ART AUCTIONS PRINTS GAIN NEW CACHET SEEKING LIGHT ELECTRICITY AS NIGERIA’S HOPE DJOKOVIC WINS MURRAY FALLS IN AUSTRALIA PAGE 7 PAGE 8 PAGE 10 | CULTURE | OPINION | SPORTS .... MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2015 Greek banks find solvency may depend on E.C.B. With budget, Obama tries to narrow income gap But aggressive posture of new government may reduce readiness to help WASHINGTON BY LANDON THOMAS JR. BULENT KILIC/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE Devastation in the Syrian town of Kobani, a result of the Islamic State siege. ‘‘We don’t care about money or buildings, only victory,’’ a resident said. ‘‘We were not broken by ISIS.’’ Pride in victory outweighs Kobani’s grief KOBANI, SYRIA Residents repel ISIS and now hope to carve out a Kurdish homeland BY TIM ARANGO Lasheen Abdulla steered her white minivan through the streets of her hometown, past the charred husks of car bombs, the shattered storefronts, the unexploded mortar shells. Across the gray of destruction were streaks of color: the purple sheets hung to hide the Kurdish snipers who, for months, defended this city from the extremists of the Islamic State. She pointed to the spots where her city’s martyrs fell — five over there, near the bullet-pocked wall of a girl’s school, six at a heap of rubble that used to be an open-air vegetable market. In recent days, the ruins have yielded corpses of Kurdish fighters, their heads severed. Even children’s dolls were found decapitated, a symbol, Ms. Abdulla said, of the cruelty of their enemy. ‘‘When you see your hometown destroyed like this, you feel destroyed from within,’’ said Ms. Abdulla, 43, who remained in Kobani for the entire siege. She has washed many bodies of Kurdish fighters for burial, and said she had three in the house where she has been staying. The devastation of this city, wrought by the Islamic State siege and the AmerOUTRAGE IN JAPAN OVER ISIS VIDEO After the apparent killing of a journalist, the public is still backing the prime minister’s stand against ISIS. PAGE 5 ican-led air campaign that ultimately expelled the militants, is so thorough that it manages to feel unreal, like a movie set. Even so, now that the city has been liberated, pride in victory outweighs grief over the losses for the Kurds who live here. As the battle unfolded, with its outcome uncertain, Kobani had taken on mythic status — Kurds called it their Stalingrad — as a place from which the Kurds hope to carve a homeland from the turmoil of the Middle East. ‘‘All I can feel now is happiness be- KOBANI, PAGE 5 In January 2013, as Cypriot banks faced collapse, Jens Weidmann, Germany’s powerful representative at the European Central Bank, made it clear how unhappy he was with the Cyprus bank bailout. It was not the E.C.B.’s job to ‘‘fund the gap of any bank runs,’’ Mr. Weidmann told its Governing Council, according to confidential minutes of the meeting, citing both the Cyprus rescue and the Greek bank bailout in 2012. As depositors yank their savings from Greek banks, the question is being asked if the European Central Bank would bail them out again. The question gained urgency late last week as the new Greek government of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras abruptly cut off talks with the country’s lenders. On Wednesday, the E.C.B. is to meet to decide whether it should approve a move by the Greek central bank to provide emergency loans to some of the country’s largest banks. Such shortterm financing, which is more expensive than traditional loans, is provided only as a last resort, when banks are bleeding deposits and cannot gain access to funds from their usual lenders. And while Greece’s banks are in far better shape than they were two years ago, the fear that Mr. Tsipras’s government could be even more radical than advertised has sparked a mini-run, with bankers and analysts estimating that as much as 14 billion euros, or $15.8 billion, has been pulled from the banks in the past month. Bankers say that these outflows accelerated late last week following aggressive