Jul 19, 2012

Chrome Extensions Not in the Chrome Web Store, More Difficult to Install

Chrome Extensions Not in the Chrome Web Store, More Difficult to Install: Chrome 21, currently in beta, brings bad news to those who install extensions from third-party sites. Users will no longer be able to install extensions, apps and user scripts by simply downloading them and clicking "install" in a Chrome box.

Chrome 21 shows a message that's actually inaccurate: "Extensions, apps and user scripts can only be instlled from the Chrome Web Store." When you click the "learn more" link, you'll found there's actually a way to install .crx files: just download them, open their folder and drag them to Chrome's extensions page (Tools > Extensions).


"Previously, any website could prompt you to add an extension into your browser. In the latest version of Google Chrome, you must explicitly tell Chrome that you want to install these extensions by adding them through the Extensions page," explains Google. The reason for this change is that Google can only find and remove malicious extensions in the Chrome Web Store. "Online hackers may create websites that automatically trigger the installation of malicious extensions. Their extensions are often designed to secretly track the information you enter on the web, which the hackers can then reuse for other ill-intended purposes."

Most likely, this change won't affect too many users and it will encourage developers to submit their extensions to the Chrome Web Store. Power users will complain that it's more difficult to install user scripts from sites like userscripts.org and extensions from sites like chromeextensions.org. Maybe Google could add an option in the settings page that lets you disable this security feature.

Update: There's a command-line flag that disables this feature: --enable-easy-off-store-extension-install. Use the instructions from this page to add the flag. Please note that the feature is available starting with Chrome 21 (right now it's in the beta channel, but it will be in the stable channel next month).

{ Thanks, Sterling and Ruben. }

Usage Examples in Google Translate

Usage Examples in Google Translate: Google Translate has a new button that shows word usage examples from the web. This works for both original text and the translated text, but it's no limited to single words: Google can also find examples for longer texts and even translate them for you.

"At Google we're always curious about new words from around the world, from all languages, and we think one of the best ways to understand and make sense of new words is by observing them in their natural habitat. Our latest feature does just that by providing you with example sentences taken from fresh new stories around the web," explains Google.


There's also a "select all" button that selects the entire translated text, so that it's easier to copy.


{ Thanks, Emanuele and Dean. }

Number of Somali refugees in Horn of Africa passes 1 million mark

Number of Somali refugees in Horn of Africa passes 1 million mark: But UNHCR data for the main arrival countries of Kenya and Ethiopia also shows lower but steady numbers of people leaving Somalia.

PHILIPPINES: Texting help and health in disaster response

PHILIPPINES: Texting help and health in disaster response:
MANILA, 17 July 2012 (IRIN) - The Philippines looks set to expand its rapid monitoring system, based on mobile phone text messaging, to lessen the number of deaths and improve emergency response times. With over 7,000 islands and more than 100 million people, the archipelago experiences an average of 20 typhoons a year, with stronger storms in recent years.

AID POLICY: Hitching social media to humanitarian assistance

AID POLICY: Hitching social media to humanitarian assistance:
NAIROBI, 17 July 2012 (IRIN) - From Tweets in Egypt to blogs in Syria and Facebook campaigns in Sudan, the world has witnessed an unprecedented upsurge in citizen journalism, which played a major part in the 2011 "Arab Spring", a series of revolutions that saw long-term leaders in Egypt, Libya, Tunisia and Yemen deposed. But citizen journalists say social media's impact is not limited to political rabble-rousing and that it can also be a useful tool in humanitarian emergencies.

MAURITANIA: Sharing to survive

MAURITANIA: Sharing to survive:
DJOKE/GORGOL, 17 July 2012 (IRIN) - The fragrance of cooking food wafts from a communal kitchen as the villagers of Djoke, in the Gorgol region of Mauritania, talk about how hunger and drought took them by surprise. Gorgol, Brakna and Assaba form the Triangle of Poverty, where at least 60 percent of the population live on less than one US dollar a day. "We did not even know the rains were going to fail us [in 2011], we did not receive any warning," said Sao Moussa, a village elder.

SOMALIA: Return to Mogadishu*

SOMALIA: Return to Mogadishu*:
MOGADISHU, 17 July 2012 (IRIN) - Thousands of people who fled insecurity and fighting in the Somali capital Mogadishu have returned to the city since August 2011, after the departure of Al-Shabab insurgents, say officials.

EGYPT: No ID, no government services

EGYPT: No ID, no government services:
CAIRO, 18 July 2012 (IRIN) - Most Bedouins from Egypt's Sinai Peninsula never think to register their marriages. A palm leaf from the father of the bride to the groom is enough to mark the union; families and tribal elders stand witness to the ceremony.

HRW - Venezuela: Concentration and Abuse of Power Under Chávez

Venezuela: Concentration and Abuse of Power Under Chávez:
The concentration of power under President Hugo Chávez has taken a heavy toll on human rights in Venezuela.
The concentration of power under President Hugo Chávez has taken a heavy toll on human rights in Venezuela, Human Rights Watch said in a report released today.


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HRW - Philippines: Killings of Environment Advocates Unpunished

Philippines: Killings of Environment Advocates Unpunished:
The Philippine government’s failure to address threats and killings of environmental advocates worsens a climate of lawlessness just as the Aquino administration is pushing for new mining investments.
(New York) – The Philippine government’s failure to address threats and killings of environmental advocates worsens a climate of lawlessness just as the Aquino administration is pushing for new mining investments.


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HRW - Bangladesh: Rights Abuses Under Washington Spotlight

Bangladesh: Rights Abuses Under Washington Spotlight:
The US government should continue to press Bangladesh to improve on labor issues and women’s rights, reform abusive security forces, and meet its obligations to refugees, Human Rights Watch said today in a hearing before the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission of the US Congress.
(Washington DC) – The US government should continue to press Bangladesh to improve on labor issues and women’s rights, reform abusive security forces, and meet its obligations to refugees, Human Rights Watch said today in a hearing before the Tom Lantos Human Rights Comm
read more

ICG - How Indonesian Extremists Regroup

How Indonesian Extremists Regroup: Almost ten years after the 2002 Bali bombing, Indonesian extremists are weak and divided but still finding partners for new operations.

ICG - Mali: Avoiding Escalation

Mali: Avoiding Escalation: Calls for military intervention in Mali are increasing but it could sink the state, which is already on the brink of dissolution, further into chaos.

