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Obama offered accolades, advice in Inauguration Day letter to Trump

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Before he left office in January, President Obama offered his successor accolades and advice in a private letter that underscored some…
Here’s our look at the Trump administration and the rest of Washington:
Before he left office in January, President Obama offered his successor accolades and advice in a private letter that underscored some of his concerns as he passed the baton.
In the letter, published Sunday by CNN, Obama praised President Trump, saying: «Congratulations on a remarkable run. Millions have placed their hopes in you, and all of us, regardless of party, should hope for expanded prosperity and security during your tenure.»
Obama went on to urge Trump to «build more ladders of success for every child and family, » to «sustain the international order» and to protect «democratic institutions and traditions.»
Obama wrote: «We are just temporary occupants of this office. That makes us guardians of those democratic institutions and traditions — like rule of law, separation of powers, equal protection and civil liberties — that our forebears fought and bled for.»
It is customary for presidents to leave notes for their successors. But typically these missives do not come to light so quickly. The handoff letters from President George W. Bush in 2009 and President Clinton in 2001 were revealed earlier this year. CNN reports it received the Obama letter from «someone Trump showed it to.»
After taking office, Trump praised the note from Obama, calling it a «beautiful letter» in an interview with ABC. Trump added that he called Obama to thank him for the note.
The White House declined to comment, as did a spokesman for Obama.
In the letter, Obama offered some advice: urging Trump to provide opportunities for those «willing to work hard, » arguing that American «leadership in this world really is indispensable» and asking him to leave «instruments of our democracy at least as strong as we found them.»
Obama also wrote that Trump should «take time, in the rush of events and responsibilities, for friends and family. They’ll get you through the inevitable rough patches.»
He concluded by wishing the «very best as you embark on this great adventure.»

© Source: http://www.latimes.com/politics/washington/la-na-essential-washington-updates-obama-offers-accolades-advice-in-1504479885-htmlstory.html
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What You Need To Know About The Latest Actions By North Korea

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Defense Secretary Mattis issued a stern warning regarding North Korea earlier today. This, after North Korea announced on Sunday afternoon via its state-run television that it had “tested a…
Defense Secretary Mattis issued a stern warning regarding North Korea earlier today. This, after North Korea announced on Sunday afternoon via its state-run television that it had “ tested a thermonuclear weapon, ” as reported by CBS News.
Secretary Mattis, from the West Wing of the White House on Sunday, told of a “massive military response, ” including potentially “total annihilation” of North Korea should it attack the U. S. or its allies, according to Politico . “Any threat to the United States or its territories, including Guam, or our allies, will be met with a massive military response—a response both effective and overwhelming, ” according to Mattis.
North Korea has conducted a number of missile tests over the last few months. But, this one was reportedly the largest and most powerful and came just hours after the North Korean government issued a video of Leader Un inspecting what was reported to be a hydrogen bomb. Once launched, the earthquake produced by the test was nearly 10 times more powerful than the one created during the last nuclear test by North Korea, as reported by Reuters. That test was about a year ago. A magnitude 6.3 earthquake was reported by the U. S. Geological Survey and was near a site well-known for previous tests reports Military.com. The epicenter of the quake was estimated to be several miles underground, consistent with a nuclear test. The U. S. military will now take air samples in the area of the Korean peninsula to confirm that there was, in fact, a nuclear test.
According to Pyongyang, this type of bomb is now ready to be loaded onto a long-range missile capable of hitting the U. S. If that is true, North Korea has hit another important milestone in its quest for nuclear capability. And, contrary to Secretary of State Rex Tillerson’s recent comments regarding North Korea showing “restraint, ” these actions seem to indicate heightened provocation.
While the North Koreans may be trying to send a message to the world, “they’ re trying to learn something new, ” according to North Korean expert Joel Wit, as reported by The Atlantic. In fact, they “may be experimenting with how to increase ‘yields,’ or the amount of energy released when a nuclear weapon is detonated.” This would lessen the need for accuracy on hitting the missile’s target.
Leader Un is believed to want the nuclear weapons to keep the U. S. and its allies from attacking North Korea or attempting some sort of coup to impose a regime change. And, he has spent a lot of money on the project. According to a recent article from Popular Mechanics, the North Korean government has “devoted about 25 percent of their entire gross domestic product to defense, and much of that to missiles.”
Even though North Korea is now making claims of being able to load a nuclear weapon onto a medium-to-long-range missile, that does not necessarily make the claim true. But, with each test, progress is made. And with each bit of progress, the options to the U. S. may get a bit more limited.
[Featured Image by KRT via AP Video/AP Images]

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Yen, bonds and gold all up after North Korea nuclear test

