ENI in $17bn Venezuela oil deal

ENI chief executive Paolo Scaroni (left) and Venezuelan energy minister Rafael Ramirez at the signing ceremonyMr Scaroni (left) and Mr Ramirez agreed the deal was a major venture between their two countries
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Italian energy company ENI has signed a $17bn (£11bn) deal with Venezuela to develop crude oil fields and build a refinery.

Working with the state-owned oil company Petroleos de Venezuela (PDVSA), ENI will develop a major oil field in the eastern Orinoco river basin.

The two companies have committed to spend $8bn developing the oil field, with ENI taking a 40% minority stake.

They will spend a further $9bn on the refinery, which is to be ready by 2016.

“Within four, five years, Venezuela is going to be the second most important country for our company,” said ENI chief executive Paolo Scaroni.

“It is without doubt the biggest joint investment between Venezuela and Italy,” said Venezuelan energy minister Rafael Ramirez.

The Junin 5 oil field is expected to produce 70,000 barrels of oil per day by 2012, rising to a peak of 240,000 barrels during the life of the 25-year deal.

The refinery will process 350,000 barrels per day into diesel for the European market.

ENI has also committed to finance a new electrical plant in the country, and is involved in developing an enormous new offshore gas fields along with Repsol of Spain.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

£1m boost to cancer services

Ciaran Devane and Michael McGimpseyMacmillian’s Ciaran Devane and Health Minister Michael McGimpsey sign the £1m agreement

A leading charity is to invest £1m on projects that will improve long-term services for cancer patients in Northern Ireland.

Macmillian Cancer Support will provide the funding as part of a two year initiative with the Department of Health.

Health Minister Michael McGimpsey will sign an agreement alongside Macmillan’s chief executive Ciaran Devane at Stormont on Tuesday. Mr McGimpsey said he “welcomed” the £1m pledge.

He added: “Many people who have treatment for cancer can now expect many years of life ahead.

“I’m confident that this initiative and the pilot projects that will flow from it will bring new and innovative ways of supporting patients and their carers and ensuring they benefit from an increased quality of life.”

More than 55,000 people in Northern Ireland are living with the after effects of cancer, according to Macmillan.

The charity is now looking for bids for pilot projects from health care providers, with the intention of improving long-term services for cancer patients.

Mr Devane said: “We know that patients often feel abandoned after their treatment has ended. They feel unprepared and need more information about what to expect.

“We also need to move away from the current model of follow-up which focuses solely on physical symptoms and illness to one that focuses on health and well-being.”

Cancer patients also welcomed the funding announcement.

Belfast woman Teresa Majury, 46, was diagnosed with kidney cancer two years ago.

She said: “I feel like there needs to be more effort to treat people as individuals and to help us access information and support that is right for us as individuals.

“I also think I would feel like less of a burden if I had a single point of contact, like a nurse, who could address any queries I had about my condition.”

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Newspaper review

Papers

The Daily Telegraph reports that uncertainty over the Irish financial bail-out has led to a sharp fall in the price of shares in British banks.

The banks have large outstanding loans in the Irish Republic, it says.

The paper explains that calls for a general election in the Irish Republic led the markets to fear that the government there might collapse.

The Guardian says the mood was “reminiscent of the days after the collapse of Lehman Brothers”.

The Times argues that refusing to participate in the Irish bail-out would damage the UK’s banks and trade, as well as its public finances.

“Schadenfreude without action would be risky”, says the paper’s leader, which concludes that now is not the time for “economic isolation”.

There is concern in the Financial Times that the emergency loans will not solve the Republic’s problems.

That is unless its banking system undergoes fundamental reform, it says.

There is an image of suspected Nazi war criminal Samuel Kunz, who died in Germany last week aged 89, on the front page of the Independent.

The paper believes that, in the interests of justice, the process of bringing suspected former Nazis to trial must be speeded up.

