address this difficult phase except through consensus. We will put aside any issue that does not win consensus. Every issue should win the consensus of all Cabinet parties,” Salam said.


“We looked into the agenda today. We put aside items that did not win consensus and passed those that garnered agreement,” the premier continued.


Salam said that the session’s agenda would be distributed to ministers 96 hours ahead of the session’s scheduled time.


“This will give the ministers enough time to study the agenda and discuss it,” he said.


Under normal conditions, ministers used to receive the agenda 48 hours before the session date.


Salam said that if a Cabinet party demanded more time to study a certain item, he would propose the request in the upcoming Cabinet session.


“If all Cabinet members agree on postponing it [the item] to another session, then this will happen,” Salam said, adding that disputed items would be put aside.


The prime minister said that representatives of all blocs in the government would sign Cabinet decrees.


“At least one minister representing each political party in the national unity government will sign the decrees,” Salam said. “Whoever will be attending the session on behalf of a certain political bloc can sign the decrees.”



Authorities on the hunt for suspects


BEIRUT: Security forces raided more hotels in Beirut Thursday in search of suspected terrorists as details emerged that the two Saudi suicide bombers had planned to attack a restaurant in the southern suburbs frequented by Hezbollah officials.


The Lebanese Army enforced strict security measures around the Dbayeh Palestinian refugee camp north of Beirut after a tip to security forces that a suspected car was inside the camp. Although it was not found, the search continued in and around the area, security sources said. Other camps are off-limits to Lebanese authorities and policed by armed Palestinian factions.


Speaker Nabih Berri, meanwhile, renewed his call for 3,000 new Army recruits and an additional 1,000 members each for General Security and the ISF to face growing threats from terror groups.


“We have no choice but to shore up the Army and security agencies. When these institutions are strong, terrorists will not be able to do anything,” Berri was quoted as saying.


The stepped-up security alert came as authorities have mounted pre-emptive operations in a bid to crack down on terror cells, days after three suicide bombings rattled Lebanon and threatened to put the country on edge.


A Saudi suicide bomber detonated his explosive belt at the Duroy Hotel in the Raouche district of Beirut Wednesday evening, killing himself to evade arrest during a raid by General Security personnel. A second would-be suicide bomber survived the blast and is undergoing interrogation.


Security sources said the suicide bomber and his partner had planned to carry out an attack against As-Saha restaurant, a popular restaurant located on the Beirut airport road in the southern suburbs and frequented by Hezbollah officials.


The would-be bomber, Abdul-Rahman al-Shnifi, who suffered severe burns after his partner, Abdul-Rahman al-Thawani, blew himself up to evade arrest, told interrogators that the pair planned to carry out a double suicide attack outside As-Saha, a security source told The Daily Star.


One of the two was supposed to enter the restaurant and blow himself up. Seconds later, the other would do the same after people had gathered to help the wounded, to cause maximum damage, the source said.


Shnifi, according to the source, said he and Thawani had obtained the explosives in Lebanon and arrived in the country on June 11.


The source added that the pair were members of the Al-Qaeda-inspired Islamic State of Iraq and Greater Syria (ISIS), while a Syrian man who helped the pair plan the attack was a member of the Tawhid Brigade, an armed rebel group involved in the Syrian war.


“They all belong to organizations under the umbrella of Al-Qaeda [that aim] to spread chaos in Lebanon,” the source said.


The two had stayed in a different hotel before coming to the Duroy Hotel, and they had made reservations at two different hotels with checkout dates mid-July.


Prime Minister Tammam Salam praised the coordination and pre-emptive action by security agencies that, he said, had thwarted the suicide bombers’ plans.


“With our consciousness and with God’s help, we were able to foil the plan of those enemies,” Salam said after chairing a Cabinet session at the Grand Serail. “No terrorist plan will succeed in sowing strife among us.”The United States condemned Wednesday’s bombing and voiced hopes that it did not signal a return to spiraling violence in Lebanon. “That’s yet another reason why we have been in a very material way supportive of assisting the Lebanese armed forces and internal security forces,” a senior U.S. State Department official said after talks in Paris between U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and former Prime Minister Saad Hariri.


Saudi Arabia also condemned the “terrorist act” in Raouche.


“Such actions have nothing to do with humanitarian or Muslim values but represent an attack on innocent people and sanctities,” the Saudi Embassy in Beirut said in a statement.


Saudi Ambassador Ali Awad Assir said his country was ready to send a team to help in the ongoing investigation with the Saudi would-be bomber if the Lebanese government wanted.


Security and judicial sources told The Daily Star that the Army was taking unprecedented measures at the entrances and around the Dbayeh camp in line with a crackdown on suspected terror cells.


Sources said around midday ISF Information Branch personnel, wearing bulletproof vests, raided the Ramadan Plaza, located diagonally across from the Duroy Hotel. Security agents stationed outside the Ramada Plaza said some explosive material had been discovered inside the hotel and that they would be removed gradually. The hotel premises were cordoned off, preventing reporters from entering.


