Aug 21, 2012

Afghans to spy on own troops to stop ‘insider’ attacks

Afghans to spy on own troops to stop ‘insider’ attacks:
KABUL — Afghan officials say they have launched an expanded effort to spy on their own police and army recruits, an acknowledgment that previous measures designed to reduce insurgent infiltration in the country’s security services have failed.
Read full article >>



Survey shows public wants federal services

Survey shows public wants federal services:
A majority of Americans would rather see higher taxes on the wealthy before cuts are made to public services such as food safety and border security, according to a survey released Monday by a major federal employee union.
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When the culture of ‘no’ leaves a bad taste

When the culture of ‘no’ leaves a bad taste:
For much of the 20th century, anyone who immigrated to America generally understood they would have to sacrifice some of their beloved foods. That’s just the way it was back then, before import markets were established and U.S. farmers embraced the artisanal approach to animal agriculture and produce.
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Report: Shell gushed cash on Nigeria security

Report: Shell gushed cash on Nigeria security: Leaked documents reveal oil giant spent nearly 40 per cent of its $1bn security budget to guard assets in Nigeria.

Ethiopian leader Meles Zenawi dies

Ethiopian leader Meles Zenawi dies: Former guerrilla leader, in power since 1991, to be succeeded by deputy prime minister, state TV says.

Ecuadorians rally behind Assange asylum bid

Ecuadorians rally behind Assange asylum bid: Large crowd marches in capital to support granting political asylum to the WikiLeaks founder, who fears US prosecution.

South Africa mine owner eases ultimatum

South Africa mine owner eases ultimatum: Lonmin says sackings will not ease tensions, after second deadline for miners to return to work expires.

Mali announces national unity government

Mali announces national unity government: Cabinet includes five appointees known to be close to army officer who led the March coup that sparked ongoing turmoil.

PKK denies responsibility for Turkey blast

PKK denies responsibility for Turkey blast: Kurdish fighters say they were not responsible for car bomb that killed nine people in the country's southeast.

Afghan rockets hit US army chief's plane

Afghan rockets hit US army chief's plane: Attack at Bagram airbase did not injure Martin Dempsey, the highest-ranking US military officer, spokesman says.

Russia warns West after Obama Syria threats

Russia warns West after Obama Syria threats: Lavrov warns against unilateral action after Obama threatens military force if Syria uses chemical weapons.

India cracks down on internet over Assam

India cracks down on internet over Assam: New Delhi has asked Facebook and Twitter to remove "inflammatory" content it says helped spark an exodus of migrants.

ETHIOPIA: Getting a better deal for coffee farmers

ETHIOPIA: Getting a better deal for coffee farmers:
ADDIS ABABA, 21 August 2012 (IRIN) - Ethiopia is regarded as arabica coffee's birthplace, but while the country's high-quality coffee has made it to the gourmet shelves of major coffee houses around the world, many of its growers remain poor.

DRC: Violence hampers aid work in Ituri

DRC: Violence hampers aid work in Ituri:
BUNIA, 21 August 2012 (IRIN) - Inter-ethnic tensions have again turned violent in north-eastern Democratic Republic of Congo's Ituri region, compromising the delivery of humanitarian aid to more than 100,000 people, according to officials there.

ISRAEL-SYRIA: Could a new regime in Syria be good for the Golan Heights?

ISRAEL-SYRIA: Could a new regime in Syria be good for the Golan Heights?:
MAJDAL SHAMS, 21 August 2012 (IRIN) - The Syrian Druze communities of the occupied Golan Heights have traditionally supported Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. But they are increasingly divided over the conflict in their homeland. And now, some Arab residents of the Golan feel that a change in Syria's government could put the Golan's status back on the national and regional agenda.