Iranian Journalist Nazila Fathi: “There were always ways to circumvent the restrictions and write”

Iranian Journalist Nazila Fathi: “There were always ways to circumvent the restrictions and write”:
Nazila Fathi
Nazila Fathi. Photo: Camila Centeno
Nazila Fathi was an Iran-based correspondent for two decades. In her portfolio—if she has such a thing—there would be 2,000 articles she wrote for the New York Times, plus all her pieces that appeared in publications like The New York Review of Books, Foreign Policy, Nieman Reports, and Open Democracy. In 2009, when Fathi was covering what she describes as the most important story of her life—the massive protests following Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s controversial victory—she was forced to leave her country: 16 men sent by the government were following her steps. Her experience and analyses will soon be compiled in a nonfiction book (untitled as yet) that she has been writing since 2010, when she started a Nieman Fellowship at Harvard.
On May 5, Fathi participated in City of Asylum/Pittsburgh’s Exiled Voices of Iran and sat with Sampsonia Way to talk about her experiences as a persecuted journalist, including her work inside and outside Iran. Also included, a video of a thoughtful conversation between Fathi and Steve Sokol, Executive Director of the World Affairs Council of Pittsburgh, recorded at the COA/P event.
Can you tell us more about why and how you left Iran?
After President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was announced as the winner of Iran’s election there were these spontaneous protests. The authorities had let in a lot of foreign reporters to cover the election, so there were all these visiting reporters. The New York Times luckily, or unluckily for the Iranian government, even had its executive editor, Bill Keller, present.
Three days after the election, the protests reached their peak. The ministry of culture, who was responsible for monitoring foreign reporters, sent out letters saying that those who were on visas had to leave. Then the government forbade resident journalists like me—who were half-Iranian or had Iranian citizenship—from leaving their offices anymore.
But most of us, the resident journalists, kept going out, except for members of big news agencies that had a bureau. Their headquarters could come under attack, and they wanted to keep them open, which is important strategically.
Then one of our colleagues was arrested and many others left the country. At one point I was the only person on the ground, and I received a call from a siege commander of the militia force who told me that snipers would shoot me if I kept going out. I didn’t take it seriously. I was mesmerized by the size of the protest. But one morning I was going out, and I noticed that I was being followed. That really scared me. I went back and looked and all these men kept coming. They just stood outside my home. They came around 8:00 in the morning and left every night at 12:00. Because they hadn’t seen me go to a travel agency to buy a ticket and my internet was disconnected, they didn’t think I had the means to leave the country. But I had bought tickets a long time ago for a long–planned vacation to Canada. On the night of July 1st, after they left, I went to the airport with my two children and my husband. We left the country.
So you thought you were leaving for a little while, yet three years have already passed…
Yes. We left thinking that we would go back. We left with a couple of t–shirts, and we just kept postponing our return by a month. After six months we realized it was impossible for us to go back without facing serious risks. I continued working for the New York Times from Toronto, until I got the Nieman Fellowship at Harvard in 2010. Since then we moved to Boston, and I’ve been in Cambridge. I did another fellowship at the Kennedy School at Harvard this year.
But my journey was much easier than the journey of a lot of my colleagues. They were stranded in northern Iraq or Turkey for a long time until they finally got asylum somewhere. And that’s not the end of the story. Many of them still cannot work.
Lets go back to before the 2009 elections, to those days when you were covering a less convulsed Iran for the New York Times. Which stories gave you the most trouble then?
It hasn’t always been the political stuff that has gotten me into trouble, and getting into trouble with the government hasn’t been the most annoying thing. The government was very sensitive about specific topics, and they would ask me, “Why did you write about the arrests of activists?” or “Why did you focus on human rights violations so much?” But I had more trouble with the cultural stories I wrote. I was viciously attacked by people who felt jealous about the person I was writing about.
Do you have a specific example in mind?
I wrote about [Mohsen Namjoo], an artist/musician who was extremely talented. He had this protest music that was very metaphorical, very new. He was combining blues and jazz with traditional Persian music. He was also very popular. You could hear his music in other people’s cars while you were in traffic, and this is illegal in Iran. I wrote a story about him and called him the Bob Dylan of Iran. Then I was attacked so viciously by other musicians who did not think he was even worth mentioning in the New York Times.
What about writing on women’s rights?
Women’s rights was always one of my very favorite topics, particularly because women have gone through immense changes in Iran. The government warned me not to write about women activism, so I tried to find other angles. For instance, when I wrote a story about female novelists I used parts of their books to say how far they’ve come and how Iranian society has changed. I was working on a story about female singers before I left the country, but I couldn’t finish it.
It was possible to write about women’s rights without the government thinking you were writing about political issues?
Every topic related with women’s rights is extremely politicized. Let’s not forget women are symbols of the Islamic republic. They carry its symbols: The headscarf, the coat that they wear. If they don’t wear those then who would know that this is the Islamic Republic of Iran? The issue of women, like everything, is politicized in Iran.
How did you deal with the restrictions imposed by the government, and even by society?
When I was in Iran I always found a way to report what I thought was important, except for a couple of stories that meant the end of my career. I still worked on those, but they were not published under my name. There were other colleagues in New York who wrote the stories.
I wouldn’t say that Iran was a country where you could not work. There were always ways to circumvent the restrictions and write. And I really enjoyed what I was doing. I found other creative ways. Under that kind of repression creativity flourishes and leads to powerful works. The music, literature, and art that is produced in Iran is a lot more powerful than what is produced outside the country.
Now, things have become very difficult in Iran. Pressure and repression have become a lot worse than when I was there.
But I bet that at the middle of 2009, when the protests were repressed, your sources were in fear…
Towards my last days in Iran I couldn’t work. Nobody wanted to speak to me because the minute they spoke they were picked up by authorities and put in jail. If they picked up their cell phones the government could track them. And then towards the end, I was sort of under house arrest and my internet was not safe. I was afraid to leave the house. I had no idea what those guys would do to me. That was the worst part.
What was your relationship with those sources when you left Iran?
As soon as I left the country people started reaching out to me because I was still working for the New York Times. All those people who didn’t want to speak to me when I was in Iran found a way to get on Skype, which was considered a more secure way of communication.
During the year that I covered what happened after the protests for the New York Times it was much easier to work, to have access to people, and to write about the story from outside the country.
But this is not doable all the time…
It was a very special time. People were voluntarily reaching out to give you the story and citizen journalism was very much out there. I could watch videos that people were posting from the protests on the same day that they were happening. But that is not the case anymore. The people who were posting those videos have other jobs. They’ve gone back to their normal lives. Now it’s very hard to cover Iran from outside the country. You need to be there and on the ground.
I understand you are still writing on Iran…
Harvard opened a totally different door for me. I started looking at my experience in a much deeper way. I’m writing a book now—a memoir—to tell the bigger story of Iran through my experience as a journalist.
