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  • Facebook to meet German government on Internet hate-mongering

    In a letter to Facebook’s European subsidiaries, Justice Minister Heiko Maas suggested a meeting with company executives on September 14 to talk about “improving the effectiveness and transparency of your community standards”.

    Facebook’s German unit agreed to meet Maas, saying in an email sent to AFP it “takes his concerns very seriously”.

    “We are very interested in an exchange of views with Minister Maas about what society, companies and politicians can do together against xenophobia spreading in Germany,” the email said.

    The Internet giant “works hard every day to protect people on Facebook against abuse, hate speech and bullying”, the company spokesman said.

    “Racism has no place on Facebook.”

    As Germany faces a record influx of refugees and a backlash from the far right, social media like Facebook have seen an upsurge of hateful, xenophobic commentary.

    Many users say that when they complain to the company about offensive posts, Facebook often responds that after a review the post does not violate its community standards, Maas said, even in “obvious cases”.

    And users also accuse the company of double standards for cracking down swifter and harder on nudity and sexual content than on hate-mongering.

    Maas said Facebook was required to delete posts in violation of German laws against incitement of racial hatred.

    Facebook users in Berlin and the southern state of Bavaria have been slapped with large fines this year for hate speech.

    Last month Germany’s most popular film star, Til Schweiger, blasted fans who left dozens of anti-immigrant comments on his Facebook page after he appealed for donations for a refugee charity.

    And a German TV journalist’s impassioned appeal this month for an “uprising of decent people” against racism and attacks on asylum-seekers was viewed more than five million times via Facebook alone within 48 hours, drawing an outpouring of both support and scorn.

    Facebook said in April it would not allow the social network to be used to promote hate speech or terrorism as it unveiled a wide-ranging update of its global community standards. – AFP

  • Two US journalists killed in Virginia firing during live TV broadcast

    WDBJ journalist Alison Parker, 24, and cameraman Adam Ward, 27, were shot at close range while conducting an on-air interview. The gunman was still at large.

    “We do not know the motive. We do not know who the suspect or the killer is,” said WDBJ general manager Jeffrey Marks as he confirmed the deaths to viewers.

    WDBJ is located in the southern Virginia city of Roanoke.

     


    Firing at news men during live coverage in… by arynews
     

    Marks said Parker and Ward were “both in love with other members of the team” at WDBJ.

    The woman that Parker was interviewing on a balcony at the lakeside Bridgewater Resort in the town of Moneta, near Roanoke, was reportedly wounded.

    Parker was talking to the woman about tourism development for WDBJ’s early-morning newscast when the gunman seemingly closed in from behind.

    Several shots were heard, as well as screams, as Ward’s camera fell to the floor, capturing a fuzzy image of the gunman, dressed in dark clothing.

    The station then cut away to a startled anchorwoman back in the studio.

    On her Facebook page, Parker — whose birthday was just a week ago — described herself as the “mornin’ reporter” at WDBJ with an interest in ballroom dancing.

    WDBJ anchor Chris Hurst tweeted that he and Parker were “very much in love,” adding: “I am numb.”

    “She worked with Adam every day. They were a team. I am heartbroken for his fiancee,” Hurst said.

    Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe said on Twitter that he was “heartbroken over (the) senseless murders.”

    Virginia state police were working with local authorities to capture the gunman, he said.

  • Pakistan’s economic growth hamstrung by low tax collection, says report

    Pakistan’s economy grew at 4.24 percent during the 2014-2015 fiscal year with per capita income rising a significant 9.25 percent, markers that come as investor confidence in the long-underperfoming South Asian giant have also increased.

    But according to the report by non-profit organisation Raftar, funded by Britain’s Department for International Development (DFID), Pakistan’s economy continues to rely heavily on “commercial loans, concessionary donor loans and aid”.

    The country’s tax-to-GDP ratio of 9.4 percent is among the lowest in the world, leading to a public debt of 17 trillion rupees ($163 billion). This an almost three-fold increase since 2008 for the $232 billion economy, with 44 percent of tax revenue going toward interest payments.

