Israel, U.S. sign deal to upgrade Arrow missile shield

(Reuters) – Israel and the United States have signed an agreement to make the Arrow II ballistic shield capable of shooting down missiles at a higher altitude, the Israeli Defense Ministry said on Sunday.

The Arrow III will allow Israel “to deal with the threat of ballistic missiles with long range” and will give it “the ability to shoot down weapons of mass destruction outside the atmosphere,” the ministry said in a statement.

Israel, which describes its Arrow system as a defense against Iran, says the upgraded version will cap off its multi-tier air defenses.

The Arrow is jointly produced by state-owned Israel Aerospace Industries and the American firm Boeing Co. and has absorbed close to $1 billion in direct U.S. funds since its 1988 inception.

The Israeli air force said last year that the Arrow III would take more than four years to complete and that would depend on what resources were made available for the project.

The United States, Western powers and Israel suspect Iran’s civilian nuclear program is designed to produce a nuclear bomb. Tehran denies this.

Israel, which is assumed to have the Middle East’s only atomic arsenal, has hinted it could resort to force to prevent Iran attaining the nuclear means to threaten its existence.

Iran has threatened to retaliate for any attack on its nuclear facilities by firing medium-range missiles at Israel.

(Reporting by Dan Williams; Writing by Joseph Nasr, Editing by Alison Williams)

Russia police kill two power plant attackers

(Reuters) – Russian police killed two men on Sunday accused of bombing a North Caucasus hydroelectric plant, media reported, just days after President Dmitry Medvedev threatened to sack security officials if there were another attack.

Six masked men, suspected Islamist militants, stormed the Baksanskaya power plant in Kabardino-Balkaria Wednesday, shot dead two guards and set off remote-controlled bombs beside the main generator units, bringing the station to a halt.

Analysts said the attack could signal a change of tactics by rebels in the North Caucasus trying to expand an Islamist insurgency along Russia’s southern flank and focus on economic targets — a threat they have long made public.

Medvedev threatened Thursday to sack top security officials if they failed to prevent new attacks on strategic assets in the region. No one took responsibility for the bombing.

Russian news agencies quoted a police spokesman as saying the armed men were killed in a shootout during an attempt to detain them as they drove away in a car.

“The rebels had taken part in a number of serious crimes … including the attack on the Baksanskaya power plant on July 21,” the agencies quoted the spokesman as saying.

The Kremlin is struggling to contain an Islamist insurgency in Chechnya, site of two separatist wars since the mid-1990s, Dagestan and Ingushetia where poverty and official abuse of force push some youths right into the hands of the rebels.

(Reporting by Dmitry Solovyov; Editing by Alison Williams)

Russia police say kill two power plant attackers

July 25 (Reuters) – Russian police killed two men on Sunday accused of bombing a North Caucasus hydroelectric plant, media reported, just days after President Dmitry Medvedev threatened to sack security officials if there were another attack.

Six masked men, suspected Islamist militants, stormed the Baksanskaya power plant in Kabardino-Balkaria on Wednesday, shot dead two guards and set off remote-controlled bombs beside the main generator units, bringing the station to a halt.

Analysts said the attack could signal a change of tactics by rebels in the North Caucasus trying to expand an Islamist insurgency along Russia’s southern flank and focus on economic targets — a threat they have long made public.

Medvedev threatened on Thursday to sack top security officials if they failed to prevent new attacks on strategic assets in the region. No one took responsibility for the bombing.

Russian news agencies quoted a police spokesman as saying the armed men were killed in a shootout during an attempt to detain them as they drove away in a car.

“The rebels had taken part in a number of serious crimes … including the attack on the Baksanskaya power plant on July 21,” the agencies quoted the spokesman as saying.

The Kremlin is struggling to contain an Islamist insurgency in Chechnya, site of two separatist wars since the mid-1990s, Dagestan and Ingushetia where poverty and official abuse of force push some youths right into the hands of the rebels. (Reporting by Dmitry Solovyov; Editing by Alison Williams)

Uganda police say suicide bombers carried out attacks

July 18 (Reuters) – Twin bomb attacks in Uganda’s capital that killed 73 people last week were carried out by suicide bombers, the head of police said on Sunday.

