Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Greece's ruling conservatives extend lead in opinion polls

Tue May 28, 2013 5:47am EDT

A woman walks in front of the headquarters of co-ruling New Democracy party in Athens January 14, 2013. REUTERS/Yorgos Karahalis
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ATHENS (Reuters) - Greece's ruling conservatives have widened their lead over anti-austerity opponents, three polls showed, in a sign that improving business sentiment has bolstered support for the crisis-ridden country's government.
A survey by GPO pollsters for Mega TV released on Tuesday put support for the New Democracy party at 21.3 percent, 1.8 percent ahead of the leftist Syriza party, which opposes Greece's international bailout.
Two polls published on Sunday by agencies RASS and ALCO showed Prime Minister Antonis Samaras' conservatives leading by as much as 2.8 points, up from about 1 point last month.
This is New Democracy's widest poll lead since an election victory last year that made it the backbone of a three-party coalition dedicated to renewing Greece's EU/IMF bailout and saving it from bankruptcy and a chaotic exit from the euro zone.
Bond and share prices have rebounded since then, with the stock market hitting a two-year high two weeks ago and Samaras saying Greece is on course to meeting its EU/IMF targets.
However, the Greek economy remains stuck with a record unemployment rate of 27 percent and a harsh recession.
Despite the improved ratings, a rift has emerged within the coalition over a draft anti-racism bill aimed at stopping violence against immigrants that activists blame on sympathizers of the far-right Golden Dawn party.
The bill, sponsored by the coalition's two junior partners, the Socialist PASOK and Democratic Left parties, proposes penalties ranging from fines to withdrawal of voting rights for those inciting racial hatred or carrying out attacks.
The bill targets Golden Dawn, which tapped into popular anger over austerity-driven cuts to emerge from obscurity and enter parliament in last year's election. PASOK backs the bill whereas New Democracy opposes it, saying existing laws suffice.
After inconclusive talks on the bill on Monday, PASOK chief Evangelos Venizelos said he would not back down.
"We have a political formation which is blatantly Nazi," he said. "It's our international duty... to have full-fledged legislation against pro-Nazi and violent, racist behavior."
Golden Dawn, which denies any involvement in anti-immigrant attacks, ranked third with 10 percent in the GPO poll.
(Reporting by Renee Maltezou; Editing by Harry Papachristou and Mark Heinrich)

Monday, May 27, 2013

ΒΡΕΤΑΝΙΚΗ ΕΡΕΥΝΑ

Τα δέκα πιο κερδοφόρα επαγγέλματα του μέλλοντος

Τα δέκα πιο κερδοφόρα επαγγέλματα του μέλλοντος
Τέρμα στις κλασσικές συνταγές που θέλουν τους γονείς να ωθούν τα παιδιά τους προς την ιατρική και τη δικηγορία δίνει μελέτη που αποτυπώνει τα επαγγέλματα με τη μεγαλύερη αναγνώριση και υψηλές αποδοχές, στο μέλλον.
Το υπουργείο Επιχειρήσεων, Καινοτομίας και Δεξιοτήτων της Βρετανίας παρουσίασε έρευνα με τα πιο επικερδή επαγγέλματα σε 20 χρόνια, των οποίων το αντικείμενο δεν υπάρχει ακόμα αλλά βασίζονται σε πιθανά σενάρια για τις ανάγκες και τη ζήτηση του μέλλοντος.
Σύμφωνα με τη μελέτη αυτή, τα επαγγέλματα θα είναι τα εξής:
1. Σύμβουλος υγείας για ηλικιωμένους: με δεδομένο ότι ο γηραιότερος πληθυσμός αυξάνεται, τότε ένα επάγγελμα που θα εξειδικεύεται στην περίθαλψη της τρίτης ηλικίας θα είναι απαραίτητος.
2. Χειρουργός επαύξησης μνήμης: θα συμβάλει στη βελτίωση της μνήμης, ιδίως του ηλικιωμένου πληθυσμού.
3. Απτικός προγραμματιστής: θα ασχολείται με την τεχνολογία σε συνδυασμό με την επιστήμη της αφής.
4. Ψηφιακός Αρχιτέκτονας: θα σχεδιάζει εικονικές κατασκευές για να τις χρησιμοποιούν όσοι ασχολούνται με το μάρκετινγκ και τη διαφήμιση.
5. Χειριστής Χαμένων Δεδομένων: θα διαγράφει τα άχρηστα δεδομένα υπεύθυνα.
6. Ελεγκτής Κλίματος: θα τροποποιεί τις καιρικές συνθήκες που διαρκούν για μεγαλύτερο χρονικό διάστημα απ' ό,τι πρέπει.
7. Μάνατζερ για Άβαταρ: θα σχεδιάζει και θα διαχειρίζεται τους εικονικούς χαρακτήρες των μελλοντικών pc games.
8. Κατασκευαστής μελών σώματος: στο ίδιο πλαίσιο με την τελειοποίηση της προσθετικής χειρουργικής, θα δημιουργούνται μέλη για αθλητές και στρατιώτες.
9. Χρηματιστής χρόνου: αντί για χρήματα, θα διαχειρίζεται το χρόνο του πελάτη του.
10. Περιοριστής παντοδυναμίας: θα επαναφέρει τους πελάτες του στην πραγματικότητα, μετριάζοντας τις πεποιθήσεις που τους θέλουν πανίσχυρους.
Former factory boss, Guo Bin (far right), recently closed his garment workshop and moved to Turin to open a bar. As the economic crisis continues to unfold, Italy's fashion industry is suffering and Chinese workshops are also getting less work.
Suzanne Ma, November 2011, Rimini, Italy

