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Oct 18, 2011
IRIN - Thailand: New drug crackdown raises concerns
CHIANG MAI, 18 October 2011 (IRIN) - Thailand's new government has unveiled plans for an ambitious crackdown on drugs, with an emphasis on rehabilitation and compassion.
Officially announced on 3 October, the policy includes placing some 400,000 drug addicts in rehabilitation programmes within the year, as well as arresting some 10,000 known dealers.
But while the planned focus on rehabilitation is seen as a step forward in a country where nearly 3,000 people were killed during the 2003 controversial war on drugs, human rights groups and activists remain sceptical.
"An ambitious and worrying target has been set to 'rehabilitate' 400,000 drug users within one year," says Human Rights Watch (HRW) spokesman Sunnai Pasuk.
"Concerns remain about the potential arbitrary arrests and detention of drug users in compulsory drug 'rehabilitation' centres, mostly run by the military and Interior Ministry, where 'treatment' is based on military-style physical exercise, with little medical assistance for drug withdrawal symptoms," he added.
HRW is not alone in its concern.
"We need to ensure that in working with the government that full respect for human rights is maintained and that the treatment provided to drug users is voluntary, evidence-based and rights-based," Gary Lewis, regional representative for East Asia and the Pacific in the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), said.
In 2010, more than 80 percent of all persons who received drug treatment in specialized treatment facilities and correctional institutions reported methamphetamine pills as the primary drug of use.
Thailand is one of the few countries in the region that provides specialized treatment for amphetamine-type stimulants (ATS) usage, according to the UNODC's 2011 Global ATS Assessment.
That is due, in large part, to the alarming increase in drug seizures in the region in recent years. UNODC reports that the number of methamphetamine pills seized in South-East Asia leaped from 32 million in 2008 to 133 million in 2010, with Thailand remaining one of the largest markets.
"In the region the international community and the countries of the region have taken their eye off the ball in drug control," said Lewis.
"For various reasons we are now in a situation where we are facing a significant increase in seizures as well as opium production, largely in east and south Shan state in Myanmar," Lewis added.
Due to increased illicit manufacture in neighbouring Myanmar, seizures of methamphetamines in both pill and crystalline forms in Thailand have increased each year since 2007.
During that period, methamphetamine pill seizures rose from 14 million in 2007 to 22 million in 2008, 27 million in 2009 and nearly 50 million in 2010, according to UNODC.
Earlier this month, just one day after the launch of the crackdown, Thai Navy forces seized nearly a million amphetamine pills from a Chinese vessel hauling fruit and vegetables down the Mekong River.
Lessons learnt
In the hills of northern Thailand, where most of the drugs are smuggled across the porous border, Captain Sompong Taweeklamkun has seen first-hand the damage caused by the illicit trade.
The commander is confident the new crackdown will not be a repeat of the 2003 controversy. "We have learnt from the past, use better tactics to get inside the community by using volunteers to go to every village on the drug list," the veteran member of the Thai military's anti-drug Pha Muang task force, which oversees enforcement in the north, told IRIN.
Indeed, the new policy has key elements that sound good - at least on paper - but there are still concerns about implementation.
And there is little comfort for the thousands of victims' families from the crackdown seven years ago - who still wait for full investigations to take place. "To date, there is no sign that the government will continue the 'war on drugs' investigations," says HRW's Pasuk.
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Oct 17, 2011
Asian Correspondent - Italian priest shot dead in Philippines
By Edwin Espejo Oct 17, 2011 3:28PM UTC
Photo of slain Italian priest Fr. Fausto Tentorio in the PIME website
MANILA – An Italian missionary was gunned down Monday morning outside his parish church in Arakan Valley, Cotabato as he was preparing to attend the Presbyterium of the Cotabato diocese in southern Philippines.
Reports said Fr. Fausto Tentorio, a PIME priest, was approached by a lone gunman who shot him in the head and chest before fleeing on a motorcycle.
Witnesses were not able to describe the face of the gunman, who was reportedly wearing a crash helmet.
The priest was rushed to the hospital in Kidapawan City but was pronounced dead on arrival.
Police are still investigating the motive and the identity of the lone gunman.
Prior to his death, Fr. Tentorio revealed in the website of PIME (Pontifical Institute for Foreign Missions) that armed men who introduced themselves as members of Bagani were casing his parish convent and asking for his whereabouts early in the month.
The armed men were also reportedly asking around the neighborhood as to Fr. Tentorio’s whereabouts.
Villagers however declined to reveal the priest’s location.
One of the armed men reportedly said they “will just arrest” the priest and bring him to their superiors.
“Worried of the possible consequences, the people denied to them that I was there. They told me and my companions to stay quiet in the house and hide there because the Bagani were looking for me. We decided to listen to their advice because to try to run would have been too dangerous. We did not know how many of them were there, and where they were hiding,” the priest narrated.
