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No 'imminent' signs of N. Korea nuclear test – US think tank

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SEOUL, South Korea – Recent satellite images show no imminent signs of a fifth North Korean nuclear test, following the conclusion of a party congress that many thought Pyongyang would mark with an atomic detonation, a US think tank said on Wednesday, May 11

The pictures, dated May 8, show low-level activity at the underground test site at Punggye-ri in the country's northeast, and vehicles previously observed at the site's command centre were "no longer present", according to an analysis by the US-Korea Institute at Johns Hopkins University.

Earlier satellite images had shown closely parked vehicles at the command center – usually only seen during final test preparations.

North Korea wrapped up its first ruling party congress in 36 years on Monday.

South Korean officials and North Korea watchers elsewhere had warned of a high possibility that Pyongyang might – as a show of strength – carry out a test in the run-up to the conclave, or even during the event itself.

"That gathering is now ended and there are no apparent signs that a detonation will occur in the near future," said the analysis.

But the low-level activity across the complex suggests it "remains capable of supporting additional tests once a decision to move forward is made in Pyongyang", it said.

North Korea has conducted four nuclear tests. The most recent was on January 6, with Pyongyang claiming it marked the country's first successful test of a powerful hydrogen bomb.

The UN Security Council responded by imposing its strongest sanctions to date over the North's nuclear weapons programme.

At the ruling party congress, North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un praised the "magnificent and exhilarating sound" of the January test, and delegates adopted Kim's report calling for an improved and expanded nuclear arsenal. – Rappler.com


Multiple stabbings at Massachusetts mall, attacker shot

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NEW YORK, USA – An assailant stabbed at least 4 people Tuesday, May 10, in the US state of Massachusetts before an off-duty security officer shot the suspect, police said.

Massachusetts State Police and Taunton Police responded to the tragedy at a shopping mall.

Shortly after 7:00 pm (2300 GMT), the suspect drove his car into the glass entrance at a Macy's department store, at the Silver City Galleria, state police said.

Two people were stabbed at a local home before the suspect crashed his car into the store facade. He then stabbed two more people at a mall restaurant.

"At this point none of the victims are deceased although some injuries may be life-threatening," police said.

"It is possible that the assailant was involved in an earlier motor vehicle crash on Myrick Street prior to the stabbings there."

No motive for the attack was immediately known. The suspect's condition was not clear.

"I heard shots and saw cops loading AR-15s and I ran for my life," one witness told CBS affiliate WBZ.

Another said shots rang out in Bertucci's restaurant at the shopping center. – Rappler.com

Senate graduates: Pia Cayetano wins, Lapid loses in local polls

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MANILA, Philippines – While most sitting senators would aim for higher elective positions, some settle to return to their hometowns and run in local races.

Senators Pia Cayetano and Lito Lapid, who have served in Senate since 2004, end their term this year and aimed for a local position.

But the two senators have different fates: Cayetano won as Taguig representative, while Lapid lost as mayor of Angeles City in Pampanga.

Cayetano will be replacing her brother Lino in Congress after defeating her lone contender, city councilor Michelle Anne Gonzales, by more than 50,000 votes. She got 69.4% of the total votes.

Unlike her brother who started in local positions, Cayetano is a neophyte in local politics. She never had any other elective positions in government apart from being a senator.

Meanwhile, Lapid was defeated by reelectionist Angeles City Mayor Edgardo Pamintuan by more than 30,000 votes. Lapid only got 33.8% of the votes, compared to Pamintuan's 56.6%.

Lapid was a local politician before becoming a senator. He served as Pampanga's vice governor from 1992 to 1995, and governor from 1995 to 2004.

Both have relatives who ran for national positions this year: Cayetano's brother Alan Peter is 4th in the unofficial tally of votes in the vice presidential race, and Lapid's son Mark is yet to enter the top 12 in the unofficial tally of votes in the senatorial elections.

Other graduating senators this year – those who have served for 6 consecutive years since 2004 – include Miriam Defensor-Santiago who's currently 5th in the unofficial tally of votes in the presidential elections, and the 3 senators who are implicated in the pork barrel issue (Juan Ponce Enrile, Jinggoy Estrada, and Ramon "Bong" Revilla Jr). – Rappler.com

Editor’s Note: An earlier version of this story said that Senator Lito Lapid was defeated in the Angeles City mayoral race by Edgardo Pamintuan Jr. This has been corrected.

Court acquits ex-Comelec chair Abalos in NBN-ZTE case

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ACQUITTED. Former Commission on Elections chief Benjamin Abalos. Rappler file photo

MANILA, Philippines – The anti-graft court Sandiganbayan has acquitted former Commission on Elections (Comelec) chair Benjamin Abalos of graft charges in connection with the botched  $329-million national broadband network government deal with ZTE Corporation of China.

The Sandiganbayan's Fourth Division said in its decision issued on Wednesday, May 11, that state prosecutors failed to provide sufficient proof that Abalos had brokered the deal for a fee.

"The failure of the prosecution to sufficiently establish its allegation that the accused brokered for ZTE for a fee in the concluded NBN-ZTE contract has rendered moot the legal issue on whether the alleged act constitutes the offense defined under RA No. 3019, 3 (h)," the court said.

"Accordingly, accused Benjamin S. Abalos is acquitted of the charge against him for failure of the prosecution to establish his guilt beyond reasonable doubt," it added.

The court said that the evidence provided by prosecutors “only proved that accused was brokering the collaboration between AHI and ZTE, where ZTE would supply equipment to AHI while AHI would contract with the Philippine government for the operation of the NBN.”

“It was not able to establish that he brokered the signed contract between ZTE and the Philippine government and that he did so for a fee," it said.

State prosecutors had accused Abalos of abusing his position as Comelec chairman when he brokered for ZTE to get the contract for the national government’s National Broadband Network project between September 2006 and April 2007.

For this, Abalos was supposed to have received $130 million in commission from ZTE, thereby bloating the original contract cost to $329 million.

He is also accused of offering a P200-million bribe to then Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Romulo Neri for the approval of the project, and $10 million to businessman Joey de Venecia for his Amsterdam Holdings Incorporated (AHI), a competing contractor, to drop its bid for the project.

The prosecutors said these were in violation of Republic Act 3019 or the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act, which prohibits public officials from having pecuniary interests in government projects. (READ: Abalos conviction in NBN-ZTE case sought)

The NBN-ZTE deal was among the major controversies that hounded the Arroyo administration.

