Jun 10, 2009

Southeast Asia Research Centre Working Papers Series

Click on the Working Paper title to download. Each paper is a PDF, created with Adobe Acrobat.


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Source page - http://www.cityu.edu.hk/searc/WP.html


The Working Papers series is organised in the following table by year of publication. To look for papers published in a particular year, click the year. Alternatively, simply scroll down the page to browse all papers.


A full set of papers on CD-ROM can be obtained by sending a US$25 draft drawn on the City University of Hong Kong to Ms Josephine Yim, Southeast Asia Research Centre, City University, Tat Chee Ave, Kowloon Tong, Hong Kong.


2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008

2001

Working Paper & Date

Author

Title

1, April 2001

Kevin Hewison

Pathways to Recovery: Bankers, Business and Nationalism in Thailand

2, April 2001

Kanishka Jayasuriya

Governance, Post Washington Consensus and the New Anti Politics

3, April 2001

Kanishka Jayasuriya

Southeast Asia's Embedded Mercantilism in Crisis: International Strategies and Domestic Coalitions

4, May 2001

Kevin Hewison

Nationalism, Populism, Dependency: Old Ideas for a New Southeast Asia?

5, May 2001

Herb Thompson

Indonesia: The Denouement of Forest Management Following Economic, Environmental and Political Crises

6, May 2001

Zang Xiaowei

Resource Dependency, Chinese Capitalism, and Intercorporate Ties in Singapore

7, May 2001

Raymond Chan

The Sustainability of the Asian Welfare System after the Financial Crisis: Reflections on the Case of Hong Kong

8, May 2001

Kevin Hewison

Thailand: Class Matters

9, June 2001

Maniemai Thongyou

Sub-contracting Industry in Rural Villages: Fish-nets in Rural Thailand

10, June 2001

Mark Beeson

The Political Consequences of the Southeast Asian Region's Economic Vulnerability

11, June 2001

Michael Vatikiotis

Fixing Southeast Asia: Mixed Blessings

12, October 2001

Michael Kelly Connors

Ideological Aspects of Democratisation in Thailand: Mainstreaming Localism

13, October 2001

Raymond Chan

The Welfare System in Southeast Asia: Development and Challenges

14, November 2001

Vivienne Wee

Gender and Development in Post-Crisis Southeast Asia

15, November 2001

Kevin Hewison

Liberalism and Globalisation

16, November 2001

Vivienne Wee

Political Faultlines in Southeast Asia: Movements for Ethnic Autonomy as Nations of Intent

17, November 2001

David Brown

Why Might Constructed Nationalist and Ethnic Ideologies Come Into Confrontation With Each Other?

2002

18, January 2002

Amy Sim

Organising Discontent: NGOs for Southeast Asian Migrant Workers in Hong Kong

19, January 2002

Michael Jacobsen

Cross-Border Communities and Deterritorialising Identities. Assessing the Diaspora Triangle: Migrant-Host-Home

20, January 2002

Philip Bowring

East Asia: Centrifugal or Centripetal

21, January 2002

Graeme Lang

Deforestation, Floods, and State Reactions in China and Thailand

22, March 2002

Vivienne Wee

Ethno-nationalism in Process: Atavism, Ethnicity and Indigenism in Riau

23, March 2002

Thomas M. McKenna

Saints, Scholars and the Idealised Past in Philippine Muslim Separatism

24, March 2002

Kanishka Jayasuriya

Globalisation, International Standards and The Rule of Law: A New Symbolic Politics

25, April 2002

Alex H. Choi

Non-Governmental Organisations and Democratisation: The 1992 Bangkok Uprising Revisited

26, May 2002

Michael Jacobsen

Nation-making and the Politicisation of Ethnicity in Post-Suharto Indonesia

27, July 2002

Andrew Brown

Bundit Thonachaisetavut Kevin Hewison

Labour Relations and Regulation in Thailand: Theory and Practice

28, July 2002

Nick Thomas

From ASEAN to an East Asian Community? The Role of Functional Co-operation

29, July 2002

Michael Jacobsen

‘To be or what to be – that is the question’. On Factionalism and Secessionism in North Sulawesi Province, Indonesia

30, September 2002

Vivienne Wee

Kanishka Jayasuriya

New Geographies and Temporalities of Power: Exploring the New Fault Lines of Southeast Asia

31, September 2002

Vivienne Wee

Social Fragmentation in Indonesia: A Crisis from Suharto’s New Order

32, September 2002 Mark Beeson East Asia and the International Financial Institutions: The Politics of Regional Regulatory Reform
33, September 2002

Richard Robison

Garry Rodan

Kevin Hewison

Transplanting the Regulatory State in Southeast Asia: A Pathology of Rejection
34, October 2002 Vivienne Wee

