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BRICS economic cooperation promising: analyst

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BEIJING, Aug. 29 (Xinhua) -- BRICS have broad prospects for economic cooperation and will make bigger contribution to the global economy in the future, an analyst said ahead of a business forum in early September.
"There is enormous potential for cooperation in trade, investment, finance and infrastructure among the five countries," said Jiang Zengwei, head of the China Council for the Promotion of International Trade.
Jiang cited factors including huge markets, rich natural resources, economic disparities, favorable policies and active businesses.
"Uncertainties and unstable factors exist, but opportunities outshine challenges."
BRICS Business Forum, a major side-event of BRICS Summit, is expected to gather a record 1,200 attendees in Xiamen, east China's Fujian Province on Sept. 3 and 4, including executives from more than 50 Fortune 500 multinationals.
The meeting will focus on global economic growth, including trade and investment, financial cooperation, connectivity, and the blue economy.
BRICS accounts for 23 percent of the world economy, 16 percent of foreign trade and 12 percent of outbound investment, and contribute to more than 50 percent of the global economic growth.
With ample room for more cooperation, the five countries will generate more growth impetus for the world, Jiang said.

China to continue patrolling, defending Doklam area

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BEIJING, Aug. 29 (Xinhua) -- Chinese border troops are continuing their patrolling
 and defending the Dong Lang (Doklam) area, a Chinese Foreign Ministry 
spokesperson said Tuesday.
"We will make an overall assessment of the weather conditions and all 
related factors, and according to the actual circumstances complete 
construction plans for the Dong Lang (Doklam) area," spokesperson
 Hua Chunying told a daily news briefing.
On June 18, over 270 armed Indian troops with two bulldozers crossed
 the boundary into Dong Lang (Doklam), Chinese sovereign territory, to
 obstruct infrastructure construction.
China Monday confirmed that India had withdrawn personnel and 
equipment from Dong Lang (Doklam) after a military stand-off lasting
 more than two months.
Dong Lang (Doklam), which borders India's Sikkim state to the west
 and the Kingdom of Bhutan to the south, is part of Chinese territory 
and has been under Chinese rule for a very long time.
Hua said for a long period of time, China has constructed 
infrastructure facilities including roads to meet the needs of 
soldiers and civilians, and improve their living conditions.

Alliance to the Rescue of 33 Million Latin American Rural Poor

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Indigenous women, such as these farmers on the outskirts of Sucre, Bolivia’s official capital, are part of a group with the most difficulties to overcome extreme poverty in Latin America, and therefore require specific policies to give them equal opportunities. Credit: Franz Chávez/IPS
Indigenous women, such as these farmers on the outskirts of Sucre, Bolivia’s official capital, are part of a group with the most difficulties to overcome extreme poverty in Latin America, and therefore require specific policies to give them equal opportunities. Credit: Franz Chávez/IPS
SANTIAGO, Aug 29 2017 (IPS) - “There are 33 million rural dwellers in Latin America who are still living in extreme poverty and can’t afford a good diet, clothes or education, and we are not going to help them move out of poverty if we use the same strategies that worked 20 years ago,” FAO regional representative Julio Berdegué told IPS.
Since 1990, rural poverty in the region was reduced from 65 per cent to 46 per cent, while extreme poverty fell from 40 per cent to below 27 per cent.
But while the proportion of rural extreme poor decreased by 1 percentage point a year between 1997 and 2007, the rate of decrease was only 0.2 per cent a year between 2007 and 2014.
To break that pattern in the most vulnerable rural group, the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) and the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) are launching this last week of August in Santiago, Chile the “Alliance to end rural poverty in Latin America.”
FAO regional representative Julio Berdergué. Credit: FAOALC
FAO regional representative Julio Berdergué. Credit: FAOALC
“There is a strong deceleration in the reduction of poverty, five times slower than before, only just 0.2 per cent per year,” noted with concern Berdegué, who attributed the phenomenon, among other causes, to a regional economic slowdown which has had an impact on employment and incomes.
“The strong, sustainable, solid solution to rural poverty is economic development in rural areas. Quality jobs, better wages: that is the best strategy to reduce rural poverty,” said Berdegué, who is also FAO deputy director-general, in the body’s regional office in the Chilean capital.
For Berdegué, “social policies compensate for the effects of economic development, but what we want is for people to stop being poor because they have better jobs and not because of good social programmes…that is a second best option.”
In his interview with IPS, the Mexican senior U.N. official said the region has already done a great deal to reduce poverty and extreme poverty and what remains is to eradicate the most difficult part of poverty, harder to combat because it is structural.
He cited the example of Chile, where less than three per cent of the rural population suffer from extreme poverty, but the people affected are indigenous women in remote areas, which makes the task of rescuing them from deep poverty especially complicated.
According to Berdegué, the policies and programmes created and implemented in Latin America to eradicate poverty successfully served their purpose ,“but not necessarily the same strategies and same programmes are the ones that will work for us in the final push” of putting an end to hard-core, entrenched poverty.
Luiz Carlos Beduschi, a Brazilian academic and policy officer in the FAO regional office,pointed out to IPS that one of the most significant programmes to combat poverty in Nicaragua consisted of giving extremely poor people chickens, pigs or pregnant cows along with technical assistance.
Specific policies for women

