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  • 4
    days
    ago

    European leaders add to rising fears of breakup

    A new election is scheduled for June 17, as debate continues over the country's place in the euro zone. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.

    By John W. Schoen, Senior Producer

    European officials are playing a dangerous game of chicken with Greece.

    In an apparent signal to Greek voters, the head of the World Bank warned Thursday that if Athens were to depart from the common currency, Spain and Italy could well be the next dominoes to fall in Europe’s widening financial crisis.

    After ousting the Athens government that agreed to deeper spending cuts in return for a financial lifeline, voters return to the polls in June after the winning parties failed to form a new government. Apparently hoping to convince Greek voters to return a pro-austerity government to power, European officials are now openly discussing the likely dire consequences if they don’t.

    But the comments may have only served to heighten fears of a wider breakup of the eurozone should Greece exit the monetary union.    

    Investors backed away further from Spain's government debt Thursday, raising the country’s borrowing costs to levels that sparked the Greek debt crisis in the first place.

    Bond buyers were also reacting to fresh economic data showing that Spain’s economy is beginning to shrink, which makes its existing debt load even harder to carry.

    The growing crisis also has caused growing nervousness among U.S. investors. Since the inconclusive Greek vote May 6, the Dow Jones industrial average has fallen in seven out of eight sessions and was down again Thursday. U.S. banking giant JPMorgan Chase send another ripple of worries through the market May 10 when it said it had lost at least $2 billion in a failed attempt to hedge against European volatility.

    The recession is also putting more pressure on Spain’s banks, which have been saddled with bad mortgages as the country faces a deepening housing bust. Last week, the government took over Bankia, which holds 10 percent of the banking system’s deposits, after it reportedly suffered an large outflow of deposits.

    Aris Messinis / AFP - Getty Images

    Greek Archbishop Ieronimos blesses the new caretaker prime minister, Panagiotis Pikrammenos, right, in Athens Thursday. Greeks will return to the polls next month after an inconclusive vote sent jitters across the eurozone.

    The news follows reports that depositors pulled another $900 million out of Greek banks on Wednesday, extending a capital flight that could bring down Greece’s banking system. The fear is that those worries spread among depositors in other countries like Spain where the banking system is already under pressure.

    Until very recently, European officials were loath to even discuss the idea of Greece’s departure from the compact binding 17 nations with a common currency. For one thing, the treaty that created the euro has no provision for a member country to abandon the currency or for its expulsion by the rest of the monetary union.

    But central bankers and officials of agencies like the World Bank and International Monetary Fund have begun to think – and discuss – the unthinkable. IMF chief Christine Lagarde warned this week that Greek's departure from the euro would be “quite messy” and  "extremely expensive."

    Analysts who are looking at the potential impact say the losses and economic pain would be widely felt.

    Replacing the euro with a new, devalued currency would wipe out much of the remaining assets on Greek bank books. Europe’s central bankers have already pulled back some forms of funding for Greek banks that have been hit hardest by withdrawals. Hundreds of billions worth of additional borrowing by Greek households and businesses would be in legal limbo.

    Any new currency – or a return to the pre-euro drachma – would be massively devalued, by some estimates as much as half the value of a euro. That would help Greece’s economy eventually get back on a growth path because it would make its products and services cheaper for buyers spending dollars and euros. A week’s vacation in Crete would cost half the price of a comparable trip to Sardinia.

    But Greek households and businesses would bear the immediate pain. Imported goods and commodities like oil would suddenly cost twice as much. Households and businesses making good on outstanding loans written in euros would see repayment double in local currency terms.

    European officials who engineered the costly plan to “save” Greece -- led by France and Germany -- would also feel the pain. Much or all of the more than $200 billion in loans already extended to the Greek government by the IMF, European Central Bank and Europe’s private banks would be at risk. That would mean explaining to French and German taxpayers what went wrong with the grand plan.

    It would also raise the political costs of extending further bailouts to weaker, debt-burdened countries including Spain and Italy. As Greece demonstrates that a once-unthinkable exit from the euro is now possible, other countries may follow. If investors continued to shun Spanish and Italian government bonds and depositors flee their banks, the choice facing Europe grows more stark.

    Worries about the fragmentation of Europe’s monetary union have already sapped business and consumer confidence and brought the region’s economy to a dead stop. Government austerity measures imposed on weaker economies are driving them deeper into recession.

    As that recession spreads, the pain of Greece’s departure from the euro would be felt even more broadly, according to Michel Juvet, an economist at Bordier, a Swiss bank.

    “At the same time we have China, which is slowing down very, very fast, we have the U.S. economy, which is losing momentum, and we have this global slowdown, “ he said. “All economies are so connected that when one country or one big zone is suffering, the others are suffering as well. This is globalization.”

    Others see the crisis in starker terms.

    “This is phase two of the global financial crisis," said R. Seetharaman, CEO of Doha Bank in Qatar. "That’s the reality."

    What's happening in the global markets and how are the Europeans handling the euro crisis? R. Seetharaman, Doha Bank CEO, provides perspective on Middle East banking mentality, summer gas prices, and global economic trends.

     

    245 comments

    How's that so called global econemy working out? Your 401k is about to take another big hit.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: economy, europe, greece, features
  • 4
    days
    ago

    Horrors of Srebrenica massacre set out at Mladic trial

    The war crimes trial of Bosnian Serb ex-army chief Ratko Mladic has been postponed because prosecutors failed to disclose some evidence to the defense. ITV's Bill Neely reports.