    The report blamed the lack of a “tax culture” on non-revenue sources of funds the country has historically enjoyed in the form of foreign aid and loans.

    It said 68 percent of tax revenue was being generated through indirect taxes on fuel, food and electricity, which unfairly penalizes the poor.

     

    The lack of revenue collection also negatively affects infrastructure development including power generation, with the country facing a massive shortfall of up to 4000 MW in the summer that shaves about $15 billion off the country’s GDP.

    Pakistan is currently in a $6.6 billion loan programme with the International Monetary Fund, which was granted on condition that Islamabad carried out extensive economic reforms, particularly in the energy and taxation sectors.

  • Twitter blocks website saving politicians’ deleted posts

    The Open State Foundation started Politwoops in the Netherlands in 2010, and its collection of deleted tweets proved a frequent source of embarrassment for politicians, as well as a useful tool for journalists.

    But the foundation said it was informed on Friday night by Twitter that access was being shut off to Politwoops in the 30 countries in which it operates, following the blocking of Politwoops’ US operation in May.

    It said Twitter was also blocking Diplotwoops, which screens deleted messages by diplomats and embassies worldwide.

    The Open State Foundation said it was told that Twitter had decided to suspend access “following thoughtful internal deliberation and close consideration of a number of factors that doesn’t distinguish between users”.

    “No one user is more deserving of that ability (to delete tweets) than another. Indeed, deleting a tweet is an expression of the user’s voice,” Twitter told the foundation.

    Since being formed at a so-called hackathon five years ago, Politwoops spread to 30 countries from Egypt to the Vatican, as well as the European Parliament.

    It started operating in the US in 2012 thanks to the Sunlight Foundation, which fights for transparency in politics.

    In a statement to AFP, Twitter said that “the ability to delete one’s tweets — for whatever reason — has been a long-standing feature of Twitter for all users”.

    Twitter policy says that those who have access to its APIs (application programme interfaces), as Politwoops did, must delete content “that Twitter reports as deleted or expired”.

    “From time to time, we come upon apps or solutions that violate that policy. Recently we identified several services that used the feature we built to allow for the deletion of tweets to instead archive and highlight them,” Twitter said.

    “We subsequently informed these services of their noncompliance and suspended their access to our APIs.”

    Open State Foundation director Arjan El Fassed insisted comments made by politicians on Twitter should remain in the public domain.

    “What elected politicians publicly say is a matter of public record. Even when tweets are deleted, it’s part of parliamentary history,” he said.

    “What politicians say in public should be available to anyone,” El Fassed added.

    “This is not about typos but it is a unique insight on how messages from elected politicians can change without notice.”

    A check on the Politwoops website on Monday showed no activity for the past two days.

  • Sangakkara offered diplomatic post

    Several thousand cheering fans, many of them schoolchildren waving Sri Lankan flags along with VIPs, turned out to salute Sangakkara at the end of the second Test against India in Colombo.

    “You have been a great honour to Sri Lanka,” President Maithripala Sirisena said in a televised ceremony at the P. Sara Oval for the formidable cricketer after the match.

    Sangakkara, who turns out for Surrey in English county cricket, did not directly address Sirisena’s announcement about the diplomatic post, later telling reporters he had been unprepared for the gesture.

    “It was a surprise, I have to go and think about it and discuss with his excellency (the president)” Sangakkara said.

    During the formal sendoff, the 37-year-old broke down as he thanked his parents for standing by him during his 15 years of cricket.

    “All the support and love they showed over the years, whether I played cricket or not, whether I did well or not, the only place I could go and feel safe was home. So thank you ‘amma’ (mother) and ‘apachchi’ (father),” Sangakkara said, fighting back tears as fans cheered and clapped.

    He also praised Indian captain Virat Kohli and his team for their tough opposition during his farewell match which Sri Lanka lost by 278 runs on Monday, allowing the tourists to level the series 1-1.

    “Thank you for not giving any quarter,” he told the Indian team.

    “And thank you for really making it a privilege of mine to play against you,” he said.

    Hours after the emotional send-off, Sangakkara said he was looking forward to a “new innings” with his family.

