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Indian special forces have raided the house of former finance minister Palaniappan Chidambaram to arrest him on charges of corruption and money laundering.See also:
Shortly after Chidambaram returned home from a press conference at Congress Party headquarters, a Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) team scaled the wall of his Jor Bagh residence in New Delhi to detain the 73-year-old politician.
The dramatic scenes televised across Indian media showed CBI officers jumping over the locked gate to let the main force inside, while another team entered the house from the back door. The senior Congress leader, accused of clearing foreign investments in exchange for bribes when he was finance minister, was then driven away in a CBI vehicle amid spirited protests outside his house.
CBI and Enforcement Directorate (which investigates financial crimes) officers have been scouting Chidambaram's house since Tuesday, the day the politician went missing after the High Court rejected his plea seeking protection from arrest. Earlier, the Enforcement Directorate issued a lookout notice against him seeking his detention and effectively preventing the politician from fleeing abroad.
At the press conference, the former finance minister denied any wrongdoing and claimed that he was "not hiding from the law" but rather "seeking protection of the law."
Chidambaram is accused of facilitating Foreign Investment Promotion Board clearance to the INX Media company in 2007 when he was the Finance Minister for Manmohan Singh's government. Investigators allege that his son Karti received kickbacks after INX Media secured funds equivalent to roughly $41 million.
China's Commerce Ministry warned the US against further escalating the trade war as it urged Washington not to proceed with new tariffs against Chinese imports, some of which are set to take effect September 1.The outlook for the global economy is looking particularly bleak:
If Washington resorts to the promised tariffs, Beijing will have to retaliate, ministry spokesman Gao Feng said on Thursday. The same was promised by the State Council Tariff Committee last week, but neither Gao nor the committee clarified what steps China will take.
"Despite the US decision to delay tariffs on some Chinese goods... if the United States rides roughshod over China's opposition and impose any new tariffs, China will be forced to adopt retaliatory actions," the spokesman told a news briefing as cited by Reuters.
Earlier this month, US President Donald Trump threatened to hit China with 10-percent levies on $300 billion worth of imports. While additional levies for certain goods were later postponed till December 15, some products worth more than $100 billion are still on the hit-list which will come into force on September 1.
Trade talks between the two sides are still in progress, but there has been no breakthrough leading to a final deal. Last month's meeting in Shanghai brought no results, and the date of next round of face-to-face talks has not been announced.
On Wednesday, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said he hopes that the US and China can "get along" and resume "mutually beneficial" trade.
"We hope the United States will meet China halfway," the spokesman said referring to a trade agreement that can end the protracted trade row.
Trump has recently linked the success of a trade agreement with China to Beijing's policies towards the Hong Kong protests, which have been ongoing for weeks. The president said that a violent crackdown on the protesters would make the deal "much harder" to sign. Beijing urged Washington to stay out of its domestic affairs.
Introduction: first, several friends recently suggested that that I should interview Professor Seyed Mohammad Marandi; then I read this most interesting text on Moon of Alabama and I decided to ask Professor Marandi to share his views of the current situation in Iran, the Persian Gulf the rest of the Middle-East who very kindly agreed to reply to my question in spite of his most hectic and busy schedule. I am most grateful to Prof. Marandi for his time and replies. Crucially, Prof. Marandi debunks the silly notion that Russia and Israel are allies or working together. He also debunks that other canard about Russia and Iran having some major differences over Syria. Prof. Marandi, who is currently in Iran, is superbly connected and informed, and I hope that with this interview some of the more outlandish rumors which were recently circulated will finally be seen for what they are: utter, total, nonsense. Enjoy the interview!
"Americans tested this missile too quickly - way too quickly after having announced [they] are leaving the agreement. Given that, we have all reasons to believe that development to make it a ground launched missile - it's a maritime based projectile - started long before [US started] to look for reasons to leave the deal."The weapon was confirmed by the Pentagon as being a modified version of a sea-based Tomahawk cruise missile, which is normally stationed on warships and submarines. It came just about two weeks after the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF) officially expired on August 1.
"We have hope for the light at the end of the tunnel when it comes to issues of cease-fire, disengagement of forces, and implementation of the Minsk agreements. Now all sides need to demonstrate readiness for dialogue and action, or people will continue to die in this conflict."To resolve the issue, "we need direct and open dialogue," Maas said.
Comment: Yes it would be harmful to their 'national security', but what they mean by 'national security' is maintaining global empire.
A Pakistani space initiative? LOL! That money goes towards keeping Pakistan 'on-side' and a festering sore in south Asia... in the form of bribes to local politicians and warlords.
See also: State Department cuts Pakistan's handouts by $440 million, but Islamic state still receives billion$ from US taxpayers