    By msnbc.com news services

    THE HAGUE, Netherlands - Prosecutors in the genocide trial of Serb general Ratko Mladic on Thursday described five days of terror in the Bosnian enclave of Srebrenica in July 1995, when troops under his command massacred more than 7,000 unarmed Muslim boys and men.

    Mladic, 70, sat listening with his back to the public after being warned at the start of his trial on Wednesday for making a throat-slitting gesture to a relative of Srebrenica victims.


    The massacre, Europe's worst atrocity since World War Two, helped finally to galvanize Western powers into launching air strikes on Serb forces to bring the 1992-95 Bosnian war to an end.

    "This was and will remain genocide," said prosecutor Peter McCloskey, showing grainy video footage of bodies outside a warehouse where about 1,000 prisoners were gunned down.

    "The evidence of this crime is overwhelming ... We will focus on linking General Mladic and his men to the crime."

    Mladic is accused of commanding Bosnian Serb troops who waged a campaign of murder and persecution to drive Muslims and Croats out of territory they considered part of Serbia. His troops rained shells and snipers' bullets down on civilians in the 44-month siege of the Bosnian capital, Sarajevo.

    However, there was a blow for efforts to ensure that the trial of Mladic, whose lawyers say he has had three strokes and a heart attack, does not parallel that of Slobodan Milosevic, which lasted so long that he died before a verdict was reached.

    Srebrenica: The story that will never end

    The judges accepted a defense argument that prosecutors had not disclosed their case properly, but did not say if they would grant the full six-month delay requested by the lawyers before the trial enters its next stage, where evidence is presented.

    Presiding judge Alphons Orie said judges will analyze the "scope and full impact" of the error and aim to establish a new starting date "as soon as possible." The presentation of evidence was supposed to begin later this month.

    Mladic looks frail and thin compared to the stocky commander seen in wartime barking orders to shell Bosnian Muslim positions, but has benefited visibly from the medical treatment he has received while in detention.

    McCloskey said prosecutors planned to call scores of witnesses, including 11 survivors of the massacre as well as executioners from the Bosnian Serb army.

    "In only five days, forces of Radovan Karadzic and Ratko Mladic expelled the population from Srebrenica and Zepa and murdered more than 7,000 Muslim men and boys."

    He said nearly 6,000 bodies had been exhumed from mass graves and secondary sites where bodies were reburied to conceal them in remote mountain areas. Their remains have been identified by DNA testing.

    In the public area, mothers of Srebrenica victims wept as they listened to the proceedings.

    "My husband was 45 years old. He was taken away and killed only because he had a different name and different religion," said Zumra Sahomerovic.

    "There is no punishment good enough for him (Mladic)."

    Slideshow: The charges against Ratko Mladic

    Serge Ligtenberg / Getty Images

    A career soldier, Mladic stands accused of orchestrating the siege of Sarajevo and the slaughter of 8,000 Muslims in Srebrenica.

    Launch slideshow

    The prosecution says the massacre was part of a strategic plan, devised with Milosevic, then Serbian president, and Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic, to "cleanse" parts of the Balkans of non-Serbs and create a pure Serb state.

    Among the 11 charges against Mladic are genocide, murder, rape, imprisonment and acts of terror for actions that also include the 43-month siege of the Bosnian capital, Sarajevo, in which 10,000 died, and the establishment of a number of brutal prison camps.

    Like Karadzic, who is also on trial in The Hague, Mladic faces a sentence of up to life imprisonment if found guilty.

    Both were indicted by the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia at the end of the Bosnian war in 1995, but remained free in Serbia for more than a decade before being tracked down. 

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Inside Syria rebel stronghold: 'The city is on mute'
    • Will $95-million cable car be ready for Olympics?
    • What's behind China's crackdown on foreigners?
    • NBC's Ayman Mohyeldin answers Syria questions
    • Royal rumble: Spain's queen snubs UK queen
    • Italian university to switch to English-only classes
    • Germany's Pirate Party rides wave of popularity
    • 'Scapegoated'? Westerners held over massacre
    • Anxious Greeks withdraw $894 million in a day
    • In China, English teaching is a whites-only club
    • Beer-swilling bride sparks controversy in New Zealand
    • Oh la la! A look at France's fascinating first ladies

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    36 comments

    Adoph Hitler revisited. NEVER let this guy walk free again.

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    Explore related topics: europe, featured, trial, bosnia, war-crime, ratko-mladic, hague, serb, balkan
  • 5
    days
    ago

    German police clear Frankfurt Occupy camp

    Kai Pfaffenbach / Reuters

    German riot police carry a demonstrator covered in paint as police clear the camp of a group of occupy protestors in front of the European Central Bank in Frankfurt on May 16, 2012.

    More on the European financial crisis:

    • Spaniards keep up anniversary rally against economic crisis
    • 'Say your prayers': Attempts to form new Greek government fail

    Protesters at Occupy Frankfurt throw paint at police officers who are trying to clear the encampment in front of the ECB skyscraper. Msnbc.com's Dara Brown reports.

    2 comments

    Why? This is so stupid. Not the reason but the means... really people... why can't they protest peacefully.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: world-news, europe, germany, protest, occupy, frankfurt
  • 5
    days
    ago

    Greeks withdraw $894 million in a day: Is this beginning of a run on banks?

    In Greece, a senior judge is to be put in charge of a caretaker government to run the country until a new General Election on June 17. Questions are growing over whether the country's finances will last that long. Hundreds of millions of euros have been withdrawn from Greek banks in recent days over fears of a departure from the euro - and return to a devalued drachma. Jonathan Rugman, Channel Four Europe reports.