On Monday, however, Fr. Tentorio became the third member of the PIME congregation to be killed in Mindanao.
The first was Fr. Tulio Favali, who was killed in Tulunan town also in Cotabato in 1985. The other was Fr. Salvador Carzedda who was gunned down in Zamboanga City in 1992.
According to local Mindanao-based online publication www.mindanews.com, the slain priest was active in his advocacy of the protecting the rights of indigenous tribes in the province and was a staunch anti-mining advocate.
Fr. Tentorio had organized the tribal organization called the Tinananon-Kulamanon Lumadnong Panaghiusa or TIKULPA.
IRIN - Cambodia worries about long-term flood fallout
KRATIE PROVINCE, 17 October 2011 (IRIN) - Severe flooding across Cambodia poses serious risks to the country's food security, according to NGOs.
Flooding has spread across 17 of Cambodia's 24 provinces, killing 247 people, forcing the evacuation of more than 34,000 households, and destroying some 200,000 hectares of rice fields, which comprise nearly 10 percent of the country's harvest, according to the National Committee for Disaster Management (NCDM), a government agency.
It said flood damage, including destruction of more than 1,000 schools and some 2,400km of roads, would exceed that caused by devastating floods in 2000, which cost US$161 million in damage.
Leh Smah, 62, said a third of residents in his community, Chhoer Teal Plun Village in Kratie Province in the northeast, had lost large parts or all of their rice harvest.
The 20kg rice sacks donated to affected families by the Red Cross will last a week, he said. "Soon they will be out of food again and will have to purchase food on credit unless they receive more aid."
More than 80,000 families have received aid, according to the NCDM.
Francis Perez, head of Oxfam in Cambodia, said flood relief varied by province, with robust assistance in most areas but there were still "huge pockets where emergency response has been very inadequate".
The southeastern province of Prey Vey in particular, he said, had received far less flood relief than other provinces and some communities were facing food shortages.
Recovery
The longer-term impact of the flooding remains uncertain but, says Rosaleen Martin, a spokesperson for the UN World Food Programme, there are widespread concerns over food security.
Prime Minister Hun Sen announced last week that the government would create a $100 million fund for relief and rehabilitation but no details have been given on how this money would be managed.
The Agriculture Ministry says it plans to distribute rice seeds to flood-affected communities to help offset losses from destroyed crops.
In a move to stabilize rice prices, which began to rise because of the flood, government authorities released 120MT of government-stocked milled rice on to the market on 16 October.
A spokesperson for the UN Disaster Management Team in Cambodia said the group was drafting a proposal for an emergency fund that would include assistance for emergency relief and the rehabilitation of destroyed fields.
Oxfam's Perez said that because of losses to their rice harvest, farmers would likely turn to borrowing, which is commonly done at usury rates "that drive people into a risky cycle".
Health risks
Health officials say the flooding had prolonged the dengue fever season: 54 children have died from the disease in the first nine months of this year, compared with 28 in 2010, according to the government's National Dengue Control Programme.
Dengue outbreaks are spurred by heavy rain, which forms pools that harbour the eggs of mosquitoes carrying the disease.
Other health risks associated with flooding include water-borne diseases spurred by damage to toilet and drinking water facilities, as well as respiratory infections and measles.
The UN and a number of NGOs were coordinating with government agencies to provide water purification tablets, ceramic water filters and jerry cans for safe water storage.
Nima Asgari, a public health specialist with the World Health Organization in Cambodia, said no signs had yet emerged of disease outbreaks in affected communities.
The main task for health officials is to restore emergency health services, including assisted birthing, to affected communities.
The UN Children's Fund is releasing funding for rural government health offices to form mobile teams to travel to families cut off from regular healthcare access because of the floods, said Richard Bridle, the group's country representative.
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Oct 16, 2011
Timor-Leste’s Tasi Mane Project
By Mong Palatino
Part of Timor-Leste’s Strategic Development Plan is the building of three industrial clusters on the country’s southwest coast, which will be the backbone of its petroleum industry. But civil society groups have warned that the ambitious project will have little impact on the economy.
The Tasi Mane (Male Sea) Project will involve the development of an integrated petroleum infrastructure in the coastal zone from Suai to BeaƧo over the next two decades. The plan includes the construction of the Suai Supply Base cluster, the Betano Refinery and Petrochemical Industry cluster, and the BeaƧo LNG-Plant cluster.
