New Rabobank HQ tower on fire after explosion

June 27 (Reuters) – An explosion on Sunday set on fire one of two new towers being built by Dutch bank Rabobank [RABO.UL] as its headquarters, and firefighters are having difficulty putting out the blaze, Dutch agency ANP reported.

Financials

The fire broke out on the tower’s 25th and 26th floors after a 4 a.m. (0200 GMT) explosion, ANP said. It was unclear what caused the blast, and there were no immediate details on possible victims, the agency added.

Dutch state broadcaster NOS said the local fire department is taking into consideration the possibility that the tower could collapse entirely, although there was no indication that a collapse was imminent.

Rabobank is building the new towers just down the street from the central train station in Utrecht, the Netherlands’ fourth-largest city.

According to a presentation on the bank’s website, the towers are meant to have 27 floors each and reach to a height of 105 metres (344.5 ft). Employees were intended to start moving in early next year, with the official opening scheduled for the second quarter of 2011.

Rabobank is the country’s largest retail savings bank and has recently set its sights on substantial expansion in India and China as well. (Reporting by Ben Berkowitz, editing by Miral Fahmy)

Smelly studios and fleas cause Cyprus TV walkout

(Reuters Life!) – News staff at Cyprus’s state broadcaster briefly walked off the job on Monday over conditions which included smelly studios and an infestation of fleas, workers said.

Lifestyle

“We demand a decent and safe place to work,” a staff member told Reuters, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Management are trying to find suitable work spaces for staff. Management were not immediately available for comment, but had said last week that they were working on improving job conditions.

The aging premises of the Cyprus Broadcasting Corporation in Nicosia have been causing problems for years, either from an invasion of cats, or fleas.

There were several incidents of members of staff falling ill after pest controllers were called to the premises last week, staff said.

(Editing by Paul Casciato)

Aid ship says determined to continue journey to Gaza

(Reuters) – An aid ship carrying cargo to Gaza is determined to finish its journey despite a naval blockade and expects to reach the point where Israeli commandos raided a flotilla later this week, a crew member said.

World

The MV Rachel Corrie, a converted merchant ship bought by pro-Palestinian activists and named after an American woman killed in the Gaza Strip in 2003, set off on Monday from Malta.

It is carrying 15 activists including a northern Irish Nobel Peace laureate and expects to be at the point of Monday’s deadly raid on a Turkish-backed aid convoy between Friday evening and Saturday morning, crew member Derek Graham said.

The Israeli navy stormed a Turkish ferry leading a six-ship convoy on Monday, killing nine people in what authorities have said was self-defense. The killings have sparked a world outcry and condemnations of Israel.

“We had a meeting after what happened on Monday morning and we were more determined than ever to continue with our mission,” Graham told Irish state broadcaster RTE on Wednesday.

He said he would be inform Israeli authorities of the exact positions of the ship’s passengers and urge those on board to remain peaceful.

“I will advise the passengers and crew to sit quietly with their hands shown so they cannot do like they did on Monday and claim we attacked them,” he said. “We are a peaceful mission.”

The Israeli government has offered to escort the vessel and deliver the civilian aid for it. It has said Egypt is prepared to do the same.

However Graham said he was concerned not all the cargo would be delivered. The ship is carrying medical equipment, school supplies and cement, a material Israel has banned from entering Gaza.

Irish Prime Minister Brian Cowen, who described the vessel as Irish-owned, said it should be allowed to finish its mission.

(Reporting by Marie-Louise Gumuchian; Editing by Noah Barkin)

International reaction to flotilla intervention

Here is some international reaction to the incident:

PALESTINIAN PRESIDENT MAHMOUD ABBAS:

– “What Israel has committed on board the Freedom Flotilla was a massacre.”

He declared three days of official mourning for the dead.

TURKISH PRESIDENT ABDULLAH GUL:

– Gul said in a statement that Ankara is demanding an inquiry into the violent interdiction of the Turkey-backed convoy and the punishment of the culprits.

– Turkey said on Monday it had called for an emergency meeting of the U.N. Security Council.