Somali al Shabaab insurgents linked to al Qaeda have said they carried out the attacks on a crowded restaurant and a rugby club in the Ugandan capital while fans watched the World Cup final on television last Sunday.

However, it said the attacks were not the work of suicide bombers. [ID:nLDE66C0U7]

“These attacks were carried out by suicide bombers. The evidence is overwhelming … two heads have not been claimed, neither have they been identified. It can’t be a coincidence,” Inspector General of Police Kale Kayihura told a news conference.

The al Qaeda-linked group al Shabaab said it was avenging the killing of civilians by African Union peacekeepers. Ugandan forces form the backbone of the 6,100-strong contingent in Somalia. (Reporting by Elias Biryabarema, Editing by George Obulutsa and Alison Williams)

FACTBOX-Security developments in Afghanistan, July 10

July 10 (Reuters) – Following are security developments in Afghanistan reported at 1400 GMT on Saturday

(* denotes new item):

KABUL – Five members of the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) died in separate attacks across the country on Saturday, the alliance said in a statement.

It said one service member died as a result of small-arms fire, another died following an improvised explosive device (IED) strike and a third following an insurgent attack in eastern Afghanistan, while two service members died in IED strikes in the south.

* KABUL – An ISAF service member died following an accidental explosion in eastern Afghanistan on Saturday, the alliance said in a statement. (Compiled by David Fox; Editing by Alison Williams)

Russia registers first polio death in a decade

MOSCOW, June 13 (Reuters) – Russia has confirmed its first death from polio in more than a decade, the country’s top public health official said on Sunday, Interfax news agency reported.

A citizen of the former-Soviet Central Asian country of Uzbekistan died of polio in the Urals Mountains city of Yekaterinburg in early June, Gennady Onishchenko was quoted as saying. “Tests have confirmed this,” he said.

Onishchenko’s spokeswoman was unavailable to comment on the report on Sunday.

Polio was practically eradicated as a public health problem in industrialised countries in the 1960s, but remains endemic in seven countries, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO).

Russia last month confirmed its first case in 13 years in an infant visiting from Tajikistan, where at least 12 people have died from a polio outbreak this year.

State news agency RIA Novosti last week reported that an Uzbek man died of polio in Yekaterinburg on June 4, but Onishchenko’s office refused to comment on that report until additional tests in Moscow confirmed the diagnosis.

Onishchenko said four cases of polio had been confirmed in citizens from Central Asia and two other possible cases were being investigated, Interfax reported.

Polio, which spreads in areas with poor sanitation, attacks the nervous system and can cause irreversible paralysis within hours of infection. Children under the age of three are most vulnerable. (Writing by Conor Humphries; Editing by Alison Williams)

BP will decide its own dividend: UK minister

(Reuters) – Energy giant BP, under pressure in the United States to suspend its dividend to help pay for damage from a huge oil spill, will decide its own dividend, Foreign Secretary William Hague said on Sunday.

U.S. | Green Business | Gulf Oil Spill

Britain and the United States sought to patch up tensions over the Gulf of Mexico spill in a telephone call between U.S. President Barack Obama and British Prime Minister David Cameron on Saturday.

Asked if there would be no more talk about British-based BP having to consult U.S. politicians on its dividend policy, Hague told the BBC: “BP will decide on its own dividend, of course.”

Hague said BP must “do its utmost to stop this oil spill, to deal with it satisfactorily on a permanent basis and to do everything it possibly can to mitigate the consequences.”

He said the British government was offering large quantities of chemical dispersant to the United States to help with the spill.

(Reporting by Adrian Croft; Editing by Alison Williams)

BP will decide its own dividend-UK minister

June 13 (Reuters) – Energy giant BP (BP.L)(BP.N), under pressure in the United States to suspend its dividend to help pay for damage from a huge oil spill, will decide its own dividend, Foreign Secretary William Hague said on Sunday.

Britain and the United States sought to patch up tensions over the Gulf of Mexico spill in a telephone call between U.S. President Barack Obama and British Prime Minister David Cameron on Saturday.