At least two individuals were arrested, and police are still in search for an unidentified woman. It is unclear where the latter suspect was staying at the hotel.


Sources said the security forces had also raided the Golden Tulip Galleria Hotel in Jnah, arresting a Saudi and Syrian national.


Separately, Interior Minister Nouhad Machnouk stressed that Gulf citizens would continue to receive visas on arrival at the airport.


“Discussing the issue that visas should be granted for Gulf nationals by prior application is out of the question,” Machnouk said.


After the Cabinet session, Salam reaffirmed that tourists from the Gulf would still receive visas upon arrival: “Visas do not affect the terrorists.”



Calling Dame Judi: UK needs new MI6 spy chief


Wanted: Spymaster. Discretion an asset.


Britain's MI6 intelligence agency announced Thursday that director John Sawers will leave in November at the end of his five-year term.


It said the recruitment process for his successor would begin soon.


MI6, also known as the Secret Intelligence Service, is Britain's foreign intelligence agency. Its most famous boss is the fictional M in the James Bond stories — although the real-life MI6 chief is known as C.


MI6 said Sawers — a former diplomat who advised Prime Minister Tony Blair on foreign policy — had done "an exceptional job as Chief of the Secret Intelligence Service." It did not elaborate.


Until the 1990s, the identity of the MI6 chief was kept secret. Sawers brought an unprecedented openness to the job, delivering speeches and appearing at televised parliamentary hearings.


His 2009 appointment brought allegations of a security lapse when his wife posted photos of the master spy in his bathing suit on a beach, along with personal information, on Facebook.


Then-Foreign Secretary David Miliband dismissed fears of a security breach, saying: "It's not a state secret that he wears Speedo swimming trunks."


Sawers' successor will lead an agency under increasing criticism in the wake of revelations by the anti-secrecy group WikiLeaks and by former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden.



Stocks head lower on Wall Street, led by banks


Banks and other financial firms tugged the stock market slightly lower Thursday as a mixed batch of economic reports and earnings results gave investors little reason to push the market up.


Barclays sank following news that New York's attorney general sued the British bank, claiming that it favored high-frequency traders over large institutions in its private-trading platform, known as a "dark pool."


It was only the third loss in 10 trading days for the Standard & Poor's 500 index, which closed at its latest record high just under a week ago, on June 20. Many investors have been saying stocks could be due for a pullback given their rapid rise recently.


Phil Orlando, chief equity strategist at Federated Investors, said a short slump in the summer months wouldn't come as a surprise. "I fully expect to see a hiccup here, but I wouldn't get too worried about it," he said. "It's probably going to set us up for a nice end-of-the-year rally."


The Standard & Poor's 500 index sank 2.31 points, or 0.1 percent, to close at 1,957.22, while the Nasdaq composite index fell 0.71 of a point to 4,379.05.


The Dow Jones industrial average lost 21.38 points, or 0.1 percent, to close at 16,846.13.


Two economic reports out early Thursday offered little encouragement. In one, the government said the number of Americans seeking unemployment benefits declined last week, another sign that an economic slowdown earlier this year hasn't caused employers to shed workers. In a separate report, the government said consumer spending inched up 0.2 percent last month, half the increase that economists had predicted.


Among the stocks making big moves, Bed Bath & Beyond sank 7 percent, the biggest loss in the S&P 500, after the retailer posted quarterly earnings and sales late Wednesday that fell short of analysts' estimates. The store's stock dropped $4.41 to $56.70.


GoPro jumped 31 percent in its stock-market debut. The company, whose cameras get strapped to the heads of skydivers, extreme skiers and surfers, raised $427 million in its initial public offering Thursday. GoPro soared $7.34 to $31.34 in its first day of trading on the Nasdaq stock market.


With one trading day left in the week, the S&P 500 is on track for its second weekly loss this month. That shouldn't worry anyone, said Randy Frederick, managing director of active trading and derivatives at the Charles Schwab Center for Financial Research. As the stock market set a series of all-time highs this spring, more traders began laying bets in the options market that the market would take a fall, if only for technical reasons. Markets can only go so far in one direction.


"There's nothing to get panicked about," Frederick said. "We haven't had a real pullback in a while. And when we have one, they turn out to be buying opportunities. This time is no different."


In the market for government bonds, the yield on the 10-year Treasury note dropped to 2.52 percent from 2.56 percent late Wednesday. Bond yields fall when prices rise.


Among companies in the news:


— Barclays' U.S.-listed shares fell $1.16, or 7 percent, to $14.55. Other banks that operate private-trading platforms also fell. Morgan Stanley and Citigroup each fell more than 1 percent.


— Alcoa plans to acquire Firth Rixson, a British maker of jet-engine parts, for $2.9 billion, as the company continues to shift away from its aluminum-smelting roots. Alcoa's stock rose 39 cents, or 3 percent, to $14.94.


— Iron Mountain soared $5.97, or 20 percent, to $35.74 after the information storage and management company said it is moving ahead with its conversion to a real estate investment trust, which could reduce taxes and increase returns for stockholders.



