Thứ Tư, 15 tháng 5, 2013

Oil falls below $93 on Europe, US economic news

NEW YORK (AP) — The price of oil fell below $93 on Wednesday after disappointing economic reports from Europe and the U.S.

By late morning in New York, benchmark oil for June delivery was down $1.78 to $92.41 a barrel. That marks five straight days of declines after oil rose above $96 last week.

New figures released Wednesday showed the eurozone's economy continued to contract in the first quarter, keeping it in recession for a sixth consecutive quarter. And a report in the U.S. showed factories cut back sharply on production in April, suggesting economic growth may be slowing this spring.

That added to the pressure on oil prices seen Tuesday after the International Energy Agency raised its forecast for U.S. oil production while cutting its prediction for global crude demand.

The dreary economic news is overshadowing the latest data from the Energy Department showing that oil supplies declined unexpectedly last week.

Crude supplies declined by 600,000 barrels, or 0.2 percent, to 394.9 million barrels, in the week ended May 10. Analysts expected an increase of 300,000 barrels. Still, demand for gasoline and distillates such as diesel remain below year-ago levels.

Meanwhile, traders were monitoring news that the EU has launched an investigation into possible price-fixing on the oil markets. Three oil companies, Britain's BP, Royal Dutch Shell and Norway's Statoil, as well as Platts, a division of McGraw Hill Financial which compiles prices for energy markets, confirmed they were being investigated.

The EU, which did not name the targets of its investigation, said oil companies "may have colluded in reporting distorted prices."

"Even small distortions of assessed prices may have a huge impact on the prices of crude oil, refined oil products and biofuels purchases and sales, potentially harming final consumers," the EU said.

Brent crude, a benchmark for many international oil varieties, was down $1.32 to $101.17 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange in London.

In other energy futures trading on Nymex:

— Wholesale gasoline fell 5 centx to $2.79 a gallon.

— Heating oil lost 4 cents to $2.83 a gallon.

— Natural gas added 2 cents to $4.05 per 1,000 cubic feet.

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Pablo Gorondi in Budapest and Pamela Sampson in Bangkok contributed to this report.


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Rugby-Winning All Blacks sevens team home, focus on World Cup

By Greg Stutchbury

WELLINGTON, May 15 (Reuters) - New Zealand's All Blacks Sevens rugby team returned home on Wednesday having clinched their 11th World Series title in an increasingly competitive season that sets up the prospect of a tantalising World Cup next month.

Gordon Tietjens' team clinched the final tour stop in London on Sunday with a crushing 47-12 victory over Australia to finish on 172 points, 41 ahead of second-placed South Africa.

The victory was made all the more sweeter for Tietjens, whose normally stable selections were rocked through injuries to experienced players like captain DJ Forbes and playmaker Tomasi Cama, forcing him to introduce several new players.

As a result, the win at Twickenham was only their second on the tour and the key to their series victory was consistency across all nine tournaments.

The team made seven finals and finished third in the other two tournaments in Wellington and Hong Kong.

"We have done it with a lot of players out. A lot of new youngsters have come up and put their hand up," Tietjens told the International Rugby Board's (IRB) series website.

"It's a confidence booster moving into the World Cup," he added of the June 28-30 tournament in Moscow.

"We know how hard it is going to be, but we only take it one game, one tournament, at a time.

"That (the World Cup) is going to be totally different.

"It might be a totally different team but these guys have put their hands up and said they want to go to Moscow so I have a few problems ahead of me."

LEVEL FIELD

Injury and selection issues aside, Tietjens is also acutely aware that much the field has been levelled across the board during this season's circuit and how close the World Cup tournament could be.

Kenya, under former England coach Mike Friday, came within a whisker of winning their first title in Wellington despite having two players sin-binned in the final against England.

At the same tournament, sevens heavyweights Fiji failed to qualify for a world series Cup quarter-final for the first time and were then beaten by Canada in the final of the Bowl competition.

The Fijians rebounded during the series to win the showcase tournament in Hong Kong but were a distant third in the overall series after some poor performances since that victory in March.

While Fiji struggled, they did not suffer the same ignominy Scotland had to face last weekend in London.

Inventors of the shortened form of the game, the Scots were forced into an eight-team playoff against the likes of Zimbabwe, Georgia and Hong Kong to ensure their place on the circuit next year.

The promotion-relegation playoff was introduced by the IRB this year in an attempt to improve the standard of play and broaden its depth as the sport prepares for its debut at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro.