In February 2008,  then President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo admitted in an interview with radio dzRh that the day before she witnessed the signing of the NBN-ZTE deal contract on April 21, 2007 in Boao, China, she was informed of alleged irregularities in the contract. But she decided not to scrap it then as it involved another government.

The project is funded through a loan from the Chinese government.

 

Mounting pressure from opposition lawmakers coupled with public outrage over allegations of overpricing, corruption, and backroom deals in connection with the project eventually prompted Arroyo to cancel it.

Neri, who Abalos had allegedly tried to bribe, was earlier found guilty of simple misconduct in connection with the deal. (READ: CA affirms guilty verdict in NB-ZTE deal– Rappler.com

'Vigilant collaboration' with next admin – CBCP

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'VIGILANT COLLABORATION.' The Catholic Bishops' Conference of the Philippines, led by Archbishop Socrates Villegas, vows 'vigilant collaboration' with the new administration set to be led by presumptive president-elect Rodrigo Duterte. Photo of Villegas by Roy Lagrde; photo of Duterte by Manman Dejeto

MANILA, Philippines – The Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) vowed "vigilant collaboration" with the next administration as Davao City Mayor Rodrigo Duterte is set to become the Philippines’ next president.

"The greatest promise the Church can offer any government is vigilant collaboration, and that offer, we make now," CBCP president Lingayen-Dagupan Archbishop Socrates Villegas said in a statement issued Monday evening, May 9.

"Vigilant collaboration" deviates slightly from a familiar stance of Catholic bishops during the Marcos dictatorship and in succeeding years: "critical collaboration."

When he was first elected CBCP president in 2013, Villegas vowed "critical collaboration" with the government under President Benigno Aquino III. 

“Critical collaboration” was the same stance adopted by his mentor, the late Manila Archbishop Jaime Cardinal Sin, during the time of Marcos. Sin eventually helped mount the 1986 People Power Revolution that ousted the dictator.

Villegas did not respond when asked on Monday about the difference between "vigilant" and "critical" collaboration.

In his statement, Villegas added: "We will urge our people to work with the government for the good of all, and we shall continue to be vigilant so that ever so often we may speak out to teach and to prophesy, to admonish, and to correct – for this is our vocation."

‘Look, my betrayer is at hand’

Villegas then quoted a passage from the Bible: "Get up now, let us go."

That was from Chapter 26, Verse 26 of the Book of Mathew, where Jesus is praying in the Garden of Gethsemane and is about to be arrested. 

There, Jesus says, in a context unstated in Villegas’ message: "Behold, the hour is at hand when the Son of Man is to be handed over to sinners. Get up, let us go. Look, my betrayer is at hand."

The CBCP issued its post-election statement after it issued a stinging pre-election statement on May 1. The bishops in that pastoral letter warned against any candidate "who takes positions that are not only politically precarious but worse, morally reprehensible."

Before this, Villegas led the CBCP in December 2015 in slamming Duterte for cursing Pope Francis. 

Months later, in a personal Facebook post, he also questioned Duterte for making a rape joke.

Other bishops, such as Cagayan de Oro Archbishop Antonio Ledesma, also criticized Duterte for more than 1,400 extrajudicial killings in his own city.

Despite warnings from Catholic bishops and other religious groups, Duterte is now leading in the unofficial tally, with 15.82 million votes or 38.5% of the total. 

His closest rivals, Manuel Roxas II and Grace Poe, have both conceded.

‘Credit your victory to God’

While not explicitly mentioning Duterte in its post-election statement, the CBCP also assured prayers for winning candidates.

Villegas said: "God’s hand is to be recognized in the events of history. Credit then your victory, neither to fame nor popularity, but to God who calls you to service and to care for the weakest and the most distressed in our midst."

"Children need care that cannot be postponed. And many women still find themselves in situations of exploitation. Indigenous peoples remain marginalized and the vaunted growth in the economy still has to mean something significant for Filipinos living outside urban areas," he said.

Villegas told losing candidates, on the other hand, that they, "as persons, as sons and daughters of God, are infinitely so much more than the positions" for which they aspired.

"Rather than becoming despondent and discouraged, you should challenge yourselves by asking how it is that the Risen Lord sends you ‘to make disciples of all nations.’ Surely there are so many other ways to contribute to the building of the Kingdom of God. It is for you to discover your paths, in faith and in docility to God’s spirit," the CBCP president said.

Villegas also said the Catholic Church cannot stop in commenting on political issues even if "several critical, even spiteful, voices” have asked them “to desist from ‘interfering’ in politics."

Villegas said: "We do not aspire after office and we have sought none. We do not even impose upon the Catholic faithful a set of anointed candidates. But it would be a denial of Christ’s universal lordship were we to desist from reminding his disciples of what fidelity to him — in all things, including political life — demands." – Rappler.com

Trump rolls unrivaled, Sanders takes West Virginia

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WINNERS IN WEST VIRGINIA. Donald Trump (L) and Bernie Sanders (R). AFP file photos

WASHINGTON DC, USA – Presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump cruised to victory in two more states Tuesday, May 11, while Bernie Sanders beat rival Democrat Hillary Clinton in West Virginia to bolster his argument for remaining in the race.

The substantial wins in West Virginia and Nebraska according to early results put Trump ever closer to clinching the 1,237 delegates he needs to be declared the party's nominee at its convention in July.

"Thank you West Virginia!" and "Thank you Nebraska!" Trump said in a pair of tweets.

Now the sole Republican candidate in the contest after his remaining rivals dropped out last week, Trump is transitioning from the fierce primary battles with the likes of Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio to a general election showdown with Clinton, even amid deep Republican discord about the celebrity billionaire.

He has narrowed his picks for running mate, telling Fox News he is considering 5 vice president options.

"I think they are excellent," he added. "I'll announce whoever it will be at the convention" in Cleveland, Ohio, Trump said.

With Republican concern about their nominee sizzling, a Quinnipiac University poll out Tuesday showed Trump closing in on Clinton's lead in two major battleground states – Florida and Pennsylvania – and overtaking her in swing state Ohio.

No candidate has won the presidential election without taking at least two of those three states.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell seized on the polls as a sign that Trump will mount a strong challenge against Clinton.

"It's a long time 'til November, but the early indications are that our nominee is likely to be very competitive," McConnell told reporters.

Unyielding Sanders

Despite Clinton's overwhelming delegate lead, Sanders ensured the race would go on with his win in West Virginia, where he was ahead of Clinton by 11 percentage points with about a third of precincts reporting.

