Jun 10, 2012

Syria rebels gaining ground, strength

Syria rebels gaining ground, strength:
BEIRUT — An increasingly effective Syrian rebel force has been gaining ground in recent weeks, stepping up its attacks on government troops and expanding the area under its control even as world attention has been focused on pressuring Syrian President Bashar al-Assad to comply with a U.N. cease-fire.
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President Obama bristles when he is the target of activist tactics he once used

President Obama bristles when he is the target of activist tactics he once used:
Barack Obama entered the stately Roosevelt Room and assumed his customary spot. Many of the nation’s leading immigration advocates had been waiting for him inside the windowless meeting space in the West Wing, eager to make their case. The president’s reserved chair was situated at the center of the long conference table, its back slightly elevated, a gentle reminder of power, but this did not seem to intimidate the activists on that March afternoon in 2010.

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Obama’s political gaffe will be fodder in general election

Obama’s political gaffe will be fodder in general election:
Here’s an unpopular opinion: Political gaffes matter.
In the wake of President Obama’s assertion Friday that “the private sector is doing fine” — and his subsequent attempt to clean up the rhetorical mess he had made for himself — many Democrats insisted that while it wasn’t his best moment, it was far from consequential in his reelection race.
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Look But Don't Touch….Yet: Internet Activism in #TimorLeste ...

Look But Don't Touch….Yet: Internet Activism in #TimorLeste ...: This modern-day utterance came not from the secretary of a high-school prom organizing committee, but rather from the youngest Board Member of Ba Futuru, Timor Leste's preeminent peace building and human rights ...

Noir nights in Phnom Penh

Noir nights in Phnom Penh:
Phnom Penh Street at Night – Chris Coles
While Phnom Penh’s come a million miles since the Khmer Rouge and Year Zero, it’s still a city with an edge, especially at night. Entire buildings and city blocks are often dark and unlit, sidewalks and streets in disrepair, piles of garbage are strewn in every direction. A small group of “Big Men” have their Mercedes, Toyota Land Cruisers and Lexus SUV, but most of the people who inhabit Phnom Penh grind away on almost nothing, living day to day with no real savings, no prospects, a daily darwinistic struggle for low-level survival with just a faint glimmer of hope far, far away, on a distant neon horizon.
In the midst of the ongoing debate about Cambodia’s present government, power structure, levels of injustice and impunity, etc., it’s nevertheless clear that there is an immense transformation taking place at this moment in Cambodia.  Huge and rapid capital accumulation by a small elite, waves of internal immigration by young people from the rural/farming areas into Phnom Penh, a barely controlled influx of foreigners and investment from China, Russia, Korea, Europe, Australia, South Asia, North America and even Africa, a multitude of small business being started, so many NGO’s that they seem to be colliding with each other in their competition to “do good”, altogether a redefining of what modern Cambodia is and what it is becoming.
“Noir Nights in Phnom Penh” is a view of the present moment filtered through my perceptions and point of view as an artist rather than an academic or objective analysis. But perhaps the imagination, intuition and instinct can sometimes provide illumination in a way that eludes a more rational and scientific approach………

Lexus SUV in Phnom Penh Night – Chris Coles
It probably cost 100,000 plus USD, more than a lifetime income for most Cambodians, much less what they might save………it’s shiny, invulnerable, air-conditioned to the max and takes one of Cambodia’s Big Men wherever he wants to go………

Bargirl in the Phnom Penh Night – Chris Coles
Usually from one of Cambodia’s rural provinces, usually with at least one son or daughter, unlikely to have gone to school more than 6 years, the ex-husband or boyfriend AWOL, her mother and father subsistence farmers scratching out a few hundred dollars a year…….it all comes down to her, sitting alone in the Phnom Penh Expat bar, hoping to somehow find a way out………

Nite Cafe Phnom Penh – Chris Coles
Scattered around the Phnom Penh night, in between the pools of darkness, there are more and more Nite Cafe’s……liter bottles of Angkor beer, Khmer pop music, spicy food, snacks, warm and lively conversation,  a re-knitting of the social fabric after so many years of destruction…………

Phnom Penh Hi-Rise – Chris Coles
Rising high above the rest of Phnom Penh, massive cement condos to be filled with large-screen plasma tv’s and newly rich Khmer, business guys from China, Korea, Japan, Taiwan, Singapore, NGO chiefs from North America, Europe and Australia…..

