MITRA MANDAL GLOBAL NEWS

By Kylie MacLellan and Douglas Busvine | NEW DELHI
British Prime Minister Theresa May offered India a possible improved visa deal on Monday, as the two countries kicked off talks on boosting trading links ahead of Britain's departure from the European Union.
May, making her first bilateral trip outside Europe since Britons voted on June 23 to quit the bloc, described as "limitless" the potential of the relationship with India and its market of 1.3 billion people.
She attached a condition to a better deal, however: progress in sending home Indians who have outstayed their visas. That harked back to her tough line as interior minister and the mandate she says the Brexit vote gave on curbing immigration.
"The UK will consider further improvements to our visa offer if, at the same time, we can step up the speed and volume of returns of Indians with no right to remain," May told reporters in New Delhi after talks with Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
A source in May's office said any improvements would be about the visa process, such as cost and speed, rather than criteria applicants must meet.
In Modi, May found a host keen to link market access to freedom of movement - the very issue that will complicate her own efforts to extract Britain from the EU without being cut off from the bloc's lucrative single market.
"We believe that such a group should not only focus on ways to increase trade in goods, but also on the expansion of services trade, including through greater mobility of skilled professionals," Modi told reporters.
His comments highlighted the interests of India's burgeoning IT services sector whose main base is Bengaluru. May visits the south Indian city, known as the world's back office, on Tuesday.
ASPIRATIONAL INDIA
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Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May (L) reads a joint statement as her Indian counterpart Narendra Modi watches at Hyderabad House in New Delhi, India, November 7, 2016. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi
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May endorsed India's aspirations as a rising 21st-century power, backing its bid for a permanent seat on the United Nations Security Council and promising to cooperate on cyber security to counter violent extremists.
But she did not go as far as her predecessor, David Cameron, who on a 2010 visit said that Pakistan, India's regional arch rival, should not "promote the export of terrorism".
Modi said he had conveyed to May his deep concern regarding cross-border terrorism and the need for the international community to take strong action against states that support and sponsor it.
He did not refer directly to Pakistan but tension has been running high for months, after street protests in Indian-ruled Kashmir, an attack on an Indian army base near the frontier in September, and a series of ensuing border clashes.
POST-BREXIT BRITAIN
Looking ahead to a post-Brexit world, May said she wanted Britain to be a committed advocate of free trade.
"It's why - as Britain leaves the EU - we're determined not to turn our backs on the world but to forge a new, global, outward-looking role for ourselves," she earlier told an India-UK Tech Summit.
"Because we know from history what happens when countries do not embrace the opportunities of the world. They stagnate. They get poorer. They don't protect their people. They get worse off."
Britain will offer new services to improve business travel for Indian visitors, including faster clearance through UK border controls. A select group of high-net-worth Indians, nominated by New Delhi, will also gain access to a "bespoke" visa and immigration service, May's office said.
May also said that more 1 billion pounds ($1.24 billion) in deals would be signed during her trip, and by partnering with Modi's initiative to build 100 "smart" cities, British business could unlock a further 2 billion pounds over five years.
STICKING POINTS
Modi, addressing the tech summit, called for "greater mobility and participation of young people in educational and research opportunities" - a reference to the sharp fall in the number of Indian nationals studying in Britain.
In the five years that May was interior minister, the number of Indian students in Britain fell to 11,864 in June 2015 from 68,238.
Some of May's cabinet colleagues and business leaders in both countries have urged May to exclude foreign students from Britain's statistics on net migration, which May has vowed to bring below 100,000 a year, from 336,000 in 2015.
Responding, the head of the Indian government's policy think tank said that, while India was opening up its manufacturing and defense sectors to foreign investors, its professionals faced restrictions on working in Britain and other Western countries.
"There is no such thing as selective free trade," Amitabh Kant, best known as the originator of the "Incredible India" tourism promotion, told the tech summit, when asked about May's emphasis on striking a free trade deal with India.

