terça-feira, 31 de março de 2009

Jabor:"Finger linckin good"

Como é que diz a música :):):):)
Now what could be better than a home cooked meal
Now you want to eat it
Depends on how you feel
You can eat all you want...
Can you make a fire without using wood?
Yes...


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Mundo:El Papa Benedicto XVI ordenó que se investigaran las actividades de "sacerdote"

El Papa Benedicto XVI ordenó que se investigaran las actividades de un grupo religioso de ultra derecha conocido como los Legionarios de Cristo, cuyo fundador fue el sacerdote mexicano Marcial Maciel.
El Papa, quien le encomendó el estudio a un equipo de obispos y sacerdotes, dijo que quiere ayudar a la orden religiosa mexicana a resolver sus problemas con "verdad y transparencia".
La congregación está a cargo de una universidad en Roma y de otras instituciones en Europa y América Latina.
Maciel, quien murió el año pasado, era un cercano amigo del Papa Juan Pablo II, el antecesor de Benedicto XVI.
BBC Mundo

THE NY TIMES:Obama Arrives in Europe for Global Economic Meeting




By David Sanger
LONDON — For nearly 30 years, American presidents have arrived at economic summit meetings with nearly identical talking points: The solution to most ailments lies in more economic integration, unleashing free markets, and using a light touch to tame capitalism.
As President Obama landed here on Tuesday night at the start of his first overseas venture as the leader of the world’s largest economy, almost every one of those principles appears up for debate.
Economic integration is in retreat. Some countries have tried to wall themselves off from the troubles sweeping the world, noting that those less tied to the global economy have suffered less. Heavy regulation is back, this time with Washington’s agreement. On Tuesday the French hinted they would walk out of the Thursday summit meeting if other nations did not agree to set up a robust international financial regulatory agency.
For all of Mr. Obama’s early optimism that the rest of the world would follow his lead on big stimulus packages, there is no clear move in that direction. By last weekend the White House was signaling that it would not confront the nations, notably Germany, that resist more deficit spending.
All of this suggests a rebuke of American economic leadership. Yet Mr. Obama is still likely to dominate the discussions here. And there is no clear alternative to his strategy for reviving the world economy.
Many in Europe and Asia who depend heavily on the United States market favor Mr. Obama’s spending, hoping an American rebound will revive their economies — and ease the pressure on them to spend more.
“Here’s the central paradox,” said Jeffrey Garten, a professor at the Yale School of Management and a former top commerce department official in the Clinton administration. “Everyone has lost confidence in the U.S. system because the more that is revealed, the more it feels as if we pursued capitalism in a very irresponsible way. But everyone is now waiting the U.S. to bail them out.”
In fact, Mr. Obama’s biggest challenge may be to persuade the other nations at the meeting that the United States, while committed to recovery, does not envision a return to voracious American consumption.
“The irony,” said Mr. Garten, “is that most of our partners, after berating us for being irresponsible and greedy, want to return to the era when American consumers supported the world, when we spent too much and saved too little.”
Little of this will be said explicitly. No one wants to rattle the markets further by suggesting disharmony, at least during the 36 hours that the leaders of all 29 nations and institutions will be part of the misnamed G-20 summit meeting. A draft of the communiqué that circulated Tuesday and that will be in front of the leaders at the meeting in Britain’s Docklands — not too far from the ports where shipwrecks were once towed in for salvage — commits every nation to make efforts to refloat their economies, but sets no targets.
There will be some agreements, worded to avoid controversial details. For the first time, there will be a broad agreement about the need to regulate hedge funds and to force tax havens from the Caribbean to Switzerland to meet some global standards. Mr. Obama will arrive pledging an overhaul of the United States’ patchwork of regulations, which left institutions like A.I.G. without adequate supervision. (The American delegation will also be fending off pressure for international oversight of American regulatory actions.)
The meeting’s host, Prime Minister Gordon Brown, has been jetting around the world to encourage a veneer of broad accord. But the frictions are clear.
At the last G-20 summit meeting, participants agreed to resist protectionist tendencies. Few have. By several official counts, 17 nations — the United States included — have taken at least preliminary actions to limit imports or make sure that their stimulus money is spent at home.
“This is a classic case of countries bending to domestic political pressure because it is too difficult to make the political argument that if everyone restricts imports, everyone loses,” said Charlene Barshefsky, who served as the United States trade representative in the late 1990’s, boom years for globalization.
“You would think that leaders would get religion from the fact that global trade this year could be down by 10 percent, precisely the trend that happened between 1930 and 1933,” she said. “But try making that argument at home, in front of lawmakers who say we’re not going to be spending government money to buy someone else’s products.”
The size of the G-20 contributes to the chafing. Its membership, of necessity, includes a broad swath of the world economy, about 85 percent of global G.D.P. Few doubt that its meetings will eclipse the annual meeting of the G-7 nations — Britain, France, Germany, Italy, the United States, Canada and Japan.
At G-20 meetings, with China and India in the room, and with countries as diverse as Indonesia, Saudi Arabia, Brazil and Turkey represented, there is no shared assumption that economic interdependence is necessarily a good thing. In fact, China has expressed its worries about its American investments in surprisingly blunt terms, and is watching its industrial cities closely for signs of unrest now that millions of Chinese factory workers are being laid off.
Inside the European Union, the richest nations of Western Europe do not want to spend heavily to bail out their poorer eastern neighbors — a task they want to leave to the International Monetary Fund. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner has committed the United States to boosting its contribution by about $100 billion, or a fifth of the needed $500 billion. But getting that amount through Congress, at a time Mr. Obama is seeking more aid for countries like Afghanistan and Pakistan, will be an enormous challenge.
Mr. Obama has promised a new form of engagement. His aides have been debating how to mix expressions of humility with the exercise of influence. It will be a delicate dance, made more difficult by the fact that the broad goal of remaking the world’s economic architecture has given way to each nation trying to avoid the equivalent of domestic foreclosure.
“In any international meeting, other leaders are going to want to hear that we understand what went wrong in the U.S. and abroad, that we care how it affects them, and that we are working to fix it,” said David Lipton, the special assistant to Mr. Obama for international economic affairs. “It is hard to imagine a meeting with a foreign leader who isn’t interested in those questions.”

