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Posts Tagged ‘freeze’

Why Is It So Cold? Should the Big Freeze Alter Our Approach to Climate Change?

Preface: If you believe in man-made global warming, please read this essay from the beginning to the end. If you are skeptical of man-made global warming, please skip ahead to the last two sections of this essay so that you see where I’m going.Europ…

U.S. suspends efforts on settlement freeze

The Obama administration said Tuesday it has ended its effort to persuade Israel to renew its moratorium on most West Bank settlement activity, VOA reports.
The moratorium was needed in order to restart peace talks with the Palestinians.

Shabbaz Sharif tipped off JUD prior to asset freeze order by govt: Zardari to Patterson

Asif Ali ZardariPakistan President Asif Ali Zardari discussed with the then US envoy to Pakistan, Anne Patterson, his increasing frustration with former premier Nawaz Sharif”s government in Punjab, whom he believed, had tipped off Jamaat ul-Dawa (JUD) about the assets freeze ordered by the federal government, according to whistle-blower website WikiLeaks. During a meeting on January 2, [...]

Obama praises Netanyahu on settlement proposal

U.S. President Barack Obama praised Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu for urging his cabinet to accept a U.S. proposal to extend a freeze on W. Bank settlements. The freeze would be extended for 90 days, RFE/RL reported.

Serbian police unions freeze strike

Representatives of police unions decided to freeze the announced strike after a several-hour meeting with Interior Minister Ivica Dačić.

President of the Independent Police Union Velimir Barbulov told B92 that the government had agreed to pay each MUP employee bonus worth RSD 10,000 for November and December.

Grayson Sends Letter to Geithner, FSOC Regulators on Foreclosure Fraud and Systemic Risk, Calls for Foreclosure Freeze

I’m passing on verbatim another excellent roundup on the foreclosure issue emailed to me by a friend on the Hill. He’s much better informed on the issue than I am.Rep. Alan Grayson is sending the following letter to Secretary Geithner and the other me…

Serbia looks to freeze recognitions

President Boris Tadić has sent 55 of his personal emissaries to as many countries, pleading that they do not recognize Kosovo.

Belgrade daily Večernje Novosti writes today that this “diplomatic campaign” is already bearing fruit.

No-bama to building freeze, say Jewish settlers

Hardline Jewish groups in Israel have criticised American attempts to kick start Middle East peace talks with the Palestinians. Protesting outside the US consulate in Jerusalem, they called on Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu not to cave into demands to extend a freeze on settlements beyond September.

Oil drilling in the Arctic: Facing a freeze

Governments are reviewing plans to open Arctic waters to oilmen

WHEN BP’s Macondo well began spewing oil into the Gulf of Mexico, the firm was in the midst of an effort to persuade Canada’s energy regulator that safety standards for offshore drilling in the Canadian Arctic were expensive, impractical and should be relaxed. Hearings on the subject were promptly suspended and the regulator declared that no new drilling permits would be issued pending a review of existing rules. “We have a duty to pause, to take stock of the incident,” says Gaetan Caron, head of the National Energy Board.

For a time it looked as though the Arctic would be the next frontier for Western oil firms, which have only limited access to the most promising prospects in sunnier climes. The retreat of the polar ice cap is making the region easier to work in, and there is thought to be lots of oil and gas to tap. But Canada is not the only country now thinking twice: America, Norway and even Russia are all contemplating tighter rules for drilling. …