Will Indonesia Hold? Past, Present and Future in a Fragmenting State

35, October 2002 William A. Callahan

Diaspora, Cosmopolitanism and Nationalism: Overseas Chinese and Neo-Nationalism in China and Thailand

36, October 2002

Pasuk Phongpaichit

Chris Baker

‘The Only Good Populist is a Rich Populist’: Thaksin Shinawatra and Thailand’s Democracy
37, October 2002 Catherine C.H. Chiu Labour Relations and Regulation in Hong Kong: Theory and Practice
38, November 2002

Malcolm Falkus

Stephen Frost

Labour Relations and Regulation in Cambodia: Theory and Practice Full Version (The file is large, downloads may be slow)

Main Report, Appendices, Figure 1

2003

39, January 2003

Martin Painter

Marketisation, Integration and State Restructuring in Vietnam: The Case of State Owned Enterprise Reform

40, March 2003 Raymond K.H. Chan
Moha Asri Abdullah
Zikri Muhammad
Labour Relations and Regulation in Malaysia: Theory and Practice
41, April 2003 Michael Jacobsen

Reconceptualising the Ethnic Chinese Diaspora in Southeast Asia: Exploring the Outer Limits of Ethnic Affiliations

42, April 2003 Michael Kelly Connors

The Reforming State: Security, Development and Culture in Democratic Times

43, April 2003 Anne Loveband

Positioning the Product: Indonesian Migrant Women Workers in Contemporary Taiwan [A SEARC CAPSTRANS Paper]

44, April 2003 Kevin Hewison

A Preliminary Analysis of Thai Workers in Hong Kong: Survey Results [A SEARC CAPSTRANS Paper]

45, May 2003 Kevin Hewison

The Politics of Neo-Liberalism: Class and Capitalism in Contemporary Thailand

46, May 2003 Michael Jacobsen

Tightening the Unitary State: The Inner Workings of Indonesian Regional Autonomy

47, May 2003 Vedi R. Hadiz

Decentralisation and Democracy in Indonesia: A Critique of Neo-Institutionalist Perspectives

48, July 2003 Huei-ying Kuo Nationalism Against Its People? Chinese Business and Nationalist Activities in Inter-War Singapore, 1919-1941 (The file is about 3.5MB, downloads may be slow)
49, August 2003

Vivienne Wee

Amy Sim

Transnational labour networks in female labour migration: mediating between Southeast Asian women workers and international labour markets [A SEARC CAPSTRANS Paper]

50, August 2003 Allen Chun Who Wants To Be Diasporic?
51, September 2003 William Case

Malaysia: New Reforms, Old Continuities, Tense Ambiguities

52, September 2003

Vedi R. Hadiz

Richard Robison

Neo-Liberal Reforms and Illiberal Consolidations: The Indonesian Paradox

53, September 2003

Li Qi

Bill Taylor

Stephen Frost

Labour Relations and Regulation in Vietnam: Theory and Practice

54, November 2003 Michael Jacobsen Chinese Muslims in Indonesia: politics, economy, faith and expediency
55, November 2003

Stephen Frost

Catherine C.H. Chiu

Labour Relations and Regulation in Singapore: Theory and Practice
56, December 2003 Adrian Vickers The Country and the Cities [A SEARC CAPSTRANS Paper]
57, December 2003 Kathleen Weekley

Saving Pennies for the State. A New Role for Filipino Migrant Workers? [A SEARC CAPSTRANS Paper]

2004

58, January 2004 Ken Young

Southeast Asian Migrant Workers in East Asian Households: Globalisation, social change and the double burden of market and patriarchal disciplines [A SEARC CAPSTRANS Paper]

59, January 2004

Kanishka Jayasuriya

Kevin Hewison

The Anti-Politics of Good Governance: From Global Social Policy to a Global Populism?

60, February 2004 Michael Jacobsen

De-linking the Chinese Diaspora. On Manadonese Chinese Entrepreneurship in North Sulawesi

61, March 2004 Vedi R. Hadiz

Indonesian Local Party Politics: A Site of Resistance to Neo-Liberal Reform

62, March 2004

Andrew Brown

Kevin Hewison

Labour Politics in Thaksin’s Thailand

63, May 2004

Kevin Hewison

Garry Rodan

Closing The Circle?: Globalization, Conflict and Political Regimes

64, May 2004 Mark Beeson

Multilateralism, American Power and East Asian Regionalism

65, July 2004 Graeme Lang

Cultural Intrusions and Religious Syncretism: The Case of Caodaism in Vietnam

66, July 2004 Alex H. Choi Migrant Workers in Macao: Labour and Globalisation
67, July 2004 Stephen Frost

Chinese Outward Direct Investment in Southeast Asia: How Much and What Are the Regional Implications?