With 8 contests remaining, "we think we have a good chance to win many of those states," Sanders told supporters Tuesday in San Francisco, according to CBS News.

"We hope we can win some of them with big majorities."

Quinnipiac's poll also found that Sanders, a democratic socialist who commands an enthusiastic following on the left, would do better against Trump than Clinton in all 3 states if he were the Democratic nominee.

The 74-year-old Vermont senator, who defeated Clinton in Indiana, has mounted an unyielding come-from-behind challenge that has exposed weaknesses in the former secretary of state's campaign.

Although almost certain to win the Democratic nomination – she is only about 160 delegates short of that goal – Clinton's ability to excite young and white working-class Democrats going into the general election has been put in doubt by Sanders's primary successes.

But she has used her campaign stops in Appalachia – including an event in Kentucky, which holds its Democratic primary on May 17 – as opportunities to win over blue-collar white voters.

"If I am so fortunate enough to be the nominee, I'm looking forward to debating Donald Trump come the fall," she said in Louisville.

"We can't be scapegoating and finger-pointing and blaming and demeaning and degrading and insulting our Americans."

In coal-mining West Virginia, Clinton shot herself in the foot in March by telling voters in neighboring Ohio she would slash mining jobs and put coal companies "out of business."

She later apologized and suggested her remarks were misunderstood, but in a state where livelihoods have hinged on coal for generations, many are unconvinced.

Trump challenges

While Clinton still has Sanders to worry about, Trump faces a rebellion within the Republican leadership over the insulting tone and shifting substance of his candidacy.

House Speaker Paul Ryan last week announced he was "not ready" to support Trump, a rare rebuke that put the power struggles within the Republican Party on very public display.

Ryan and other Republican congressional leaders were due to huddle with Trump Thursday in Washington, in highly anticipated meetings that could help gauge GOP support for the real estate tycoon.

McConnell said he expected "a cordial meeting to discuss the way forward."

It may be thorny. A defeated Cruz ruled out a third-party bid, but when pressed by reporters as he returned to the US Senate he declined to say whether he would endorse Trump.

Rubio said he would "support the Republican nominee" but would not offer an outright endorsement.

The Republican establishment is still reeling from Trump's hostile takeover of the party, aghast at positions he's taken on trade, foreign policy and taxes that fly in the face of conservative dictums.

But Trump has shown no sign of backing down, and some Republicans are looking to heal, embrace the nominee and turn to defeating Clinton in November.

"I think the party needs to come together," said Senator John McCain, the 2008 Republican nominee. – Michael Mathes, AFP / Rappler.com

With Duterte win, global populism wave hits Philippines

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Duterte appears on Quoboloy's SMNI network, and meets key people and supporters including Sen. Alan Peter Cayetano and Sen Pia Cayetano. Photo by Manman Dejeto/Rappler

MANILA, Philippines – The election of Rodrigo Duterte as Philippine president marks the latest victory for populist politics, as voters around the world reward candidates offering simple solutions to complex problems.

In a country beset by crime, poverty and corruption, Duterte promised voters a raft of quick fixes that many analysts believe will remain empty promises. One of his main campaign pledges was to completely eradicate crime within 6 months.

Foul-mouthed tirades have only added to the appeal of his plug-and-play solutions for a broken economy and a bankrupt society, echoing in some ways the simplistic sloganeering of presidential hopeful Donald Trump in the United States.

In Europe, iconoclast politicians revel in anti-immigrant rhetoric, capitalising on voters' disquiet over rising unemployment and an elite they think is out of touch.

"People want some kind of change. They want to break from the past. They are exasperated, aggravated," said Earl Parreno of the Manila-based Institute for Political and Economic Reform.

"They want someone like Duterte who promises everything will be solved in 3 to 6 months."

Duterte's victory over establishment candidate Mar Roxas was founded on simplistic brutality.

The 71-year-old vowed he would end crime by ordering security forces to kill tens of thousands of suspected criminals, then pardon himself if he was found guilty of mass murder.

Despite 6 years of stable economic growth under President Benigno Aquino, one in four Filipinos still lives on less than $1.30 a day and a devastating rich-poor divide has worsened.

"People want change. They are happy to take risks to get this change," said Parreno.

"Whether the change is better or worse, that's not the issue. They want a new platform, even if they don't know what is next."

Colorful

Even in a country that has a track record of controversial presidents – dictators and movie stars jostle in the pages of recent history books – Duterte's hustings have been colorful affairs.

Supporters have delighted in their candidate's willingness to shoot from the hip, like when he called the pope a "son of a whore" and made jokes about raping an Australian missionary.

His coarse ascent mirrors that of Trump, the presumptive presidential candidate for the Republican Party.

The real estate mogul has similarly shown willingness to offend, luxuriating in name-calling at rallies that have at times teetered on the hysterical.

Trump – who, like Duterte, has drawn comparisons with Adolf Hitler – is regularly accused of demagoguery, the populism-plus-one of a politician who plays to the baying mob.

"Demagogues do not reassure the electorate with a rational assessment of risk as mainstream politicians tend to do," says Richard Ashby Wilson, professor of anthropology and law at the University of Connecticut.

"Instead, they play up existing threats, embrace a narrative of victimhood and sow despair," he wrote on theconversation.com earlier this year.

While Duterte has focused on criminals, Trump has trained his fire on Muslims and Mexicans.

He has threatened to build a wall along the southern US border to keep out immigrants – Mexicans are "rapists" in Trump's world – and says he will ban all non-American Muslims entering the United States in his bid to combat the perceived threat of terrorism.

This scapegoating of minorities finds a less extreme form in Europe, a continent staggering under the weight of its worst migrant crisis since World War II.

Geert Wilders in the Netherlands, Marine Le Pen in France and Nigel Farage in Britain have all enjoyed electoral success to one degree or another, espousing anti-immigrant nationalisms that until a few years ago seemed consigned to Europe's past.

Cookie-cutter politicians

For Francisco Magno, president of the Philippine Political Science Association, the intolerance of modern day populists is magnified by social media.

The short soundbites and use of imagery favoured on the medium "is used to emphasise some kind of purity. It makes things black and white: strong and weak, purity vs. inclusiveness," he told Agence France-Presse in Manila.

That also translates to the stump; Trump and Duterte make speeches filled with incomplete sentences and unfiltered thoughts that quickly segue from one topic to another, both claiming simply to be telling it like it is.