Germany boosts aid to U.N. in Africa to deter Europe-bound migration

Germany on Monday pledged a 61-million-euro ($67.44 million) hike in funding for U.N. relief operations in Africa so that fewer of its people undertake perilous odysseys to Europe, which has struggled to absorb an influx of migrants since last year.
The extra funding lifts Germany's total contribution to the U.N. refugee agency UNHCR to 298 million euros for 2016, Foreign Ministry officials said. Its total humanitarian budget for 2016 was 1.28 billion euros, up from just 105 million euros in 2012.
Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier announced the increase during a meeting with U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi in Berlin.
Countries targeted by Germany's move are ridden by chronic conflict, disastrous climate change and poverty. Many of their citizens continue to make desperate journeys through desert and by sea on rickety, overloaded boats to European shores.
Well over a million migrants, from Africa as well as the Middle East and Asia, have reached Europe since last year. Thousands have died en route. Major destination countries including Germany have struggled to cope with the human waves, and anti-immigrant sentiment and violence have spread.
"These countries urgently need our help," Steinmeier said in a statement after the meeting with Grandi. "The money will allow people to be cared for near their homes so they don't have to make the dangerous journey to Europe."
Ministry officials said the additional pledged aid would benefit people especially in Burundi, Mali, Somalia, South Sudan and neighboring countries, as well as those affected by the Boko Haram Islamist insurgency in West Africa's Chad region.
UNHCR also helps migrants return to their home countries.
The International Organization for Migration said last week that 4,220 migrants had drowned in the Mediterranean this year.
The German Interior Ministry this weekend disclosed it was looking at plans to stop migrants from ever reaching Europe's Mediterranean coast by picking them up at sea and returning them to Africa.
The Foreign Ministry had no immediate comment on the plan, which would amount to a huge shift for a country that has long had one of the most world's most generous asylum policies.
($1 = 0.9046 euros)

(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; editing by Mark Heinrich)

Justice Department to monitor Tuesday's election in 28 states

Personnel from the U.S. Justice Department's civil rights division will be deployed to polling sites in 28 states to monitor Tuesday's election, five more than it monitored in the 2012 election, the department said on Monday.
Most of those states will receive Justice Department staff who have no statutory authority to access polling sites as a result of a 2013 Supreme Court decision that struck down parts of the Voting Rights Act, curtailing the department's ability to deploy election observers with unfettered access to the polls.
More than 500 Justice Department personnel will be deployed on Tuesday, compared to more than 780 personnel the department dispatched during the 2012 general election. A Justice Department spokesman declined to say how many of Tuesday's personnel will be full-access observers.
Tuesday's hotly contested election, including the presidential race pitting Republican Donald Trump against Democrat Hillary Clinton, will be the first in decades in which the Justice Department can only send full-access observers to states where a federal court ruling has authorized it.
On the campaign trail, Trump has warned the election may be rigged and has called on supporters to keep an eye on voting activity for possible signs of fraud in large cities. Numerous studies have found that U.S. voter fraud is exceedingly rare.
"As always, our personnel will perform these duties impartially, with one goal in mind: to see to it that every eligible voter can participate in our elections to the full extent that federal law provides," said Attorney General Loretta Lynch in a statement.
Courts have granted the Justice Department permission to deploy full-access observers in five states: Alaska, California, Louisiana, New York, and Alabama. But the court order for Alabama only pertains to municipal elections and it is not on the list of states where the Justice Department is deploying poll watchers this year.
The Justice Department staff who are deployed to the other 24 states on Tuesday will be election "monitors", who must rely on local and state authorities to grant them access to polling locations.
“In most cases, voters on the ground will see very little practical difference between monitors and observers," said Vanita Gupta, the head of the department's civil rights division, in a statement.
(Reporting by Julia Harte; Editing by Will Dunham and Alistair Bell)

Israel won't attend French peace conference, wants direct talks with Palestinians

