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Spain needs more time to meet austerity targets

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 Spain needs more time to meet austerity targets
Record unemployment has sparked protests in Madrid against the government's austerity drive.
Recession-hit Spain needs two more years to meet budget targets agreed with the EU, the government said Friday, presenting a new challenge to the region's austerity drive.
Unveiling a program of structural reforms aimed at reviving the economy, the Spanish government said gross domestic product was likely to shrink by about 1.3% this year, after suffering a similar contraction in 2012, before returning to growth in 2014.
 
It also published new estimates of government borrowing, revising up sharply the budget deficit for 2013 to 6.3% of GDP from 4.5%. The deficit should fall to 5.5% next year but won't be brought under the 3% EU target until 2016, two years later than originally planned.
Spanish government debt would hit almost 100% of GDP in 2015.
The European Commission said earlier this month that Spain's high level of domestic and external debt continued to pose "serious risks for growth and financial stability", and the government's response would be assessed by EU officials at the end of May.
Related: Unemployment misery deepens in Spain, Greece
But EU budget hawks have been under pressure this week as criticism that rigid adherence to a policy of austerity is self-defeating has grown louder.
Spain's new timetable for debt reduction won immediate and unequivocal support from the International Monetary Fund, which has been warning for some months that some countries are trying to cut too fast in the face of weak or non-existent growth.
"I strongly support the Spanish government's objectives of restoring a sound fiscal position while securing a recovery and creating jobs," IMF managing director Christine Lagarde said in a statement.
"Today's announcement to pursue a more gradual consolidation path is a welcome step toward meeting these goals, building on major reforms and structural fiscal improvements last year."
EU officials have signaled this week that they may be prepared to give some countries more time to bring down borrowing, given the dire economic backdrop, but insist that the eurozone must not stray from its goal of sound finances.
 
The government of Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy is still grappling with the fallout of a real estate and banking crisis that tipped Spain back into recession in 2011. An austerity drive since then has accelerated the decline.
It was forced to bail out several banks, with EU assistance, but has so far managed to avoid following Greece, Irel
and, Portugal and Cyprus in requesting a full-blown sovereign rescue.
Spain has been helped by a sharp decline in borrowing costs after the European Central Bank's announcement last year that it would backstop weaker eurozone states, as well as the banking sector assistance.
GDP figures due next Tuesday are expected to confirm that the Spanish economy shrank by 0.5% in the first quarter. That would be the seventh straight quarter of contraction in the eurozone's fourth-biggest economy and underscore the difficulty heavily indebted European states face in bringing down debt while their economies are going backwards.
Unemployment has hit a eurozone record of 27.2%, and more than half of all young Spanish workers under 24 are without a job. The government said it expected the jobless crisis to begin to ease in 2014

Nazi victims cash used to fund Euro 2012

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Ukraine has been accused of swiping money destined for the poorest members of its community including money pledged to victims of the Third Reich – and using it to build stadiums and other facilities for the Euro 2012.

Automakers are getting crushed in Europe

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Germany's Daimler AG, which manufactures the Mercedez-Benz brand, is suffering amid weak demand in Europe.
Europe's deteriorating economy is wreaking havoc on global automakers, as car sales across the continent have sunk to their lowest level since the mid-1990s.
New car registrations have fallen by double-digit percentages in most European markets this year.
 
In March, demand for new passenger cars declined for the 18th consecutive month, according to the European Automobile Manufacturers' Association.
And automakers, which are slowing production in Europe, continue to warn that their overall financial results are suffering because of weak sales in the region.
These warnings are a stark reminder of the depths of the economic pain in Europe, which is hobbled by high unemployment, sovereign debt problems and the impact of widespread austerity.
The latest manifestation of the pain came Wednesday. Daimler AG (DDAIF) reported a 60% plunge in net profit for the first quarter of the year compared to the same period in 2012. The automaker also lowered its forecast for 2013 earnings to below 2012 levels.
Related: 10 big car brands that bit the dust
The German company, well known for its Mercedes-Benz brand, said it's struggling with a weak Western European market, where demand is expected to stay at a 20-year low.
"In the first three months of this year, many markets developed worse than expected for economic reasons, especially Western Europe," said chairman Dieter Zetsche in a statement.
 
Ford Motor (F, Fortune 500) is also suffering in Europe, even as it posted improved quarterly earnings Wednesday. Its North American sales jumped by $3.7 billion, or almost 20%, but the company lost $462 million in Europe, more than triple what it lost in the first quarter of 2012.
Ford has announced plans to close two U.K. plants and a third plant in Belgium to try to stem European losses. But those plant closings won't take effect until later this year or in 2014.
Meanwhile, Volkswagen (VLKAF) is also struggling in Europe, a point it emphasized on Wednesday.
"Business in the first quarter was dominated by the difficult economic environment," the company said in a statement. "The markets were sluggish, especially in Europe, and not least in Germany." Despite setbacks, the company said it still hopes to match 2012 operating profits this year.
Related: 11 cars in need of a makeover
Overall, new car registrations across Europe fell by 10% in the first three months of the year compared to the same period a year earlier, according to the European automakers association. Germany and Italy posted declines of 13%, while France dropped 14.5%.
The U.K. is the only major market that's showing any resilience, with sales steadily growing by nearly 7.5% since last year.