68, August 2004

Florencio R. Riguera

Environment and Social Justice: Familiar Norms and Contingent Settings – A Philippine Case Study

69, August 2004 Adam Fforde

Vietnamese State Owned Enterprises: ‘Real Property’, Commercial Performance and Political Economy

70, September 2004 Adam Fforde

State Owned Enterprises, Law and a Decade of Market-Oriented Socialist Development in Vietnam

71, September 2004 Dennis Arnold

The Situation of Burmese Migrant Workers in Mae Sot, Thailand

72, September 2004 Khoo Boo Teik

Searching for Islam in Malaysian Politics: Confluences, Divisions and Governance

73, October 2004 Vedi R. Hadiz

Indonesia: Order and Terror in a Time of Empire [A SEARC-Asia Research Centre Paper]

74, November 2004 Joy Y. Lam

Religious Conversion and Reconstruction of Identities: The Case of Chinese Muslim Converts in Malaysia

75, November 2004

Philip S. Robertson Jr.

Somsak Plaiyoowong

The Struggle of the Gina Workers in Thailand: Inside a Successful International Labour Solidarity Campaign

2005

76, May 2005 Martin Painter Thaksinocracy or Managerialization? Reforming the Thai Bureaucracy
77, June 2005 Graeme Lang
Cathy Hiu Wan Chan
The Impact of China on Southeast Asian Forests
78, July 2005 Vivienne Wee Melayu, Indigenism and the 'Civilising Process': Claims and Entitlements in Contested Territories
79, August 2005 Michael H. Nelson Analyzing Provincial Political Structures in Thailand: Phuak, Trakun, and Hua Khanaen
80, August 2005 Maniemai Thongyou Dusadee Ayuwat Social Network of Laotian migrant workers in Thailand
81, December 2005 Michele Ford Accountable to whom? Trade unions, labour NGOs and the question of accountability in Indonesia
2006

82, November 2006

Michele Ford

Nicola Piper

Southern Sites of Female Agency: Informal Regimes and Female Migrant Labour Resistance in East and Southeast Asia
2007

83, January 2007 William Case Democracy’s Quality and Breakdown: New Lessons from Thailand
84, February 2007 Jan Stark Malaysia’s Foreign Policies and a New Asian Regionalism
85, April 2007 Stephen McCarthy The Politics of Piety: Pageantry and the Struggle for Buddhism in Burma
86, May 2007 William Case
Phoebe So
Hong Kong’s 2007 Chief Executive Election:Comparators and Consequences
87, May 2007 Michael H. Nelson People’s Sector Politics’ (Kanmueang Phak Prachachon) in Thailand: Problems of Democracy in Ousting Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra
88, June 2007 Edo Andriesse Personal Power Networks and Economic Development in Satun (Thailand) and Perlis (Malaysia)
89, October 2007 Vivienne Wee A Cultural Economy of Regionalisation: Ethnicity and Capital in the Changing Relations between China and Southeast Asia (in Chinese)
90, October 2007 Michael Jacobsen Decentred Diaspora or Grounded Cosmopolitanism? On Negotiated Identities and International Linkages in Southeast Asia (in Chinese)
91, October 2007

Stephen Frost

Marry Ho

Mainland Investment on the Move: State-owned Enterprises and Outward Direct Investment in Southeast Asia (in Chinese)
92, October 2007

Wang Wangbo

The Characteristics of Southeast Asian Chinese Investments in Mainland China since 1978 (in Chinese)
93, October 2007

Vivienne Wee

Michael Jacobsen

Tiong Chong Wong

Oscillating between Economic Opportunities and Contextual Constraints: Assessing the Positioning of Southeast Asian Ethnic ‘Chinese’ Entrepreneurs in relation to China (in Chinese)
94, October 2007

Michael Jacobsen

De-linking the Chinese Diaspora – Manadonese Chinese Entrepreneurship in North Sulawesi (in Chinese)
95, October 2007

Edmund Terence Gomez

Chin Yee Whah

Malaysia in China: Transnationalism, Business Networks and Enterprise Development (in Chinese) (Part I and Part II)

96, November 2007

Andrew Selth

Modern Burma Studies: A View from the Edge

97, November 2007

Troy Johnson

Voices from Aceh: Perspectives on Syariat Law

2008

98, February 2008

Michael H. Nelson

Thaksin’s 2005 Electoral Triumph: Looking Back From the Election in 2007

99, May 2008

Astrid S. Tuminez

The Past Is Always Present: The Moros of Mindanao and the Quest for Peace

100, June 2008

Andrew Selth

Populism, Politics and Propaganda: Burma and the Movies

101, November 2008

Andrew Selth

Burma’s Coco Islands: Rumours and Realities in the Indian Ocean

Neo-liberalism a Dirty Indonesian Word

Asia Times, Jakarta, Megawati Wijaya, June 11 - Indonesia's presidential election campaign has swung towards economic policy debate, with challengers to incumbent and frontrunner Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono raising questions about his government's commitment to neo-liberal capitalism and offering voters an alternative "people-based economics", known locally as ekonomi kerakyatan.