ARAB LEAGUE CHIEF AMR MOUSSA:

– Amr Moussa called on Monday for an emergency meeting to discuss what the body that groups 22 Arab states described as Israel’s “terrorist act.”

“The Arab League strongly condemns this terrorist act.”

IRANIAN PRESIDENT MAHMOUD AHMADINEJAD:

– “The inhuman acts of the Zionist regime against Palestinians and preventing humanitarian aid to the Gaza people does not show the strength of the Zionist regime but shows its weakness,” Ahmadinejad told state broadcaster IRIB. “All these acts indicate the end of the heinous and fake regime and will bring it closer to the end of its existence.”

FRENCH PRESIDENT NICOLAS SARKOZY:

– “The President of the Republic expresses his profound emotion in the face of the tragic consequences of the Israeli military operation,” Sarkozy’s office said. “He condemns the disproportionate use of force and addresses his condolences to the families of the victims,” it said.

ITALIAN FOREIGN MINISTER FRANCO FRATTINI:

– “I deplore in the strongest terms the killing of civilians. This is certainly a grave act.”

BRITISH FOREIGN SECRETARY WILLIAM HAGUE:

“I deplore the loss of life during the interception of the Gaza Flotilla…We have consistently advised against attempting to access Gaza in this way, because of the risks involved. But at the same time, there is a clear need for Israel to act with restraint and in line with international obligations…”

GERMAN GOVERNMENT SPOKESMAN ULRICH WILHELM:

– “The German government is shocked by events in the international waters by Gaza…”

– “Every German government supports unconditionally Israel’s right to self defense,” said Wilhelm, but added that Israeli actions should to correspond to what he described as the “basic principle” of proportionality.

EUROPEAN UNION:

– “High Representative Catherine Ashton expresses her deep regret at the news of loss of life and violence and extends her sympathies to families of the dead and wounded,” said a spokesperson for Ashton, the EU’s foreign policy chief.

– “On behalf of the European Union she demands a full enquiry about the circumstances in which this happened… The continued policy of closure is unacceptable and politically counter-productive. She calls for an immediate, sustained and unconditional opening of the crossing for the flow of humanitarian aid, commercial goods and persons to and from Gaza,” the spokesperson said.

NORWEGIAN PRIME MINISTER JENS STOLTENBERG:

– “This underlines that the blockade of Gaza should be ended as soon as possible,” Stoltenberg told reporters. “This type of military action is unacceptable. The shootings must be investigated and documented. It is clear that this is a use of force against civilians.”

SPANISH SECRETARY OF STATE DIEGO

LOPEZ GARRIDO:

– Spain unequivocally condemns the Israeli attack on the humanitarian flotilla and it does so as a country and as the acting president of the EU Council. Spain has summoned the Israeli ambassador to ask him for explanations of the attack.

DUTCH FOREIGN MINISTER MAXIME VERHAGEN:

– “I want the Israeli ambassador in The Hague to provide clarification today on this,” Verhagen said in a statement. “The Netherlands wants an investigation specifically into how this could have happened.”

GREEK DEPUTY FOREIGN MINISTER DIMITRIS DROUTSAS:

– “There is no excuse. The level of violence cannot be excused … we condemn it and this is exactly the message I conveyed this morning to the Israeli ambassador.

–”Israel must provide us with all the information demanded and (guarantee) the safety of the Greek citizens.

THE VATICAN:

– “This is a very painful fact, in particularly because of the loss of human lives,” said chief Vatican spokesman Father Federico Lombardi. He said the Vatican was against violence “from whatever side it comes.”

Iran tests speed boats in “major” Gulf war games

Iran’s Revolutionary Guards successfully deployed a new speed boat capable of destroying enemy ships as war games began on Thursday in a waterway crucial for global oil supplies, Iranian media reported.

The Islamic Republic, which is locked in a dispute with the West over its nuclear activities, often announces advances in its military capabilities in an apparent bid to show its readiness for any attack by Israel or the United States.

