At the Turkish border, some Syrian refugees find a mini safe zone:
BAB AL-SALAMEH CROSSING, Syria — When their urban neighborhoods were bombed by government aircraft, many northern Syrians hid in nearby villages. When those were bombed, the refugees fled to the fields. When the fields were targeted, they had little option but to head for this rebel-held border station and try to cross into Turkey.
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Daily news, analysis, and link directories on American studies, global-regional-local problems, minority groups, and internet resources.
Sep 1, 2012
Impasse between union, employers could shut down some major U.S. ports in Oct.
Impasse between union, employers could shut down some major U.S. ports in Oct.:
Ports along the Eastern and Gulf of Mexico coasts of the United States face a possible shutdown on Oct. 1 as a result of a deadlock in negotiations between port employers and the main union, the International Longshoremen’s Association.
Read full article >>
Ports along the Eastern and Gulf of Mexico coasts of the United States face a possible shutdown on Oct. 1 as a result of a deadlock in negotiations between port employers and the main union, the International Longshoremen’s Association.
Read full article >>
China’s coming leadership change met with a shrug
China’s coming leadership change met with a shrug:
BEIJING — With China facing a worsening economy, its biggest political crisis in two decades, and growing public anger and domestic unrest, what do people here say about the seismic change about to take place in the country’s top leadership?
Read full article >>
BEIJING — With China facing a worsening economy, its biggest political crisis in two decades, and growing public anger and domestic unrest, what do people here say about the seismic change about to take place in the country’s top leadership?
Read full article >>
Apple Suit Targets Samsung's Galaxy S III
Apple Suit Targets Samsung's Galaxy S III: Apple formally made Samsung Electronics's current flagship smartphone, the Galaxy S III, a target in their continuing patent dispute.
Kim Serious About Reforms: Expert
Kim Serious About Reforms: Expert:
Though many analysts are skeptical, expert Andrei Lankov says North Korea's new leader Kim Jong Un is beginning to consider Chinese-style economic reforms. He speaks to RFA’s Executive Editor Dan Southerland:
Q: How do you interpret reports that North Korea is planning to reform the economy and the agricultural system? Do these appear to be signs of a serious effort at reform?
A: I think for the first time they’re taking steps toward Chinese-style reforms. But if they don’t move carefully, it could eventually mean instability.
Q: What are the signals that this is something really serious and not mere tinkering?
A: They’ve replaced almost all of the top military leaders. This allows for a shift from the military-first policy to a new emphasis on the economy.
First they replaced the army chief of staff, Ri Yong Ho. Two days later the commander of the navy was gone. Seven or eight military district chiefs have been replaced. Kim Jong Un has dramatically downsized the military-run enterprises. Many individual enterprises that were under the control of the military are now under the supervision of the cabinet.
Second, they introduced a new agricultural management policy. It would allow the government to take 70 percent of their crop. But the farmers would keep 30 percent. Think of the reforms in China in the late 1970s.
Q: Is this coming from Kim Jong Un’s Swiss education, from Chinese pressure, or from both?
A: From both. Kim Jong Un wants to go down in history. He knows that his father’s politics have no future. But he probably doesn’t know how risky his new reformist policy is.
Q: You say they’ve downsized the military-run enterprises. Does this mean shifting the military’s control of the foreign trade companies to civilian control? If that’s the case, wouldn’t this mean a huge transfer of wealth away from the military?
A: Yes, of course.
Q: If economic reforms are implemented, what implications would they have for North Korea’s foreign policy?
A: They need investment money, and the investment can come only from overseas. Therefore, they will continue to court China. But they’ll also seriously try to improve relations with the United States and Japan and, of course, South Korea.
Q: They seem to be shifting away from the old “military first” policy. But at the same time, we see reports this month that they’ve now placed the dome on a light-water reactor at a nuclear plant. So presumably, they’ll forge ahead with their nuclear program. No compromise on that?
A: They will absolutely make no compromise on the nuclear issue. They saw what happened to Colonel Gadhafi, who surrendered his nuclear program in exchange for economic promises. They feel they must have a nuclear deterrent. And it’s also important, just in case, as a tool for blackmail.
Q: So they really believe that the U.S. might invade?
A: Yes, and why not?—They’ve seen what happened in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Q: What dangers would that light-water reactor pose for South Korea and the region once it’s up and running?