Implement NRO verdict or face pay freeze


ISLAMABAD – Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry on Friday directed Chairman National Accountability Bureau (NAB), Naveed Ahsan, to ask the Federation to implement the Supreme Court’s verdict on National Reconciliation Ordinance (NRO) and ensure reopening of Swiss cases.
The Chief Justice also ordered Chairman NAB to implement the apex courtÂ’s 16th December order within 48 hours, otherwise his salary would be withheld. He expressed annoyance over Chairman NAB for not reopening of Swiss cases and held him responsible for non-implementation of court orders, which said 8,041 cases would be reopened soon from where they were being withdrawn.
During the course of proceedings of Banker City case, the CJ urgently summoned Chairman NAB on his poor performance in implementing the court order for clarification. “Why are some people being exempted from trial when all cases were reopened?” the CJ said adding, “You (Chairman NAB) even didn’t write a letter to Swiss government regarding the withdrawn cases.”
The CJ also asked why the Prosecutor General and the Additional Prosecutor NAB were still working despite the orders given by the apex court to replace them. He further said the NAB officials would not be allowed to appear before the court unless the court orders were implemented, adding that the condition would be applied in the whole country.
The Chairman NAB said that he didnÂ’t have the authority to remove the prosecutors from their offices. However, Swiss cases will be preceded soon as he was taking instructions from Secretary Law in this connection, he added.
On this point, the CJ said the apex court knew very well how to implement its decisions and ordered to freeze of salary of Chairman NAB if Swiss cases were not reopened.
The CJ, Justice Chaudhry Ijaz and Justice Ghulam Rabbani got furious when the learned counsels in the case of Banker City spoke against the NAB officials and said they were not cooperating with authorities concerned regarding Banker City Housing SocietyÂ’s fraud.
The CJ also told the Chairman NAB that a special cell of apex court under the head of Justice Ghulam Rabbani was monitoring the NABÂ’s business regarding cases being reopened on the direction of the apex court.
Besides, Justice Chaudhry Ijaz remarked that Government itself should write a letter to Swiss government for reopening of cases. The decision of the larger bench was not an ordinary decision, he added.
Chairman NAB said that he was under the impression that the Attorney General of Pakistan and the Ministry of Law would write the letter to authorities concerned in Switzerland regarding the cases, which were withdrawn on the request of the then attorney general Malik Qayyum.
The CJ said, “You (Chairman NAB) should have to work for the implementation of court’s order with Law Ministry and submit his written reply in the court till March 12.”
A three-member bench comprising Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, Justice Ch Ijaz Ahmed and Justice Ghulam Rabbani in its order on pleas filed by Syed Rahat Mehmood, Muhammad Akhtar, Muhammad Farooq Ansari against NAB, gave last opportunity to Chairman NAB to submit progress report by March 12.
NAB also submitted a report over recovery of money in BankersÂ’ City case which was not endorsed by the bench.
In the report, Tariq Mehmood Bhatti, Investigation Officer NAB, admitted that he had registered claims of about 11,000 people from whom amount was taken by Syed Rahat Mehmood, one of the accused.
Malik Bashir Awan, counsel for RDA, apprised the bench that the claim made by Syed Rahat Mehmood about Rawalpindi Development AuthorityÂ’s interest in purchasing his property, was not correct. He elaborated that in Adiala village, where RDA intended to acquire land for building a city, the accused had only a small portion of 2-kanal land.
The bench, however, accepted Syed Rahat MehmoodÂ’s request and assurance that he would come up with positive result after two-weeks. Deputy Attorney General Shah Khawar and NAB officials were present during the proceedings.
On the last hearing, the bench had observed that interim bails to Farooq Leghari, Syed Rahat Mehmoood and Muhammad Akhtar, accused in Bankers City scam, were granted on the condition that they would pay back to affectees and resolve their issues.

What are the reasons of Windows Vista Freeze? Posted By : Tauqeer Hassan

The user will definitely get relieved by installing Windows Vista in the PC. It has earned a name for easy use and performance that is far more and above Windows XP.

IMF official on salary freeze

IMF Resident Representative in Serbia Bogdan Lissovolik spoke about the government’s policy regarding the freezing of salaries in the public sector. Despite the agreement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the government has set aside another RSD 12bn for the salaries in the administration, Lissovolik warned.

Obama to freeze pay of top officials

President Barack Obama will again freeze the pay of top White House staff this year, as a gesture to Americans suffering during the worst economic crisis in generations, an official said. Obama is expected to announce the move in his crucial State of the Union address on Wednesday night, which

What Should We Make of Obama’s “Spending Freeze”

The big news today is Obama’s proposed “spending freeze”.Fiscal liberals say this cuts spending at the exact time that we most need to increase it. See this and this.Fiscal conservatives say this doesn’t go nearly far enough. See this, this and this….

Big freeze hits eastern Europe

It is eastern Europe’s turn to feel the icy blast of winter. Drifting snow and high winds have made driving in Romania treacherous. Five people have died since Friday, with temperatures plunging as low as minus 25, and even sea traffic is affected, with Romania’s Black Sea ports closed.

Europe freeze strands travellers, cuts power

The Arctic freeze that has stricken Europe left hundreds of people stuck in vehicles in deep snow or stranded at airports with scores more flights cancelled and power cuts to thousands of homes yesterday. The treacherous conditions cut off villages in northern Germany and the Baltic islands, and

Israelis protests in Jerusalem against PM’s decision

Jerusalem: The decision to partially suspend construction in West Bank settlements by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, is being protested by Israelis.
The protesters held up signs on Wednesday reading “God’s Bible gave us this land” and “We will keep building in Judea and Samaria,” and wore T-shirts declaring, “Freeze the freeze”.

Judea and Samaria are the Hebrew [...]

Prepare to freeze

Israel’s prime minister faces a difficult path as he prepares for a possible halt to new settlements

THE Israeli government’s approval this week of 455 new housing units in the West Bank settlements was announced with a wink and a nod, and seems to have elicited winks and nods all round. Binyamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, is expected soon to agree, reluctantly and under American pressure, to a temporary freeze on settlement building, and the new homes are widely seen as an act of face-saving political expediency on his part.

Expressions of protest and disapproval from foreign governments, upset Palestinian negotiators and domestic doveish critics had a predictable air to them. An American State Department spokesman deflected reporters’ irate questions on the matter with equanimity. He declined to consider whether the administration felt it was being spat on, and said that a planned trip to the region by America’s envoy, George Mitchell, would go ahead as planned at the weekend. …

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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Israelis suspicious of U.S.-sponsored peace process

Growing tensions between Israel and the United States are eroding Israeli support for peace moves with the Palestinians. Amid strong U.S. pressure for a freeze on Jewish settlement construction, there is growing skepticism among Israelis about the peace process.