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The Japanese yen, gold and sovereign bonds all rose early on Monday as North Korea’s latest nuclear test provoked the usual knee-jerk shift to safe havens, while futures pointed to a difficult day for global equities.
SYDNEY (Reuters) — The Japanese yen, gold and sovereign bonds all rose early on Monday as North Korea’s latest nuclear test provoked the usual knee-jerk shift to safe havens, while futures pointed to a difficult day for global equities.
The dollar was marked down as deep as 109.22 JPY= yen at the opening, off a whole yen from late on Friday, but there was no follow-through selling and it was last at 109.76.
Japan is the world’s largest creditor nation and traders tend to assume Japanese investors would repatriate funds at times of crisis, thus pushing up the yen. Many wonder, however, if Japanese assets would really remain in favor if an actual shooting war broke out in Asia.
Nikkei futures NKc1, for instance, pointed to an opening drop of around 0.7 percent for Japanese stocks.
North Korea on Sunday conducted its sixth and most powerful nuclear test, which it said was of an advanced hydrogen bomb for a long-range missile, prompting the threat of a “massive” military response from the United States if it or its allies were threatened.
Speaking outside the White House after meeting with President Donald Trump and his national security team, U. S. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said Trump asked to be briefed on all available military options.
“Markets continue to treat each North Korean escalation as being the same as the previous instance, buying the yen, Swiss franc, treasuries and gold while selling the Aussie dollar — but not on a large scale, ” said Sean Callow, a senior forex strategist at Westpac.
“Assuming the worst on the Korean peninsula has not proven to be a winning trading strategy this year, ” he added. “Investors seem reluctant to price in anything more severe than trade sanctions, and the absence of another ‘fire and fury’ Trump tweet has helped encourage markets to respond warily.”
The dollar slipped to 0.9603 Swiss francs CHF= from 0.9646, and was off 0.15 percent against a basket of currencies at 92.672. The euro was a shade firmer at $1.1878 EUR= .
Gold also benefited, with a 0.8 percent increase to a 10-month peak of $1,335.80 XAU=.
In the futures markets, the U. S. Treasury 10-year contract <0#TY: > climbed 6 ticks in early trade, while E-Mini futures for the S&P 500 ESc1 dipped 0.4 percent. U. S. markets will be closed on Monday for the Labor Day holiday.
Wall Street ended last week on a mildly positive note after a tepid U. S. jobs report kept expectations muted for another interest rate hike this year.
The Dow ended Friday. DJI with a gain of 0.18 percent, while the S&P 500. SPX added 0.20 percent and the Nasdaq. IXIC 0.1 percent.
U. S. job growth slowed more than expected in August after two straight months of hefty increases. Non-farm payrolls increased by 156,000 last month, while economists had forecast an increase of 180,000.
On a brighter note, the Institute for Supply Management reported its factory activity index soared to 58.8 in August, the highest reading since April 2011.
Following the mixed data, Fed fund futures <0#FF: > implied around a 39 percent chance that the Federal Reserve could raise rates at its December meeting.
In the commodities market, oil prices were mixed in early Asian trade. U. S. crude CLc1 added 7 cents to $47.36 a barrel, while Brent crude LCOc1 eased 28 cents to $52.47.

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The Latest: UN Security Council sets urgent NKorea meeting