Does the book have a title?
It has had a million different titles. I’m sure it’s going to keep changing until it comes out.
Can you tell us some highlights of the story?
I’d prefer not to talk about that because editors eventually make so many changes. But I’m writing about the events of 2009. The reason I decided to write this book was because people kept asking me, “So why did the uprising fail?” “Why didn’t the green revolution overthrow the regime?” First of all, it was not a revolution. Second, people had no intention of overthrowing the regime. Third, people are afraid of institutional breakdown. After events in Egypt, everybody raised this question again: “So Iranians failed, but did Egyptians succeed?”
They are very different countries…
They’re not even comparable. It would be very hard for Iranians to pose a serious threat to the regime, considering how well–equipped the Iranian regime is to repress any kind of dissent. Egyptians, on the other hand, managed to get workers on their side. Even workers in the Suez Canal went on strike. Iranians were never able to get any kind of union or guild on their side, partly because there are no independent guilds and unions. Without those groups, they cannot really bring the movement to a point where it can pose a threat.
The most important thing was that the Iranian uprising did not have the kind of leadership that had overthrowing the regime on its agenda. The two leaders were very loyal to the system, all they wanted, and all people wanted, were new elections. They thought Ahmadinejad had stolen the election and they wanted new ones. Iranians have gone through a bloody war, through a bloody revolution, in the past three decades. The majority of the population remembers those experiences, and they don’t want to live through it again.
What would you say to the people who think that Iranian protesters didn’t have the same courage as the people of Egypt?
During the Iranian uprising, six months from beginning to end, about 150 people died, maybe less. So far in Egypt, over 1,500 have died. We called ours a bloody uprising and they call theirs a peaceful one. They’re very different countries. They have different goals. The Egyptians haven’t had a revolution since 1960. They haven’t had it for a long time.
This idea that democracy has to be grassroots, that reform has to come from bottom–up, has become a very acceptable notion in Iran. Iranians want the regime to adapt to change, rather than Iranians changing the regime, because they wonder “What will come next?” A new group could hijack the next revolution again.
Lets talk about the alarming declarations on the Iranian Nuclear Program. Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak just said that Iran is working toward a ‘threshold status’ of being able to produce a nuclear bomb with 60 days notice.
That is not true. That is highly exaggerated. It’s not a unanimous message coming out of Israel. It’s Netanyahu and Barak who have been making these exaggerated assessments of Iranian capabilities. Actually another Israeli defense minister official recently said there was no evidence that Iran had intentions to make a weapon. Its weaponization is one question, and whether Iran is going to work to have the capability is another question. No hard evidence has been found that Iran is moving towards any of those directions.
What is your opinion the Iranian Nuclear Program?
The Iranian government wants to see the sanctions lifted because without the oil revenue they would be crippled. It’s not that the revenue’s going to end, because they have found ways to sell their oil, but it’s going to decrease by about 50 percent and that will be very hard for the country. They might compromise to a point where they see the sanctions softened. But unfortunately the Iranian government has never looked at its long–term interests.
Everything for Iran, all the decisions that have been made inside the government and its foreign policy, have been based on very short–term survival. If Iran was going to make a wise decision, it would give up its nuclear enrichment program because it doesn’t make any financial sense. The reactor in Tehran that needs the enriched uranium is old. The technology is from the 1960s. It doesn’t make sense for Iran to invest so much money in a program just to produce fuel for this old reactor. They are doing things that financially and logically don’t make any sense.
There are activists in Washington that are arguing to “lift the sanctions…”
I think they’re right because the sanctions are hurting civil society more than the government. The Iranian regime has been an expert at circumventing restrictions and sanctions because they’ve been faced with some kind of sanction since the 1979 revolution.
They have been in touch with all these front companies in Europe, even in London and Rome, who have been buying things for them. They have bought banks in the Gulf countries to circumvent the restrictions that are imposed on the Iranian banking system. They were prepared for the sanctions. They have become masters at circumventing them.
But China and Russia are the countries that always came out as supporters of Iran…
China and Russia, of course, have been the worst allies. But the point is that even Germany, France, and Britain talk to Iran in different voices.
Germany kept its economic ties with Iran. France was talking in a very, tough voice with Iran politically, but all these French companies were still operating in Iran. They didn’t want to pull out. Britain was tougher on Iran. The United States kept asking for tough sanctions on Iran and on European companies. But It was not until recently that even the Dutch Shell company pulled out of Iran’s oil investment. It’s been very hard to get all these countries to act unanimously and get these other, private companies that had high stakes in Iran, to pull out.
Can the West help Iranian people on human rights issues?
We know that the Iranian government has been responsive to pressure. The reason they wanted to get rid of all journalists in 2009 was because they wanted to stop the flow of information outside the country. Journalists were causing a huge embarrassment for the regime.
They kept on claiming that they are the best model of religious democracy, that they respected human rights, but the truth was, they were using extreme violence against their own people. They picked up all sorts of people: Poets, musicians, activists, writers, economists, anyone whose work was critical of the regime in any way.
And a lot of them are still in prison. Just look around you: Novelists whose work was not even directly political have been forced to leave the country because everything in Iran has become politicized. But if the West keeps pressing Iran over its human rights violations, they will respond. There was an example in 2010: A woman was sentenced to death by stoning on charges of murdering her husband. I don’t know what happened, but she was really very close to getting executed by stoning, which is quite barbaric. Eventually the Iranians had to stop her execution. I think she’s in prison now. She survived it because of the pressure from the West.
What is your opinion of the recent parliamentary elections?
I have no expectations for this parliament. I had no expectations for the previous parliament. The previous parliament was extremely obedient to the leader. The last election in February was a big loss for Ahmadinejad and that was the only difference. The supreme leader [Ayatollah Ali Khamenei] who became the ultimate decision maker in the country, practically hand–picked all its members. Ahmadinejad used to have about seventy members who supported him, but now he has less than a dozen, which means he has lost all his influence in parliament. We can expect a new parliament that is very obedient to Khamenei and will approve whatever he asks for. Khamenei has suggested that maybe the position of president should be abolished. So if they take a bill on that to parliament, we might expect it to be approved easily.
Would you go back to Iran if it became possible?
Iran is my home. Nobody can keep me away.
How do you see the future of Iran?
I’m basically a very positive person. I’m very optimistic. No authoritarian regime has lasted forever. Democratic regimes last much longer. If we can call the change in the people a revolution, then a huge revolution has taken place in Iranian society. That was the greatest thing about the 2009 uprising: Massive numbers of people came out on the streets in very civilized, nonviolent ways. And they had very reasonable expectations and demands. Then they very wisely retreated from the streets. I think change has already taken place. This population, 70 percent of them under the age of 35, is ready for a much more democratic system than what they have. I’m sure what happens next is going to be much better. This system is rotten from within. It’s going to collapse one day.