US: Immigrant Ruling Rejects State Overreach | Human Rights Watch

US: Immigrant Ruling Rejects State Overreach | Human Rights Watch

Burma’s most successful export: Pythons | Asia News – Politics, Media, Education | Asian Correspondent

Burma’s most successful export: Pythons | Asia News – Politics, Media, Education | Asian Correspondent

Minister of Justice Dionisio Babo-Soares announces plan to establish Criminal Investigations Centre

Tue Aug 21 2012 18:20:27 GMT-0400 (EDT)

Correlation between high unemployment and violence in Timor-Leste

Tue Aug 21 2012 18:18:58 GMT-0400 (EDT)

Uganda: Growing Intimidation, Threats to Civil Society

Uganda: Growing Intimidation, Threats to Civil Society:
Research and advocacy organizations in Uganda that deal with controversial topics are facing increasing harassment by Uganda’s government. Groups have recently faced forced closure of meetings, threats, harassment, arrest, and punitive bureaucratic interference. The Ugandan government should end its hostile rhetoric and repeated obstructions of nongovernmental organizations.
(Nairobi) – Research and advocacy organizations in Uganda that deal with controversial topics are facing increasing harassment by Uganda’s government, Human Rights Watch said in a report released today.
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Burma: Where are The Muslims!

Burma: Where are The Muslims!:

Technology's Dark Side: Devious Devices Designed to Harm You | PCWorld

Technology's Dark Side: Devious Devices Designed to Harm You | PCWorld

Ohio GOP Admits Early Voting Cutbacks Are Racially Motivated | The Nation

Ohio GOP Admits Early Voting Cutbacks Are Racially Motivated | The Nation

Key Indicators for Asia and the Pacific 2012 | Asian Development Bank

Key Indicators for Asia and the Pacific 2012 | Asian Development Bank

Police Detain Tibetan Singer

Police Detain Tibetan Singer

US Envoy Visits Monk, Activist in Vietnam

Envoy Visits Monk, Activist

Cambodian Activist in Hiding Denies Claims

Activist in Hiding Denies Claims

Dissident Lawyer Attacked in Vietnam

Dissident Lawyer Attacked

North Korean IDs to Include Data Chips

IDs to Include Data Chips


It's Not Honor Killing, It's Murder | Sampsonia Way Magazine

It's Not Honor Killing, It's Murder | Sampsonia Way Magazine

ASAA Asian Currents August 2012

www.asaa.asn.au/publications/ac/2012/asian-currents-12-08.pdf


The August 2012 issue of "Asian Currents" from the Asian Studies Association of Australia is now available from the ASAA web site at http://www.asaa.asn.au/publications/ac/2012/asian-currents-12-08.pdf


In this issue:
  • The death of rights in China?
  • Korea obligations continue to deny East Asia peace and stability
  • Korean Buddhism: the dangers of toeing the party line
  • Building demand for Asia literacy
  • Centre fosters Australia–Mongolia ties
  • Far from provincial: contemporary literature in East Kalimantan
  • Doorstep interactions: Chinese influence in Southeast Asia
  • ASAA 19th Biennial Conference
  • Symposium: labour migration in the Asia–Pacific
  • Asian artists strong show at Sydney Biennale
  • 4A presentation at Shanghai biennale Coming events
  • Fellowships and grants
Starting with this issue clicking on any item in the contents listing in the PDF will take you to that article.

How to Get Started With Google Reader | PCWorld

How to Get Started With Google Reader | PCWorld

The Hill’s 50 Wealthiest lawmakers - The Hill - covering Congress, Politics, Political Campaigns and Capitol Hill | TheHill.com

The Hill’s 50 Wealthiest lawmakers - The Hill - covering Congress, Politics, Political Campaigns and Capitol Hill | TheHill.com

Aug 20, 2012

Amazon.com: Islamic Nationhood and Colonial Indonesia: The Umma Below the Winds (9780415297578): Michael Francis Laffan: Books

Amazon.com: Islamic Nationhood and Colonial Indonesia: The Umma Below the Winds (9780415297578): Michael Francis Laffan: Books

Fee.  Always also try bookfinder.com site for any available less expensive copies.