    “Thank you for the wonderful farewell,” he said on Twitter. “I will miss the cricket. But my amazing wife (Yehali) and children await my innings with them. Time for family.”

    Thousands turned out on Sunday to see Sangakkara’s final international innings. But he was denied a dream end to his career when he was caught tapping a full toss to the short mid-wicket fielder for 18.

    Sangakkara, the fifth highest run-getter in Test history, finished his Test career with 12,400 runs from 134 Tests at an average of 57.40. He scored 38 centuries, including a best of 319 against Bangladesh in Chittagong last year.

    He follows Sachin Tendulkar of India, Ricky Ponting of Australia, Jacques Kallis of South Africa and Rahul Dravid of India in the all-time list of leading Test scorers.

    ICC chief executive David Richardson paid tribute to Sangakkara as “one of cricket’s greatest ever players and ambassadors”.

    “By scoring a total of 28,016 runs across all three formats, he puts himself in the higher echelons of players to ever grace the game.

    “Sangakkara will rightly go down as one of cricket’s greatest-ever players and ambassadors,” Richardson said in an ICC statement.

  • Qatar in talks to host Pakistan Twenty20 League

    The head of the Qatar Cricket Association, Gul Khan told AFP there was a “70 percent” chance Doha would host the tournament, to be played in February 2016, following three days of talks with the senior members of the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) over the weekend.

    PCB officials are expected to return to Qatar in early September when a final decision will be taken.

    “We want some big international tournaments here,” Khan told AFP. “This is a good experience for everybody. It’s good for Qatar, it’s good for cricket.”

    He added that “big players, big names” would take part in the tournament.

    The PCB is looking for a venue after its first choice of the United Arab Emirates gave priority to a separate tournament involving former players.

    Details of the Super League tournament have yet to be finalised, said Khan, but there will be at least five teams.

    Most of the players are expected to be from Pakistan but Khan added they would be looking to bring in players from other major cricket nations including India, Australia and England.

    Media reports from Pakistan earlier this month claimed the PCB would in September begin the bidding process for selling team franchises, as well as broadcasting and merchandising rights.

    The tournament would be played at Doha’s Asian Town Cricket Stadium, which has a 14,000 seat capacity, and it is likely all games would be day/night matches.

    The event should prove popular among Qatar’s huge Asian community.

    There are around 90,000 people from Pakistan living in Qatar, a number which is expected to rise in the near future with the influx of more workers needed for the huge number of infrastructure projects taking place in the super rich Gulf state.

    In addition, there are large numbers of people from other strong Asian cricketing nations including more than half a million residents from India, 150,000 from Bangladesh and 100,000 from Sri Lanka.

    Khan said it was hoped that the super league could attract spectators from nearby UAE.

    The tournament could also pave the way for Qatar to host Pakistan test matches, said Khan.

    Currently Pakistan plays its test matches outside the country because of security concerns.

    Pakistan will play Ashes winners England in a three-match test series in the UAE in October and November.

    If the negotiations secure the tournament in Qatar, it will reinforce the Gulf state’s position as a major sporting hub.

    As well as the 2022 football World Cup, Qatar is set to host the World Athletics Championships in 2019, and last year hosted the short-course World Swimming Championships.

    Officials will announce within the next month if Qatar will bid to host the 2024 Summer Olympics.

     

  • White House admits Biden mulling 2016 run

    Biden, President Obama’s deputy for nearly seven years, has previously said he would make a decision on entering the 2016 race by the end of the summer.

    “I would assume that that means he’s got a another month or so to think about this and announce a decision,” said White House spokesman Josh Earnest.

    Obama has so far been careful not to pick among the Democratic candidates.

    But several close aides have jumped from the White House to Clinton’s campaign in recent months.

    Her struggles to explain why she used a private email server to conduct state business has raised questions about her status as presumptive nominee.

    Democrats have long been concerned about the prospect of a half-hearted primary race leading to Clinton’s nomination.

    Biden would provide Clinton with stiff competition, but his path back to the White House is not entirely clear.

    He has been a presidential candidate twice and twice lost badly.

