Friday 13 February 2015

Boko Haram regional mastermind arrested in Niger

The suspected mastermind of different attacks by Boko Haram
islamist sect in Niger’s Diffa region near the Nigerian border
has been arrested by Nigerian security forces, local media
reported Thursday.
Niger’s Anfani private radio station said the suspect going by the
name Kaka Bounou, was a trader based in Diffa. He had a title
of a captain in Boko Haram, and was behind all the attacks
carried out in Diffa.
“He is a habitual offender who had been arrested several times
and released, including by the Nigerian judiciary,” the same
source said. Elsewhere, security forces in Maine-Soroa town, 80 km west of
Diffa, on Thursday managed to halt a suicide bomber who was
carrying explosives.
Nigerien forces have continued with the fight against Boko
Haram and are still in the Nigerian territory where they have
liberated the town of Damasak that had been held by the islamist
sect for a long time.

Oil tops $60 for first time in 2015; oversupply persists

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Oil closed up for a second straight week on Friday after another drop in the U.S.
rig count, and Brent crude hit a 2015 high above $60 a barrel, but market skeptics cautioned the rally
could fade because supplies keep coming.
Many traders and analysts believe there is a global oversupply of nearly two million barrels per day of
crude oil.They say little has changed fundamentally to explain the price rebound of the past two weeks.
The number of oil drilling rigs in the United States fell this week to its lowest since August 2011, data
showed on Friday. But the market's reaction was relatively tepid compared with the past two weeks when
prices spiked on declining rig counts.
"I think people are starting to understand to a certain point that, even if rig counts go down, it's not going
to affect production in the short term. It's going to take a few months for that to happen," said Tariq
Zahir, managing member at Tyche Capital Advisors in Laurel Hollow in New York.
U.S. crude inventories have swelled to record highs of nearly 418 million barrels, government data showed
last week.
Brent settled the session up $2.24, or nearly 4 percent, at $61.52 a barrel. It rose a 6 percent on the week
and 15 percent month-to-date. Brent's gains increased this week after its front-month contract switched
on Thursday at a premium.
U.S. crude CLc1 finished $1.57, or 3 percent, higher at $52.78 a barrel.
Oil prices more than halved between June and January as a global glut pushed Brent from a summer peak
above $115 to a near six-year low under $46.
"Naturally, when prices fall that much within that short a time, you're likely to have a severe rebound as
well, though speculators are possibly adding more fuel on the way up now," said Phil Flynn, an analyst at
the Price Futures Group in Chicago.
Some traders attributed Friday's strength to an unexpected acceleration in euro zone economic growth in
the final quarter of 2014. The bloc's largest member, Germany, grew at more than twice the expected rate.
Market bulls were also betting that cuts in exploration budgets will help mop up some of the excess
supply.

