Sep 9, 2012

Fairfax schools system faces growing budget challenge as more students need ESOL classes

Fairfax schools system faces growing budget challenge as more students need ESOL classes:
The number of Fairfax County students who speak a foreign language at home is likely to surpass 50 percent of the school population for the first time this month, reflecting a surge of immigrant families in Northern Virginia, school officials said.
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Young tech gurus bring start-up ethos to Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

Young tech gurus bring start-up ethos to Consumer Financial Protection Bureau:
Some join the federal government after law school; others after a stint with a campaign, nonprofit or consulting firm. Audrey Chen came from “South Park.”
As a senior designer at Comedy Central, Chen re-engineered the Web sites for cult hits such as “The Daily Show” and “The Colbert Report.” But a year ago, the Brooklynite was persuaded to join a team of Web developers, information architects, and digital strategists who want to revolutionize the very way that Washington works.
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Data on Americans? There’s an app for that...

Data on Americans? There’s an app for that...:
It may be premature to call it a runaway hit, but in the first month since the Census Bureau released its first mobile application, it’s been downloaded more than 32,000 times.
The app, called America’s Economy, provides updated statistics from the Census Bureau, the Bureau of Economic Analysis and the Bureau of Labor Statistics. It includes 16 monthly economic indicators,such as house sales, personal income, international trade, gross domestic product and the unemployment rate.
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U.S. Seeks to Boost Investment in Egypt

U.S. Seeks to Boost Investment in Egypt: A delegation of more than 100 American business leaders is touring Cairo this week, part of a White House-led effort to burnish Egypt's image as an investment destination and help restore the country's flagging economy.

Case of 'Untreatable' TB Echoes Globally

Case of 'Untreatable' TB Echoes Globally: The journey of a woman with one of India's first documented cases of "untreatable" tuberculosis exposes a blind spot in a medical bureaucracy that neglected to implement widespread treatment.

Singapore Corporate-Bond Issuance on Fire

Singapore Corporate-Bond Issuance on Fire: Once a backwater for global debt investors, Singapore's corporate-bond market has turned into an Asian hot spot for the world's yield-starved fund managers.

Territorial Spats Dog APEC Forum

Territorial Spats Dog APEC Forum: The Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation meeting made scant progress, beset by disputes over territorial claims, future trade initiatives and security issues in the Middle East.

Friction Fuels Vote Turnout in Hong Kong

Friction Fuels Vote Turnout in Hong Kong: A day after Hong Kong's leader caved into demands by protesters to drop a Beijing-backed plan to teach patriotism in schools, exit polls showed an unusually high number of voters appearing to hand a majority of newly made "superseats" to pro-democracy parties.

Ethnic Groups Clash in Kabul

Ethnic Groups Clash in Kabul: A minor traffic incident in Kabul this weekend escalated into a deadly gunbattle between rival ethnic groups that threatened to rekindle civil-war tensions and marred a major government celebration.

Vietnamese Undercover Reporter Jailed

Undercover Reporter Jailed:
In a conviction condemned by rights groups, a Vietnamese journalist has been sentenced to four years in jail for offering a bribe to a policeman which he said was part of an investigation to expose police corruption.

Hoang Khuong, 39, a reporter with the official Tuoi Tre newspaper, was charged with paying 15 million dong (U.S. $715) to a traffic police officer, through a broker, in return for the release of an impounded motorbike.

"This sentence is as unfair as it is disgraceful," said Christophe Deloire, the director-general of Reporters Without Borders, a Paris-based global media watchdog.

"By sanctioning Khuong for his investigative reporting and his two stories on police corruption, Judge Nguyen Thi Thu Thuy has transformed a public service into a crime punishable by imprisonment," he said.

"The fact that the authorities only learned about this matter after Khuong’s articles were published proves his honesty. And by citing his reporting as an extenuating circumstance, the verdict acknowledged its usefulness."

Reporters Without Borders urged the court to overturn the conviction and release Khuong.