Call to Abolish Bilateral Treaty

Call to Abolish Bilateral Treaty:
Dissident groups called on the authorities in Laos Wednesday to rescind a 35-year-old bilateral treaty with Vietnam, claiming that Vietnamese soldiers remain in the country under the pact and should be expelled.

On the 35th anniversary of the signing of the Treaty of Friendship and Cooperation, the French-based Lao National Council for Democracy and the U.S.-based Lao New Generation Movement said the agreement had robbed Laos of its sovereignty.

The treaty signed on July 18, 1977 provided for the stationing of Vietnamese army troops and advisers in Laos after the end of the Vietnam War.

Eleven years later, the Lao government announced that all the Vietnamese troops had withdrawn from Laos but the dissident groups claim they remained.

"The Vietnamese government has, in fact, flouted all the Lao peace treaties and independence agreements by retaining an army of over 70,000 soldiers in Laos and occupying the border regions by setting many thousands of Vietnamese families to plunder our heritage and exploit our mineral resources," a statement from the Lao National Council for Democracy said.

It also called on the international community to help restore democracy in Laos, a one-party communist state which tolerates almost no opposition and maintains strict control over the media.

The Treaty of Friendship and Cooperation effectively "handed over all sovereignty to Vietnam," said a leader of the Lao New Generation Movement, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Top investor


Vietnam-Laos ties have blossomed over the years, with Vietnam emerging the second largest investor in the neighboring state, after China, another major ally of Laos.

In Hanoi this week, leaders of Vietnam and Laos agreed to further consolidate and strengthen ties, Vietnamese media reported.

Vietnamese Vice President Nguyen Thi Doan and her Lao counterpart Bounnhang Vorachith, who was on an official visit, signed a pact to continue increasing high-ranking visits and exchanges, promoting cooperation at state, local, and business levels and raising public awareness of the "history of special ties," reports said.

Vietnam held a meeting in Ho Chi Minh City on Tuesday to mark the 35th anniversary of the controversial treaty and the 50th anniversary of diplomatic ties between the two countries.

Le Thanh Hai, a key communist party official in Ho Chih Minh City, said bilateral ties are "an invaluable asset of the two nations."

Reported by RFA's Lao service. Translated by Viengsay Luangkhot and Max Avary. Written in English by Parameswaran Ponnudurai.

Troops Leave Border Temple

Troops Leave Border Temple:
Cambodia and Thailand on Wednesday withdrew troops from a disputed area near an ancient temple on their border which had been the site of deadly cross-border clashes, honoring a ruling handed down by the International Court of Justice (ICJ) a year ago.
The troops had been stationed along the border near Preah Vihear Temple for more than four years.
Cambodia’s Defense Minister Tea Banh presided over a redeployment ceremony near the temple, saying that nearly 500 soldiers had worked hard to protect Cambodian sovereignty  and that their withdrawal  from the demilitarized zone showed that the country respected the ICJ’s decision of July last year.
“We are the owner [of the temple area],” Tea Banh said.
“We have the duty to protect our heritage and we have complied with the court order.”
Thailand’s Defense Minister Sukumpol Suwanatat traveled to the Thai side of the border to take part in the country's own ceremony marking the withdrawal of an unknown number of troops.
On July 18, 2011 the ICJ created a  17 square kilometer (6.6 square mile) Provisional Demilitarized Zone (PDZ) around the temple and ordered the removal of Cambodian and Thai troops.
Cambodian troops stationed at the border, where fighting killed 28 people last year, said they were happy to be returning home after so many years.
One soldier, who asked to remain anonymous, said he didn’t want to see further bloodshed between the Thai and Cambodian militaries.
“I am very happy with the withdrawal. I will see my wife and children,” he said.
“I don’t want war, we want to have peace. I want to go back and farm my land.”
preah-vihear-map-400
Pullback
Suos Yara, a Cambodian official in charge of the ceasefire, said 485 Cambodian troops had been redeployed from four separate locations near the border.
In their stead, authorities will deploy about 300 police and guards to protect the temple site, he said.
Cambodia will continue to administer the thousand-year-old Hindu temple, which the ICJ awarded to Cambodia in a ruling in 1962.
The two sides have exchanged several rounds of fire since 2008, when the temple, located atop a cliff in the Dangrek Mountains, was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Tensions have eased over the past year with the installation of a new Thai government that is more sympathetic to Cambodia, but both countries still have disputing claims to the 4.6 square kilometers (1.8 square miles) of land around the temple.
Reported by Hang Sayvouth for RFA’s Khmer service. Translated by Samean Yun. Written in English by Joshua Lipes.

Schools Closed Over Virus Fears

Schools Closed Over Virus Fears:
Cambodia closed all kindergarten and primary schools nationwide on Wednesday to check the spread of a deadly virus that causes a severe form of hand, foot, and mouth disease, principals and officials said.
The Education Ministry issued a statement saying the schools would get an early start to the scheduled July 31 vacation, without giving a reason except to say Prime Minister Hun Sen had ordered them shut.
But school principals said the closures were intended to prevent infected students from spreading the disease, which according to the World Health Organization (WHO) has killed at least 55 children among 61 reported infections in the country since April.
In the capital Phnom Penh, students were dismissed two hours into their classes on Wednesday, with some students and parents left not knowing why.
One mother, Khat Oum, said she was not aware of the reason for the early dismissal when she came to pick her second-grader up from the Boeung Trabet primary school.
“I will respect the ministry’s order, but if they would allow my child to study, I would have my child stay,” she said.
One 10-year-old boy outside the school said teachers wouldn’t say why the vacation was starting unexpectedly.
“My teacher said school will be closed through August. My teacher didn’t say the reason but that he would tell me after I return,” he said.
Under control
The WHO said Wednesday it had not recommended school closures and was concerned they could cause panic, according to the Reuters news agency.
A spokesman said the disease was under control in the country and no new cases were reported.
The spate of children’s deaths had sparked fears of a “mystery” illness until the WHO and the Ministry of Health said last Monday that most of the victims had tested positive for a lethal strain of Enterovirus-71 (EV-71), which causes the disease.
The victims were between three months and 11 years old, with most under three years of age.
Chan Sophea, director of the Ministry of Education’s primary schools department, refused to comment on the reason for the early dismissal.
“I only authorized to issue a statement allowing students to begin the break early,” he said, adding that the early vacation would post little harm because most schools have already completed the year’s curriculum.
But another Ministry of Education official who spoke to RFA on condition of anonymity said the closures, which affect tens of thousands of students, were to prevent an epidemic.
“[W]e are working to make sure that children would not be infected,” he said.
EV-71, which is fairly common in Asia, is contagious and spread from person to person by direct contact with most bodily fluids.
Hand, foot, and mouth disease mainly occurs in children under 10 years of age, in particular those under five years.
Symptoms generally include fever, painful sores in the mouth, and a rash with blisters on the hands, feet, and buttocks.
There is no specific treatment available, but the illness is typically mild and most children recover quickly.
Hand, foot, and mouth disease has spread through the Asian region recently, sickening more than 110,000 and killing 166 in neighboring Vietnam last year and killing more than 240 in China this year.
Reported by So Chivi for RFA’s Khmer service. Translated by Samean Yun. Written in English by Rachel Vandenbrink.

Power Struggle in North Korea?

Power Struggle in North Korea?:
Seven months after the death of North Korea's dictator Kim Jong Il, a power struggle appears to be taking place in Pyongyang, reigniting concerns about the future of the nuclear-armed regime.