“The same policies that help rural men move out of poverty don’t work for rural women,” said Julio Berdegué, who stressed that in the region “we have a generation of women with levels of education that their mothers never dreamed of.”

“We must soon achieve labour policies that allow these women to fully accede to formal employment. They are all working a lot, but on their farms or in unpaid, informal work,” he explained.

“These young rural women under 35 are going to stay on their farms producing food, but many of them are going to be employed in manufacturing and services, in nearby cities or in the rural communities themselves,” he added.

The FAO senior official stressed that “economic empowerment and autonomy are key, absolutely key, and this requires policies designed with a gender perspective. Without this, we are not going anywhere.”

Another thing that is essential, he added, is access to financing because “a poor woman farmer goes to ask for a loan and a poor male farmer goes, and the chances that the woman and the man get it are very different.”

“In all elements that are necessary for the development of family agriculture: access to markets, to technical assistance, land, etc, we need to multiply them by two, three or four in order to guarantee women equal opportunities,” he concluded. 
“A woman from District 7, in the periurban area of Managua, discovered a dormant entrepreneurial potential. She was given a cow, and today, eight years later, she has 17 cows. Her oldest daughter left to study and graduated as a dentist. The woman sold three cows to finance a clinic (for her daughter) in the neighbourhood. She is now involved in the economic and social fabric of that area,” Beduschi said. Her second daughter is now studying medicine.
He added that the beneficiaries of this programme do not so much need advice as other elements such as credit at an interest rate lower than the 20 to 30 per cent offered by local creditors.
“We have to design a new plan for new times,” he concluded.
Launching the new Alliance
More than 25 experts, researchers and decision-makers are meeting Monday 28 and Tuesday 29 in Santiago, summoned by FAO and IFAD to seek new strategies and instruments to combat rural poverty.
In this new Alliance Launch Workshop, the participants are identifying and disseminating a politically viable and technically feasible package of proposals to be implemented by Latin American governments, for each country to face the challenge of ending rural poverty from an innovative perspective.
The activities of this initiative will be carried out from now until July 2019, and will count on FAO resources for the initial phase.
Berdegué said the first successful result of the Alliance was bringing together this group of experts with the commitment of “putting their shoulders to the wheel” in seeking innovative solutions to put an end to rural poverty.
“We want to release the 1.0 version of a proposal that we are going to offer to the countries. Not more of the same, because that has us at a five times slower rate. And we want to produce the first ideas, the best that we can, but we don’t want to spend the next six months writing documents. The best that we can, the sooner we can, and with those instruments we will go to the countries,” he said.
“The meeting will be a successful one if we come out of it with a very concrete working plan, detailed in such a way that the following week we can be going to the countries, as we have already started to do in Ecuador and Nicaragua,” he told IPS.
“We have a specific work agenda for collaboration to put these ideas into practice, with public programmes and policies,” he added.
Among the new tools that are being discussed in the world and in Latin America, Berdegué pointed out the concept of a universal basic income, which has its pros and cons, and is hotly debated.
There is also the issue of rural labour markets “which are in general in a state of true disaster, with high levels of informality and very low female participation rates, among them young women who have received 10 to 12 years of schooling and have no job offers in line with this human capital they have acquired.”
And a crucial issue in the new agenda, not taken into account in the past decades, is inequality.
“Many of these 33 million poor are poor because they are first victims of inequality. A rural indigenous woman, in a less developed area, is victim of more than four inequalities: gender, ethnicity, rural and territorial. Besides, economic inequality, on grounds of social class,” Berdegué said.
“Good quality employment, better wages, that is the best strategy for reducing rural poverty. And we have an accumulation of inequalities that, if we do not solve them, it will be very hard to return to the rate of one percentage point of reduction of rural extreme poverty,” he concluded.
Academics, as well as government officials and representatives of social organisations are taking part in the FAO and IFAD meeting, joining forces to think about how to keep on combating rural poverty with the goal of eradicating it.

