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Posts Tagged ‘construction’

Obama Called “Racist” By Israeli Rabbi

A settler rabbi in Jerusalem has labelled Obama a ‘racist’ at a rally to protest the United States’ call for a total freeze on Israeli settlement construction in the West Bank, Haaretz reports.

The groups behind the rally also aim to organize…

US presses Israel on settlements

Middle East envoy George Mitchell reportedly discussing deal to allow completion of homes currently under construction

Barack Obama has dispatched a clutch of senior American officials to Jerusalem to press his demand for an end to Jewish settlement construction and move along a diplomatic process aimed at imposing a blueprint for peace if negotiations fail.

Obama’s Middle East envoy, George Mitchell, is reportedly discussing a deal with the Israeli leadership that would allow the completion of several thousand homes for Jewish settlers already under construction but impose a total halt to building once they are complete. Such an agreement would amount to a concession by Obama, who laid down an immediate and complete freeze on construction as a marker of a more interventionist policy at a testy meeting with the Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, in Washington in May.

But American sources close to the negotiations say that getting Netanyahu to agree that no new construction can begin is an important step toward forcing a new diplomatic process that is no longer hostage to Israeli intransigence.

The diplomatic moves came as the Israeli military announced that the number of Jewish settlers on the West Bank has risen above 300,000 for the first time with about 200,000 more in East Jerusalem. About 2.5 million Palestinians live in the same territory.

The US defence secretary, Robert Gates, is also in Israel as part of the drive to secure a comprehensive Middle East peace agreement.

The aim is to win a regional consensus on Iran’s nuclear programme but also reassure the Israelis that Washington has not gone soft on the issue in an effort to dampen Israeli threats of military action. Gates said he did not believe that Barack Obama’s timetable would “increase the risks to anybody” — a reference to Israeli concerns that its nuclear monopoly may soon be challenged by the Islamic republic.

Israel has hinted at a pre-emptive attack on Iran should it deem diplomacy to be at a dead end. Prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said today that he reaffirmed to Gates “the need to use all means to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear military capability”.

While the Obama administration continues to say that negotiation is the way forward, Gates today said that the promise of talks with Iran “is not an open-ended offer”.

Two other US officials are also visiting Jerusalem as part of the diplomatic push – Obama’s national security adviser, James Jones, who in an Israeli diplomatic memo was reported to have told European officials that the administration will take a hard line with the Israelis, and Dennis Ross, Bill Clinton’s special envoy to the peace process who was brought back to focus on Iran.

The immediate effort is around a settlement freeze.

Tel Aviv newspapers report that Israeli officials say that talks are moving toward a deal in which the Americans will permit the completion of 700 buildings with nearly 2,500 new homes in them that are already well under construction, mostly in two settlements close to the green line which are likely to fall inside the Jewish state’s border under a final agreement.

But as part of the agreement, the US intends to rigorously monitor the building work to ensure that the Israelis do not push it beyond the agreed limits.

The Americans are acutely aware that in the past Israel has agreed to contain settlement expansion and then promptly broken its word. This time the US is insisting on detailed plans of what would amount to a final bout of construction before a total halt to building comes in to force.

Mitchell is also pressuring Arab countries for gestures in response to an Israeli settlement freeze such as trade delegations or overflight rights.

Mitchell said at a press conference that the disagreement over settlement construction is a “discussion among friends” but it is also a test of Obama’s authority.

One former official who monitors the negotiations closely said that the US is prepared to give ground because it sees a settlement freeze as an important step toward reviving Israeli-Palestinian talks.

There is no great expectation in Washington that talks will go anywhere but that they should have been tried and failed once again will help smooth the diplomatic path for the administration’s plan to force its own proposals on to the table later this year which could force Israel to make significant territorial concessions.

The Palestinians have been insistent that there can be no talks without a settlement freeze.

That still leaves the question of Jerusalem as a major obstacle.

Netanyahu very forthrightly spurned US demands to block a new settlement project in the occupied east of the city where an American millionaire plans to bulldoze an old hotel and build Jewish-only housing.

The prime minister said that Israel will not be dictated to on where its citizens can live in what it says is its eternal and indivisible capital. Netanyahu later said that all of Jerusalem will remain under Israeli jurisdiction even after a peace settlement.

Some American officials think Netanyahu may be overplaying his hand because if he puts himself in a position where he is unable to give ground on Jerusalem, that will require others to lay down Israel’s final borders.

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London marks 3-year countdown to 2012 Olympics

LONDON (AP) — The construction of venues is forging ahead, hundreds of millions in sponsorship money has been secured, and the project remains on time and on budget despite the recession.
With three years to go Monday until the opening ceremony, London organizers say they are firmly on track in preparations for the 2012 Olympics.
“If you [...]

New accident at Delhi metro site

Cranes which crashed at a Delhi metro rail construction site on July 13, 2009

A labourer was killed when a girder fell on him at the Delhi metro rail construction site, the city’s rail corporation has said.