IMMIGRATION

Chinese migrants step out of factory shadows in Italy

Chinese immigrants have flocked to Italy to find work in the garment industry over the past decade. New arrivals are getting jobs in other fields and becoming more visible in Italian society.
The two men saunter up to the counter towards the young, female barista. Her dark hair is piled into a pony tail, and her stylish fringe trimmed neatly above her brow, frames her face.
"Ni hao!" they say. "Ciao, ciao," she replies with a smile.
Ye Pei is 17 years old and comes from China. She has been living in Italy for just a few months. While her vocabulary is limited, she has picked up just enough Italian to serve cappuccino and mix drinks at the bar here in Falconara, a seaside resort town on Italy's eastern coast.
"Right now, the most important thing is for me to learn the language," Ye explains. "That's my priority. If I learn to speak Italian well, I can be independent. It's difficult to learn Italian if you spend your entire day sewing."
Mass migration
Like most of the Chinese in Italy, Ye comes from Zhejiang Province, in eastern China. Her home, Qingtian County, is land-locked and mountainous, with little industry or opportunity.
Chinese factory workers sew swim suits near the Italian coastal city of RiminiChinese factory workers sew swimsuits near the Italian coastal city of Rimini
The Chinese started migrating to Italy 30 years ago. Most found work in garment factories subcontracted by Italian clothing companies. The work was simple - sewing buttons onto sweaters, attaching zippers to jeans - and soon, they started opening their own small workshops.
In the last decade, the number of Chinese immigrants in Italy has more than tripled, to over 200,000. The Chinese now make up about 20 percent of the total immigrant population.
Many of those who arrived in Italy brought over family members, relatives and friends from China to work for them, and quickly gained a reputation for being flexible, fast and cheap.
Made in Italy, by Chinese hands
In China, garment factory bosses, called laoban, usually provide workers with room and board, but most don't offer a monthly salary. Instead, workers are paid by the piece.
Close-up photo of a 'Made in Italy' label on clothing in Prato, Italy (Photo: Shitao Li)Manufacturers may have Chinese workers, but they can advertise with 'Made in Italy'
Jimmy Xu, who runs a workshop north of Falconara, explains why he thinks many workers prefer it this way. “The Chinese don't like fixed salaries. They think, 'even if I work fast, I still get paid the same.' So workers, especially the fast ones, like to be paid by the piece. This way they can earn more,” Xu said.
Ye's mother, Xue Fen, first came to Italy about six years ago. She got a job in a Chinese-run factory, working more than 15 hours every day and earning around 750 euros ($970) a month. It would take eight months of work in China to earn the same salary.
Fen agrees that laobans exploit workers, but she says the arrangement is also convenient for immigrants, especially those who have just arrived in Europe.
"If I work for an Italian boss, I have to pay rent, and I have to get my own groceries. That's a hassle," she said. "If I work for a Chinese boss, at least my housing and food is taken care of. This is how we do it in China."
Italian sweatshops
Italian police say they have uncovered Chinese workshops that operate like sweatshops. Some businesses employ undocumented workers and have them work at all hours of the day.
This way of life allowed the Chinese to stay invisible for a long time, explains one police officer who does not want to be named.
Living quarters for factory workers the Tuscan city of Prato (Photo: Shitao Li)Living quarters for Chinese factory workers are often cramped, like here in the industrial city of Prato
"The Chinese are very clever and very well organized," she told DW. "They deliberately choose to stay silent, so the newspapers don't write about them and police ignore them."
As many Chinese immigrants have achieved economic success in the last decade, resentment has grown, says the police officer, and has only been exasperated as Italy continues to struggle with high unemployment and debt.
Many Italians complain the Chinese are breaking employment rules - exploiting workers, undercutting the market and putting Italian factories out of business.
Valter Zanin, a professor of sociology at the University of Padua, has researched Chinese garment factories in Italy. He says that the industry relies on the cheap labor to stay competitive and that some employees are forced to work more than 18 hours a day.
Staying flexible
Ye PeiYe Pei plans to learn Italian and start her own business
But as the economic crisis in Europe continues to unfold, Italy's fashion industry is in decline, and the Chinese workshops are also getting less work.