On Wednesday, the Pentagon said U.S. military action against Iran remained an option even as Washington pursues diplomacy and sanctions to halt the country’s atomic activities.

Iranian media said naval, air and ground units of the elite Guards force would take part in the three-day exercise in the Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz. About 40 percent of the world’s traded oil leaves the Gulf region through the strategic narrows.

Western military analysts say Iran may resort to “asymmetric warfare” if it comes under attack, for example by deploying swarms of speed boats to disrupt enemy operations in the Gulf.

State broadcaster IRIB said the Guard put into operation for the first time its “smart and unique” Ya Mahdi vessel.

“The radar-evading, high-speed Ya Mahdi vessel is able to track and target the enemy’s surface vessels in a smart way and destroy them,” it said, adding it was now being mass produced.

A spokesman for the manoeuvres, Ali-Reza Tangsiri, said Ya Mahdi was a remote-controlled vessel whose missiles could blow 7-metre holes in any enemy ship.

US SANCTIONS PUSH

State Press TV said the Guards’ exercise in the Gulf would show off Iran’s defensive capabilities and its determination to maintain security in the region.

The ILNA news agency said more than 300 various high-speed vessels took part in the drill, equipped with missiles and rockets and carrying Guards commandos.

“These vessels are regarded as the enemy’s nightmare,” ILNA said.

A hypothetical enemy war ship which had entered Iran’s territorial waters was targeted, seized and destroyed, it said.

Theodore Karasik, research director at the Institute for Near East and Gulf Military Analysis, said the use of swarms of speedboats can be an “effective tool” against the enemy.

“It plays to their strengths. What they are trying to do (in case of conflict) is deny and deter access to the strait and surrounding areas,” Karasik told Reuters in Dubai.

“However, the U.S. and other navies know how to counter this,” he said.

The drills coincided with rising tension between Iran and the West, which fears Tehran’s nuclear programme is aimed at developing bombs. Iran denies the charge.

The United States is pushing for a fourth round of U.N. sanctions on Tehran over its refusal to halt sensitive nuclear activities as demanded by the U.N. Security Council, including proposed moves against members of the Guards.

Israel, widely believed to have the Middle East’s only atomic arsenal, has described Iran’s nuclear programme as a threat to its existence.

Iran, a predominantly Shi’ite Muslim state, has said it would respond to any attack by targeting U.S. interests in the region and Israel, as well as closing the Strait of Hormuz.

(Additional reporting and writing by Fredrik Dahl in Dubai; Editing by Angus MacSwan)

American series Lost to release in Iran soon

Tehran, Sep. 14 (ANI): Taking a cue from the soaring sale of its pirated DVDs in Iran, the American television series Lost, which is about plane crash survivors stranded on a remote island, is set to be released in the Islamic country.

After buying the broadcast rights and commissioning Iranian actors to dub it into Farsi, Iran’s leading home video distributor Silver Screen is planning to market the award-winning show’s first three seasons, The Guardian reports.

With a plan to air Lost on nationwide television, the distribution company is also engaged in talks with the state broadcaster, IRIB.

To suit Iranian sensibilities, programmes will be carefully censored to exclude “un-Islamic” scenes such as those featuring scantily clad women or male-female physical contact.

Iran’s culture and Islamic guidance ministry is expected to approve the idea.

Earlier, Iran’s former culture and Islamic guidance minister Mohammad Hossein Saffar-Harand had slammed the “Lost-mania” for trying to popularise “Zionist concepts”.

However, others insisted the programme was suitable for an Iranian audience because it has eastern themes.

“The atmosphere of this story, due to our classic literature, is familiar to Iranian and eastern viewers. Eastern viewers can understand it better and would naturally like it.

“Because it has a religious theme, it is possible to broadcast 90 percent of it without censorship,” The Guardian quoted TV critic Saeed Ghotbizadeh, as saying.

“But its brilliant and special characterisation might be sacrificed in Persian dubbing – a lot will depend on how well it is dubbed.” (ANI)

Italy TV refuses to air “offensive” film featuring Berlusconi

London, Aug 29 (ANI): Italy’s state TV has stopped a trailer of a film featuring Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi from being aired, claiming that it is “offensive” to his reputation.