Phnom Penh Night Market – Chris Coles
It’s late but the night market’s still open, at least some of it….piles of Cambodia fruits…a few rats scuttling through the trash……..
(to view more of Chris Coles “Noir Nights in Phnom Penh” photo essay, click here…………)

Pacquiao loses WBO title in shock defeat

Pacquiao loses WBO title in shock defeat: Judges hand victory to US fighter Timothy Bradley in Las Vegas, with decision derided as "unfathomable" by promoter.

Jun 9, 2012

Syrian cities endure intense shelling

Syrian cities endure intense shelling: Activists say shells raining down on Homs and Deraa as Russia says situation in the country is becoming "more alarming".

INDONESIA: Report card on disaster preparedness

INDONESIA: Report card on disaster preparedness:
JAKARTA, 8 June 2012 (IRIN) - JAKARTA, 8 June 2012 – A new World Health Organization (WHO) assessment reviews Indonesia's emergency preparedness and identifies needed improvements, which experts and government officials agree are critical.

Guards 'Vanish' From Chen's Village

Guards 'Vanish' From Chen's Village:
Chinese authorities have withdrawn hundreds of security personnel from round-the-clock guard duty in the home village of escaped blind activist Chen Guangcheng as his relatives accuse officials of destroying evidence of abuse ahead of an official investigation.

"The guards who were watching [the village] have all left," Chen's brother, Chen Guangfu, said on Friday. "They demolished two guard-houses, where they slept, and where they beat up countless people who tried to visit Chen Guangcheng, in the space of a single night."

"They have even taken their litter. There isn't a single trace. My feeling is that they want to destroy any evidence."

Chen's daring escape in April from his closely guarded home in Shandong's Dongshigu village and flight to the U.S. Embassy in Beijing, where he sought refuge for nearly a week, came just ahead of annual strategic dialogues between U.S. and Chinese officials, prompting a diplomatic crisis and frantic behind-the-scenes negotiations.

The crisis was defused after Chen was allowed to fly to New York, where he is a special student in law at the U.S.-Asia Law Institute of New York University.

Hundreds of security guards had stayed at their posts at Dongshigu village, manning checkpoints, surveillance cameras, and guard-houses for several weeks after Chen fled.

Chen's fellow villagers told the Associated Press that they feel liberated by the removal of the guards.

Chen told the agency by phone from New York that security measures should have been removed long ago, pointing to a promise that a central government official had made to him in May.

"I feel that there is nothing to be happy about," said Chen, adding that his nephew, Chen Kegui, was still being held in a detention center and denied access to lawyers hired by his family.

Chen has repeatedly hit out at the charges, saying Chen Kegui acted in self-defense after a sudden and vicious attack by officials in the wake of his flight to Beijing.

Chen Guangfu said he had been given details on Wednesday at the Yinan county legal aid center of the two lawyers hired by the authorities to represent his son, who has been charged with "intentional homicide."

"They told me the names of the two lawyers, and I wanted to meet with them, but that wasn't possible," he said.

"I just managed to exchange a few words on the phone with one of them. I asked him if he had met with Kegui, and he said he had. I asked him how his injuries were, but he didn't give me a straight answer."

Defense lawyer

One of the lawyers, Wang Haijun, confirmed on Friday that he had been appointed to represent Chen Kegui, but declined to give further details.

"We are acting as defense lawyers, and our main priority is to protect the interests of the defendant," Wang said. "That includes his privacy, so in the absence of confirmation of your relationship to him, I can't tell you any more."

Meanwhile, Beijing-based rights lawyer Ding Xikui, who was appointed by Chen Kegui's family to represent him, said the authorities were still preventing him from meeting with Chen Kegui.

"They're not even picking up the phone now," said Ding. "I have no way of contacting them."

"I can only continue to negotiate with them, and see if it is possible to make a trip at some point in the future."

Last month, the Shandong branch of the ruling Chinese Communist Party removed from office one of the province's most powerful law enforcement officials, Bai Jimin, in a move which analysts said could be linked to Chen's demand that officials who authorized the mistreatment of him and his family be investigated and punished.