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The Latest on the nuclear test North Korea conducted Sunday — its sixth and largest so far (all times local) :
TOKYO (AP) — The Latest on the nuclear test North Korea conducted Sunday — its sixth and largest so far (all times local) :
5: 45 a.m.
The U. N. Security Council has scheduled an emergency meeting after North Korea conducted its most powerful nuclear test to date.
The U. S., Japan, France, Britain and South Korea requested Monday’s meeting after North Korea detonated what it called a hydrogen bomb.
It will be the Security Council’s second urgent session in under a week on the North’s weapons tests, which have continued in the face of a series of sanctions.
After North Korea launched a ballistic missile over Japan, the council Tuesday strongly condemned the test and reiterated demands that Pyongyang halt its ballistic missile and nuclear weapons programs.
Monday could bring additional condemnation and discussion of other potential steps.
Meanwhile, U. N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres condemned Sunday’s nuclear test. His spokesman calls it «profoundly destabilizing for regional security.»
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4: 35 a.m.
U. S. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis is responding to North Korea’s latest nuclear test by saying threats to the United States and its allies «will be met with a massive military response.»
Mattis spoke at the White House on Sunday following a meeting with President Donald Trump and national security advisers. He says any response will be «both effective and overwhelming.»
Mattis says the United States is «not looking to the total annihilation» of North Korea, but added «we have many options to do so.»
North Korea claimed «perfect success» in an underground test of what it called a hydrogen bomb — potentially vastly more destructive than an atomic bomb. It was the North’s sixth nuclear test since 2006, but the first since Trump took office in January.
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2: 30 a.m.
The president of the European Commission says North Korea’s latest nuclear test compels the international community to unite in swift and decisive reaction.
Donald Tusk said the European Union stands ready to sharpen its policy of sanctions and invites North Korea to restart dialogue on its nuclear and missile programs without condition.
In Sunday’s statement, Tusk said the EU calls on the U. N. Security Council «to adopt further U. N. sanctions and show stronger resolve to achieve a peaceful denuclearization of the Korean peninsula, » adding, «The stakes are getting too high.»
He said North Korea must abandon its nuclear weapons of mass destruction and ballistic missile programs in a verifiable and irreversible manner and it must cease all related activities at once.
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2: 20 a.m.
Turkey has strongly condemned the latest North Korean nuclear test.
In a statement published Sunday, Turkey’s foreign ministry said the test was «irresponsible and provocative, » while ignoring international law and endangering regional peace and security.
Turkish troops were part of a United Nations command aiding South Korea during the Korean War between 1950 and 1953. More than 700 soldiers died in the battles.
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1: 35 a.m.
President Donald Trump says the United States is considering halting trade with «any country doing business with North Korea.»
Trump said on Twitter Sunday that the approach was under consideration, «in addition to other options, » after North Korea detonated a thermonuclear device in its sixth and most powerful nuclear test.
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said Sunday that he was putting together new sanctions seeking to cut off trade with North Korea. On «Fox News Sunday, » Mnuchin described Pyongyang’s behavior as «completely unacceptable.»
Trump is meeting with his national security team Sunday afternoon to discuss North Korea.
The president was asked if he would attack North Korea as he left a church service Sunday. He said: «We’ll see.»
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1: 30 a.m.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has spoken by telephone with Japanese leader Shinzo Abe and urged restraint in responding to North Korea’s claim to have set off a hydrogen bomb test.
Putin, in China for a meeting of leaders of the BRICS economic bloc, called Abe on Sunday.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told journalists that Putin «said the international community could not give in to emotions, should act calmly and deliberately, and stressed that the complex settlement of the nuclear and other problems of the Korean Peninsula can be achieved exclusively through political and diplomatic means.»
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1: 10 a.m.
North Korea has claimed a «perfect success» for its most powerful nuclear test so far, a further step in the development of weapons capable of striking anywhere in the United States.
U. S. President Donald Trump, asked if he would attack the North, said, «We’ll see.»
The president was meeting later Sunday with his national security team. North Korea’s nuclear test was the first since Trump took office in January.
In a series of tweets, Trump said the latest provocation from the isolated communist country reinforces the danger facing America. He said «talk of appeasement» is pointless because «They only understand one thing!»
After attending church in Washington, the president made his «We’ll see» comment in response to a question from reporters.
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12: 55 a.m.
India, Pakistan and the Philippines are among many Asian nations condemning North Korea’s nuclear test.
Philippine Foreign Affairs Secretary Alan Peter S. Cayetano, in Seoul for an official visit Sunday, said his country is «gravely concerned» about the detonation and added, «Such provocative actions undermine regional peace and stability.»
Cayetano says the Association of Southeast Asian Nations is ready to help in any effort to ease the tensions through dialogue.
The Indian Ministry of External Affairs issued a statement deploring Sunday’s blast. It says the North «once again acted in violation of its international commitments.»
Pakistan’s condemnation of the test also urged all sides «to display utmost restraint and return toward the path of peaceful negotiated settlement of the issue.»
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12: 50 a.m.
A member of the Senate Intelligence Committee is describing North Korea’s leader as «both spoiled and reckless.»
Sen. Roy Blunt says those traits he’s attributing to Kim Jong Un aren’t «a unique thing to find in the world today.» But the Missouri Republican says «it is unique with somebody who has control of what may now be hydrogen weapons as well as nuclear weapons.»
North Korea says it’s detonated what it’s describing as a hydrogen bomb — in its sixth and most powerful nuclear test to date.
President Donald Trump is meeting later Sunday with his national security team to discuss North Korea.
Blunt tells NBC’s «Meet the Press» that he thinks «the president putting everything on the table is not a bad thing right now.»
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12: 10 a.m.
North Korea’s neighbors are looking for radiation from its nuclear test, but they might not find any.
The North said the underground test site where it detonated what it described as a hydrogen bomb did not leak radioactive materials. If that’s true, it will be difficult for outsiders to determine whether the device was indeed a thermonuclear weapon or a simpler nuclear bomb.
Japan’s Nuclear Regulation Authority says no abnormal change in radiation levels had been detected on monitoring posts across the country as of Sunday night.
China’s National Nuclear Safety Administration says it activated nuclear radiation-related environmental contingency plans shortly after the test was conducted. It said in a statement on its website that automatic environmental radiation monitoring stations in China’s northeast were operating normally.
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12: 09 a.m.
Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin have discussed North Korea’s nuclear test in a meeting on the sidelines of a Beijing-led summit of five large emerging economies.
The official Xinhua News Agency said Sunday the two leaders «unanimously agreed to adhere to the goal of the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula, have close communication and coordination and properly respond» to Sunday’s test.
North Korea detonated what it called a hydrogen bomb. It was its sixth and most powerful nuclear test to date.
The blast could overshadow the summit of BRICS nations — Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa. It’s being held Monday and Tuesday in the southeastern Chinese city of Xiamen.
Xi gave a speech to business representatives of the five countries on Sunday without mentioning the test.
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12: 07 a.m.
Finland has strongly condemned North Korea’s nuclear test, saying it continues that country’s «series of grave violations of international obligations, which have become more common during this year.»
Describing the test as «a very dangerous and irresponsible act that will further aggravate the situation, » Foreign Minister Timo Soini said Sunday that claims the test was the strongest conducted by North Korea so far and that according to its own statement was a hydrogen bomb «are particularly alarming.»
In neighboring Sweden, Foreign Minister Margot Wallstrom tweeted that the test was «a turn for the worse. Further endangers international peace, stability. UNSC role important, » while Norway’s foreign minister, Borge Brende, said North Korea’s action was «totally unacceptable» and urged the international community to react.
___
12: 05 a.m.
British Prime Minister Theresa May has said the North Korean weapon test poses an «unacceptable further threat» to the international community.
May said in a statement Sunday that the international community must come together to increase the pressure on North Korea.
She said tougher action is needed, including speeding up the implementation of sanctions.
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12 a.m.
The head of the U. N. test ban treaty organization says the sanctions against North Korea over its nuclear weapons program aren’t working.
Lassina Zerbo, who heads the Vienna-based Comprehensive Test Ban Organization, also notes that while North Korea previously announced its nuclear tests in advance, now the announcements are coming hours after the test.
Zerbo said that international sanctions seem not to be stopping the North «from going beyond the acceptable in terms of their nuclear weapons program.»
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11: 40 p.m.
Sen. Ted Cruz says North Korea’s nuclear test calls for serious steps to prevent it from using those weapons, including economic sanctions.
Speaking Sunday on ABC’s «This Week, » Cruz said the U. S. should «use economic leverage to go against not only North Korea but every financial institution, every company that does business with North Korea.» He said most of them rely on the U. S. financial system, «so cutting off their money is another critical part» to putting pressure on Pyongyang.
The Texas Republican, a member of the Armed Services Committee, also called for enhancing missile defense to give the U. S. the capability to destroy an ICBM fired from North Korea.
