Wednesday 21 October 2015

Philippines starts post-storm rebuild

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Philippines starts post-storm rebuildResidents of one of the towns hardest hit by Typhoon Koppu begin rebuilding their lives and homes.These were the scenes in Aurora province on the main Philippines island of Luzon after typhoon Koppu hit on Sunday. Homes were destroyed, and bridges and trees brought down by the storm, packing winds up to 175 kilometres an hour. There were few initial reports of casualties but the national disaster agency says 10, 000 people have been displaced. Residents and tourists were warned in advance to move away from coastal areas to safer ground.
ASTRO  AWANI

Perlukah saya undi usul tidak percaya?' - Ku Li

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'Perlukah saya undi usul tidak percaya?' - Ku LiKUALA LUMPUR: Ahli Dewan Rakyat mempunyai hak untuk memberi pendapat mereka berkenaan hal kepimpinan negara.

Ahli politik veteran Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah berkata, Ahli Dewan Rakyat hanya merupakan alat untuk membela kepentingan rakyat.

"Apa yang disuarakan adalah suara bagi pihak rakyat," kata beliau ketika diminta memberi pandangan mengenai usul undi tidak percaya yang dirancang untuk dibentangkan oleh Ketua Pembangkang Datuk Seri Dr Wan Azizah Wan Ismail.Itu terpulang kepada mereka. Saya tidak terlibat dengan usul ini.

"Ahli Dewan Rakyat bebas memberi pendapat dalam soal ini kerana seorang yang diangkat menjadi Perdana Menteri melalui perlembagaan adalah individu yang mendapat keyakinan sebahagian besar mereka yang berada dalam Dewan Rakyat.

"Jadi kalau sokongannya sudah terhakis, maka dia gugur. Itu adalah semangat perlembagaan," kata Razaleigh, yang juga Ahli Parlimen Gua Musang.

Apabila ditanya sama ada beliau akan mengundi jika usul tersebut dibentangkan di Dewan Rakyat, Razaleigh memberi jawapan sinis.
"Perlukah saya?" ASTRO  AWANI

SRC sangkal laporan Malaysiakini, gesa peguam siasat

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SRC sangkal laporan Malaysiakini, gesa peguam siasatKUALA LUMPUR: SRC International Sdn Bhd menyangkal laporan dua portal berita berhubung dakwaan kertas pertuduhan terhadap Perdana Menteri dan rajah kononnya aliran dana ke dalam akaun beliau, yang menyatakan pinjaman RM4 bilion diperoleh syarikat itu daripada Kumpulan Wang Persaraan (KWAP) telah disalah guna.

Dalam kenyataan di sini hari ini, syarikat itu berkata berdasarkan siasatan dalaman, dipercayai dakwaan itu berdasarkan dokumen yang telah dipalsukan dalam cubaan untuk sengaja mengelirukan orang ramai.Hakikatnya, semua RM4 bilion yang dipinjam daripada KWAP diambil kira di dalam kunci kira-kiranya, selaras dengan amalan piawaian perakaunan dan tadbir urus.

"Tiada satu sen pun daripadanya telah disalah guna seperti didakwa oleh mereka yang mempunyai niat jahat," katanya. Kenyataan itu merujuk kepada portal berita Sarawak Report dan Malaysiakini.

Syarikat itu berkata dakwaan palsu itu merupakan satu serangan yang serius terhadap SRC dan telah menyebabkan kesan kewangan yang negatif serta menjejaskan reputasi perniagaannya serta kerajaan dalam cubaan untuk memburuk-burukkannya dalam politik.

Mengenai aktiviti tanggungjawab sosial korporat (CSR) syarikat, kenyataanitu menyatakan sebarang perbelanjaan syarikat bagi program-program sosial diambil daripada pendapatan tunai yang dijana menerusi pelaburannya.Selepas bertahun-tahun, pendapatan yang diraih dianggarkan RM500 juta tidak termasuk item bukan tunai lain, menyediakan pendapatan yang kukuh untuk syarikat gunakan bagi tujuan itu, katanya.
SRC menggesa Jabatan Peguam Negara menjalankan siasatan menyeluruh terhadap dakwaan terbabit dan dakwaan kertas pertuduhan yang disiarkan oleh Sarawak Report dan rajah aliran dana yang diterbitkan Malaysiakini.

"Kami mahu pihak yang bertanggungjawab terhadap pemalsuan ini dikenal pasti, berikutan ketulenannya telah dinafikan oleh Suruhanjaya Pencegahan Rasuah Malaysia pada 3 Ogos 2015,"  kata SRC.
BERNAMA

Amir Ukays dibebaskan, akui pistol mainan untuk tembak cicak

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Amir Ukays dibebaskan, akui pistol mainan untuk tembak cicakKUALA LUMPUR: Bekas vokalis kumpulan Ukays, Amir atau nama sebenarnya Mohd Azmir Muhammad, 44 yang ditahan awal pagi Rabu kerana dipercayai memiliki senjata api dibebaskan dengan jaminan polis, pada jam 5 petang hari sama.

Memetik laporan portal Berita Harian, Amir berkata, pistol berkenaan adalah pistol mainan yang digunakan untuk menembak cicak di rumahnya.

Menurutnya, pistol berkenaan seakan-akan pistol betul dan selalunya diletakkan di rumah.Namun pada tengah hari Selasa, anak beliau membawa turun dan tertinggal pistol itu di dalam keretanya.

"Saya tidak sempat membawa naik semula kerana bergegas ke studio untuk latihan vokal program Gegar Vaganza2.

"Bagaimanapun, saya kurang bernasib baik apabila ditahan sepasukan polis ketika berada dalam kereta di kawasan letak kereta di rumah selepas pulang latihan," katanya kepada portal BH berkenaan malam tadi.