THE NY TIMES:New Worries on Insurgency as U.S. Readies Exit From Iraq

By Alissa J Rubin
BAGHDAD — As the American military prepares to withdraw from Iraqi cities, Iraqi and American security officials say that jihadi and Baath militants are rejoining the fight in areas that are largely quiet now, regrouping as a smaller but still lethal insurgency.
There is much debate as to whether any new insurgency, at a time of relative calm in most of Iraq, could ever produce the same levels of violence as existed at the height of the fighting here. A recent series of attacks, however, like bubbles that indicate fish beneath still water, suggest the potential danger, all the more perilous now because the American troops that helped to pacify Iraq are leaving.
Several well-planned bombings, one on a street recently reopened because it was thought to be safe, have killed 123 people, most of them in and around Baghdad. Three were suicide bombings, signatures of Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia, a homegrown Sunni extremist group with some foreign leadership.
Assassination attempts on members of the Awakening, some of them former insurgents who switched sides for pay, are rising, as are fears that some are joining Al Qaeda or other insurgent groups. On Saturday an important Awakening leader was arrested on charges, among others, of being a member of the military wing of the outlawed Baath Party, formerly led by Saddam Hussein.
Detainees long held in American military custody are being set free every day, potentially increasing the insurgency’s numbers. At least one has already blown himself up in a suicide attack.
Most of the latest attacks, at a time when overall violence is at its lowest since the beginning of the war in 2003, have singled out Iraqis, but one development affects the Americans. A new weapon has appeared in Iraq: Russian-made RKG-3 grenades, which weigh just five pounds and, attached to parachutes, can be lobbed by a teenager but can penetrate the American military’s latest heavily armored vehicle, the MRAP. The grenades cost as little as $10, according to American military officials, who would not say how often they have killed soldiers.
To some experts, this amounts to ugly, but unavoidable, background noise, the deadly but no longer destabilizing face of violence in Iraq. In this view, there will be attacks, but no longer ones likely to topple Iraq’s government. Military officers here, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the news media, say they have reduced the number of Qaeda-linked militants from about 3,800 to under 2,000.
“In most places there isn’t an insurgency in Iraq anymore,” said an American military intelligence officer in Washington, who was not authorized to be quoted by name. “What we have now is a terrorism problem, and there is going to be a terrorism problem in Iraq for a long time.”
Other officials, Iraqi and American, are more worried. They observe Al Qaeda and other insurgent groups activating networks of sleeper cells, who are already striking government and civilian targets. Insurgent groups linked to the rule of Mr. Hussein are also reviving.
Among the most powerful now is Nashqabandi, which has ties to a former Hussein deputy, Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri. The organization, which gets money from Iraqi exiles in Syria, formed an alliance with Al Qaeda, according to American and Iraqi military intelligence.
“Al Qaeda and the hard-core Saddamists are the main threats to the national security of Iraq,” said Mowaffak al-Rubaie, Iraq’s national security adviser.
“Nashqabandi is the cradle; they are providing logistical support for Al Qaeda,” he said. “What we are seeing is the resurgence of the hard-core Saddamists, but using Al Qaeda in Iraq as a front and as suicide bombers.”
American military officials believe they have checked the insurgency, but liken it to a spring. It can come up quickly as soon as it is released, but the longer you keep it down the less it rebounds, said Col. James Phelps, an insurgency expert attached to the multinational force in Iraq.
In interviews with 14 leaders of the Awakening movement, all said they believed that the Qaeda presence in their areas had increased, as American troops began to close combat outposts or hand them over to the Iraqi Army, a first step toward withdrawing entirely. The Awakening leaders reported assassination attempts, homemade bombs placed near their homes or under their cars, leaflets urging them not to work with the Iraqi government.
“We notice when there is a bomb buried on a back road where there has not been one before,” said Sheik Awad al-Harbousi, whose Awakening group works in Taji, north of Baghdad, much of it empty country traversed by rugged dirt roads. One of his fighters was killed three weeks ago and two were wounded.
Undermining the stability of the last few months is rising friction between the Awakening Councils and the Iraqi Army and police, much of it with a sectarian edge. The tensions turned violent in Baghdad on Saturday, when members of the Awakening Council in the Fadhil neighborhood of Baghdad had a shootout with a combined American and Iraqi force.
The Awakening Councils are largely Sunni, while the security forces are dominated by Shiites. Many Awakening members are angry because promises of jobs in the Shiite-dominated government have not been kept.
In Dhuluiya, in eastern Salahuddin Province, deep in the Tigris River Valley, Mullah Nadhim al-Jubori, a onetime insurgent linked to Al Qaeda who became an Awakening leader, worries that the situation is fraying.
He ticked off seven troubling events over the last month, including the abduction of four of his men. Two were executed and two were released after paying a ransom.
“The ransom was picked up in Baghdad,” he said. “That tells me there is good coordination and organization among Al Qaeda members.”
A few of his followers have changed sides. During the last four months, 12 Awakening members were arrested as double agents, accused of killing Awakening leaders, Mr. Nadhim said.
Further east, in Diyala Province, the situation is worse. The insurgency has never been fully eradicated there, according to the American and Iraqi military. The province’s geography favors those who know its dry high hills, empty patches of deserts and thick groves of date palms.
While the province is far more secure than in 2006 and 2007, when the provincial capital, Baquba, was known locally as “the city of death,” attacks are now increasing. Forty-three people were killed in Diyala in March, up from 29 in February and 6 in January, according to the Diyala Operations Command.
Ali Al-Tamimi, the chief of the Provincial Council’s security committee, predicted an increase in violence both in Baghdad and in Baquba because the security commanders have not acted on warnings about the growing activities of armed groups within an hour of the capital.
“We have told them that Al Qaeda is still present in some neighborhoods and villages,” he said. “They have not done enough to stop them.”
Suadad al-Salhy and Mohamed Hussein contributed reporting from Baghdad, and an Iraqi employee of The New York Times from Diyala Province.