Indications of a scramble for power stemmed from the abrupt removal at the weekend of North Korea's veteran military chief Ri Yong Ho and the subsequent promotion of a relatively new general, Hyon Yong Chol, to become a vice marshal in the 1.2 million strong Korean People's Army, among the world's largest.

And Kim's successor son Kim Jong Un, already the supreme military commander, was on Wednesday made marshal in a move clearly seen as aimed at beefing up his authority over the military and tightening his grip on power.

While Ri's dismissal, decided at a rare weekend meeting of the ruling Workers' Party of Korea, is the first purge of a senior figure since Kim Jong Un assumed full power last April, it is less clear who stands to gain from the move or whether it would trigger more changes.

This is making Western powers uneasy again about the transition of power in one of the world's most reclusive nations following the December death of Kim Jong Il after 17 years at the helm.

"The uncertainties over the structure and stability of the North Korean leadership is worrisome to the U.S. and its allies because we don't know how secure the regime is—whether there is a power struggle going on and how that will play out with regards to North Korea policy," Bruce Klingner, a former chief of the CIA's Korea branch, told RFA.

"It could leave North Korea to be even more volatile and provocative than in the past," warned Klingner, now a Northeast Asia expert at the Washington-based Heritage Foundation.

Further changes in the political and military leadership are "very possible," he said, citing reports that during the past two years, more than 200 North Korean officials have been removed from office.

Some analysts wonder why Ri was ousted when he was among the closest of officials to Kim Jong Un and was appointed by the new leader's father as the apparent guardian of a plan to implement a transition to a third generation of Kim's family leadership. 

The 69-year-old Ri had backed and nurtured the junior Kim since his father's death and was among a select few party and military cadres who accompanied him when he walked alongside the hearse carrying Kim Jong Il.

"For the Workers Party senior leadership to have had to meet on a Sunday in order to review the situation suggests that something highly unusual was going on in here," Evans Revere, a former top Asia diplomat at the U.S. State Department with extensive experience in negotiations with North Korea, told RFA.

It may be an indication that Kim Jong Un, in his late 20's, feels confident enough about his control over the military and other institutions that he is now able to make some very significant changes, said Revere, now an expert at the Washington-based Brookings Institution.

The announcement on Ri's dismissal was made by the two key organs that the young Kim is head of—the Workers Party's Central Military Commission and the National Defense Commission.

"I think it is fairly easy to see this as a manifestation of his exercising of his power over appointment and dismissal," Revere said.

The official announcement cited "illness" as the reason for Ri's removal, but he was seen with Kim and senior military officials paying tribute to North Korean founder Kim Il Sung just a week before—on the July 8 anniversary of his death in 1994.

It is highly unusual for anybody in the hierarchy in North Korea to be removed for health reasons.

Ri's removal invites new scrutiny of North Korean leadership stability and cohesiveness, and once again raises uncertainty regarding the future of the regime, said Scott Snyder, a Korea expert at the New York-based Council on Foreign Relations.

"If the guardian of the succession and one of Kim Jong Il's eight pallbearers can be removed exactly one week after having joined top luminaries in a ceremony on the anniversary of Kim Il Sung's death and after having accompanied Kim Jong Un on at least half of his public appearances since his father's death almost seven months ago, who else among Ri's support network might be at risk?" Snyder asked.

"Is the purge of Ri Yong Ho the beginning of the end of stability in North Korea or is it the end of the beginning [a sign that power has been consolidated, at least for the time being]," he further asked.

Snyder warned that if Ri's removal sparked new challenges or incites rivalries at the top of the North Korean leadership, the country may become a truly volatile and unpredictable source of instability at a time when election-focused South Korea and the United States can least afford a North Korean crisis.

If Ri's ouster is an indication of a more confident and more secure Kim Jong Un being able to purge even those from the inner most circle of power in order to further consolidate his rule, it could also signal that the old guard is pushing back against the inexperienced Kim, Klingner noted.

Ri seems to have had a foot in many camps.

He was a member of the old guard, having been appointed by Kim Jong Il, and was both a military and political figure, having been the chief of the general staff of the army but also a member of the Presidium of the Politburo of the Workers Party Central Committee and a vice chairman of the
Central Military Commission.

It is likely that Vice Marshal Hyon, a little-known career military officer, will eventually take over all of Ri posts as he takes on a higher profile.

"He's come out of nowhere, but interestingly enough he was the commander of the KPA's [Korea People's Army's] Eighth Army, which would put him in charge of some of the border areas of North Korea during a period in which North Korea has been cracking down on bribery and on people trying to escape from the north into China," Revere said.

"To me that might suggest that he is not necessarily a soft-liner himself."

But Revere and other experts do not see the changes announced so far bringing about much-needed policy reforms.

Some take Kim Jong Un's growing-up years in Switzerland, as well as his more recent watching of a show of Walt Disney characters in Pyongyang, as indicative of his desire to implement reforms.

"Brutal dictators can like Western culture but it doesn't mean that their policies will be any more benevolent," Klingner said.

"We need to remember that Kim Jong Il as well as Joseph Stalin liked Western movies."

Revere also said that there was no evidence to support any notion that North Korea, as a result of the announced changes, will head in a different or better direction.

"So far, we have seen more of the same, and I think it is unfortunate, but there you have it," he said.

North Korean leaders realize that change is necessary and has to happen, but they also know that the very change that may happen could undermine the stability of the regime by removing its ability to strictly control everything in the country, Revere said.

"That's the conundrum that they face."

Opposition Parties Ink Merger

Opposition Parties Ink Merger:
Leaders from the two main opposition parties in Cambodia signed an agreement Tuesday to merge their groups and to work towards the return of top opposition leader Sam Rainsy from exile ahead of the country’s 2013 general elections.

Sam Rainsy Party (SRP) president Sam Rainsy and his Human Rights Party (HRP) counterpart Kem Sokha inked the deal in the Philippine capital Manila after two days of meetings, the two groups confirmed in a joint statement detailing their intentions.

“The two parties are working to merge the two parties into one new single party. Democrats and nationalists will participate in the new party to bring about democracy and to protect national interests,” the statement read.

The SRP and HRP had tried unsuccessfully to unite over the last two years, but expressed confidence Tuesday that together they could pose a significant challenge to Prime Minister Hun Sen’s ruling Cambodian People’s Party (CPP).

“The two parties think that regime change must be done peacefully through a free and fair election,” the statement read, adding that they would work toward making the National Election Committee (NEC), which oversees elections in the country, more independent.

The parties had previously criticized the NEC, saying its members are biased toward the ruling CPP, which has ruled the country for three decades, and which easily won the country’s commune-level elections in 2002, 2007, and 2012 amidst political violence and other problems.

The two parties also pledged to work together to guarantee the return of self-exiled party leader Sam Rainsy ahead of the parliamentary polls slated for mid-2013.

