Showing posts with label curbs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label curbs. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 25, 2013

UK deputy PM to block curbs on EU migration

UK deputy PM to block curbs on EU migration
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Britain’s Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg has pledged to block attempts by the coalition government to impose a cap on the number of European Union (EU) migrants.


Writing in the Sunday Times, Clegg described as “pointless” and “distracting” the UK’s Home Office plans for a cap on migration from the EU, possibly at 75,000 a year.


The Liberal Democrat leader also said that he backs ’sensible and reasonable reforms” to migrants’ benefit rights, but that he “draws the line” against the idea of limiting freedom of movement in the 28-member bloc.


“Sticking a big no-entry sign on the cliffs of Dover may be politically popular, but at a huge economic cost. What would happen if tonight every European living in the UK boarded a ship or plane and went home?” Clegg said.


Meanwhile, British Business Secretary Vince Cable said the Conservative party is in “a panic” over immigration because of the rise of the UK Independence Party (UKIP).


Speaking on the state-run BBC’s Andrew Marr on Sunday, Cable also accused the Tories of resorting to “populist measures that do harm”.


The remarks come amid a growing row over the Conservatives’ proposals to tighten up welfare rules for EU migrants and escalating concerns over an influx of Romanians and Bulgarians to Britain in the near future.


British Prime Minister David Cameron confirmed on Wednesday that the new rules on migrants were being laid before the UK Parliament to bring them in by January 2014, when EU working restrictions are lifted.


Under the new measures, migrants from the 28-member bloc will be barred from claiming out-of-work benefits for their first three months in the UK.


EU nationals will also have their payments stopped after six months unless they can prove they have a “genuine” prospect of employment.


Moreover, those migrants found begging or sleeping rough could be deported and banned from re-entry to Britain for 12 months.




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Saturday, December 21, 2013

Clegg opposes further migrant curbs











Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg has said he “draws the line” against moves to curb immigration from the EU.


Writing in The Sunday Times, Mr Clegg said curbs on migrants’ benefit rights were “sensible” but plans for a cap of 75,000 on EU migrants were “pointless”.


Meanwhile, Bulgaria’s president has criticised UK politicians who “play on people’s fears” over immigration.


Restrictions on movement of Bulgarians and Romanians within the EU are due to end at the beginning of next month.


Measures to make EU migrants to the UK wait three months before they are eligible for out-of-work benefits and stop them claiming housing benefit until they have a job are planned by the coalition government.



‘No-entry sign’

These are intended to be in place by 1 January when restrictions on the movement on Bulgarian and Romanian nationals in the EU are lifted.


Mr Clegg said: “These are sensible and reasonable reforms that will help preserve the UK’s open and welcoming nature.”


He said if such rules were applied to Britons living abroad, they would be considered fair.


“But this is where we draw the line,” he went on. “Talk of arbitrary caps on the number of EU nationals is as pointless as it is distracting.”


He added: “Sticking a big no-entry sign on the cliffs of Dover may be politically popular, but at a huge economic cost.


“What would happen if tonight every European living in the UK boarded a ship or plane and went home?


“Are we really that keen to see the back of German lawyers, Dutch accountants or Finnish engineers? Do we want the NHS to fall over and the City of London to grind to a halt?”


Such a cap could lead to tit-for-tat restrictions on Britons living abroad, he said, and Britain would be “one step closer to the exit” from the EU, putting economic recovery at risk.



‘Wise men’

Meanwhile, in The Observer, Bulgarian President Rosen Plevneliev called on UK politicians not to play on people’s fears over immigration.


He said: “You see, of course, Great Britain will make its planning and will take its decisions. But some of them could be right, some of them could be wrong. Some of them are bold and some of them are, I would say, not long-term orientated decisions.


“You want to make a plan for a better future for your citizens in Great Britain. In the past 20 years immigrants in Great Britain contributed heavily to its prosperity, and that is a fact.


“The only thing that is important is not to listen to populist politicians who play on people’s fears but to listen to the wise men in Great Britain.”


Earlier this week, Mr Clegg said a cap on the number of EU migrants to the UK would leave the NHS “in serious trouble”.


He also claimed it would damage the economy with the City of London “undermined overnight”.




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BBC News – Home

Clegg opposes further migrant curbs

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

White House review panel proposes curbs on some NSA programs




WASHINGTON Wed Dec 18, 2013 8:00pm EST



U.S. President Barack Obama speaks about the economy at an event hosted by the Center for American Progress in Washington December 4, 2013. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque

U.S. President Barack Obama speaks about the economy at an event hosted by the Center for American Progress in Washington December 4, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Kevin Lamarque




WASHINGTON (Reuters) – A White House-appointed panel on Wednesday proposed curbs on some key National Security Agency surveillance operations, recommending limits on a program to collect records of billions of telephone calls and new tests before Washington spies on foreign leaders.