The scandalous leader is present in an ad for Videocracy, which has scantily-clad women and statistics claiming the nation has a low press freedom rating.

But Italy TV has refused to telecast the clips on concerns that it could have a political backlash on the leader.

And the country’s state broadcaster RAI has stated in its rejection letter that the images in the trailer alluded to recent stories about the Italian premier’s private life.

However, filmmaker Erik Gandini insists that his work, which will premiere at the Venice Film Festival, is about Italian culture even though it has the top man in it.

“It is a film about the present time. It is a film that talks about how Italy has become after all these years. Of course, Berlusconi is in the story,” the BBC News quoted him as saying.

He added: “In a videocracy, the key to power is the image. In Italy, one man only has kept the domination of the image over three entire decades,”

Also, producers Fandango said that RAI told them that the movie promo showing a smiling Berlusconi came across as a political message aimed against the government.

Berlusconi’s company Mediaset, which runs Italy’s private TV stations, has declined to screen the trailer too.

Mediaset and RAI’s three state television channels make up 90 percent of the available free-to-air broadcasters in Italy. (ANI)

Iran hosts summit on fighting Taliban and drugs

Iran hosts summit on fighting Taliban and drugsThe presidents of Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan began talks in Tehran on Sunday on ways to combat terrorism, drug trafficking and other regional security problems.

The one-day summit, part of efforts to boost cooperation between the three neighbours, coincides with an offensive launched by Pakistani security forces this month to stop the spread of a Taliban insurgency in the country’s northwest.

Afghanistan, where violence has grown dramatically in the past two years despite the deployment of more U.S. and other foreign troops, is also battling Taliban militants.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad hosted his Pakistani and Afghan counterparts, Asif Ali Zardari and Hamid Karzai, at the meeting in northern Tehran.

“The presidents of the three countries will discuss security issues and the reconstruction of Afghanistan,” Iranian state broadcaster IRIB said. Iran’s Press TV said they would also talk about the opium trade, which helps fund the Taliban.

In Kabul last month, their foreign ministers agreed to meet once a month as part of efforts to fight terrorism and stabilise Afghanistan.

The United States has said it wants to increase its engagement with both Iran and Pakistan as part of a more regional approach to tackling the growing strength of Taliban militants across the south and east of Afghanistan.

MISTRUST

Despite three decades of mutual mistrust, analysts say Iran and the United States share an interest in securing regional stability. Iran says Washington is failing in Afghanistan, but that Tehran is ready to help its eastern neighbour.

At a U.N. meeting in The Hague in March, Iran offered to help Afghanistan combat the drugs trade, in a gesture that U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called promising.

The United States is pouring thousands of troops into Afghanistan this year to try to reverse gains by a resurgent Taliban, particularly in its southern heartland.

In Pakistan on Saturday, the military said street fighting erupted in the main town of the Swat valley as security forces mounted a new phase of their offensive against the militants.

The United States, which sees Pakistan as vital to its plan to defeat al Qaeda and bring stability in Afghanistan, has applauded Pakistani resolve to fight what some U.S. leaders have called an “existential threat” to the country.

The United Nations launched an appeal on Friday for $543 million for more than 2 million people displaced by fighting in northwest Pakistan, where officials said villagers were turning against the Taliban.

LTTE chief Prabhakaran killed: Lanka govt

COLOMBO: Sri Lanka’s state television station announced on Monday that Tamil Tiger rebel chief Velupillai Prabhakaran has been killed, and the army commander said the last pockets of rebel resistance have been cleared from the north.

Prabhakaran’s death would spell the end of a more than three-decade quest by the rebel leader for a separate state for minority Tamils across northern and eastern Sri Lanka.

Rupavahini television, the state broadcaster, broke into its regular programming Monday afternoon to announce Prabakharan’s death. They gave no details of how he was killed.

The government information department also sent a text message to cell phones across the country announcing Prabhakaran was killed along with his top deputies, who were known as Soosai and Pottu Amman.