Economia:Cigarros ficarão 30% mais caros


Para compensar a perda da arrecadação com as vantagens para o setores automotivo e de construção civil, o ministro da Fazenda, Guido Mantega, anunciou ontem uma elevação na alíquota do Programa de Integração Social/ Contribuição para o Financiamento da Seguridade Social (PIS/Cofins) e do Imposto sobre Produtos Industrializados (IPI) que incide sobre a venda de cigarros. Segundo ele, o preço final ao consumidor aumentará 20% no caso dos cigarros mais populares e 25% para os produtos mais sofisticados.
A medida já era esperada, de acordo com o gerente de assuntos regulatórios da Philip Morris, Maurício Jorge, mas a expectativa era que o governo simplificasse a tributação.
O setor reivindica a criação de uma alíquota única para o IPI, em substituição às seis existentes. Cigarros em embalagens de caixa sofrem uma tributação maior atualmente do que os maços, mas, no entanto, o valor de fabricação das embalagens é praticamente o mesmo. “Medidas como essa não fazem as pessoas parar de fumar, elas apenas migram de um cigarro mais caro para um mais barato.”
Fonte:Correio Braziliense

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Jabor: Que "coincidência"!Mantega diz que se contenta com crescimento 'modesto' da economia



Boa noite!Só agora tive tempo de acessar a web .
Vamos ao que interessa,quem acompanha este blog deve lembrar do post abaixo publicado no dia 20.Se por acaso você não leu clique no link:
Sei que este blog serve de "inspiração"para muitos...
Não é mesmo,Carlinhos H..?:):):)
Ora,vejam só que "coincidência"! Mantega diz que se contenta com crescimento 'modesto' da economia.O ministro da Fazenda, Guido Mantega, declarou nesta segunda-feira (30), que se satisfaz com um “crescimento relativamente modesto” do PIB (Produto Interno Bruto) Em declarações anteriores, Mantega sustentava que o país cresceria 2% neste ano.
P.S Carlinhos H,nunca disse que você está desatualizado....,até que gostei do seu texto...






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sábado, 28 de março de 2009

Jabor:Tudo o que você me desejar volte em dobro pra você



Ah,esses meus jovens leitores ,conhecer eles(os jovens) e suas histórias tem feito com que valorize a sorte."O meu livro Amor é Prosa,Sexo é Poesia é um dos mais vendidos de todos os tempos".Sinto orgulho em poder compartilhar essas experiências com leitores.Sinto-me totalmente "Zen". Leitores,que às centenas converteram-se em meus amigos e fãs.
Também gostaria de mandar um abraço aos meus leitores de outros países os quais não posso apertar a mão e nem abraçar como faço com os meus jovens leitores do blog.A todos os meus leitores fãs obrigado!
Tudo o que você me desejar volte em dobro pra você!!

Hora do Planeta


Um cenário diferente para quem passou pela Esplanada dos Ministério na noite deste sábado (28/3): com suas luzes apagadas, um dos principais pontos da capital do país marcou a participação de Brasília em um protesto mundial com o objetivo de alertar para os impactos das mudanças climáticas. Pela primeira vez, o Brasil juntou-se a 84 países na chamada Hora do Planeta, mobilização liderada pela organização não-governamental WWF. O vice-governador Paulo Octávio acionou no Museu Nacional um interruptor que deu início à sequência do desligamento das luzes da Esplanada.

No país, o apagar das luzes aconteceu entre 20h30 e 21h30 e 79 cidades aderiram à mobilização. No Rio de Janeiro, além do Cristo Redentor, o Pão de Açúcar e o Aterro do Flamengo apagaram as luzes. São Paulo, Porto Alegre, Manaus, Juazeiro do Norte (CE), Ouro Preto (MG), Posse (GO) e Salgueiro (PE) são algumas das cidades que também se juntaram ao movimento contra o aquecimento global.
A expectativa era que 1 bilhão de pessoas em todo o mundo que participassem do ato simbólico. Monumentos como as Pirâmides do Egito, a Ópera de Sidney e a Torre Eiffel, em Paris, apagaram as luzes. Parte do letreiro da Times Square, em Nova York, e a Golden Gate, em San Francisco também foram desligados. A China participou do protesto pela primeira vez, assim como o Brasil.
Correio Braziliense

Correio Braziliense:Lula pretende criar fundo com dinheiro do petróleo



Brasília - O presidente Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva dissenesta sábado (28/03), em Viña Del Mar, no Chile, que estuda criar um fundo com recursos da exploração de petróleo, semelhante ao feito na Noruega.Em ocasiões anteriores, em discursos no Brasil, o presidente já havia cogitado aplicar parte dos royalties da exploração do pré-sal no financiamento da área social e da educação.
Lula participa da Reunião de Líderes Progressistas, que se realiza no balneário chileno, onde ele se encontrou com o primeiro-ministro norueguês, Jens Stoltenberg.
No discurso, Lula apontou a América do Sul como alternativa à crise, além de destacar a ascensão da esquerda ao comando dos governos da região. “A América do Sul vive uma vigorosa onda de democracia popular, encabeçada por segmentos historicamente deserdados e marginalizados, que hoje encontram seu lugar e sua voz numa sociedade muito mais solidária. Não é mera coincidência que, hoje, predominem governos de esquerda na América Latina”, afirmou.
Agência Brasil-Correio Braziliense

Mundo:Centenas de pessoas protestam contra a crise em Madri



Centenas de pessoas foram às ruas neste sábado em Madri para protestar contra as soluções apresentadas até agora para a crise internacional, às vésperas da reunião do G-20 de quarta e quinta-feira em Londres.Alguns manifestantes, levaram cartazes com uma charge do presidente Barack Obama, com os dizeres "Não pagaremos suas crises capitalistas. É hora de mudar", passando diante da sede da Bolsa de Madri, do Banco de Espanha e outras entidades aos gritos de "é possível um outro mundo" e "é hora de uma greve geral".
A marcha finalizou com a leitura de um manifesto no qual se pedia para "arrebatar o poder econômico às finanças, realizar a socialização dos bancos e o controle social dos mercados financeiros, e erradicar os paraísos fiscais"."A classe trabalhadora não pode pagar por essa crise, mas os que fizeram fortuna sobre os anos de bonança econômica na Espanha", disse à imprensa o coordenador da coalizão ecologista e comunista Esquerda Unida, Cayo Lara.
A manifestação foi convocada por várias associações e organizações como parte da grande manifestação realizada neste sábado em Londres, a pedido da aliança "Put People first", ante a próxima celebração da cúpula do G-20 na capital britânica.
Fonte:France Press-Correio Braziliense
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Mundo:Los puntos de Alemania para la cumbre del G-20 en Londres


Las expectativas son inmensas. Políticos y economistas buscan la fórmula para hacerle frente a la más grave crisis económica de las últimas décadas. No en vano esta cumbre es considerada como la más importante desde el final de Guerra Fría. ¿Pero cuáles son los objetivos de la canciller alemana Angela Merkel?
Ya antes de Londres, la Unión Europea había dado, en efecto, muestras de solidaridad con los países más golpeados por la crisis. Así es como la UE le dará 75 mil millones de euros al Fondo Monetario Internacional (FMI) para soportes de emergencia a los Estados que lo requieran. Alemania contribuye aquí con 15 mil millones de euros.
“Cooperación y no aislamiento”, es el lema de la canciller alemana. Una “Carta global para una economía sostenible” será la propuesta de Alemania en Londres. Una fórmula con que la Berlín quiere evitar que el egoísmo y los intereses personales de algunos pocos dominen las decisiones.
Un organismo internacional debe asumir la vigilancia de las nuevas reglas del mercado financiero por definir, es lo que, por su parte, destaca el ministro alemán de Finanzas, Peer Steinbrück: "Alemania aboga por el fortalecimiento de instituciones internacionales como el Fondo Monetario y el Foro para la Estabilización de las Finanzas. Se trata primordialmente de que se establezcan mecanismos de alerta temprana y observación. Nosotros proponemos además que todos los participantes en el mercado financiero, todos los productos y todos los mercados financieros mismos estén sujetos a reglas específicas.”