Ian McAllister, a political scientist at the Australian National University, said this reflected voters' widespread disillusionment with cookie-cutter candidates.

"We have increasingly seen over the last 10 to 15 years the rise of what are popularly known as anti-politician politicians – people who speak their mind," he said.

While Duterte may have triumphed in Monday's (May 9) poll, pundits expect Trump will come unstuck in November's US general election, losing to his Democratic Party rival Hillary Clinton.

But even if he were to win, Trump, like Duterte, would likely be tamed by the political system he is fighting against, says Simon Tormey at the University of Sydney.

"It's often like walking through treacle being in government. They get all the populist energy beaten out of them as they are trampled on by vested interests and the flood of political bureaucacy," he said.

"There are no real examples anywhere of a populist politican making any radical change from within. Either their behaviour changes or they are booted out." – Mynardo Macaraig, AFP/Rappler.com

Rappler Talk: Sebastian Duterte on what it's like to be the son of Rodrigo Duterte

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Rappler talks to Sebastian "Baste" Duterte, the youngest son of presumptive president Rodrigo Duterte.

Shy and self-effacing, the younger Duterte talks about life on the campaign trail and how the crowds were too overwhelming at times. He also talks about how, if his father wins, he would rather remain in Davao because traffic is bad in Manila.

Baste also talks about how it's like growing up with a tough-talking, strict father like the long-time Davao City mayor. Watch the full Skype interview here! – Rappler.com


Cagayan resident arrests gun ban violator

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TUGUEGARAO CITY, Philippines – A gun ban violator in the Cagayan Valley region was the subject of a citizen's arrest during the elections on Monday, May 9.

Police Chief Inspector Chevalier Iringan said the concerned resident who arrested a gun ban violator exercised a power enabling private individuals to turn in law violators to the proper authorities.

"Ang maganda dito ay in-exercise nila yung power nila na tinatawag na 'citizen's arrest' na ibinigay sa kanila ng ating Saligang Batas dahil kaunti lang ang nakakaalam dito," Iringan told Rappler in a phone interview.

(What's good about this is they exercised their power of 'citizen's arrest' which is vested to them by the Constitution. Only few people knew about this.)

Iringan also said there were cases of "malicious mischief and threats" and gun ban violations reported on election day, but there were no killings or incidents of violence in the region.

Since January 2016, however, at least 16 people have been killed due to politics – 7 in Isabela and 9 in Cagayan.

The latest killing was on May 7, the last day of the campaign period, when a mayoral candidate of Jones town in Isabela was gunned down.

Three people were killed and 4 were hurt, including a 12-year-old girl who was shot in the head.

The suspects in the ambush have been arrested and are now facing murder charges.

'Faulty VCMs'

Iringan said they also received reports of faulty vote-counting machines (VCMs) at the height of the voting period, adding that these led to delayed voting in some polling precincts in the region.

Only about 5% of the VCMs malfunctioned, he added. (READ: Poll tech glitches 'very negligible – Palace)

In Tuguegarao City, the proclamation of winners was delayed until Wednesday, May 11, because of a VCM not reading its SD card. 

The Commission on Elections (Comelec) still had to bring the VCM and SD card to Smartmatic's field office in La Union to fix the glitches.

Comelec officials here said that the 500 votes in the precinct with the malfunctioning VCM may still affect the results of the 12th and 13th councilors. – Rappler.com

Queen Elizabeth II calls Chinese delegation 'very rude'

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OVERHEARD. Britain's Queen Elizabeth II (L) talks to Pastor Kofi Banful and Jayne Banful in the garden of Buckingham Palace in London as up to 8,000 guests attend the first royal garden party of the year on May 10, 2016. Photo by John Stillwell/AFP

LONDON, United Kingdom – Queen Elizabeth II was caught on camera describing some Chinese officials as "very rude" in a rare diplomatic gaffe by the long-serving British monarch over a state visit that drummed up billions in Chinese investment.

Her comments, aired on Wednesday, May 11, came just hours after Prime Minister David Cameron on Tuesday, May 10, also made inadvertently public remarks, referring to Afghanistan and Nigeria as "most corrupt."

Dressed in a pink coat and hat with white gloves, the queen could be heard during a garden party at Buckingham Palace on Tuesday making unguarded comments about a Chinese state visit last year.

Police commander Lucy D'Orsi was introduced to the queen as the woman who oversaw security for the visit of President Xi Jinping and his wife in October, to which the monarch replied: "Oh, bad luck."

The queen went on to say to D'Orsi that members of the Chinese delegation "were very rude to the ambassador" and exclaimed: "Extraordinary!"

The BBC said that the queen's comments were blanked out on BBC World transmissions in China.

The British monarch never expresses overtly political views in public and is known for her reserve and discretion, never granting an interview in her 64-year reign.

Her husband Prince Philip on the other hand is notorious for his gaffes and off-color jokes.

He told a group of British students during a visit to China in 1986 that they would become "slitty-eyed" if they remained in the country.

Prince Charles has had a famously fraught relationship with China because of his friendship with the Dalai Lama and has yet to make an official visit to the country's mainland.

He referred to Chinese leaders as "appalling old waxworks" in a private journal entry about the Hong Kong handover ceremony in 1997.

'Hugely stressful'

London and Beijing both hailed Xi's visit as a high watermark in Chinese-British relations at the time.

A clutch of contracts said by Cameron to be worth almost £40 billion (51 billion euros, $58 billion) were announced during the visit.

Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang on Wednesday said the visit had been "very successful."

"Both sides have high level recognition of that," he said.

Foreign minister Philip Hammond, however, was quoted by British media as saying that the visit had been "hugely stressful."

But he added: "Our relationship with China is very strong and has been greatly strengthened by the success of that visit."

Buckingham Palace said it would not comment on the queen's private conversations.

"However the Chinese State Visit was extremely successful and all parties worked closely to ensure it proceeded smoothly," a palace official said.

Earlier on Tuesday, Cameron was overheard at another Buckingham Palace event to mark the queen's birthday calling Nigeria and Afghanistan "possibly the two most corrupt countries in the world."

He was filmed making the remarks to the queen and Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby, ahead of an anti-corruption summit in London on Thursday where the Afghan and Nigerian presidents are expected.

"We've got some leaders of some fantastically corrupt countries coming to Britain," the prime minister said.

"Nigeria and Afghanistan, possibly the two most corrupt countries in the world," he added.

