Anonymous ID: 392e0d Jan. 25, 2019, 10:05 p.m. No.4912879   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2885 >>3085 >>3298 >>3398

Japan-U.S. talks on bilateral trade deal likely to face delay

 

Japan and the United States are unlikely to open negotiations on a proposed bilateral trade pact before the end of this month, due chiefly to the prolonged partial U.S. government shutdown, sources have said.

 

In addition, it will become difficult for economic revitalization minister Toshimitsu Motegi, who will represent Japan in the new trade talks, to arrange his schedule for the negotiations with the United States, as Japan’s Diet will be convened for a 150-day regular session on Monday, the sources said Friday.

 

The negotiations may not begin before early spring, people familiar with the situation said.

 

At their meeting in September last year, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and U.S. President Donald Trump agreed to launch negotiations on concluding a trade pact.

 

In a joint statement adopted at the bilateral summit, Abe and Trump said the negotiations will cover goods and services.

 

On Dec. 21, the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative announced the purpose of the trade talks, paving the way for the bilateral negotiations to be launched late this month.

 

But the U.S. International Trade Commission has yet to compile a report on its analysis of economic impacts of the envisaged U.S.-Japan trade pact, which would be reported to the USTR before the opening of the negotiations.

 

The expected delay in the launch of the talks is also because the U.S. government is putting priority on its trade talks with China, sources said, adding that the U.S. government shutdown is believed to have affected operations at the Office of the USTR.

 

When they meet first in the trade negotiations, Japan and the United States are expected to discuss how to proceed with the talks.

 

But a Japanese official said that the talks may not be held until April depending on the situation.

 

With Washington highly likely to make tough demands in the agriculture and automobile sectors, Tokyo is concerned about impacts the trade talks could have on an election in the summer for the House of Councilors if the negotiations kick into full gear just before the triennial vote, some sources said.

 

https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2019/01/26/business/economy-business/japan-u-s-talks-bilateral-trade-deal-likely-face-delay/

Anonymous ID: 392e0d Jan. 25, 2019, 10:28 p.m. No.4913033   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Jewish Couple, 19-Month-Old Daughter Removed From Plane Over "Body Odour"

 

Yossi Adler said he and his wife, Jennie, were heading home from a vacation in Miami when they were told there was an emergency and they needed to exit the plane.

 

A Michigan couple and their 19-month-old daughter were removed from an American Airlines flight after the airline told them that other passengers and crew members had complained about their body odor.

 

Yossi Adler said he and his wife, Jennie, were heading home from a vacation in Miami on Wednesday night when they were told there was an emergency and they needed to exit the plane.

 

The couple, both 37, had eight other children at home in Southfield, Michigan, so Adler said that he and his wife were worried that there may have been an incident involving one of them. Later, he said, when he and his wife stepped off the plane and the airline told them that they had been removed because of a stench, they were "humiliated," "frustrated" and left wondering about the real reason.

 

"Obviously, there was a reason," Adler, who is Jewish, said in a phone interview Friday with The Washington Post. "But I think it was an anti-Semitic reason."

 

"Even if it wasn't," he added, "they were anti-Semitic afterward."

 

American Airlines said in a statement that the Adlers were asked to deplane after "multiple passengers, along with our crew members, complained about Mr. Adler's body odor. Our Miami airport team members were concerned about the comfort of our other passengers due to the odor. Our team members took care of the family and provided hotel accommodations and meals, and rebooked them on a flight to Detroit Thursday morning."

 

The airline said its employees did not know of Adler's religion.

 

Adler said the vouchers that American Airlines gave him for food and lodging did not work, so he had to pay out of pocket. The airline said that should not have been the case but that it will look into the matter and ensure any such expenses are reimbursed.

 

In any case, Adler said, had the airline been that concerned about his body odor, it should have given him clean clothes to wear. Instead, he said, he had to wear the same clothes on the flight the next morning because he did not have his belongings.

 

Video showed the Adlers approach a ticket counter Wednesday evening, complaining that the airline had removed them from the plane and then sent their belongings ahead to Detroit.

 

"I'm trying to stay calm here," Yossi Adler told an employee. "But there's two Jewish people on the plane, and now they're kicking us off because of odor. Seriously? Nobody here thinks I have odor.

 

"I need to get on a plane tonight. I have eight children at home."

 

At one point, after Adler asked airline workers for an explanation for the removal, one of them asked him, "You told me for religious reasons you don't shower?"

 

"I shower every day!" Adler quickly responded. "I said you kicked me off because of religious reasons."

 

But some people who said they were also passengers on the flight said that it was not about religion.

 

A person who spoke to The Washington Post on the condition of anonymity said that he and his girlfriend were also on the plane and that there was indeed a stench.

 

Another woman who claims to have been on the flight took to Twitter to back up American Airline's claim. "The smell was so bad I don't think I could have made it through the 2.5 hr flight," she said.

 

Asked about that claim, Adler said in a text message to The Post that "the 'BO' is a fairy tale and cover for the reprehensible discrimination exhibited to myself and the insensitive treatment I and my family received by AA staff. My attorneys will prove that the BO claim is absolute nonsense."

 

Adler told The Post that he had showered Wednesday morning.

 

Adler described the experience as a "horrible" ordeal, explaining that airline employees were walking around the airport holding their noses and fanning their faces. He said that had there been a legitimate body odor issue, the employees, who have a responsibly in the service industry "to go above and beyond," should have helped him.

 

"Not once in my life has someone said I smell," he told The Post.

COMMENT

 

There have been numerous incidents on airplanes in recent years, from issues with service and support animals to problems with passengers who claimed they were removed from flights over a birthday cake, breast-feeding and menstrual cramps, and a seat-kicking toddler. Last year, an African woman was booted from a United Airlines flight after a passenger complained that she had a "pungent" odor. The woman sued for racial discrimination.

___

this is exactly why I hate flying.

Muh anti-semitism

If you smell you fucking smell.

 

https://www.ndtv.com/world-news/jewish-family-was-booted-from-a-flight-over-body-odor-but-says-anti-semitism-is-to-blame-1983498?pfrom=home-lateststories

Anonymous ID: 392e0d Jan. 25, 2019, 11:28 p.m. No.4913343   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>4913316

with you on that. get a little touchy sometimes when that subject comes up as a blanket statement. i get enough grief from the ktwats about the market stuff so I become 'toxic' to others-especially newfags- when they pull the crap they have done for weeks.