The traffic policeman who accepted the bribe was given five years in jail at the joint trial in southern Vietnam's Ho Chi Minh City.

Khoung, who uses the pen name of Hoang Khuong, said he would not have been jailed if he did not carry out the undercover reporting to publicize police corruption.

"I am wondering whether I would be standing here behind bars if I had not written the articles," Khuong told the court at his hearing, Tuoi Tre said.

"I had no other motive than to help efforts to reduce the number of traffic accidents" by exposing police corruption, he said.

Famous

Khuong’s stories about police officers who take bribes to turn a blind eye to traffic violations have made him famous and have prompted angry criticism of the police by the public,  Reporters Without Borders said.

The case has led to public outcry in communist Vietnam and prompted a debate about the state of local journalism, with many experts expressing fears the case could deter reporters from tackling corruption, according to Agence France-Presse.

Vietnamese journalists expressed disappointment with the verdict, with many taking to social networking site Facebook to voice fears that it was part of a broader crackdown on the media, the news agency said.

"Reporters are seen as the foot soldiers in this cultural, ideological battle" with the communist regime, journalist Mai Thanh Hai wrote on his personal blog.

"But the regime cannot be protected by the use of those illogical, barbarous acts," he wrote, referring to Khuong's jail term, according to the news agency.

Tuoi Tre reported that prosecutors requested a sentence of six to seven years in prison but the court gave him a lesser one on the grounds that his contribution as journalist should be taken into account.

Vietnam is ranked 172nd out of 179 countries in the 2011/2012 Reporters Without Borders press freedom index.

The group said that with at least five journalists and 19 netizens currently in jail, Vietnam is the "world’s third biggest prison" for bloggers and cyber-dissidents, after China and Iran.

It is also one of the 12 countries that Reporters Without Borders calls "Enemies of the Internet" because of their systematic use of cyber-censorship.

Reported by RFA's Vietnamese service. Written in English by Parameswaran Ponnudurai.

Obama maintains post-convention lead over Romney | Reuters

Obama maintains post-convention lead over Romney | Reuters

Sep 7, 2012

HEALTH: Asia fails to take up rotavirus vaccine

HEALTH: Asia fails to take up rotavirus vaccine:
BANGKOK, 7 September 2012 (IRIN) - Most countries in Asia have yet to make the rotavirus vaccine part of their national immunization programme (NIP), despite a World Health Organization (WHO) recommendation to do so.

ISRAEL-OPT: Upping sticks and heading for Ramallah

ISRAEL-OPT: Upping sticks and heading for Ramallah:
JERUSALEM, 7 September 2012 (IRIN) - An increasing number of Palestinian citizens of Israel are moving to Ramallah in the West Bank in search of jobs, education or what they perceive as a more congenial environment.

SOUTHERN AFRICA: Increasing hostility towards Chinese traders

SOUTHERN AFRICA: Increasing hostility towards Chinese traders:
JOHANNESBURG/BLANTYRE/MASERU/LUSAKA, 7 September 2012 (IRIN) - In the last decade, Asian migrants have fanned out through southern Africa, opening shops in small towns and rural backwaters. While consumers in countries facing increasing economic hardships have come to depend on their low prices, local shop owners complain they are being forced out of business, pressuring governments to introduce restrictions on foreign traders.

SOUTH AFRICA: The (re)making of men

SOUTH AFRICA: The (re)making of men:
JOHANNESBURG, 7 September 2012 (IRIN) - Manhood might be hard to define but South African media make it even harder, according to editors of a new book, who argue that negative coverage of men is doing more harm than good, especially when it comes to HIV. Now they are looking to rewrite masculinity in a country that ranks among the most gender inequitable in the world.

Leading humanitarian agencies join forces to fight for funds and access in Syria

Leading humanitarian agencies join forces to fight for funds and access in Syria: Over one and a half million people in Syria have been driven from their homes by conflict and are in dire need of humanitarian assistance, leading humanitarian organisations including Save the Children and the Norwegian Refugee Council, and members of The Elders warned this week in a letter to the United Nations and the League of Arab States.