Sam Rainsy currently lives in exile in France and is facing a two-year jail sentence for uprooting markers at the border with Vietnam in 2009, if he returns. He has said that he plans to return for the elections to lead the opposition against the CPP.

The statement said the parties would call for an end to what they alleged was the Cambodian government’s use of the country’s judicial system to intimidate politicians and human rights activists.

New partnership

Later on Tuesday, during a joint video conference from Manila, Sam Rainsy told reporters that the two parties had decided to merge to “rescue” Cambodia.

“We must start our work to rescue the country because our country is being ruled by dictators,” he said, claiming that Cambodia’s current leaders had “ceded part of the country to Vietnam.”

Leaders of Vietnam and Cambodia plan to finalize the demarcation of their shared border, which would result in each side exchanging swaths of land.

Many Cambodians are wary of Vietnam’s influence over their country’s affairs.

An estimated 1.7 million people, or one in four Cambodians, died in what came to be called the “Killing Fields” after the ultra-Communist Khmer Rouge took power in 1975. The regime was unseated when Vietnam invaded the country four years later.

Vietnam occupied the country for a decade before withdrawing its troops and signing the Paris Peace Agreement to restore sovereignty and stability to Cambodia.

Sam Rainsy went on to say that he would lead the new party as president, while Kem Sokha would act as the party’s deputy president.

He declined to provide any schedule for formally establishing the new party, though Kem Sokha said it would be “soon.”

“We are establishing a new party according to a democratic structure with legislative, executive, and judicial committees to allow for checks and balances so that other democrats will join as well,” Kem Sokha said.

Merger welcomed

The merger was praised by democracy groups on Tuesday, though more cautiously by the ruling party.

Hang Puthea, executive director of the Neutral and Impartial Committee for Free Elections in Cambodia, called the merger “a historic event” and said that the two parties are likely to increase the number of their votes in upcoming elections.

Government spokesman and senior CPP official Phay Siphan also welcomed the merger Tuesday, but said it was unlikely that the new group would win out against the ruling party.

“Even though the two parties will merge, they can’t compete with the CPP,” he said.

The SRP and HRP attempted to merge ahead of local-level elections for commune council chiefs held last month, but were unable to decide upon common goals. The parties set the wheels in motion for a merger nearly two years ago, but had so far been unwilling to see eye-to-eye.

The SRP won 22 commune council chief positions in June’s election while the HRP won 18. The SRP holds 26 seats in the National Assembly, or parliament, compared to three HRP seats. By contrast, the CPP won an estimated 1,592 of 1,633 commune chief positions and holds 90 of 123 National Assembly seats.

Experts have said that the united parties will face difficulty in next year’s election without their leader, Sam Rainsy, heading the election campaign.

Reported by Zakariya Tin for RFA’s Khmer service. Translated by Samean Yun. Written in English by Joshua Lipes.

Jul 16, 2012

Turkey tries 46 lawyers over Kurdish militant links - chicagotribune.com

Turkey tries 46 lawyers over Kurdish militant links - chicagotribune.com

Obama for America TV Ad: "Firms" - YouTube

Obama for America TV Ad: "Firms" - YouTube

Measuring the Effects of Voter Identification Laws

Measuring the Effects of Voter Identification Laws: Stricter laws, like those that require photo identification, do seem to decrease voter turnout by about 2 percent, and the effects are worse for Democrats - though not as bad as some imply.

July 16: Obama Gains Ground From Ohio Poll

July 16: Obama Gains Ground From Ohio Poll: President Obama's chances of winning the Electoral College are now listed at 68.7 percent by the forecast model, up from 67.0 percent on Saturday.

Swing-State Poll: Obama Leads By 2 Overall; Up In Ohio, Colorado And Virginia

Swing-State Poll: Obama Leads By 2 Overall; Up In Ohio, Colorado And Virginia:
President Barack Obama holds a slim 2-point lead over Mitt Romney in a composite poll of 12 states, including narrow leads in Ohio, Colorado and Virginia.
The latest Purple Strategies poll released Monday shows Obama leading Romney, 48 percent to 46 percent, among a combined sample of likely voters in Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Minnesota, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia and Wisconsin. The cumulative results show Obama's lead unchanged from the previous Purple Strategies poll in June, in which Obama also led Romney 48 percent to 46 percent.
Among the state-specific samples, Obama leads by 3 points in Ohio, 2 points in Virginia and 1 point in Colorado. Romney leads in Florida, 48 percent to 45 percent. The poll confirms two of the 2012 campaign prevailing truisms: The presidential race will be extremely close, and the outcome may be contingent on voters' impression of the national economy.
From Purple Strategies:

Voters' concerns about the economy continue to loom large, and their outlook is becoming gloomier. Just 28% of voters believe that the economy is getting better, a decline of 8 points from April. Forty-two percent (42%) believe that the economy is getting worse, up 7 points from April.
The impact of voters' perception of the economy on their presidential choice is dramatic. Among those who believe the economy is getting better, 93% support
Obama, 4% favor Romney. And among those who say it is getting worse, Romney leads Obama 84% to 7%. Indeed, this question is now more predictive of vote choice than any other question we ask -- including partisanship.
Each candidate faces his own unique political liability. Obama nurses tepid approval ratings in Ohio, Colorado, Virginia and Florida. His negative 46-49 percent job rating in Ohio is the best of the four states. Romney, meanwhile, continues to be vexed by a personality problem. In Ohio and Colorado, his favorability rating stands at an anemic 37 percent, while at least 50 percent of likely voters in each state have an unfavorable view of Romney.
Purple Strategies conducted its poll July 9-13 using automated telephone interviews with a combined sample of 2,412 likely voters in 12 swing states. The margin of error is 1.6 percentage points.




Chris Stringer on the Origins and Rise of Modern Humans - NYTimes.com

Chris Stringer on the Origins and Rise of Modern Humans - NYTimes.com

In Mongolia’s Boom Town, Hope and Fear

In Mongolia’s Boom Town, Hope and Fear: Development of its mining sector has brought new wealth to this remote, landlocked country, but also concerns about corruption and materialism.

The Challenge of Making Friends as an Adult

The Challenge of Making Friends as an Adult: The period for making B.F.F.’s, the way you did in your teens or early 20s, is pretty much over. It’s time to resign yourself to situational adult friends.

Lens Blog: Gordon Parks's Alternative Civil Rights Photographs

Lens Blog: Gordon Parks's Alternative Civil Rights Photographs: Gordon Parks's photographs of blacks in the South at the height of the Jim Crow era showed African-Americans living "in a complete universe." Many, however, were unpublished or unseen until now.

Yale-Singapore Venture to Forbid Political Protest

Yale-Singapore Venture to Forbid Political Protest: As Yale breaks ground for its joint venture with the National University of Singapore, critics are increasingly concerned about students' rights on the new campus.