The bottom three sides after the penultimate Glasgow tournament - Scotland, Portugal and Spain - were forced into the playoff tournament with five qualifiers in London.

The regular play on the world circuit paid off in the end, with all three retaining their places next season, though Scotland were beaten 20-19 by Hong Kong in pool play before they overcame Tonga and then Russia to ensure their place.

"We rose to the occasion and we are back on the series," Scotland captain Colin Gregor told the IRB website.

"It is horrendous being down here so we need to make sure we start the season properly, so tough summer ahead of us with the World Cup and then September, October, we're flying." (Editing by John O'Brien)


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Education woes seen as Achilles' heel of Brazil

SEROPEDICA, Brazil (AP) — There's a storage room just off a university lab that gives students more experience than many can handle: Skinned pigs and cats, disembodied cow livers, intestines, brains and the other unidentifiable detritus of years' worth of dissections fill a dozen wading pool-sized vats to the brim.

With the veterinary department's incinerator long on the fritz, the stomach-turning, formaldehyde-drenched mass of animal carcasses and organs grows by the day.

Similar scenes of neglect and decay play out across the sprawling, once-stately campus. Laboratories routinely flood when it rains, lecture halls reach oven-like temperatures because the burned-out air conditioning units were never replaced, the Internet works only intermittently and students hardly dare venture out after dark for fear of being mugged.

The situation at the Rural Federal University in this distant suburb of Rio de Janeiro is not an anomaly. As a new middle class rises in Brazil with aspirations for better education, it is finding lamentable conditions and low standards of education at many colleges and universities across Brazil. That has experts warning that the country's strained education system could stymie development, even as Brazil emerges as an economic powerhouse.

Thanks largely to a decade-long boom in commodities, Brazil last year outstripped Britain to become world's sixth largest economy. To maintain its spot, the country needs well-trained professionals, especially engineers to help tap the vast deep-sea oil deposits off the coast of Rio de Janeiro state that officials here are counting on to fuel Brazil's development.

Experts are warning that colleges and universities are simply not up to the task.

"Without qualified professionals coming out of our universities in the numbers we need in the next 10 or so years, Brazil is running a great risk of losing its new position as the world's sixth economy and with it the pretensions of playing a bigger role on the world stage," said Antonio Frets, a veteran member of the Brazilian Academy of Education. "If there's not a real and meaningful education reform, Brazil could be left in the dust."

The statistics are alarming.

Just over 17 percent of Brazilians aged 18-24 were enrolled in a university or had already obtained a diploma in 2011, according to a study by the Education Ministry. While that number is way up from 7 percent in 1997, it still lags far behind the average in developed countries and even that in many of Brazil's Latin American neighbors A study by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said around 40 percent of U.S. citizens aged 25-34 had obtained a bachelor's degree; in Chile, that number stood at slightly under 40 percent.

The average Brazilian has completed an average of just 7.3 years of schooling, according to census data. Under half of the country's workforce has finished high school and just around 12 percent of workers have a college degree. Nearly 13 million people, or 8.6 percent of the population, are illiterate.

The OECD's 2009 PISA educational survey, which measures 15-year-olds' literacy and math skills, ranked Brazil 53rd out of 65 countries, behind nations such as Bulgaria, Mexico, Turkey, Trinidad and Tobago, and Romania. Only one Brazilian college, the University of Sao Paulo, made it into the 2012 Times Higher Education World University Rankings, at No. 178 out of 200 institutions.

All that could prove a major stumbling block to development for Brazil. The past decade of booming growth has seen the number of unskilled jobs shrink, replaced by semiskilled and high-skilled posts which observers say the country is already hard-pressed to fill. And as the economy continues to develop, so will the need for skilled labor.

The paucity of such jobs is already having repercussions on businesses here. Brazil ranked 48th out of 144 countries on the World Economic Forum's 2012-213 global competitiveness report due to infrastructure problems as well as a lack of skills.

Money isn't the problem. Brazil invests 5 percent of its gross domestic product on education, about the same level of expenditure as Spain, Germany or Japan, and just under the OECD average of 6.2 percent, according to the organization's 2012 "Education at a Glance" study. The federal government says it has poured $4.2 billion into its university expansion program over the past decade.

The issue, observers say, lies largely in the way money's managed — or, often, mismanaged.