Amazon.com: The Makings of Indonesian Islam: Orientalism and the Narration of a Sufi Past (Princeton Studies in Muslim Politics) (9780691145303): Michael Laffan: Books

Amazon.com: The Makings of Indonesian Islam: Orientalism and the Narration of a Sufi Past (Princeton Studies in Muslim Politics) (9780691145303): Michael Laffan: Books

Fee.  Always also try bookfinder.com site to search for any available less expensive copies.

Thaksin and the palace

Thaksin and the palace:

Last week I had a lengthy overview of Thai politics published at Inside Story. There are a few different sections that will be of interest to New Mandala readers. I conclude that:

Under these circumstances the final months of 2012 are likely to see more aggressive efforts by Thaksin to return to the kingdom. He will not want to miss an opportunity to pay his final respects to King Bhumibol. It is easy to overlook Thaksin’s own royalist views and the fact that he has worked very closely with the palace and the military in the past. The coup put an end to that, but Yingluck’s words and actions have signalled that rapprochement is conceivable.
Radical shifts in allegiance have happened before in Thai politics and they will happen again. Far from being a republican trouble-maker, Thaksin may ultimately prove a key ally for the palace in any future crisis. His capacity for personal reinvention is legendary, and this means that as he and the palace both face the challenges of the years ahead they may find that a common cause can guarantee mutual survival.
Thaksin has a track record of indestructibility. It makes sense that in the difficult years to come the palace will want him on their side.

Revamped Sina Weibo Set to Come with Google+ Style Sharing

Revamped Sina Weibo Set to Come with Google+ Style Sharing:
Chinese mega social network Sina Weibo is set for a major revamp that will see it incorporate Google+ style sharing.
Chinese blog Techweb claims to have exclusive screenshots (translate) of the new version of the social network. The release, called “Version 5″ was first outed as existing by Sina CEO Charles Chao during the company’s earnings call last week.
One of the most obvious features from the screenshots is a revamped profile page that incorporates elements of Facebook and Google+.



You can also now choose who to share things with, as you can on Google+, by groups including “colleagues” and “classmates.”
As The Next Web notes however, the biggest challenge for Sina Weibo is to find a way of monetising. That means it’ll have to make the platform as attractive to advertisers as possible.
This has been a constant battle for one of China’s most high-profile social networks. Its most recent bid at money-making involved launching a social credit card.
The new version of Sina Weibo will reportedly launch some time in the third financial quarter of 2012.
This article by Nur Bremmen originally appeared on Memeburn and was republished with permission.

Deadly battles grip Syria as UN ends mission

Deadly battles grip Syria as UN ends mission: Army tanks shell Damascus suburb as fighting continues in Aleppo and deaths are reported in clashes in Deraa.

SRI LANKA: Water conservation “desperately” needed

SRI LANKA: Water conservation “desperately” needed:
COLOMBO, 20 August 2012 (IRIN) - Rising temperatures, a late monsoon and dwindling rivers in parts of Sri Lanka are straining the energy sector and threatening crop yields. Local experts say water conservation has become an urgent necessity.

A Measure of Change: Slow Response to Housing Crisis Now Weighs on Obama

A Measure of Change: Slow Response to Housing Crisis Now Weighs on Obama: President Obama’s response to the housing crisis was deliberately subdued, and some economists believe stronger action could have softened the economic impact.




Romney Campaign Works Feverishly to Project Relaxed Image

Romney Campaign Works Feverishly to Project Relaxed Image: Mitt Romney’s campaign has recruited professionals to manage his appearance at the Republican convention, hoping to overcome his image of being stiff and aloof.