However, Bai didn't receive any kind of public sanction, and was simply transferred to a less high-profile post at the provincial People's Congress.

Reported by Grace Kei Lai-see for RFA's Cantonese service, and by Xin Yu for the Mandarin service. Translated and written in English by Luisetta Mudie.

Altantuya and Malaysia’s 13th general elections

Altantuya and Malaysia’s 13th general elections:

As Malaysia’s thirteenth general elections draw near, the ghost of Altantuya appears to haunt the Prime Minister.
On 19th April, 2012, a Paris court began inquiry into the Scorpene submarine deal when Najib Razak was the Defense Minister:
Suaram (Malaysia’s leading human rights organisation) has announced that an inquiry into the alleged corruption, misuse and abuse of taxpayers money, linked to the purchase of the two Scorpene class submarines, back in 2002 will commence on Thursday, 19 April at the Paris Tribunal de Grande Instance (TGI), a first degree court that deals with civil litigation matters.
John Berthelsen, Asia Sentinel editor, has extensive coverage of the intricasies of this case in this article:
French investigating magistrates probing the US$1.2 billion sale of submarines to the Malaysian Defense Ministry are targeting, among other things, a Hong Kong-based company called Terasasi (Hong Kong) Ltd., whose principal officers are Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak’s close friend and the friend’s father.
Investigators believe that at least some of the €36 million funneled through Terasasi ended up in the pockets of Najib, who was Malaysia’s defense minister and deputy prime minister when the two Scorpene submarines were purchased from Thales International or Thint Asia. The state-owned defense giant DCN, later known as DCNS, and Thales established a joint company named Armaris to manufacture the submarines in 2002.
Most shocking to date has been this article by Roger Mitton, writing in the first person, in the Phnom Penh Post:
Soon after meeting her in Hong Kong, Razak took her off to tour Europe in his red Ferrari, wining and dining at all the best spots and finally ending up in Paris where they met Najib.
Multilingual Tuya, as well as being drop-dead gorgeous, was also smart and quickly learned about the huge bribe for the sub deal and doubtless envisaged a handsome cut for herself.
But succumbing to “fatal attraction syndrome”, she clung relentlessly to Razak, and he, fearing that her indiscretions might bring him down, tried to end the affair.
She would not have it, and in desperation, he spoke to Najib and the police were called in to keep her away.
Two aggressive Special Branch officers took their assignment literally and kidnapped her.
Then they raped her, shot her in the head and blew up her body with C4 explosives from Najib’s defence ministry – and for good measure, erased her entry into Malaysia from immigration records.
While it is unlikely that the court case in Paris and the media reports will have much influence on the United Malays National Organisations (UMNO) hard core supporters as well as large traction of rural poor and indigenous people at the coming general elections, the case itself will have far reaching implications on Malaysia’s leadership and its international relations, if Prime Minister Najib Razak is found guilty, ironically in a foreign country.

Majority of Chinese Prioritize Environment Over Economy

Majority of Chinese Prioritize Environment Over Economy: Fifty-seven percent of Chinese adults say environmental protection should be given priority, even at the risk of curbing economic growth. Less than half of residents in the country's biggest cities are satisfied with their air quality.

Mormons Widely Favor Romney; Jewish Voters Back Obama

Mormons Widely Favor Romney; Jewish Voters Back Obama: Mormon voters widely back Mitt Romney's presidential candidacy, with 84% saying they would vote for him compared with 13% for Barack Obama. Jewish voters, a traditionally strong Democratic group, favor Obama by 64% to 29%.

Rand Paul endorses Mitt Romney

Rand Paul endorses Mitt Romney:
Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) has endorsed Mitt Romney’s presidential bid, throwing his weight behind the presumptive GOP nominee even as his father, Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas), has yet to fully terminate his White House bid.
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Woodward and Bernstein: 40 years after Watergate, Nixon was far worse than we thought

Woodward and Bernstein: 40 years after Watergate, Nixon was far worse than we thought:
As Sen. Sam Ervin completed his 20-year Senate career in 1974 and issued his final report as chairman of the Senate Watergate committee, he posed the question: “What was Watergate?”