Case in point is Rio's Rural Federal University, where the school's budget multiplied more than 20-fold in recent years, rising from $7.4 million in 2005 to $173.5 million in 2012. Yet earlier this year, students invaded administrative offices to protest what they contend are dangerous conditions on campus.

Protesting students and faculty say they are hard-pressed to see where the money's gone, and some have speculated about graft, embezzlement and other forms of corruption.

Rainwater pours through holes in the technology department's roof, filling the laboratory knee-deep when it rains. The university's Olympic-sized pools are so green with algae that physical education instructors are said to lie atop a desk and flail their arms and legs in the air to teach different swimming stokes. The construction company hired to build an archive for the geology department handed over an unusable shell of a building, with no flooring, windows or doors. The molding, puddle-filled structure is now occupied only by the homeless.

"Here we've got professors who aren't teaching classes because there aren't adequate facilities. Repairs are started but never finished and buildings are getting ruined," said Gustavo Perreira, 22, a fourth-year law student who's a coordinator of the student movement that led the occupation. "The university is falling apart but it's not a problem of a lack of resources. It's that those resources aren't being applied as they should."

The university has experienced a recent boom in enrollment, jumping from around 7,000 students to 11,000 in the past three years.

Long the domain of the country's tiny ruling elite, Brazil's universities have become more inclusive in recent years thanks in large part to affirmative action programs aimed at boosting enrollment of poor and nonwhite students.

Enrollment at the country's public and private colleges increased from just over 1 million students in 1980 to nearly 11 million in 2011, according to an Education Ministry study. From 2012-2011 alone, enrollment in Brazil's 59 federally funded universities increased by 10 percent, and observers say the sudden boom has strained resources across the board.

"The public university system had to be expanded, but the way it was gone about worries me," said Fabio Garcia dos Reis, director of a branch of the private, Sao Paulo-based UniSal college. "With the increased number of students, they don't have enough qualified professors, nor enough labs nor classrooms."

Still, Garcia acknowledged the situation at the private institutions is even worse.

Around three-fourths of college students here study at the country's private institutions, many of which sprang up during the 1990s or later and are widely regarded as little more than diploma mills. Generally small, with enrollments of around 1,500, these colleges have a hard time recruiting qualified faculty and holding on to students, Garcia said. They also tend to have short shelf lives, with many folding after just five or so years and others being snapped up by large conglomerates.

"We have to take a hard look at what we doing and make urgent reforms," Garcia said. "Otherwise I don't have a shadow of a doubt that there will be a crisis in a few years."


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Cricket-No lack of effort or application in NZ, says Cook

By Ed Osmond

LONDON, May 15 (Reuters) - England were not complacent or under-prepared during their disappointing tour of New Zealand this year, captain Alastair Cook said on Wednesday.

England, the world's second-ranked side, were outplayed by their eighth-ranked hosts and only a courageous century by Matt Prior and a rearguard batting effort on the final day secured the draw in the third test that left the series level at 0-0.

"It was not a lack of effort or application," Cook told a news conference before the first test against New Zealand at Lord's starting on Thursday.

"We had good preparation and it was not to do with a lack of attitude."

England went into the New Zealand tour on a high after winning a test series in India for the first time since 1985.

"We did not play as well in New Zealand as we did in India," said the 28-year-old left-hander. "But India was an outstanding achievement and it should not be brushed under the carpet.

"We are in a serious industry and every summer you have meetings outlining your plans. We are moving forward and trying to improve."

Cook, who took over the captaincy from Andrew Strauss last year, will lead his country in a test at the home of cricket for the first time.

"I am looking forward to tomorrow," Cook said. "It will be an incredible honour for me to walk out as captain at Lord's. You are always going to be under scrutiny and there is always pressure when you put on the England shirt."

CLOUDY CONDITIONS

New Zealand have only won four tests out of 50 in England but twice claimed series victories, in 1986 and 1999.

They outplayed Cook's side on their home soil under the innovative captaincy of Brendon McCullum and look likely to field a four-pronged pace attack in what are forecast to be cold and cloudy conditions.

Cook said there was no danger of England underestimating their opponents or allowing their minds to wander towards the Champions Trophy in June or the Ashes series against Australia.

"New Zealand are a tough side to beat," he said. "You just have to stay in the present and that is a skill a lot of sportsmen have.

"I just want us to play some good cricket. It is always important to start well, especially in a two-test series."

