Oct 16, 2012

The Election—I

The Election—I: Michael Tomasky, Elizabeth Drew, and Cass R. Sunstein









electionI_1-110812.jpg
Charles Ommanney/Reportage by Getty Images
Mitt and Ann Romney at the Republican National Convention, Tampa, August 28, 2012



Michael Tomasky

Mitt Romney’s clear win in the first debate shifted the momentum in the race and arrested the talk of his campaign’s incompetence. But the most interesting aspect of his performance—completely unexpected by observers, pretty obviously including the president—was the way Romney appeared to position himself as a moderate, contradicting the main positions he’d taken for the previous sixteen or so months of campaigning ...

Celebrating Hispanic Heritage Month

Celebrating Hispanic Heritage Month: September 15 marked the beginning of Hispanic Heritage Month and the start of our third year celebrating the Hispanic community through events and community outreach initiatives. Googlers from our Corporate Social Responsibility Team, Diversity & Inclusion Team, Engineering Industry Team, the Hispanic Googler Network (HGN), and our Community Partners worked together to host 20+ events focused on this year’s theme of Latinos in Technology.



We kicked things off at the U.S. Hispanic Chamber of Commerce (USHCC) National Conference, where two members from our Google Accelerate team worked one-on-one with business owners during matchmaking sessions to consult on the best use of Google tools for their enterprises. Googler Eliana Murillo spoke on a panel titled “Beyond Social Media: The Potential of Technology & the Internet in a Global Economy,” where she shared how tools like Google Analytics, YouTube and Google for Nonprofits can be useful for businesses.



In early October, we ran a Hispanic Heritage Month 2012 Hangout on Air on the Life at Google page with the Latino Community Foundation (LCF). Raquel Donoso (CEO of LCF) and Googlers Hector Mujica (HGN member) and myself shared the history of the partnership and what our respective goals are. They also talked about the Family Health Day at Google & Olympic Games event, which we held at our Mountain View, Calif. headquarters that same week. Health is a pressing issue (PDF) in the Hispanic community; at this event, part of the Binational Health Week, we encouraged guests to have healthier lifestyles by teaching them some easy exercises, how to be active and eat healthy. More than 380+ community members and 50+ Googlers attended.



Last week we wrapped up a series of networking events in partnership with the Society of Hispanic Engineers (SHPE), where more than 400+ technical professionals came to our Seattle, Cambridge, Chicago, Los Angeles, Austin, New York, and Mountain View Offices to network and learn about how Google is supporting the local hispanic technical community.







Finally, today the Hispanic Googler Network is hosting the Bay Area Latino Employee Resource Group (ERG) Networking Reception in Mountain View. The Honorable Aida Alvarez, Chair of the Latino Community Foundation of the Bay Area, will speak to 300+ guests from local Hispanic ERGs in the Bay Area about what LCF is doing to build a better future for Latino children, youth and families in the Hispanic community.



Though the month officially comes to an end today, we’ll continue to support the Hispanic community as a lead sponsor in the LATISM '12 conference, taking place in two weeks. LATISM ‘12 connects Latinos in social media, technology, education, business and health fields to increase their online footprint through the web and Google's tools for small businesses and communities. We’re also participating in the Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers Conference and will soon open up applications for our Hispanic College Fund Google scholarship.



We’ve had a great time celebrating Hispanic Heritage Month, and are already looking forward to next year’s events. We invite you to view the recaps, photos and hangouts on our Life at Google page on Google+ and to visit our Diversity & Inclusion site where you can see more of what we do.



Posted by Sylvia Bonilla Zizumbo, Hispanic Googler Network Chair and Strategic Partnerships Lead 

MALI: New hope in fight against malaria

MALI: New hope in fight against malaria:
DAKAR, 16 October 2012 (IRIN) - A pioneering malaria prevention method trialled in Mali is dramatically reducing seasonal malaria among children, according to a mass pilot launched by NGO Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) in August 2012.

