Thứ Bảy, 21 tháng 1, 2017

Waching daily Jan 22 2017

For Complex News, I'm Hanuman Welch.

Earlier this week elusive drug kingpin Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman was extradited by the

Mexican government to the United States.The 62-year-old leader of the Sinaloa Cartel,

had made two jailbreaks—including one from a maximum-security prison in 2015, where a

tunnel was dug to his cell—but he was recaptured in Jan. 2016

. El Chapo was taken to New York where he's

being held in a special unit inside Manhattan's 12-story Metropolitan Correctional Center,

where other high-profile, high-risk inmates like Gambino crime family boss John Gotti

awaited trial.

Catherine Linaweaver, who served as the lockup's warden for 15 months before retiring in 2014

had this to say about the prison.

"It's got extra security above and beyond what you would have in a restricted housing

area second only to the super-maximum security prison in Florence, Colorado.

There is no other unit in the Bureau of Prisons like the high-security unit in New York."

El Chapo spent years on the run as Mexico's most wanted man and the U.S. Justice Department

issued a statement confirming Guzman was coming to the U.S. expressing gratitude to Mexico

for its cooperation,

El Chapo is wanted on charges of drug trafficking and hiring hit men to carry out targeted assassinations.

If convicted, he faces life in prison here in the United States.

That's all for now, for everything else subscribe to complex on Youtube, for Complex News, I'm

Hanuman Welch.

For more infomation >> El Chapo Extradited to the U.S. & Faces Life in Prison if Convicted - Duration: 1:19.

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TRUMP VS AFICA - Unpredictable Trump could prove a game changer for Africa! - Duration: 6:42.

Unpredictable Trump could prove a game changer for Africa

With his win of the White House, president-elect Trump has made no secret that his electoral

college mandate to "make America great again" should apply to US foreign policy as well.

During the campaign and after his victory, Trump has unabashedly and unpredictably turned

US policy on its head with a cascade of jaw-dropping statements about Mexico, China, Russia and

Putin, ISIS, Muslims, NATO, Israel and more.

There is, however, one area of the world Trump seems to have eschewed altogether, an area

where his skittishness could prove a boon.

For the past eight years Africa has been relegated to the back burner of US foreign policy.

President Obama, whose father hailed from Kenya, elicited high expectations when he

came to office and was seen, initially, as a potential champion for African causes.

Yet, aside from his struggling "Power Africa," a $7-billion presidential initiative launched

in 2013 and aimed at doubling Africa's electrical grid by 2030, Obama has little to show for

when it comes to Africa.

Unlike his immediate predecessor, who morphed into a staunch Africa supporter with several

African programs to boot (including his Presidential Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, PEPFAR), the

first black president departed from the White House in January 2017 with a legacy of soaring

rhetoric and lofty slogans, but no tangible and successful African signature policies.

Enter Trump: bombastic and volatile, with neither affinity nor proximity to Africa,

but a brazen sense of unpredictability.

Collective speculation, as echoed by University of Johannesburg professor Peter Vale in a

CNN opinion piece, holds that Trump's foreign policy on Africa "is likely to be non-existent."

Because Trump favors protectionism, the argument goes, he will turn his back on Africa and

will happily don Obama's mantle to continue Washington's minimalist involvement in African

affairs.

Trump, however, might just do the opposite and, just as George W. Bush, surprise many

critics by implementing sensible policies vis-à-vis Africa.

One may wonder why.

Why would Trump care about Africa?

Why should Africa matter to a Trump administration that has pledged to build roads and bridges

in North Carolina, not in South Sudan?

The answer to these questions is simple: China.

If Trump is serious about China, as he has ostensibly touted on the campaign trail and

via twitter, if he is determined to flex his muscles against China, he should first challenge

the rising power of the Red Dragon in Africa.

That's because Africa has served as China's economic launching pad for over two decades.

Africa has fueled and will continue to fuel China's booming industries for several decades

to come.

With the US economic presence in Africa receding, China has occupied the void and driven competition

out, including many European companies and investors.

The Chinese are building infrastructures at a dizzying pace, from Cairo to Cape-town,

in exchange for Africa's rich mineral ores.

Buoyed by state subsidies, Chinese companies are outbidding competition with many shoddy,

built-on-the-fly construction projects, and take a disproportionate role in Africa's extractive

production and industries.

Thousands of Chinese companies are doing business in 50 African countries, down to some small-scale

businesses operating in Africa's remotest villages.

Chinese state-owned companies are buying vast swatches of Africa's arable land to set up

large-scale agricultural projects.

Together, they contributed to the estimated $300 billion generated by China-Africa trade

in 2015.

In addition to trade, China relies on loans to buttress its presence in Africa.

In 2015, during the sixth Forum on China-Africa Cooperation held in Johannesburg, Chinese

president Xi Jinping pledged a whopping $60 billion loan, aid, and export credit package

to Africa.

Then there are America's national security interests that should also matter as Trump

is assembling his team.

Islamic terror groups, including Al-Shabaab and Al Qaeda operate cell groups in Africa's

rogue states.

They are after American soft targets and it's just a matter of time, if the trend is not

reversed, until we see the kind of acts that targeted American interests in Nairobi and

Benghazi.

The Chinese, of course, prefer not to interfere with what they consider to be African states'

internal affairs.

African dictators are leery of a Trump presidency, and for good reason.

A new sheriff is in town, and unlike the one he will replace in January he may not be all

talk and no cider.

With his penchant for contumely and tit-for-tat escalation, Trump might be the game changer

that shakes things up in Africa and disrupts corrupt political regimes that have quietly

survived and thrived under Obama's two terms in office.

They have largely ignored Obama's paper tiger rhetoric, but Trump's iron fist may well be

what will compel them to get in line and relinquish their illegitimate power.

Why?

Because dictators and failed states are bad for business.

They feed on corruption, serve as breeding ground for terrorism, and have no qualms about

letting their nuclear raw materials fall into wrong hands.

Democratically-elected African leaders, on the other hand, may find in President Trump

an unlikely ally, a more decisive and unfettered leader to work with to advance an economic

and political agenda that could benefit both the US and Africa.

As the global spotlight shines on his presidency, Trump might prove his critics wrong by dealing

differently with Africa and restoring America's clout on a continent that cannot afford to

put its eggs in the same basket and should not let China's monopolistic drive dictate

the terms and pace of its development.

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