A: Two dangers: First, a light-water reaction can be used for the production of weapons-grade plutonium. Second, it’s a dangerous creature. It’s dangerous to maintain. It requires a high level of technological skill, equipment, and material. So it creates the potential for a Chernobyl-style disaster in North Korea. The danger is of an explosion, or the reactor getting out of control.
Q: A major change in North Korea is in the realm of information reaching the North Korean people. You wrote a paper recently about the “crumbling wall” of censorship in the North that’s been aimed at blocking information from the outside world.
A: Kim Jong Un as well as his father before him have been unlucky in one regard. They’ve been running a system based on isolation from outside information at a time when the fastest growing technology is IT. This makes it increasingly difficult to try to control. MP3s, DVD players—all these things have their dangers.
And, of course, international radio stations might be the most politically significant media, since their audience largely consists of real or potential opinion makers. Radio also remains the only source of up-to-date political information and opinions.
Q: Couldn’t the combination of greater access to information plus a more open economy lead to the downfall of this regime? And isn’t there a danger that if Kim Jong Un goes ahead with everything that’s talked about he’ll be trying to do too many things at one time?
A: I think that he faces a really high probability of regime collapse in a few years. And I don’t think he fully understands this. The rest of the world, meanwhile, is unprepared to deal with this. The unification of North and South Korea will be extremely expensive. Who's going to control the nukes? And who’s going to run North Korea? The Americans, the Chinese, and the South Koreans need to start talking about contingency plans in a serious way.
Q: As you know, some experts and senior North Korean defectors are saying that talk of a major economic reform on the horizon is just a smokescreen. The leadership hasn’t made a public commitment to any such reform. As in the past, couldn’t they easily reverse everything that’s been talked about?
A: Yes, all of this would be easily reversible at its current stage. And a hard-line backlash is quite possible. But I think this is the beginning of the most serious attempt at transformation that I’ve ever seen.
Q: But there’s no public commitment by the leadership to any of the things that are being rumored and discussed.
A: Officially, they can’t make an open commitment to a reform. In the North Korean view, the country is run by the greatest geniuses who ever lived. To admit that reforms are necessary would be to acknowledge the mistakes of the past. But they can argue that no system is perfect and that improvements can always be made.
Q: Kim Jong Un has introduced his wife to the country through several public events. What’s the significance of that?
A: Kim Jong Un’s father, Kim Jong Il, never allowed any of his wives to be seen at public events. His grandfather’s wife was present only at diplomatic receptions. So this is something very new. And for the North Koreans it’s a sign that Kim Jong Un is not God.
Q: So this might make Jong Un more likable or accessible. But wouldn’t this destroy the personality cult of a leader who is supposed to be above the status of a normal person?
A: No, the personality cult is still there.
Q: What are we to make of the introduction of American symbols into a concert in July attended by Kim Jong Un? They were featuring Sinatra’s “My Way,” Mickey Mouse, and the theme song from the movie “Rocky.” Is this an attempt to reach out to the United States?
A: Yes, but only to a limited extent. It’s largely for domestic consumption. It’s an attempt to make the country a more enjoyable place to live in.
Andrei Lankov is a professor at Kookmin University in Seoul
Though many analysts are skeptical, expert Andrei Lankov says North Korea's new leader Kim Jong Un is beginning to consider Chinese-style economic reforms. He speaks to RFA’s Executive Editor Dan Southerland:
Q: How do you interpret reports that North Korea is planning to reform the economy and the agricultural system? Do these appear to be signs of a serious effort at reform?
A: I think for the first time they’re taking steps toward Chinese-style reforms. But if they don’t move carefully, it could eventually mean instability.
Q: What are the signals that this is something really serious and not mere tinkering?
A: They’ve replaced almost all of the top military leaders. This allows for a shift from the military-first policy to a new emphasis on the economy.
First they replaced the army chief of staff, Ri Yong Ho. Two days later the commander of the navy was gone. Seven or eight military district chiefs have been replaced. Kim Jong Un has dramatically downsized the military-run enterprises. Many individual enterprises that were under the control of the military are now under the supervision of the cabinet.
Second, they introduced a new agricultural management policy. It would allow the government to take 70 percent of their crop. But the farmers would keep 30 percent. Think of the reforms in China in the late 1970s.
Q: Is this coming from Kim Jong Un’s Swiss education, from Chinese pressure, or from both?
A: From both. Kim Jong Un wants to go down in history. He knows that his father’s politics have no future. But he probably doesn’t know how risky his new reformist policy is.