ENERGY NEWS-Harvey pushing gas prices up as another storm approaches east coast of U.S.

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China confirms India's withdrawal of troops, equipment from Dong Lang

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BEIJING, Aug. 28 (Xinhua) -- China on Monday confirmed via on-site checks that India
 has withdrawn personnel and equipment from Dong Lang (Doklam) after a military
 stand-off lasting more than two months.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying said that Chinese personnel
 completed the on-site check around 2:30 p.m., adding that China will continue to
 safeguard its territorial sovereignty according to historical boundary treaties.
The Chinese government values its neighborly friendship with India, Hua said.
 It expects India to respect historical boundary treaties and basic principles of
 international law, and to work with China to safeguard peace and stability in
 the border area on the basis of mutual respect of each other's territorial sovereignty.
On June 18, more than 270 armed Indian troops with two bulldozers crossed the
 boundary in the Sikkim sector and advanced more than 100 meters into Chinese
 territory to obstruct routine road construction in the Dong Lang area of Tibet Autonomous
 Region.
Hua said since the Indian trespass occurred, China has lodged representations to India
 through diplomatic means on multiple instances. It has explained the situation to the
 international community, and urged India to immediately withdraw its border troops to
 the Indian side of the boundary. Meanwhile, Chinese troops have taken effective measures
 to safeguard China's territorial sovereignty and lawful interests.
Dong Lang, which borders India's Sikkim state to the west and the Kingdom of Bhutan
 to the south, is part of Chinese territory and has been under Chinese rule for a very long time.
According to the Convention between Great Britain and China Relating to Sikkim
 and Tibet (1890), the area undoubtedly belongs to China. The agreement was
inherited by India after its independence and has been repeatedly confirmed in
 writing by successive governments of the former British colony.
Related:
BEIJING, Aug. 2 (Xinhua) -- China on Wednesday released a position document
 on the Indian border troops' illegal trespass into Chinese territory.Full story
BEIJING, Aug. 2 (Xinhua) -- A short online video discussing the recent borde
r issue between China and India has sparked a heated discussion among netizens
 from the region and beyond.Full story
BEIJING, Aug. 2 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Foreign Ministry issued on Wednesday a
 document of the facts and China's position concerning the Indian border troops'
 crossing of China-India boundary in the Sikkim Sector into the Chinese territory.Full story
BEIJING, Aug. 2 (Xinhua) -- China on Wednesday laid out its position on India's
 incursion into Chinese territory in the Himalayas.Full story
BEIJING, Aug. 3 (Xinhua) -- The People's Liberation Army's (PLA) flagship
 newspaper Thursday called for the immediate withdrawal of Indian border
 troops trespassing in China, warning India not to harbor any illusions about
 the Chinese military's resolve to defend its territory.Full story
BEIJING, Aug. 3 (Xinhua) -- Indian troops' trespassing into Chinese territory
 is irresponsible and reckless, the Chinese Foreign Ministry said Thursday.Full story
BEIJING, Aug. 3 (Xinhua) -- Chinese defense ministry has urged India to
 immediately pull back the trespassing troops to the Indian side of the boundary.Fulls tory
