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TRADE WARS
Russia marks win in bitcoin suspect tussle with US
by Staff Writers
Thessaloniki, Greece (AFP) Oct 11, 2017


China to sell first dollar bonds for 13 years
Beijing (AFP) Oct 11, 2017 - China on Wednesday announced plans to sell its first dollar-denominated sovereign bonds for 13 years despite recent downgrades to its credit rating.

The $2 billion offering, announced by the finance ministry, is a drop in the bucket for China, which has sold 2.4 trillion yuan ($366 billion) of central government debt this year, according to Bloomberg News.

But the move could be intended to ease concerns after Standard & Poor's and Moody's cut its credit ratings in recent months due to the country's mounting debt load.

The finance ministry will sell $1 billion of five-year notes and $1 billion of 10-year notes in Hong Kong, but the statement did not say what interest rates it expected.

The first dollar-denominated debt issue since 2004 comes as the Communist Party prepares for its twice-a-decade leadership meeting next week.

A tug-of-war between the US and Russia over the extradition of a Russian national suspected of bitcoin-related fraud went into a new round on Wednesday when a Greek court backed Russia's claim.

Alexander Vinnik, who headed BTC-e, an exchange he operated for the cyber currency, was indicted by a US court in July on 21 charges ranging from identity theft and facilitating drug trafficking to money laundering.

Last week, Thessaloniki judges ruled that he could be handed over to the United States, but they have now also ruled the Russian extradition request admissible.

Greece's justice minister will make the final call whether he will be handed over to the US or Russia.

Vinnik said Wednesday he wants to be extradited to Russia, where the government has said it should get priority over the US because he is a Russian citizen.

Vinnik has lodged an appeal against last week's decision favouring the US request, and that case will be heard by the Greek supreme court.

The Russian has been languishing in a Greek jail since his arrest on July 25 in the tourist resort of Halkidiki, near Thessaloniki.

According to US authorities, Vinnik "stole identities, facilitated drug trafficking, and helped to launder criminal proceeds from syndicates around the world".

Vinnik, whose defence is run by Greek star attorney Alexandros Lykourezos, has denied the charges.

BTC-e, founded in 2011, became one of the world's largest and most widely used digital currency exchanges, but according to the US indictment, it was "heavily reliant on criminals".

TRADE WARS
Researchers look for ancient trade routes at the bottom of the Mediterranean
Washington (UPI) Oct 9, 2017
A team of researchers from the University of Toronto are retracing the paths of Bronze Age Mediterranean traders by studying ancient anchorages along the coast of Cyprus. Over the past summer, U of T archaeologist Carrie Fulton led daily dives to the bottom of the Mediterranean Sea in search of insights into the economic and cultural relations among ancient peoples of the Mediterranean. ... read more

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