    By Alastair Jamieson, msnbc.com and NBC News

    Updated at 12:05 p.m. ET: Political leaders in Athens were due to discuss an emergency government Wednesday to deal with a possible run on banks as it emerged Greeks withdrew almost $900 million in a single day, fearing their country could crash out of the euro currency by the end of the week.

    An interim government would take the country through to new elections on June 17, triggered by the collapse on Tuesday of talks to form a coalition between winners of the inconclusive May 6 election.


    Greeks are withdrawing euros from banks, apparently afraid of the prospect of rapid devaluation if the country leaves the European single currency and returns to the drachma.

    President Karolos Papoulias warned of “great fear that could develop into a panic,” the minutes of Papoulias' negotiations with political leaders showed, according to Reuters.


    Follow @msnbc_world

    The minutes also reveal Papoulias was warned by George Provopoulos, head of the country’s central bank, that savers withdrew at least 700 million euros ($894 million) on Monday, Reuters said.

    "Withdrawals and outflows by 4:00 p.m. when I called him exceeded 600 million euros and reached 700 million euros," the president said according to the minutes of the meeting. "He expects total outflows of about 800 million euros."

    The country's economy is in a meltdown, raising fears that Greece will exit the Euro Zone completely and default on its huge pile of debt. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    Several banking sources told Reuters similar amounts had also been withdrawn on Tuesday. Nevertheless, there was no sign of panic or queues at bank branches in Athens on Wednesday. Bankers dismissed suggestions that a bank run was looming. A senior executive at a large Greek bank told Reuters: "There is no bank run, no queues or panic. The situation is better than I expected. The amount of deposit withdrawals the president mentioned referred to three days, not one." 

    Still, some were taking no risks. Jenny P., an Athens private medical clinic receptionist originally from Ohio, told msnbc.com she had withdrawn 85 per cent of "what's left" in her bank account.

     "We could have a new currency in a couple of days and nobody knows for sure what will happen," she said. "There are no lines to withdraw money, but maybe that's because many Greeks have precious little left in the bank. Many have been surviving on [$500] 400 euros a month, which has to cover tax, bills, food and medical costs."

    She said she was planning to return to the United States amid the economic turmoil which has left her Greek husband unemployed. "It is hard to see what the future will be here," she said.

    Greeks have already been withdrawing their savings from banks at a sharp clip - nearly a third of bank deposits were withdrawn between January 2010 and March 2012, reducing total Greek household and business deposits to 165 billion euros. 

    A senior bank executive said there had been withdrawals in recent days but there was no sign yet of a panic, as had happened in April 2010 when eight billion euros were withdrawn just before Greece obtained its first foreign bailout. 

     The political vacuum in Greece has hampered the country’s chances of making the budget cuts required by the European bailout deal. Without more austerity measures, the flow of bailout money will dry up, raising the prospect of a euro exit with all its wider ramifications.

    Yannis Behrakis / Reuters

    Two men withdraw money from an ATM in central Athens May 16, 2012.

    The likelihood of a Greek exit from the euro – dubbed the "Grexit" by commentators – is now so high that even political leaders committed to avoid it admit preparations are under way.

    Asked in an interview whether Greece could leave the euro zone, IMF director Christine Lagarde replied: "We certainly don't hope so, from the IMF point of view ... but we have to be technically prepared for anything".

    Will there be a run on Greek banks?

    A Twitter image shared by economics blogger Tyler Durden, posted on UK website Zero Hedge, showed what appeared to lines outside ATMs in Greece, although it was impossible to verify where the picture was taken or if lines were longer than normal.

    Reuters reported early Wednesday that there has “so far been no sign” of lines at banks in Athens, despite the likelihood that an exit from the euro would see a dramatic devaluation in of Greek currency.

    CNBC’s John Carney raised the prospect of reduced limits on ATM withdrawals, citing a calculation by London analysts Capital Economics that if every working-age Greek withdrew the maximum permitted ATM amount of 300 euros a day, every single deposit of Greek households would be gone within 61 days.

    “So the controls put in place in advance of an exit from the euro would have to include not only limits on moving funds abroad, but limiting withdrawals from ATMs and possibly declaring a bank holiday,” Carney wrote.

    In practice, however, any Greeks lucky enough to possess any savings have already taken the precaution of withdrawing them from banks.

    “Over the last two years Greeks withdrew approximately 70 billion euros from their bank accounts, an amount equivalent to approximately 35 percent of Greek GDP,” Dr Michael Arghyrou, senior economics lecturer at Cardiff Business School in Wales told msnbc.com.

    “This is a negative demand shock of enormous proportions and with increased uncertainty this trend will almost certainly accelerate. So yes, we will almost certainly see more deposits withdrawals over the next few days, I just hope is that they will not be so large as to lead to a full-blown bank run.”

    How likely is ‘Grexit’? Are drachma notes being printed?

    A year ago, it was nearly impossible to get officials and political leaders to talk about the possibility of Greece leaving the eurozone. Now it appears to be an open secret.

    Yorgos Karahalis / Reuters

    A man makes his way past a replica of a one drachma coin outside the Athens Town Hall May 15, 2012.

    Ireland's central bank chief and European Central Bank policymaker, Patrick Honohan, signaled on Sunday that a Greek exit might not be as painful as previously thought.

    "Technically, it can be managed," he told reporters. "It would be a knock to the confidence for the euro area as a whole ... It is not necessarily fatal, but it is not attractive."

    The tone from the European Commission, the EU's executive, has shifted too.

    On Monday, spokeswoman Pia Ahrenhilde-Hansen said: “We wish Greece will remain in the euro and we hope Greece will remain in the euro ... but it must respect its commitments. Greece has its future in its own hands and it is really up to Greece to see what the response should be.”