Beliau turut bekerjsama dengan pihak polis ketika dibawa ke Ibu Pejabat Polis Daerah Sentul untuk disoal siasat.

"Alhamdulillah, saya dibebaskan tidak sampai 24 jam selepas disoal siasat. Berita saya ditahan reman tidak benar.Saya memberi kerjasama kepada polis kerana saya tahu saya tidak bersalah, saya bukan perompak atau penjenayah. Tiada apa yang harus saya takutkan," katanya.

Sementara itu, Ketua Polis Daerah Sentul, Asisten Komisioner R Munusamy, berkata Amir dibebaskan sementara menunggu kertas laporan kes disiapkan untuk dihantar ke Jabatan Peguam Negara.
"Tindakan seterusnya terpulang kepada jabatan itu untuk memutuskan sama ada dia perlu didakwa di mahkamah atau sebaliknya, " katanya.

Polis sebelum ini melaporkan penyanyi berkenaan ditahan pasukan peronda ketika berada di dalam kenderaan jenis Proton Gen-2, di susur masuk ke Kampung Chubadak.Pemeriksaan lanjut dilakukan anggota preman yang melakukan rondaan dan kemudiannya menemui sepucuk pistol berwarna hitam yang tertera tulisan 'Walther CP99 Compact' dengan nombor siri 12L20520.
ASTRO  AWANI

Anggota renjer Thai maut dalam letupan disyaki perbuatan balas dendam

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Anggota renjer Thai maut dalam letupan disyaki perbuatan balas dendam

Polis percaya motif pengeboman adalah balas dendam kerana mangsa, Ismail Cherna, 54, pernah menembak mati seorang anggota militan pada 2013. - Gambar hiasan
NARATHIWAT: Balas dendam disyaki sebagai motif kematian seorang anggota renjer dalam satu letupan bom di sini pada Selasa.

Polis percaya motif pengeboman adalah balas dendam kerana mangsa, Ismail Cherna, 54, pernah menembak mati seorang anggota militan pada 20 Oktober 2013, kata Ketua Polis Daerah Takbai Kolonel Polis Jiradej Praswang.

Ismail terkorban apabila sebutir bom yang diletakkan pada keretanya meletup ketika beliau sedang memandunya dalam kejadian pukul 4 petpetang semalam.

Kejadian berlaku di Pekan Takbai, yang bersempadan dengan Pengkalan Kubor, Kelantan, Malaysia.

Jiradej berkata bom buatan sendiri seberat 10 kg dilekatkan di bawah kereta mangsa dan diletup dengan menggunakan walkie talkie.

Letupan bom itu telah memusnahkan bahagian hadapan kereta berkenaan dan mayat mangsa terhimpit dalam kereta, kata beliau.

Mangsa bekerja di Pejabat Daerah Takbai dan ketika kejadian beliau sedang memandu kereta untuk pulang ke rumahnya yang terletak hanya 200 meter daripada tempat kerjanya.
BERNAMA

Police: Handyman arrested in couple's killing, stole cash

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This photo provided by the Baton Rouge Police Department shows a mug shot of Ernesto Alonso. Louisiana police say the handyman arrested in Florida is accused of kidnapping and strangling his Baton Rouge employers. (Baton Rouge Police Department via AP)NEW ORLEANS (AP) — A handyman kidnapped and strangled a couple he worked for and stole tens of thousands of dollars from a safe in their home, Baton Rouge police said Wednesday.
Ernesto Llerena Alonso, 42, of Baton Rouge, was arrested about 8 a.m. Wednesday in Hollywood, Florida, and will be extradited and booked with kidnapping and murder in the deaths of Denis Duplantier, 71, and Suzanne Duplantier, 70, Baton Rouge Police Chief Carl Dabadie said in a news release.
The Duplantiers' bodies were found in their pickup at a truck stop in Hammond, about 45 miles east of Baton Rouge and 860 miles from Hollywood.
Alonso's white pickup was on surveillance video pulling into the truck stop at the same time as the Duplantiers' red truck, said Cpl. L'Jean McKneely, a Baton Rouge police spokesman. A large sum of money has also been found, he said.
Police said relatives called late Monday saying they had been unable to get in touch with the Duplantiers. OnStar tracked their pickup to a truck stop to Hammond, where police found their bodies in the truck's back seat.Both had been strangled, authorities said.
McKneely said he did not know whether they were killed in the truck or killed and then put into the back seat.
Police said Tuesday they were searching for a second, unidentified, person in the case.
AP

