US shutdown: Barack Obama cancels Asia trip
"Obama pins the blame on House Republicans"
US President Barack Obama has cancelled his trip to Asia because of the US government shutdown.
Mr Obama will miss two summits, including the Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation (Apec) meeting in Indonesia.
The decision was made due to the "difficulty in moving
forward with foreign travel in the face of a shutdown", the White House
said.
The US government closed non-essential operations after the two houses of Congress failed to agree a new budget.
Mr Obama called Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
on Friday morning and expressed his regret for the cancellation,
Indonesian Presidential Spokesman for Foreign Affairs Teuku Faizasyah
The visit has not been rescheduled, the spokesman added.
Secretary of State John Kerry will attend the Apec gathering
and the East Asia summit in Brunei in Mr Obama's place, the White House
said.
'Avoidable'
"The cancellation of this trip is another consequence of the
House Republicans forcing a shutdown of the government," the White House
said in a statement.
"This completely avoidable shutdown is setting back our
ability to create jobs through promotion of US exports and advance US
leadership and interests in the largest emerging region in the world,"
the statement added.
Mr Obama had been due to begin a four-nation Asian trip on
Saturday, heading to Bali and Brunei for regional summits before
travelling on to Malaysia and the Philippines.
On Wednesday, the White House had said Mr Obama would
postpone his trips to Malaysia and the Philippines because of the US
government shutdown, but maintained that he would travel to Indonesia
and Brunei.
The US government began a partial shutdown earlier this week
after Republicans refused to approve a budget, saying they would only do
so if funding for President Barack Obama's healthcare reforms was
delayed.
IMF head Christine Lagarde says it is "mission critical" that the situation is resolved
On Friday, Democrats and Republicans appeared no closer to resolving the feud.
The US also faces running out of money and defaulting on its
debt if there is no agreement to raise government borrowing limits later
this month.
Christine Lagarde, managing director of the International
Monetary Fund (IMF), said on Thursday that a failure to raise the US
debt ceiling would be a far worse threat to the global economy than the
current shutdown.
She said it was "mission critical" that the US agrees a new debt limit.
Ms Lagarde's comments were echoed by the US Treasury.
It said a debt default could lead to a financial crisis as bad as 2008 or worse.
Meanwhile, the impact of the shutdown was being felt across the country.
The National Transportation Safety Board did not sent
investigators to a deadly church bus crash in Tennessee that killed
eight people and injured 14 others.
The Labor Department also said it wouldn't release the highly
anticipated September jobs report on Friday because the government
remains shuttered.
With Tropical Storm Karen bearing down on the Gulf States,
the website of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA), carried a message saying: "Due to the Federal government
shutdown, NOAA.gov and most associated web sites are unavailable."
It referred visitors to the National Weather Service.
However, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema) recalled workers to help prepare for the stor
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