    Asked about contingencies, she did not rule them out.

    Reuters quoted one European Commission official saying: "Clearly, the future of Greece is in the Eurozone. We are working on that. The 16 other governments in the Eurozone really are at the end of their patience with Greece. There isn't room or any willingness to move. The decisions are really in Athens' hands. But it doesn't look good."

    However, the official response remains that a Greek exit is not being considered.

    In an interview with NBC News on Wednesday,  Angela Merkel, the German Chancellor, said: "I have the will, the determination, to keep Greece in the Eurozone. I think it will be good for Greece and good for all of us. We want Greece to stay in the Eurozone."

    Some commentators have pointed to a 13 percent rise in the share value of British firm De La Rue, which is the world’s largest currency printer, amid speculation it is best placed to pick up the contract for issuing new versions of the drachma, the Greek currency phased out in 2002.

    It has remained tight-lipped on whether it is working for the Greek government, but in the meantime an interim solution has been mooted in which existing euro notes would be converted into drachmas by being endorsed with an official stamp.

    Would a 'Grexit' be so bad? If so, what are the alternatives?

    Lagarde said a Greek exit from the Eurozone would “have consequences on growth… consequences on trade and…consequences on financial markets “. She added: “You can certainly assume it would be quite messy."

    Global financial institutions have a $536 million exposure to Greek debt, according to the latest figures from the International Monetary Fund, although almost all is borne by France, Germany and other key European economies.

    The Institute of International Finance has estimated that the global cost of a Greek exit could hit $1.2 trillion, according to the Daily Telegraph in London. When Argentina defaulted in 2001, foreign debtors lost around 70 percent of their investments, it said.

    The Telegraph said a report in Germany’s Wirtschaft Woche magazine forecast that a Grexit would cost the Eurozone governments alone $300 billion, pushing the whole European economy – which narrowly avoided entering recession on Tuesday by recording exactly zero quarterly growth - into a crisis not seen since the 1930s.

    Many are looking at the possibility that Athens issues IOUs to meet salaries and key service bills for a fixed period, much in the way California did during its budget crunch in 2009 when it issued 'registered warrants' with a coupon in place of dollar salaries and which banks then accepted for cash.

    Much hinges on whether the European Central Bank would allow the Greek central bank to accept such IOUs and there's little clarity on those hypotheticals.

    However, strategists believe any Greek government IOUs would quickly act as a proxy for a new drachma and exchange values against the euro would mostly likely plummet in practice as people rushed to cash out - offering Greeks a glimpse of the shock of devaluation in a euro-ised economy with euro-denominated debts.

    "I'm really not sure Greece could survive for very long if external money was cut off," said Darren Williams, economist at fund manager AllianceBernstein. "But what an experience of IOUs may do rather quickly is bring home to the average Greek citizen just how much more difficult a place it is outside the bailout programme and outside the euro."

    What would happen to the euro?

    Besides the huge liabilities, there is the risk that a Greek exit from the euro would set a precedent for the possible exit of other weakened economies including Spain and Portugal.

    "Opening up the Pandora's box of exit means deposit risk across the periphery,” an RBS analyst told Reuters.

    Jan Randolph, head of sovereign risk, IHS Global Insight, told the BBC: “It would be difficult for the [European Central Bank] to keep banks afloat. The Greek banking sector would collapse as well. What happens next is a political question. European nations would probably not accept another Western European country descending into chaos and collapse.”

    What is the political future for Greece?

    Rampant inflation, civil unrest and even a return to dictatorship could be on the cards, analysts warn.

    Arghyrou told msnbc.com: “There will be no credit for Greek banks or the Greek state. That could mean a shortage of basic commodities, like oil or medicine or even foodstuffs.

    The country would end up in a volatile period. There would be institutional weakness. The worst case scenario would be a social and economic breakdown, perhaps even leading to a totalitarian regime.”

    Henry Wilkinson, head of analysis at the Risk Advisory Group, said: "We are entering into unknown territory and it remains profoundly unclear what actually will happen. I wouldn't overstate it, but I think the big concern out of all of this is that in times of great uncertainty and hardship, more extreme parties tend to find greater resonance with their message."

    Roger White, an American private tutor who moved back to the United States from Greece three weeks ago to escape the economic crisis, told msnbc.com: "I see violence on the Greek horizon. Will the Greeks continue to withdraw their savings?  Yes, for as long as they can.  Then, the government will intervene with limits on withdrawals and other controls.  Then, Greeks will protest in the streets, light banks afire, smash bank windows and rip out ATMs. 

    "Oddly, I can say that in many ways my Greek experience gave me wonderful opportunities.  Nonetheless, my epiphany came when Greece's economic collapse and the government's implosion revealed just how reliant on the government we are, and just how vulnerable to government mismanagement we are."

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Iranians already feeling pain of sanctions
    • EU forces attack Somali pirates on land for first time
    • Aussie Olympic hopeful loses bet over 'mankini' at opening ceremony
    • Hipsters to the rescue? UK celebrity venue in spat with Jaguar
    • Vatican allows mobster to be exhumed for clues in disappearance
    • Iran hangs ‘Israel spy’ over nuclear scientist killing
    • Mexico's drug war: No sign of 'light at the end of the tunnel'

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world


    528 comments

    I'm an American living in Greece with my husband. We went to the bank yesterday and withdrew all our money. Better safe than sorry. I hope we can get out of here before all hell breaks loose.