He said President Donald Trump was right to talk tough with the North Korean leader, who he said only understands and respects strength.
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11 p.m.
U. S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin says he is putting together new sanctions seeking to cut off trade with North Korea after it detonated a thermonuclear device in its sixth and most powerful nuclear test.
Speaking on «Fox News Sunday, » Mnuchin described Pyongyang’s behavior as «completely unacceptable.»
Mnuchin says the sanctions package being drafted for President Donald Trump’s consideration will make clear that if countries want to do business with the U. S., they will have to cut off North Korea economically.
Mnuchin says the U. S. is continuing to work with allies and China to exert pressure on North Korea.
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10: 45 p.m.
The office of German Chancellor Angela Merkel says North Korea’s provocations have «reached a new dimension» with the nation’s sixth nuclear test.
Merkel spoke on the phone Sunday with French president Emmanuel Macron. Her office says both leaders «condemn North Korea’s new nuclear tests in the sharpest possible terms» and that «the latest provocation by the rulers in Pyongyang has reached a new dimension.»
Macron’s office said he, Merkel and Italian Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni agree on the need for a «strong international reaction» against North Korea, including new sanctions from the European Union.
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10: 25 p.m.
The White House says President Donald Trump and his national security team plan a meeting later Sunday to discuss North Korea, in the wake of the North’s announcement that it has conducted its most powerful nuclear test to date.
The White House says the president’s team is «monitoring this closely.»
Trump has reacted to the test by calling North Korea «a rogue nation» whose «words and actions continue to be very hostile and dangerous to the United States.»
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9: 25 p.m.
Britain and Italy are among the many nations condemning North Korea over its sixth nuclear test Sunday.
British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson called the test «reckless» in a statement and said «all options are on the table.»
Italian Foreign Minister Angelino Alfano said in a statement that North Korea must immediately abandon its nuclear and missile development program.
He also urged the North Koreans to stop going down the path of increasing self-isolation. Alfano pledged that Italy would do its part to at achieve a «firm and cohesive response» by the international community to North Korea’s latest challenge.
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9: 20 p.m.
The European Union’s foreign policy chief says North Korea’s sixth nuclear test represents a «major provocation» and «a grave threat to regional and international security.»
Federica Mogherini also said in a statement that Pyongyang «must abandon its nuclear, weapons of mass destruction and ballistic missile programs in a complete, verifiable and irreversible manner and immediately cease all related activities.»
Mogherini said she will meet Monday with Yukiya Amano, head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, to discuss North Korea.
North Korea’s nuclear test Sunday was apparently its most powerful yet. The country’s state-controlled media say it was a thermonuclear device and a «perfect success.»
___
9: 15 p.m.
NATO’s secretary-general has strongly condemned North Korea’s sixth nuclear test, calling it «yet another flagrant violation of multiple U. N. Security Council resolutions.»
Jens Stoltenberg also said in a statement that «NATO is concerned by Pyongyang’s destabilizing pattern of behavior, which poses a threat to regional and international security.»
He called on North Korea to «immediately cease all existing nuclear and ballistic missile activities in a complete, verifiable, and irreversible manner, and re-engage in dialogue with the international community.»
North Korea’s nuclear test Sunday was apparently its most powerful yet. The country’s state-controlled media say it was a thermonuclear device and a «perfect success.»
___
9 p.m.
The head of the U. N. atomic energy agency says the latest test of a nuclear weapon by North Korea is of «grave concern.» He’s urging Pyongyang to heed U. N. demands to stop such testing and mothball its nuclear program.
Yukiya Amano says the International Atomic Energy Agency «continues to closely follow developments.» But while the IAEA is policing Iran’s nuclear program, its abilities to monitor the North’s program are limited.
Its inspectors have been shut out of the country since 2002, and North Korea unilaterally withdrew from the nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty a year later.
___
8: 45 p.m.
President Donald Trump has reacted to what he’s calling «a major Nuclear Test» by North Korea — branding the North «a rogue nation» whose «words and actions continue to be very hostile and dangerous» to the United States.
North Korea says it has conducted its sixth and most powerful nuclear test to date — and claiming a «perfect success.»
Trump tweets that North Korea «has become a great threat and embarrassment to China, which is trying to help but with little success.»
China is by far the North’s biggest trading partner.
___
7: 25 p.m.
French President Emmanuel Macron has condemned «in the strongest possible terms» North Korea’s sixth nuclear test.
In a written statement, Macron «calls on the members of the United Nations Security Council to quickly react to this new violation by North Korea of international law.»
He also calls for a «united and clear reaction of the European Union.»
He says the international community «must treat this new provocation with the utmost firmness» to bring North Korea back to the path of dialogue and give up its nuclear and missile programs.
North Korea’s nuclear test Sunday was apparently its most powerful yet. State-controlled media say it was a hydrogen bomb. South Korea’s weather agency says the detonation set off a magnitude 5.7 earthquake.
___
6: 35 p.m.
The Russian Foreign Ministry says North Korea’s claim to have tested a hydrogen bomb «deserves the strongest condemnation.» It’s calling for all parties to refrain from escalating tensions further.
The ministry issued a statement Sunday urging immediate dialogue and negotiations. It says that’s the only way settle the Korean Peninsula’s problems, «including the nuclear one.»
The ministry says Russia reaffirms its readiness to participate in negotiations, «including in the context of the implementation of the Russian-Chinese road map.» Under that proposal, North Korea would suspend nuclear and missile tests in exchange for the U. S. and South Korea suspending their joint military exercises.
North Korea’s nuclear test Sunday was apparently its most powerful yet. The country’s state-controlled media say it was a thermonuclear device and a «perfect success.»
___
6: 20 p.m.
A Chinese expert on North Korea says the country conducted its sixth nuclear test Sunday to damage the atmosphere at the summit of the Chinese-led group of large and emerging countries known as BRICS.
The summit of leaders from Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa is being held Monday and Tuesday in the southeastern Chinese city of Xiamen. A related business forum opened Sunday with a keynote speech by Chinese President Xi Jinping, who said nothing of the missile test.
Cheng Xiaohe (CHUHNG-She’ow-huh) of Renmin University says the latest test means «the Korean Peninsula situation will be at a stage of new crisis.»
He says North Korea has demonstrated that it is not afraid of any pressure, which leaves other parties with few options.
___
6 p.m.
China’s foreign ministry has condemned North Korea’s sixth nuclear test.
The ministry said in a statement Sunday that the Chinese government has «expressed firm opposition and strong condemnation» of Sunday’s detonation.
China urged North Korea to «stop taking erroneous actions that deteriorate the situation.»
North Korea’s nuclear test Sunday was apparently its most powerful yet. The country’s state-controlled media say it was a thermonuclear device.
___
5: 10 p.m.
South Korea says it wants to answer North Korea’s sixth nuclear test with the strongest measures possible.
South Korea’s National Security Director Chung Eui-yong said Sunday that President Moon Jae-in will seek every available diplomatic measure, including new sanctions from the United Nations Security Council. He says Moon will also discuss with Washington ways to deploy the «strongest strategic assets» the U. S. has to completely isolate Pyongyang.
The president’s office would not comment on it means by «strongest strategic assets.»
The response comes in the wake of the North’s confirmation that it has successfully tested a hydrogen bomb of «unprecedented» strength meant to be loaded into an intercontinental ballistic missile. The nuclear test triggered a strong earthquake.
__
4: 10 p.m.
South Korea’s presidential office says the security chiefs for Seoul and Washington have spoken following North Korea’s sixth nuclear test.
The office says U. S. National Security Adviser H. R. McMaster spoke with his South Korean counterpart, Chung Eui-yong, for 20 minutes in an emergency phone call about an hour after the detonation.
North Korea’s nuclear test Sunday was apparently its most powerful yet. State-controlled media say it was a hydrogen bomb. South Korea’s weather agency says the apparent detonation set off a magnitude 5.7 earthquake, making the blast five to six times stronger than the North’s fifth test in September 2016.
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3: 45 p.m.
North Korean TV says the country has successfully conducted a test of a hydrogen bomb that is meant to be loaded into an intercontinental ballistic missile.
The TV anchor announced the test’s success on Korean Central Television, hours after Seoul and Tokyo detected unusual seismic activity at North Korea’s nuclear test site. The announcer says North Korea’s leader Kim Jong Un ordered the test.
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3: 30 p.m.
South Korea’s weather agency says an apparent nuclear test by North Korea appears to have been several times stronger than its previous test.
The Korea Meteorological Administration estimated Sunday that the nuclear blast yield of the presumed test was between 50 to 60 kilotons, or five to six times stronger than the North Korea’s fifth test in September 2016.
North Korea is believed to have conducted a test after a magnitude 5.7 earthquake was detected earlier Sunday. The previous test created seismic waves with a magnitude of 5.0.
Japan’s defense minister says the larger magnitude of the earthquake suggests «capability significantly exceeding the last one.»
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2: 55 p.m.
North Korea’s state broadcaster says an important announcement is coming at 3 p.m. in Pyongyang. That would be 3: 30 p.m. in Seoul and Tokyo, and 2: 30 a.m. EDT.
KRT did not give any details of the announcement, but it comes after earthquake activity was detected earlier Sunday in what is presumed to have been a North Korean nuclear test.
The apparent test came hours after North Korea said its leader had inspected a hydrogen bomb meant for a new intercontinental ballistic missile. The report could not be independently verified.
Copyright 2017 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Manjaro Gellivara 17.0.3 Arch-based Linux distro now available — final 32-bit release