Meanwhile, the headline in the Daily Mirror is “drinking up time”.

It reveals that a 50 pence per unit minimum charge on alcoholic drinks may be on the way in Manchester.

As the government unveils its migration cap, the Sun urges ministers to target bogus colleges.

The paper says many non-EU migrants claim to be in the UK to study, “yet some can’t even speak English”.

The Daily Mail reports that a robot used to persuade people such machines would be the domestic servants of the future has been unmasked as a fraud.

“George” was shown vacuum cleaning, baking a cake and doing the shopping in newspaper photographs in the 1950s.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Cambodia mourns stampede tragedy

Police officer looking at bridge

Daylight revealed the aftermath of the Cambodia stampede

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Cambodia has declared Thursday a national day of mourning after at least 345 people were killed in a stampede in the capital Phnom Penh.

Hundreds more were injured when people were crushed on a small island on the final day of the Water Festival.

The stampede took place on a bridge, which eyewitnesses said had become overcrowded.

Prime Minister Hun Sen ordered an investigation into the cause of the disaster.

Hun Sen described the stampede as the “biggest tragedy” to hit Cambodia since the mass killings carried out by the Khmer Rouge regime in the 1970s.

He ordered all government ministries to fly the national flag at half-mast.

map

Government spokesman Khieu Kanharith told AFP news agency that more than 400 people had been injured.

“Most of the deaths were as a result of suffocation and internal injuries,” he said.

Authorities had estimated that more than two million people would attend the three-day festival, one of the main events of the year in Cambodia.

Panic broke out after a concert on Diamond Island, which followed a boat race on the Tonle Sap river regarded as a highlight of the festivities.

Sean Ngu, an Australian who was visiting family and friends in Cambodia, told the BBC too many people had been on the bridge.

He said some of the victims were electrocuted.

“There were too many people on the bridge and then both ends were pushing,” he said.

“This caused a sudden panic. The pushing caused those in the middle to fall to the ground, then [get] crushed.

Cambodian relatives of a stampede victim cry in a hospital in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, 23 November 2010Many of the dead appeared to be teenagers

“Panic started and at least 50 people jumped in the river. People tried to climb on to the bridge, grabbing and pulling [electric] cables which came loose and electrical shock caused more deaths.”

“It was packed. People were pushing each other and I fell,” Khon Sros told the Reuters news agency from her hospital bed. “People were shouting ‘go, go’,” the 19-year-old added.

She said she had been pinned in the crowd from her waist down until police pulled her out.

“One man died near me. He was weak and didn’t have enough air.”

As day broke Tuesday on Diamond Island, sunglasses, flip-flops and brightly coloured clothes lay scattered on the bridge.

Revellers lingered in tears as the bruised bodies of youths in party clothes were carried away from the bridge, which was still decked with bright lights from the festival.

Many of the dead appeared to be teenagers.

Calmette Hospital, Phnom Penh’s main medical facility, was filled with dead bodies as well as the injured, some of whom had to be treated in hallways.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Praying for vengeance

Grace Morales holding pictures of her husband and sister who were killed in the Maguindanao massacre, picture taken November 2010Grace Morales lost her husband and sister in the Maguindanao massacre. “When my kids ask what happened to their father, I can’t answer,” she says.
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A year ago in the southern Philippines 57 people were brutally murdered and their bodies dumped in a mass grave. While some key suspects are now on trial, more than 100 remain on the run.

Grace Morales goes to the cemetery near her home at least once a week. The graves she is looking for are right at the back, in a separate section roped off from the rest.

Her husband and sister were among 57 people killed a year ago, in the largest massacre in recent Philippine history.

“At first I didn’t believe it – I just didn’t,” she says, welling up with emotion.

Rossel Morales and Marites Cablita are buried next to each other, along with 10 others – all of them friends, all journalists who found themselves in the wrong place at the wrong time, caught up in a row between two powerful clans.