Pero las reglas de las que habla Steinbrück podrían ir más allá de lo que los estadounidenses quisieran. Una regulación generalizada de los mercados financieros también incluye los Fondos Hedge, o “capitales golondrina”, la participación de accionistas en empresas y las agencias de rating, que estiman la capacidad de crédito de una empresa dándole una calificación según la confianza que inspiren en los mercados. Pero igualmente la remuneración de los altos gerentes estará en el tapete de discusión en Londres.

Bernd Grässler / José Ospina-Valencia
Deutsc
he Welle




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THE NY TIMES:Obama Will Face a Defiant World on Foreign Visit


Deu no NY Times:
By Helene Cooper
WASHINGTON — President Obama is facing challenges to American power on multiple fronts as he prepares for his first trip overseas since taking office, with the nation’s economic woes emboldening allies and adversaries alike.
Despite his immense popularity around the world, Mr. Obama will confront resentment over American-style capitalism and resistance to his economic prescriptions when he lands in London on Tuesday for the Group of 20 summit meeting of industrial and emerging market nations plus the European Union.
The president will not even try to overcome NATO’s unwillingness to provide more troops in Afghanistan when he goes on later in the week to meet with the military alliance.
He seems unlikely to return home with any more to show for his attempts to open a dialogue with Iran’s leaders, who have, so far, responded with tough words, albeit not tough enough to persuade Russia to support the United States in tougher sanctions against Tehran. And he will be tested in face-to-face meetings by the leaders of China and Russia, who have been pondering the degree to which the power of the United States to dominate global affairs may be ebbing.
Mr. Obama is unlikely to push for specific commitments from other countries on stimulus spending to bolster their own economies, White House officials acknowledged Saturday in a teleconference call, despite the fact that administration officials would like to see European countries, in particular, increase their spending to try to prompt a glo-bal economic recovery.
“Nobody is asking any country to come to London to commit to do more right now,” said Michael Froman, deputy national security adviser for international economic affairs. Instead, world leaders at the meeting will try to “do whatever is necessary to restore global growth,” Mr. Froman said.
The challenges stem in part from lingering unhappiness around the world at the way the Bush administration used American power. But they have been made more intense by the sense in many capitals that the United States is no longer in any position to dictate to other nations what types of economic policies to pursue — or to impose its will more generally as it intensifies the war in Afghanistan and extracts itself from Iraq.
“There is a direct challenge under way to the paradigms that America has been trying to sell to the rest of the world,” said Eswar S. Prasad, a former China division chief at the International Monetary Fund. The American banking collapse, which precipitated the global meltdown, has led to a fundamental rethinking of the American way as a model for the rest of the world. Yet even as his presence stirs opposition to particular American policies, Mr. Obama is being welcomed by many Europeans as an embodiment of American ideals.
In Prague, where Mr. Obama will stop later in the week, local officials are installing a hot line for residents to find out about street closings. In Strasbourg, France, site of a NATO meeting, protesters are planning an “international resistance camp” with antiwar actions designed to press Mr. Obama to get American troops out of Afghanistan. In Istanbul, his last stop, workers are polishing up the Hagia Sophia basilica-cum-mosque-cum-museum for the expected visit.
“The rest of the world is yearning for him,” said Kenneth Rogoff, a Harvard economist. “On the one hand, they’ll all be criticizing him, and criticizing the American model. But they all want to hear that he does have a miracle to deliver.”
The quandary has left senior advisers to Mr. Obama scrambling to come up with a way for him to project both American power and the new cooperative international model that his aides have been promising.
Mr. Obama will try to show confidence that his stimulus and economic program will work, administration officials said, while conceding that it may take time. He will say that he has put all the pieces in place to fix the American economy, while acknowledging that in a global system nations cannot put up walls to protect their individual economies.
Robert D. Hormats, vice chairman of Goldman Sachs International, said the president “must demonstrate to the world that he understands that it’s not just about saving ourselves.”
And Mr. Obama must try to do all of that in the middle of a global recession for which most of the world blames the United States. “The U.S. brand name has clearly suffered from this crisis, and the rest of the world is no longer willing to sit quietly and be lectured by the United States on how they should conduct economic policy,” Mr. Rogoff said.
A senior Obama administration official acknowledged that it would be harder for Mr. Obama to exhort other countries to adopt the American model. But Robert Gibbs, the White House spokesman, said Saturday in the conference call that Mr. Obama “is going to listen in London, as well as to lead.”
“Many of the things we’ve done in the past week demonstrate that America is leading by example,” he said.
In the past, American officials traveled to India, Brazil, China and South Africa and lectured government officials on the need for open markets, free trade and deregulation. But now some of those very policies — particularly deregulation — are viewed as the culprits for the recent economic collapse.
“Emerging markets now think they can do what they want without hectoring from the United States,” said Mr. Prasad, the former monetary fund official.
Compounding the problem for Mr. Obama is that the route that he has chosen to lead the United States out of the mess — heavy government spending — is not available to many other countries. European governments, for instance, are far more lukewarm about enormous stimulus programs because they already have strong social safety nets, and more fears of inflation, than does the United States.
So when Mr. Obama meets with other world leaders in London, he will be confronting a philosophical divide, with the United States on the defensive not just on economic issues like trade and financial regulation but also on a variety of national security and diplomatic matters.
After he leaves London, Mr. Obama will go to the French-German border for a NATO meeting at a time when European governments, under pressure from their populations, are looking for the exit doors in Afghanistan even as the United States sends more troops and money.
Administration officials had initially said they hoped to get more troop contributions at the NATO meeting; now they do not even talk about securing more troops from the Europeans, in a tacit acknowledgment that the forces will not be coming.
“I hope that Afghanistan will not be Obama’s war, because it should be owned by all of us,” said NATO’s secretary general, Jaap de Hoop Scheffer.
But there are already twice as many American troops as NATO troops in Afghanistan, and “Europe will never be able to match the numbers of the Americans in Afghanistan,” Mr. de Hoop Scheffer said. The NATO summit meeting, he said, “will not be about troop contributions.”
In Prague, Mr. Obama will confront an Eastern Europe nervous about Russian attempts to reassert itself in an area that Moscow views as its backyard. Mr. Obama has taken pains to reassure Russia that his administration will tread carefully regarding Bush administration plans to locate a missile defense system in Poland and the Czech Republic.
Yet in placating Russia, Mr. Obama has raised hackles in Poland, where officials seek closer ties to the United States.