Hopefuls for the first round of voting on July 8, Jusuf Kalla, the incumbent vice president, and Megawati Sukarnoputri, a former premier, have both taken critical aim at Yudhoyono's neo-liberal credentials, claiming his pro-market policies have cow-towed to Western business interests at the expense of grassroots Indonesians. Should either manage an electoral upset, Indonesia could see a surge in economic nationalism under their leadership.
Kalla's and Megawati's criticism has been mainly motivated by Yudhoyono's surprise decision in mid-May to tap Bank Indonesia governor Boediono, who is not affiliated with any political party, as his vice presidential running mate. A respected technocrat, the Wharton business school-trained Boediono has earned kudos for his handling of the Indonesian economy, both as Yudhoyono's coordinating minister for the economy and as central bank governor, a post he took up in May last year.

As a minister, he oversaw reforms to Indonesia's outdated 1967 Foreign Investment Law that have facilitated greater foreign participation in the economy. The new law, passed in 2007, simplified the former 150-day investment permit process to a one-stop, 30-day registration process, gave stronger and longer property rights to investors, expanded tax incentives, provided greater guarantees against investment expropriation, and allowed for the free repatriation of expatriate capital.

As central bank governor, his monetary easing, including six interest rates cuts since December, has helped to cushion the impact of the global economic meltdown and promoted more spending at home. While Southeast Asia's more export-geared economies tumble towards recession and negative growth, Indonesia's gross domestic product (GDP) expanded 4.4% in the first quarter this year and is expected to grow at 4.5% for all of 2009.

Last week the International Monetary Fund (IMF) revised up Indonesia's projected growth to 3%-4% from its previous 1-2% forecast, a strong foreign endorsement of the economy's management in tough times. Boediono also served as a finance minister in Megawati's administration and was widely credited with restoring macroeconomic and currency stability after the country went spectacularly bust in the wake of the 1997-98 Asian economic crisis.

At the same time, Boediono's selection has sparked political ripples, including a sense of pique among Yudhoyono's committed coalition partners. The Islamist Prosperous Justice Party (PKS), the United Development Party (PPP), and the National Mandate Party (PAN) have all launched attacks on Boediono's selection. Djoko Susilo, deputy chairman of the PAN faction in the House of Representatives, said Boediono's "neo-liberal Western economic perspective" was not suited for Indonesia's economic situation and that PAN is "suspicious of possible American interference behind the decision" to choose Boediono.

Those criticisms have since been echoed by Yudhoyono's election rivals. Golkar party candidate and incumbent vice president Kalla said that Boediono's neo-liberal tendencies, including the sale of national assets to foreigners, could cause the collapse of the Indonesian economy and turn Indonesians into "migrant workers in their own country". Kalla has instead proposed a "people's economy" approach, entailing grassroots involvement in managing the economy, encouragement of traditional markets and providing micro-finance facilities for small- and medium-sized enterprises.

Meanwhile, Megawati and her running mate, former soldier Prabowo Subianto, have likewise jumped on the populist bandwagon, saying if elected they will emphasize improving the livelihood of those at the bottom of the national income scale, including farmers, fishermen, and small traders at traditional markets. They have vowed to achieve double-digit GDP growth of 10% (compared to Yudhoyono's promised 7% and Kalla's 8%) with "minimum foreign loans and investment".

Yudhoyono's team has defended itself against the opposition's politicized charges. At a press conference arranged by Yudhoyono's election team, his supporters boomeranged the neo-liberal slight onto Megawati, who they noted sold the country's top telecommunications company Indosat and offshore tanks of state-owned national oil and gas company Pertamina to foreign investors during her presidency, which spanned from 2001 to 2004. They also highlighted Kalla's big business background and deals he's brokered with big foreign investors.

IMF legacy
The neo-liberal versus pro-people economy debate has its ideological roots in Indonesia's hard-knocks experience during the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis. The onerous conditions attached to the IMF's US$43 billion bailout package remain hugely controversial due to lingering perceptions they favored foreign over local interests.

Those measures included sovereignty eroding demands to privatize state enterprises, liberalize domestic markets to more foreign competition, and implement trade and tariff reforms that were hugely unpopular among the local commercial elite and economic nationalists. Average Indonesians, meanwhile, faced galloping inflation and lower spending power from a sharply depreciated currency.

When Megawati took over the premiership in 2001, she handed the economic reins to Boediono, who served as her finance minister. In a politically risky maneuver, he shunned economic nationalists in parliament and moved forward with the IMF's neo-liberal prescriptions. Ever since Boediono has overseen Indonesia's deepening market reforms, spanning both Megawati's and Yudhoyono's administrations.