Seeking alternatives, many Chinese immigrants like Ye are getting into the hospitality business. In this new line of work, the Chinese are no longer invisible.
Daily interaction with Italians is helping immigrants like Ye to integrate better and learn more about the Italian way of life.
"I will work hard to learn Italian and to acquire the skills necessary for running a bar," Ye said. "One day, once I've saved enough money, I plan on opening my own bar so my mother and father can have an early retirement."     dw de
Master craftsmen are lacking in Germany

DEMOGRAPHICS

Study: New immigrants are better qualified than Germans

Many Germans have a wrong image of immigrants. Long gone are the days when unskilled laborers came to Germany. Today, the country attracts top talent and it’s a win-win situation, says a Bertelsmann Foundation study.
It's a two-hour drive from Shuo Chen's birth place to Shanghai. In order to enable him to get a good education, his family decided to have him live with relatives and go to school in the mega-metropolis. Shuo Chen was six years old at the time.
At the age of 19, Shuo took an even bigger leap: He left the high-rise buildings and moved to the German countryside. In Worms, in the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate, he studied economics. Today, 35-year old Shuo Chen has a leadership position in a German mechanical engineering company. Success stories like his are actually quite common in Germany, experts say.
Many Asian immigrants come to Germany to study technology or engineeringMany Asian immigrants come to Germany to study technology or engineering
Members of the Chinese elite, in particular, come to Germany to study computer science, business, or engineering, Tobias Busch told Deutsche Welle. Busch recruits skilled Chinese workers and top managers for the head hunters company PersonalGlobal.
"It's a positive selection of people. They all have a lot of power, energy and motivation." While the wealthier children of the political class study at expensive top universities in England, or in the US, the less wealthy talents study in Germany, where studying is much cheaper. Between 20,000 and 30,000 academics from China – under graduates and graduates – are currently in Germany. "China plays a much bigger role in terms of immigration than most people think."
New immigrants with twice the qualification of Germans
In Germany, many people still assume immigrants have lower qualifications, says labor market researcher Herbert Brücker. But the opposite is true. He compiled a new study commissioned by the Bertelsmann Foundation. It found that, today, 43 percent of new immigrants between the ages of 15 and 65 have either a master craftsman certificate, or a university or technical college degree – more than twice as many as in 2000. Among Germans with no migrant background, only 26 percent have one of those degrees. At the same time, the number of lower qualified people has almost halved, down to 25 percent from 40 percent previously.
Germany is competing with the US and Canada, says labor market expert Herbert Brücker Germany is "competing with the US and Canada", says labor market expert Herbert Brücker
Apart from young Chinese, like Shuo Chen, the new immigrants come to Germany above all from the younger EU member states in Central and Eastern Europe. "Immigration is, of course, connected to the euro crisis," Brücker told DW.
Former dream destinations, such as Spain, Italy, Britain, and Ireland have become unattractive because of high unemployment there. Germany's Federal Statistics Office said last year, 369,000 more people came to Germany than left the country – the highest number since 1995.
Overcome administrative hurdles
But the number of immigrants could go down again with the end of the economic crisis, says the chairman of the Bertelsmann's Foundation, Jörg Dräger. But Germany needs highly qualified immigrants, he insists. "We have a shortage of skilled labor, we're an aging population and our social security system will become unstable, if fewer young people pay into it for a growing number of old people," he warned.
That's why the foundation promotes a change in migration politics. Bertelsmann would like to see the introduction of a so-called 'Black, Red and Gold' card - the German national colors - which could be given out to highly skilled workers and to specialized workers in areas where there's a shortage of staff.
The card would have to take into account both the immigrant's qualification profile and the existing demand on the German labor market. The card would guarantee its owner unlimited right of residence and work. That's how Bertelsmann wants to convince the best talents to come to Germany.
Can a 'Black-Red-and Gold'-card attract top leaders like this Chinese scientist? Can a 'Black-Red-and Gold' card attract top leaders like this Chinese scientist?
"We are in competition with the US, Canada and Australia," says labor market expert Brücker. Those countries also controlled immigration with the help of a point system.
"We don't just need to change the laws in those fields. A lot has been done already over the past couple of years. We also need a much clearer recruitment strategy," he said.
Degrees obtained in the course of a person's educational career must be recognized, for example. Germany did introduce a new recognition law in 2012. But it failed because of administrative hurdles.
"The main problem is that educational systems are completely different from country to country in Europe." Germany and Austria have a dual educational system in place for example, which is missing in most other countries. It means in those countries, people aren't trained on the job but receive their qualification at school.
The home countries benefit
And how do the home countries cope with their academics' and skilled workers' absence? Years ago, experts warned of the risk of a brain drain – the rapid loss of highly skilled personnel, which would have a damaging effect on the economy. But labor market expert Brücker says migration to Germany has benefits for the home countries, too. "Unemployment sinks when there is emigration. That benefits the state and the economy because per-capita demands are reduced." Staff recruiter Busch says countries, like China, benefit directly from contacts that people like Chen can make.    dw de.