anti-Europe comments by Greece’s new government ministers. ‘‘People are not so much afraid of the banks,’’ said Gikas Hardouvelis, who was, until last week, the Greek finance minister. ‘‘They are afraid that the Syriza GREECE, PAGE 15 As Ebola fades, the focus turns to life MONROVIA, LIBERIA New cases in Liberia, an epidemic center, now number in single digits BY NORIMITSU ONISHI JOHN MOORE/GETTY IMAGES — AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE A wedding reception in Monrovia, Liberia, which just months ago was ravaged by Ebola. As fear of the virus decreases, Liberians are slowly returning to their daily rhythms. Life is edging back to normal after the deadliest Ebola outbreak in history. At the height of the epidemic, Liberians met horrific deaths inside the bluepainted walls of the Nathaniel V. Massaquoi Elementary School, as classrooms became Ebola holding centers and the education of a nation’s children, shuttered in their homes for safety, was abruptly suspended. Now, parents are streaming into the schoolyard once again, not to visit their stricken loved ones, but with their restless children in tow to register for the start of classes in a delayed and shortened academic year. Eager to learn and to play with her friends again, Florence Page, 11, bounded ahead, brimming with pent-up energy, as her mother, Mabel Togba, paused to look warily into the school building through its padlocked metal screen doors. ‘‘They still haven’t told us that Liberia is free of Ebola, so I’m still afraid,’’ said Ms. Togba, 42. ‘‘But it’s better than to leave my children at home doing nothing.’’ New Ebola cases in Liberia, where streets were littered with the dead just a few months ago, now number in the INSIDE TO DAY ’S PA P E R ONLINE AT INY T.COM Vaccine critics on the defensive The Super Bowl spectacle As officials in 14 states grapple with an outbreak of measles, the parents at the heart of the anti-vaccine movement in the United States are being faulted for a public-health crisis. WORLD NEWS, 6 Full coverage of Super Bowl XLIX from Glendale, Ariz., where the Seattle Seahawks and the New England Patriots faced off on Sunday for football’s mostcoveted prize. nytimes.com/football Egypt frees and deports journalist Special-care residents forced out The Egyptian authorities on Sunday released and deported an Australian journalist jailed for more than a year in a case that had been criticized by human rights groups. WORLD NEWS, 6 John Cosentino has spent 36 years at a Brooklyn institution. Now the state is moving disabled residents out. The change is painful. nytimes.com/nyregion An overnight stay at Hotel 22 A $3 tip on a $4 coffee? Take a hint In the United States, increasing varieties of digital payment options are expanding when and how much people are encouraged to tip. BUSINESS, 14 A bus route in Silicon Valley has become a well-known overnight shelter for the homeless. A video journalist rode Line 22, documenting its passengers through the night. lens.blogs.nytimes Pakistan’s competing narratives Dust obscures glimpse of big bang I believe Pakistan must face its inner demons, but my beliefs cannot stand in the way of inconvenient truths, Bina Shah writes. OPINION, 8 NEWSSTAND PRICESINFORMATION, CALL: FOR SUBSCRIPTION Cyprus ¤ 48 2.90 Germany27 ¤ 3.00 00800 44 78 Czech Rep CZK 110 Gibraltar £ 1.35 Andorra ¤ 3.50 Antilles ¤ 3.50 Austria ¤ 3.00 Bahrain BD 1.20 Belgium ¤3.00 Bosnia & Herzegovina KM 5.00 Bulgaria ¤ 2.55 Cameroon CFA 2.500 Canada C$ 5.50 Croatia KN 20.00 Latvia ¤ 3.25 Lebanon LP 5,000 Hungary HUF 800 Lithuania LTL 15 Israel NIS 13.00/Eilat NIS 11.00 Luxembourg ¤ 3.00 Italy ¤ 2.80 Macedonia Den 150.00 Ivory Coast CFA 2.500 Malta ¤ 3.00 Jordan. JD 1.50 Montenegro ¤ 2.00 Kazakhstan USD 3.50 Morocco MAD 25 Kenya K. 