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, addresses the 71st session of the General Debate of the United Nations General Assembly at the United Nations in New York City on September 22. On Monday, he said his nation will not attend a French conference aimed at resolving conflict with the Palestinians. File photo by Monika Graff/UPI 
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JERUSALEM, Nov. 7 (UPI) -- Israel has rejected France's invitation for a Middle East peace conference in Paris later this year and instead reiterated hopes to meet directly with Palestinians.
French envoy Pierre Vimont was informed of Israel's intentions at a meeting Mondaywith Israel's acting national security adviser and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's diplomatic adviser in Jerusalem.
"[They] told the French envoy in a clear and unequivocal manner that Israel's position to promote the peace process and reach an agreement will only come through direct negotiations between Israel and the Palestinian Authority," Netanyahu's office said in a statement.
Despite Israel's statement, the French foreign ministry said it's still planning the conference before the end of the year. The Palestinians have said they would attend the Paris conference.
"If the Israeli government would decide to come to such a conference, it would be a perfect arena so that everyone, at last, would think that the commitment by the Israeli government to a two-state solution is genuine, sincere and deeply based and grounded in strong convictions," Vimont said Sunday.
France has spearheaded efforts since peace talks broke down in 2014.
In June, it hosted the United Nations, European Union, United States and major Arab countries to discuss ideas without the Israelis or Palestinians present.
Israel doesn't want an international conference because it fears it will give Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas a place to grandstand, rather than engaging directly with the Israelis.
"Any other initiative, including this one, will only distance peace from the region," Netanyahu's office said.
For nearly 50 years Israel has occupied the West Bank and East Jerusalem.
Vimont is hopeful of cooperation outside of the conference.
Russia has called for a meeting between Netanyahu and Abbas, he said. On Thursday, Russian Prime Minister Dimitry Medvedev is scheduled arrive in Israel and the Palestinian territories.
Netanyahu is watching with interest the U.S. election for president.
"We expect that the U.S. will remain faithful to the principle that it has set over many years, that the Israeli-Palestinian dispute can be resolved only by direct negotiations without preconditions and, of course, not in decisions by the U.N. or other international institutions," Netanyahu said before the weekly cabinet meetingn Sunday.
"Whoever is elected the new president, I am convinced that U.S.-Israel relations, which are solid and strong, will not only remain as such, but will strengthen further."
Netanyahu noted Israel "is developing relations with many other countries including the world's major powers."

40 buildings damaged in Oklahoma earthquake

The city manager of Cushing, Okla., said the city will consult a structural engineer to determine which buildings, if any, will be closed following the 5.0-magnitude earthquake on Sunday that damaged between 40 and 50 buildings in the downtown area. Screenshot from CBS News
CUSHING, Okla., Nov. 7 (UPI) -- More than 40 buildings in Cushing, Okla., were damaged by a 5.0-magnitude earthquake that could be felt 250 miles away in Dallas, Texas.
The earthquake struck Sunday evening, four miles below the surface, and was centered one mile west of Cushing, a city between Tulsa and Oklahoma City. The quake could be felt as far away as Dallas and Kansas City. Although the U.S. Geological Survey downgraded its magnitude from the originally announced 5.3-magnitude, the earthquake remains the state's 5th largest ever recorded.
Most of the damage was concentrated in the downtown area of Cushing, a community of about 8,000. An assisted living facility was evacuated, and the city manager's office said a structural engineer would be consulted to determine which buildings must be closed. Bricks fell from a number of buildings, and several streets were blocked off to prevent injuries from additional bricks falling during aftershocks. The city's public schools were closed Monday to assess damage.
Assistant City Manager Jeremy Frazier said some residents suffered minor injuries. In addition to reports of damaged buildings, gas leaks and interruptions in electricity were reported. No problems were reported by the area's pipeline and oil storage terminals.
The earthquake affecting Cushing was one of six seismic events recorded in Oklahoma by the U.S. Geological Survey in 24 hours, with one recorded just over the state border in Kansas. The Oil and Gas Division of the Oklahoma Corporation Commission said it was working to assess the status of the energy infrastructure tied to Cushing in the wake of the quake.

Kurdish Peshmerga take full control of Bashiqa, Iraq, from Islamic State

The town of Bashiqa, about 8 miles northeast of Mosul, is under the full control of the Kurdish Peshmerga after an offensive to seize the city away from Islamic State control, Kurdish officials said Monday. Photo by Shvan Harki/UPI 
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BASHIQA, Iraq, Nov. 7 (UPI) -- Kurdish Peshmerga forces in Iraq on Monday said the town of Bashiqa, near Mosul, is under its full control after battle against the Islamic State.
Bashiqa is about 8 miles northeast of Mosul in the semi-autonomous Kurdistan region. Rudaw reported Bashiqa was freed from Islamic State control soon after municipal government and Kurdistan Democratic Party branch buildings were freed.
The offensive was being helped by U.S.-led coalition airstrikes, which played an important role in Bashiqa, Kurdish Peshmerga Cmdr. Kaka Hama said. Kurdish officials said there were dozens of IS militants inside Bashiqa.
Several Islamic State suicide attacks -- mainly car bombings -- were repelled by the Kurdish soldiers.
There were an estimated 5,000 IS militants in Mosul prior to the start of Iraq's offensive to recapture the city on Oct. 17. Mosul is considered one of the most important battles in the fight against the Islamic State in Iraq, as it is considered the militant Islamist group's last major stronghold in the country.