UN chief pushes Palestinians to calm spiralling unrest

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A masked Palestinian protester uses a slingshot to throw stones during clashes with Israeli security forces in the occupied West Bank city of Hebron, on October 21, 2015UN chief Ban Ki-moon called Wednesday for an end to spiralling Israeli-Palestinian violence as he met Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas in a bid for calm after three weeks of deadly unrest.
Ban later told the Security Council by video conference from Amman that he was "not optimistic" about prospects for quelling the bloodshed, according to a diplomat at the closed-door emergency meeting in New York.
The UN secretary-general traveled to the region this week to urge the Israelis and Palestinians to pull back from a "dangerous escalation" that could lead to a full-scale Palestinian uprising.
Ban offered no public proposals to end the unrest, but spoke of returning to "meaningful negotiations," after more than a year of frozen peace efforts and seething frustration with Israel's occupation.
"We will continue to support all efforts to create the conditions to make meaningful negotiations possible," Ban said after meeting Abbas in the West Bank city of Ramallah.
"Our most urgent challenge is to stop the current wave of violence and avoid any further loss of life."Abbas called on Israel to strictly respect rules governing Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem's flashpoint Al-Aqsa mosque compound, known to Jews as the Temple Mount.
Clashes between Israeli security forces and Palestinian protesters at the compound in September sparked the current wave of violence.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has repeatedly accused Abbas of incitement by suggesting Israel wants to change the status quo of the compound, sacred to both Muslims and Jews.
Muslims fear Israel will seek to change rules governing the site, where Jews are allowed to visit but not pray to avoid provoking tensions.
Netanyahu says he has no intention of changing the rules.
"The continued occupation and aggression against Christian and Muslim holy sites in east Jerusalem, particularly against Al-Aqsa, opens the door to a religious conflict, which has unfortunately started," said Abbas.
Israeli security forces stand guard close to the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound in East JerusalemIsraeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (R) shakes hands with UN chief Ban Ki-moon during a joint presser in Jerusalem on October 20, 2015The sister of Palestinian Ahmed al-Serhi, who was killed in clashes with Israeli forces, mourns at his funeral in Deir al-Balah, Gaza, on October 21, 2015
We don't want it and we are warning over its consequences."
- 'Not optimistic' -
In his behind-closed-doors report to the Security Council, Ban delivered a sobering assessment of prospects for a return to calm, according to a diplomat.
Stating bluntly that he had emerged from his meetings "not optimistic," he said there was no time to waste to press for a de-escalation and pull the sides back from the brink.
The UN chief presented a report prepared by his legal experts on international protection after the Palestinians called for the deployment of an observer force in east Jerusalem.
The report, seen by AFP, outlines 17 cases -- from Trieste after World War II to Kosovo in 1999 -- when the Security Council stepped in and set up special regimes to guarantee the protection of civilians.
In a letter to the council, Ban said the report should not be seen as an "options paper" for addressing the crisis but added that it could be useful in "informing future work on this subject."
At least 47 Palestinians and one Arab Israeli have been killed in the upsurge in violence that began at the start of the month, including alleged attackers. Eight Israelis have died.Violent protests have also erupted in east Jerusalem, the occupied West Bank and the Gaza Strip.
- Netanyahu to meet Kerry -
Netanyahu showed little appetite for compromise when meeting Ban on Tuesday, harshly criticising Abbas for "fanning the flames" and rejecting allegations that Israel has used excessive force.
He repeated the assertion in Berlin on Wednesday.
"If we want to have peace we have to stop terror. And to stop terror we have to stop incitement," he said after talks with Chancellor Angela Merkel on the eve of a meeting with US Secretary of State John Kerry.
Kerry hopes talks this week with the Israeli and Palestinian leaders will provide some "political breathing space," the State Department said.
He is also due to meet Jordan's King Abdullah II.
The unrest continued even during Ban's visit.
On Wednesday, a woman was shot and wounded after allegedly approaching an Israeli settlement with a knife.Later in the day, an Israeli soldier was severely wounded in a stabbing near a West Bank settlement and her attacker shot dead.
And in the evening, a Palestinian drove his car into a group of Israelis in the West Bank, injuring five of them, before being shot and seriously wounded by soldiers.
Ban also met families of victims of the latest wave of violence before travelling to Amman, where he is due to meet the Jordanian king.
A meeting of the Middle East peace quartet is to be held on Friday in Vienna. The group comprises Russia, the United States, the European Union and the United Nations
Israeli security forces check a Palestinian man at Damascus gate in Jerusalem's Old City on October 20, 2015
AFP

Netanyahu Holocaust comment not backed by scholarly evidence - U.S.

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U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry (L) speaks with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during a meeting in New York, October 2, 2015. REUTERS/Kena Betancur/PoolWASHINGTON (Reuters) - Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's comments on Wednesday linking a Muslim leader to the Holocaust were not supported by scholarly evidence, the State Department said, as U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry left Washington for talks on ending weeks of Palestinian-Israeli violence.
Netanyahu, speaking just before the start of a visit to Germany, said that Haj Amin al-Husseini, the Muslim elder in Jerusalem during the 1940s, persuaded Adolf Hitler to exterminate the Jews.
Opposition politicians and Holocaust experts criticized the remarks and accused Netanyahu of distorting the historical record. A German government spokesman said the Holocaust was Germany's responsibility and there was no need for another view on it.
State Department spokesman John Kirby declined to characterize Netanyahu's comments as potentially inciting, but he said scholarly evidence on the Holocaust did not support the prime minister's view.
"We've seen the press reports of his comments, and if you look at them, they would connote that the scholarly evidence does not support that position," Kirby told a daily briefing.Kerry will meet with Netanyahu in Berlin on Thursday at the outset of a trip aimed at finding ways to end the violence between Israelis and Palestinians, Kirby said.
He said Kerry hoped for "some level of agreement" that would calm the violence, adding the secretary wanted to see both sides moving away from rhetoric and actions that incite violence.
"What we'd like to see are steps being taken, whether they're in word or in deed, to reduce the tensions, to try to restore some calm, and to end this terrible violence that's going on. That's what the secretary's trying to do on this trip," Kirby added.
While in Berlin, Kerry will also meet with his German counterpart and EU foreign policy chief, Federica Mogherini, before travelling on Friday to Vienna for talks on the conflict in Syria with his Russian, Turkish and Saudi counterparts.
Over the weekend, Kerry will visit Jordan where he will meet with Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas and King Abdullah of Jordan. He will then travel to Saudi Arabia for further discussions, Kirby said.
Kerry said in Madrid on Monday he wants Israeli and Palestinian leaders to clarify their positions regarding the status quo around Jerusalem's al-Aqsa mosque, where violence flared last month.
The mosque is Islam's third holiest site but is also revered by Jews as the site of two destroyed biblical temples.
Under a "status quo" arrangement, Jews are allowed to visit the site but not pray there. Kerry has said Netanyahu assured him he won't change the status, but Palestinians are angry at what they see as Jewish encroachment on the mosque compound in Jerusalem's walled Old City.
REUTERS