The Ampatuan family had been running the province of Maguindanao as a virtual fiefdom for about 20 years – occupying almost all the political posts in the area.

But in the elections for provincial governor, a rival emerged from another influential clan, the Mangudadatus.

Esmael Mangudadatu, Governor of Maguindanao province, Philippines, pictured in November 2010

“I can’t forgive them, I keep praying that God will curse them”

Esmael Mangudadatu Governor of Maguindanao

To stamp out this threat, the Ampatuans allegedly decided to kill their opponents.

It is a charge the family vehemently denies, but what is certain is that when the Mangudadatus set out to register their candidate for the poll – taking more than 30 reporters with them – they were stopped by a group of gunmen.

The bodies of the entire convoy were found later that day on a nearby hill.

A year on, there is little physical evidence that such brutal murders ever happened. The mass grave where the killers buried their victims is overgrown with grass, and the only reminder is a small piece of police tape tied to one of the trees.

The emotional scars, though, will take a lot longer to heal.

“When my kids ask what happened to their father, I can’t answer. I just let my tears flow and keep silent,” says Grace Morales.

A journalist visits the site of the Maguindanao massacre, November 2009 A journalist visits the massacre site – 32 of those killed were journalists

Esmael Mangudadatu, the man whom the Ampatuans were allegedly trying to target, was not in the convoy on that fateful day.

In the months that followed, he campaigned for and won the election.

But victory came at a heavy price; his wife and two sisters were among those killed. He had sent them and other female relatives to file his papers in the belief that their lives would be spared.

The Ampatuans are “like monsters. I can’t forgive them, I keep praying that God will curse them”, he says.

A year on, Governor Mangudadatu still has concerns about his security – only about a third of the 197 people charged over the massacre have been arrested.

The rest, many of them members of the Ampatuan family or their 2,000-strong private army, are still on the run.

“Locating them is very hard,” says the military commander for the area, Colonel Mario Mendoza.

“We’re a new unit, we need to pay informants to identify them for us – we don’t know them personally.”

“I’m begging the president, begging officials in government to help us get these people,” says Governor Mangudadatu.

He is not entirely confident of the abilities of the police and army to round up the suspects.

Many of those on the wanted list were members of the police. Can current police officers really be relied upon to arrest them?

One suspect, Jimmy Ampatuan, even managed to win a local election last month, while technically on the run. He was finally arrested after the poll.

Another problem for Governor Mangudadatu is that more than 20 Ampatuans are still in positions of power – some of them replacing other family members now in jail – and he has to work with them on a regular basis.

“Not all of them are bad. Some are co-operating with me,” he says, “but some are not.”

While the hunt continues for many of the accused, the key suspects, at least, are behind bars. They are on, or awaiting, trial in Manila – hundreds of miles away from Maguindanao.

Attention is currently focused on the trial of Andal Ampatuan Jr, who is accused of personally killing many of the victims, as well as ordering his henchmen to kill others.

He has yet to take the stand, but his lawyer Sigfried Fortun says he is planning to put up a strong defence.

Candle on grave of a victim of the Maguindanao massacre, picture taken November 2010Key suspects in the massacre are awaiting trial but the legal process is expected to take years

“The Ampatuan family controls 33 out of 36 municipalities, or thereabouts,” says Mr Fortun.

“Why would anybody who controls 85% of the votes of the province have anything to do with the killing of a political opponent, from which any blame would definitely rebound on to him?”

Andal Jr’s father and brother will be tried separately, as will other family members, and some 700 people are due to give evidence. With the court sitting just once a week, it is likely to be a painfully slow process.

A senior congressman, Senator Joker Arroyo, told the media that, at this rate, the process would take an estimated 200 years.

Meanwhile there are allegations that some of the witnesses and relatives of the victims have been offered bribes, and several would-be witnesses have been killed in as yet unexplained circumstances.