Suai will become a centre for providing services, logistics, fabrications and human resources for the petroleum industry. The supply base will require the establishment of a sea port in Kamanasa, a housing complex, heavy metals workshop, shipbuilding and repair facilities and a rehabilitated Suai airport. In Betano, a refinery and petrochemical complex will rise in a new centre that will be known as Petroleum City. And finally, in Beaco, an LNG Plant complex will be constructed near the towns of Nova Beaco and Nova Viqueque. The existing airport at Viqueque will be upgraded into a regional airport.
Aside from addressing the long term domestic energy requirements of Timor-Leste, the Tasi Mane Project is expected to generate substantial revenues, jobs, and livelihood opportunities in the country’s southern corridor. The government is confident that it will boost the petroleum sector, which can be used to directly promote the industrialization of the economy.
Timor-Leste is dependent on its oil revenues, but economists have already advised it to diversify its economy by venturing into non-oil activities since its oil and gas reserves are estimated to reach its peak in 13 years. But La'o Hamutuk, a Timor-Leste-based NGO, believes that Tasi Mane reflects the continuing dependence of the country on the petroleum industry. In its critique of the government’s development strategy, the group noted that petroleum processing seems to be the only industrial development discussed in the paper. ‘What about agricultural processing, or light industry to replace imported products?’ the group asked.
The group also questioned the government allocation of over 30 million for the Tasi Mane project, which is more than twice the budget of the Agriculture Ministry. ‘We lamented the nearly exclusive focus on the petroleum industry and resulting in lost opportunities to explore other possibilities for economic development,’ the group said.
The project blueprint is also silent on the concrete and real impact of Tasi Mane on the local economy and the communities in the south coast. ‘Nothing is said about how many jobs these projects will provide for Timorese workers, how much land they will take from uses such as agriculture and fishing, how many people will have to be displaced, or how much revenue they will generate for the state,’ La'o Hamutuk added.
Parliament is being urged by the NGO not to grant the government a blank cheque for a project that’s lacking transparency and whose economic viability is in doubt.
Still, the Tasi Mane Project is the flagship programme of Timor-Leste’s development strategy, and it has much potential since it can harness the country’s petroleum resources for the long term benefit of the local population. It can redirect the oil revenues to spur industrialization and the diversification of the local economy. But the issues raised by La'o Hamutuk and other NGOs are also valid, and they require immediate government consideration and action. Timor-Leste’s leaders must clarify these issues by engaging and consulting with the people, especially the communities that will be affected or displaced by Tasi Mane.
Image credit: Flickr / yeowatzup
Oct 15, 2011
NYT - Rallies Across the Globe Protest Economic Policies
October 15, 2011
By RACHEL DONADIO and ELIZABETH A. HARRIS
ROME — In dozens of cities around the world on Saturday, people took to the streets, clutching placards and chanting slogans as part of a planned day of protests against the financial system.
In Rome, a rally thick with tension spread over several miles. Small groups of violent young people turned a largely peaceful protest into a riot, setting fire to at least one building and a police van and clashing with police officers, who responded with water cannons and tear gas.
Local news media reported that dozens of protesters had been injured. Law enforcement officials would not confirm those figures, but said 20 police officers had been hurt.
In other European cities, including Berlin and London, the demonstrations were largely peaceful, with thousands of people marching past ancient monuments and gathering in front of capitalist symbols like the European Central Bank in Frankfurt. Elsewhere, the turnout was more modest, but rallies of a few hundred people were held in cities including Sydney, Australia, Tokyo and Hong Kong. Protests also continued in New York and were held in several other cities in the United States and Canada.
But just as the rallies in New York have represented a variety of messages — signs have been held in opposition to President Obama yards away from signs in support of him— so Saturday’s protests contained a grab bag of messages, opposing nuclear power, political corruption and the privatization of water.
Despite the difference in language, landscape and scale, the protests were united in frustration with the widening gap between the rich and the poor.
“I have no problem with capitalism. I have no problem with a market economy. But I find the way the financial system is functioning deeply unethical,” Herbert Haberl, 51, said in Berlin. “We shouldn’t bail out the banks. We should bail out the people.”
In New York, where the occupation of Zuccotti Park in Lower Manhattan was moving into its second month, a large crowd marched north early Saturday afternoon to Washington Square Park, where they were joined by several hundred college students who spoke, among other things, about student debt and unemployment. Another march, to Times Square, was planned for later.
Earlier, about a dozen protesters entered a Chase branch in Lower Manhattan and withdrew their money from the bank while 300 other people circled the block, some shouting chants and beating on drums. The former Chase customers, who declined to reveal how much they had in their accounts — though a few acknowledged it was not much — said they planned to put their money into smaller banks or credit unions.
About 20 people were arrested while demonstrating at a Citibank branch in Greenwich Village.
In Washington, several hundred people marched through downtown, beginning in the early morning, passing by several banks. Escorted by the police, the marchers also demonstrated in front of the White House and the Treasury Department before moving on to a rally on the National Mall, where they were joined by representatives of unions and other supporters.
