S.Korea urges ‘courage’ from Japan on sex slaves

South Korean President Lee Myung-Bak urged Japan to have the “courage” to compensate ageing wartime sex slaves before it is too late and let the two nations’ relationship progress. Lee on Sunday told Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda in Japan’s ancient capital of Kyoto that the issue had prevented their countries from becoming “true partners” in the years since World War II. Japan, which insists the issue... [more]

The high price of saving the euro

Has Germany saved the euro or doomed the European Union? ZEIT ONLINE’s Matthias Krupa looks at the high political price of the crisis summit in Brussels. So was that the night the euro was saved? Or will those ten hours on last week go down in history as the moment the European Union began to disintegrate? The leaders of the 27 EU nations certainly couldn’t have made their crisis summit any more dramatic. Even before it began on the... [more]

UN ends sanctions on Libya central bank

The UN Security Council lifted sanctions on Libya’s central bank and a key investment bank freeing tens of billions of dollars to ease a post-Kadhafi cash crunch. The United States immediately announced it would unblock more than $30 billion dollars of assets of the Central Bank of Libya and its subsidiary, the Libyan Foreign Bank (LFB). Britain said it would release more than $10 billion. An estimated $150 billion of assets were frozen... [more]

Japan set to declare Fukushima plant shutdown

Japan was set to announce Friday it has finally tamed leaking reactors at Fukushima, in what authorities say is a vital step on the long road to recovery, nine months after its nuclear crisis began. Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda was expected to tell a disaster-weary public that all reactors at the plant, struck by a titanic tsunami in March, were in a state of cold shutdown and were no longer at any risk of spontaneous fission. Stabilisation... [more]

Cracks Start To Appear In EU Finance Pact

The Czech Republic and Hungary have said they will not sign the new European Union pact unless tax harmonisation plans are dropped. The announcement comes less than one week after the EU summit hailed as bringing unity to all but one of its member nations. In Brussels, 26 of the 27 members of the EU backed new fiscal rules to keep budgets in line, with only the UK abstaining. Neither Hungary or the Czech Republic uses the euro, and tax harmonisation... [more]

‘Eurozone Heading For Another Recession’

The eurozone is likely to slip back into recession next year, according to a report by audit firm Ernst & Young. It says it expects the economies of the 17 member countries to shrink in the first two quarters of 2012. The report predicts growth of just 0.1% for the whole of the year and warns unemployment in the eurozone is unlikely to fall below 10% before 2015. The warning was backed up by economic data from Markit suggesting that... [more]

Dutch infrastucture minister astonishes MPs

Infrastructure Minister Melanie Schultz van Haegen has surprised MPs by telling them that when maximum speeds on motorways are increased to 130 kilometres per hour in 2012, 20 percent of the roads will not yet be suitable for such speeds. She says this is because measures to improve safety will not be ready until later. Nevertheless, she wants to introduce the increased maximum speed as of 2012, even on roads which still need to be adapted.... [more]

BBC apologises for ‘Weekend in Amsterdam’

The BBC faced a barrage of complaints for a second time this week after a radio DJ played the song ‘Weekend in Amsterdam’ by Irish folk singer Christy Moore. Radio Ulster DJ Gerry Anderson played the record, which describes the Dutch capital’s vices, before lunchtime in a family-oriented programme. Some listeners were offended by the lyrics. In his ballad, which also contains strong language, Christy Moore sings about Amsterdam’s... [more]

Putin to address Russians in phone-in after protests

Prime Minister Vladimir Putin was on Thursday to address Russians during his trademark marathon televised phone-in session, after a rare outburst of protest against his rule. The Russian strongman is expected to use the traditional question and answer format to lay out his plans for returning to the Kremlin in 2012 polls as he seeks to tackle the most serious political crisis of his 12-year rule. “As in previous years, the head of... [more]

German banks abandon US customers

German banks are closing US customers’ investment accounts because they say financial reporting requirements by American authorities are just too onerous. According to the Financial Times Deutschland (FTD) newspaper, HypoVereinsbank is the latest financial institution to tell US citizens and all its clients residing in the United States that it is closing their brokerage accounts. Deutsche Bank already made the move earlier this year... [more]

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