He currently serves as the IMF's governor for Indonesia, a position that gives him the power to vote on IMF decisions and responsibilities for implementing the Fund's policies towards Indonesia. While his dual role and potential for conflict of interests has sparked the opposition campaign against his candidacy, the opposition criticism has been misleading, say some economic analysts.

Since former dictator Suharto's tenure, Indonesia's economic policy has always been a mix of market forces and state intervention, where calibration has always been "a fine tuning process", according to Yohannes Eko Riyanto, a lecturer in economics at the National University of Singapore. Yudhoyono has endeavored to accelerate market reforms, including through the rationalization of the banking and telecommunication industries and overhaul of the Foreign Investment Law.

As a member of the World Trade Organization (WTO) and signatory to various free trade agreements, Indonesia is legally required to dismantle tariff barriers and promote free competition across various local industries. Despite the populist posturing, neither Kalla nor Megawati is poised to drag the country back to the protectionist 1960s, when import substitution and infant industry protection were en vogue.

Ikhsan Modjo, executive director of Jakarta-based think-tank Institute for Development of Economics and Finance Indonesia (INDEF), notes that Yudhoyono's government has incorporated various pro-people policies into its economic mix. He points in particular to the government's direct cash assistance program, fuel price subsidies, and programs that have aimed to encourage economic empowerment, job opportunities and financial independence for grassroots villages.

Both Modjo and Riyanto raise red flags about Megawati's and Kalla's call for more so-called people-based economics, including unaddressed questions about how such policies would be implemented and financed. They also note that the personal backgrounds of both presidential aspirants have historically been more pro-business than pro-poor, despite each candidate's best efforts to cast themselves on the hustings as sensitive to the country's large number of people living under the poverty line.

Some analysts and investors raise concerns about the anti-Western sentiment in both Kalla's and Megawati's campaign message. To be sure, many Indonesians still believe the IMF's neo-liberal prescriptions plunged the country deeper into crisis and prolonged the period of economic suffering. The economy whipsawed from positive 7% growth to negative 13% at the height of the 1997-98 meltdown.

"Indonesians do not want to taste the same bitter pill again,'' said former finance minister Rizal Ramli. "It was an economic depression on a scale we had never experienced since independence from Dutch in 1945," he added.

Economic and financial analysts believe Indonesia is better positioned to weather the current global downturn. Analysts note that Yudhoyono was confident enough in the country's fundamentals to refuse an IMF US$2 billion short term lending facility offer to boost the country's flagging currency at the time of the G-20 meeting in Washington last November. On several measures, Indonesia has weathered the current global crisis better than many of its wealthier, more export-oriented regional neighbors, including Singapore, Malaysia and Thailand.

Although the neo-liberal versus pro-people economic debate is largely politicized, they also reflect your average Indonesian's worries about the economic future, say analysts. While economic growth has held up relatively well, due to resilient local markets, local industries such as steel and textiles have repeatedly asked the government to tighten import barriers and encourage "buy local" provisions to help them survive the downturn.

More significantly, the gap between rich and poor has recently widened and Yudhoyono has plainly failed to meet key economic targets set in the beginning of his tenure. Both Yudhoyono and Kalla promised to reduce unemployment, which peaked at 9.9% in 2004, to 5.1% when their term expired. The current unemployment rate still stands at 8.5%. Meanwhile the percentage of people living below the poverty line is stuck at 15.4%, down from 16.7% in 2004, but lagging badly behind their set goal of 8.5%.

Yudhoyono kicked off his campaign for a second term last week by saying that a "just and equitable" economy will be his priority if re-elected. He also introduced a new catchphrase to counter the neo-liberal mudslinging, a policy approach he referred to as the "middle-way" economy. Indonesia will not surrender everything to the free market, he said, but would embrace the efficiencies of a well-functioning market mechanism while ensuring more equitable wealth distribution.

According to opinion polls, Yudhoyono has hit the right economic notes. A recent poll conducted by the Indonesian Survey Institute showed that Yudhoyono's popularity now hovers around 70%. To narrow that gap, Kalla and Megawati are expected to attack his economic record during the three rounds of upcoming presidential debates to be telecast live on national television.

Pollsters and analysts say Indonesians are concerned mainly with bread and butter issues that directly affect their livelihood and are unlikely to be swayed by abstract philosophical debates over neo-liberal and people-based policies. And if the preliminary polls have it right, the election is Yudhoyono's to lose.

"Rather than debating on economic philosophy, the challengers should concentrate on elaborating their own concrete policies to fight the country's most urgent problems: poverty and unemployment," said Modjo.