Sri Lanka’s army chief, Lt. Gen. Sareth Fonseka, told television his troops routed the last rebels from the northern war zone Monday morning and were working to identify Prabhakaran’s body from among the dead.

“We can announce very responsibly that we have liberated the whole country from terrorism,” he told state television.

Prabhakaran was in a small convoy of a van and ambulance along with several close aides which tried to drive out of the battle zone, but was attacked and killed, the senior defence ministry official said.

“He was killed with two others inside the vehicle. There will be a formal announcement later,” the official said on condition he not be named.

“When the troops opened fire, the van tried to get away, but it was also hit,” said another high-level source from the military. “The vehicle caught fire.”

The defence ministry said the rebels’ leadership was decimated, heralding an end to their decades-old battle to carve out an independent ethnic homeland in the north of the island.

Troops also found the bodies of Prabhakaran’s 24-year-old son Charles Anthony, the group’s political wing leader B. Nadesan, and the head of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) Peace Secretariat, S Pulideevan.

Also reportedly found dead were the LTTE’s police chief Ilango, its eastern leader, S Ramesh, and deputy intelligence chief Kapil Amman.

In a dramatic announcement, the guerrillas acknowledged Sunday that their decades-old battle for an independent ethnic homeland had reached its “bitter end” — signalling Asia’s longest running civil war was all but over.

The separatist rebels were once one of the world’s most feared guerrilla armies, and ran a de facto mini-state spanning a third of the island before the government began a major offensive two years ago.

“We have decided to silence our guns. Our only regrets are for the lives lost and that we could not hold out for longer,” Selvarasa Pathmanathan, the Tigers’ chief of international relations, said in a statement.

But his appeals for peace talks — rather than a surrender — were flatly rejected by the government, and the defence ministry said soldiers were being sent in to crush the diehard remnants and recapture “every inch of land.”

Sri Lanka’s hawkish president, Mahinda Rajapaksa, will open a new session of parliament on Tuesday with an address that will officially mark the ending of the war.

The conflict has left more than 70,000 dead from pitched battles, suicide attacks, bomb strikes and assassinations. The LTTE emerged in the 1970s, with all-out war breaking out in the early 1980s.

The capital Colombo, which has been frequently hit by Tiger suicide attacks over the past quarter century, saw street celebrations which lasted well into Sunday night.

Authorities have been determined to capture, kill or recover Prabhakaran’s body amid fears his escape may lead to an attempt to rebuild the LTTE and usher in a new cycle of violence.

The Sri Lankan government’s moment of triumph has also come at the cost of thousands of innocent lives lost in indiscriminate shelling, according to the United Nations. The UN’s rights body now wants a war crimes probe.

The International Committee of the Red Cross, the only neutral organisation that has been allowed to work in the war zone, has for its part described “an unimaginable humanitarian catastrophe.”

But Sri Lanka has shrugged off the international pressure.

“There was no bloodbath as some people feared,” human rights minister Mahinda Samarasinghe told reporters. “Everybody has come out safely and they are being looked after by the government.”

DBS gains 3.5 pct; investors focus on bank rally

* Investors focus on bank rally, put faith in chairman

* Analysts call for CEO who could ride out turmoil

* Finmin says DBS should not rush on new CEO (Adds analysts comments)

By Saeed Azhar

SINGAPORE, April 13 (Reuters) – Shares of DBS, Southeast Asia’s biggest bank, rose 3.5 percent on Monday, as a broad rally in banks offset news of the death of CEO Richard Stanley, and investors showed faith in the bank’s experienced chairman.

Analysts said DBS (DBSM.SI), may take time to select a new CEO who could steer the bank through a global economic downturn that has badly affected its two key markets in Singapore and Hong Kong.

“The key element would be to find someone who could drive DBS through the current turmoil and position the bank to take advantage of the opportunities that the turmoil is throwing up,” said an analyst at a foreign bank, who declined to be identified because of the sensitive nature of the news.