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Tomorrow is Labor Day, meaning for many of you, this is a three-day weekend. While some folks will use this time to relax, we computer geeks will instead tinker with hardware and try new software. If you like to install and play with various…
Tomorrow is Labor Day, meaning for many of you, this is a three-day weekend. While some folks will use this time to relax, we computer geeks will instead tinker with hardware and try new software. If you like to install and play with various Linux-based operating systems, Labor Day Weekend is perfect for this!
Today, version 17.0.3 of the Manjaro Gellivara Linux distribution becomes available. This Arch-based operating system is quite the satisfying experience — I highly recommend it. This will be the final «Gellivara» release, which also means it is the final 32-bit version of Manjaro. Yes, folks, for the next major version of the operating system, you will need 64-bit hardware to use this distro. If your hardware is still 32-bit only, please buy a new machine already!
«Manjaro Gellivara was a great release! Now we are proud to announce v17.0.3, our final release of Gellivara. It took us a little over two months to finish this updated version. We improved our hardware detection, fixed some features in our installer (Calamares) , added the latest packages available to our install media and polished our release as a whole, » says Philip Müller, Manjaro.
Müller further says, «Due to the decreasing popularity of i686 among the developers and the community, we have decided to phase out the support of this architecture. The decision means that v17.0.3 ISO will be the last that allows to install 32 bit Manjaro Linux. September and October will be our deprecation period, during which i686 will be still receiving upgraded packages. Starting from November 2017, packaging will no longer require that from maintainers, effectively making i686 unsupported.»
Philip Müller shares the following changes in version 17.0.3 of the OS.
Ready to give this version of Manjaro Linux a try? You can download the ISO here. Besides choosing between 32-bit and 64-bit, you also have three desktop environment options — GNOME, KDE, and Xfce. All three are solid choices, so you really can’t go wrong. If you have more meager hardware, however, Xfce is the most lightweight of the trio.