Uniting against rising extremist terrorism

Uniting against rising extremist terrorism: After the raid on two “kingpins” of Malaysian-born terrorist operations in Indonesia, namely “The Demolisher” Dr. Azahari Husin ( 2005) and “The Financier” Noordin M Top (2009), plus the ...

Fires and haze threaten national parks in Jambi

Fires and haze threaten national parks in Jambi: Spreading wildfires in Jambi have reportedly almost reached the province’s three major national parks: Bukit Tiga Puluh, Kerinci Seblat and Sembilang. Based on satellite reports compiled by the US ...

Mobile phones and social media in the global south

Mobile phones and social media in the global south: While the benefits of e-governance have been observed in many high-income developed economies, there is still much skepticism about its applicability in the global South. E-governance or ...

Shia group wants a dialogue, not sermon

Shia group wants a dialogue, not sermon: A Shia organization says it will accept an invitation to a transparent and neutral dialogue to resolve existing problems with majority Sunni Muslims.“We have always been open to dialogue. I, for ...

Surf the Net, check e-mail on SIA flights | The Jakarta Post

Surf the Net, check e-mail on SIA flights | The Jakarta Post

Indonesia Terrorism Suspects in Plot on Parliament - Jakarta Globe

Indonesia Terrorism Suspects in Plot on Parliament - Jakarta Globe:

Jakarta Globe

Indonesia Terrorism Suspects in Plot on Parliament
Jakarta Globe
Indonesia Terrorism Suspects in Plot on Parliament September 07, 2012. A local TV cameraman films the interrogation video of a terror suspect Bayu Setiono that was released by the police at Indonesian national Police headquarters in Jakarta, Indonesia ...
Indonesia terror suspects in plot on parliamentChannel News Asia
Arrested Indonesian tells police of terror plotKansas City Star
Bomb items found amid Indonesia terror raidsFox News

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Indonesia’s Shiite minority feels the heat | Transitions

Indonesia’s Shiite minority feels the heat | Transitions

Indonesia Faces Coffee Shipment Delays as Bean Deliveries Rise - Businessweek

Indonesia Faces Coffee Shipment Delays as Bean Deliveries Rise - Businessweek

Scouring Siphandon, the Back Story of Laos’ 4000 Island River Archipelago

Scouring Siphandon, the Back Story of Laos’ 4000 Island River Archipelago:
By: Bernie Rosenbloom

In 1866, French Commander Ernest Doudart de Lagree and his first officer, Francis Garnier, departed Saigon with a crew of 20, and set sail to explore the Mekong. Their mission: steam to the fabled riches of China and firm up France’s Southeast Asian colonial foothold.
The French steamer “Argus”, Courtesy of Jean-Michel Strobino
The French steamer “Argus”, Courtesy of Jean-Michel Strobino

The raging rapids flanking Champasak’s Don Khone Island ended their boat ride, but not France’s colonial aspirations. They realised the strategic value of Don Khone, as it sidestepped the impassable torrent. Control Don Khone and Siphandon (4,000 Islands), and the Mekong is yours.

I realised that without Siphandon’s back story, my visit would boil down to pondering a pair of 100-year-old rusty locomotives, spotting Irrawaddy river dolphins, and watching water race over rocks. Surely thousands of islands offer more than that.

Once again, Rik Ponne and Jim Johnston at the Asian Development Bank’s Sustainable Tourism Development Project (STDP-Laos) opened their library and presented the plan to brighten Siphandon’s flash on travellers’ radar screens.
Pier at Ban Don Det, By: Rik Ponne
Pier at Ban Don Det, By: Rik Ponne

Lapping Don Khong

Don Khong deserves a permanent slot in Siphandon itineraries rather than “often overlooked” status, so the STDP brought its highlights to the fore.