Asked if there would be no more talk about British-based BP having to consult U.S. politicians on its dividend policy, Hague told the BBC: “BP will decide on its own dividend, of course.”

Hague said BP must “do its utmost to stop this oil spill, to deal with it satisfactorily on a permanent basis and to do everything it possibly can to mitigate the consequences”.

He said the British government was offering large quantities of chemical dispersant to the United States to help with the spill. (Reporting by Adrian Croft; Editing by Alison Williams)

Instant View: Centre-right Fidesz scores big win in Hungary

(Reuters) – Hungary’s center-right Fidesz party secured 206 out of 386 parliamentary seats in the first round of elections on Sunday, ousting the Socialists after eight years, preliminary results showed.

World

Based on the first round, Fidesz has a chance to win two-thirds of seats in the next parliament.

The second round of voting will be held on April 25.

Followings are analysts comments on the election outcome.

ANDRAS GIRO-SZASZ, SZAZADVEG

“Fidesz needs to win another 52 of the remaining 57 individual constituencies on top of the 206 mandates it won today for a two-thirds (parliamentary) majority.

“If they win about 50 seats of the remaining 57 then it’s feasible they will get another two seats from the national compensation list, so they will need to win 50 seats of the 57 to have a chance for a two-thirds (majority).”

(Reporting by Gergely Szakacs and Krisztina Than; Editing by Alison Williams)

Hungary’s Fidesz wins election with strong mandate

BUDAPEST, April 11 (Reuters) – Hungary’s centre-right Fidesz party secured 206 out of 386 parliamentary seats in the first round of elections on Sunday, ousting the Socialists after eight years, preliminary results showed.

The National Election Committee said on its website that based on individual constituencies and party list votes, the Socialists gained 28 seats, ahead of the far-right Jobbik party which had 26 seats in the first round.

The results are from 99.2 percent of votes counted.

Green liberal LMP is the fourth party which passed the threshold to get into parliament, and secured 5 seats.

The remaining 121 seats will be decided in the second round on April 25. (Reporting by Krisztina Than; Editing by Alison Williams)

Factbox: Five facts about Viktor Orban of Hungary’s Fidesz

(Reuters) – The Hungarian opposition Fidesz party is forecast to win by a landslide in a parliamentary election Sunday, opinion polls say.

World

Followings are facts about Fidesz Chairman Viktor Orban, who is poised to become the country’s new prime minister.

* Orban, 46, a trained lawyer, will start his second term as prime minister after spending the past eight years of Socialist rule in opposition. He headed a Fidesz government between 1998 and 2002, in coalition with the agrarian populist Smallholders’ Party.

* A founder of Fidesz in 1988, Orban rose to fame when he demanded Soviet troops get out of Hungary during a 1989 reburial ceremony of 1956 prime minister Imre Nagy. Orban has been the figurehead of Fidesz since the party was founded.

* As prime minister, Orban advocated a growth-centered economic policy. While maintaining a relatively frugal fiscal regime, his government initiated a program that distributed around 100 billion forints ($500 million) mostly to local small and medium enterprises to invigorate the economy.

* Though the party got into parliament in 1990 on a liberal platform and focused its policies on young voters, Orban subsequently transformed Fidesz into a mainstream conservative group, appealing to the middle class and entrepreneurs.

* Orban himself also appeals to many ordinary Hungarians with his rural preferences and down-to-earth approach. He is a keen amateur soccer player. He is married with five children.

(Reporting by Marton Dunai, Editing by Alison Williams)

Factbox: Five facts about Viktor Orban of Hungary’s Fidesz

(Reuters) – The Hungarian opposition Fidesz party is forecast to win by a landslide in a parliamentary election Sunday, opinion polls say.

World

Followings are facts about Fidesz Chairman Viktor Orban, who is poised to become the country’s new prime minister.

* Orban, 46, a trained lawyer, will start his second term as prime minister after spending the past eight years of Socialist rule in opposition. He headed a Fidesz government between 1998 and 2002, in coalition with the agrarian populist Smallholders’ Party.