The Philippine judicial system is under scrutiny as never before, and President Aquino has personally pledged to make sure justice is done.

For Grace Morales, left to bring up her children and those of her sister alone – and using any spare money to fly to Manila to attend the trial – justice cannot come soon enough.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Church ‘feminisation’

General synod in sessionThe introduction of women bishops is a key issue for the Church’s General Synod to consider

After a special service at Westminster Abbey later, the Queen is to open the Church of England’s General Synod.

The synod gets the honour of a royal inauguration because this is the established, state church and the Queen is its supreme governor.

The synod – the Church’s legislative body – is the only institution outside parliament that can make laws, even if it does have to get its decisions approved by a special parliamentary committee.

One of the most important laws likely to emerge in the synod’s five-year term starting on Tuesday is the introduction of women bishops.

It has already been a debate that has deeply divided traditionalists from progressives, and led some on the Catholic wing of the Church to say they will take up the Pope’s offer of a place in the Roman Catholic Church.

To many outside the Church – and to some Anglicans as well – so much anguish and dispute over what they regard as a logical progression from the ordination of women priests 16 years ago is unaccountable.

But for traditionalists – from both Anglo-Catholic and Protestant backgrounds – there is something fundamental at stake.

Some see it as part of a struggle for the soul of the Church, suggesting that the future starting with this new synod will bring in a more liberal Anglicanism which has less time for traditionalist values.

They point to the growing “feminisation” of the Church as a cause for concern.

Since women were first ordained as Anglican priests, they have come to make up almost a third of the Church’s clergy.

Church statistics show that in the next two decades, no fewer than a quarter of its full-time paid clergy will retire, the great majority of them men.

The Reverend Peter Sanlon is the curate of St Ann’s in Tottenham, an evangelical church in north London.

Last Sunday morning he presided over a family service of lusty singing, accompanied by an electric organ and the vicar on guitar.

“I have known many gay clergy. They’ve helped me and I’m very delighted to serve in a church where they feel included.”

The Reverend Marjorie Brown

The worship was informal but the church is socially conservative and Dr Sanlon watches the influx of women clergy with concern.

Dr Sanlon understands the Bible as supporting “male headship”, a natural role for men as leaders of their own households and the Church alike.

He says he would be reluctant to serve under a woman bishop, but his real concern is that the growing influence of women clergy will result in the ordination of openly gay bishops.

“While it’s not true of every woman, in general more women are supportive of permitting homosexuality”, he says.

“So in general statistical terms, the more women who are promoted to positions of leadership like that, the greater problem there will be in holding the line and defending the traditional views of morality in that area as well.”

A few miles away in Primrose Hill, the Reverend Marjorie Brown is one of two women leading the service of Sung Eucharist.

Incense billows from a swinging thurible and the clergy wear heavy ornate robes.

The vicar insists that women clergy are not automatically liberal, and differ widely in their approach to homosexuality.

She does accept that many of them have a natural sympathy for gay clergy, having felt the force of discrimination in the Church for themselves.

“I have known many gay clergy”, she says. “They’ve helped me and I’m very delighted to serve in a church where they feel included. I would like to see the whole Church reflect that Christ-like welcome to all.”

But some traditionalists insist that the Church’s more feminine face is not universally welcoming.

Dr Sanlon says he has seen at first hand that some men are discouraged from going to church when women priests are in charge.

“The average working class man doesn’t respond as well to a female clergy person as he does to a man”, he says.

“That may not be politically correct but it is a fact of life, but the Church is here to serve people as they are, and not to turn them into some sort of politically correct being.”

The Bishop of Richborough, Keith Newton, a traditionalist on the Church’s Catholic wing, supports that view.

Bishop Newton, who recently decided to convert to Catholicism because of the way women bishops were being introduced, worries that the absence of parental fathers could be especially damaging.

“I have seen research that says if you want children to go to church, dad needs to go with mum. And we’ve got a real problem with dad going. So church becoming more feminine could be a problem.”