Megawati Wijaya is a Singapore-based journalist. She may be contacted at megawati.wijaya@gmail.com

Source - http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/KF11Ae01.html

Palau Accepts Chinese Muslims Held at Guantanamo Bay

Photo taken on 01 June shows a guard and a Chinese Uighur Guantanamo detainee communicating at the Camp Iguana detention facility at Guantanamo Bay U.S. Naval Base, Cuba
Photo taken on 01 June shows a guard and a Chinese Uighur Guantanamo detainee communicating at the Camp Iguana detention facility at Guantanamo Bay U.S. Naval Base, Cuba


VOA, Richard Green, Washington, June 10 - Palau President Johnson Toribiong announced Wednesday his government would be "honored and proud" to temporarily resettle the 17 Uighurs being held at the controversial U.S. detention center.

Mr. Toribiong agreed to Washington's request to accept the Uighurs after talks with U.S. diplomat Daniel Fried, who is leading the U.S. State Department's effort to resettle the Guantanamo detainees. U.S. President Barack Obama has ordered Guantanamo to be shut down by January of next year.

The Bush administration refused to designate the Uighurs as "enemy combatants." It was in late 2008 when a U.S. federal judge ordered the men to be released into the United States. That ruling was eventually overturned by an appeals court.

Sandra Pierantozzi, Palau's minister of state, in an interview with VOA, says her nation is glad to have the Uighurs.

"If they want to settle in Palau we would welcome them," Pierantozzi said. "This is very much in line with the culture of Palau, where people who drift in and who needs settlement and place are welcome to our shores and our tradition will take care of them and insert them into our society."

The Uighurs are from China's western Xinjiang province. Beijing has accused the Uighurs, who dominate the province, as separatists who want to create an independent "East Turkestan." Washington is refusing to send the Uighurs back to China, fearing they would be persecuted.

Palau, a former U.S. trust territory until achieving independence in 1994, maintains diplomatic relations with Taiwan, China's longtime rival, rather than Beijing. Pierantozzi says her nation is not concerned over China's likely displeasure over the resettlement of the Uighurs.

"We continue to conduct business as usual, we are a free sovereign country, we are free to make decisions for us, as we believe and see for our benefit," Pierantozzi said. "and also we are a small country but we are a part of the United Nations and the world community of nations, so we try to do our part."

Although they would finally be free, Pierantozzi says the Uighurs may face some unexpected challenges living in Palau, a lightly populated chain of islands located 800 kilometers east of the Philippines.

"We'd like to think it is paradise, but you have to also remember the Uighurs come from a landlocked country in China, and for all intents and purposes, they make not like living in a small island surrounded by water," Pierantozzi said. "So we're not really sure they will want to come our not."

Pierantozzi denies reports her government agreed to accept $200 million in aid from the U.S. in exchange for accepting the Uighurs.



Source - http://www.voanews.com/english/2009-06-10-voa7.cfm

Guantanamo Detainee Denies Guilt

Picture of Ahmed Ghailani on the FBI website
Mr Ghailani's trial will be an important test case for closing Guantanamo

BBC, June 9 - The first Guantanamo detainee to be brought to the US for trial has pleaded not guilty to involvement in two embassy blasts in East Africa in 1998.

Ahmed Ghailani appeared before a federal court in New York, after being transferred there earlier in the day.

Mr Ghailani, a Tanzanian, was detained in Pakistan in 2004 and taken to Guantanamo in late 2006.

The case is seen as a test of the Obama administration's pledge to close Guantanamo Bay by next January.

Mr Ghailani entered the courtroom in Manhattan wearing a blue prison uniform.

AHMED KHALFAN GHAILANI
Born in Zanzibar but date varies from 1970 to 1974
Alleged to have been Osama Bin Laden's bodyguard
Accused of buying equipment for embassy attack in Tanzania in 1998 and involvement in simultaneous Kenya attack
Indicted in 1998 in New York and reportedly fled to Afghanistan
Reported in Liberia in 2001
Arrested in Pakistan in 2004

Judge Loretta Preska asked him for his plea to charges of conspiring to commit the bombings of US embassies in Tanzania and Kenya that killed 224 people, including 12 Americans.

"Not guilty," Mr Ghailani said.

Judge Preska set a date of 16 June for the next hearing.

The justice department says Mr Ghailani faces 286 charges.

They include conspiring with Osama Bin Laden and other members of al-Qaeda to kill Americans around the world, and murder charges for each of the victims of the embassy attacks of 7 August 1998.

If found guilty Mr Ghailani could face the death penalty.

Earlier, US Attorney General Eric Holder said in a statement: "With his appearance in federal court today, Ahmed Ghailani is being held accountable for his alleged role in the bombing of US embassies in Tanzania and Kenya."

Congress rejection

The BBC's Kevin Connolly in Washington says if President Barack Obama is to honour his promise to close Guantanamo Bay in his first year in office he needs as many cases from there as possible to be tried as ordinary criminal cases in federal courts.

However, the US Congress has already rejected an administration request for funding to close down Guantanamo amid widespread opposition to bringing detainees on to the US mainland.