This is the third accident in the last 10 days at metro construction sites in the national capital.

The incident took place in the Punjabi Bagh area in west Delhi, a Delhi Metro Rail Corporation spokesman said.

At least six people died when a pillar supporting a partly-built bridge collapsed on 12 July in south Delhi.

A day later three cranes crashed while trying to clear the site.

Delhi’s seven year old metro system is the city’s pride and joy, offering commuters a clean air-conditioned and swift alternative to overcrowded buses and three wheelers.

‘Buckled’

"The labourer was guarding the beam when it hit his shoulder," the Press Trust of India news agency quoted Delhi metro’s Chief Public Relations Officer Anuj Dayal as saying.

The injured man was rushed to a nearby hospital where he succumbed to his injuries, he said.

Mr Dayal said that there was no structural collapse in the incident.

The truck-mounted cranes had lifted the girder off the ground when they buckled under the weight, the agency quoted him as saying.

The frequent accidents at metro sites have given rise to fears that safety standards are being compromised in the rush to build new lines, correspondents say.

There is pressure to upgrade Delhi’s metro before next year’s Commonwealth Games.

On 12 May, a pillar supporting a partly-built bridge collapsed killing six in the city’s Zamrudpur area.

The men who died were labourers working on the bridge.

In October, two people were crushed to death and 12 injured when another bridge under construction collapsed on to a bus and cars below. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

East Jerusalem Settlements: Mike Huckabee Joins The Fray, Will Broadcast From Disputed Site

The dispute over a highly controversial East Jerusalem Israeli settlement project on Arab land came to a head Tuesday when direct, public statements from France and Russia joined statements made by the United States demanding that all construc…

Construction law to be debated by MPs

The Serbian parliament continues work today with a debate on four laws from the fields of urbanism, residence and environmental protection. MPs will discuss a draft law for spatial organization and construction, surveying registries, and the fund for environmental protection.

Matthew Duss: Olmert’s Settlement Blues

Despite it’s promises not to take actions that would prejudice a final outcome, for years, Israel has gotten away with building and expanding settlements on occupied Palestinian land.

South African construction workers to end strike

South African construction workers have agreed to end a week-long strike that has disrupted work on stadiums for the 2010 World Cup, the main union involved in the dispute said on Wednesday.  The National Union of Mineworkers, which includes building workers, said details of a wage agreementSouth African construction workers have agreed to end a week-long strike that has disrupted work on stadiums for the 2010 World Cup, the main union involved in the dispute said on Wednesday. The National Union of Mineworkers, which includes building workers, said details of a wage agreement

Quinn Signs $31 Billion Capital Bill

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (AP) — Gov. Pat Quinn on Monday approved the state’s first construction spending plan in over a decade – a $31 billion infusion expected to create thousands of jobs and help rebuild the state’s crumbling infrastructure that wi…

New accident at Delhi Metro site

Cranes which crashed at a Delhi metro rail construction site on July 13, 2009

Three cranes have crashed trying to lift a collapsed steel girder at the Delhi metro rail construction site, a day after a deadly accident there.

The truck-mounted cranes had lifted the girder off the ground when they buckled under the weight.

Nobody was injured but television footage showed people at the site running away to avoid the debris.

There are fears that safety standards are being compromised in the rush to build new lines, correspondents say.

There is pressure to upgrade Delhi’s metro before next year’s Commonwealth Games

On Sunday, a pillar supporting a partly-built bridge collapsed killing six.

The men who died were reported to be labourers working on the bridge, part of the city’s new prestigious metro system.

‘Buckled’

"There have been no injuries to anybody. Some TV channels have been flashing four injuries or six injuries. But I am confirming there have been no injuries," Delhi Metro Rail Corporation (DMRC) spokesman Aunj Dayal said.

Four cranes were trying to lift the 300-ton girder when one of them malfunctioned, news agency Associated Press quoted senior police officer Ajay Kashyap as saying.

The other three cranes could not handle the weight and buckled, he said.

Sunday’s accident in south Delhi’s Jamrudpur area is the second involving metro construction projects in less than a year.

In October, two people were crushed to death and 12 injured when another bridge under construction collapsed on to a bus and cars below.

The BBC’s Sanjoy Majumder in Delhi says that Delhi’sthe seven year old metro system is the city’s pride and joy, offering commuters a clean air-conditioned and swift alternative to overcrowded buses and three wheelers.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Metro bridge collapses in Delhi

Workers on a section of a metro bridge in Delhi

At least five people have died and 15 have been injured after a partially constructed bridge collapsed in Delhi, Indian officials say.

A pillar supporting part of the structure collapsed, a spokesman for the Delhi Rail Corporation said.

The men who died were reported to be labourers working on the bridge, part of the city’s new metro system.

The accident happened in the early hours of Sunday morning. Rescue crews are checking others are not trapped.

It is the second accident involving metro construction projects in less than a year.

In October, two people were crushed to death and 12 injured when another bridge under construction collapsed on to a bus and cars below.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.