Q: You say they’ve downsized the military-run enterprises. Does this mean shifting the military’s control of the foreign trade companies to civilian control? If that’s the case, wouldn’t this mean a huge transfer of wealth away from the military?
A: Yes, of course.
Q: If economic reforms are implemented, what implications would they have for North Korea’s foreign policy?
A: They need investment money, and the investment can come only from overseas. Therefore, they will continue to court China. But they’ll also seriously try to improve relations with the United States and Japan and, of course, South Korea.
Q: They seem to be shifting away from the old “military first” policy. But at the same time, we see reports this month that they’ve now placed the dome on a light-water reactor at a nuclear plant. So presumably, they’ll forge ahead with their nuclear program. No compromise on that?
A: They will absolutely make no compromise on the nuclear issue. They saw what happened to Colonel Gadhafi, who surrendered his nuclear program in exchange for economic promises. They feel they must have a nuclear deterrent. And it’s also important, just in case, as a tool for blackmail.
Q: So they really believe that the U.S. might invade?
A: Yes, and why not?—They’ve seen what happened in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Q: What dangers would that light-water reactor pose for South Korea and the region once it’s up and running?
A: Two dangers: First, a light-water reaction can be used for the production of weapons-grade plutonium. Second, it’s a dangerous creature. It’s dangerous to maintain. It requires a high level of technological skill, equipment, and material. So it creates the potential for a Chernobyl-style disaster in North Korea. The danger is of an explosion, or the reactor getting out of control.
Q: A major change in North Korea is in the realm of information reaching the North Korean people. You wrote a paper recently about the “crumbling wall” of censorship in the North that’s been aimed at blocking information from the outside world.
A: Kim Jong Un as well as his father before him have been unlucky in one regard. They’ve been running a system based on isolation from outside information at a time when the fastest growing technology is IT. This makes it increasingly difficult to try to control. MP3s, DVD players—all these things have their dangers.
And, of course, international radio stations might be the most politically significant media, since their audience largely consists of real or potential opinion makers. Radio also remains the only source of up-to-date political information and opinions.
Q: Couldn’t the combination of greater access to information plus a more open economy lead to the downfall of this regime? And isn’t there a danger that if Kim Jong Un goes ahead with everything that’s talked about he’ll be trying to do too many things at one time?
A: I think that he faces a really high probability of regime collapse in a few years. And I don’t think he fully understands this. The rest of the world, meanwhile, is unprepared to deal with this. The unification of North and South Korea will be extremely expensive. Who's going to control the nukes? And who’s going to run North Korea? The Americans, the Chinese, and the South Koreans need to start talking about contingency plans in a serious way.
Q: As you know, some experts and senior North Korean defectors are saying that talk of a major economic reform on the horizon is just a smokescreen. The leadership hasn’t made a public commitment to any such reform. As in the past, couldn’t they easily reverse everything that’s been talked about?
A: Yes, all of this would be easily reversible at its current stage. And a hard-line backlash is quite possible. But I think this is the beginning of the most serious attempt at transformation that I’ve ever seen.
Q: But there’s no public commitment by the leadership to any of the things that are being rumored and discussed.
A: Officially, they can’t make an open commitment to a reform. In the North Korean view, the country is run by the greatest geniuses who ever lived. To admit that reforms are necessary would be to acknowledge the mistakes of the past. But they can argue that no system is perfect and that improvements can always be made.
Q: Kim Jong Un has introduced his wife to the country through several public events. What’s the significance of that?
A: Kim Jong Un’s father, Kim Jong Il, never allowed any of his wives to be seen at public events. His grandfather’s wife was present only at diplomatic receptions. So this is something very new. And for the North Koreans it’s a sign that Kim Jong Un is not God.
Q: So this might make Jong Un more likable or accessible. But wouldn’t this destroy the personality cult of a leader who is supposed to be above the status of a normal person?
A: No, the personality cult is still there.
Q: What are we to make of the introduction of American symbols into a concert in July attended by Kim Jong Un? They were featuring Sinatra’s “My Way,” Mickey Mouse, and the theme song from the movie “Rocky.” Is this an attempt to reach out to the United States?
A: Yes, but only to a limited extent. It’s largely for domestic consumption. It’s an attempt to make the country a more enjoyable place to live in.
Andrei Lankov is a professor at Kookmin University in Seoul
Freedom of Speech Roundup
Freedom of Speech Roundup:
In the Weekly Freedom of Speech Roundup Sampsonia Way presents some of the week’s top news on freedom of expression, journalists in danger, artists in exile, and banned literature.
