NATO chief seeks bigger defense budgets ahead of US meeting

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg speaks during a news conference at the NATO Headquarters in Brussels, Belgium. (REUTERS)
Updated 14 February 2017
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NATO chief seeks bigger defense budgets ahead of US meeting

BRUSSELS: NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg is urging the allies to step up defense spending on the eve of a first meeting between new US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis and his 27 counterparts in Brussels.
Stoltenberg said Tuesday that “fair burden-sharing and increased defense spending underpins the trans-Atlantic alliance.”
US President Donald Trump hinted during the election campaign that he might not defend allies who refuse to contribute their fair share. His comments have alarmed European nations, particularly those near Russia’s border like the Baltic States and Poland.
NATO leaders have committed to halt spending cuts and raise their military budgets to 2 percent of gross domestic product.
Apart from the United States only four member countries — Britain, Estonia, Poland and debt-ridden Greece — have met the benchmark. 


Indonesia targets illegal mining on 190,000 hectares of forest land

Updated 3 sec ago
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Indonesia targets illegal mining on 190,000 hectares of forest land

JAKARTA: The Indonesian government could potentially seize mining activities across 190,000 hectares (733.59 square miles) of illegally cleared forest, the deputy forestry minister told ​a parliamentary hearing on Monday, as authorities tackle what they say is unlawful extraction in the resource-rich archipelago. Indonesia’s unprecedented crackdown, which has seen military-led teams take over palm plantations and mines, has unnerved the industry, pushing up global palm oil prices over concerns it will ‌hit output, ‌and more recently, powering ‌rallies ⁠in ​the prices ‌of metals like tin. “There were 191,790 hectares (mines) that do not have forestry use permits, which could be considered illegal,” Deputy Forestry Minister Rohmat Marzuki said. He did not name any of the companies involved or say how many were involved. ⁠Neither did he elaborate on what was being mined or ‌provide any timeline for the seizures.
“The ‍forestry task force ‍has already obtained 8,769 hectares and this is ‍still ongoing to reach 191,790 hectares,” he added.
“Along with the forestry task force, the forestry ministry remains committed in obtaining back the forest areas ​from illegal oil palm plantations and illegal mines,” Marzuki said.
The military-backed forestry task force ⁠said last week it had taken over 8,800 hectares of land where nickel, coal, quartz sand and limestone were being mined. It has also seized palm plantations across 4.1 million hectares (10.1 million acres), an area roughly the size of the Netherlands. Indonesia’s Attorney General has assessed potential fines of 109.6 trillion rupiah ($6.47 billion) for palm oil companies and 32.63 trillion rupiah for mining companies, ‌for operations in forest areas.