Kelly Mears, 24, a former software engineer, said he was despondent about the direction of the country and was inspired to join the protest after following the one in New York on Twitter and other social media. Mr. Mears and dozens of other protesters have been camped out in McPherson Square, a park not far from the White House, for the past two weeks.
“You see how people are beholden to corporate interest no matter how hard you might have worked to get them elected,” Mr. Mears said. “There is a disconnect.”
Saturday’s protests sprang not only from Occupy Wall Street movement that began last month in New York, but also from demonstrations in Spain in May. This weekend, the global protest effort came as finance ministers and central bankers from the Group of 20 industrialized nations meet in Paris to discuss economic issues, including ways to tackle Europe’s sovereign debt crisis
In London, where crowds assembled in front of St. Paul’s Cathedral, the ubiquitous emblems of the movement were in evidence. “Bankers Are the Real Looters” and “We Are the 99 Percent,” read several placards and flags. One demonstrator, dressed as Jesus Christ, held a sign that said “I Threw the Money Lenders Out for a Reason.”
Brief clashes were reported in London, where the police were out in force with dozens of riot vans, canine units and hundreds of officers. But the gathering, attended by people of all ages, was largely peaceful, with a picnic atmosphere and people streaming in and out of a nearby Starbucks.
The WikiLeaks founder, Julian Assange, made an appearance at the cathedral, where he was met by hundreds of cheering fans. He called the protest movement “the culmination of a dream.”
In Rome, Saturday’s protests were as much about the growing dissatisfaction with the government of Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi — who narrowly survived a vote of confidence on Friday — as they were about global financial inequities. Tens of thousands of people turned out for what started as peaceful protests and devolved into ugly violence. The windows of shops and bank windows were smashed, a police van was destroyed and some Defense Ministry offices were set alight.
“We’re upset because we don’t have prospects for the future,” Alessia Tridici, 18, said in Rome. “We’ll never see a pension. We’ll have to work until we die.”
In contrast, protests in Berlin remained peaceful and upbeat, with music and even a little dancing on a warm, sunny day.
“I like the carnival atmosphere,” said Juhani Seppovaara, 64, a photographer and writer originally from Finland now living in Berlin. “But for me there’s a little too much populism, very complicated matters reduced to one or two sentences.”
About 350 miles away in Frankfurt, thousands gathered under a giant blue euro sign at the European Central Bank, in an orderly and well-organized demonstration complete with public toilets.
Thomas Lindner, 45, said the New York protests had inspired him to join the demonstration.
“The banks get rescued right away, but the poor people don’t get any support,” Mr. Lindner said.
Nearby, a man who said he went by only one name, FrƤnky, passed out fake 10-euro notes as part of a campaign to abolish money.
In Sydney, several hundred protesters carried signs with slogans including “We Are the 99%” and “Capitalism Is Killing Our Economy.” The atmosphere was lively, with a brass band providing music in thoroughfares outside the headquarters of the Reserve Bank of Australia in the city’s financial district.
In central Tokyo, where periodic rallies against nuclear power have been held since the March accident at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, about 300 protesters marched with signs through busy streets and heavy traffic, chanting “We’re with Occupy Wall Street!” “Down with the rich!” and “No more nukes!”
Two young men held a banner that expressed an apologetic solidarity: “Radioactivity Has No Borders. To the World From Japan: Sorry!”
Another held a sign that read simply, “Let’s Complain More.”
“Even timid Japanese are finally starting to push for change,” said Miku Ohkura, 24, a college student in Tokyo, who said she had already been to about a half-dozen protests for various causes in the last few months. She said that apart from being opposed to nuclear power, younger people were angry at being made to bear the brunt of Japan’s economic woes. “We all have different messages, but we’re all alike in that we want society to become more equal,” she said.
Throughout the day, that sentiment was echoed around streets and squares all over the world.
“We’ve had decades of increasing inequality, culminating in the financial crisis,” said Jack Copley, 20, a student at the University of Birmingham who was protesting in London. “The best we can hope for,” he said, gesturing to the gathered crowd, “is that we can change the political climate to make it harder for politicians to rule in the interests of the few.”
Rachel Donadio reported from Rome, and Elizabeth A. Harris from New York. Reporting was contributed by Kevin Drew from Hong Kong, Jack Ewing from Frankfurt, Nicholas Kulish from Berlin, Colin Moynihan and Christopher Maag from New York, Ron Nixon from Washington, Matt Siegel from Sydney, Australia, Ravi Somaiya from London and Hiroko Tabuchi from Tokyo.
Sep 12, 2011
Abstracts - Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, Volume 42 / Issue 03, October 2011, pp 373 - 582
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