Many leading blogs and news websites in Jordan 'blacked out' their home pages this week with images like the one above to protest pending amendments to the Press and Publications law, which some are calling censorship in disguise.Below Sampsonia Way presents some of the top news on freedom of expression, censorship, literature, and journalists in danger for the week of August 23-29.
Investigative journalist Seth Rosenfeld talks with Democracy Now about his new book, J. Edgar Hoover and the FBI, and Free Speech Movement leader and student activist Mario Savio.
Ikhwanweb. On Sunday August 26 Egyptian magazine El-Hilal organized a symposium on culture and the arts in Muslim Brotherhood thought that was attended by Egyptian writers, professors, a filmmaker, and a member of Egypt’s upper house of parliament. Read the Conversation Here
In the Weekly Freedom of Speech Roundup Sampsonia Way presents some of the week’s top news on freedom of expression, journalists in danger, artists in exile, and banned literature.
Many leading blogs and news websites in Jordan 'blacked out' their home pages this week with images like the one above to protest pending amendments to the Press and Publications law, which some are calling censorship in disguise.
Jordan Web ‘Blackout’ Protest Targets Alleged Censorship
Los Angeles Times. On Wednesday August 29, some leading Jordanian blogs and online news sites changed their home pages to a black screen in protest against proposed changes in Jordanian laws that social media and free-press advocates call censorship under the cover of anti-pornography legislation. Read HereWhen is Government Web Censorship Justified? An Indian Horror Story
The Atlantic. “A swirl of unfounded rumors” spread via social media ignited religious violence in India, displacing 300,000 and killing 80. Read HereEcuador’s Crusade for Assange is all about Power
Stabroek News. Emilio Palacio, the former leading columnist of Ecuador’s daily El Universo, which President Correa sued for libel earlier this year, weighs in on the implications of Julian Assange’s asylum in the Ecuadorian embassy. Read HereChronicler of Africa’s Revolutionary Movements and Revolutionaries: Remembering Heidi Holland
The Daily Maverick. South African investigative journalist Heidi Holland (1947-2012) is remembered for her courageous work, including books about Nelson Mandella and the African National Congress, Robert Mugabe, and The Colour of Murder, a true crime investigation of racism and violence in South Africa. Read HereRead an Excerpt from Subversives: The FBI’s War on Student Radicals and Reagan’s Rise to Power
Democracy Now. Read the first chapter of Seth Rosenfeld’s new book Subversives: The FBI’s War on Student Radicals and Reagan’s Rise to Power, which reveals that the FBI tried to disrupt the 1964 Free Speech Movement at Berkeley, helping to ignite an era of protest and to launch Ronald Reagan’s political career. Read the Excerpt HereInvestigative journalist Seth Rosenfeld talks with Democracy Now about his new book, J. Edgar Hoover and the FBI, and Free Speech Movement leader and student activist Mario Savio.
Local Press Targeted and Harassed in Ivory Coast
CPJ. The state-run National Press Council suspended the daily Le Temps on August 3 for 20 editions in connection with a July 24 article that it said defamed President Alassane Ouattara. On Sunday morning, a group of armed men attacked the offices of the Cyclone Media Group, which publishes Le Temps, assaulted a security guard, set a room on fire, and stole several computers. Read HereCensorship in the Internet Age
The Guardian. In a speech he gave at the Edinburgh World Writers’ Conference author and journalist Patrick Ness challenges the West’s “fearless” writers to think about whether or not they censor themselves for acceptance. Read HereEgypt: A Cultural Request, the Muslim Brotherhood Responds
Al Bawaba. Hundreds of Egyptian intellectuals, artists, writers and politicians gathered on August 23 in Talaat Harb Square to protest moves by the government–such as their increased control of the media–that are seen as antagonistic to freedoms. Read HereIkhwanweb. On Sunday August 26 Egyptian magazine El-Hilal organized a symposium on culture and the arts in Muslim Brotherhood thought that was attended by Egyptian writers, professors, a filmmaker, and a member of Egypt’s upper house of parliament. Read the Conversation Here
PEN Announces Recipients of 2012 PEN Literary Awards
PEN American Center. This year, PEN will present 18 awards—including two new awards: the PEN/Bellwether Prize for Socially Engaged Fiction, and the PEN/Steven Kroll Award for text in an illustrated picture book. Read the List HereWhy Chinese Netizens are Calling Koreans “Lucky”
Tea Leaf Nation. On August 23, judges in South Korea ruled the country’s controversial real name internet registration system unconstitutional, a move hailed as a victory by free speech advocates and many Chinese netizens. Read HereCaptured Turkish Journalist Appears on Syrian TV
Reuters. A Turkish cameraman, missing while reporting from Syria, appeared in an interview with a pro-government Syrian television channel on Monday, saying he had been seized by Syrian soldiers in Aleppo. Read HereAug 31, 2012
Justice Sought For Missing
Justice Sought For Missing:
An exile group called on China Thursday to account for thousands of ethnic Uyghurs believed to be victims of enforced or involuntary disappearances in the country’s northwestern Xinjiang region.