quinta-feira, 26 de março de 2009

Jabor:"120 Days of Sodom"



Tudo bem!A correria é grande. Agora a noite depois de 24 horas é que tive tempo de acessar a web.Acabei de chegar tomei banho,café,liguei o som...Estou ouvindo música "De todas as Maneiras" um hit da década de 70.
Enquanto rola a música reflito:
Nesses meus 66 anos não consigo pensar em uma posição que ainda não tenha experimentado.
Acho que já experimentei todas as posições :sentado,em cima,virado de costas.Quase tudo:):)
Gostaria ,entretanto,de dar uma sugestão aos meus jovens leitores:"120 Days of Sodom ,do Marquês de Sade".:):)
Beijos molhados..
Fui


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Mundo:Con el plan el gobierno Obama rompe con décadas de desregulación financiera iniciada en los tiempos del presidente Reagan y Bush


Resumo:
Carlos Chirinos BBC Mundo, Washington
Este jueves el secretario del Tesoro de los Estados Unidos Timothy Geithner, explicó ante el Comité de Finanzas de la Cámara de Representantes del Congreso que propondrá expandir la supervisión federal del mercado financiero, incluyendo a instituciones que hasta ahora están fuera de esos controles. En sus palabras de apertura ante el Comité, Geithner aseguró que se trataba de una "reforma integral", aunque aclaró que los datos específicos se conocerán en las próximas semanas cuando el gobierno termine el diseño del plan.
"No se trata de modestas reparaciones al margen, sino de nuevas reglas del juego" afirmó el Secretario del Tesoro, quien agregó, sin dar detalles, que se creará una oficina que se encargará de supervisar el sistema financiero.
"Los productos y las instituciones financieras deben estar regulados por la función económica que proveen y los riegos que representan, no por la forma legal que adquieran" dijo Geithner, en referencia a las actuales normas que sólo regulan a los bancos tradicionales y dejan fuera sistemas surgidos en los últimos años.
"No podemos permitir que las instituciones escojan quien los va a regular y que se dirijan a aquellas donde enfrenten los estándares y las regulaciones más bajas", afirmó Geithner, quien en las últimas semanas ha estado asistiendo a interpelaciones parlamentarias para explicar cómo su oficina está manejando la actual crisis.
El camino que toma el gobierno Obama rompe con décadas de desregulación financiera iniciada en los tiempos del presidente republicano Ronald Reagan y profundizada bajo el mandato de George W. Bush.
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Mundo:Israel testa sistema de mísseis antifoguetes com sucesso

Israel realizou com sucesso nas últimas 48 horas uma série de testes de mísseis para se proteger de ataques de foguetes de curto e médio alcance, informou na noite desta quinta-feira (26/03) a rede de televisão israelense Channel Ten.
Durante os testes, o exército israelense disparou mísseis inteligentes que foram capazes de localizar, perseguir e interceptar em pleno vôo foguetes lançados de forma isolada ou simultaneamente.
Fonte:Agência France Press

Mundo:Coreia do Norte já posicionou foguete, dizem Estados Unidos

Os Estados Unidos e a Coreia do Sul advertiram nesta quinta-feira (26/03) para as sérias consequências de um possível lançamento de um foguete pela Coreia do Norte, entre 4 e 8 de abril. Funcionários norte-americanos afirmaram que Pyongyang já posicionou o projétil no nordeste do país para abastecimento. Os norte-coreanos afirmam que o foguete levará um satélite, mas outras nações suspeitam que o país usará o lançamento para testar uma tecnologia de mísseis de longo alcance, capazes de atingir o Estado norte-americano do Alasca.
A secretária de Estado norte-americana, Hillary Clinton, advertiu que tal "ato provocativo" pode ameaçar as emperradas negociações sobre o programa nuclear norte-coreano. Washington e outros países oferecem um pacote de incentivos em troca do fim do programa nuclear de Pyongyang.
A Coreia do Norte já avisou que adotará "duras medidas" caso o Conselho de Segurança (CS) da Organização das Nações Unidas (ONU) condene o lançamento do foguete. Em nota despachada pela agência estatal de notícias da nação comunista captada em Seul, o governo norte-coreano reafirmou que pretende apenas lançar um satélite de comunicações e reivindicou seu direito de desenvolver um programa espacial.
Fonte: Agência Estado

Mundo:Lula e primeiro-ministro britânico discutem fundo de US$ 100 bilhões para financiar comércio


Anfitrião da Cúpula do G20 financeiro que será realizada dia 2 de abril, em Londres, o primeiro-ministro britânico, Gordon Brown, proporá às maiores economias desenvolvidas e em desenvolvimento a criação de um fundo de US$ 100 bilhões para o financiamento do comércio.
A proposta foi apresentada nesta quinta-feira (26/03) ao presidente Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, no Palácio do Alvorada.
O fundo conta com a simpatia do governo brasileiro, assegurou o ministro das Relações Exteriores, Celso Amorim. Lula chegou a sugerir que a atual rodada de negociações da Organização Mundial do Comércio (OMC) fosse concluída durante a reunião do G20.
No encontro de Londres, os dois chefes de estado também pretendem defender medidas efetivas para a recuperação do crédito. Segundo Brown, 90% do comércio mundial depende de crédito.
Lula destacou que as medidas de saneamento do sistema financeiro não estão sendo suficientes para a retomada do desenvolvimento mundial. O caminho para isso, na avaliação do presidente, deve ser o estímulo ao crédito.“Sem crédito a economia vai atrofiar",disse Lula.
Fonte:Agência Brasil-Correio Braziliense

terça-feira, 24 de março de 2009

Jabor:Eu e meu caro amigo Jorge P

Não existe no Mundo um correspondente internacional como o meu amigo Jorge P.Pude acompanhar as suas reportagens nos Estados Unidos durante as eleições de Obama ... Jorge P é fluente em inglês,francês etc
Eu e o Jorge P nos conhecemos por acaso no Rio de Janeiro.Sinceramente não lembro a data.Lembro que foi na década de 70,estavamos em plena ditadura militar,no mundo acontecia a crise do petroleo.O incrível é ,que tínhamos em comum, somente a paixão pelo cinema...