South Korean Conservatives Nominate Dictator’s Daughter for President - NYTimes.com

South Korean Conservatives Nominate Dictator’s Daughter for President - NYTimes.com

7 Israelis Held in Attack on Palestinians in Jerusalem - NYTimes.com

7 Israelis Held in Attack on Palestinians in Jerusalem - NYTimes.com

Pilot program seeks more accurate count of Chesapeake Bay crabs - The Washington Post

Pilot program seeks more accurate count of Chesapeake Bay crabs - The Washington Post

Pakistani Christians, fearing backlash, flee community after girl accused of blasphemy - The Washington Post

Pakistani Christians, fearing backlash, flee community after girl accused of blasphemy - The Washington Post

Todd Akin says he won’t leave Senate race as Republicans rush to condemn rape comment - The Washington Post

Todd Akin says he won’t leave Senate race as Republicans rush to condemn rape comment - The Washington Post

As always, Florida in the middle of the voting wars

As always, Florida in the middle of the voting wars:
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Stick a pin almost anywhere on a map of Florida and you’ll find a legal battle over who will be eligible to vote in the coming presidential election — and when, and how, and where.
Read full article >>


In Syria, group suspected of al-Qaeda links gaining prominence in war to topple Assad

In Syria, group suspected of al-Qaeda links gaining prominence in war to topple Assad:
ALEPPO, Syria — A shadowy jihadist organization that first surfaced on the Internet to assert responsibility for suicide bombings in Aleppo and Damascus has stepped out of the shadows and onto the front lines of the war for Syria’s cities.
Read full article >>



Smartphone payment space packed with competition

Smartphone payment space packed with competition:
Salad in hand, Carol Lyn Brown walked up to the cashier at K Street Cafe and Bagel in Northwest Washington and handed over her credit card.
Erin Cullen, the cashier, didn’t run it through a traditional cash register. Instead, she swiped it through a small plastic attachment on her iPad — and within seconds the payment was processed. The receipt can be texted or e-mailed back to the customer.
Read full article >>



Report: GOP lawmakers reprimanded for drinking, skinny-dipping in Israel

Report: GOP lawmakers reprimanded for drinking, skinny-dipping in Israel:
Updated Monday, 12:22 p.m. ET

House Republican leaders reprimanded 30 lawmakers last August for antics including drinking and skinny-dipping during a fact-finding trip to Israel, according to published reports.
Read full article >>



Mitt Romney, as a leader in Mormon church, became a master of many keys

Mitt Romney, as a leader in Mormon church, became a master of many keys:
BOSTON — In the back office of his Weston, Mass., headquarters a quarter-­century ago, Mitt Romney, the chief Mormon authority in the Boston area, told the leader of his Spanish-speaking congregation that he would not directly pay for lawyers to help the growing number of illegal immigrants in his church. Then he carefully instructed his subordinate on how to circumvent the Mormon Church’s new hard line against such assistance and subsidize their legal aide.
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In Mexico’s murder city, the war appears over

In Mexico’s murder city, the war appears over:
CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico — When this city was among the most murderous in the world, the morgue ran out of room, the corpses stacked to the ceiling in the wheezing walk-in freezers.
Medical examiners, in plastic boots, performed a dozen autopsies a day as families of victims waited outside in numbers sufficient to require a line.
Read full article >>


Can Obama Win Over the Billionaires? : The New Yorker

Can Obama Win Over the Billionaires? : The New Yorker

Obama doesn’t like cozying up to billionaires. Could it cost him the election?

A strategy for filtering America's toxic sludge of political advertising | Dan Gillmor | Comment is free | guardian.co.uk

A strategy for filtering America's toxic sludge of political advertising | Dan Gillmor | Comment is free | guardian.co.uk

Facebook Spent $700,000 On Mark Zuckerberg's Private Jets Last Year - Business Insider

Facebook Spent $700,000 On Mark Zuckerberg's Private Jets Last Year - Business Insider

Welcome to Justice System Monitoring Programme "JSMP" Website.

Welcome to Justice System Monitoring Programme "JSMP" Website.

Aug 19, 2012

Mass-circulation ‘Asia Weekly’ launched in Phuket

Mass-circulation ‘Asia Weekly’ launched in Phuket: Phuket News discovered by ThaiVisual at Phuket daily news headlines story – PHUKET: The Phuket Gazette is proud this week to be ushering into Phuket the China Daily Asia Weekly, a world-class publication built in Hong Kong by, among others, senior expatriate editors from the UK, the United States, Europe, India, Australia, South Africa and [...]