Beijing is “systematically” using the tactic of enforced disappearances to silence Uyghurs who voice opposition to Beijing’s policies in the region, the exile World Uyghur Congress (WUC) said in a statement marking the U.N.’s International Day of the Victims of Enforced Disappearances.
“Many Uyghurs have attempted to uncover the whereabouts, condition, and fate of their forcibly disappeared loved ones, but continually find their requests for information being rejected or ignored,” WUC President Rebiya Kadeer said.
She has estimated 10,000 Uyghurs have been forcibly disappeared since deadly violence rocked the Xinjiang region in July 2009 following long-simmering tensions between Han Chinese and Uyghurs.
Kadeer said the Chinese authorities have ignored requests for information about the missing, creating a “stubborn culture of impunity.”
China should provide reparations to the victims of the “deeply concerning” practice, the WUC said.
Legalities
The practice of forced disappearances, which has also been used against other groups in China, will effectively be legalized under upcoming amendments to China’s Criminal Procedure Law, human rights groups say.
“Some of these amendments, notably Article 73 [of the revised law], will in effect legalize the already widespread of enforced disappearances of Uyghurs,” Kadeer said.
The article, which governs “residential surveillance,” sets out provisions allowing authorities to hold individuals under effective house arrest in their homes or at a “designated abode.”
The amendments, passed by the National People’s Council in March 2012, could have “drastic” consequences for Uyghurs when they take effect next year, the WUC said.
International convention
But even if the practice is effectively made legal under China’s laws, it is still a clear breach of international rights law, the group said.
China has not signed the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearances (ICCPED), which explicitly bans the practice, but it is a signatory of the International Convention on Civil and Political Rights, which contains similar provisions.
“China has not ratified nor shown any interest in signing this vital human rights treaty which enshrines into international law the accepted standards states should adopt in regards to preventing such a human rights violation,” the WUC said.
It urged the international community to press China to ratify the ICCPED, which was adopted by the U.N. General Assembly in 2006 and went into force in 2010, is designed as an international instrument to prevent governments from carrying out forced disappearances.
The International Day of the Victims of Enforced Disappearances is marked to honor the missing victims and to highlight the seriousness of the offense.
“It is an act that negates the very essence of humanity and is contrary to the deepest values of any society,” a group of independent United Nations experts said in a statement Thursday.
Reported by Rachel Vandenbrink.
An exile group called on China Thursday to account for thousands of ethnic Uyghurs believed to be victims of enforced or involuntary disappearances in the country’s northwestern Xinjiang region.
Beijing is “systematically” using the tactic of enforced disappearances to silence Uyghurs who voice opposition to Beijing’s policies in the region, the exile World Uyghur Congress (WUC) said in a statement marking the U.N.’s International Day of the Victims of Enforced Disappearances.
“Many Uyghurs have attempted to uncover the whereabouts, condition, and fate of their forcibly disappeared loved ones, but continually find their requests for information being rejected or ignored,” WUC President Rebiya Kadeer said.
She has estimated 10,000 Uyghurs have been forcibly disappeared since deadly violence rocked the Xinjiang region in July 2009 following long-simmering tensions between Han Chinese and Uyghurs.
Kadeer said the Chinese authorities have ignored requests for information about the missing, creating a “stubborn culture of impunity.”
China should provide reparations to the victims of the “deeply concerning” practice, the WUC said.
Legalities
The practice of forced disappearances, which has also been used against other groups in China, will effectively be legalized under upcoming amendments to China’s Criminal Procedure Law, human rights groups say.
“Some of these amendments, notably Article 73 [of the revised law], will in effect legalize the already widespread of enforced disappearances of Uyghurs,” Kadeer said.
The article, which governs “residential surveillance,” sets out provisions allowing authorities to hold individuals under effective house arrest in their homes or at a “designated abode.”