Countless answers have been offered in the 40 years since June 17, 1972, when a team of burglars wearing business suits and rubber gloves was arrested at 2:30 a.m. at the headquarters of the Democratic Party in the Watergate office building in Washington. Four days afterward, the Nixon White House offered its answer: “Certain elements may try to stretch this beyond what it was,” press secretary Ronald Ziegler scoffed, dismissing the incident as a “third-rate burglary.”
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Greg Sargent: Mitt Romney: We don’t need more cops, firefighters or teachers

Greg Sargent: Mitt Romney: We don’t need more cops, firefighters or teachers:
When Republicans attack public workers, they often take care to exempt cops and firefighters, because they are culturally sympathetic figures, and muddle the message that government workers are parasites who are destroying the economic conditions of ordinary Americans.
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Pelosi marks a quarter-century in the House

Pelosi marks a quarter-century in the House:
Rep. Nancy Pelosi, the Democratic leader in the House, is celebrating 25 years as a member of Congress on Saturday and the celebrations and commemorations of the milestone have been epic. There have been million-dollar fundraisers and lectures with former presidents; San Francisco streets have been named after her and there were concerts with rock star Bono and the remaining members of the Grateful Dead.
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A bad week for Obama and the Democrats

A bad week for Obama and the Democrats:
All you need to know about the week the Democrats just had can be summed up by noting that both President Obama and former president Bill Clinton, the two best campaigners their party has seen in decades, had to clean up verbal messes they’d made earlier. And, oh yes, Mitt Romney’s campaign raised more money last month than Obama’s — by more than 25 percent.
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Approval Rating for Supreme Court Hits Just 44% in Poll

Approval Rating for Supreme Court Hits Just 44% in Poll: Three-quarters of Americans say the Supreme Court’s decisions are sometimes influenced by personal or political views, according to a New York Times/CBS News poll.

Nuclear Agency Talks With Iran Stall Over Access to Sites

Nuclear Agency Talks With Iran Stall Over Access to Sites: Discussions aimed at securing access to restricted sites — where the United Nations believes scientists may have tested explosives that could be used on nuclear warheads — stalled on Friday.

Political Memo: Demographic Shifts in Key States Could Aid Obama in Fall

Political Memo: Demographic Shifts in Key States Could Aid Obama in Fall: Polls show that President Obama holds a thin cushion against economic and political woes in many states: minority voters and the shape-shifting November electorate.

E-Mails Highlight Extent of Obama’s Deal With Industry on Health Care

E-Mails Highlight Extent of Obama’s Deal With Industry on Health Care: Newly released messages between administration officials and drug industry lobbyists underscore the compromises underlying President Obama’s effort to overhaul health care.

Six Words From Obama, and a Barrage From Republicans

Six Words From Obama, and a Barrage From Republicans: Congressional Republicans and Mitt Romney seized on a comment by President Obama — “the private sector is doing fine” — to criticize him as out of touch.

Obama Shows Support for Philippines in China Standoff

Obama Shows Support for Philippines in China Standoff: In a meeting with President Benigno S. Aquino III, President Obama said the two countries would “consult closely together” as part of the “pivot by the United States back to Asia.”

Big U.S. Banks Brace for Downgrades

Big U.S. Banks Brace for Downgrades: Banks, bond issuers and investors are bracing for aftershocks from a wave of bank downgrades expected to hit the U.S. as soon as the coming week.
 

Jun 7, 2012

Bad day for LinkedIn: 6.5 million hashed passwords reportedly leaked – change yours now