Sunday, May 26, 2013


Huge anti-gay marriage protest march in Paris


Protester: "We are here to defend marriage"

Related Stories

Tens of thousands of protesters against France's new same-sex marriage are marching in the capital Paris, amid a heavy police presence.
They are rallying against the law recently signed by President Francois Hollande, following heated debates.
Officials have warned that violent hardliners could infiltrate the rally, but it has so far been peaceful.
Fifty protesters were arrested on Saturday evening for blocking the capital's Champs-Elysees avenue.
France is now the ninth country in Europe, and 14th globally, to legalise gay marriage.
But French people have been bitterly divided over the issue. On Tuesday, a far-right historian shot himself dead in Notre Dame Cathedral, leaving messages in which he denounced gay marriage.

Start Quote

I am an ass. I voted Hollande”
Anti-gay protester in Paris
'Ultras'
French police says that 150,000 protesters are taking part in the march in central Paris, but the organisers say the number is closer to one million.
One demonstrator dressed in black, holding a scythe and wearing a mask of Mr Hollande, stood behind a coffin in which lay a mannequin dressed as Marianne - the emblem of France.
Some marchers drove donkeys, one of which bore a placard which read, "I am an ass. I voted Hollande".
The demonstrators headed in columns from a number of points around the city to the Invalides complex.

Leading activist Virginie Tellene, aka Frigide Barjot, greets protesters at the Gare de Lyon railway station in Paris, 26 MayLeading activist Virginie Tellene, aka Frigide Barjot, greeted protesters
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The leader of the UMP conservative opposition party, Jean-Francois Cope, headed one of the processions.
Leading activist Virginie Tellen - better known as Frigide Barjot - earlier in the day greeted protesters arriving to Paris from across France at a Paris train station. But she did not take part in the march, citing threats from far-right groups.
Some 4,500 have been deployed to prevent any violence during the demonstration held on France's Mother's Day.
Interior Minister Manuel Valls earlier warned that hardline activists - the so-called "ultras" - could infiltrate the demonstration.
It is the first big rally since the law was signed on 18 May by Mr Hollande.
'Playing God'
One UMP member of parliament, Jacques Myard, told BBC News that the law had been passed by the governing party "by force" and his party would review it if re-elected.
Mr Myard told the BBC there was a "huge gap between this government and the citizens" over the marriage issue.
"This is something we cannot accept because of the fate of the children," he said.
"Those people are playing God, because they want to marry, but it won't stop at this stage. Then they will adopt, and then we will have children in families where there is no father or no mother."
The leader of France's far-right National Front, Marine Le Pen, was also among the marchers.
Among those expected to take part were members of a radical new movement called French Spring (French: Printemps Francais), which the interior ministry has threatened to dissolve due to its inflammatory rhetoric.
On Saturday evening, a group of protesters chained themselves to metal barriers they had placed in the middle of the Champs-Elysees.
Some released smoke bombs before police moved in and arrested them. Nobody was hurt.
Opposition to gay marriage has become conflated with all sorts of other anti-government grievances coming from the right and the atmosphere in the country is particularly volatile, the BBC's Hugh Schofield says.

