June 17 Photo Brief: G8 summit, Youth Day, search for Jimmy Hoffa remains
G8 summit, Youth Day in South Africa, search for Jimmy Hoffa’s remains continues and more in today’s daily brief.
- U.S. President Barack Obama (2nd L) attends a news conference with (L-R) European Council President Herman Van Rompuy, European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso and Britain’s Prime Minister David Cameron at the G8 summit in Enniskillen, Northern Ireland, on June 17, 2013. The conflict in Syria was set to dominate the G8 summit starting in Northern Ireland on Monday, with Western leaders upping pressure on Russia to back away from its support for President Bashar al-Assad. (Jewel Samad/AFP/Getty Images)
- Demonstrators from the ‘IF campaign’ wearing masks depicting G8 leaders protest against tax avoidance during the G8 Summit in Enniskillen, in Northern Ireland, on June 17, 2013. (Ben Stansall/AFP/Getty Images)
- Turkish police guard the entrance of Gezi Park at Taksim Square in Istanbul June 17, 2013. On Sunday, police detained 441 people in connection with clashes in Istanbul between police and demonstrators protesting against the government, an official at the city’s bar association said on Monday. (Marko Djurica/Reuters)
- A farmer holds rice saplings as she walks in the rice paddy field in Khokana, Lalitpur June 17, 2013. Rice is considered the main staple for Nepalese and is planted during the Nepali month of Asar, which usually lies between June and July, typically seen by locals as an auspicious month for planting rice. (Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters)
- Residents of Diepsloot go about their daily activities as they pass the public holiday following Youth Day on June 17, 2013 in Johannesburg, South Africa. Youth Day commemorates the Soweto Uprising of June 16, 1976, when students gathered on the streets of Soweto to protest against Afrikaans being the language of instruction used in schools. The protest turned violent resulting in the deaths of students and hundreds in the riots that followed across South Africa. (Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images)
- A sand storm envelops camels in the desert region of al-Hasa, some 370 km east of the Saudi capital Riyadh, on June 16, 2013. (Fayez Nureldine/AFP/Getty Images)
- A piglet resists as a boy tries to pull it, at a cattle market in Celendin, at Peru’s northern region of Cajamarca, June 16, 2013. (Enrique Castro-Mendivil/Reuters)
- Residents gather at the premises of a coffee shop that was destroyed in a suicide bomb attack the night before, in Baghdad June 17, 2013. Five people were killed and 20 were wounded in the attack, police said. (Saad Shalash/Reuters)
- A protestor runs as police fire a water canon during a demonstration in front of the Indonesian parliament against a proposed rise in fuel prices on June 17, 2013 in Jakarta, Indonesia. Thousands of Indonesians protested around the country against the controversial fuel price hike which is set to be decided by parliament Monday. (Ed Wray/Getty Images)
- FBI agents search a field outside Detroit for the alleged remains of former Teamsters’ union president Jimmy Hoffa June 17, 2013 in Oakland Township, Michigan. The agents were acting on a tip provided by Tony Zerilli, 85, a former mobster, who was released from prison in 2008. Hoffa, who had reported ties to organized crime, went missing in July of 1975. (Bill Pugliano/Getty Images)
- An accrobatic plane performs over Le Bourget airport on June 17, 2013 on the opening day of the International Paris Air show. (Eric Feferberg/AFP/Getty Images)
- Italian supporters celebrate a goal by Italy’s national soccer team player Andrea Pirlo against Mexico, as they watch a broadcast of the Confederations Cup Group A soccer match on a screen at a beach in Cesenatico, on the Adriatic seaside June 16, 2013. (Alessandro Garofalo/Reuters)
- A view of Earth from the Cupola on the earth-facing side of the International Space Station is seen in this NASA handout photo taken June 12, 2103 and provided June 17, 2013. Visible in the top left foreground is a Russian Soyuz crew capsule. In the lower right corner, a solar array panel can be seen. (NASA handout via Reuters)
- A colony of honeybees swarm on the ledge of a window outside the Media Centre, in Bern June 17, 2013. (Ruben Sprich/Reuters)
- Visitors looks at the “Neuron” military drone on the Dassault pavilion as heavy rain falls at Le Bourget airport on June 17, 2013 on the opening day of the International Paris Air show. (Eric Piermont/AFP/Getty Images)
- A hotel guest swims in the pool of the Marina Bay Sands Skypark overlooking the haze covered skyline of Singapore June 17, 2013. The haze worsened on Monday with the Pollutant Standards Index (PSI) hitting 105 at 3pm according to local media. (Edgar Su/Reuters)
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Western leaders rebuke Putin over Syria at G8 summit
Roberta Rampton and Alexei Anishchuk, Reuters
1:03 p.m. EDT, June 17, 2013
ENNISKILLEN, Northern Ireland (Reuters) – Western leaders rebuked Russian President Vladimir Putin for supporting Syria’s Bashar al-Assad’s attempt to crush a two-year-old uprising, setting the stage for a tense G8 summit of the world’s most powerful nations.