Muslim spokesman: As boy departs, Muslims feel 'under siege'

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Ahmed Mohamed, the 14-year-old who was arrested at MacArthur High School after a homemade clock he brought to school was mistaken for a bomb, smiles before before leaving his family's home Wednesday, Oct. 21, 2015, in Irving, Texas. Mohamed will soon be leaving Irving with his family to move to the Middle Ease to attend school. Mohamed's family said in a statement Tuesday that they've accepted a foundation's offer to pay for his high school and college in Doha, Qatar. (AP Photo/LM Otero)IRVING, Texas (AP) — The decision by the family of a Texas teenager to move to Qatar is not surprising in light of lingering anti-Muslim sentiment that makes many U.S. followers of Islam feel as if they are "under siege," a spokesman for a national Muslim-American group said Wednesday.
The teen, Ahmed Mohamed, shot to national prominence last month after he was arrested for bringing a homemade digital clock to school that a teacher mistook for a possible bomb.
On Tuesday, the family announced that they would soon leave their modest home in the Dallas suburb of Irving and move to Qatar, a wealthy oil nation on the Persian Gulf. There, a foundation has offered to pay for Ahmed's high school and college education in Doha.
Yaser Birjas, imam of the Valley Ranch Islamic Center in Irving, said he wishes the 14-year-old well but worries about the stress that can come with celebrity.
"I hope that he does not get overwhelmed and consumed with that because now the expectation of him is so high," Birjas said. "And he's just a kid."
Birjas cautioned that people who move from America to Muslim countries are often disappointed when they discover restrictions they never experienced in the U.S.
"Here in America, you have much more freedom practicing the faith," he said.
For others, the family move to the Middle East sends an unfortunate message.
Yousuf Fahimuddin, a Muslim journalist in the San Francisco Bay area, believes the family's departure will only perpetuate the idea that Muslims are not loyal to the U.S.
"I don't think moving to Qatar, a country with its own share of problems, constructively helps fight prejudice," Fahimuddin said in an email.
FILE - In this Monday, Oct. 19, 2015, file photo, Ahmed Mohamed, the 14-year-old who was arrested at MacArthur High School in Irving, Texas, after a homemade clock he brought to school was mistaken for a bomb, speaks during an interview with the Associated Press, in Washington. Ahmed Mohamed will soon be moving with his family to Qatar to attend school thanks to the Qatar Foundation for Education, Science and Community Development. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik, File)FILE - In this Monday, Oct. 19, 2015, file photo, Ahmed Mohamed, the 14-year-old who was arrested at MacArthur High School in Irving, Texas, after a homemade clock he brought to school was mistaken for a bomb, speaks during an interview with the Associated Press, in Washington. Ahmed Mohamed will soon be moving with his family to Qatar to attend school thanks to the Qatar Foundation for Education, Science and Community Development. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik, File)Ahmed Mohamed, the 14-year-old who was arrested at MacArthur High School after a homemade clock he brought to school was mistaken for a bomb, smiles before before leaving his family's home Wednesday, Oct. 21, 2015, in Irving, Texas. Mohamed will soon be leaving Irving with his family to move to the Middle Ease to attend school. Mohamed's family said in a statement Tuesday that they've accepted a foundation's offer to pay for his high school and college in Doha, Qatar. (AP Photo/LM Otero)

Instead, he said, "Muslims should try to share their common humanity with others to demonstrate that they are regular people."
Ibrahim Hooper, spokesman for the Council on American-Islamic Relations, said the U.S. has seen a significant rise in the level of anti-Muslim sentiment — feelings he said were reflected by the political attacks of GOP presidential candidates such as Donald Trump and Ben Carson.
"The Muslim-American community feels under siege by all this," Hooper said.
Ahmed's father, Mohamed Elhassan Mohamed, told The Dallas Morning News that the family was moving "to a place where my kids can study and learn and all of them being accepted by that country."
The family said in a statement that Ahmed will enroll in a program offered by the Qatar Foundation for Education, Science and Community Development. He received a full scholarship for his secondary and undergraduate education.
The foundation was launched two decades ago to advance Qatar's development through education and scientific research. The foundation's umbrella includes outposts of American universities, a business hub designed to foster technological innovation and cultural projects such as the national library and a philharmonic orchestra.
American university campuses, which attract both Qataris and foreign students, are clustered in the foundation's Education City on the western edge of the capital city of Doha. They include Carnegie Mellon University, Georgetown University, Northwestern University and Texas A&M University.
Ahmed recently visited Qatar as part of a whirlwind month that included a stop Monday at the White House and an appearance Tuesday at the U.S. Capitol.
The family said in their statement that they've been "overwhelmed by the many offers of support" since Ahmed's arrest Sept. 14.
The teen took the clock to his high school to show a teacher, but another teacher thought it could be a bomb. The school contacted police, who handcuffed the boy and took him to a detention center. He was suspended for three days.
A police photo of the device shows a carrying case containing a circuit board and power supply wired to a digital display. Authorities eventually concluded that there was no evidence the teen meant to cause alarm, and he was not charged. His parents later withdrew him from the school.
Frances King, a neighbor of the family, said she visited with them Wednesday to say goodbye.
"I think all this publicity they've gotten because of all this ... kind of hurt them," King said.
___AP