The amendments, passed by the National People’s Council in March 2012, could have “drastic” consequences for Uyghurs when they take effect next year, the WUC said.
International convention
But even if the practice is effectively made legal under China’s laws, it is still a clear breach of international rights law, the group said.
China has not signed the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearances (ICCPED), which explicitly bans the practice, but it is a signatory of the International Convention on Civil and Political Rights, which contains similar provisions.
“China has not ratified nor shown any interest in signing this vital human rights treaty which enshrines into international law the accepted standards states should adopt in regards to preventing such a human rights violation,” the WUC said.
It urged the international community to press China to ratify the ICCPED, which was adopted by the U.N. General Assembly in 2006 and went into force in 2010, is designed as an international instrument to prevent governments from carrying out forced disappearances.
The International Day of the Victims of Enforced Disappearances is marked to honor the missing victims and to highlight the seriousness of the offense.
“It is an act that negates the very essence of humanity and is contrary to the deepest values of any society,” a group of independent United Nations experts said in a statement Thursday.
Reported by Rachel Vandenbrink.
Could Thailand Withstand Another Flood?
Could Thailand Withstand Another Flood?:
A man wades through waist deep flood waters past a reclining Buddha at the Wat Lokayasutharam temple in Ayutthaya, Thailand, on Nov. 4. (Photo: Reuters)A year ago, central Thailand was inundated with what may have been the worst floods in the country’s history, covering the Ayutthaya plain with up to three meters of water and drowning a major segment of the multinational car and electronics industries that had settled there.
The question today is whether it could happen again. Although the Thai government has developed a reconstruction plan focused on immediate relief and recovery and as well as projected long-term solutions including raising dykes, extensive reforestation and other solutions, there are reasons to be concerned whether the government is moving fast enough.
Certainly, as climate change has grown more severe, severe weather incidents have been picking up all over the region. Although there have been no signs so far that Thailand might take another hit like the country got from last year’s Tropical Storm Nock Ten, which inundated 20 Thai provinces, at least 85,000 people in Burma next door to Thailand were forced out of their homes this month by what has been described as the worst flooding since 2004.
Other cities have been hit hard as well. Manila has been flooded repeatedly. Beijing was hit by the heaviest rainfall in 60 years in late July, leaving 37 people dead and thousands stranded at the city’s main airport.
Roofs collapsed and downed power lines electrocuted an unknown number of people Taiwan has been battered by Tropical Storm Tambin, which dropped 50 cm of rain on the southern part of the island and appears about to return it again. Tropical Storm Bolaven has turned into a super typhoon, with sustained winds of 185 km per hour and is headed straight up the Yellow Sea towards North Korea. Citizens of Jiangsu in China have been warned to prepare for severe weather.
“While the 2011 [Thai] flood disaster was exceptional in scale and impact, climate change projections suggest that natural disasters of this kind are likely to occur more frequently and more severely in Thailand in the years ahead,” the Asia Foundation warned in a recent report.
“It is important to recognize that this unique moment needs to extend beyond the communities that were most seriously affected by the 2011 flooding and that Thailand needs to develop good practices, lessons learned, and knowledge-sharing to shape and influence broader and longer-term environmental governance in Thailand.”
So did Thailand learn its lesson? The answer is yes and maybe. Construction work to raise levees and dikes has been going on feverishly. The multinational electronics and car assembly companies—predominantly Japanese and American ones—have taken their own steps. The government has been criticized on several fronts by creating a development plan that was both too hasty and somewhat too late.
One of the biggest problems in 2011 was that government officials left too much water in five reservoirs upstream from the major urban areas surrounding Bangkok. The government has this time left considerably less water in the reservoirs, according to a study by the Japanese External Trade Organization (JETRO).
In January, the country’s two largest dams, Bhumibol Dam was 91 percent full, Sirikit Dam 89 percent full. By the end of March, both had been reduced to 60 percent. According to Jetro, capacity of the two is now down to about 45 percent.
Rivers are being dredged to increase capacity, according to the JETRO study, so that water can flow faster towards the Isthmus. Existing inner roads are being raised and turned into dikes to act as a bulwark against high water. Entrance routes are being raised into the factories so that trucks and can move in and out to evacuate goods. Massive concrete barriers are being built around industrial parks themselves.