Welby, who worked as an oil executive in West Africa before joining the church and who has also undertaken conflict resolution work in Nigeria, noted that "this particular president is actually not corrupt."

"He's really trying," Cameron agreed, and the queen noted to Welby: "He is trying, isn't he?"

It was not clear to whom they were referring, but Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari and Afghanistan's President Ashraf Ghani are both due to attend the summit.

In anti-bribery watchdog Transparency International's Corruption Perceptions Index for 2015, Afghanistan ranks 166th and Nigeria 136th out of 168 countries and territories.

Return stolen assets

Buhari said Wednesday that he did not want an apology from Cameron but said Britain could return assets stolen by officials who fled to London.

"I am not going to demand any apology from anybody. What I am demanding is the return of the assets," Buhari told an anti-corruption event hosted by the Commonwealth Secretariat in London.

"This is what I'm asking for. What would I do with an apology?" he said to cheers from many civil society organizations and Nigeria delegates in the audience.

Asked about Cameron's comments, a spokesman for the Nigerian president earlier said: "This is embarrassing to us, to say the least, given the good work that the President is doing.

"The prime minister must be looking at an old snapshot of Nigeria," he said.

Buhari has embarked on a widespread anti-corruption campaign since taking office one year ago, and is due to give a speech on the issue in London on Wednesday.

In Afghanistan, Ghani also made a promise to rein in runaway corruption when he was elected in 2014. – Dario Thuburn, AFP / Rappler.com

Can the OAV vote decide the vice-presidential race?

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TIGHT RACE. Will the OAV vote affect Leni Robredo's lead over Bongbong Marcos?

MANILA, Philippines – Given what appears to be a hairline gap between the top two contenders for the vice presidency, getting 99% of the votes counted becomes even more important, according to Pulse Asia research director Ana Tabunda.

Abroad, the overseas absentee voters (OAV) appear to be the biggest bloc yet. A record-breaking 1.38 million overseas Filipino workers registered for the OAV, making them a potential game changer in the 2016 elections.

Locally, an estimated 3 million votes have yet to be transmitted from the precincts.

As of 10:05 am of Wednesday, May 11, unofficial partial election results data from the mirror server showed that only 349 of the 1,767 OAV precincts have transmitted results.

These precincts accounted for only 334,092 registered voters or 24.35% of the total 1,037,821 registered overseas voters.

Global turnout for the OAV is currently at 33.93%. If current turnout holds, only roughly 350,000 votes might still be expected from the OAV.  

Our computations show that Ferdinand Marcos Jr's share of these remaining expected votes will not be enough to turn the tide in his favor. 

Expected votes

As of 10:05 am of Tuesday, May 10, Marcos was leading in the overseas vote with 48,424 votes, or almost 42% of the total.

Leni Robredo, who is leading the national count back home, ranked 3rd in the OAV vote, with 24,795 votes or just about 19.5% of totalso far. (See graph below)

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Given the expected turnout of roughly 352,133 votes, Marcos with his 42% would only get an additional 148,451 votes.

Robredo with her 19.5% share would get 67,634. (See how we computed for this in the table below.)

GAME CHANGER? As of 10am of May 11, the Marcos leads by 42.16% in the OAV.

As of 10:05 am of May 11, Robredo's lead versus Marcos was at 225,326 votes.

Thus, should the turnout and voter share patterns hold, expected OAV votes will narrow the gap between Marcos and Robredo by 80,817 votes but Robredo could still lead by 144,509 votes.

It must be noted that there are differences in turnouts per region and post. Precincts that reported in Europe currently have a turnout of 21.11%. Precincts that already reported in Singapore has a turnout of 45.92%. – with Joben Ilagan/Rappler.com

Top court orders disaster fund for drought-hit India

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SEVERE DROUGHT. An Indian woman collects water from an almost dried up well at Chintamanivadi village, India, April 20, 2016. File photo by Divyakant Solanki/EPA

NEW DELHI, India – India's top court criticized the government Wednesday, May 11, for failing to set up a disaster fund to help drought-hit farmers and villagers suffering crop losses and severe water shortages.

India is in the grip of its worst water crisis in years, with the government saying about 330 million people, or a quarter of the population, are suffering from drought after two weak monsoons.

Acting on a petition, the Supreme Court issued a slew of orders to the government including creating a national plan to tackle the crisis, a mitigation fund and standard procedures for declaring areas drought-hit.

Justice Madan B. Lokur also lashed out at the government over a lack of preparedness for the drought which has struck at least 10 states across the country.

"Evidently, anticipating a disaster such as a drought is not yet in the 'things to do' list of the Union of India and ad hoc measures and knee jerk reactions are the order of the day," Lokur said in a written judgement.

"We are also quite surprised that the National Disaster Mitigation Fund has not yet been set up even after 10 years of the enforcement of the DM (Disaster Management) Act," he also said.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi has met recently with at least 3 state chief ministers over the drought, as the government comes under intense pressure to ease the crisis.

Rural Development Minister Birender Singh told parliament on Tuesday, May 10, that millions in government funds have been released to drought-hit regions, as temperatures soar across the country in the summer months.

Industry body ASSOCHAM estimated on Wednesday the crisis would cost the economy $100 billion if it continued until the end of the year.

Poor rains have prompted extreme measures including water restrictions, armed guards at reservoirs, and water trains sent to the worst-affected regions.

Farmer suicides are high and some have migrated to cities and towns to work as daily wage laborers to earn money. Villagers in remote areas are being forced to walk long distances to source drinking water as local wells dry up.

Officials have forecast an above-average monsoon this year, offering hope for the struggling agriculture sector that employs about 60% of the population.

Farmers across India rely on the monsoon – a 4-month rainy season which starts in June – to cultivate crops. – Rappler.com

Robredo camp to Marcos: Stop the 'mind conditioning'

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FIRING BACK. Georgina Hernandez, spokesperson of Leni Robredo, rejects allegations of cheating in the vice presidential elections.

MANILA, Philippines – The camp of Liberal Party (LP) vice presidential candidate Leni Robredo on Wednesday, May 11, urged chief rival Senator Ferdinand Marcos Jr to stop trying to "condition" the minds of the electorate in a tight vice presidential race that's likely going to end in a hairline victory. 