Italian craftsmanship meets Wall Street, Ferrari goes public

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Fiat Chrysler CEO Sergio Marchionne stands with a La Ferrari in front of the New York Stock Exchange prior to Ferrari's IPO, Wednesday, Oct. 21, 2015. Ferrari roared onto the New York Stock Exchange and its shares, trading under the ticker symbol RACE, jumped sharply Wednesday in their public debut. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)Ferrari roared onto the New York Stock Exchange Wednesday and its shares, trading under the ticker symbol RACE, closed higher in their public debut.
Shares of Ferrari climbed almost 17 percent in early trading and settled for the day at $55, up 6 percent while the broader markets edged lower.
The automaker, based in the northern Italian town of Maranello, had been a private company since its founding in 1929 by Italian sports driver Enzo Ferrari.
In 1969, Fiat bought a 50 percent stake in the company, which it then increased to 90 percent in 1988.
For Fiat-Chrysler (the companies joined last year), the IPO raises needed cash and also helps pare debt at the world's seventh largest automaker, which has ambitious plans to expand its Alfa Romeo brand and other higher-margin luxury cars like Maserati.
There were questions, however, about how becoming a public company might affect such an iconic brand.
IHS Automotive, the consulting firm, said some ffilings suggest Ferrari might boost production from between 7,000 and 8,000 cars per year, to 9,000 by 2019.
IHS acknowledged that it did not know if the company would devote any new production to higher-end models that cost well in excess of $200,000 which already exceed demand or, like in the late 1960s and early 1970s, it would again start making lower-priced models to put the Ferrari within reach of more people.
"Whatever the strategy it chooses to enact, it will be keen to maintain the combination of mystique and profit-generating ability of this business," said Ian Fletcher, an IHS analyst.
In an interview with CNBC from the floor of the NYSE, Sergio Marchionne, CEO of Fiat Chrysler Automobiles and chairman of Ferrari, said he would not allow increased production to threaten the Ferrari tradition.  
Piero Ferrari, son of Ferrari founder Enzo Ferrari, arrives at the New York Stock Exchange for Ferrari's IPO, Wednesday, Oct. 21, 2015. The parent company, mass-market carmaker Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, is selling shares under the stock name RACE. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)What is at the heart of the brand is this intimate relationship between us and the customer base. We have 60 percent of the people that buy our cars every year are returning customers," Marchionne said. "And therefore it would be almost suicidal to try and expand volumes to the detriment of that relationship."
Fiat Chrysler Automobiles will still retain an 80 percent share in Ferrari. It plans distribute Ferrari stock to its shareholders next year.
The remaining 10 percent belongs to the Ferrari family.
The IPO, even in what has become a dodgy market with doubts about the economic recovery seeping into the minds of investors, raised more than $893 million this week.
A number of companies in recent weeks have canceled IPO, fearing the market malaise.
But investors clamored for a piece of one of the world's premier automakers, erasing doubts about the allure of holding its stock
AP
Fiat Chrysler chairman John Elkann, left, Ferrari CEO Amedeo Felisa, center, Piero Ferrari, son of Ferrari founder Enzo Ferrari, second right, and Fiat Chrysler CEO Sergio Marchionne, applaud at the opening bell at the New York Stock Exchange in honor of Ferrari's IPO, Wednesday, Oct. 21, 2015. The parent company, mass-market carmaker Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, is selling shares under the stock name RACE. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)A Ferrari F12berlinetta is uncovered in front of the New York Stock Exchange, Wednesday, Oct. 21, 2015, in preparation for Ferrari's IPO. The parent company, mass-market carmaker Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, is floating shares under the stock name RACE. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

Fourth New York police officer shot dead in 11 months

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A police car is pictured in the East Harlem district of New York City on August 28, 2015A New York police officer died after being shot in the head during a shootout in Harlem, the fourth killed in the line of duty in less than a year, officials said Wednesday.
Randolph Holder, a 33-year-old Guyanese immigrant who had been on the force for five years, was pronounced dead in hospital at 10:22 pm on Tuesday (0222 GMT Wednesday), police commissioner Bill Bratton said.
The man suspected of his murder has been arrested, and three other men have been detained for questioning, the commissioner added.
Holder and his partners had been responding to gun shots in the Harlem area of Manhattan when a male victim told officers that his bike had been stolen at gunpoint by one of the suspects, police said.
Officers pursued the suspects and encountered a man on a bicycle. In an exchange of fire between the suspect and officers, Holder was struck in the head, Bratton said.
He "ran toward danger," the New York police chief told reporters. "It was the last time he will respond to that call."
Holder's father and grandfather worked as police officers in Guyana, on the northern coast of South America.
The killing will likely raise further questions about an increase in violent crime in America's largest city, where tensions have been palpable between the police and local communities.
"Four police officers murdered in 11 months -- that's about as bad as it gets," Bratton acknowledged Wednesday.
"We are dealing ... with a core element in our population that is still involved in carrying firearms, still willing to use those firearms, so it is a very vivid and very tragic reminder," Bratton added.
The latest statistics released by the police department show 275 murders in New York over the last 12 months, compared to 254 in the same period last year, an 8.3 percent increase.
The chief suspect arrested for Holder's death is in custody and being treated for gunshot wounds to his leg, police said.
Mayor Bill de Blasio said the entire city was in mourning for "a man who gave his life as a guardian for all of us."
He was killed by "a hardened criminal who shouldn't have been out on the streets," de Blasio added.
Rising crime is a sensitive subject in a city where rates fell steadily under previous mayors Michael Bloomberg and Rudolph Giuliani.
There are currently 34,500 police officers in New York. The city has a population of nearly 8.5 million.
--AFP