For instance, at the Sudhrat Nakon industrial park, 43 factories are expected to be now crouching behind a 12-kilometer earth dike and serviced by an elevated entrance road that has been raised from 6.5 meters to eight meters. Detention areas—areas where floodwaters can be diverted safely until water levels have begun to fall—now have been increased by 3,600 square kilometers
An official with the National Disaster Center at Rangsik University recently told an American Chamber of Commerce Thailand luncheon that weather patterns, and the current low levels of water being held in the dams at present would indicate there will probably be no flood.
However, construction crews are racing the clock. Work on the Sudhrat Nakon park is scheduled to be finished by November, well into the rainy season. Asia Foundation said a proposed extensive program of flood relief worth 350 billion baht US $11.7 billion was being criticized for having been hastily developed and doesn’t have clear terms of reference. As with any major public construction project in Thailand, the plan has also come under the scrutiny of the National Anti -Corruption Commission.
Italthai, the country’s major construction company, has brought in workers and materiel from international sources in a major effort to raise dykes. In particular, the government efforts have been concentrated on the Ayutthaya plain area, where eight industrial estates were inundated by three meters of floodwaters for months, destroying thousands of brand-new cars, electronic equipment and hundreds of millions of dollars of factory infrastructure built to produce the manufactures.
Two main concerns addressed by the flood recovery plan are restoring economic losses in flood-affected provinces and assuring international industrial enterprises operating in flood-prone areas. To restore confidence with foreign investors, the government has allocated a large amount of funding to industrial owners to build dykes to protect the industrial zone from future flooding and has held large seminars with investors to discuss how the government’s plan will protect businesses. Despite the government’s efforts, many industrial leaders have also expressed frustration with the lack of information from the government.
So it looks like Thailand will probably skate through in 2012. However, one Thai businessman warned, given weather patterns for this year, it should be okay. But if the skies empty again like they did when Nock Ten came over the region and stayed for days, the government is still behind the curve.
A man wades through waist deep flood waters past a reclining Buddha at the Wat Lokayasutharam temple in Ayutthaya, Thailand, on Nov. 4. (Photo: Reuters)
The question today is whether it could happen again. Although the Thai government has developed a reconstruction plan focused on immediate relief and recovery and as well as projected long-term solutions including raising dykes, extensive reforestation and other solutions, there are reasons to be concerned whether the government is moving fast enough.
Certainly, as climate change has grown more severe, severe weather incidents have been picking up all over the region. Although there have been no signs so far that Thailand might take another hit like the country got from last year’s Tropical Storm Nock Ten, which inundated 20 Thai provinces, at least 85,000 people in Burma next door to Thailand were forced out of their homes this month by what has been described as the worst flooding since 2004.
Other cities have been hit hard as well. Manila has been flooded repeatedly. Beijing was hit by the heaviest rainfall in 60 years in late July, leaving 37 people dead and thousands stranded at the city’s main airport.
Roofs collapsed and downed power lines electrocuted an unknown number of people Taiwan has been battered by Tropical Storm Tambin, which dropped 50 cm of rain on the southern part of the island and appears about to return it again. Tropical Storm Bolaven has turned into a super typhoon, with sustained winds of 185 km per hour and is headed straight up the Yellow Sea towards North Korea. Citizens of Jiangsu in China have been warned to prepare for severe weather.
“While the 2011 [Thai] flood disaster was exceptional in scale and impact, climate change projections suggest that natural disasters of this kind are likely to occur more frequently and more severely in Thailand in the years ahead,” the Asia Foundation warned in a recent report.
“It is important to recognize that this unique moment needs to extend beyond the communities that were most seriously affected by the 2011 flooding and that Thailand needs to develop good practices, lessons learned, and knowledge-sharing to shape and influence broader and longer-term environmental governance in Thailand.”
So did Thailand learn its lesson? The answer is yes and maybe. Construction work to raise levees and dikes has been going on feverishly. The multinational electronics and car assembly companies—predominantly Japanese and American ones—have taken their own steps. The government has been criticized on several fronts by creating a development plan that was both too hasty and somewhat too late.
One of the biggest problems in 2011 was that government officials left too much water in five reservoirs upstream from the major urban areas surrounding Bangkok. The government has this time left considerably less water in the reservoirs, according to a study by the Japanese External Trade Organization (JETRO).
In January, the country’s two largest dams, Bhumibol Dam was 91 percent full, Sirikit Dam 89 percent full. By the end of March, both had been reduced to 60 percent. According to Jetro, capacity of the two is now down to about 45 percent.