Stanley, the former chief of Citigroup’s (C.N) China operations, was widely expected to boost DBS’s China business and pursue acquisitions beyond its key markets, which eluded his predecessor. But instead of buying banks, he opted to build DBS’s existing businesses in China, Indonesia, Taiwan and India.

“We never got a sense he wanted to aggressively go into China,” said David Lum, an analyst at Daiwa Institute of Research. “His focus was on organic growth and he wanted to boost market share in Hong Kong and Singapore.”

Most analysts said investors trust the bank’s current chairman Koh Boon Hwee to lead DBS while the board searches for a successor. Koh has taken on a more active management role since DBS announced in January that Stanley had leukemia.

For a NEWSMAKER on chairman, click [ID:nSP178711]

Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratham told the state broadcaster that DBS, which is 28 percent-owned by state investor Temasek [TEM.UL], should not rush its search for a new chief.

“The senior management had been running the bank, putting all their time into it. That is the way it will continue for a while, while they embark on a search,” he said. “This is something the board has to decide on, but I do not think there is a need for them to rush.”

Stanley, a 48-year-old American, joined DBS last May. He had been suffering from leukemia and died on Saturday from an infection.

Singapore’s benchmark share index .FTSTI was up 2.3 percent at its highest since Jan. 7. (Editing by Ian Geoghegan)

Georgian opposition steps up street campaign

By Margarita Antidze and Niko Mchedlishvili

TBILISI (Reuters) – Thousands of demonstrators in Georgia marched on the office of President Mikheil Saakashvili and blocked main roads in the capital on Friday, vowing to force his resignation through a campaign of civil disobedience.

Opposition leaders, who gathered some 60,000 protesters on Thursday and 20,000 on Friday, said they would pursue their campaign nationwide until Saakashvili quits over his record on democracy and last year’s disastrous war with Russia.

Saakashvili refused to resign, saying he had heard such “ultimatums” every other month since taking power in the former Soviet republic on the back of the 2003 “Rose Revolution.”

But the campaign marks potentially the biggest challenge to his continued rule. He called for dialogue, and opposition leaders said they had agreed to sit down with him, but the details of a possible meeting were not set.

Protesters blocked Tbilisi’s central avenue in front of parliament through the night and into Friday, before halting traffic on the main roads leading past the office of the president and the state broadcaster. Some climbed on the fence surrounding the presidential compound.

“We are not going to enter these buildings,” Levan Gachechiladze, an opposition leader and former presidential challenger, told the crowd outside parliament. “We just want to take our country back.”

TENSIONS

He said protesters would repeat the roadblocks daily from 3 p.m. to 9 p.m. (1100-1700 GMT). The campaign threatens to test the patience of authorities who in November 2007 sent in police firing teargas and rubber bullets to disperse the last peaceful mass demonstrations against Saakashvili.

Diplomats question whether the opposition can maintain unity and muster enough people to join daily protests to force him out. They warn tensions risk boiling over into unrest.

Analysts say Saakashvili’s ruling United National Movement retains wide support and his position appears strong, despite the defection of some top allies and several cabinet reshuffles.

“It’s obvious the answer to this question is ‘No’,” 41-year-old Saakashvili told a news conference when asked if he would give in to the opposition call. “It has always been ‘No’, because that’s how it is under the constitution,” he said.

“I’ve been facing these ultimatums every other month during the last five years,” Saakashvili said, speaking in English. “Every independent poll clearly proves that people are longing for dialogue, for long-term stability.”

Pro-Western but seen by some Georgians as brash and impulsive, Saakashvili has polarized opinion in the Caucasus country of 4.5 million people, a transit route for oil from the Caspian Sea to Europe. Critics accuse him of betraying the promises of 2003 by monopolizing power and exerting pressure on the judiciary and media.

Defeat in last year’s five-day war with Russia, when Moscow crushed a Georgian assault on breakaway South Ossetia, has emboldened critics who argue the president has made too many mistakes to remain in power until 2013.

But many Georgians appear frustrated with political bickering and sympathetic to government calls for stability.

(Additional reporting by Niko Mchedlishvili, editing by Mark Trevelyan)