Russia NGO law: Election watchdog Golos fined

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Election watchdog Golos has become the first non-governmental organisation (NGO) to be fined in Russia under a controversial new law.
 
A Moscow court ruled Golos had failed to declare itself as a "foreign agent" after receiving funds from abroad after the law took effect in November.
 
It was fined the sum of 300,000 roubles (£6,200; $9,500; 6,300 euros).
 
The NGO said it had returned the money - a prize for its human rights work - as soon as it entered its account.
 
It also denied being involved in political activity.
 
Golos, which received assistance in the past from the US government development agency USAID, insists it no longer accepts foreign funding.Now in its 13th year, the NGO did much to expose fraud at the 2011 parliamentary election, when it charted abuses across Russia, notably through its online "map of violations".
 
'Rushing to conclusions'
The accusation concerned a sum of 7,728.4 euros awarded by the Norwegian Helsinki Committee as part of its Andrei Sakharov Freedom prize.
 
Golos says the money entered one of its accounts in December before it had time to decline it, and the sum was later returned unused.
 
It accused the Russian justice ministry of "rushing to conclusions".
 
"The Golos association receives no foreign funding and is funded solely by Russian resources," it said in a recent statement.
 
Under the new law, NGOs involved in political activity which are funded from abroad must register as "foreign agents".
 
Presenting the case on Thursday, the justice ministry's representative did not specify what political activity Golos was suspected of conducting, the Russian news website lenta.ru reports.
 
"We are convinced of our innocence," Golos said before the verdict. "This is the first court hearing bringing to responsibility an organisation that is purportedly a foreign agent. The fate of many other NGOs will depend on the decision."
 
Tax inspectors have been scrutinising the finances of other Russian NGOs in recent months.
 
USAID was expelled from Russia in September after being accused of attempting to "influence political processes through its grants", which had totalled $3bn.

Carl Pistorius in court again, trial continues

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VANDERBIJLPARK, South Africa (AP) -- Oscar Pistorius' older brother Carl sat in the dock looking at his cellphone and a tablet device and at one point smiled and shook his head as a policeman testified in his culpable homicide trial on Thursday.

Carl Pistorius, 28, denies causing the death of Maria Barnard in a road accident in March 2008. He pleaded not guilty last month to culpable homicide and also not guilty to two other charges relating to driving recklessly and without consideration when his Ford Ranger SUV collided with Barnard's motorcycle five years ago, throwing Barnard off the bike.

The 36-year-old Barnard died in the hospital six days after the accident in Vanderbijlpark, a city south of Johannesburg.

Prosecutors say Pistorius was driving recklessly and caused the accident, which he denies. In court last month, when the trial began, defense lawyer Kenneth Oldwadge suggested that Barnard was the one driving too fast and also may have consumed alcohol on the day of the collision.

Around 10 reporters and a handful of television crews and photographers were at Vanderbijlpark Magistrate's Court for the continuation of Carl's trial on Thursday. Henke Pistorius, the father of Oscar and Carl, attended and sat directly behind Carl in the courtroom. Pistorius' sister Aimee was also present.

Carl's trial has raised media interest in South Africa because his brother, Oscar, the multiple Paralympic champion and world's most famous disabled sportsman, is now facing a high-profile murder trial for shooting his girlfriend dead. Oscar Pistorius, 26, the double-amputee Olympic athlete, will return to court in Pretoria on June 4 after being charged with murder in the Valentine's Day shooting death of his girlfriend, Reeva Steenkamp. Oscar Pistorius was freed on bail in February and denies murdering Steenkamp in his home, saying he mistook her for an intruder.

On Thursday, constable Robert Raphadu, the policeman, testified in Carl's trial that he was ''close, very close'' to the injured Barnard when he attended the accident scene and could not smell alcohol on the victim. In his cross-examination, Oldwadge said the defense did not agree with a sketch of the accident scene made by Raphadu and questioned the policeman's recollection of the scene after the accident.

In a blue suit and open-necked white shirt, Carl Pistorius sat looking at his phone and tablet for much of the morning's proceedings, but did confer with his legal team at one point during Raphadu's testimony. Magistrate Buks du Plessis adjourned proceedings so that the court could decide if it was necessary to take Raphadu back to the scene of the accident.

Spain unemployment hits record high

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Spain's unemployment rate soared to a new record of 27.2% of the workforce in the first quarter of 2013, according to official figures.
 
The total number of unemployed people in Spain has now passed the six million figure, although the rate of the increase has slowed.
 
The figures underline Spain's struggle to emerge from an economic crisis which began five years ago.
 
A big demonstration in Madrid is being planned against the austerity measures.
 
Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy will unveil on Friday fiscal and policy measures aimed at halting recession in the eurozone's fourth-largest economy.
 
The International Monetary Fund last week cut its 2013 forecast for Spain's growth to a 1.6% contraction from 1.5% and said unemployment will peak at 27% this year.
 