Bad day for LinkedIn: 6.5 million hashed passwords reportedly leaked – change yours now: 6290003115 7788c41563 z 520x245 Bad day for LinkedIn: 6.5 million hashed passwords reportedly leaked   change yours now
Update: LinkedIn has responded to the issue, updating its official Twitter account to state that it is “looking into reports.” Scroll down for more information.
Already in the spotlight over concerns that its iOS app collects full meeting notes and details from a device’s calendar and sends them back to the company in plain text, LinkedIn user accounts are now said to have been compromised, with 6.5 million hashed and encrypted passwords reportedly leaked.
Norweigan IT webite Dagens IT reported the breach, with 6.5 million encrypted passwords posted to a Russian hacker site. Security researcher Per Thorsheim has also confirmed reports via his Twitter feed, stating that the attackers have posted the encrypted passwords to request help cracking them.
Finnish security firm CERT-FI is warning that whilst user details have not been posted, it is believed that the attackers will have access to user data as well as their passwords.
One LinkedIn user has already confirmed his password was leaked:
btw after getting the list of @linkedin hashes and hashing my old pwd with no salt there is a match for the hash in the list
— securityninja (@securityninja) June 6, 2012
What should you do? For starters, change your password.
LinkedIn hasn’t responded to reports at the time of writing, so the breach is yet to be confirmed. However, over 300,000 passwords are said to have been decrypted, and more are being cracked as we write this. We suggest you employ good security practises and amend yours, regardless of whether you have been affected or not.
LinkedIn is home to more than 150 million users, suggesting the breach is limited to less than 10% of the professional social network’s userbase, but it will still affect a huge number of users.
The unsalted hashes use SHA-1 encryption, and while it is somewhat secure, it can still be cracked if the user employs a simple dictionary password.
Earlier today we reported that the LinkedIn iOS app collects full meeting notes and details from your device’s calendar and sends them back to the company in plain text.
The information is gathered without explicit permission by a feature that allows users to access their calendar within the app. LinkedIn has took the time to formulate an official response, noting that a new version of the app it on its way.
It also provided a list of what it does and doesn’t do with your data.
Please note that the two issues are completely unrelated. 
We have contacted LinkedIn for clarification on the password breach and will update the article should we receive a response.
Update: LinkedIn has tweeted the following update from its account:
Our team is currently looking into reports of stolen passwords. Stay tuned for more.
— LinkedIn News (@LinkedInNews) June 6, 2012

LeakedIn: Check if your LinkedIn password was leaked with this tool

LeakedIn: Check if your LinkedIn password was leaked with this tool: 2012 06 06 14h30 56 520x245 LeakedIn: Check if your LinkedIn password was leaked with this tool
The LinkedIn password release debacle is still in full swing, as millions discover that their account was potentially compromised. I recommend that you, no matter what, change your LinkedIn password.
However, if you want to see whether or not your account was specifically made unsafe, there is an answer. Meet LeakedIn (ten points to its creators for the name), which will hash your password client side, and check that value against what leaked. It’s a safe way to check and see if your password was lade bare. [As always: use at your own risk.]
Oh, and if you were compromised, you get one of these, I just found out:
2012 06 06 14h26 09 LeakedIn: Check if your LinkedIn password was leaked with this tool
Also in the news today was the fact that LinkedIn has been playing a bit of unsafe hanky panky with user data. From our own Matthew Panzarino:
The LinkedIn mobile app for iOS devices collects full meeting notes and details from your device’s calendar and sends them back to the company, The Next Web has been informed. The information is gathered without explicit permission by a feature that allows users to access their calendar within the app.
The US Congress is already beating the war drums over the password leak. It hasn’t been a very good day for LinkedIn. However, the company’s market performance has been, well, muted. Perhaps Wall Street missed the memo.
➤ LeakedIn
Ps. Change your dang LinkedIn password regardless of whether it was leaked today and do it now.

China's Overseas Investment Surges

China's Overseas Investment Surges: China's overseas investment in the first quarter more than doubled to $21.4 billion as state-owned companies snapped up resource-related assets around the globe.

Former Mongolia President Ineligible for Election

Former Mongolia President Ineligible for Election: In the latest setback to his attempted political comeback, Mongolia's former President Enkhbayar Nambar said he has been deemed ineligible to stand in this month's parliamentary elections.

News Analysis: Drones and Cyberattacks Renew Debate Over Secrecy

News Analysis: Drones and Cyberattacks Renew Debate Over Secrecy: Leaks about drones and cyberattacks, two weapons that by many accounts have devastated Al Qaeda and set back Iran’s nuclear effort, have angered lawmakers in both parties.

Al Qaeda Power Shifting Away From Pakistan

Al Qaeda Power Shifting Away From Pakistan: The killing this week of Al Qaeda’s deputy head, Abu Yahya al-Libi, tore at the connective tissue between the group’s embattled leadership and affiliates in the Middle East and Africa.