    Earnest did not rule out the possibility that Obama would ultimately chose between his vice president and his former secretary of state.

    “I wouldn’t rule out an endorsement,” he said.

    Speculation about Biden’s plans were fueled by reports over the weekend that he had met privately with Senator Elizabeth Warren, an influential voice in the Democratic Party’s left wing.

  • Almost 80,000 sign UK petition for Netanyahu arrest

    The petition was launched earlier this month by British citizen Damian Moran and is posted on the government’s website.

    “Under international law he (Netanyahu) should be arrested for war crimes upon arrival in the UK for the massacre of over 2,000 civilians in 2014,” Moran said, referring to the 51-day offensive by Israeli forces in Gaza last year.

    If the number of signatories reaches 100,000, the petition can be considered for debate in Britain’s parliament.

    But Moran told media he doubted it would reach the chamber given the close relationship between Israel and Britain.

    The British government was obliged to respond after the document received 10,000 signatories, saying that “visiting heads of foreign governments, such as prime minister Netanyahu, have immunity from legal process, and cannot be arrested or detained”.

    “We recognise that the conflict in Gaza last year took a terrible toll,” it added.

    “As the prime minister (David Cameron) said, we were all deeply saddened by the violence and the UK has been at the forefront of international reconstruction efforts.

    “However the prime minister was clear on the UK’s recognition of Israel’s right to take proportionate action to defend itself, within the boundaries of international humanitarian law.”

    Britain is pushing for a two-state solution to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and “will reinforce this message to Mr Netanyahu during his visit” in September, according to the response.

    Any British citizen can launch a petition on the government’s website, asking for a specific action from the government or parliament’s lower House of Commons.

    Only British citizens are meant to sign the petitions, but need only enter a name, email address and valid postcode.

    Israel launched military action in the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip on July 8 last year, leading to the deaths of more than 2,000 Palestinians and 66 Israeli soldiers.

    Pro-Palestinian British lawyers unsuccessfully tried to arrest former Israeli justice minister Tzipi Livni following the 2008-2009 Gaza war.

    Israel’s embassy in London called the latest petition a “meaningless publicity stunt”.

  • Five-star Ashwin helps India level Sri Lanka series

    Ashwin grabbed five for 42 as Sri Lanka, set an improbable victory target of 413 runs, were shot out for 134 in their second innings soon after lunch on the fifth day at the P. Sara Oval.

    Leg-spinner Amit Mishra chipped in with three wickets as the hosts lost their last eight batsmen for 62 runs after resuming at 72-2, giving Virat Kohli his first win as captain in his fifth Test as leader.

    A brief spell of heavy rain forced an early lunch with nine wickets down, but the weather cleared for India to finish the match in the second over after resumption.

    The defeat denied retiring Sri Lankan great Kumar Sangakkara a fairytale farewell in his last international match. The left-hander was dismissed for 18 on Sunday.

    India’s emphatic win set the stage for an intriguing finale to the series when the third and final Test starts at the Sinhalese sports club in the Sri Lankan capital on Friday.

    Opener Dimuth Karunaratne made 46, but six batsmen failed to reach double figures as Sri Lanka were bowled out in 43.4 overs.

    Ashwin finished with a match-haul of seven wickets to add to the 10 he took in the first Test in Galle where Sri Lanka fought back from the brink to win by 63 runs.

    Sri Lanka lost captain Angelo Mathews off the first ball of the day, edging fast bowler Umesh Yadav to stand-in wicketkeeper Lokesh Rahul, who dived to his right to hold a low catch.

    First Test hero Dinesh Chandimal began by hooking seamer Ishant Sharma for a six, before he was bowled round his legs by Mishra for 15 to reduce the hosts to 91-4.

    It soon became 111-6 as India grabbed two more wickets in the space of five deliveries.

    Ashwin had Lahiru Thirimanne snapped up at silly point by substitute fielder Cheteshwar Pujara, and in the next over Ishant Sharma forced Jehan Mubarak to edge a catch to second slip.