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Mundo:Obama bate papo com os astronautas da Estação Espacial Internacional


WASHINGTON - O presidente Barack Obama deixou de lado por alguns minutos seus inúmeros problemas econômicos e voltou sua atenção para o espaço numa videoconferência que manteve nesta terça-feira (24/03) com os astronautas que atualmente orbitam a Terra.
Durante 30 minutos, o presidente, ladeado por alguns estudantes de Washington, conversou com os dez astronautas da Estação Espacial Internacional (ISS) que se encontra a 350 km de distância.Obama também fez perguntas sobre os padrões de condicionamento físico para suportar o rigor da vida no espaço e mencionou o filme "A coisa certa" (The Right Stuff, 1983) sobre as origens do programa espacial americano.
Correio Braziliense-France Press
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Obama: premiê australiano será nosso parceiro nos próximos anos


O presidente Barack Obama disse nesta terça-feira esperar que o primeiro-ministro da Austrália, Kevin Rudd, seja seu parceiro nos "próximos anos", após sua primeira reunião na Casa Branca.Rudd, que é visto como uma alma gêmea de Obama em termos políticos, destacou por sua vez que é bom poder contar de novo com os EUA para resolver os problemas econômicos do mundo e as questões relacionadas à mudança climática.
"Acredito que está fazendo um trabalho muito bom, e prevejo uma boa parceria com ele", disse o presidente americano, depois de se reunir com Rudd no Salão Oval durante mais de uma hora.Obama também sugeriu que receberia de bom grado a prorrogação da permanência de 1.100 militares australianos enviados ao Afeganistão ou um aumento de seu número.
A questão dessa permanência é assunto de grande dificuldade para Rudd: 65% dos australianos, segundo pesquisa recentemente divulgada pelo jornal The Australian, são contra o envio de mais tropas ao Afeganistão.
Agência France Press-Correio Braziliense

segunda-feira, 23 de março de 2009

Jabor:No túnel do tempo com Jorge P

Segunda feira.Tempo nublado.Meus pensamentos estão em New York.
Hoje ,vou homenagear um amigo de longa data : Jorge P ou Jorgito para os íntimos.
A inspiração pintou na madrugada de sábado (21)quando ao voltar da balada na casa de amigos,liguei a televisão e o Jorge P apareceu comentando a gafe de Obama num talkshow nos Estados Unidos.
Naquele momento, lembrei que eu e o Jorge P também já cometemos muitas gafes calientes nos idos dos anos 70.Como daquela vez que eu derramei cubalibre no seu corpo e depois "enxuguei" gentilmente ...
Lembrei das nossas noites calientes nos bares do Baixo Leblon,Galeria Alasca e Menescal ...Quando sem permissão entrei no seu corpo (naquele vai e vem frenético) você perdeu o folêgo e pediu para eu diminuir o ritmo...
Agora,não sei porque depois de tanto tempo,volto a lembrar do teu corpo nú diante de um espelho psicodélico..
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Mundo:Hamburgo será la “Capital Verde de Europa 2011”



Hamburgo es conocida internacionalmente por haber logrado reconciliar armoniosamente el carácter industrial de su aparato productivo con los paisajes rurales que la rodean; la cronometrada agitación de su puerto con el imperturbable ir y venir de las aguas que la cruzan; el pulso de la vida urbana con la serenidad de sus parques, bosques y arboledas. Ese es un atributo que no solamente atrae a numerosos turistas durante todo el año, sino que se traduce en una elevada calidad de vida para la mayoría de sus habitantes. Y esa es una de las razones por las que Hamburgo fue nombrada “Capital Verde de Europa 2011”.
Los evaluadores de la Comisión Europea se basaron en diez indicadores: acceso de la ciudadanía al transporte público, grado de contaminación acústica, nivel de producción de residuos y eficiencia en su administración, consumo de agua, tratamiento de las aguas residuales, gestión medioambiental de la autoridad local, aprovechamiento sostenible del suelo, grado de contribución local al cambio climático global, disponibilidad de zonas verdes abiertas al público y la calidad del aire que se respira.
Quienes seleccionaron a Hamburgo como “Capital Verde de Europa 2011” celebran el hecho de que casi todos sus habitantes puedan disfrutar de aire limpio.
Deutsche Welle