New images of the Moon!

Some Of The Deepest & Sharpest Shots of The Moon from Earth

by Nancy Atkinson
Who doesn't love to gaze at the Moon on a clear night? But astrophotographer Thierry Legault now taken Moon-gazing to new heights. Legault traveled to the Alps in August and set up his Celestron C14 Edge HD and ZWO ASI1600MM camera. The results are absolutely stunning.
"These are the largest and sharpest quarters ever," Legault said via email, adding that he created mosaic images of 10 fields for a definition of 150 million pixels!
Above you can see incredible detail in the 58 mile-wide (93 km) impact crater Copernicus.
Below is a lunar quarter taken on August 24, 2016:
Image of the Moon taken on August 24, 2016 from the Alps. Credit and copyright: Thierry Legault. Used by permission.
Image of the Moon taken on August 24, 2016 from the Alps. Credit and copyright: Thierry Legault. Used by permission.
Legault has been known to travel wherever it takes to get the best shots, for example traveling through Germany, France and Spain to capture shots of space shuttle Endeavour on its final mission, or finding the best locations for stunning and sometimes ground-breaking shots of the International Space Station crossing the Sun or Moon, or views of spy satellites in orbit.
In his book, "Astrophotography," Legault said that for clear close-ups of the Moon, good atmospheric conditions are a must, as well as having a finely tuned or collimated telescope. Below is a close-up view of Triesnecker crater and the surrounding region near the central part of the Moon's near side, including sharp view of the rilles.
Triesnecker crater in the central part of the Moon's near side is 26 km in diameter and 2.7 km deep. A system of rilles can also be seen. Credit and copyright: Thierry Legault. Used by permission.
Triesnecker crater in the central part of the Moon's near side is 26 km in diameter and 2.7 km deep. A system of rilles can also be seen. Credit and copyright: Thierry Legault. Used by permission.
For processing these images Legault used AutoStakkert!2 (AS!2), PTGui stitching software and Photoshop.
You can see more of these stunning shots at Legault's website, where he says he'll have posters of these images available soon.
Our thanks to Thierry Legault for sharing these wonderful new images of the Moon!

Dozens killed as rival Somali states clash again




MOGADISHU, Nov. 6 (Xinhua) -- Clashes erupted in the central Somali town of Galkayo between two rival federal state forces on Sunday, killing 24 people and injuring 50 others, medical sources and eye witnesses said.
The sources said mortar shelling and intense gunfire could be heard across Galkayo as there was heavy fighting between Galmudug and Puntland forces despite a peace deal brokered by Dubai and signed on Nov. 1.
Eighteen of those killed were soldiers, they said.
Galkayo is currently divided into two districts, with Galmudug state governing the southern district and Puntland state controlling the northern one.
Puntland's Galkayo governor Hassan Khalif confirmed the deaths and injuries and said the fighting was still going on.
"There are several casualties including deaths and injuries. We don't count the casualties as the fighting is still going on, but I can say Galmudug is not ready for peace it brokered early this week," Khalif said.
The governor added that his administration was ready for peaceful talks to end the hostilities. He suggested dialogue should begin from grassroots and not only from higher authorities.
Galmudug's Galkayo governor Hirsi Yusuf said their forces were attacked by Puntland troops on Sunday morning and accused Puntland of violating the peace agreement.
Galkayo has been plagued by recurrent clashes between the two neighboring states which are said to be fighting for control of the town.
The UN Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) says fighting between the rival forces killed at least 23 people and displaced more than 80,000 others between Oct. 7 and 31.
The OCHA said while a peace agreement was reached on Nov. 1, fighting broke out again on Nov. 2.
The rival states are scheduled to hold further talks to implement the agreement on Nov.20. 

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