Cook gave few clues as to which player in England's 12-man squad will be left out of the team with fit-again Tim Bresnan and Steven Finn vying for the third pace-bowling spot.

"Finn has been coming out at good pace," Cook said. "I watched him in the nets and I was glad I didn't have to face him."

Off-spinner Graeme Swann is also back in the squad after missing the series in New Zealand due to an elbow injury but Cook said he was not certain to play.

"It is always an option to leave the spinner out," he said. "We have options. You always challenge yourself to improve and we have high standards." (Editing by Ken Ferris)


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El Salvador court hears arguments in abortion case

SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) — El Salvador's Supreme Court heard opening arguments Wednesday in a landmark abortion case in which a woman suffering from kidney failure and lupus has not been allowed to terminate a pregnancy in which the fetus is given no chance of surviving.

The Central American country's laws prohibit all abortions, even when a woman's health is at risk. At present, the woman and any doctor who terminated her 23-week pregnancy would face arrest and criminal charges.

Supporters gathered outside the court building where the case of the 22-year-old woman, who for privacy reasons has been identified only as "Beatriz," is being heard. Court spokesman Jaime Marinero said the five-justice panel had begun hearing arguments but it was not known when it would issue a ruling.

Beatriz is described as in fragile health. "She is pretty bad," said her mother, Delmy.

Her daughter suffers from lupus, a chronic immune disorder, and kidney failure, and medical experts say the pregnancy is a threat to her health.

Ultrasound images, meanwhile, indicate the fetus is developing with only a brain stem, a condition known as anencephaly. Most babies born with anencephaly live only a few days.

The government's Health Ministry has said it supports Beatriz's request for an abortion on health grounds. But the government's Legal Medicine Institute contends her illnesses are under control and says the pregnancy should be allowed to continue.

A medical committee at the maternity hospital where Beatriz has been treated said the baby wouldn't survive and recommended terminating the pregnancy, saying the woman's health "will certainly get worse as the pregnancy advances."

The New York-based group Human Rights Watch issued a statement calling on Salvadoran President Mauricio Funes to stand up for the woman's rights.

"The president should take immediate measures so that Beatriz can terminate a pregnancy that is putting her life at serious risk," the group's Americas director, Jose Miguel Vivanco, said in the statement.

El Salvador's attorney general for human rights, Oscar Luna, said that "in reality, what should prevail above all are human rights — in this case, the right to life."

"We support protecting the rights of the mother, and this does not imply opening the door to on-demand abortion," Luna said.

The Yes to Life Foundation, a Salvadoran group that opposes abortion, has said the woman should wait to see if there were any medical procedures available to induce an early delivery.

Regina de Cardenal, the head of the foundation, said the case is being used to press for legalized abortion in El Salvador.


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Cricket-New Zealand to make late decision on bowling attack

By John Mehaffey

LONDON, May 15 (Reuters) - New Zealand will assess weather and pitch conditions on Thursday morning before making a final decision on whether to field four pace bowlers in the first test against England at Lord's.

On the eve of the first match in the two-test series on Wednesday, captain Brendon McCullum said the final place would go to either Doug Bracewell or left-arm spinner Bruce Martin, who played in the drawn three-match series in New Zealand this year.

Rain is forecast throughout the first four days of the match and the prospect of a shortened game will also influence the selectors' decision with Kane Williamson able to chip in with a few overs of off-spin if Martin is omitted.

Martin bowled well and batted usefully in the first two tests at home after making his debut at the advanced age of 32. But he failed to take a wicket in the third test in Auckland, when New Zealand fell just short of winning the series, and was expensive in the tour match against the England Lions in Leicester.

"We've got 12 at the moment and that's just the balance issue for us," McCullum said. "We're trying to work out whether to play the four seamers or have Bruce and the same setup we brought into the three tests at home. That's something we are going to look at in the morning. Either way we have got good options."

New Zealand made a horrible start to the year when Ross Taylor withdrew from their tour of South Africa after he was replaced as captain by McCullum. They were then bowled out before lunch for 45 on the opening day of the first test.

However, they then had the better of England in the first test at home and eventually drew the series 0-0 after they needed only more wicket to win in Auckland.

HARDER CHALLENGE

"Obviously that series back home was really good for us. We learned a lot as a team. We know that this challenge is going to be a lot different and it's going to be a lot harder as well," McCullum told a news conference.

"We know we are going to have improve as a team on our performance. We know that they (England) are going to be a tough proposition but we believe we have got some guys who will be favoured by these conditions as well."