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    Explore related topics: europe, featured, debt, bank, greece, currency, c, euro, greek, cnbc, bottom-line
  • 6
    days
    ago

    Exit Sarkozy, enter Hollande: Socialist sworn in as French president

    Laurent Cipriani / AP

    French President Francois Hollande waves from his car as he drives down the Champs Elysees in Paris after his inauguration on May 15, 2012.

    Christophe Ena / AFP - Getty Images

    French President-elect Francois Hollande arrives for his inauguration on May, 15, 2012 at the Elysee Palace in Paris.

    Reuters reports — Francois Hollande became French president on Tuesday in an official handover ceremony that makes him the country's first Socialist leader since Francois Mitterrand.

    Outgoing President Nicolas Sarkozy greeted Hollande on the steps of the Elysee presidential palace, and took him inside to transfer nuclear codes and other secret files ahead of a short swearing-in ceremony attended by around 400 guests.

    Hollande was due to fly to Berlin later in the day for his first meeting with German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

    'Monsieur Normal' takes office ... unmarried

    French economy stalls, posing challenge for new president

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Fred Dufour / AFP - Getty Images

    Hollande is awarded "Grand Maitre" in the Order of the Legion of Honor, from chancellor of France's National Order of the Legion of Honor, General Jean-Louis Georgelin.

    Mehdi Fedouach / AFP - Getty Images

    Hollande, right, walks on the red carpet towards his predecessor Nicolas Sarkozy prior to the start of the investiture ceremony.

    Lionel Bonaventure / AFP - Getty Images

    Sarkozy, left, welcomes his successor Hollande upon his arrival at the Elysee Palace.

    Jacques Brinon / AP

    Hollande's partner Valerie Trierweiler, right, shakes hands with Sarkozy's wife Carla Bruni-Sarkozy before the presidential handover ceremony.

    Jacky Naegelen / Reuters

    Journalists work as a man sweeps the red carpet in the courtyard of the Elysee Palace.

    Patrick Kovarik / AFP - Getty Images

    Sarkozy and his wife leave the Elysee Palace after the formal investiture ceremony.

    Reuters

    Hollande stands up in his car as he rides in the rain up the Champs Elysees.

    The current First Lady of France, Valerie Trierweiler, and the former, Carla Bruni, have captivated the world. NBC's Jim Maceda reports.

     

     

    140 comments

    With France electing its first socialist president in over twenty years, I guess that leaves Germany as the only adult in the union. France will be joining Greece soon.

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    Explore related topics: world-news, europe, france, paris, inauguration, nicolas-sarkozy, francois-hollande
  • 14
    May
    2012
    11:27am, EDT

    British country lane road rage attack caught on video

    Police are asking witnesses to come forward and help identify the two people in this YouTube video seen in an apparent road-rage incident. Msnbc.com's Dara Brown reports.

    By Alastair Jamieson, msnbc.com

    LONDON - Police in Britain released video footage of an apparent road-rage incident between an angry woman and a man on a bicycle on a country lane, ITV News reported Monday.

    The clip shows a man wearing Wellington boots and flat-cap cycling along the narrow road when he is approached by a woman on foot, who appears to throw punches and kicks.


    Police have issued the video, which was shot by someone in a car following the pair and posted on YouTube, as part of an appeal for witnesses of the January 28 incident in the western England county of Gloucestershire.

    Some reports on Monday suggested there could be more to the altercation than meets the eye.

    ITV News said longer versions of the clip include allegations that the cyclist was deliberately blocking traffic because he was a supporter of fox-hunting and wanted to stop anti-hunt campaigners reaching their destination.

    Fox-hunting – a British country pursuit which involves tracking, chasing and killing foxes - was outlawed in 2005. But hunting by a smell or trail is still lawful and monitored by anti-hunt campaigners, according to the Daily Telegraph.

    Police have appealed for the pair captured on the film to come forward.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Report: Al-Qaida doctors trained to implant bombs in humans
    • Elephants run amok in India; child killed, 25 injured
    • France's 'Monsieur' Normal takes office ... unmarried
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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

     

    72 comments

    There is no rush to judgment. This has nothing to do with Trayvon Martin. There is no Gun involved and no on is lying dead on the ground. This woman ran up and tried to push this man off his bike and he is holding up his had to defend himself. She then punches and kicks him.

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    Explore related topics: europe, uk, youtube, britain, traffic, road-rage, motoring
  • 14
    May
    2012
    7:00am, EDT

    Protests outside nationalized Spanish bank as Euro zone worries grow

    Pedro Armestre / AFP - Getty Images

    A woman holds a card reading "This bank cheats, defrauds, throws people out of their houses" during a protest held outside Caja Madrid bank's headquarters in Madrid on May 14, 2012.

    Alberto Di Lolli / AP

    Riot police stand guard in front of a branch of the recently nationalized Caja Madrid bank during a protest in Madrid on May 14, 2012.

    The Associated Press reports — Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy on Sunday defended his government's harsh austerity measures aimed at correcting Spain's grim economic forecast, one day after tens of thousands of Spaniards took to the streets to protest his handling of the country's worst crisis in decades.

    On Friday the government ordered independent assessments of its banks' debt loads and forced them to set aside billions more in provisions for the real estate sector. 

    Global shares , euro hit as political risks pile up

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    2 comments

    If you see the photo of the Caja Madrid Bank with the Riot Police standing guard...remember that photo...that will be the United States in less then three years if something isn't done about the finanical ruin coming our way!

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  • 14
    May
    2012
    6:29am, EDT

    Now towering over London's Olympic Park: 'The Godzilla of public art'

    Tim Hales / AP

    Designed by Anish Kapoor and Cecil Balmond, the ArcelorMittal Orbit sculpture is made up of 63 percent recycled steel and incorporates the five Olympic rings.