* A founder of Fidesz in 1988, Orban rose to fame when he demanded Soviet troops get out of Hungary during a 1989 reburial ceremony of 1956 prime minister Imre Nagy. Orban has been the figurehead of Fidesz since the party was founded.

* As prime minister, Orban advocated a growth-centered economic policy. While maintaining a relatively frugal fiscal regime, his government initiated a program that distributed around 100 billion forints ($500 million) mostly to local small and medium enterprises to invigorate the economy.

* Though the party got into parliament in 1990 on a liberal platform and focused its policies on young voters, Orban subsequently transformed Fidesz into a mainstream conservative group, appealing to the middle class and entrepreneurs.

* Orban himself also appeals to many ordinary Hungarians with his rural preferences and down-to-earth approach. He is a keen amateur soccer player. He is married with five children.

(Reporting by Marton Dunai, Editing by Alison Williams)

Russia’s Medvedev visits site of metro bombing

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev laid flowers on Monday on the platform a central Moscow metro station where a suicide bomber killed dozens of people during the morning rush hour.

Two female suicide bombers killed at least 38 people on packed metro trains on Monday, stirring fears of a broader campaign in Russia’s heartland by Islamists from the North Caucasus.

Medvedev, who after the attacks vowed to fight terrorists “to the end”, entered the Lubyanka metro station outside the headquarters of the Federal Security Service (FSB), Russia’s main domestic security service.

Joined by his wife and Moscow Mayor Yury Luzhkov, Medvedev placed a bouquet of red roses with a black ribbon on the platform where the blast took place, television pictures showed.

(Reporting by Helena van Geest, writing by Guy Faulconbridge, editing by Alison Williams)

NYSE CEO says “real money” investors sat out March rally: report

LONDON (Reuters) – “Real money” investors sat out the March stock market rally and are probably waiting for a second one around June or July, the head of the world’s biggest stock exchange, NYSE Euronext (NYX.N), said in a newspaper interview.

“The real money investors are still waiting. I think they’re waiting, they’re watching. They want to make sure that what we saw in March is real,” NYSE Chief Executive Duncan Niederauer was cited as saying by the Financial Times newspaper on Thursday.

“And I think once they are convinced, you will know it. The market will have a totally different tone to it.”

Niederauer’s comments came after the U.S. benchmark Standard and Poor’s 500 index .SPX rose 8.5 percent in March, its best month since October 2002.

According to the FT, he said the rally was driven by short-term traders trying to take advantage of high volatility and that he sensed that volumes were below the level that would indicate that investors had regained confidence in the fundamentals of the market.

“I think we’re waiting for another rally, in my opinion, in around June or July,” the newspaper reported him saying.

(Reporting by Andrew Callus; Editing by Alison Williams, Leslie Gevirtz)

Gearbox failure caused N.Sea helicopter crash-probe

LONDON, April 10 (Reuters) – The North Sea helicopter crash that killed 16 people last week was caused by a “catastrophic failure” that led to the aircraft’s main rotor breaking away, British air accident investigators said on Friday.

In an initial report, the Air Accidents Investigation Branch (AAIB) said the failure occurred in part of the helicopter’s main gearbox.

The rotor then broke off, hitting and severing the aircraft’s tail boom, the AAIB said, adding there was also a rupture in the helicopter’s right-hand engine casing.

The 14 passengers and two crew were returning from a BP oil platform when the Super Puma helicopter crashed in the sea in fine weather on April 1.

The AAIB said the Puma’s manufacturer Eurocopter should instruct all operators to increase main rotor gearbox inspections.

It also said Eurocopter should “improve the gearbox monitoring and warning systems on the (Puma) helicopter so as to identify degradation and provide adequate alerts”.

It was the second Super Puma crash in the North Sea in six weeks. In February, all 18 on board a Super Puma travelling to a BP oil rig were rescued after it went down into the sea after hitting a fog bank.

Both aircraft were operated by Bond Offshore Helicopters, which runs a fleet of Super Puma twin-engined helicopters to supply sea-based oil rigs. (Reporting by Frank Prenesti; Editing by Alison Williams)