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Скандал с граффити Евромайдана: владелец магазина сообщил о закрытии

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Игорь Доценко уверяет на своей странице в Facebook, что ни он, ни его сотрудники не стирали граффити с магазина, а стали заложниками вандалов.
КИЕВ, 3 сен — РИА Новости Украина. Владелец салона мебели «Эмпориум» по улице Грушевского в Киеве Игорь Доценко сообщил о закрытии магазина после череды событий, связанных с исчезновением с фасада памятных граффити времен Майдана и погрома с сожжением шин и разбитием витрин радикальными организациями. О решении закрыть магазин владелец сообщил на своей странице в Facebook.
При этом Игорь Доценко уверяет, что ни он, ни его сотрудники не стирали граффити с магазина, а стали заложниками вандалов.
«Уважаемые граждане! Салон «Эмпориум» закрыт! Несмотря на то, что мы три половиной года смотрели и ухаживали за граффити, мы стали заложниками провокаторов, которые и закрасили эти работы для того, чтобы совершить этот акт вандализма. Около 200 из вас изысканным матерным словом меня поносили, но при этом ко мне в друзья попросилось более полутысячи человек, а именно это важно! Тем не менее, я надеюсь, что полиция и суд разберутся, кто, где и как. Всем всего наилучшего!», — отметил Игорь Доценко.
Однако в сети разместили фото владельца магазина, который присутствовал во время уничтожения граффити.
В воскресенье, 3 сентября, протестную акцию у магазина анонсировали в националистической организации «С14».
Напомним, в Киеве с фасада магазина «Эмпориум» исчезли граффити, на которых изображены писатели Тарас Шевченко, Иван Франко и Леся Украинка.