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WORLD NEWS, 3 DISPUTED LAND NEWSSTAND PRICES ¤CFA3.00 Northern IrelandFrance £ 1.50 Senegal 2.500 Norway Nkr 28 Serbia Din 250 AndorraSlovakia ¤ 3.50 Oman OMR 1.250 ¤ 3.30 Poland ZI 12.20 Slovenia ¤ 2.50 ¤ 3.50 Portugal ¤ 3.00 Antilles Spain ¤ 3.00 Qatar QR 10.00 Sweden Skr 28 Cameroon CFA 2.500 Republic of Ireland ¤3.00 Switzerland SFr 4.30 Reunion ¤ 3.50 Gabon CFA Syria US$ 3.00 2.500 Romania Lei 11.50 The Netherlands ¤ 3.00 Saudi Arabia SRIvory 13.00 Coast TunisiaCFA Din 4.300 2.500 Turkey TL 6 Ukraine US$ 5.00 Morocco MAD 25 United Arab Emirates AED 12.00 United States $ 4.00 Senegal CFA 2.500 U.S. Military (Europe) US$ 1.75 Tunisia Din 4.300 Reunion ¤ 3.50 IN THIS ISSUE No. 41,021 Books 7 Business 13 Crossword 12 Culture 7 Opinion 8 Sports 10 A push to be forgotten worldwide A case that originated in France against Google has raised the question of whether Europe can impose its strict privacy laws on sites that operate elsewhere. BUSINESS, 13 A team of astronomers, after announcing last spring the discovery of long-sought evidence for what kicked off the big bang, now concedes that more work is needed. nytimes.com/science The Johnny Appleseed of pickling Tara Whitsitt rides around the United States in a bus, earning a living largely by holding workshops in which she teaches old-fashioned methods of food preservation. nytimes.com/nyregion single digits, according to the World Health Organization. In neighboring Sierra Leone and Guinea, the other two nations in the Ebola hot zone, new cases have fallen sharply in the last month, dropping to fewer than 100 in a week at the end of January — a level not seen in the region since June. With a virus as deadly as Ebola, officials warn that the epidemic will not be over until cases reach zero in all three countries. But after nearly 9,000 deaths from the disease, the W.H.O. announced last week that it was focusing on a goal that had seemed out of reach for much of last year: ending the Ebola epidemic, no longer simply slowing its spread. Here in Monrovia, the capital, ambulances and body collection vehicles that EBOLA, PAGE 4 $4 trillion plan would hit overseas corporate profits and assist middle class BY JONATHAN WEISMAN President Obama will propose a 10-year budget on Monday that stabilizes the federal deficit but does not seek balance, instead focusing on policies to address income inequality as he adds nearly $6 trillion to the debt. The $4 trillion budget would hit corporations that park profits overseas, raise taxes on the richest of the rich and lift the incomes of the middle class through new spending and tax credits. He will challenge the Republican Congress to answer his emphasis on wage stagnation, according to congressional aides briefed on the details. The central question Mr. Obama will pose is this: Should Washington worry about what may be the defining economic dilemma of the era — the rising gap between the rich and everyone else — or should policy makers address a mountain of debt that the White House hopes to control but not reduce. The president’s budget — thicker than a phonebook in multiple volumes — will be just the starting point for that OTTO KITSINGER/ASSOCIATED PRESS President Obama wants the debate to be more about inequality than reducing debt. discussion with the newly elected Republican Congress, a document representing Mr. Obama’s aspirations, not the final word. Criticism of the president’s intentions arrived, even before the budget was presented. ‘‘We’re six years into the Obama economic policies, and he’s proposing more of the same, more tax increases that kill investment and jobs, and policies which are hardly aspirational,’’ Representative Paul Ryan of Wisconsin, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, said in an interview over the weekend. Mr. Obama’s spending-and-taxes plan foresees a $474 billion deficit, which would be 2.5 percent of the gross domestic product, a level most economists see as manageable, according to budget documents obtained by The New York Times. The deficit number would creep up each year, to $687 billion by 2025. But measured against the economy, the deficit would remain stable. The debt, while growing every year, would remain around 75 percent of the gross domestic product. That is a level BUDGET, PAGE 6
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