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2011年4月29日星期五

Syria tells public to stay home as the Opposition called for rallies

April 29, 2011, 3: 34 pm EDT by Massoud a. Derhally

April 29 (Bloomberg)--the Ministry of the Interior the Syria warned its citizens not step to organize demonstrations and "contribute to the stability and security" of the country as pledged to defy a deadly repression and continue protests by activists.

The Syrians said Ministry should "refrain from exercising rallies or demonstrations and sit-ins, under a title pending approval of" of the authorities, according to a statement carried by managed by the Government of Syria Arab News Agency. "The laws will be applied to serve the security of citizens and the stability of the homeland", the Ministry said.Demonstrators will likely challenge the ban because "nothing important was held to appease the anger of the people", Abdul - Karim Rihawi, head of the Syrian human rights League, said in a telephone interview from Damascus late yesterday. The opposition that Muslim Brotherhood called on people to demonstrate today, Al-Arabiya television reported. Anti-Government protests have intensified after the Friday prayer since the beginning of the agitation in the workplace March.The last exercised repression since last Friday prayers, especially in the southern region of Dara, pushed the number of deaths throughout the country since the middle of March to more than 450, says organization the national Syria for human rights. The demonstrations are part of a wave of popular movements who unseated leaders in Egypt and Tunisia, violent reactions pricked in Libya and Bahrain and oil prices have helped grow more than 20 per cent this year.More than 1,000 people were arrested across the country since the latest demonstrations began on April 22, with the total number of detentions since unrest began at least 2,000 according to Mahmoud Merhiwho heads the Arab Organization for Human Rights.European PressureEuropean nations have intensified pressure on the Syria, summoning the ambassadors and pushing for an organization of the United Nations vote to protest against violence. In New York, China and the directed Russia opposition blocked an initiative on 27 April by the United States and its European allies to the Security Council of the United Nations to condemn the attacks of the Syrian Government on peaceful demonstrators.United Kingdom Foreign Secretary William Hague also removed invitation of Syrian Ambassador to marriage of today of Prince William and Kate Middleton of the London.European Union officials will meet in Brussels today to discuss the Syria. Germany supports sanctions on the direction of the Syria, including restrictions on travel and financial freezes, German Government spokesman Steffen Seibert told journalists in Berlin yesterday.

-Editors: Ben Holland, Karl Maier.

To contact the reporters on this story: Massoud a. Derhally to Beirut, to the Lebanon to the mderhally@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Andrew j. Barden at barden@bloomberg.net


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Syria tells public to stay home as the Opposition called for rallies - BusinessWeek

April 29, 2011, 3: 34 pm EDT by Massoud a. Derhally

April 29 (Bloomberg)--the Ministry of the Interior the Syria warned its citizens not step to organize demonstrations and "contribute to the stability and security" of the country as pledged to defy a deadly repression and continue protests by activists.

The Syrians said Ministry should "refrain from exercising rallies or demonstrations and sit-ins, under a title pending approval of" of the authorities, according to a statement carried by managed by the Government of Syria Arab News Agency. "The laws will be applied to serve the security of citizens and the stability of the homeland", the Ministry said.Demonstrators will likely challenge the ban because "nothing important was held to appease the anger of the people", Abdul - Karim Rihawi, head of the Syrian human rights League, said in a telephone interview from Damascus late yesterday. The opposition that Muslim Brotherhood called on people to demonstrate today, Al-Arabiya television reported. Anti-Government protests have intensified after the Friday prayer since the beginning of the agitation in the workplace March.The last exercised repression since last Friday prayers, especially in the southern region of Dara, pushed the number of deaths throughout the country since the middle of March to more than 450, says organization the national Syria for human rights. The demonstrations are part of a wave of popular movements who unseated leaders in Egypt and Tunisia, violent reactions pricked in Libya and Bahrain and oil prices have helped grow more than 20 per cent this year.More than 1,000 people were arrested across the country since the latest demonstrations began on April 22, with the total number of detentions since unrest began at least 2,000 according to Mahmoud Merhiwho heads the Arab Organization for Human Rights.European PressureEuropean nations have intensified pressure on the Syria, summoning the ambassadors and pushing for an organization of the United Nations vote to protest against violence. In New York, China and the directed Russia opposition blocked an initiative on 27 April by the United States and its European allies to the Security Council of the United Nations to condemn the attacks of the Syrian Government on peaceful demonstrators.United Kingdom Foreign Secretary William Hague also removed invitation of Syrian Ambassador to marriage of today of Prince William and Kate Middleton of the London.European Union officials will meet in Brussels today to discuss the Syria. Germany supports sanctions on the direction of the Syria, including restrictions on travel and financial freezes, German Government spokesman Steffen Seibert told journalists in Berlin yesterday.