U.S. advances new sanctions on Hezbollah



BEIRUT: The U.S. House Foreign Affairs Committee Thursday passed an amended version of a bill aimed at preventing Hezbollah from receiving financing through international institutions.


Committee Chairman Ed Royce said: “The threat posed by Hezbollah’s global operations has exploded. Underpinning that development is a financing and logistical network. In 2011, we saw the tip of the iceberg when a massive Hezbollah drug and money laundering operation was uncovered.


“To deter dealings with Hezbollah, the bill targets those financial institutions that knowingly do business with what has been called the ‘A-team’ of terrorists.”


The Hezbollah International Financial Prevention Act of 2014 was introduced by Republican Mark Meadows and introduced on April 3.


Lawmakers at the time said Hezbollah continued to “pose a threat to the United States, our allies and interests throughout the Middle East, and well beyond.”


The U.S. announced last August that it was sanctioning Hezbollah over its support for Syrian President Bashar Assad, a largely symbolic move as the group has been subject to financial restrictions since it was classed as a terrorist group in 1995. In September, the U.S. imposed further sanctions against Hezbollah chief Sayyed Hasan Nasrallah for assisting the Syrian regime.


The bill will now advance to the full House of Representatives. It must also be approved by the Senate and signed by President Barack Obama.



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Beirut hotels empty amid crackdown


BEIRUT: Hotels in Beirut’s touristic Raouche neighborhood were on lockdown Thursday, with managers upping security measures to reassure guests amid a continued search for potential suicide bombers.


Just down the road from the Duroy Hotel, where a Saudi suicide bomber blew himself up in his room Wednesday evening to avoid being detained during a security raid, Hisham al-Okaily said security forces had been into his hotel to ask for guest documentation three times since the blast.


“They have been asking for photocopies of [IDs of] people staying here,” said Okaily, manager of The Diplomat Hotel. “They came at 11 p.m., 2 a.m. and again this morning at 9. ... We are now searching the luggage of every new guest. Luckily it’s mostly families here.”


The atmosphere in the back streets of Raouche, a popular area where locals and foreigners alike come to walk along the seafront and take pictures of the famous Pigeon Rock, remained tense throughout the day as security forces conducted an hourslong raid on the upscale Ramada Plaza hotel just opposite the Duroy. Two people were later arrested in the establishment, according to security sources on the scene.


The surrounding area was crawling with General Security officers, plainclothes policemen and Army soldiers in bulletproof vests, while passersby were forbidden from coming near the scene. Worried looking guests were seen being evacuated into taxis along with all their luggage.


“They are checking every room,” one female guest said as she left. “I think everything is fine though.”


The junction by the two hotels was closed for most of the day as the Ramada Plaza raid took place and forensic scientists examined the Duroy Hotel. Broken glass and piles of sodden rags littered the road until Sukleen was sent in to clean up the area in the late afternoon.


“An Iraqi family who had been staying at Duroy came to our hotel to find a room last night,” said Atef Awada, general manager of the nearby Grand Suites Hotel, with a shake of his head. “Their IDs had been confiscated as part of the raid, and normally I wouldn’t let people without an ID check in – but what else could I do, make them sleep on the street?”


Awada confirmed that he was taking extra precautions following recent events, which include the arrest last Friday of terror suspects in two Hamra hotels.


“Everything here is tense, nervous. It makes me very worried,” he said. “We now check everybody’s luggage before they come in, especially guests from the Gulf. They don’t normally come here so we are being especially careful with them.”


Struggling to deal with the presence of around 1.5 million Syrian refugees, closed borders due to the civil war next door and travel warnings from several countries, Lebanon’s economy is in tatters. The discovery of numerous potential terrorists in hotels across west Beirut has likely killed any chance of a much-needed tourism boom, and the prospect of a calm summer after several quiet months is now evaporating with alarming speed.


Round the corner at the City Suite Hotel, Operations Manager Teddy Aouad admitted that the foiled Duroy terror plot had caused a significant loss in business.


“One [person] checked out this morning, and five people due to arrive yesterday never showed up,” he said. “We heard in the news that some hotels were being raided, but thank God there is nothing suspicious here.”


Sources said security forces also raided the Golden Tulip Galleria Hotel in the Jnah neighborhood of Beirut Thursday, leading to the arrest of a Saudi and Syrian national.


At the King’s Suites Hotel, which is opposite Ramada Plaza and right next to the Duroy, a family of four was busy checking out despite having only arrived the day before.


“We were walking on Raouche when we heard it,” said the mother, a Puerto Rican. “It sounded like a car accident, but my husband is Lebanese and he suspected different.”


“Then I checked the news on here,” added her son, pointing to his tablet computer, “and we saw it was a bomb.”


“We’re staying somewhere else tonight and leaving tomorrow,” the mother said.


Staff at the King’s Suites Hotel declined to comment on whether or not they had been raided as part of the security sweep of the area, as did those at a nearby branch of the popular Rotana hotel chain, Raouche Arjaan.