© Source: http://rian.com.ua/kiev/20170903/1027322080.html
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У Києві закрився салон меблів, на фасаді якого були знищені графіті часів Майдану

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Розташований у центрі Києва по вулиці Грушевського салон меблів «Емпоріум», з фасаду якого були стерті графіті часів Революції гідності, закрився….
Розташований у центрі Києва по вулиці Грушевського салон меблів «Емпоріум», з фасаду якого були стерті графіті часів Революції гідності, закрився. Про це на своїй сторінці в Facebook повідомив директор магазину Ігор Доценко.
«Салон» Емпоріум «закритий! Не дивлячись на те, що ми три з половиною роки дивилися і доглядали за графіті, ми стали заручниками провокаторів, які і зафарбували ці роботи, для того щоб вчинити цей вандалізм», – зазначив він. Він висловив надію, що «поліція і суд розберуться» в даній ситуації.
Нагадаємо, сьогодні стало відомо, що Український інститут національної пам’яті готує звернення в поліцію і Генеральну прокуратуру за фактом вандалізму в зв’язку зі знищенням у Києві графіті із зображенням класиків української літератури, створеної під час Революції гідності і оголошеного пам’ятником історії.
Пізніше генеральний прокурор Юрій Луценко заявив, що Київська прокуратура відкрила кримінальне провадження за даним інцидентом .

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Malcolm Turnbull: Korean peninsula closer to war than any time in 60 years