The jobless figure is the highest since at least 1976, the year after dictator Francisco Franco's death began Spain's transition to democracy.
 

Iain Banks 'astounded' by support over terminal cancer.

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Scottish author Iain Banks has said the messages of support he has received from fans since announcing he has terminal cancer have been "astounding".

 
On 3 April, the writer announced he was suffering from gall bladder cancer, saying it was "extremely unlikely I'll live beyond a year".
 
Writing on Banksophilia, a website set up by a friend, he said: "Good grief! - what an outpouring of love, affection and respect. I honestly had no idea.
 
"I feel treasured," he added.
 
"I am deeply flattered and touched, and I can't deny I've been made to feel very special indeed."
 
Banks' first novel The Wasp Factory was published in 1984 and was ranked as one of the best 100 books of the 20th Century in a 1997 poll conducted by book chain Waterstone's and Channel 4.
 
"It's only the fact that I've been able to pre-announce my own demise that has allowed me to realise my portion of that love in full while I'm still around to appreciate it," he wrote.
 
"Which has got me thinking; I need to tell other writers how much their work has meant to me while they are (and I am) still alive."
 
"I think I'll start with the amazing Mr Alasdair Gray."
 
Medical trials
The 59-year-old wrote that he had recently returned to the UK following a short honeymoon in Venice and Paris with his wife Adele.
 
His proposal, he revealed with trademark black humour, ended with the words: "Will you do me the honour of becoming my widow?"
 
Banks cancelled public engagements following his diagnosis and asked his publishers to bring forward the release of his new book The Quarry.
 
The writer also writes sci-fi titles under the name Iain M Banks. His latest book The Hydrogen Sonata was released last year.
 
In his latest post, he praised his fans as "bright, clever, highly informed and sometimes worryingly more intelligent than me".
 
He added that he was, "of course, deeply happy that I have attracted the attentions of a few of our - how can I put this politely? - more rationality-challenged friends".
 
The author had said there was little chance of surgeons being able to remove the tumours in his liver because of how far they had spread, but had since been offered health advice and links to medical trials that "will be looked at seriously".
 
He signed off the message by saying he would continue to write updates "for as long as I'm able".

Anglican school where 75% of the pupils are Muslim drops Christian hymns from assemblies

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Hymns have been dropped from assemblies at a Church of England school which has also introduced separate prayer rooms for girls and boys to cater to its mostly Muslim students.
 
Daily assemblies at Slough and Eton Church of England Business and Enterprise College, where 75 per cent of pupils are Muslim, are not based specifically on the Bible, but may make reference to it alongside other religious texts.
 
All of the the meat served at the secondary school, which has over 1,000 pupils aged between 11 and 19, is halal.
 
Headmaster Paul McAteer said the approach was to be 'sensitive to the fact that we do have many different faiths in the school', but added that Christian values were 'more prevalent here than I have experienced in non-Church of England schools'.
 
Mr McAteer, who pointed out that the Church of England describes itself as 'a faith for all faiths', told the Sunday Times: 'The values we support are very much Christian values of honesty, integrity, justice.'
 
According to the school's prospectus its assemblies - which Mr McAteer said contain a 'moral message' - reflect humanitarian and spiritual issues 'that concern everyone'.
 
The headmaster explained that the gender-separated prayer rooms at Slough and Eton, which is a voluntary controlled Church of England school,  were not specifically for Muslim pupils, but said that it tended to be Muslim children that use them.
 
A voluntary controlled school refers to one which is state funded but the running of which a foundation - in this case the Church of England - has some influence over.
 
He said 20 male students would typically attend a lunchtime Islamic prayer session at the Berkshire school. 
 
One of the school aims outlined on its mission statement is 'to promote tolerance and respect for all cultures represented in the school'.
 
The college was judged 'outstanding' by Ofsted in May 2011 and it was awarded the same rating after a Church of England inspection the following month.
 
Collective worship at the school is broadly Christian, and assemblies are based on Christian principles but are 'designed to value and not exclude any other faith', the prospectus states.
 
According to the Church of England, a substantial number of primary and secondary church schools - both voluntary controlled and voluntary aided - have over 80 per cent intake from the Muslim community.
 

Kosovo and Serbia reach historic understanding

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The agreement between Kosovo and Serbia in Brussels today is historic, says Foreign Minister Espen Barth Eide.

Italian Parliament failed to elect the new President

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Italy's parliament failed to elect a new state president in the first two votes on Thursday, with a centre-left rebellion against leader Pier Luigi Bersani torpedoing his official candidate and prolonging political stalemate.

G8 holds talks in London over to discuss Korean and Syrian Crisis

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The Korean and Syrian crises will be high on the agenda when foreign ministers from the G8 group of nations hold talks in London on Thursday.

Filip Vujanovic wins Montenegro Presidential Elections

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Incumbent Filip Vujanovic has won the presidential election in the tiny Balkan nation of Montenegro.

Margaret Thatcher died at 87

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Former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher, the "Iron Lady" who shaped a generation of British politics, died following a stroke on Monday at the age of 87, AFP reports citing her spokesman.