The Latest: Court defends diversion for cop shooting suspect

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A police officer says a silent prayer at the makeshift memorial to honor New York City Police Department Officer Randolph Holder outside the police station in New York, Wednesday, Oct. 21, 2015. Holder, a five-year veteran of the NYPD, was shot dead Tuesday night during an exchange of gunfire in East Harlem. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)NEW YORK (AP) — The latest on the fatal shooting of a New York Police Department officer during a gunbattle and chase involving a stolen bicycle (all times local):
3:30 p.m.
A spokesman for the New York state court system says a career criminal accused of killing a police officer was the "perfect candidate" to be freed from jail as part of a diversion program.
Police Commissioner William Bratton said Wednesday that 30-year-old Tyrone Howard was "the poster boy" for candidates who shouldn't qualify for the program.
But state court system spokesman David Bookstaver says Howard qualified because he was charged with selling and possessing drugs and was addicted.
Howard is accused of killing New York Police Department Officer Randolph Holder on Tuesday night.
He was charged last year with criminal sale of a controlled substance and pleaded guilty in May.Howard is in police custody. It isn't clear whether he has a lawyer who could comment on the allegations.
Police officers work at the scene, Wednesday, Oct. 21, 2015, where New York Police Department Officer Randolph Holder was shot in the head and died during a gunfight and chase on Tuesday night, in New York. Holder was responding to a report of shots fired. A suspect in his slaying is in custody, police said Wednesday. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)Police investigate on a street near FDR Drive early Wednesday, Oct. 21, 2015, in New York. A New York City police officer has died after being shot in the head in a gun battle while pursuing a suspect following a report of shots fired, police said. The shooting happened in Manhattan's East Harlem neighborhood on Tuesday night. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II)
3 p.m.
Gov. Andrew Cuomo says the fatal shooting of a New York City police officer is another example of the growing crisis of gun violence.
Cuomo told reporters Wednesday that the slayings of police officers "has to stop."
The governor's comments come a day after New York Police Department Officer Randolph Holder was fatally shot during a gunfight.
Holder responded to a call of shots fired and a bicycle stolen at gunpoint in Manhattan's East Harlem neighborhood. He and his partner chased the suspect, who opened fire.
Police say 30-year-old Tyrone Howard shot the officer in the head during the gunfight.
Howard is in police custody and expected to be formally charged Wednesday. It isn't clear whether he has a lawyer who could comment on the allegations.
___
2:40 p.m.
JetBlue Airways says it will offer free flights for police who want to attend the funeral of a slain New York Police Department officer.
The company says it is honored to help shuttle the officers wishing to pay tribute to a fallen comrade.
Police Commissioner William Bratton said at a news conference Wednesday that funeral arraigfor Officer Randolph Holder were still being finalized.
Holder was shot in the head Tuesday evening as he responded to calls of shots fired and a bicycle stolen at gunpoint. Holder and his partner chased the suspect, who opened fire.
Thirty-year-old Tyrone Howard was taken into custody after the shooting and is expected to be charged Wednesday. It isn't clear whether he has a lawyer who could comment on the allegations.
___
2:30 p.m.
Authorities say a career criminal accused of killing a New York City police officer had been arrested last year and freed from jail as part of a diversion program.
Police also say 30-year-old Tyrone Howard was wanted in connection with another shooting last month.
Police Commissioner William Bratton said Wednesday that Howard had shown an increasing level of violence. Bratton says he shouldn't have been on the streets.
Bratton says, "If ever there was a candidate not to be diverted, it would be this guy."
Howard is accused of fatally shooting Officer Randolph Holder Tuesday night.
He was charged last year with criminal sale of a controlled substance.Howard is in police custody and it isn't clear whether he has a lawyer who could comment on the allegations.
___
1:45 p.m.
Police say a man suspected of fatally shooting a New York Police Department officer had been wanted in connection with another shooting last month.
NYPD Chief of Department James O'Neill said Wednesday that 30-year-old Tyrone Howard had been wanted in connection with a September shooting in Manhattan.
O'Neill says investigators suspected Howard shot at a member of the East Army gang on Sept. 1. He says police had been trying to arrest Howard but could not find him.
The chief says Howard didn't show up at his court appearances and wasn't home when investigators went there.
Howard is accused of fatally shooting Officer Randolph Holder Tuesday night after a chase.
He is in police custody and it isn't clear whether he has a lawyer who could comment on the allegations.
___11 a.m.
New York City police have identified the man suspected of shooting and killing an officer after a bicycle robbery.
Police on Wednesday named 30-year-old Tyrone Howard as the man they believe killed New York Police Department Officer Randolph Holder.
Holder was shot in the head Tuesday evening as he responded to calls of shots fired and a stolen bicycle at gunpoint. Holder and his partner chased the suspect, who opened fire.
Police say Howard was wounded in the leg and captured a few blocks away. He is in police custody Wednesday, and it isn't clear yet whether he has a lawyer to represent him.
Three others who had been questioned were released.
___
10:30 a.m.
Residents in the neighborhood where a New York Police Department officer was fatally shot say they often feel unsafe there, particularly at night.
NYPD Officer Randolph Holder was killed late Tuesday after he chased a gunman along a pedestrian bridge in East Harlem.
Monica Amolina works at Public School 78. She said Wednesday that she "always walks fast" in the neighborhood because she's worried about gang activity.
Juliette Torres just moved to the neighborhood two weeks ago. She says she feels unsafe walking her dog at night because of the people hanging out on the street.
But resident Stephon Clarette calls it a "good neighborhood" and says "outsiders" are "trying to tear it up."
Parents walking their kids to school Wednesday had to make their way around police blockades.
___
9:40 a.m.
New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio has ordered flags flown at half-staff in honor of a police officer killed in the line of duty.
New York Police Department Officer Randolph Holder was killed late Tuesday after he chased a gunman along a pedestrian bridge in East Harlem. A man had reported that his bicycle had been stolen at gunpoint, and Holder chased down the suspect.
The 33-year-old had been an officer for about five years.
A suspect is in custody in Holder's slaying. His identity hasn't been released.
Three others were taken into custody for questioning.
AP

Tuesday 20 October 2015

Istana terbiar 100 tahun milik Tunku Kudin bukan Raja Bersiong - Persatuan Sejarah

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Istana terbiar 100 tahun milik Tunku Kudin bukan Raja Bersiong - Persatuan SejarahALOR SETAR: Istana terbiar berusia lebih 100 tahun di Bukit Tinggi, Kepala Batas bukan Istana Raja Bersiong sebagaimana diperkatakan orang ramai, kata Pengerusi Persatuan Sejarah Malaysia Cawangan Kedah (PSMCK), Datuk Dr Wan Shamsudin Mohd Yusof.