U.S. President Barack Obama is expected to use his first face-to-face meeting with Putin in a year to try to persuade the Kremlin chief to bring Assad to the negotiating table to end a conflict in which at least 93,000 people have been killed.
British Prime Minister David Cameron, who is chairing the G8 summit in a remote golf resort in Northern Ireland, conceded there was “a big difference” between the positions of Russia and the West on how to resolve the war.
In some of his most colorful remarks on Syria, Putin described anti-Assad rebels as cannibals who ate human flesh and warned Obama of the dangers of giving guns to such people. Moscow also said it would not permit no-fly zones over to Syria.
For their part, Western leaders have criticized Russia, Syria’s most powerful ally, for sending weapons to Assad forces and considering deliveries of a sophisticated missile system.
“How can we allow that Russia continues to deliver arms to the Bashar al-Assad regime when the opposition receives very few and is being massacred?” French President Francois Hollande said.
Stung by recent victories for Assad’s forces and their support from Hezbollah guerrillas, the United States said last week it would step up military aid to the rebels including automatic weapons, light mortars and rocket-propelled grenades.
In an apparent response to this development, Assad said Europe would “pay the price” if it delivered arms to rebel forces, saying that would result in the export of terrorism to Europe.
“Terrorists will gain experience in combat and return with extremist ideologies,” he said in an advance extract of an interview due to be published in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung on Tuesday.
Divisions over Syria dominated the atmosphere as global leaders streamed into the heavily guarded resort in Northern Ireland, a place once rocked by decades of violence but which Cameron now wants to showcase as a model of conflict resolution.
Despite the disagreements over Syria, Putin and his Western counterparts appeared cordial in their public appearances. The Kremlin chief cracked a grin as he shook Cameron’s hand outside the venue, as police helicopters surveyed the site overhead.
Moscow and Washington both agree that the bloodshed in Syria should stop and say they are genuinely trying to overcome mistrust between them. They had earlier agreed to set up a Syrian peace conference in Geneva but progress has been slow.
The European Union has dropped its arms embargo on Syria, allowing France and Britain to arm the rebels, though Cameron expressed concern about some of Assad’s foes.
“Let’s be clear – I am as worried as anybody else about elements of the Syrian opposition, who are extremists, who support terrorism and who are a great danger to our world,” Cameron said.
Syria aside, Cameron wants to focus on the formal agenda on tax, trade and transparency, dubbed “The Three Ts”, topics expected to dominate discussions on Tuesday.
As the summit kicked off on Monday afternoon, the United States and the EU opened negotiations for the world’s most ambitious free-trade deal, promising thousands of new jobs and accelerated growth on both sides of the Atlantic.
OBAMA-PUTIN TALKS
The spotlight was on Obama and Putin who were due to meet at about 6:30 p.m. (1730 GMT) at the Lough Erne golf resort about 10 km (7 miles) outside the Northern Irish town of Enniskillen, scene of an IRA bomb attack in 1987 that killed 11 people.
Security was tight and the venue was surrounded by a 15-ft high steel fence. Unlike previous summits which have seen often turbulent anti-capitalist protests, the meeting failed to attract any crowds, possibly due to its remote location.
In a speech in Belfast, Obama urged young people in Northern Ireland to finish making “permanent peace” and set an example to other areas of the world stricken by conflict.
Cameron could also face some awkward questions at the G8 table after a Guardian newspaper report that Britain spied on officials taking part in two Group of 20 meetings in 2009.
In a report published just hours before the G8 summit, the daily said some delegates from countries in the Group of 20 – which comprises top economies around the world – used Internet cafes that had been set up by British intelligence agencies to read their emails.
“If these allegations prove to be true, it will be condemned in the strongest fashion and the necessary action taken,” said Turkish Finance Minister Mehmet Simsek, who the Guardian said had his calls intercepted by Britain.
The leaders of the United States, Japan, Canada, Russia, Germany, France, Britain and Italy – representing just over half of the $71.7 trillion global economy – will also discuss global economy and trade.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and other leaders are likely to say they are not content with progress so far in fixing their economies in the wake of the global financial crisis, according to a draft communiqué seen by Reuters.
Abe will use the opportunity to explain his blend of fiscal and monetary stimuli known as ‘Abenomics’ to the leaders as investors try to absorb the implications of a signal by the U.S. Federal Reserve it may start to slow its money-printing.
(Additional reporting by Maria Golovnina, William Schomberg, Andrew Osborn, Kate Holton, Jeff Mason and Gernot Heller in Enniskillen, Gabriela Baczynska in Moscow; Writing by Guy Faulconbridge and Maria Golovnina)