Two injured in mysterious Texas bombing, fourth in month
AFP/File / SUZANNE CORDEIROPolice in Austin, Texas are investigating a series of deadly bombings in recent weeks
Two people were injured late Sunday in an explosion at a home in Austin, Texas, the fourth mysterious bombing in the city this month, police said.
The blast came just hours after police made a direct public appeal to the unknown bomber or bombers suspected of other recent bombings.
An exploding package killed a 39 year-old man on March 2. On March 12, one exploding package killed a 17-year-old boy and another separate one injured a woman.
After the latest blast, the county Emergency Medical Service said on Twitter that they responded to reports of an explosion around 8:30 pm (0130 GMT Monday), and two men in their 20s were rushed to a hospital with serious injuries.
Authorities were investigating the previous bombings as possible hate crimes as the two men killed were African-American, and a Hispanic woman was seriously injured.
Police did not mention the race of the Sunday victims.
"Stay inside your home until we have had a chance to deem this neighborhood safe," Austin interim Police Chief Brian Manley said at a streetside news conference after the blast.
"That will not be, at a minimum, until daylight, given the darkness and the size of the area that we want to go in and check to make sure again that this neighborhood is safe."
Because of the darkness "we have not really had an opportunity to really look at this blast site to determine what has happened," Manley said.
- $115,000 reward -
Police believe the earlier attacks were related. All of the cardboard packages were hand-delivered, not sent through the mail, and the bombs were built with household items available at hardware stores.
At a later press conference early Monday, Manley said that the Sunday explosive may have been activated by a trip-wire, unlike the previous bombs.
It is "very possible" that it was "activated by someone either handling, kicking or coming in contact with a tripwire that activated the device," Manley said.
"That changes things," he said. "We now need to have an extra level of vigilance and pay attention to any suspicious device, whether it be a package, a bag, a backpack, anything that looks out of place."
Manley told reporters that the two victims were either riding their bikes or pushing them when a suspicious package on the side of the road detonated.
He told the Austin-American Statesman that investigators are operating under the assumption that the attack is connected to the three prior blasts.
A task force of hundreds of agents is working on the case, including criminal profilers and experts from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF).
At an earlier press conference Sunday, Manley addressed the unknown bomber or bombers directly.
"We want to understand what brought you to this point, and we want to listen to you," he said.
Police also said they were increasing the reward offered for information leading to an arrest, bringing the total city and state bounty money to $115,000.
Russia: Five economic challenges facing Putin
AFP/File / Vasily MAXIMOVWhile the economic situation in Russia has stabilised since the 2015-2016 recession, growth forecasts are capped at 1-2 percent, below targets set by the Kremlin
As he prepares for his fourth term, President Vladimir Putin is expected to finally make good on his repeated pledges to revive Russia's creaking economy.
While the situation has stabilised since the 2015-2016 recession, growth forecasts are capped at 1-2 percent, below targets set by the Kremlin. Here are the five main challenges:
- Lack of manpower -
Putin made several references to the crucial question of family policy during his campaign.
Russia, which currently has a population of 146.9 million, has lost more than five million inhabitants since 1991, a consequence of the serious demographic crisis that followed the fall of the Soviet Union.
The first generation born in the post-Soviet years, which were marked by a declining birth rate, is now entering the labour market, which is likely to see a shortage of qualified manpower and a resultant curb on economic growth.
This new, smaller generation, is also reaching the age to have children, which has resulted in a further drop in mortality in 2017.
"We will have fewer young people in the next 10 to 15 years, so a young specialist with new skills -- interpersonal and technical, including computer programming -- will be worth gold," former finance minister Alexei Kudrin said recently.
- Retirement age -
The retirement age in Russia -- 55 for women and 60 for men -- is among the lowest in the world.
While state pensions are very low, with the demographic decline the system still represents a growing burden for the federal budget.
Putin has said several times that reforms would be necessary but has so far always judged that the moment for them had not yet arrived.
While liberals like Kudrin advocate a gradual increase in the retirement age to 63, tampering with this Soviet-era social benefit may prove unpopular in a country where retirees often have trouble making ends meet with their meagre pensions.
In a gesture for this group who have particularly suffered from the surge in prices in recent years, the Kremlin announced Friday that it would prepare measures to allow pensions to increase faster than inflation.
- Attract investment -
Putin regularly flirts with foreign investors at economic conferences, promising to improve a business climate undermined by bureaucracy and also, according to his own findings, by sometimes unjustified lawsuits.
"Russia needs to attract more foreign investment, it needs to create a favourable competitive environment (weak ruble, lower taxes for industry and investment incentives) and reduce bureaucracy," according to Chris Weafer, founder of consulting firm Macro Advisory.
"The need for foreign investment is also the reason why the Kremlin has not retaliated against the recent US sanctions escalation; it does not wish to make it any more difficult for foreign investors to come to Russia."
On Friday, the Kremlin said it had instructed Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev and central bank chief Elvira Nabiullina to draw up an "action plan" by July 15 to significantly increase the role of investment in an economy still dependent on hydrocarbons.
While investment increased 4.4 percent in 2017, according to the statistics agency Rosstat, the growth was largely due to large one-off projects such as the bridge being constructed to connect the Crimea or the football World Cup.
- Diversify -
The economic model that saw high energy prices fuel meteoric growth during Putin's first two terms in power from 2000 to 2008 has run its course.
Rich in vast reserves of hydrocarbons, Russia is at the mercy of fluctuations in their prices, as shown by the 2015-2016 crisis.
The "economy remains structurally dependent on the commodities sector, which is clearly negative for the growth outlook," according to Alfa Bank.
To wean itself off this dependence, Weafer suggests investing in entrepreneurs and small businesses by making "money for investment and consumption more affordable and more easily available".
He also said Russia should encourage investment into "robotics, smart technologies, artificial intelligence".
As an example of what can be achieved, Lev Jakobson, first vice rector at Moscow's Higher School of Economics, points to "quite impressive growth in the productivity of the agricultural sector", which has broken harvest and export records in recent years.
- Increase productivity -
"The economy is very inefficient. Partly this is the legacy of the Soviet system and partly because of the easy growth coming from the oil wealth in the years 2000-13," said Weafer.
"There are plenty of inefficiencies in the system which, if fixed, could drive strong growth."
Weafer cites the example of the oil sector which, while it was under Ukraine-related sanctions imposed in August 2014 and even as prices plunged, increased output by 740,000 barrels a day.
"The industry was forced to become more efficient and innovative," he said.
To modernise large companies, the government has launched several privatisation plans, but the state's share in the economy has actually been further strengthened in recent years by a triumphant state capitalism that saw the oil company Rosneft grow significantly.
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