    By Kiko Itasaka, NBC News

    LONDON -- Red, twisted and 72 feet higher than the Statue of Liberty, the ArcelorMittal Orbit now looms over the Olympic Park as the tallest sculpture in Great Britain.

    Designed by Turner Prize-winning artist Anish Kapoor and architect Cecil Balmond, tabloid newspapers have branded it "the Eye-ful Tower," "the Godzilla of public art" and worse. Others say it looks like a roller coaster gone badly awry.

    Even London's normally garrulous Mayor Boris Johnson struggles to describe the $36-million structure. "It is very absorbing to look at," he says. "It has got that weird enigmatic tubey Fallopian quality about it if I'm being totally blunt."

    'A 45-second conversation'
    The idea for what has been called a "deconstructed Eiffel Tower" was formulated in 2009, when Johnson and steel magnate Laksmi Mittal discussed creating something dramatic for the Olympics while attending the World Economic Forum meeting in Davos, Switzerland.  

    The ArcelorMittal Orbit sculpture towers over the 2012 Olympic Park. The brainchild of London's Mayor Boris Johnson, the Orbit is the subject of much debate.

     


    "This was conceived in a 45-second conversation in a cloakroom!" Johnson recalled on Friday, as officials announced the 2,000-ton tower had been completed.

    Mittal contributed $31 million to the project, with the rest of the cost being covered by public funds. However, the sculpture has proved controversial at a time when the U.K. is grappling with massive spending cuts.

    The British royal family is keeping busy ahead of the Queen's Diamond Jubilee and the London Olympics. NBC's Michelle Kosinski reports.

    Kapoor says he expected to evoke a mixture of responses to his latest work. "When you make a new addition of this scale to the London skyline, its bound to be controversial, and there are those who love it and those who don’t and we'll see what time does," he said.

    Bad neighbors for Team USA? Occupy protesters face eviction

    Kapoor noted that Paris's iconic Eiffel Tower was considered "the most tremendously ugly object" by many when it was first built. 

    Belmond, who described the looping structure as "a curve in space," said he thought people would be won over by it.

    Visitors will be able to pay $24 to go up the 35-story structure in an elevator when it opens during the Olympic Games in July.

    Olympic housing crunch: London landlords evict tenants to gouge tourists

    On a clear day, views from its observation deck extend for 20 miles across London and the green hills beyond.

    Slideshow: When the Olympics is your neighbor

    /

    A diverse community in East London will welcome the world to Britain for the 2012 Olympic Games. Meet residents and hear how they feel about having a huge, world stage in their backyard.

    Launch slideshow

    The tower will be at the heart of a new 560-acre park, the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park, that will include a lush river valley, biking trails and a tree-lined promenade. 

    Brits revel in gloom ahead of Games, but don't believe the gripe

    After the Games, Johnson says he expects millions will visit the Orbit, and that it will be become a landmark. 

    He believes other Londoners will come to love it, too.

    "I think so," he said, then paused. "In the end."

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Now towering over London: 'The Godzilla of public art'
    • France's 'Monsieur' Normal takes office ... unmarried
    • Too busy to put the kids to bed? Try 24-hour daycare
    • 88,000-mile voyage? Plastic card found after 33 years
    • Bad neighbors for Team USA? Occupy camp axed

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    80 comments

    Looks like a tornado eating a duct tape factory.

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    Explore related topics: europe, featured, olympics, london, orbit, olympic-park, anish-kapoor, kiko-itasaka
  • 11
    May
    2012
    7:43am, EDT

    Tears as victim's brother throws shoe at Norway mass killer Anders Breivik

    Heiko Junge / Pool via EPA

    Anders Behring Breivik (center) is escorted out of court by police during his trial proceedings in Oslo, Norway, Friday.

    By msnbc.com and news services

    A man identified as the older brother of one of the victims of Norwegian mass killer Anders Behring Breivik threw a shoe at him during his trial Friday, the first time the proceeding has been interrupted by a public outburst. 

    "Go to hell, go to hell, you killed my brother," the man, who was seated in the second row of the public gallery, screamed as he threw the shoe at Breivik from a few yards away, newspaper VG reported on its website.  


    The shoe missed Breivik but struck his co-defense lawyer, Vibeke Hein Baera, who was seated closest to the public gallery, during the presentation of an autopsy report. 

    "Luckily, it was just a shoe," Hein Baera told the AFP news agency after the incident.

    Norwegian media said the man was a brother of one of the victims of Breivik's rampage, but his name was not immediately available. He was removed from the courtroom by police. 

    Slideshow: Norway mourns after massacre

    The nation looks to rally after a bombing and shooting spree leaves 77 people dead.

    Launch slideshow

    "Some spectators were uncomfortable. Some started crying. Many clapped their hands," Swedish journalist Bjoern Lindahl said, according to the Press Association news agency, which added that the incident contrasted with the usual "polite atmosphere" in the court.

    The incident came during a week of harrowing testimony from survivors of Breivik's rampage across the small island of Utoeya last July, where the ruling Labor Party was holding a youth camp. He killed 69 people there, many of them teenagers. 

    Breivik has listened calmly to the descriptions of his killings and shown hardly any emotion, except when hearing descriptions about how he was said to have let out "cries of joy" and laughed while shooting, which he has denied. 

    Breivik has admitted the killings, but denies criminal responsibility. He says he was defending Norwegian ethnic purity from Muslim immigration and the multiculturalism backed by the Labor Party. 