HEALTH: New TB vaccine on the horizon

HEALTH: New TB vaccine on the horizon:
LONDON, 16 October 2012 (IRIN) - A research team at Oxford University in the UK is very close to determining the efficacy of their new tuberculosis (TB) vaccine. If current clinical trials are successful, it will be the first new TB vaccine in almost a century.

ZIMBABWE: Nurses step up to initiate HIV treatment

ZIMBABWE: Nurses step up to initiate HIV treatment:
HARARE, 16 October 2012 (IRIN) - Faced with the ambitious target of reaching 85 percent of people in need of HIV treatment by the end of 2012, the Zimbabwean government has announced that nurses will be trained to prescribe and manage antiretroviral (ARV) drug treatment.

SOMALIA: Food insecurity still a problem

SOMALIA: Food insecurity still a problem:
MOGADISHU, 16 October 2012 (IRIN) - Rising food costs, poor ‘Gu' seasonal rains earlier in the year and continuing insecurity in parts of southern Somalia are affecting the nutritional status of vulnerable people there - a situation that could worsen in the coming months amid the risk of flooding, warn experts.

AFRICA: Addressing food wastage to fight hunger

AFRICA: Addressing food wastage to fight hunger:
NAIROBI, 16 October 2012 (IRIN) - Experts have called on governments and development organizations to put in place measures to significantly reduce the amount of food lost in the global food delivery chain.

FOOD: No more fertilizers but trees

FOOD: No more fertilizers but trees:
ADDIS ABABA, 16 October 2012 (IRIN) - To keep its mostly maize-growing small farms productive through cycles of drought, Malawi spends 60 percent of its agricultural budget subsidizing fertilizers. But the findings of a 12-year study, released today, suggest farmers in Malawi and elsewhere could increase yields consistently without applying fertilizers, using instead 'fertilizer trees'.

EDUCATION: Getting the skills for life

EDUCATION: Getting the skills for life:
LONDON, 16 October 2012 (IRIN) - Rising numbers of children out of school in sub-Saharan Africa, significant numbers of children spending six years in primary school and still not being able to read a complete sentence - the latest report by the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) paints a gloomy picture of the state of the world's education.

Daily Number: 23% - Number of Americans Who Read Print Newspapers Continues Decline

Daily Number: 23% - Number of Americans Who Read Print Newspapers Continues Decline: The percent of Americans who say they read a print newspaper the previous day continues to drop, falling 18 points over the last decade to 23%.

Tiny Azerbaijan unleashes pop-power against Iran’s mullahs - The Washington Post

Tiny Azerbaijan unleashes pop-power against Iran’s mullahs - The Washington Post

Unmasking Mitt Romney as an economic sham - The Plum Line - The Washington Post

Unmasking Mitt Romney as an economic sham - The Plum Line - The Washington Post

Tim Kaine for the U.S. Senate in Virginia - The Washington Post

Tim Kaine for the U.S. Senate in Virginia - The Washington Post

Wisconsin, the land of persuadable voters - The Washington Post

Wisconsin, the land of persuadable voters - The Washington Post

Jesse Jackson Jr.: Political candidate and focus of many unanswered questions - The Washington Post

Jesse Jackson Jr.: Political candidate and focus of many unanswered questions - The Washington Post

Montana Senate race is coming down to the wire - The Washington Post

Montana Senate race is coming down to the wire - The Washington Post

Supreme Court won’t get involved in Ohio dispute; all must be allowed to vote early - The Washington Post

Supreme Court won’t get involved in Ohio dispute; all must be allowed to vote early - The Washington Post

Burmese President Retains Party Leadership - Voice of America

Burmese President Retains Party Leadership - Voice of America: Burmese President Retains Party Leadership - Voice of America:

Voice of America


Burmese President Retains Party Leadership
Voice of America
Union Solidarity and Development Party spokesperson Htay Oo says Burmese members reappointed President Thein Sein as party leader Tuesday during a conference in the administrative capital of Naypyidaw. Heading into the three-day meeting there had ...