Our correspondent says Mr Ghailani's case will also establish whether defence lawyers will seek to have US federal trials thrown out on the grounds that the government has admitted applying harsh interrogation techniques to some detainees, and holding others in secret prisons overseas.

Mr Obama is hoping to persuade America's allies around the world to take some of the other Guantanamo detainees, but negotiations have proved difficult.

A number of high-value prisoners are likely to face indefinite detention without trial, our correspondent says.

Apology

According to the transcript of a closed-door hearing in March 2007, Mr Ghailani admitted delivering explosives used to blow up the US embassy in the Tanzanian city of Dar es Salaam.

Federal Courthouse in New York
Ahmed Ghailani appeared at the Federal Courthouse in New York

However, he told the hearing he did not know about the attack beforehand and apologised to the US government and the victims' families.

Investigators say he left Africa just before the bombings.

Mr Ghailani is thought to have been born on the Tanzanian island of Zanzibar in 1970 or 1974 - making him 39 or 35 years old. He is said to speak fluent English.

He is alleged to have risen through the ranks of al-Qaeda to become a bodyguard of Osama Bin Laden.

According to the US transcript, he admitted visiting an al-Qaeda training camp in Afghanistan after the bombings. But he denied being a member of al-Qaeda.

Analysts described him as a very important figure, who was probably sent to east Africa at the time of the bombings by Osama Bin Laden's second-in-command, Ayman al-Zawahiri.

It is suggested that Mr Ghailani fled to Afghanistan after being indicted in 1998.

Source - http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8091013.stm

Army Denies Role in Thai Attack

BBC, June 9 - A Thai military spokesman has denied any possibility that the army was responsible for Monday's attack on a mosque in the south of the country.

At least 10 people died in the Narathiwat shootings, which happened during evening prayers.

Islamic militants are thought to be behind many of the attacks in the area, as part of a separatist insurgency.

But local people say they find it hard to believe the insurgents would have attacked fellow Muslims in such a way.

Separatist violence in the region has caused more than 3,000 deaths in the past five years, and there has been a recent upsurge in violence.

'Barbaric act'

Eyewitnesses report that the five or six gunmen disguised themselves with ski masks when they attacked the mosque.

The BBC's South East Asia correspondent, Jonathan Head, says the provocative nature of the attack raises questions about exactly who was behind it.

Map

Local villagers have said they find it hard to believe the insurgents would have carried out such an attack on Muslims while they were praying.

But a spokesman for the regional army command told the BBC it was impossible that any military units were responsible.

Thailand's army chief General Anupong Paojinda told reporters that the insurgents were trying to pin the blame for the "barbaric act" on the authorities .

"They absolutely want to raise this issue to a level of international concern, by making it seem like state authorities are violently cracking down on villagers," he told reporters, before leaving Bangkok for Narathiwat.

After more than a year in which the military seemed to be making progress in curbing the insurgency, the number of attacks has suddenly spiked over the past two weeks.

The insurgents remain in the shadows, never stating their demands, our correspondent said.

Comprising young men recruited by local Islamic preachers, the small cells of fighters launch hit-and-run attacks on soldiers, government officials and Thai Buddhists almost at will, he adds.

Much of the south is now a no-go area for the army, and the mainly Muslim population is deeply mistrustful of the government.

Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva has just finished a visit to neighbouring Malaysia, where he sought co-operation in sealing their shared border.

But this conflict - where both the insurgents and the security forces benefit from rampant smuggling - is too complex to be resolved by diplomacy alone, our correspondent says.

Thailand annexed the three southern provinces - Narathiwat, Yala and Pattani - in 1902, but the vast majority of people there are Muslim and speak a Malay dialect, in contrast to the Buddhist Thai speakers in the rest of the country.

Source - http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/8090599.stm

Great Firewall of China Winds Down; Censorship Battle Continues

Mashable, Ben Parr, June 9 - Last Tuesday, China took dramatic steps to quiet chatter on the web by blocking Twitter, Flickr, Bing, Hotmail, YouTube, and a wide range of social websites. This was done in advance of the 20th anniversary of Tiananmen massacre.

Well, it looks like the Great Firewall of China is finally coming down, at least for now. According to The Wall Street Journal, Chinese Internet users have been regaining access to most of social networking websites. However, it seems that the bans have not yet been lifted for YouTube (YouTube reviews) and Blogger (blogger reviews), both subsidiaries of Google (Google reviews).

This doesn’t mean that China is giving up censorship of the web. Far from it, in fact. We reported just yesterday that China intends to force PC manufacturers to install a software that blocks specific websites that the Chinese government deems detrimental. There’s still no word as to which websites will be blocked by this new software.

While the Great Firewall of China may be disappearing, the battle for freedom on the web is only beginning. There are plenty of workarounds to these blocks and now there is plenty of attention on the Chinese government’s practices. People will continue to fight censorship and oppression, even in the face of insurmountable odds because it’s just human nature. The battle over web censorship in China has only begun.