Sebaliknya, kata beliau, istana tersebut adalah kepunyaan Tunku Dhiauddin ibni Sultan Zainal Rashid atau lebih dikenali sebagai Tunku Kudin, Raja Muda Kedah ketika pemerintahan abangnya, Sultan Ahmad Tajuddin Mukarram Shah pada 1854 hingga 1879."Istana itu bukan sama sekali milik Raja Bersiong. Raja Bersiong tak wujud dalam pemerintahan raja Kedah, ia hanyalah satu episod dalam Hikayat Merong Mahawangsa," katanya baru-baru ini.

Istana tersebut, katanya, dibina Tunku Kudin selepas dia dipecat abangnya kerana campur tangan dalam hal ehwal negeri Selangor dalam Perang Saudara Selangor pada 1867.

Istana dua tingkat itu, kata Wan Shamsuddin, dibina menggunakan telur putih dan manisan lebah, dipercayai bagi menguatkan struktur dan binaannya, manakala untuk menghidupkan keseluruhan lampu di istana mengambil masa setengah jam.

Menurutnya, banyak tempat-tempat lama di Kedah dianggap mempunyai kaitan dengan Raja Bersiong termasuk kubur Raja Bersiong di Kuala Muda, tiang bendera Raja Bersiong di Tikam Batu serta keris di Kampung Kota Bukit, Jeneri, namun kesahihannya diragui.

Tinjauan Bernama mendapati, istana yang terletak di jalan utama berdekatan Taman Tabung Haji, Kepala Batas itu kini terbiar dengan semak samun, malah turut diletakkan sebuah tong sampah besar di hadapan tinggalan bersejarah tersebut.

Seorang penduduk, K.Jagesan, 60, berkata, beberapa individu mengunjungi tempat itu dan meminta untuk mendapatkan satu blok bata istana tersebut, namun dia menolak kerana tidak berani berbuat demikian.
Wan Shamsudin berharap, tinggalan bersejarah tersebut dibangunkan dan dipulihara kerajaan negeri, memandangkan ia merupakan tinggalan lama yang berpotensi dijadikan tarikan pelancong.Menurutnya, jika istana itu dibangunkan dan dipulihara, ia mampu menjadi satu nilai tambah sempena kempen 'Discover Kedah 2016' yang akan datang, seterusnya menarik kedatangan pelancong dalam dan luar.
BERNAMA

Video pekerja restoran cuci kuali guna mop viral di media sosial

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Video pekerja restoran cuci kuali guna mop viral di media sosialSEDANG viral di media sosial kini adalah rakaman video perbuatan seorang pekerja di sebuah restoran mamak menggunakan mop untuk mencuci dapur dan kuali. 

Video itu dirakamkan seorang pelanggan yang menyedari tindak-tanduk pekerja restoran berkenaan.

Dalam video berdurasi 35 saat yang dimuat naik ke YouTube, pekerja yang sedang leka mencuci dapur tidak menyedari perbuatannya dirakamkan.Hampir setahun lalu pada November 2014, turut viral satu rakaman yang hampir sama dimuat naik pengguna di media sosial. 

Melalui video berkenaan jelas kelihatan seorang pekerja di sebuah restoran mamak di Setiawangsa, Kuala Lumpur menggunakan mop untuk mengelap meja penyediaan makanan.Sebahagian pelanggan yang menonton kedua-dua rakaman berkenaan memuat naik reaksi mereka melalui Twitter.Insiden-insiden yang dirakamkan sendiri oleh pelanggan restoran mamak walau bagaimanapun tidak menghalang pelanggan lain untuk terus mengunjungi premis-premis berkenaan.
ASTRO  AWANI