    The procession back to the pavilion continued when Dhammika Prasad attempted to loft Ashwin out of the ground, but only managed to top-edge a catch to Mishra at mid-on.

    Sri Lanka’s last recognised batsman Karunaratne was bowled by Ashwin before lunch and Mishra sealed the win by trapping both Tharindu Kaushal and Dushmantha Chameera leg-before on either side of the break.

  • China shares plummet more than 8% by the break

    Chinese stocks have tumbled since peaking in mid-June and authorities have launched broad interventions to try to restrain the drops, but concerns over stalling growth and doubts about valuations continue to drag.

    The surprise devaluation of the yuan on August 11 added to fears the world’s second-largest economy is weaker than thought, sparking a sell-off that has wiped more than $5 trillion off world equity markets.

    The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index plunged 8.45 percent, or 296.54 points, to 3,211.20 by the break — below its closing level on December 31 last year, wiping out all its 2015 gains — after losing as much as 8.59 percent.

    The Shenzhen Composite Index, which tracks stocks on China’s second exchange, slumped 7.61 percent, or 155.24 points, to 1,884.16.

    Hong Kong’s benchmark Hang Seng Index fell 4.64 percent, or 1,039.92 points to 21,369.7 by the end of morning trading.

    Taipei recorded its biggest-ever intraday drop, at 7.46 percent, while regional markets also slumped, including Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 falling 3.21 percent.

    Oil was trading below the $40 a barrel mark, at its lowest level since 2009.

    “China’s economy is pretty ugly and some sectors have bubbles,” Wu Kan, a Shanghai-based fund manager at JK Life Insurance, told Bloomberg News.

    “Selling pressure around global markets is also weighing on local sentiment. The Shanghai Composite may fall to around the 3,000-point level.”

    China’s economy, a key driver of global growth, expanded at its weakest pace since 1990 last year and has slowed further this year, growing 7.0 percent in each of the first two quarters.

    The yuan devaluation was widely seen as intended to give Chinese exporters — a key sector of the economy — a boost by making their products cheaper abroad.

    Concerns growth is decelerating in the world’s number two economy were fuelled on Friday when the preliminary figure for Caixin’s purchasing managers’ index for August, a key indicator of manufacturing activity, slumped to a 77-month low.

    US and European equities tumbled after the data, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average posting its worst single-day session in four years and all the benchmark indices on Wall Street losing over three percent.

    “The market is going to drop further,” Qian Qimin, an analyst from Shenwan Hongyuan, told AFP, referring to Shanghai equities. “It’s normal as the markets across the whole world are falling.”

    – ‘Still not cheap’ –

    Chinese shares have been extremely volatile after a huge debt-fuelled rally, which saw the market rise 150 percent in 12 months, collapsed in mid-June.

    Beijing then intervened with a rescue package that included funding the China Securities Finance Corp. (CSF) to buy stocks on behalf of the government and barring major shareholders from selling their stakes.

    In the latest move at the weekend, China said it will allow its huge state pension fund to invest up to 30 percent of its assets — which totalled 3.5 trillion yuan at the end of 2014, according to the official news agency Xinhua — in stocks.

    The market regulator has also issued reassurances that the CSF will continue to soothe market volatility “for several years”, although that has not been enough to reassure investors.

    “The entry of the pension fund will take a long time to happen,” said Qian. “And valuations are still not cheap.”

    Despite recent falls, stocks on the mainland trade at a median 61 times earnings, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, more than three times the multiple of 19 for companies in the S&P 500 index in the US.

    Monday’s fall took the Shanghai index well below the 3,500 mark, which had been seen as a symbolic moat authorities would seek to protect.

    Some analysts predicted more government intervention by the so-called “national team”, a description for entities, including the CSF, that are trading on behalf of the government.

    “If the market falls too much, the ‘national team’ will still step in,” Li Daxiao, chief economist of Yingda Securities, told AFP, adding that the pension fund move was announced “partly to stabilise the market”.

    But others warned that efforts to control prices were ultimately futile. “Government intervention won’t be able to stop the market correction in the long run,” KGI Securities analyst Ken Chen, told Bloomberg News.