Source - http://mashable.com/2009/06/09/china-firewall-ends/

Wikipedia Articles Appear in Google News Results

Mashable, Ben Parr, June 9 - Google News has built a strong reputation on its ability to quickly find, sort and deliver news information and sources. It takes information from news websites like CNN and Reuters, newspapers like The New York Times, and news blogs like Mashable (Mashable reviews). This provides you with a broad overview of the news.

Wikipedia (Wikipedia reviews), on the other hand, is the world’s largest collection of collaboratively-edited information online. Because the articles are built by the hands of so many users, Wikipedia articles can quickly become comprehensive, detail-rich, and filled with sources and info on major news stories and events. Google (Google reviews) apparently sees great value in that information. So much so, in fact, that Wikipedia articles are starting to appear in Google News results.

While Wikipedia ranks highly in standard Google results, they have never appeared in Google News until now. After all, Wikipedia isn’t a news organization. Yet an article from CNN may provide you with a headline and a few paragraphs of information, but not provide the background and depth that a Wikipedia article can have. If you’re looking for the background on Tienamen Square or the Air France tragedy, you’re likely to find all you need there.

airbus-image
Image Credit: Nieman Lab

Google recently told the Nieman Journalism Lab of Harvard University that they’re currently experimenting with displaying Wikipedia articles as a reference and complement to current events news. That means that you might not see the links yet, and Google could end the experiment and remove Wikipedia results at anytime. Yet it seems that Google has an affinity for the community collaboration model, and we’d be surprised if Google doesn’t continue the integration after it collects enough data.

Are Wikipedia articles better sources of information than credible news sources? No, but they’re not worse, either. Wikipedia articles are an aggregation of news information sources to build a comprehensive picture. And having that information available along with news results provides the user with a different option for finding the information he or she is seeking.

Source - http://mashable.com/2009/06/09/wikipedia-google-news/

East Timor Legal News 8 - 9 June 2009

Dili court stops Pualaka Company's activities Radio Televisaun Timor Leste 9 June 2009 - The manager of the Pualaka Company, Joao Alves, who was the complainant in a petition to the court against Americo Lopes who is the Director of Pualaka Company and husband of Justice Minister Lucia Lobato applying to the court to order a stop to the the oil installation in Tibar port and oil pumps in Fatuhada.

Parliamentary Committee A has not sent final report to the President Radio Televisaun Timor Leste 9 June 2009 - MP Fernanda Borges from the National Unity Party (PUN) who is also the President for the Parliamentary Committee A said the Commission's final report on the Parliamentary Inquiry law has not yet been sent to the President of Republic Jose Ramos Horta to be promulgated because the Committee was still reviewing the content.

LABEH considers adviser for civil society abused power Radio Televisaun Timor Leste 9 June 2009 - Director of the anti-corruption NGO, LABEH, Christopher Henry Samson, considers that the adviser to the Prime Minister for Civil Society hadabused his power because he had used the government logo on a name card he sent to LABEH.

Absence of MPs a negative implication for the parliamentary plenary Radio Televisaun Timor Leste 9 June 2009 - President of Parliament Fernando Lasama de Araujo said the absence of the MPs in the parliament has negative implications for the plenary and the meetings of the Parliamentary Committees.

Fretilin concerned about the condition of the border post in Oecusse Radio Televisaun Timor Leste 9 June 2009 - Fretilin-MP Aniceto Guterres has expressed concern over the condition of the border post in Oecusse that is used by the Timorese National Police (PNTL) UPF department.

Borges calls on the Parliament to discuss Chega report Radio Televisaun Timor Leste - National Unity Party MP Fernanda Borges has urged the Parliament to speed up the discussion of the Chega report in order to respond to the people's needs of accessing their rights in the trial process.

Democratic Party never stops the duty of Deputy PM Mario Carrascalao Timor Post 9 June 2009 - The Democratia Party parliamenty bench has declared at parliament that the party has never stopped the duty of Mario Viegas Carrascalao to combat corruption, collusion and nepotism in this country.

PDHJ establishes an investigation team for maladministration Timor Post 9 June 2009 - Human Rights and Justice Ombudsmen (PDHJ) Sebastiao Dias Ximenes said he has established an investigation team to oversee cases of government maladministration.
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President calls for restaurants to be moved Radio Televisaun Timor Leste 8 June 2009 - President Jose Ramos Horta has called for the restaurants at the seashore of Metiaut to be moved to another place, because the place is belonging to the Government.

President calls for the Govt to create a decree law to force citizens to clean Radio Televisaun Timor Leste 8 June 2009 - President Jose Ramos Horta said he would consult with the Government to create a decree law to force all residents to take part in public cleaning program that being set by the AMP Government.
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Source - http://easttimorlegal.blogspot.com/2009/06/east-timor-legal-news-8-9-june-2009.html