Fighting rages in run-up to Ukraine ceasefire

By Anton Zverev
DONETSK, Ukraine (Reuters) - Ukraine and Russian-backed rebels fought fiercely across the east of the
country on Friday despite a new peace deal brokered by Germany and France.
A ceasefire is due to come into effect from Sunday under the agreement, which also envisages a
withdrawal of the heavy weapons responsible for many of the 5,000 casualties in the conflict that broke
out almost a year ago.
Kiev said pro-Russian rebels had built up their forces across separatist-held zones since the deal and both
sides accused each other of killing civilians.
Two people were killed and six wounded when a shell hit a cafe in the Kiev-controlled town of Shchastya
near rebel-held Luhansk in eastern Ukraine, a local official said, adding other shells had struck elsewhere in
the town.
"The town's heating system is broken, power lines are damaged as well as the water supply ... So this is
how a comprehensive ceasefire is prepared for," the head of the Kiev-controlled administration, Hennadiy
Moskal, said online.
The rebels accused Ukrainian forces of shelling the separatist stronghold of Donetsk and the town of
Horlivka, where they said on their website that three children had been killed.
The sound of artillery could be heard in the outskirts of Donetsk and clouds of black smoke hung over its
suburbs.
Outgoing fire from the Ukrainian side was visible on the road between Kiev-controlled Kramatorsk and
rebel-held Donetsk and rebels at a checkpoint near Donetsk said they had been hit by mortar strikes. They
mocked the impending truce.
"What sort of ceasefire? Don’t make me laugh. This is already the second or third ceasefire," one said.
The Group of Seven industrialised countries issued a statement late on Friday calling on all sides to refrain
from actions in the coming days that would hinder the start of the ceasefire. It said G7 countries were
ready to take "appropriate measures" against those who violate the agreement, an apparent threat of more
economic sanctions against Russia.
The deal, sealed by the leaders of Germany and France after 16 hours of all-night talks in Minsk, capital of
Belarus, with the Russian and Ukrainian presidents, was soon overshadowed by the clashes.
A Ukrainian military spokesman said 11 soldiers had been killed and 40 wounded in the past 24 hours.
"The enemy continues to build up forces in the main areas of the armed conflict," Andriy Lysenko said.
Fighting was intense around Debaltseve, a railway junction linking the two main rebel areas, where
separatists used rockets and artillery to attack government forces holding the town.
"Rebels are repeatedly storming the strongholds and base camp of Ukrainian forces," in and around
Debaltseve as well as firing artillery, mortars and rockets, Lysenko said, stressing that government troops
had held their positions.
The United States and Europe have threatened further sanctions against Moscow if the rebels seize more
territory.
DISAGREEMENTS
Ukraine's pro-Western president said he was not naive and wanted to make clear the country was a long
way from peace.
"Nobody has a strong belief that the peace conditions which were signed in Minsk will be implemented
strictly," Petro Poroshenko said.
Away from the battlefield, disagreements surfaced over whether a rebel amnesty or the release of a
Ukrainian pilot detained by Russia were part of the ceasefire deal.
Western diplomats said the European Union would go ahead on Monday with planned sanctions against 19
Ukrainian separatists and Russians, despite the ceasefire.
NATO and the United States said the fighting ran counter to the spirit, if not the letter of the agreement
and U.S. officials said further sanctions were still on the table.
At an EU summit in Brussels, the leaders of Germany, France and the European Council also said new
sanctions were possible.
The French, German, Russian and Ukrainian leaders are expected to speak again by phone on Saturday in
the hours before the ceasefire is due to take effect.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Moscow expected all points of the deal to be implemented, but
that Russia had not promised to free Nadezhda Savchenko, a detained Ukrainian pilot that Kiev wants free.
Her case would be decided by a Russian court, he said.
Ukraine said it had not agreed to an amnesty for all rebels, drawing an angry response from the
separatists.
Sanctions by the EU and United States have piled intense economic pressure on Russia's economy, which
has also been hit by a collapse in oil prices.
Russia's economy minister said he hoped sanctions would be lifted soon.
VAST "BUFFER ZONE"
On Thursday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel described the agreement with Russia on Ukraine as a good
start but said undertakings must now be respected.
Ukraine reported a new, mass influx of Russian armour into rebel-held eastern Ukraine as the agreement
was being finalised.
The deal calls for the withdrawal of heavy weapons from the front line when and if the ceasefire has taken
hold, and constitutional reform to give eastern Ukraine more autonomy.
The rebels have advanced far past an earlier ceasefire deal, agreed in September, and the new agreement
appears to envisage them pulling their guns back around 75 km, to take them back behind it, while
Ukrainian guns would move 25 km back.
This would leave a buffer zone 50 km wide, a challenge for the monitors from the Organization for Security
and Cooperation in Europe who are expected to patrol it. It also appears to take more territory outside
Kiev's control.
The White House, under pressure from Congress to provide arms to the stretched Ukrainian military, said
the deal was "potentially significant" but urged Russia to withdraw soldiers and equipment, and give
Ukraine back control over its border.
Russia denies arming the rebels and sending troops to fight alongside them, despite what Ukraine and its
Western allies say is overwhelming evidence.
(Additional reporting by Alessandra Prentice, Pavel Polityuk, Richard Balmforth, Gabriela Baczynska and
Alexander Winning; writing by Philippa Fletcher; Editing by Peter Millership and Janet Lawrence)