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Mexican fire fighters will travel to Canada to control “The Beast”
6/3/2016 2:58:22 AM

One hundred and eight Mexican fire fighters are preparing to travel to Alberta, Canada to assist in the fight against ‘The Beast,’ a 500,000-hectare fire in Fort McMurray, which has been burning out of control for more than a month, and is the largest ever recorded in the history of Alberta.

Fifty-nine of the Mexican fire fighters are from Jalisco and the remaining forty-nine hail from Baja California, Sonora, Durango, Michoacan, Mexico City and Oaxaca, according to Juan Ramon Cruz of the National Forestry Commission.

Fifty-nine of the Mexican fire fighters are from Jalisco and the remaining forty-nine hail from Baja California, Sonora, Durango, Michoacan, Mexico City and Oaxaca, according to Juan Ramon Cruz of the National Forestry Commission.

He explained that the Mexican fire fighters are now gathering at the National Center for Forest Fires Control (Conafor) in Zapopan, Jalisco. In the coming days, they will travel to Guadalajara, and from there to Edmonton, the capital of Alberta.

wildfire

59 of the Mexican fire fighters are from Jalisco and 49 hail from Baja California, Sonora, Durango, Michoacan, Mexico City and Oaxaca, according to Juan Ramon Cruz of the National Forestry Commission. (Photo: banderasnews.com)

An Alberta wildfire information officer said fire fighters from Alberta and Mexico have had a partnership for the past eleven years. In exchange for helping fight fires in Canada, Mexico’s bomberos are given additional training. The government of Alberta pays the bomberos’ travel and housing costs in addition to the salaries they are paid when called upon to assist.

“Our Bomberos are ready to join the fight. They have been trained under the same standards as the US Forest Service, which are the same in Canada, so they ‘speak the same language’ as their Canadian counterparts,” said Cruz. “Over the years they have taken up to 23 different study and field work courses, and have participated in annual drills,” he added.

In Fort McMurray, the Mexican brigade will fight ‘The Beast’ for 14 days, take a three-day break, then work another 14 before returning home.

The Beast has already burned through 20% of the city and continues to burn.

Source: http://www.banderasnews.com/1606/nr-jalisco-joins-alberta-fire-fight.htm

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'The Beast' wildfire burns out of control in Canada
6/3/2016 3:05:04 AM



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Debt Scandal ~ International
6/3/2016 2:45:20 PM
A 'hidden debt scandal' might crush one of the world's poorest countries

After about a decade of strong growth, Mozambique has hit a snag.
In April, the southeast African nation admitted that it had hidden over $1.4 billion in debt from the International Monetary Fund and other investors — after which the IMF, the World Bank, and the UK promptly suspended aid to the country.
And before that, there was another controversy "involving a state-backed $850 million bond that was ostensibly issued to set up a tuna fishing company ... even though $500 million of the debt was spent on naval vessels and other security equipment," as reported by the Financial Times.
Since then, S&P Global Ratings slashed Mozambique's credit assessment to CCC from B-, noting an increased risk of defaulting on debt either because of higher than expected debt-service obligations or acceleration clauses in the government's external commercial debt. The S&P now estimates that Mozambique's net general debt is at 90% of GDP for this year.
Additionally, Fitch downgraded the country's rating to CC last week, arguing that "a default of some kind appears probable."
Notably, now that investors' feelings toward Mozambique have cooled, a report by BMI Research argues that the country is edging closer to the possibility of seeing a balance-of-payments crisis over the next five years.
"A significant deterioration in investor sentiment towards Mozambique following the recent hidden debt scandal will have negative consequences for the wider economy, highlighting the flaws in an economic model so heavily dependent on strong balance of payments dynamics," the BMI Research report stated.
The report continued:

The likelihood of slower growth in levels of inward investment, particularly into the infrastructure sector, has led us to make substantial downward revisions to our economic forecasts, as the strong flows of foreign capital that have buoyed the economy in recent years begin to decline. While inward investment into key sectors will provide sufficient capital to fuel relatively robust real GDP growth over the next five years, averaging 4.7% per annum according to our forecasts, this will not be enough to alleviate the ongoing dollar shortage, causing the economy to operate below its potential.


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India's Revenue Minister
6/4/2016 6:39:55 AM
BJP will decide action against Revenue Minister Khadse: Fadnavis
BJP will decide action against Revenue Minister Khadse: Fadnavis

The BJP leadership will soon take a final call on Maharashtra's Revenue Minister Eknath Khadse as Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis on Thursday met party president Amit Shah and submitted "a factual report" on the controversy involving the senior OBC leader.

The Sena gave up its studied silence on the Khadse imbroglio as the party strategists realized that the beleaguered minister could well be on his way out.

But Khadse remained defiant and refused to quit, sources close to Fadnavis told India Today TV. Khadse has strong support in the north Maharashtra district of Jalgaon.

"Eknath Khadse lied


NOTE: There are rumors he has resigned

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Why Germany's recognition of Armenian genocide is such a big deal
6/7/2016 3:28:03 AM
Germany's parliament was practically unanimous: The killings of over 1.5 million Armenians by Ottoman Turks in 1915 constituted genocide.

The German Bundestag's overwhelming vote last week in favor of this resolution, with just one vote against and one abstention, brought both gratitude and anger. Armenian communities, many of them descendants of genocide survivors who are dispersed across the world, are grateful. Turkey, however, was incensed and recalled its ambassador to Germany. Many Turks see the vote as not just a threat to longstanding German-Turkish relations, but to Turkish national identity.

These opposing emotion-fueled reactions over the "G-word" and its politics are nothing new. Turkey and its government have long denied the genocide took place, calling the use of the term a gross distortion of the truth. Instead they've chosen to interpret the killings as a consequence of war, and not a systematic attempt to wipe out most of the Armenian population of the Ottoman Empire. Turkey's most conciliatory step has come in the form of condolences offered to descendants ...

Osman Orsal/Reuters


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