GOP continues to slam new Obama war approach

WASHINGTON (AP) — Republicans keep slamming President Barack Obama's push to move the government away from a war footing and refine and recalibrate counterterrorism strategy.
Capitol Hill Republicans like Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina say Obama is projecting weakness at a time when the United States needs to show resolve against terror networks like al-Qaida.
The South Carolina Republican said Sunday that "at a time when we need resolve the most, we're sounding retreat."
Obama gave a major speech Thursday in which he said al-Qaida is "on the path to defeat" and he's signaling that he's reluctant to commit troops overseas to conflicts like Syria or other countries struggling with instability in the uncertain aftermath of the Arab Spring. He's also modifying policies on the use of unmanned drone aircraft to try to limit civilian casualties and is redoubling his longstanding — but so far unfulfilled — promise to close the prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, where many terrorism suspects are being held without formal charges.
Obama is trying to recast the image of terrorists from enemy warriors to cowardly thugs and move the United States away a state of perpetual war.
But Graham said Obama is displaying a "lack of resolve" despite a slew of concerns in the Middle East, including civil war and chemical weapons in Syria and threats to Israel from Syria's unrest and Iran's nuclear program.
"We show this lack of resolve, talking about the war being over," Graham said. "What do you think the Iranians are thinking? At the end of the day, this is the most tone-deaf president I ever could imagine."
"I see a big difference between the president saying the war's at an end and whether or not you've won the war," said Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla. "We can claim that it's at an end, but this war's going to continue. And we have still tremendous threats out there, that are building, not declining, building, and to not recognize that, I think, is dangerous in the long run and dangerous for the world."
Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., defended the president, reprising Obama's theme that maintaining a wartime posture runs the risk of compromising U.S. principles.
"If we're constantly thinking of this as a war, we stand a chance of doing things that compromise our freedoms," Durbin said.
Obama ally Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., said that "having transparency, having rules and engaging other activities other than military to help curb the war on terror — diplomacy, economic sanctions and things like that — is going to be useful as well. So I think the president did a very, very smart pivot, realizing we're not going to let up on terrorists, but at the same time we're going to meet the changes in the world."
Graham and Durbin spoke on "Fox News Sunday." Schumer and Coburn spoke on CBS' "Face the Nation."      www yahoo news

Friday, May 24, 2013

ΤΟ ΚΥΠΡΙΑΚΟ ΣΤΗ ΔΙΝΗ ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗΣ ΚΑΙ ΟΙΚΟΝΟΜΙΚΗΣ ΚΡΙΣΗΣΆλλαξε γνώμη ο Νταβούτογλου
24/05/2013

Αναβλήθηκε η επίσκεψη Νταβούτογλου στα Κατεχόμενα που είχε προγραμματιστεί γι’ αυτό το σαββατοκύριακο. 

Αυτό ανακοίνωσε ο Ντερβίς Έρογλου, ο οποίος επίσης αποκάλυψε πως το δείπνο του με τον Κύπριο Πρόεδρο Αναστασιάδη θα πραγματοποιηθεί στις 30 και όχι στις 29 Μαΐου. 

Στο δείπνο θα είναι παρών και ο ειδικός σύμβουλος του Γενικού Γραμματέα του ΟΗΕ, Αλεξάντερ Ντάουνερ, ο οποίος τον τελευταίο καιρό δέχεται τα πυρά της Λευκωσίας, λόγω της σπουδής που επιδεικνύει για επίλυση του Κυπριακού μέσα στην κρίση. 
  
Για το δείπνο με τον πρόεδρο Αναστασιάδη, ο Ντερβίς Έρογλου επεσήμανε ότι «ασφαλώς δεν θα λύσουμε το Κυπριακό εκείνη τη μέρα, ωστόσο θα συζητήσουμε για το πότε θα αρχίσουν οι διαπραγματεύσεις και θα ανταλλάξουμε απόψεις για ζητήματα που αφορούν το Κυπριακό».

Σε ό,τι αφορά την κρίση στα Κατεχόμενα που οδηγεί σε πρόωρες «εκλογές», ο Ντερβίς Έρογλου αρνήθηκε ότι βρίσκεται πίσω από τους αντάρτες «βουλευτές» του Κόμματος Εθνικής Ενότητας. 

«Έγραψαν ότι έκανε πραξικόπημα το προεδρικό. Εγώ ποτέ δεν έκανα πραξικόπημα στη ζωή μου», δήλωσε ο Ντερβίς Έρογλου, σύμφωνα με την ανταποκρίτρια του ΡΙΚ στην Κωνσταντινούπολη.

Ο Έρογλου ημείωσε επίσης ότι δεν βρίσκεται σε διαμάχη με το κόμμα Δικαιοσύνης και Ανάπτυξης του Τούρκου πρωθυπουργού, Ταγίπ Ερντογάν, υπογραμμίζοντας ότι δεν βρίσκεται σε διαμάχη ούτε και με τον «πρωθυπουργό» Ιρσέν Κιουτσιούκ και πρόσθεσε ότι δεν καταλαβαίνει γιατί ο Ιρσέν Κιουτσιούκ τον πολεμά.www.elzoni.gr