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Australian prime minister warns that North Korea’s nuclear test has raised tensions to an alarming extent and urged China to respond
Malcolm Turnbull has labelled Kim Jong-un “evil” and warned the Korean peninsula is “closer to war than at any time” since the Korean War.
In comments to ABC’s AM on Monday the prime minister also used the crisis to discourage the Labor opposition from causing chaos in parliament, accusing it of “playing political games” rather than focusing on the international events.
The foreign minister, Julie Bishop, said the North Korean test of a hydrogen bomb was a “serious escalation” of tensions on the peninsula, warning the bomb was “exponentially more powerful than previous tests”.
Turnbull said that although North Korea “is not a puppet state of China”, China had the “overwhelmingly dominant economic relationship” with North Korea and “can do more” to resolve the crisis.
“This test is a direct affront to China … Kim Jong-un has chosen to affront China, to defy China, and this calls for a strong Chinese response, ” he said.
Asked if China could cut off North Korea’s oil, Turnbull said that “absolutely would be a lever that China could pull, and that would put enormous economic pressure on the regime”.
“The Chinese are frustrated and dismayed by North Korea’s conduct, but China has the greatest leverage, and with the greatest leverage comes the greatest responsibility.
“Having a near-neighbour that is bringing the Korean peninsula closer to war than at any time since the end of the Korean War cannot possibly be in China’s interests.”
Asked if he shared former prime minister John Howard’s assessment that Kim was “evil”, Turnbull said: “Yes, I don’ t think there is any doubt about that.”
Turnbull cited Kim’s assassinations of members of his family and starvation of the North Korean people. “This is a shocking, dangerous, provocative, illegal regime that is threatening the peace and security of the region and the world.”
Asked about Labor’s threat to disrupt parliament to put pressure on deputy prime minister Barnaby Joyce over his eligibility to sit as an MP, Turnbull said it “says a lot about the Labor party” that it would do so “when we’ re facing the greatest threat of war on the Korean peninsula in 60 years”.
“Australians will be sickened by the sight of the Labor party’s failure to recognise the priorities of the Australian parliament, is to keep Australians safe and to support the opportunity, the economic opportunity that Australians deserve, ” he said.
“That requires the parliament to focus on the real issues, rather than playing political games.”
At a doorstop in Canberra, Bishop said new sanctions that will take effect in September were “the toughest most comprehensive set of sanctions against North Korea to date” and must be used to deter it from “carrying out any more illegal tests”.
The sanctions ban coal, lead, iron ore and seafood exports, and introduce new visas for North Korean workers so they cannot send remittances home.
Asked about Donald Trump’s threat that the United States is considering cutting trade with countries that do business with North Korea, such as China, Bishop said it was a “very significant step”.
“It reflects the gravity with which the United States views the current situation with North Korea, ” she said. But the current round of sanctions had been supported by China and “they have a long way to go”.
Asked if Australia could stop trading with China to put pressure on North Korea, Bishop said both China and the United States were major trading partners and Australia wanted “to avoid any kind of trade war” between the two.
“We certainly back the United States’ concerns and the concerns of China that North Korea should be prevented from accessing the finance that it is using for its illegal weapons program.”

© Source: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/sep/04/malcolm-turnbull-korean-peninsula-closer-to-war-than-any-time-in-60-years
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More sensors to be installed in pipes to reduce water loss

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SINGAPORE: More than 320 sensors have already been installed in Singapore’s potable water supply pipelines to detect water leaking from them, national water agency PUB said. To further reduce the amount of water lost through leakage, the installation of sensors will be extended to include…
SINGAPORE: More than 320 sensors have already been installed in Singapore’s potable water supply pipelines to detect water leaking from them, national water agency PUB said.
To further reduce the amount of water lost through leakage, the installation of sensors will be extended to include the NEWater pipeline network over the next three years, the agency added.
The sensors are able to measure the flow rate and the pressure of the water, as well as detect the noise made when water escapes through cracks in the pipes.
Data collected from the wireless sensors are sent to the PUB’s command centre, which monitors the condition of the pipes.
Currently, Singapore’s unaccounted water rate is at 5 per cent. This refers to water that has been produced but is “lost” before it reaches users. In comparison, London has an unaccounted water rate of 20 per cent.
However, Singapore is aiming to cut its losses to that of cities like Tokyo, which has a rate of 3.2 per cent.
PUB’s Director of Water Supply (Network) Michael Toh said: «We think that we can perhaps lower it to levels that the Japanese have, because I think that’s something for us to emulate. We are very water-stressed; we need to make sure that we conserve every drop, so we need to do more.»
The sensors also complement the water agency’s pipeline renewal project. Since 2016,20km of old pipelines have been replaced with more robust iron and steel pipes.
Over the next two years, an additional 75km of pipes will be replaced in areas that have been prioritised, such as Hougang, Clementi and Serangoon Gardens.
By 2019, PUB aims to more than double the rate of renewal to 50km of pipelines per year.

© Source: http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/singapore/more-sensors-to-be-installed-in-pipes-to-reduce-water-loss-9181986
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Burn: rental camera gear destroyed by the solar eclipse

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A heavy emphasis was put on the importance of protecting eyeballs leading up to the recent solar eclipse, and rightfully so. Sadly, some people didn’ t get the memo that pointing your camera at the sun without special protection is also…
A heavy emphasis was put on the importance of protecting eyeballs leading up to the recent solar eclipse, and rightfully so. Sadly, some people didn’ t get the memo that pointing your camera at the sun without special protection is also a bad idea.
The camera rental company saw an uptick in gear rentals leading up to the solar eclipse and warned customers that solar filters must be attached to the end of their lenses to protect the lens elements and camera sensors from damage.
When the celestial event passed and returns started flowing in, LensRentals noticed that some of its gear had been damaged by the sun. In a recent blog post, the company shared photos of some of the damaged hardware which included melted sensors, burnt shutter systems, mirror damage and more.
LensRentals said it was really impressed with how few pieces of gear they got back damaged. Unfortunately, the company views the damage as neglect because customers were warned about the danger associated with pointing an unprotected camera at the sun.
Found is a TechSpot feature where we share clever, funny or otherwise interesting stuff from around the web.
Images courtesy LensRentals

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