BEIJING, Aug. 4 (Xinhua) -- On June 18, Indian border troops crossed the
 China-India boundary in the Sikkim Sector at the Duo Ka La (Doka La) pass
 and advanced more than 100 meters into Chinese territory.Full story
BEIJING, Aug. 8 (Xinhua) -- India should underestimate neither
 China's determination nor its capacity to defend its sovereignty
 and national interests.Full story
BEIJING, Aug. 9 (Xinhua) -- Nearly two months have passed since
 Indian troops illegally crossed the China-India boundary in Sikkim
 Sector, and there is no sign of withdrawal so far.Full story
BEIJING, Aug. 16 (Xinhua) -- Chinese border troops have always patrolled
 the Chinese side of the line of control on the China-India border, said a
Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wednesday in response to a recent altercation
 between the two troops.Full story
BEIJING, Aug. 18 (Xinhua) -- A Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson said Friday
 that the Japanese ambassador to India should not wag his tongue too freely on the
 standoff between China and India in the Dong Lang (Doklam) area.Full story
BEIJING, Aug. 19 (Xinhua) -- Chinese border troops have always been
 committed to upholding peace and tranquility of the China-India border
areas, said a Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Wednesday in
 response to India's trespassing into the Dong Lang (Doklam) region on June 18.Full story
BEIJING, Aug. 21 (Xinhua) -- Some Chinese troops suffered injuries from
 Indian troops' fierce action in the western part of the border area, the
 Chinese Foreign Ministry confirmed Monday.Full story
BEIJING, Aug. 22 (Xinhua) -- China hopes that India will take practical
 and positive actions to correct its incorrect words and deeds, a Foreign
Ministry spokesperson said Tuesday.Full story
BEIJING, Aug. 23 (Xinhua) -- The Indian military's trespassing into China's
 territory has entered the third month, with no signs of the south Asian
 country withdrawing its troops. The ball is now firmly in India's court.Full story
BEIJING, Aug. 24 (Xinhua) -- India's road building near an undemarcated
 boundary reveals a contradiction between what India says and what it does,
 a Foreign Ministry spokesperson said Thursday.Full story
BEIJING, Aug. 25 (Xinhua) -- It has now entered the third month since Indian
 military trespassed into Chinese territory, to which China has shown the
 utmost tolerance. India must take any possible consequences if it
 continues to miscalculate the situation.Full story
BEIJING, Aug. 4 (Xinhua) -- The military standoff between China and India
 in the Doklam region has lasted for almost two months now, and there is
 still no end in sight.Full story
BEIJING, July 24 (Xinhua) -- A Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson
said Monday that there has been no territorial dispute in the Doklam area.Full story
BEIJING, July 14 (Xinhua) -- India has repeatedly ignored China's call for
 pulling its border-crossing troops from Doklam area back to its own territory.
 However, turning a deaf ear to China will but to worsen the month-long
 stand-off and put itself further into embarrassment.Full story
NEW DELHI, July 5 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Ambassador Luo Zhaohui on
Tuesday urged India to unconditionally withdraw its border troops to the
 Indian side of the boundary with China and seek a peaceful solution to
 the recent incident in the Doklam area.Full story

Is the “Alien Megastructure” around Tabby’s Star Actually a Ringed Gas Giant?