Republicans Turn Against John Roberts, U.S. Supreme Court

Republicans Turn Against John Roberts, U.S. Supreme Court: Republicans have significantly more negative views of U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts and the court itself after the recent ruling on the U.S. healthcare law. Democrats are now more positive about both.

Ada Kuburan Massal di Kantor PM Timor Leste - KOMPAS.com

Ada Kuburan Massal di Kantor PM Timor Leste - KOMPAS.com

Body count at Dili's mass grave now 72: Timor-Leste Police | The Northern Myth

Body count at Dili's mass grave now 72: Timor-Leste Police | The Northern Myth

Official legal translation services required | East Timor Law and ...

Official legal translation services required | East Timor Law and ...: East Timor Legal News 16 July 2012 Source: The Dili Weekly 16 July 2012 14:37 Written by Venidora Oliveira - Fundasaun Mahein (FM) suggest the new Government create a Legal Translation Department in order to ensure ...

East Timor peaceful after weekend's violence, says UN | East Timor ...

East Timor peaceful after weekend's violence, says UN | East Timor ...: East Timor Legal News 16 July 2012 Source: Radio Australia 16 July 2012, 14:37 AEST - There have been reports of violence over the weekend in East Timor, as the Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao announced he'll be ...

Singapore’s Ambassador Chan Heng Chee ends 16-year service in Washington - The Reliable Source - The Washington Post

Singapore’s Ambassador Chan Heng Chee ends 16-year service in Washington - The Reliable Source - The Washington Post

YouTube is an important source of video news, says new report - The Washington Post

YouTube is an important source of video news, says new report - The Washington Post

Microsoft ends online marriage with NBC to pursue building its own online news service - The Washington Post

Microsoft ends online marriage with NBC to pursue building its own online news service - The Washington Post

Egypt officials say they will not give in to demands of Bedouin holding 2 Americans hostage - The Washington Post

Egypt officials say they will not give in to demands of Bedouin holding 2 Americans hostage - The Washington Post

As Clinton urges dialogue, Egypt’s military chief takes tough stance on Brotherhood - The Washington Post

As Clinton urges dialogue, Egypt’s military chief takes tough stance on Brotherhood - The Washington Post

In Syria, an oasis from the war

In Syria, an oasis from the war:
The flag of the revolution flies high above this prosperous town in southwestern Syria. Each week, thousands take to the streets to demonstrate peacefully. Rebels roam freely — but without weapons.
The government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has lost control of Yabrud. But unlike Homs, Hama and countless other places where pro-Assad forces have unleashed furious assaults to keep their grip amid a 16-month-long rebellion, Yabrud appears to have been given up to the rebels. Here, at least for the time being, the revolution has been won. And it was won without a fight.
Read full article >>



YouTube is an important source of video news, says new report

YouTube is an important source of video news, says new report:
One of the world’s biggest and most important video news organizations employs no reporters or anchormen, owns no satellite trucks and doesn’t even report the news itself.
In just seven years of existence, YouTube — which has made viral sensations out of cute baby videos and Justin Bieber music videos — has grown into an important source of news, drawing audiences that rival those of traditional TV news networks and creating “a new kind of visual journalism,” according to a new study that assesses the site’s role as an information provider.
Read full article >>



In surprise move, N. Korea strips military chief of all duties

In surprise move, N. Korea strips military chief of all duties:
BEIJING — With a terse four-paragraph statement, North Korea on Monday announced the dismissal of its top military leader, the latest in what analysts describe as a series of increasingly bold shake-ups to strengthen support for young leader Kim Jong Eun.
Read full article >>



Mormons, African Americans face substantial prejudice, poll finds

Mormons, African Americans face substantial prejudice, poll finds:
Substantial prejudice still exists for both Mormons and African Americans, despite shifting views on both groups since Barack Obama and Mitt Romney first ran for president four years ago.
Sizable pockets of voters say they would be uncomfortable with a close family member marrying someone who is black or Mormon, according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll, with Mormons facing slightly more distrust from people outside their community.
Read full article >>



Premier Palestinian medical school graduates struggle to work in Jerusalem

Premier Palestinian medical school graduates struggle to work in Jerusalem:
JERUSALEM — Basel Nassar, a young Palestinian doctor from this city, is not allowed to practice medicine here. So instead, he flew to Houston last week to take the last phase of a licensing exam that will qualify him to work in the United States.
Read full article >>



IMF: China, India, other developing countries show signs of slowdown

IMF: China, India, other developing countries show signs of slowdown:
The crisis in Europe and a sluggish U.S. recovery have begun sapping growth across the rest of the world as China, India and other major developing countries join in an evolving global slowdown.
In its latest world economic projections, the International Monetary Fund sounded a newly cautious note about a situation where rounds of government stimulus spending and low interest rates have failed to take hold, and left countries with saddled with debt and other problems that give them little room to maneuver if conditions get worse.
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Cambodian Radio Station Chief Held

Cambodian Radio Station Chief Held:
The head of a Cambodian radio station was arrested Sunday for allegedly instigating villagers to be involved in armed clashes with security forces over a land dispute.

The government accused Mam Sonando, the director of FM station 105, also known as Beehive Radio, of orchestrating a mass occupation of land in Broma village in Kratie province’s Chhlong district that triggered a security crackdown and bloody clashes in May, officials said.

The clashes occurred after some 1,000 village families refused a government order to vacate state land they had used for farming and which activists said had been awarded as a concession to Russian firm Casotim, which plans to set up a rubber plantation.

A non-governmental organization, Association of Democrats, led by Mam Sonando, has been accused of sparking the land revolt and the ensuing clashes in which in an innocent teenage girl was fatally shot by security forces.

"This morning, at 8:58, 7 cars and [a] score of police came to arrest Mr. Mam Sonando at his residence. Please be informed about this," the radio station chief said in a brief email to RFA.

Europe

Mam Sonando, in his 60's, was in Europe when the security forces surrounded Broma village and moved to evict the villagers on May 16 in a violent crackdown. He returned home on July 12. He had earlier rejected any links to the revolt in an interview with RFA.

Prime Minister Hun Sen had last month insinuated that Mam Sonando should be arrested, saying he had been leading a "secession" plot and attempting to establish "a state within a state."

According to Interior Ministry spokesman Khieu Sopheak, the Kratie provincial court issued a warrant of arrest on Mam Sonando on July 2 but it could not be served on him because he was abroad. 

Human rights groups protested the arrest, saying it was politically motivated.

"It's shocking that Mam Sonando was arrested for encouraging people for the land grabbing, which is what the government claims," said Brad Adams, Asia director at Human Rights Watch.

"The biggest land grabber in Cambodia is the prime minister and his business cronies who are taking land from poor people all over the country. So, it's really sheer hypocrisy that this has happened."

Mam Sonando "has done nothing wrong over the years except to run a radio station that broadcasts news that sometimes the prime minister and the people around the prime minister don't like," Adams said.