Marjorie Brown – the first female vicar of St Mary’s in Primrose Hill in its 120-year history – has had virtually the opposite experience.

She says women have helped make the Church less starchy and remote for both men and women, and brought it closer to the society it serves.

If anything, she says, the Church has further to go in creating true equality.

“When we’re externally paternalistic in our ways about God, we alienate women. Therefore female clergy are trying to find more inclusive language and imagery. We’re not trying to change the Church, just to be more inclusive.”

Although one in every two new Anglican priests ordained each year is a woman – only a minority take jobs like Marjorie Brown’s as a vicar of a parish church.

Instead many work as chaplains, or unpaid as “self-supporting ministers”.

But as ageing male priests retire, the influence of women clergy will grow along with their numbers.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Haiti set for poll amid cholera

Haitians look at supporters of presidential candidate Jude Celestine march in a rally in Port-au-Prince on 21 November, 2010.Haitians have 19 presidential candidates to choose from in Sunday’s poll
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Aid agencies are trying to step up their work in Haiti, where a cholera outbreak is now known to have killed 1,250 people since last month.

Aid efforts, especially in the worst-hit areas in the north, were disrupted last week by protesters who blame UN peacekeepers for spreading the disease.

Officials said the security situation there had stabilised.

Campaigning is meanwhile in full swing for Sunday’s elections despite some calls for a postponement.

Voters are due to elect a new president and members of the legislature.

Late on Friday, four candidates appealed for the election to be delayed so authorities could focus on tackling the cholera outbreak.

The four, none of whom is a front-runner in the 28 November poll, also called for an independent inquiry to establish the origin of the cholera.

Some Haitians have blamed UN peacekeepers from Nepal, where cholera is endemic, for bringing the disease to their country.

Violence erupted last week, with people setting up barricades and throwing rocks at UN vehicles.

UN agencies and other aid groups said the protests were preventing them from carrying out relief work in the Cap-Haitien area, which has the highest fatality rate in the country.

A girl carries a bucket of water in Port-au-Prince on 21 NovemberThe challenges of rebuilding Haiti are immense

However, at the weekend, supplies were once again being sent to the area, humanitarian groups said.

“The security situation there has now stabilised,” Imogen Wall of the UN humanitarian agency, Ocha, told Reuters.

“We’re going to have to scramble to get back to where we were.”

Oxfam said they planned to resume their work in the north on Monday.

In the capital, Port-au-Prince, one of the main challenges is to prevent cholera from spreading in the slums and tent camps housing more than one million people left homeless by January’s devastating earthquake.

So far the squalid encampments appear to have been spared.

“In all the camps where we have been working since the earthquake, we have not had one single confirmed case of cholera,” Raphael Mutiku from Oxfam told the French news agency AFP on Sunday.

CholeraIntestinal infection caused by bacteria transmitted through contaminated water or foodSource of contamination usually faeces of infected peopleCauses diarrhoea, vomiting, severe dehydration; can kill quicklyIn pictures: Haiti clashes BBC Health: Cholera Cholera ‘difficult to predict’

“Most of the cases of cholera in Port-au-Prince are in slums that did not receive post-earthquake relief.”

However, there are concerns that the peak of the disease has not yet been reached and that people’s urgent needs are not being met.

Over the weekend, international medical charity MSF said the response so far had been “inadequate”.

It said swift action was needed to build latrines, provide safe water supplies, remove bodies and reassure frightened people that the disease is treatable.

But the UN agencies have said that their work has been hindered by the recent riots.

UN officials have also said that the violence is being encouraged by forces that want to disrupt the presidential election.

Some 19 candidates are vying to succeed current president, Rene Preval and it is likely that the election will go to a second round run-off on 16 January.

Most candidates have insisted that the elections, which will also choose 99 deputies and 10 senators, should go ahead as planned.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.