Rivers are being dredged to increase capacity, according to the JETRO study, so that water can flow faster towards the Isthmus. Existing inner roads are being raised and turned into dikes to act as a bulwark against high water. Entrance routes are being raised into the factories so that trucks and can move in and out to evacuate goods. Massive concrete barriers are being built around industrial parks themselves.
For instance, at the Sudhrat Nakon industrial park, 43 factories are expected to be now crouching behind a 12-kilometer earth dike and serviced by an elevated entrance road that has been raised from 6.5 meters to eight meters. Detention areas—areas where floodwaters can be diverted safely until water levels have begun to fall—now have been increased by 3,600 square kilometers
An official with the National Disaster Center at Rangsik University recently told an American Chamber of Commerce Thailand luncheon that weather patterns, and the current low levels of water being held in the dams at present would indicate there will probably be no flood.
However, construction crews are racing the clock. Work on the Sudhrat Nakon park is scheduled to be finished by November, well into the rainy season. Asia Foundation said a proposed extensive program of flood relief worth 350 billion baht US $11.7 billion was being criticized for having been hastily developed and doesn’t have clear terms of reference. As with any major public construction project in Thailand, the plan has also come under the scrutiny of the National Anti -Corruption Commission.
Italthai, the country’s major construction company, has brought in workers and materiel from international sources in a major effort to raise dykes. In particular, the government efforts have been concentrated on the Ayutthaya plain area, where eight industrial estates were inundated by three meters of floodwaters for months, destroying thousands of brand-new cars, electronic equipment and hundreds of millions of dollars of factory infrastructure built to produce the manufactures.
Two main concerns addressed by the flood recovery plan are restoring economic losses in flood-affected provinces and assuring international industrial enterprises operating in flood-prone areas. To restore confidence with foreign investors, the government has allocated a large amount of funding to industrial owners to build dykes to protect the industrial zone from future flooding and has held large seminars with investors to discuss how the government’s plan will protect businesses. Despite the government’s efforts, many industrial leaders have also expressed frustration with the lack of information from the government.
So it looks like Thailand will probably skate through in 2012. However, one Thai businessman warned, given weather patterns for this year, it should be okay. But if the skies empty again like they did when Nock Ten came over the region and stayed for days, the government is still behind the curve.
Judge Restores 3 Early Voting Days in Ohio
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On a scorching afternoon in the Amazon, all Agustin Villa and his partner needed was a chain saw and gasoline to take down an 82-foot hardwood in less than two minutes.
Battling thick brush and mosquitoes, the pair downed 25 trees in all that day, from silk-cotton softwoods to figs, clearing the limbs and sawing them into sections for tractors to drag to a nearby dirt road.
Read full article >>
On a scorching afternoon in the Amazon, all Agustin Villa and his partner needed was a chain saw and gasoline to take down an 82-foot hardwood in less than two minutes.
Battling thick brush and mosquitoes, the pair downed 25 trees in all that day, from silk-cotton softwoods to figs, clearing the limbs and sawing them into sections for tractors to drag to a nearby dirt road.
Read full article >>
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Read full article >>
TAMPA — On average, Mitt Romney and Clint Eastwood delivered a surprising and remarkable speech on Thursday night.
That is to say, Mitt Romney delivered exactly the sort of thing Mitt Romney always delivers, and Clint Eastwood rambled nonsensically to an empty chair for 12 minutes.
Read full article >>
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Back in 2001, a very curious deal was struck between the government of Greece and Goldman Sachs. It was an exotic dollar/yen swap for euros. What possessed Greece to do such an unusual — and expensive — financial transaction? It needed help to hide its large and rapidly growing debt in order to maintain its status as a euro-zone member in good standing.
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Back in 2001, a very curious deal was struck between the government of Greece and Goldman Sachs. It was an exotic dollar/yen swap for euros. What possessed Greece to do such an unusual — and expensive — financial transaction? It needed help to hide its large and rapidly growing debt in order to maintain its status as a euro-zone member in good standing.
Read full article >>
Obama administration divided over designating Haqqani network as terrorist group
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Just days before a congressional deadline, the Obama administration is deeply divided over whether to designate the Pakistan-based Haqqani network as a terrorist group, with some officials worried that doing so could complicate efforts to restart peace talks with the Taliban and undermine already-fraught relations with Pakistan.
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Just days before a congressional deadline, the Obama administration is deeply divided over whether to designate the Pakistan-based Haqqani network as a terrorist group, with some officials worried that doing so could complicate efforts to restart peace talks with the Taliban and undermine already-fraught relations with Pakistan.
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