Three Uzbekistan Women arrested for Trafficking Uzbekistan Girls

Three Uzbekistan Women arrested for Trafficking Uzbekistan Girls: Chiang Rai News discovered by ThaiVisual at Chiang Rai daily news headlines story – The arrested were identified as Ms. Notira Nakodgeiva, age 28; Ms. Golea or Gulnora Butaeva, age 50; and Ms. Asisa or Robiya Gerbonova, age 52.   Chiangrai Times – Three Uzbekistan women were arrested in Bangkok’s Nana district for tricking Uzbekistan [...]

Monarchy’s twilight II

Monarchy’s twilight II:
As with the commentators in our previous post, Nicholas Farrelly at the Australia’s Inside Story comments on the decline of what the royalists call “the institution.” Okay, the story is really about Thaksin Shinawatra’s political tenacity, but the monarchy is also central.

The author points out:
In the years since then [the 2006 coup], Thailand’s military, palace, bureaucratic and judicial power brokers have remained sensitive about any discussion of the political role of the royal family. In recent years the country’s lese-majesty law, which demands harsh penalties for any perceived slights against the king or senior royals, has become newly problematic [sic.]. Since the crackdown on the Red Shirt protests of April and May 2010, anti-palace graffiti and slogans have infused rallies with radical sentiments.
Like one of the commentators we quoted in our earlier post, we think Farrelly is wrong on lese majeste under the Yingluck Shinawatra government when he claims:
Under her government, Thailand continues to lock up critics of the palace and determinedly pursues legal proceedings against any minnows who dare challenge royal prestige.
As we have said before, the rhetoric was initially strong, but the record of locking people up is miniscule when compared with the Abhisit Vejjajiva regime. He is right in observing:
What Yingluck’s government knows is that the lese-majesty law holds back an avalanche of scrutiny and criticism looming over the palace. They have decided that this is not the time to unleash its destructive potential.
The perverse consequence of continuing to clamp down on critical references to the royal family is that intrigue, scuttlebutt and animosity multiply. Discussions of the most sensitive topics have not been eradicated and, like a festering wound, are left to draw attention in ways unwanted and uncomfortable.
The author then turns to Thaksin and succession:
His opponents remain preoccupied with the palace succession and the need to ensure the continuity of the Chakri dynasty. There are also those hoping to keep control of what Forbes estimates could be a $30 billion royal fortune. [PPT: It's $37 billion at last count.]
… The $30 billion question is: what happens when … Bhumibol dies? It remains the question that nobody is prepared to touch. But if we have understood anything of Thailand’s political action since the 2006 coup then any tentative answer matters a great deal. It provides an explanation for what we have seen and what, we assume, lurks just out of sight. On everyone’s lips there is an unspoken view that things could get very bad as Thailand seeks to clarify its longer term political future.
Unresolved questions about Crown Prince Vajiralongkorn’s reckless behaviour haunt the equation. His apparent incapacity to generate consistent popular goodwill must infuriate those pragmatic types who have sought to provide every chance for his success…. Millions of Thais have stopped believing in the official, benign portrayal of the Crown Prince.
The palace plan, we think, is unchanged; the prince steps up. The issue is whether this will unleash political forces betting on and promoting others. For the author, succession plays out for Thaksin too:
Under these circumstances the final months of 2012 are likely to see more aggressive efforts by Thaksin to return to the kingdom. He will not want to miss an opportunity to pay his final respects to King Bhumibol. It is easy to overlook Thaksin’s own royalist views and the fact that he has worked very closely with the palace and the military in the past. The coup put an end to that, but Yingluck’s words and actions have signalled that rapprochement is conceivable.
Seat belts might be required.