"Lahat ng mga paratang na kanilang binabanggit sa media ay [puwedeng] maidaan sa pormal na pamamaraan. Ipasa natin sa Comelec nang mahusay. Huwag natin gawan ng paraan na maimpluwensiyahan ang isipan ng publiko sa kung ano man ang sinasabi nila na nangyayari, ginagawa, nagagawa sa eleksyong ito," Robredo's spokesperson, Georgina Hernandez, told media in a press briefing. 

(All the accusations they're throwing our way can be solved through formal means. Let's submit these to the Commission on Elections properly. Let's not find ways to condition the minds of the public over what they allege happened and is happening in this election.) 

Marcos had earlier accused Robredo of cheating in the vice presidential race, which he initially led based on the real-time partial and unofficial count. The partial, unofficial count represents transmissions coming straight from the precinct level. (READ: Can the OAV vote decide the vice-presidential race?)

Marcos' lead was slowly chipped away, however, and Robredo eventually overtook him in the wee hours of the morning on Tuesday, May 10. Observers and experts have explained this was because votes from Robredo's bailiwicks – the Bicol Region, parts of the Visayas, and parts of Mindanao – came in much later.

In contrast, Marcos bailiwicks were able to transmit much earlier. 

The Marcos camp has since claimed a "new script" was inserted past 7 pm on Monday, May 9, or after polls had closed. While the senator's camp could not say how the alleged "new script" could affect the counting of votes, it raised alarm in a press conference held on Wednesday

Hernandez said their camp is unsure if the supposed "new script" is true or not. They are also unaware of the basis for Marcos' allegations. 

Bu the newly-minted spokesperson rebuffed any possibility of cheating using the "new script" all the same. 

"Nais po namin bigyang linaw na umaakyat pa po ang boto ni Senator Marcos pagkatapos ng 7:30 pm. In fact, pinakamataas na botong natanggap ni Senator Marcos, 8:308:35 pm…nag peak 'yung lamang ni Senator Marcos at over 900,000 after noong sinasabing new script na pinasok," she said.  

(We want to clarify that there was still a surge in Senator Marcos' votes past 7:30 pm. In fact, the highest numbers of votes Senator Marcos received were reflected in the tally at around 8:308:35 pm. This was the peak of Senator Marcos' lead at over 900,000 – around the same time the supposed new script was inserted.) 

Robredo began leading at around 3 am on Tuesday.

Even Marcos' standard-bearer, Senator Miriam Defensor Santiago, has joined the fray and accused Robredo of cheating.

"Iginagalang po natin ang pahayag ni Senator Miriam ngunit kung titignan po nung Abril pa lang po, ay unti-unti nang tumataas ang rating ni Cong Leni sa iba't ibang mga survey. Ang pagtaas na ito ay bunga ng hirap at pawis ng mga taga suporta at volunteers ni Cong Leni kaya para sabihin na ito'y minanipula lang ay malaking insulto sa kanilang pagsisikap," said Hernandez, referring to Santiago's statement. 

(We respect Senator Miriam's statements, but as early as April, Congresswoman Leni's ratings in different surveys began rising slowly. And this rise is thanks to the hard work of her supporters and volunteers, so to say that the results were manipulated is a huge insult to the effort they've put into this campaign.)

Santiago is 5th and last in the presidential race but has yet to formally concede. LP standard-bearer Manuel Roxas II is a distant second to presumptive president Rodrigo Duterte but has already conceded.  

In the same press conference, the Robredo camp said it expected a narrow victory for Robredo by just over 226,000 votes. – Rappler.com

Italy issues green light for gay civil unions

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LANDMARK BILL. This file photo taken on June 13, 2015 shows heart-shaped balloons pictured near the Colosseum during the Gay Pride Parade in Rome. File photo by Filippo Monteforte/AFP

ROME, Italy – Italy's parliament on Wednesday, May 11, gave a green light for the introduction of gay civil unions in the last major Western country not to legally recognize same-sex relationships.

Lawmakers in the lower-house Chamber of Deputies voted 369-193 in favor of a vote of confidence in the government which makes final approval of the divisive civil unions bill automatic.

The long-awaited and much-disputed legislation was hailed as a civil rights landmark but also criticized as falling short of full equality for gay couples, particularly in relation to adoption rights.

The bill itself was expected to be voted later Wednesday.

Prime Minister Matteo Renzi called the confidence vote to short-circuit potential last-minute blocking or delaying amendments by opponents of the legislation, who include rebels in his own party as well as the Catholic right.

"Today is a day of celebration for so many people," Renzi wrote on his Facebook page ahead of the vote.

"We are writing another important page of the Italy we want ... it was no longer acceptable to have any more delays after years of failed attempts."

The government used the same confidence vote tactic to get the bill approved by the upper house Senate in February, but only after the original text had been diluted to appease opponents threatening to scupper it altogether.

A draft article that would have granted gay couples the right to adopt their partners' biological children was dropped. While adoption will not be ruled out entirely, family judges will decide on a case-by-case basis.

'A bittersweet victory'

In the face of concern that civil unions would be too similar to marriage, references to a need for faithfulness were also removed.

Gay couples will be able to take each other's names and inherit each other's residual pension rights, but critics say the new rules fall short of legal protection offered to same-sex couples in other European countries, Canada and the United States.

"For Italian homosexuals and all those who support civil rights, it's a bittersweet victory," said Claudio Rossi Marcelli, a commentator for Internazionale magazine, who lives with his husband and children in Denmark.

"The glass is half full," Gabriele Piazzoni, national secretary of the Arcigay organisation, said in a statement.

"The text contains the recognition and protection many gays and lesbians have been waiting for all their lives... (but) everything this law has failed to guarantee leaves a bitter taste."

Several previous attempts to legalize civil unions in Italy have foundered, often due to opposition orchestrated by the Catholic church.

In 2007, a mass protest led the center-left government of Romano Prodi to drop a much less ambitious civil union project – and the failure of the bill was cited as one of the causes behind the fall of his government in early 2008.

The current bill risked running aground over the adoption clause, with critics insisting it would open the door to surrogacy, which is illegal under Italian law.

Renzi's Interior Minister Angelino Alfano was among the most fervent opponents of providing a legal framework for surrogacy, saying in January the the use of paid surrogate mothers should be treated like a sex crime.

At the same time, the center-left premier faced pressure to get a bill onto the statute book from the European Court of Human Rights.

Judges at the court ruled last year that Italy had breached its commitments under the European Convention on Human Rights by denying gay couples legal unions.

Opinion polls suggest Italian public opinion has moved decisively in favor of civil unions in recent years but that a majority of voters remains opposed to extending equal adoption rights to gay couples.