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Bad neighbors for Team USA? Occupy camp axed
    • WWII fighter plane found preserved in Sahara Desert
    • Egypt's first TV presidential debate thrills viewers
    • 88,000-mile voyage? Plastic card found after 33 years
    • Hell-raising holy men: Boozy monks caught gambling
    • Sources: Spy who uncovered underwear bomb plot is a Brit
    • Video: Murder and corruption scandal rocks China
    • Move over, Al Roker! Prince Charles becomes weatherman

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    67 comments

    He is right about the muslims. However, wrong way to go about it. In 1970 - united states had 9,000 muslims in 2010 - over 2 million muslims in 2050 - ?? Read about what happens when muslims reach even 5% of the population.

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  • 11
    May
    2012
    7:13am, EDT

    Andy Rain / EPA

    The High Court is reflected in the car window of Rebekah Brooks, the former chief executive of News International, as she arrives to give evidence at the Leveson Inquiry into press ethics in London on May 11, 2012.

    All eyes on court as Murdoch confidante Rebekah Brooks lays bare ties to UK elite

    Reuters reports — British Prime Minister David Cameron was among top politicians who sent sympathetic messages to Rebekah Brooks when she was forced to resign as chief executive of Rupert Murdoch's U.K. newspaper group over phone-hacking, she told an inquiry on Friday.

    Tabloid editor got free horse from UK police force

    Brooks is a former editor of the News of the World, which Murdoch shut last July when it emerged its journalists had hacked into the voicemail of public figures and a murdered schoolgirl. She was appearing at a judicial inquiry into press ethics to answer questions about her friendships with British politicians.

    VIDEO: Brooks confirms Cameron ties amid scandal

    The Leveson Inquiry's lead lawyer, Robert Jay, cut straight to the chase as Brooks began her day-long testimony, pressing her for names of politicians who had expressed their sympathy when she was caught up in the hacking storm in July 2011. At first Brooks sought to evade the question, but eventually said:

    "I received some indirect messages from Number 10, Number 11, the Home Office, the Foreign Office." Numbers 10 and 11 Downing Street are the prime minister's and finance minister's offices respectively. Read the full story.

    6 comments

    The scoundrels commute back and forth across the pond..... http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/may/06/leveson-murdoch-cameron-brooks-privilege

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  • 10
    May
    2012
    2:52pm, EDT

    Greek turmoil deepens Europe's debt crisis

    John Kolesidis / Reuters

    Greek actress Ino Menegaki, playing the role of high priestess, takes part in the Olympic torch ceremony at the site of ancient Olympia in Greece Thursday. Greece could use some help from above as it struggles to solve deep economic and political problems.

    By John W. Schoen, Senior Producer

    The deepening political turmoil in Greece has begun reverberating throughout the global financial markets as Athens’ failure to form a government last weekend threatens to further undermine the battered European economy and banking system.

    Two years after European leaders began engineering a bailout for the debt-laden Greek government in return for deep spending cuts, the grand plan to cement the widening cracks in Europe’s common currency appears to have collapsed. 

    There is no Plan B. 

    "Greece is an unguided missile launched from the middle of the eurozone," said Carl Weinberg, chief economist at High Frequency Economics. “How, when and where it will strike cannot be predicted."

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    On Thursday, Greece’s fragmented political leadership failed in another last-ditch effort to form a government, all but assuring another round of elections next month. Voters swept from power the two major parties that had engineered a painful austerity plan with Europe’s wealthier countries, led by Germany, in exchange for an ongoing financial lifeline.


     With no government in place to enforce spending cuts, the European Union temporarily cut off a portion of that lifeline, raising the likelihood that Greece will be forced to leave the 17-nation compact that shares a common currency. The Athens government is due to run out of cash in June.

    Without the financial lifeline or membership in the common currency, Greece faces a grim future. With its economy already contracting at an estimated 6 percent annual rate, an exit from the eurozone would accelerate its economic and financial collapse. But holders of its debt, including Europe’s banking system, would also feel the blow.

    The turmoil is already putting pressure on other European governments wrestling with large debts and deep spending cuts.  

    No one can predict the outcome. And unlike the sudden financial panic that swept the world in September 2008, some analysts say, the crisis could stretch on for years. Europe has become a “slow motion train wreck,” according to New York University economist Nouriel Roubini.

    "Slow motion because it might take three or four years," he told CNBC. "But three or four years in which all these risks coming from the eurozone -- economic, political, fiscal, financial -- are going to get gradually worse."

    For the moment, Spain appears to be the most vulnerable to the “contagion” of Greece’s apparently imminent demise.

    With Spain’s economy mired in the second recession since 2009 and unemployment at 25 percent, the country’s bankers are struggling with rising loan defaults left behind by a U.S.-style housing bust. Spanish banks, unable to unload bloated inventories of repossessed homes, are stuck with nearly a quarter trillion dollars worth of bad debt.

    CNBC's Michelle Caruso-Cabrera reports on the details of Alexis Tsipras' plans for Greece's future.

    On Wednesday, the Spanish government took over the latest casualty, Bankia, which holds 10 percent of the Spanish banking system's deposits. Government officials there are expected to demand as early as Friday that bankers set aside more capital to offset those debts. That would leave them with less cash to lend to businesses and consumers, dampening spending and deepening the recession.

    That recession is spreading across Europe. On Thursday, the OECD said in a monthly economic update that France and Italy are showing further signs of weakness.

    That leaves Germany, Europe’s largest economy, as the main provider of financial lifelines to its weaker neighbors. Despite growing signs that deep budget cuts are worsening Europe’s economic contraction, German leaders remain publicly steadfast in support of further “austerity” as the ultimate cure.