Monarchy’s twilight I

Monarchy’s twilight I:
PPT said it some time ago: the monarchy is in decline. This is re-confirmed by two recent commentaries, by Thitinan Pongsudhirak and Sonia Rothwell.
Rothwell, writing at the Zurich-based International Relations and Security Network (ISN), comments on the south and red shirts, with an interesting link about rising political consciousness:
Building on the political awakening of the middle classes in the 1990s, there has been increasing political awareness both in the far south and among Thailand’s poor. Encouraged by Prime Minister Yingluck [Shinawatra]’s brother Thaksin, the politicization culminated in the so-called Red Shirt protests of 2010.
She then writes about the monarchy and while the general drift of the remarks are acceptable, some aspects deserve criticism.  The author states: “The declining health of Thailand’s long-serving King Bhumibol also threatens to seriously fracture the fragile unity of the country.” PPT isn’t sure there is much unity, but the point that the king’s death will lead to unpredictable outcomes is correct.
Rothwell asserts that the aging monarch “has been widely regarded as a unifying figure for Thailand over the past 66 years…”. On this, she is exaggerating, but many other journalists make this point from palace propaganda. The next exaggeration is a big one: “With the continuity of Thai nationhood at present largely resting on the continuity of the royal family, it is perhaps unsurprising that the country’s notoriously stringent lese majeste laws (which prohibit criticism of the royal family) continue to be tightly enforced.” The first claim about monarchy and nation is most usually heard from the yellow-shirted royalists, while the second claim neglects that lese majeste is a political crime, and that its most extravagant use corresponds with political crises.
Despite being a little mixed-up, Rothwell does identify the passing of an era.
The second commentary is by Thitinan in an article available from the Journal of Democracy, which has been outlined by Bangkok Pundit. It is an academic article that argues that the conservative elite is losing its battle to hold Thailand’s democratization back. Bangkok Pundit emphasized some parts of the article, and we’ll do that too. There are some things we think are errors (the death toll in the war on drugs was not 2,300; Yingluck’s government hasn’t been “strictly enforcing” lese majeste; Thaksin did make big bucks from state concessions; the new palace-sanctioned biography of the king is anything but “scholarly”), but much that deserves attention.
As twilight settles over the 65-year reign of King Bhumibol Adulyadej (b. 1927), Thais find themselves caught in a national stalemate. Those who favor maintaining the monarchy-centered hierarchy as the ultimate source of political power are arrayed against others who want to reform the monarchy and reconcile it with a fuller and more mature form of democracy.
He adds at the end of the paper:
For Thaksin’s establishment foes, conceding to his spectacularly successful populism would have been tantamount to admitting that most people in the … have been—and have been kept—poor.
As Thitinan indicates, bereft of popular support and wanting things to be as they were “before”, the conservative elite fights on as “it has too much at stake to simply give way to the challenges that Thaksin…”. Thitinan reckons that the rift between the palace and Thaksin began after the latter’s huge 2005 election victory. That seems true enough, although criticism from the Privy Council is mentioned in a Wikileaks cable from just prior to the election, focused on the south.
At present the fight is, Thitinan claims, a stalemate, so Yingluck continues in government:
As long as the monarchy remains sacrosanct and the symbiotic relationship between it and the military remains untouched, Yingluck may be able to muddle along with a reheated populist agenda …. Should the palace begin to perceive a clear and present danger, however, the Yingluck government and anyone who actively aspires to a basic reform of the monarchy will likely face stepped-up pressure and perhaps even the specter of violence from royalist and conservative quarters.
Judicialization is a big section of the paper, and seeing this as an elite strategy, fostered by the palace, Thitinan sees it as having failed:
The monarchy is associated with the launch of the judicialization strategy, and that strategy’s failure appears to have compromised the

monarchy up to a point.
That’s a big call, especially given the Constitutional Court’s (re)positioning in political space in recent weeks. PPT thinks the judiciary remains an important elite and palace weapon against democratization.
Both articles recognize an end is near. Thitinan notes that the way forward is murky because there are so few alternatives: Thaksin and his flaws do not augur well for a broader-based democratization.