The decision to use a confidence vote to push the bill through angered the Church, with Nunzio Galantino, secretary general of the Italian Bishops' conference, describing it as "a defeat for everyone." – Angus MacKinnon & Ella Ide, AFP / Rappler.com

North Korea sings praises of 'motherly' ruling party after congress

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CONCERT. North Korea's all-female Moranbong Band performs in Pyongyang on May 11, 2016. Photo by Ed Jones/AFP

PYONGYANG, North Korea – North Korea on Wednesday, May 11, sang the praises of the ruling party in a two-hour concert extolling its achievements and those of the Kim dynasty that has ruled the country for its entire history.

The show entitled "Always follow our party" was staged to celebrate a Workers' Party congress, the first for 36 years, which ended Monday.

That meeting was widely seen as a coronation for current leader Kim Jong-Un, who took power after the sudden death of his father Kim Jong-Il in December 2011 and has been working to claw back power from the military.

The concert featured the country's first all-women group, the Moranbong Band, whose members – clad in white outfits ending above the knee and matching hats – were said to have been chosen by the leader himself.

Also featured in the event at a 10,000-seat Pyongyang stadium were the Chongbong Band, formed in 2015, and the military's State-Merited Chorus.

While the Moranbong Band made nods to Western popular musical influences, songs about love referred to love of the party, the country, or the ruling family – which are taken to be one and the same.

A song entitled "Mother Party" described its love for the people as "higher than the sky, deeper than the sea."

The concert echoed the North's historical narrative – that it won the 1950-53 Korean War and went on to build a thriving economy in the teeth of adversity.

Archive film or computer-generated images projected behind the performers showed smiling Stakhanovite workers achieving miracles of production in industry and construction, or heroic soldiers struggling through snowdrifts.

'Nothing to envy'

There was also footage of recent achievements such as the launch of a rocket which put a satellite in space – an exercise seen in the West as a disguised ballistic missile test.

The overarching theme of the performance was the good life the party had given its people, played out in numbers such as "We have nothing to envy in the world" and "Glory to the Workers' Party of Korea."

Images of golden wheatfields and bountiful rice crops suggested a theme of plenty at odds with the North's history of famine in the 1990s and the serious food shortages international agencies say continue today.

While praising the "motherly party," the concert also paid tribute to all 3 members of the ruling dynasty: national founder Kim Il-Sung, his son and successor Kim Jong-Il, and the current ruler, whose smiling portrait closed out the event.

"We only follow you, no others," was the title of one song, referring to Kim Jong-Un.

Western analysts say the party congress delivered little of political substance, restating Pyongyang's continued foreign policy of belligerent defiance backed by an expanding nuclear arsenal.

But the North has spared no effort to celebrate the event, staging a parade in Kim Il-Sung Square on Tuesday, May 10, followed the same day by a mass dance and torchlight parade.

Party delegates, including several members of the politburo standing committee, made up most of Wednesday's audience in the auditorium, which was decked out in the party colors of red and gold. – Simon Martin, AFP / Rappler.com


French 19-year-old commits suicide live on Periscope

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PARIS, France – French prosecutors launched an investigation Wednesday, May 11, after a 19-year-old woman committed suicide by throwing herself in front of a suburban train near Paris and streamed the act live on Periscope.

The suicide, which took place on Tuesday, May 10, at a station in Egly to the south of Paris, is the latest controversy to hit the Twitter-owned streaming service, which has recently seen rapes and assaults shown live.

The unnamed French woman "sent a text to one of her friends several minutes before her death to make them aware of her intentions," said prosecutor Eric Lallement.

"She also made statements to Internet users via the Periscope application to explain her act."

A judicial source said the victim "spoke of a rape and named the aggressor" during the filming, adding that the claims were being treated with caution at this stage.

Footage of the woman's actual death was removed by Periscope but some of the video leading up to the suicide was republished by users, and was still available on YouTube.

The woman is seen on a couch, smoking a cigarette, saying the video is "not designed to create a buzz... but to make people react, to open their minds, and nothing else."

The video then cuts to a black screen, and what appear to be the voices of emergency personnel can be faintly heard. Messages of concern from Periscope users are seen flashing up on the screen.

Periscope is a smartphone application that allows users to stream live video via their Twitter account. The video usually remains accessible for 24 hours.

Alerted by users

Police said they were informed by someone watching the stream.

"We were alerted around 4:30 pm by a Periscope user who was connected with the victim and told us that she was not well," a police source said.

Twitter, which bought Periscope in 2015, said it did not comment on individual accounts.

Disturbing incidents have become increasingly common on live-streaming services.

An 18-year-old woman appeared in court in the US state of Ohio last month accused of filming the rape of her 17-year-old friend by a 29-year-old man and live-streaming it on Periscope.

Marina Lonina "got caught up in the likes" that Periscope users gave the video, her lawyer told the court.

Buzzfeed reported on an apparent rape in March, when a young man was filmed by two friends having sex with a woman in London and the footage was streamed live on Periscope.

A mass brawl between teenage gangs at a London shopping center was also live-streamed in April.

Twitter and other social media companies have limited control over what users publish via their services, and rely on the public to flag illegal or disturbing content.

An investigation has been opened into the precise circumstances of Tuesday's suicide in Paris.

"Once the first results of the analysis of the victim's mobile telephone and the images diffused by Periscope are known, the investigators will attempt to specify the motivations for her act, and if necessary, to enlarge the investigation," Lallement said in a statement. – Alexandre Hielard, AFP / Rappler.com

Kenya earmarks $10M to close world's largest refugee camp

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SET FOR CLOSURE. A file photograph dated August 1, 2011 shows newly arrived refugees at the sprawling Dadaab refugee camp in northeastern Kenya. File photo by Dai Kurokawa/EPA

NAIROBI, Kenya – Kenya said Wednesday, May 11, it had set aside $10 million to help fund the closing of the world's largest refugee camp, home to around 350,000 mostly Somali refugees, citing security fears.

Kenya hosts around 600,000 refugees, some of whom have lived in the country for a quarter of a century.

On Friday, May 6, an interior ministry official announced a plan to refuse new refugee arrivals and shut Dadaab on the Kenya-Somalia border.

"For reasons of pressing national security that speak to the safety of Kenyans in a context of terrorist and criminal activities, the government ... has commenced the exercise of closing Dadaab Refugee Complex," Interior Minister Joseph Ole Nkaissery told a press conference in Nairobi.