The future of ‘famine foods,’ unconventional edibles in the garden

The future of ‘famine foods,’ unconventional edibles in the garden:
They’re called poor people’s foods. Plants foraged by starving folk and scavenged when crops succumb to drought: They’re what you eat just to get by. Many are unusually rich in nutrients, have medicinal value and may even taste good. But because they’re free for the taking they get little respect.
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In Mali, an Islamic extremist haven takes shape

In Mali, an Islamic extremist haven takes shape:
A vast new sanctuary is emerging for al-Qaeda’s African followers in the desert wastelands of northern Mali, where Tuareg secessionists, allied with extremist Muslim guerrillas, have shaken off government rule and declared an independent Islamist state.
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How Useful Are Short-Term Medical Missions?

How Useful Are Short-Term Medical Missions?:
Press Release – University of Sydney
Australia is a world leader in sending medical personnel to less developed countries to assist with a variety of medical issues but the contribution of these missions has now been examined in a study, led by a University of Sydney academic, which calls …How Useful Are Short-Term Medical Missions?
Australia is a world leader in sending medical personnel to less developed countries to assist with a variety of medical issues but the contribution of these missions has now been examined in a study, led by a University of Sydney academic, which calls for improved transparency, implementation and policymaking.
“This is the first review of accounts of short-term medical missions to lower and middle income countries over a 25-year period,” said Dr Alexandra Martiniuk, lead author of the study, from the Sydney Medical School at the University and its affiliated George Institute.
“It highlights the impact, sustainability and priorities of these missions.”
The review is published today in the BMC Health Services Research journal and is co-authored by Joel Negin, from the University’s School of Public Health, together with practitioners from Canada and the University of NSW.
The study reviewed 230 accounts of short-term medical missions to low and middle income countries over a 25 year period (1985-2009).
For the first time this new research formally defines medical missions, describing them as short trips of one day to two years by a healthcare professional, typically from a high income country, to a developing country to provide direct medical care.
“The number of health professionals going on these missions is growing globally and medical schools are also noting an increased demand from their students to volunteer as a health professional in developing countries.”
As identified in this new research: the USA, Canada and Australia represent the top three countries sending medical missions to developing countries.
The USA sends short-term medical missions to Honduras most often, Canada to Somalia and Australia to Papua New Guinea (28 percent of missions). The next most popular destination for short-terms missions from Australia is the Solomon Islands (17 percent). Of those missions that specified the health condition being focused on, the most common were cleft lip and palate deformities, oral and dental health and vaginal fistulas.
Several weaknesses of short-term medical missions were highlighted by the study review.
“A major concern was the quality and effectiveness of the medical care provided by foreign doctors unfamiliar with local health needs, local culture and the strengths and limitations of the healthcare system in which they must leave their patients for follow up care,” Dr Martiniuk said.
Such experiences can be further undermined by an absence of follow-up data and ongoing good relationships with the local health services Medical missions may also not be the best use of limited financial and human resources.
This includes the considerable costs involved in financing medical missions such as airfares, accommodation, vaccinations, visa costs, customs fees for medicines and medical equipment. It is often asked if money would be better spent donated directly to health care facilities in the destination country.
“This new research also highlights the ethical dilemma of the importance of responding to the needs of individual patients, so often the focus of these types of missions, versus addressing the health needs of the community as a whole,” Dr Martiniuk said.
Preventing illness – by, for example, using safe water, immunisation or insecticide-treated bed nets for malaria – is more likely to reduce the burden of long term disease in a community, the study observes.
“Considering their popularity and growth, there is a need to harness the positive power of these medical missions and to reduce their weaknesses. This can be done by increasing true partnership with people in developing countries and mentorship over the long term to help local people increase their own skills to reduce the need for medical missions,” Dr Martiniuk said.
ENDS
Content Sourced from scoop.co.nz

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ASIA HAND : Back to the brink in Thailand

ASIA HAND : Back to the brink in Thailand: Thailand's intensifying political clashes over legislation to give an amnesty to self-exiled former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra have spilled over into street protests, threatening a new round of civil and parliamentary instability. For the time being, a repeat of the 2006 military coup is not considered imminent, but national reconciliation is looking a very distant prospect. - Shawn W Crispin (Jun 7, '12)

Young Chinese spearheads efforts to save dialects

Young Chinese spearheads efforts to save dialects: Li Da, 25, is a technical consultant with Hewlett-Packard by day and a "Shanghainese crusader" by night. "It's sad to see so many local children and young people losing the language of their forefath .....