After a 130-km motorbike ride on Route 13 south from Pakse, a sign, “Ban Hat Xay Khoun”, signalled a right turn to the Mekong ferry – bridge under construction – to Don Khong Island and Khong Town, today’s district capital and colonial France’s southern Lao administrative base.

We stopped at the STDP-supported Tourist Information Centre and Governor Kou Aphai’s French colonial house, built in 1935 and restored with STDP’s help into the Khong District Museum.
Climbing sugar palm tree on Don Khong, By: Bernie Rosenbloom
Climbing sugar palm tree on Don Khong, By: Bernie Rosenbloom

The visitor centre suggested a 10-stop, 30-km “Southern Loop”, which turned up a circus act in Ban Hinsiew. An older farmer scaled a limb-less sugar palm tree to extract fruit juice, which he steamed into sugar cakes called nam oy.

The Khmer-era rock carvings, scattered at the base of 14th-century Vat Phou Khao Keo’s stupa, caught me off guard, while the slow-pace surrounding our riverside restaurant seats in Meuang Saen kept everyone from saying, “Let’s go.”

Exploring Don Khone

About 14 km further down Route 13, the Nakasang Tourist Information Centre introduces Don Khone and Don Det in English and Lao.

We booked ferry passage to laidback Ban Khone, though some commuters stopped at the livelier Ban Hua Det, where the river bank boasted the remains of a 100-year-old pier, a hint of what lay ahead.

We arrived at Ban Khone, a cluster of guesthouses and riverside restaurants serving “Pa Phone”, a local fish specialty. Over dinner, we mapped out a tour weaving island life and nature into colonial France’s past.
Suspension bridge to Don Pa Soi, By: Rik Ponne
Suspension bridge to Don Pa Soi, By: Rik Ponne

At sunrise, we motored east to the 500-meter-long river barrier, built in 1903 to funnel teak down the Hou Ixam Channel to a diversion dam straddling Khone Pa Soy Rapids. We pondered the marvel from Pa Soy Island’s suspension bridge, before taking a path to fishermen crawling over the rapids on a bamboo matrix to check their traps. Fish-filled buckets revealed a good catch.

Back on the main trail, we ventured 2.5 km to Hang Khone Port on Don Khone’s southern tip. I expected the steam locomotive in a pavilion with panels presenting the railway’s tale, but got much more.
Locals knew where to find the abandoned locomotive, Courtesy of Jean-Michel Strobino
Locals knew where to find the abandoned locomotive, Courtesy of Jean-Michel Strobino

The concrete bones of an abandoned four-storey pier, from where gantry cranes once loaded freight, hung hauntingly over the Mekong. A rusted pulley system climbed up the bank to a now-silent motor room. A retired hillside reservoir quietly looked down on a ghost town that had thrived through the 1930s.

Fate propelled Hang Khone into the spotlight. French and Siamese tensions over the Mekong escalated into an 1893 naval blockade of Bangkok. The resulting treaty favoured France, who needed to move gunboats above Don Khone.

Mission leader, Naval Lt Georges Simon, constructed a 3-km railway to bypass Somphamit Falls (Li Phi), and transport vessels from Don Khone’s Marguerite Bay to Ban Khone Tai.
Half of the “Ham Luong” on Laos’ maiden train ride, Courtesy of Jean-Michel Strobino
Half of the “Ham Luong” on Laos’ maiden train ride, Courtesy of Jean-Michel Strobino

But, Lt Simon’s crew could not hoist the boats ashore, so he rerouted the rails to Hang Khone in 1894, and pulled the two-piece “Ham Luong” to an awaiting carriage and three-hour push to calm upriver waters.