"The refugees will be repatriated to their countries of origin or to third party countries for resettlement," Nkaissery said.

Nkaissery said the government would provide $10 million (just under 9 million euros) "to kick-start the repatriation process and subsequent closure of Dadaab," adding that a timetable was being drawn up.

Charities and the UN refugee agency are dismayed by the plan while human rights groups have warned that forcibly repatriating refugees would break international law.

Nkaissery repeated claims that terrorist attacks on Nairobi's Westgate shopping mall, at Kenya's Garissa university and elsewhere, "were planned and deployed from Dadaab refugee camp by transnational terrorists," but no credible evidence has yet been provided to support these allegations.

Nkaissery compared Kenya's Somali refugees to Syrian refugees in Europe.

"ISIS has taken advantage of refugee inflows and processes to install its destructive cells. So much so that governments across Europe and the Middle East have taken unprecedented efforts to limit refugee inflows into their countries on the grounds of national security," he said.

Nkaissery said Kenya, too, faces a potential threat from the Islamic State group, adding: "Kenya cannot look aside and allow this threat to escalate any further."

"This decision has been made by government reflecting the fact that the camps have become hosting grounds for Al-Shebab as well as centers of smuggling and contraband trade besides being enablers of illicit weapons proliferation," Nkaissery said, referring to Somalia's Al-Qaeda aligned group.

Dadaab residents, aid agencies on the ground and independent observers deny that Islamic militants find a safe haven there, while numerous reports have highlighted the role of corrupt Kenyan officials in the smuggling of charcoal, sugar and people through Dadaab. – Rappler.com

Mossack Fonseca to start legal action over Panama Papers leak

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PANAMA PAPERS. Law firm Mossack Fonseca is taking legal action over the massive trove of leaked documents. File photo by Alejandro Bolivar/EPA

PANAMA CITY, Panama – The law firm at the center of the Panama Papers scandal says it is filing suit against the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) for the leak of information it says is false.

The public gained its first access to the Panama Papers records of over 200,000 secret offshore companies when the ICIJ put a searchable database online earlier Monday, May 9.

The database, built on just a portion of the 11.5 million documents leaked from Panama's Mossack Fonseca law firm, reveals more than 360,000 names of individuals and companies behind the anonymous shell firms, the ICIJ said.

The law firm urged the ICIJ to cease and desist prior to the leak online, but it moved ahead with the release.

"The Consortium has forced us to start aggressive legal action to protect ourselves from acts such as these, which, since they are crimes, must be taken to the proper bodies for due process," the company said in a statement released on Tuesday, May 10.

The Panama Papers reveal the full extent to which the world's wealthy, alongside criminals, create nominee companies to stash and transfer assets out of sight of the law and tax officials.

Reports already published in April based on the explosive dossier linked some of the world's most powerful leaders, including Russian President Vladimir Putin, British Prime Minister David Cameron, and others to unreported offshore companies.

The new database can be searched by individual and company name and address, and shows links between those in the records.

But it gives no information – beyond their name – on the full identities of those behind the companies, nor of the underlying assets linked to the accounts. – Rappler.com

Solar Impulse 2 set for next leg in round-the-world flight

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SOLAR IMPULSE 2. Solar Impulse 2 takes-off from Mountain View, California towards Phoenix with Andre Borschberg at the controls. Photo by Solar Impulse on Flickr

LOS ANGELES, USA – The Solar Impulse 2 will resume its record-breaking quest on Thursday, May 12,  to circle the globe without consuming a drop of fuel, with a flight from Arizona to Oklahoma.

The experimental sun-powered plane, piloted by Swiss adventurer Bertrand Piccard, is set to take off from Phoenix at 3:00 am (1000 GMT).

"After sustained efforts from the entire team, at the Mission Control Center and on the ground, we have found a clear weather window that gives way for a 17 hour and 50 minute flight to complete the flight to reach the heart of the United States," the Solar Impulse 2 (SI2) team said in a statement.

"The objective is to reach New York as soon as possible!"

After being grounded for several months to undergo repairs, the plane resumed its round-the-world voyage in April, flying from Hawaii to California. It then flew to Phoenix on May 2.

It is expected to make one or two more stops in the United States before landing in New York City.

The SI2 was grounded in July last year when its batteries suffered problems halfway through its 21,700-mile (35,000-kilometer) circumnavigation.

The crew took several months to repair the damage from high tropical temperatures during the flight's final Pacific stage, a 4,000-mile (6,437-kilometer) flight between Nagoya, Japan and Hawaii.

The aircraft was flown on that stage by Piccard's teammate Andre Borschberg, whose 118-hour journey smashed the previous record of 76 hours and 45 minutes set by US adventurer Steve Fossett in 2006.

The plane is expected to cross the United States, stopping in New York before a trans-Atlantic flight to Europe, from where the pilots plan to make their way back to the point of departure in Abu Dhabi. – Rappler.com

Mexico violence displaces up to 35,000 people

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DRUG CARTEL VIOLENCE. View of a burnt truck used to block a highway near Apatzingan town, Michoacan state, Mexico, 13 April 2016. File photo by EPA

MEXICO CITY, Mexico – Mexico's drug violence has forced up to 35,000 people to flee their homes, the National Human Rights Commission said Wednesday, May 11, in a report urging the government to protect internally displaced people.

The governmental body lamented that the government lacks a clearcut position on the issue and that it is "not in the public agenda."

The commission documented 1,784 cases of internally displaced people, but it said the number could exceed 35,000 according to reports from municipal and state authorities.

Commission president Luis Raul Gonzalez said the available data did not allow his agency to come up with a solid estimate.

It is the first government-issued report on internally displaced people in Mexico. The commission urged the government to conduct a census to get an exact figure.

The Norwegian Refugee Council, a non-government humanitarian organization, said last year that more than 280,000 people have been displaced within Mexico.

"Violence, insecurity, impunity, the weakness of our rule of law, and the lack of adequate conditions for development for people have caused a considerable number of Mexicans to abandon their homes in various regions," Gonzalez said.

He said people flee to "seek better living conditions, but also often for basic issues such as staying alive."

The report called on the government to establish a public policy to defend the rights of internally displaced people.

Drug-related violence skyrocketed in Mexico after the government deployed tens of thousands of troops in 2006. More than 100,000 people have died or gone missing since then, many of them victims of drug cartel turf wars. – Rappler.com

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