    On Thursday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel insisted, in a newspaper interview, that Greece has to follow through on further cuts due next month under terms of the bailout negotiated by its government. German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said Thursday that Europe and the International Monetary Fund stood ready to help Greece, but the country’s fate would depend on adherence to the existing plan. 

    "Whether Greece is ready to do what is necessary - only the Greek people can decide," he told a news conference. "Greece can rely on the solidarity of Europe, but if Greece does not help itself, there is nothing to be done."

    If the austerity plan fails and Germany withdraws financial support, Greece would almost certainly default on its debt, including loans already extended by the IMF and European Central Bank. The impact of those losses could make it much more difficult for other countries to win support for bailouts of their own.

    "If after all this Greece has to be written off after all, it will also add to aid fatigue that is making the round in the countries financing the bailouts," said Natascha Gewaltig, head of European economics for Action Economics.

    Borrowers across Europe already face a tougher time getting credit as banks are apparently hoarding cash to weather an increasingly risky and uncertain future, according to a recent analysis by the Wall Street Journal.  At the end of March, 10 of Europe's biggest banks had parked nearly $1.2 trillion at central banks around the world. That’s $128 billion, or 12 percent, higher than December and up 66 percent from the end of 2010, the Journal said.

    As Europe’s economic and financial crisis drags on, tighter credit conditions could spread worldwide to large companies trying to raise cash by selling bonds. On Thursday, Standard & Poor's issued a report estimating that nonfinancial corporations in the eurozone, U.K., U.S., China, and Japan will need to raise $43 trillion to $46 trillion over the next five years, including $30 trillion of debt to refinance existing bonds and $13 trillion to $16 trillion of new money to fund growth. The report warned of "credit rationing that may occur as banks seek to restructure their balance sheets" and investors grow jittery about the risks of buying all that debt.

    "Combined with the eurozone crisis, the slow U.S. economic recovery, and the prospect of a slowing economy in China, this raises the downside risk of a perfect storm in global corporate credit markets," said Jayan Dhru, S&P head of global corporate ratings.

    Investors are also warily watching the looming "fiscal cliff" facing the biggest borrower of all, the U.S. government. Unless Congress and the White House can steer away from it, massive tax hikes and spending cuts are scheduled to take effect at year-end. Economists have warned the combined impact could cost the U.S. economy between 2.5 and 5 percent of gross domestic product, stopping the anemic recovery in its tracks.

    "The markets are telling Washington, 'You better get it in gear; you cannot let this uncertainty overhang the market,'" said Yra Harris, a currency trader at Praxis Trading. "This uncertainty is really making people nervous."

    412 comments

    The sad thing is the only difference between the U.S. and Europe is time. The U.S. has the time to fix the problems all it has to do is stop the deficit spending, 16 Trillion Dollar depts, borrowing 40 cents of every dollar that the Fed spends, etc. The problem is the will to do it. The Republicans  …

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    Explore related topics: europe, economy, featured, germany, spain, greece, stock-market
  • 10
    May
    2012
    6:20am, EDT

    Olympic torch lit by sun's rays at birthplace of Games

    Orestis Panagiotou / EPA

    Actress Ino Menegaki, in the role of the High Priestess, lights the torch of the Olympic Flame in front of Hera Temple in Ancient Olympia, Greece, on May 10, 2012.

    The Associated Press reports — The flame that will burn during the London Games was lit at the birthplace of the ancient Olympics on Thursday, heralding the start of a torch relay that will culminate with the opening ceremony on July 27.

    Actress Ino Menegaki, dressed as a high priestess, stood before the 2,600-year-old Temple of Hera, and after an invocation to Apollo, the ancient Greeks' Sun God, used a mirror to focus the sun's rays and light a torch.

    The triangular torch is designed to highlight the fact that London is hosting the Olympics for the third time. It also staged the games in 1908 and 1948.

    Under bright sunny skies there was no need for the backup flame that was used during the final rehearsal for the Olympic torch lighting a day earlier. Read the full story.

    Related content:

    • Five facts about the London 2012 torch
    • Video: Countdown to the Olympic Games
    • Slideshow: When the Olympics is your neighbor
    • Full Olympic coverage on NBCOlympics.com

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Orestis Panagiotou / EPA

    The flame will make a 1,800-mile journey through Greece using 490 torchbearers.

    John Kolesidis / Reuters

    Ino Menegaki holds up the cauldron with the Olympic flame during the torch lighting ceremony.

    John Kolesidis / Reuters

    Alexander Loukos, center, a British boxer of Greek descent, runs with the Olympic flame during the torch relay at the site of ancient Olympia on May 10, 2012. The torch will be handed to London organizers on May 17 in Athens' Panathiaic Stadium, where the first modern games were held in 1896.

    An actress playing high priestess kindles the torch of the 2012 Games, sparking the global relay to the Opening Ceremony cauldron in London on July 27.

    Slideshow: Venues for 2012 London Olympic Games

    Oda / Getty Images

    From Wimbledon to Wembley Stadium to The Dome, a look at the venues for the 2012 London Olympic Games.

    Launch slideshow

     

    57 comments

    The costumes worn by the accresses are better than 90% of the ones worn on the red carpet at the Oscars.

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    Explore related topics: sports, olympics, europe, greece, world-news, torch, london-2012, ancient-olympia
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John W. Schoen

John W. Schoen has reported and written about business and financial news for more than 30 years. He began his career as a newspaper reporter and editor in Connecticut, moving to Dow Jones as radio newscaster and writer for The Wall Street Journal. As a reporter for the CBS Radio Network and public radio's Marketplace, he covered Wall Street's insider trading scandals and the Crash of '87. He joined CNBC several months before it went on the air i …

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