THE NY TIMES:U.S. Lays Out Plan to Buy Up to $1 Trillion in Risky Assets



Deu no The New York Times
By Brian Knowlton-Edmund L Andrews
WASHINGTON — The Obama administration formally presented the latest step in its financial
rescue package on Monday, an attempt to draw private investors into partnership with a new federal entity that could eventually buy up to $1 trillion in troubled assets that are weighing down banks and clogging up the credit markets.
The Dow Jones industrial average was up sharply in afternoon trading on Monday, gaining more than 270 points. When the Treasury secretary, Timothy F. Geithner, spoke on Feb. 10 of a bank rescue plan without offering much detail, investors took that as a worrying sign and the Dow fell sharply, losing 380 points.
The Treasury secretary did not deny the uncertainties inherent in the new program on Monday but defended it as a practical approach. “There is no doubt the government is taking a risk,” Mr. Geithner said, “the only question is how best to do it.”
President Obama said later that he and his economic advisers were “very confident” that the program outlined by Mr. Geithner would start to unclog the credit markets.
“It’s not going to happen overnight,” the president said after meeting with his economic team. “There’s still great fragility in the financial systems. But we think that we are moving in the right direction.”
The president also reiterated his pledge “to design the regulatory authorities that are necessary to prevent this kind of systemic crisis from happening again.”
The success or failure of the plan carries not only enormous stakes for the nation’s recovery but certain political risks for Mr. Geithner as well. At least two Republican lawmakers have called for his resignation. And on Sunday, Senator Richard C. Shelby of Alabama, the ranking Republican on the Banking Committee, told Fox News that “if he keeps going down this road, I think that he won’t last long.”
Initially, a new Public-Private Investment Program will provide financing for $500 billion in purchasing power to buy those troubled or toxic assets — which the government refers to more diplomatically as legacy assets — with the potential of expanding later to as much as $1 trillion, according to a fact sheet issued by the Treasury Department.
At the core of the financing package will be $75 billion to $100 billion in capital from the existing financial bailout known as TARP, the Troubled Assets Relief Program, along with the share provided by private investors, which the government hopes will come to 5 percent or more. By leveraging this program through the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and the Federal Reserve, huge amounts of bad loans can be acquired.
The private investors would be subsidized but could stand to lose their investments, while the taxpayers could share in prospective profits as the assets are eventually sold, the Treasury said. The administration said that it expected participation from pension funds, insurance companies and other long-term investors.
The plan calls for the government to put up most of the money for buying up troubled assets, and it would give private investors a clearly advantageous deal. In one program, the Treasury would match, one for one, every dollar of equity that private investors invest of their own money in each “Public Private Investment Fund.”
On top of that, the F.D.I.C. — tapping its own credit lines with the Treasury — will lend six dollars for each dollar invested by the Treasury and private investors. If the mortgage pool turns bad and runs big losses, the private investors will be able to walk away from their F.D.I.C. loans and leave the government holding the soured mortgages and the bulk of the losses.
The Treasury Department offered this example to illustrate how the program would work: A pool of bad residential mortgage loans with a face value of, say, $100 is auctioned by the F.D.I.C. Private investors submit bids. In the example, the top bidder, an investor offering $84, wins and purchases the pool. The F.D.I.C. guarantees loans for $72 of that purchase price. The Treasury then invests in half the $12 equity, using funds from the $700 billion bailout program; the private investor contributes the remaining $6.
An attractive feature of the program is that it will allow the marketplace to establish values for the assets — based, of course, on the auction mechanism that will signal what someone is willing to pay for them — and thus might ease the virtual paralysis that has surrounded those assets up to now.
For a relatively small equity exposure, the private investor thus stands to make a considerable return if prices recover. The government will make a gain as well. In the worst case, the bulk of the risk would fall on the government. The presumption, of course, is that the auction will lead to realistic purchase prices.
One institutional investor said he was surprised that the government was lending so much of the money, saying that private investors have been willing to buy up pools of mortgage-backed securities with less “leverage” or outside borrowing than the Treasury proposed on Monday.
The true magnitude of the toxic-asset purchase program could amount to well over $1 trillion. Buried in Mr. Geithner’s announcement was the detail that the Treasury would sharply revise and expand its joint venture with the Federal Reserve, known as the Term Asset-backed Secure Lending Facility, which was originally created to finance consumer lending and some forms of business lending.
Starting soon, that program will be expanded to finance investors who want to buy existing mortgages and mortgage-backed securities, including commercial real estate mortgages. By allowing the so-called TALF program to buy up older assets, as well as new loans, the Treasury and Fed will be putting nearly an additional $1 trillion on the line — on top of all the money being provided through the F.D.I.C. program and the Treasury partnership programs announced on Monday.
The department defined three basic principles underlying the overall program. First, by combining government financing, involving the F.D.I.C. and the Federal Reserve, with private sector investment, “substantial purchasing power will be created, making the most of taxpayer resources,” the fact sheet said.
Second, private investors will share both in the risk and in the potential profits, the Treasury Department said, “with the private sector investors standing to lose their entire investment in a downside scenario and the taxpayer sharing in profitable returns.”
The third principle is the use of competitive auctions to help set appropriate prices for the assets. “To reduce the likelihood that the government will overpay for these assets, private sector investors competing with one another will establish the price of the loans and securities purchased,” the department said.
By emphasizing that private investors will share in the risk, the Treasury Department seemed to be seeking to reassure ordinary taxpayers that they will not bear the entire downside burden of yet another $1 trillion program.
At the same time, administration officials strove over the weekend to reassure potential investors that they would not be subjected to the sort of pressures, criticism and public outrage that followed reports of multimillion-dollar bonuses to executives of the American International Group.
The Treasury Department defended its approach as a compromise that would avoid the dangers both of being too gradual an approach and of burdening taxpayers with the entire risk.
“Simply hoping for banks to work legacy assets off over time risks prolonging a financial crisis, as in the case of the Japanese experience,” the department said. “But if the government acts alone in directly purchasing legacy assets, taxpayers will take on all the risk of such purchases — along with the additional risk that taxpayers will overpay if government employees are setting the price for those assets.”
The plan relies on private investors to team with the government to relieve banks of assets tied to loans and mortgage-linked securities of unknown value. There have been virtually no buyers of these assets because of their uncertain risk.
But some executives at private equity firms and hedge funds, who were briefed on the plan Sunday afternoon, are anxious about the recent uproar over millions of dollars in bonus payments made to executives of the American International Group.
Some of them have told administration officials that they would participate only if the government guaranteed that it would not set compensation limits on the firms, according to people briefed on the conversations.
Mr. Geithner made it clear on Monday that no limits on executive compensation would be imposed on companies that invest — unless the companies are already subject to such limitations as recipients of TARP money — because the government does not want to discourage investor participation.

sábado, 21 de março de 2009

Jabor:"Au Revoir"

Agora a noite, é que pude acessar a web,passei o dia inteiro na praia,não fez sol caiu um temporal.
Conclusão:estou resfriado,o termômetro digital marca 39 graus(que febre),estou irritado,melancólico...
Pensarão os leitores que eu virei "emo",como aquele roqueiro do Greenday?Nada disso.O que me irritou foi a inconstancia de personalidade de um certo alguém.
Não importa o quanto eu dê a ele,nunca é suficiente,pois ele desconfia que eu o estou traindo.Diz que eu tenho affair com Deus e o mundo,fica a me espionar, bisbilhotar,feito o "Protógenes".
Por isso, tomei a decisão de dizer:Au Revoir.
Ou como diz aquela música:
Daí nosso caso de amor está desfeito
E o que parecia tão perfeito
Caiu desse jeito sem perdão
Pois é,
Então..
Bom,querido leitor, vou sair pra night(pra ver se melhoro o meu astral) sem hora pra voltar.



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THE NY TIMES:Obama Responds to Criticism From Cheney



Deu no THE NY TIMES:
WASHINGTON — President Obama has hit back at former Vice President Dick Cheney, calling Bush administration policy on detainees at the military prison at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, “unsustainable.”
“How many terrorists have actually been brought to justice under the philosophy that is being promoted by Vice President Cheney?” Mr. Obama said Friday in an interview to be broadcast Sunday on “60 Minutes” on CBS.
The president was responding to recent charges by Mr. Cheney that the administration’s decision to shut down the Guantánamo prison, along with other policies on the treatment of terrorism suspects, would make the United States more vulnerable to attacks.
Bush administration terrorism policy “hasn’t made us safer,” Mr. Obama said, according to excerpts of the interview released Saturday.
“What it has been,” he continued, “is a great advertisement for anti-American sentiment.”
Mr. Obama defended the Treasury secretary, Timothy F. Geithner, who has come under fire as public anger over bonuses paid to Wall Street executives has grown and the nation’s economic crisis has deepened.
Mr. Obama said he and Mr. Geithner had not discussed whether Mr. Geithner should resign. And even if Mr. Geithner offered to resign, the president joked that his response would be, “Buddy, you’ve still got the job.”