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Matt Williams द्वारा
KIC 8462852 (aka. Tabby’s Star) continues to be a source of both fascination and controversy. Ever since it was first seen to be undergoing strange and sudden dips in brightness (in October of 2015) astronomers have been speculating as to what could be causing this. Since that time, various explanations have been offered, including large asteroids, a large planet, a debris disc or even an alien megastructure.
The latest suggestion for a natural explanation comes from the University of Antioquia in Colombia, where a team of researchers have proposed that both the larger and smaller drops in brightness could be the result of a ringed planet similar to Saturn transiting in front of the star. This, they claim, would explain both the sudden drops in brightness and the more subtle dips seen over time.
The study, titled "Anomalous Lightcurves of Young Tilted Exorings", recently appeared online. Led by Mario Sucerquia, a postdoctoral student at the University of Antioquia's Department of Astronomy, the team performed numerical simulations and semi-analytical calculations to determine if a the transits of a ringed gas giant could explain the recent observations made of Tabby's Star.
An artist impression of an exomoon orbiting a ringed exoplanet. Credit: Andy McLatchie
Currently, exoplanet-hunters use a number of methods to detect planetary candidates. One of the most popular is known as the Transit Method, where astronomers measure dips in a star's brightness caused by a planet passing between it and the observer (i.e. transiting in front of a star). How a gas giant with rings would dim a star's light was of concern here because it would do so in an irregular way.
Basically, the rings would be the first thing to obscure light coming from the star, but only to a small degree. Once the bulk of the gas giant transited the star, a significant drop would occur followed a second smaller drop as the rings on the other side passed by. But since the rings would be at a different angle every time, the smaller dips would be larger or smaller and the only way to know for sure would be to compare multiple transits.
In the past, researchers from the University of Antioquia developed a novel method for detecting rings around exoplanets ("exorings"). Essentially, they showed how an increase in the depth of a transit signal and the so-called "photo-ring" effect (often mistaken for false-positives in previous surveys) could be interpreted as signs of an exoplanet with a Saturn-like ring structure.
The team that devised this method was led by Jorge I. Zuluaga of the Harvard Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA), who was also a co-author on this study.  To test this theory with KIC 8462852, the team simulated a light curve from a ringed planet that was about 0.1 AU from the star. What they found was that a tilted ring structure could explain the dimming effects detected from Tabby's Star in the past.
Artist's impression of an exoplanet with an extensive ring system. Credit and Copyright: Ron Miller
They also found that a tilted ring structure would undergo short-term changes in shape and orientation as a result of the star's gravitational tug on them. These would be apparent due to strong variations of transit depth and contact times even between consecutive transits. This too would likely be interpreted as anomalies in signal data, or lead to miscalculations of a planet's properties (i.e. radius, semi-major axis, stellar density, etc).
This is not the first time that a ringed-structure has been suggested as an explanation for the mystery that is Tabby's Star. And the team admits that there are other possible explanations, which include the possibility of an exomoon breaking up around a larger planet (i.e. leaving a debris disk). But as Sucerquia indicated in an interview with New Scientist, this latest study does offer some compelling food for thought:
“The point of this work is to show the community that there are mechanisms that can alter the light curves. These changes can be generated by the dynamics of the moons or the rings, and the changes in these systems can occur in such short scales as to be detected in just a few years.”
Another interesting takeaway from the research study is the fact that oscillating ring structures could also account for the strangeness of some light-curves that are already known. In other words, its possible that astronomers have already found evidence of ringed exoplanets, and simply didn't know it. Looking ahead, it is possible that future surveys could turn up plenty more of these worlds as well.
Of course, if this study should prove to be correct, it means that what some consider our best hope of finding an alien megastructure has now been lost. Admittedly, this would be a disappointment. If there's one thing about the mystery of Tabby's Star that has been consistently intriguing, it's the fact that a megastructure couldn't be ruled out. If we have come to that point at last, there's not much more to say.
Except, perhaps, that's it's a big Universe! There's sure to be a Kardashev Type II civilization out there somewhere!
Further Reading: New ScientistsarXiv

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