Among the panel’s proposals, made in the wake of revelations by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden, the most contentious may be its recommendation that the eavesdropping agency halt bulk collection of the phone call records, known as “metadata.”


Instead, it said, those records should be held by telecommunications providers or a private third party. In a further limitation, the U.S. government would need an order from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court for each search of the data.


“We don’t see the need for the government to be retaining that data,” said Richard Clarke, a member of the panel and a former White House counterterrorism adviser.


The panel’s report expressed deep skepticism about both the value and effectiveness of the metadata collection program.


“The question is not whether granting the government (this) authority makes us incrementally safer, but whether the additional safety is worth the sacrifice in terms of individual privacy, personal liberty and public trust,” it said.


The report’s authors say that the metadata collection program “has made only a modest contribution to the nation’s security.” The program “has generated relevant information in only a small number of cases” that might have led to the prevention of terrorist attack, they said in a footnote.


It added that “there has been no instance in which NSA could say with confidence that the outcome would have been different without the… telephony meta-data program. Moreover, now that the existence of the program has been disclosed publicly, we suspect that it is likely to be less useful still.”


It remains to be seen, however, how many of the panel’s 46 recommendations will be accepted by President Barack Obama and the U.S. Congress. The panel’s five members met with Obama at the White House on Wednesday.


Obama said in a television interview earlier this month that he would be “proposing some self-restraint on the NSA” in reforms that the White House has said will be announced in January.


White House press secretary Jay Carney said some of the outside panel’s recommendations could be accepted, others studied further, and some rejected.


Obama has already rejected, at least for now, one of the panel’s proposals: that NSA and U.S. Cyber Command, which conducts cyberwarfare, have separate leaders, with NSA led by a civilian rather than a military officer.


NSA officials have staunchly defended the bulk metadata program, saying it is essential to “connect the dots” between terrorist plotters overseas and co-conspirators inside the United States.


“There is no other way that we know of to connect the dots,” Army General Keith Alexander, NSA’s director, told a Senate committee last week. “Given that the threat is growing, I believe that is an unacceptable risk to our country.”


Alexander nonetheless has on occasion indicated a willingness to consider modifications in the metadata collection program.


Leaders of both the House and Senate Intelligence Committees, which would consider possible changes to surveillance laws, have indicated support for continuation of metadata collection.


In response to the publication of the White House panel’s report, Sen. Patrick Leahy, the Democrat who chairs the Senate Judiciary Committee, said a bill he has introduced contains a provision that would order an end to metadata collection.


Michael Morell, a former deputy CIA director who is on the White House review panel, said its members do not believe that its proposals for change “in any way undermine the capabilities of the U.S. intelligence community to collect the information it needs to collect to keep this country safe.”


In another major recommendation, the panel proposed five tests it said should be met before Washington conducts surveillance against foreign leaders.


Revelations in documents provided by Snowden that the United States spied on German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff have enraged those countries’ citizens.


Brazil on Wednesday awarded a $ 4.5 billion contract to Saab AB to replace its aging fleet of fighter jets, after news of U.S. spying on Brazilians helped derail U.S. firm Boeing’s chances for the deal.


“The NSA problem ruined it for the Americans,” a Brazilian government source said on condition of anonymity.


Before spying on foreign leaders, the panel said, U.S. leaders should determine whether such surveillance is merited by “significant threats” to national security, and whether the nation involved is one “whose leaders we should accord a high degree of respect and deference.”


U.S. leaders also should determine whether there is reason to believe the foreign leader has been duplicitous, whether there are other ways to obtain the necessary information, and weigh the negative effects if the surveillance were to become public, the panel said.


It said the U.S. government should explore agreements on spying practices “with a small number of closely allied governments.” Reuters recently reported that German and U.S. government representatives have opened discussions about such an agreement following the disclosures about the alleged bugging by the NSA of Merkel’s mobile phone.


Among its other recommendations, the panel called for limits on National Security Letters, which allow the FBI and other agencies to compel individuals and organizations to turn over business records without any independent or judicial review.


Such letters should only be issued after a judicial finding, and there should be limits on “gag orders” that bar the recipients of National Security Letters and similar orders from disclosing their existence, the panel said.


Across U.S. surveillance programs more broadly, “we tend to believe there should be further judicial oversight than there has been,” panel member Clarke said.


(Editing by James Dalgleish, Vicki Allen and Ken Wills)






Reuters: Politics



White House review panel proposes curbs on some NSA programs

Monday, August 5, 2013

Fonterra CEO apologizes, sees China dairy curbs lifted within days

WELLINGTON/BEIJING (Reuters) – Fonterra, the world’s leading exporter of dairy products, apologized on Monday for a milk powder contamination scare in China that risks tainting New Zealand’s reputation for food safety.



Reuters: Top News



Fonterra CEO apologizes, sees China dairy curbs lifted within days