Lula: Obama é 1º dos EUA que mostra sintonia com América Latina


O presidente Luiz Inácio Lula Silva disse ontem(20) que o presidente dos Estados Unidos, Barack Obama, é a primeira autoridade norte-americana em várias décadas que mostra sintonia com os países da América Latina.
Durante o encerramento do seminário Oportunidades de Comércio, Negócios e Investimentos entre Argentina e Brasil, ao lado da presidente da Argentina, Cristina Kirchner, Lula voltou a dizer que reza pelo presidente norte-americano, pois boa parte da recuperação da economia mundial está vinculada à retomada do crescimento dos EUA. "Ele sabe o tamanho da crise lá, e ele sabe também que não vai salvar a economia colocando dinheiro para banqueiro quebrado", disse.
O presidente Lula não comentou a possível extradição, pelo Supremo Tribunal Federal (STF), do ex-ativista político Cesare Battisti, condenado à prisão perpétua pela Justiça italiana por quatro assassinatos no fim dos anos 70, quando fazia parte do grupo Proletários Armados pelo Comunismo (PAC). "Eu só falo sobre o Battisti quando houver uma decisão do Supremo porque vamos deixar primeiro o Supremo definir o que vai fazer", limitou-se a dizer.
Fonte Agencia Estado-Correio Braziliense

Mundo:Obama saúda retorno da França ao comando militar da Otan


WASHINGTON - O presidente dos Estados Unidos, Barack Obama, recebeu com entusiasmo a decisão da França de se unir ao comando militar integrado da Otan, que o país havia abandonado há 43 anos."Saúdo com entusiasmo a decisão do presidente francês, Nicolas Sarkozy, de reintegrar plenamente a França à Otan", afirmou Obama, em um comunicado."A participação da França no comando militar integrado da Otan contribuirá para formar uma Aliança mais forte e uma Europa mais forte", completou. "A Otan é a pedra angular da segurança transatlântica há 60 anos", acrescentou."Estou impaciente para discutir, em minha próxima visita à França e à Alemanha para a cúpula da Otan, por seu 60º aniversário, a maneira de nos assegurarmos de que nossa aliança reforçada, com a inteira participação da França em todas as suas estruturas, seja tão importante no século XXI, como o era no século XX", concluiu.
France Press-Correio Braziliense

sexta-feira, 20 de março de 2009

Jabor:Eu me contento com detalhes interessantes,tipo um nariz grande...




Ah,homens mais jovens.Se tem uma coisa que eu gosto são homens mais novos do que eu.
Falo com conhecimento e experiencia no assunto:Homem novo revigora,rejuvenece.
Homem novo não precisa tomar remedinho pra ficar com o pau duro. Algumas pessoas procuram um homem de beleza perfeita.
No entanto,eu me contento com os detalhes interessantes por exemplo um "nariz grande"(...)
Ah,essa foto seria bem melhor sem a bruaca que aparece lá no fundo.

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quinta-feira, 19 de março de 2009

Correio Braziliense:Ministros aprovam 19 condições e Raposa deve ser desocupada já


Os arrozeiros que ocupam a reserva indígena Raposa Serra do Sol, em Roraima, deverão desocupar imediatamente o local, conforme decisão tomada nesta quinta-feira (19/03) pelos ministros do Supremo Tribunal Federal (STF). Caberá ao relator da ação, ministro Carlos Ayres Brito, coordenar a execução da determinação.
Os ministros também aprovaram 19 condições para que seja colocada em prática a decisão de tornar legal a demarcação contínua da reserva indígena Raposa Serra do Sol, em Roraima, e desocupação da área pelos arrozeiros. Entre as ressalvas estão a relativização do usufruto das riquezas do solo, dos rios e dos lagos existentes nas terras sempre que houver relevante interesse público da União; e a dependência de autorização do Congresso para o aproveitamento pelos índios de recursos hídricos e potenciais energéticos.
A Corte determinou ainda que o usufruto dos índios não abrange a pesquisa e a lavra de riquezas minerais, que também dependerá de autorização do Congresso, assegurando a eles participação nos resultados; os índios também não terão direito à garimpagem nem à faiscação, dependendo-se o caso, ser obtida a permissão da lavra garimpeira.
O STF ressalvou ainda que o usufruto dos índios não se sobrepõe ao interesse da Política de Defesa Nacional. A instalação de bases, unidades e postos militares e demais intervenções militares, a expansão estratégica da malha viária, a exploração de alternativas energéticas de cunho estratégico e o resguardo das riquezas de cunho estratégico serão implementados independentemente de consulta às comunidades e à Fundação Nacional do Índio (Funai)
A atuação das Forças Armadas e da Polícia Federal (PF) na área também está garantida, sem que as entidades precisem consultar a comunidades indígenas e a Funai.
Também, os ministros deixaram livre a reserva para que a União possa instalar equipamentos públicos, redes de comunicação e construções necessárias à prestação de serviços públicos.
A Corte ainda decidiu que a atividade indígena na área afetada por unidades de conservação fica sob responsabilidade do Instituto Chico Mendes de Conservação da Biodiversidade. Ainda, a entidade responderá pela administração da área de unidade de conservação
Segundo o STF, o trânsito de visitantes e pesquisadores não-índios deve ser admitido na área afetada à unidade de conservação nos horários e condições estipulados pelo instituto; e permitido no restante da área da terra indígena, observadas as condições estabelecidas pela Funai.
Para o ingresso, não pode ser cobrada nenhuma tarifa. A cobrança, inclusive, não é permitida para a utilização das estradas, equipamentos públicos, linhas de transmissão de energia ou de quaisquer outros equipamentos e instalações colocadas a serviço do públicoAs terras indígenas não poderão ser objeto de arrendamento ou qualquer negócio jurídico; e caça, pesca ou coleta, assim como agropecuária extrativa, são atividades exclusivas dos índios da reserva.
De acordo com a Corte, as terras sob ocupação indígena e suas atividades estão livres do pagamento de impostos. O STF decidiu ainda proibir a ampliação da terra indígena já demarcada. As duas últimas ressalvas estipulam que os direitos dos índios relacionados às suas áreas são imprescritíveis e as terras, inalienáveis e indisponíveis; e que está assegurada a participação dos entes federativos durante o processo demarcatório .
Agencia Estado-Correio Braziliense