Driven out

Several thousand Cambodians are driven every year from farmland or urban areas to make way for real estate developments or mining and agricultural projects, reports have said.

Economic land concessions granted to private developers have been at the root of several high-profile disputes in recent years, including in the Boeung Kak Lake and Borei Kela areas of Phnom Penh, where residents say they were forced from their homes.

Ou Virak, the president of the Cambodian Center for Human Rights, called Mam Sonando's arrest groundless, saying the government wants to use Sonando as a "scapegoat" over the land crisis in Kratie province.

He felt the government delayed the arrest to wait for the conclusion Friday of the annual meeting of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations held in Phonm Penh and attended by U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and other international dignitaries.

"I think the government waited until the ASEAN summit is over. It does not want to arrest Mr. Mam Sonando while the U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and other top ASEAN diplomats along with many journalists are present in Cambodia," Ou Virak said.

Twice arrested

Mam Sonando has been arrested twice before.

In 2003, he was arrested and charged with giving "false" information and inciting people to "discriminate" and "commit crimes."

In 2005, he was held and charged with defamation over a radio interview that elicited criticism of Hun Sen's Cambodian border control issues with Vietnam.

Reported by Chea Sotheacheath and Vichey Anandh for RFA's Khmer service. Translated by Sok Ry Sum. Written in English by Parameswaran Ponnudurai.

Jul 15, 2012

Facebook snoopers to be exposed - Connect - NZ Herald News

Facebook snoopers to be exposed - Connect - NZ Herald News

Illegal Immigrants Slip Into Europe by Way of Greek Border

Illegal Immigrants Slip Into Europe by Way of Greek Border: Middle Eastern, South Asian and African immigrants have streamed across the 126-mile border between Turkey and Greece into the European Union, making its member countries resentful.

We see all immigrants as legal or illegal. Big mistake.

We see all immigrants as legal or illegal. Big mistake.:
Acentury ago, the immigrants from across the Atlantic included settlers and sojourners. Along with the many folks looking to make a permanent home in the United States came those who had no intention to stay, and who would make some money and then go home. Between 1908 and 1915, about 7 million people arrived while about 2 million departed. About a quarter of all Italian immigrants, for example, eventually returned to Italy for good. They even had an affectionate nickname, “uccelli di passaggio,” birds of passage.
Read full article >>



Where Obama failed on forging peace in the Middle East

Where Obama failed on forging peace in the Middle East:
It was their first meeting with the new president, and the dozen or so Jewish leaders picked to attend had made an agreement among themselves: No arguing — either with each other or their host.
The pledge would be hard to keep.
Read full article >>



Wikimania hits D.C. as Wikipedia faces changes

Wikimania hits D.C. as Wikipedia faces changes:
Over 1,000 self-proclaimed Wikipedians from 87 countries descended on George Washington University’s campus to an annual meeting on all things Wikipedia. It was as if one of the site’s Talk pages — where people argue over the finer points of online articles — had come to life. Attendees in every presentation shot up their hands in the middle of speeches, eager to add their input.
Read full article >>


Sri Lanka is descending toward dictatorship, rights activists and opposition leaders say; U.S. is determined to remain engaged

Sri Lanka is descending toward dictatorship, rights activists and opposition leaders say; U.S. is determined to remain engaged:
COLOMBO, Sri Lanka — The defeat of one of the world’s largest and most lethal terrorist organizations — and the end of a three-decade civil war — should have heralded a bright new dawn for the tropical Indian Ocean island of Sri Lanka.
Read full article >>



Coalition announced in Timor-Leste.Timor-Leste elections: CNRT will lead three-party coalition for next five years | The Lost Boy »This is info coming from the National Congress for Timorese Reconstruction (CNRT) conference today. Xanana Gusmao's CNRT has officially said no to a coalition

Coalition announced in Timor-Leste.

Timor-Leste elections: CNRT will lead three-party coalition for next five years | The Lost Boy »
This is info coming from the National Congress for Timorese Reconstruction (CNRT) conference today. Xanana Gusmao's CNRT has officially said no to a coalition

China urges Philippines not to escalate tensions »China on Friday said it opposed the Philippines' plan to offer oil exploration contracts in the South China Sea, urging the country not to escalate tensions in the area.

China urges Philippines not to escalate tensions »
China on Friday said it opposed the Philippines' plan to offer oil exploration contracts in the South China Sea, urging the country not to escalate tensions in the area.

Jul 14, 2012

They are just Papuans

They are just Papuans:

Recent violence shows the authorities share a disturbing mindset about the residents of Papua



Budi Hernawan

hernawan1.jpg

A student demonstration in Jayapura
Budi Hernawan
The statement by President Yudhoyono that recent violent incidents in Papua are ‘small-scale incidents compared to those in the Middle East’ (Jakarta Post, 12 June 2012) is worrying. The worry is not only that, by comparing Papuans and people in the Middle East in this way, he appeared to confuse his constitutional duty to protect Indonesian nationals with his role as observer of world politics. It is also because his comment suggests the president views Papuans as living ‘bare lives.’
First coined by the Italian philosopher Giorgio Agamben, a ‘bare life’ denotes a life that is limited to its biological and physiological dimensions. The term emphasises the emptiness of such life, a life that is devoid of meaning and value. Lived bare, the life of an individual is equivalent to a piece of meat. If someone destroys this life, it makes no difference because a bare life that is ended cannot be transformed into sacrifice. It has no higher meaning or significance.
Whenever a Papuan is killed in violent conflict in Papua, this attitude is on public display. Government officials proclaim their concern about ‘national integrity’ or ‘security’, in abstract and formal terms. We never, or rarely, hear them expressing sympathy for the victims, or acknowledging that their lives were valuable and dignified. Human

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Women and development

Women and development:

Indonesian women have been the target of hundreds of gender-focused development programs but to what effect?


Nikki Edwards

edwards1.jpg

Mixed reactions as women document a community development initiative in Bangka Belitung
Nikki Edwards
Over recent decades Indonesia’s 120 million women have been the target of a veritable barrage of gender-focused development initiatives designed to help reach the United Nations’ Millennium Development Goal of achieving ‘gender equity’ by 2015. Yet as this deadline looms, has the situation for women really improved? Are women any better equipped to gain access to work, healthcare, resources or government support?
This special edition of Inside Indonesia presents a variety of views on the extent to which gender-focused initiatives have improved or otherwise changed the day-to-day lives of Indonesian women. A number of the articles focus on the gap between those women who have benefited from development and those who are left behind. Some question the rationale underpinning particular development programs or the true effect of gender-focused government initiatives on women. Others focus on the marginalised women who benefit from development initiatives and consider the ways in which this is occurring.
Rosser sets the scene, writing about how government schemes which provide maternal healthcare to low-income women fail to provide an adequate level of support. He contends that these schemes cannot be fixed with more funding alone, but that they must also concentrate on empowering the mothers they aim to help. In

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