I stood gawking at the relics, when someone snapped me from my daze. It was time to board a boat to spot the endangered Irrawaddy dolphins.
The rare freshwater Irrawaddy dolphin surfaces in the Mekong, Courtesy of WWF
The rare freshwater Irrawaddy dolphin surfaces in the Mekong, Courtesy of WWF

Though the small stretch of quiet, shallow, fish-filled waters off Hang Khone terminated upriver steamboat trips, it offers a rare habitat harbouring a handful of the Mekong’s 80-some “snub-fin dolphins”

We puttered to Cambodia, as the swelled rainy-season river sends dolphins to the western banks. Eyes scanned the surface near a shrubby island, and as if on cue, the dolphins’ bulging foreheads and blue-gray bodies broke the surface, as they lazily came up for air.

The view of the enormous skeletal pier interrupting Hang Khone’s greenery on our return conjured images of Titanic-era tourists and cargo transferring to the shuttle train and ships bound for Savannakhet, Vientiane, and Luang Prabang.

Our route continued to Somphamit Waterfalls, the boulder-filled, white-water thorn in colonial France’s side, and stopped to see Khmer-era relics at Vat Khone Tai.
The impassable Somphamit Rapids halted upriver passage, By: Rik Ponne
The impassable Somphamit Rapids halted upriver passage, By: Rik Ponne

Ban Khone Tai provided another history lesson. In 1910, along with Hang Khone upgrades, the French built the still-viable 13-arch bridge across Hou Béhanzin to Don Det, extended the rails to Ban Det, and constructed the pier we passed the day before. A Ban Khone Tai pavilion shelters a 1929 locomotive and panels revealing Don Kone’s past in English and Lao.

Our Siphandon excursion ended at the Khone Phapheng Waterfalls. This hydro-wonder explodes over a wide fault line like an unending tsunami, rumbling over massive boulder-filled drop-offs with a foaming, ground-shaking force, just like it did when the French arrived.

Digging Deeper into Siphandon

STDP-Laos has established three boating tours based in Hang Khone. A one-day “Dolphins and Rapids Tour” spots the “Darling of the Mekong”, and travels to Don Sadam Island, Hu Sahong Channel, rapids, and Tham Ee Daeng Canyon.




The two-day “Island Hopping Tour” sails to Don Sahong Island, treks along Hu Xang Pheuak Channel to waterfalls, boats to Kassoum and Yuak Islands, and overnights at a Ban Hang Khone homestay. The three-day option includes a second homestay and trek to Khmer-era temple ruins.




To book a tour, contact the Nakasang visitor center staff.

The Lao-Asian Development Bank’s Sustainable Tourism Development Project (www.stdplaos.com) supported the research and writing of this story.

Charity's foreign staff to leave Pakistan

Charity's foreign staff to leave Pakistan: Order follows intelligence report alleging link between Save the Children and vaccination drive used in bin Laden hunt.

Group claims responsibility for Nigeria fires

Group claims responsibility for Nigeria fires: Boko Haram spokesperson says attacks on mobile-phone towers across the north were meant to foil security operations.

US warns of Sudan-South Sudan border conflict

US warns of Sudan-South Sudan border conflict: Susan Rice says US is "deeply concerned" over lack of urgency in both countries to accept an African Union roadmap.

The Female Factor: Family Life According to the Brotherhood

The Female Factor: Family Life According to the Brotherhood: Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood is committed to upholding patriarchal and traditional values around a woman’s place in society, and many Egyptian women need no convincing.

Washington area one of nation’s most diverse - The Washington Post

Washington area one of nation’s most diverse - The Washington Post

Tacopocalypse hits the District

Tacopocalypse hits the District:
This may be D.C.’s year of the taco. Four taquerias have opened in the District since April, and at least two more arrive in coming months.
Why the sudden reverence for what amounts to a little meat and onion tucked into a corn tortilla? There are several reasons. One is economics: In a down market, few foods taste so special and yet cost so little. Another is that chefs of Mexican heritage are overseeing many of these new restaurants, including Mama Chuy, El Chucho and Tacos El Chilango, whose owners descend from a long line of taco-makers. The growing variety of ethnic foods available in the city, in part thanks to the rise of food trucks, primed our palates for the portable Mexican staple.
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