-Editors: Ben Holland, Karl Maier.

To contact the reporters on this story: Massoud a. Derhally to Beirut, to the Lebanon to the mderhally@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Andrew j. Barden at barden@bloomberg.net


View the original article here

2011年4月9日星期六

Women endure deletions of jobs in the Public sector

Esmé e. Deprez and Holly Rosenkrantz

During the 18-month recession which ends in June 2009, the lost men far more jobs than women. But since the beginning of recovery, the situation has changed and women have had the worse, mainly because of cuts in public sector. As Governors continue to trim to balance spending budgets, more layoffs are on the road, and dominated by women in areas such as teaching, nursing and home care are vulnerable.

In the acrimonious debate on jobs of the Government, pension and collective bargaining, the disproportionate impact on women has gone almost unnoticed. Women lost 72% of 378,000 government jobs cut between July 2009 and in March 2010, according to the Ministry of labour when the gains of the private sector are included, women had a net loss of 212 000 jobs between July 2009 and last month.

Added men 757,000 jobs, especially in the private sector, during the same period, but they continue to women in the overall employment lagged gains. The male workforce is 6.8% below the level of employment gives, while women remain 3.7% behind.

Now that ramps up, the public sector private sector - and particular local Government - continues to shed jobs. This year will be "the year the more difficult even for local governments", Moody's Investors Service said in a report of 16 March. Local Government has the highest concentration of workers of the three government levels, to 62%. Women hold 57 percent of all jobs in the Government, show the data of the Ministry of labour.

Some of the greatest successes are in public education. Composed of approximately 76% of the teachers of the school year 2007-2008, the latest available figures by the Ministry of education of women of New Jersey Governor Chris Christie has cut the school aid by $ 1.3 billion since the entry into service in January 2010. 80% Reductions of State teacher districts reported this school year, said Frank Belluscio, a spokesman at the expense of the New Jersey School Boards Kasich plan Governor of Ohio Assn.. John stiff 7,000 teachers over two years, said the Ohio Innovation, who lobbied for the poor and middle class. The Government is "taking a wrecking what have traditionally been female-dominated occupations," said Randi Weingarten, President of the American Federation of teachers. Dawn Willis, 39, is among those who have lost their jobs due to budget restrictions. It was social studies teacher in Jackson, New Jersey "is difficult for me to believe that we are in a recovery," she said. After eight years of classroom of experience, it can change career. "I have always been very optimistic, but now I begin to swing the other way."

Diana Furchtgott-Roth, senior fellow at the Hudson Institute, a Washington research group that advocates limits on the power of work, according to the laws curbing union bargaining will allow fewer redundancies and to limit tax increases, saving money from the States. "The current system is unsustainable, says Furchtgott-Roth, who was Chief Economist at the Department of labor under President George w. Bush." Women are the winners in all this. ?

It is difficult to square with the data: last month, Governor of the Michigan Rick Snyder, stripped of the bargaining rights of workers childcare at home, including 94% are women. Widely publicized Act by the Governor of the Wisconsin Scott Walker, who is challenged in court, would revoke the bargaining rights for workers of the Hospital of the University, home and daycare providers. Firefighters and police, majority male, is exempt. Restricting collective bargaining could also jeopardize the flexible hours of work and maternity leave, explains Joan Entmacher, Vice President of the Centre of National law of women, as well as to widen the gap wage between the sexes. In 2010, women members of the Union has obtained 89 cents for each counterparts male dollar earned, according to women in Labour Dept. NonUnion made 81 cents on the dollar.

The bottom line: Public sector job losses have fallen disproportionately on women, as States cut to predominantly female jobs in education and health care.

Deprez is a journalist for Bloomberg News. Rosenkrantz is a reporter for Bloomberg News.

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