McCullum said his relationship with Taylor, New Zealand's premier batsman who returned for the home series against England, was fine.

"Ross has been great since we arrived in the UK, he's been outstanding. Ross is determined to perform well throughout this series," he said.

"We had a discussion when we first arrived here and it was a really good discussion. We have some great moments over the last 10 to 12 years and some great moments both on and off the field."

McCullum, now batting at number six after a brief spell as a an opener, scored 248 at an average of 82.67 in the home series in England. His aggressive batsmanship was paralleled by an attacking and innovative approach as captain.

"It's early days," he said. "For us as a group, we know that we are going to struggle to go to go toe to toe with the big boys of world cricket playing our style of game for long periods.

"We have been slow starters, we have tried to address that with our preparation on this tour. But these conditions are more familiar to us than they are on the Indian sub-continent, conditions where we have been caught on the hop." (Editing by Alison Wildey)


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Woman: China police ask to ax White House petition

BEIJING (AP) — Upset about plans for a petrochemical plant near her hometown in China, a woman turned to a new method that Chinese are using to air their complaints: she posted a petition on the White House's website. Then, Chinese police asked her to remove it.

Last week's run-in with internal security agents turned into an unexpected lesson for the woman.

"I didn't think (the petition) was a big deal and didn't foresee the ensuing events," said the woman, who asked to be identified only by the initials she used on the petition, B.Y., for fear of further angering the police.

B.Y., who is in her late 20s and works in the finance industry in the central city of Chengdu, said the officers asked her last Friday to delete the petition from the White House open petition site.

Set up in 2011, the "We the People" site allows the public to directly petition the White House. But she said she discovered the site does not allow people to remove petitions so she was unable to comply.

The Chengdu police department declined comment and would not provide the unlisted number for its domestic security protection branch.

B.Y.'s petition problem, which was first reported by Hong Kong's South China Morning Post newspaper, shows how prickly Chinese authorities are about Internet dissent, probably particularly when it involves the White House.

Chengdu, the capital of Sichuan province, has been on edge over plans to build a petrochemical plant 40 kilometers (25 miles) northwest of the city. The plant is expected to produce 10 million tons of oil and 800,000 tons of ethylene per year. Residents are concerned that the plant, operated by state-owned PetroChina, will aggravate air and water pollution, and question its safety because it is near a seismic fault where two deadly earthquakes have occurred in the past five years.

Authorities thwarted a planned demonstration over the plant on May 4 by filling the streets with police for a supposed earthquake drill, and have censored discussions of protest on the Internet.

Internet sites, particularly social media, are China's most unfettered forums for discussion, and many, especially younger Chinese, chafe at increasingly intrusive censorship.

At about the same time, Chinese discovered that the White House petition site was beyond the censors' reach. Discussions about an unsolved case involving the poisoning of a university student named Zhu Ling in Beijing 18 years ago were being deleted from Chinese sites, so someone turned to the White House site. In a few days, a petition calling for an investigation of a suspect living in the U.S. gathered 100,000 online signatures — the threshold for an official White House response — and kept the discussion alive in China.

B.Y. said she went to the White House site to sign the petition for Zhu Ling. Then, she saw she could start her own petition as well.

"So, I wrote about Chengdu," B.Y. said in an interview conducted by instant message. Her petition, posted in English on May 7, notes public concern about the project and urges the international community to evaluate the plan and monitor its environmental impact.

The next day, she received a call from the domestic security personnel. "I got a shock today," she wrote on her Sina Weibo microblog. Two days later, she met with the officers at a police station near her workplace.

"I will be out to have some tea," she wrote Friday. "If I should not return in two hours, please report me as missing." Having tea usually means someone has been called by the domestic security personnel for a talk.

"It was merely a chat," B.Y. said in the interview. "They wanted to know what the opposing views were and if there were other issues the public are worried about."

Asked whether the White House had provided any information to Chinese authorities to help them identify the petition writer, White House spokesman Matt Lehrich said it does not disclose users' information to any outside person or organization.

Unable to remove the White House petition, B.Y. attempted to comply with the police request by deleting a Sina Weibo post that had called attention to the petition. But she is also continuing to post Chengdu pollution levels on her microblog.

Quoting a well-known Chinese author, Hao Qun, who goes by the pen name Murong Xuecun and whose own microblog was recently censored, B.Y. said, "I am going to stay here until the stone blossoms."


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