Canada to return to its honest broker role under Trudeau

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TORONTO (AP) — The stunning victory of Justin Trudeau will have reverberations beyond Canada's borders after the Liberal Party leader emphatically put an end to a decade of rule by the most conservative leadership in the country's history.
Among the areas in which Trudeau differs from his predecessor, Conservative Stephen Harper: airstrikes against the Islamic State group, support for Israel, climate change, immigration and how much relations with the U.S. should hinge on the future of the Keystone XL oil pipeline.
Speaking at a rally in Ottawa on Tuesday, the 43-year-old Trudeau — son of one of the country's most dynamic politicians — underlined the sea change.
"I want to say this to this country's friends around the world: Many of you have worried that Canada has lost its compassionate and constructive voice in the world over the past 10 years. Well, I have a simple message for you on behalf of 35 million Canadians. We're back," he declared.
With Trudeau's decisive victory on Monday, Canadian voters reclaimed their country's liberal identity, giving the new prime minister a commanding majority in parliament that will allow him to govern without relying on other parties.
That means change in Canadian policies on a broad spectrum of issues.
"Trudeau will return Canada to its traditional approach in foreign affairs which is characteristic of every single government but Harper's," said Robert Bothwell, a professor at the University of Toronto. "Canada will go back to multilateralism, back to strong support for the United Nations."
There will be a "new way for Canada to be on the world stage," agreed Liberal lawmaker Marc Garneau, who won re-election Monday.
The son of the late Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, who swept to office in 1968 on a wave of support dubbed "Trudeaumania" and governed for most of the next two decades, the younger Trudeau channels the star power — if not quite the political heft — of his father.
Tall and trim, he is a former school teacher and member of Parliament since 2008. He becomes the second-youngest prime minister in Canadian history and has been likened to U.S. President Barack Obama.
"The whole tone of the U.S.-Canada relationship will change. Philosophically Obama and Trudeau are much closer," Bothwell said.
The White House said Obama called to congratulate Trudeau Tuesday afternoon and said in a statement the two leaders "committed to strengthening the countries' joint efforts to promote trade, combat terrorism and mitigate climate change."
Obama "also teased me about my lack of grey hair, but said I'd probably get some quite soon," the dark-haired Trudeau quipped at a news conference later.
Trudeau's victory will likely improve ties with the United States, at least for the remainder of Obama's presidency. Harper was frustrated by Obama's reluctance to approve the Keystone XL pipeline from Alberta to Texas and clashed with the president on other issues, including the Iran nuclear deal.Although Trudeau supports the Keystone pipeline, he argues relations should not hinge on the project.
"Theoretically, Justin is for Keystone, but he can obviously jettison that," Bothwell said of the project, which Democratic presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton recently expressed opposition to. Republican contenders are for the project.
Antonia Maioni, a political science professor at McGill University, said the Obama administration will welcome the change in government. "Even on Keystone, Mr. Trudeau says he supports it, but he is not going to make it an issue of conflict with Obama," Maioni said.
Still, there are differences that could lead to friction with the U.S. Trudeau has said he'll remove Canada's six fighter jets from the U.S.-led bombing campaign against the Islamic State group. Harper had said removing the jets from the fight would hurt relations with the U.S.
Trudeau said the issue came up in his conversation with Obama, and the U.S. president understood his commitment to end Canada's involvement in the combat mission.
Liberal leader Justin Trudeau makes his way to the stage with wife Sophie Gregoire at the Liberal party headquarters in Montreal, Tuesday, Oct. 20, 2015. Trudeau, the son of late Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, became Canada’s new prime minister after beating Conservative Stephen Harper. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press via AP) MANDATORY CREDITNew Democratic Party leader Tom Mulcair speaks to supporters Monday, Oct. 19, 2015, in Montreal. (Ryan Remiorz/The Canadian Press via AP) MANDATORY CREDITConservative leader Stephen Harper and his wife Laureen wave to supporters on Monday, Oct. 19, 2015, in Calgary, Alberta. Canadians voted for a sharp change in their government Monday, returning a legendary name for liberals, Trudeau, to the prime minister's office and resoundingly ending Harper's near-decade in office. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press via AP) MANDATORY CREDIT
Trudeau has also vowed to take in 25,000 Syrian refugees by the end of the year. Harper declined to resettle more Syrian refugees despite the haunting image of a drowned 3-year-old's body washed up on a Turkish beach after his family's failed attempt to immigrate to Canada, and some analysts have questioned whether Trudeau's goal is realistic.
Canada shifted to the center-right under Harper, who lowered sales and corporate taxes, avoided climate change legislation, strongly supported the oil and gas extraction industry and backed the right-wing government of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Trudeau will have a more balanced approach to the conflict in the Middle East, analysts said.
"It certainly won't be the kind of blanket support for the Netanyahu regime that we saw from the Conservatives," Maioni said.
Trudeau has also vowed to consult the premiers of Canada's provinces in an effort to come up with a plan ahead of the Paris climate talks in November. Under Harper, Canada pulled out of the Kyoto Protocol, the emissions reduction program for rich countries, and the Conservative leader was perceived by environmentalists as more interested in protecting Canada's oil-rich region of Alberta — which has the third-largest oil reserves in the world — than efforts to stem the effects of climate change.
"Canada's days of being a less-than-enthusiastic actor on the climate-change file are behind us," Trudeau told the news conference in Ottawa.
Nelson Wiseman, a political science professor at the University of Toronto, said Canadian diplomats are delighted at Trudeau's election because Harper never let them speak without checking with the government first. "They've been totally marginalized. They've been told 'We don't care what you think,'" Wiseman said.
Harper, whose nearly 10 years as prime minister makes him one of the longest-serving Western leaders, will step down as Conservative leader after the crushing defeat, his party said.
During the campaign, Trudeau re-energized the Liberal Party, which suffered its worst electoral defeat four years ago, winning just 34 seats and finishing third behind the traditionally weaker New Democrat Party.
Liberal leader Justin Trudeau greets supporters at the Liberal party headquarters in Montreal, Tuesday, Oct. 20, 2015. Trudeau, the son of late Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, became Canada’s new prime minister after beating Conservative Stephen Harper. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press via AP) MANDATORY CREDITLiberal leader Justin Trudeau stands on stage at the Liberal party headquarters in Montreal, Tuesday, Oct. 20, 2015. Trudeau, the son of late Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, became Canada’s new prime minister after beating Conservative Stephen Harper. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press via AP) MANDATORY CREDITLiberal leader Justin Trudeau makes his way through a crowd of supporters during a campaign rally Sunday, Oct. 18, 2015, in Surrey, British Columbia. (Paul Chiasson/The Canadian Press via AP) MANDATORY CREDIT
Trudeau, who has promised to raise taxes on the rich and run deficits for three years to boost government spending, said positive politics led to his victory.
Throughout the campaign, Trudeau's opponents pilloried him as too inexperienced, and he will be put to the test in the coming weeks with a series of global summits, including the Paris climate summit.
"It's going to showcase his lack of experience. He's going to be with world leaders and that's going to be a test," Maioni said
AP