and more »

Cambodia - Children's nutrition and sanitation

Cambodia - Children's nutrition and sanitation

Romney 50%, Obama 46% Among Likely Voters

Romney 50%, Obama 46% Among Likely Voters

Oct 15, 2012

People’s Movement for a Just Society

People’s Movement for a Just Society:
Asia is home to 75% of the world’s farming households, 80 percent of which are small-scale farmers, who are increasingly facing threats to their way of life resulting from unchecked large-scale investments in land, in particular for agriculture, biofuels and mining (International Land Coalition Asia website).
The last groups of motorbikes finally arrived back home as the sun was setting tonight in Chiang Mai, Chiang Rai, Nan, Phayao, Phrae and Mae Hongson today, concluding their week-long journey down to Bangkok and back.  After a journey of more than 1,300 kms while braving the rains and dangerous highways on their Honda Dreams in order to demand government action to address the plight of landless farmers, many wondered if their efforts were worth it (especially the two riders who suffered broken bones during accidents en route).

The People’s Movement for a Just Society (P-move) is a network organization organized to strengthen the voices of different, but related causes working to bring justice for marginalized groups in Thailand, including land rights for small-scale farmers, citizenship for stateless persons, fair compensation for communities forced to relocate to accommodate large scale state projects, and housing solutions for urban slum dwellers, among others. This coalition is similar in its organization and objectives to the Assembly of the Poor, and many of its members were core members of the AOP. P-move has organized mass protests over the last four years to put pressure on the government to address their problems and provide legal frameworks and policies to assist them in attaining justice.
P-move’s most recent campaign brought together network members from all the regions to the Government House to demand that PM Yingluck follow up on her promises to take actions to help P-move’s issues. One month after being elected in July 2011, Yingluck’s Peua Thai Party agreed to P-move’s demand that committees be set-up to address the issues facing the network members. After these committee failed to take any actions, P-move organized a protest a January mobile cabinet meeting held in Chiang Mai. At that time, Yingluck signed a document ensuring that the committees would have to action with 90 days and would be headed by her deputy PM Yongyuth Wichaidit, who recently resigned amid the Alpine Golf Course scandal investigations. P-move’s goal for this movement, therefore, was to have Yingluck agree to take over the chair of the committees and ensure that actions would be taken quickly and without fear of another minister being dismissed, resigning or be transferred.
The landless farmers have been advocating for a three-pronged policy to address their issues:
  1. A Progressive Land Tax, which would discourage land speculation and be used to fund a National Land Bank.
  2. The establishment of a National Land Bank to assist with purchasing idle lands and redistributing them to landless farmers.
  3. Recognition of Community Land Titles, which would allow farming communities to administer their natural resources, and prevent the sale of individual land holdings to outsiders not interested in joining the sustainable agricultural practices of the community.
All three of these policies have been approved at certain levels, but have yet to be fully implemented.
The stateless persons, meanwhile, are continuing to demand that the Central Government put pressure on the local agencies to implement the legislation regarding citizenship that has already been approved.
Members from the Esaan and the Southern regions travelled to Bangkok on busses, trucks and vans, while the Northern members organized a motorcycle caravan that would take three days to descend upon the capital. It was hoped that by travelling in a large group with flags and banners flying, the farmers would be able to spread their message and raise the awareness of communities along the roads leading to Bangkok.
Having recently worked closely with Northern farmers’ organizations while researching the land reform movement for my master’s thesis , I was able to accompany the farmers’ caravan from Chiang Mai to Bangkok, and have put together some photos from the journey in order to let others know about the efforts of these marginalized groups. The movement was also covered in a few articles (here and here) in the Bangkok Post as well as some of the Thai newspapers and television stations.

The caravan begins the 600+ km. journey in Chiang Mai. At this point, the group consisted of about 50 motorbikes driven by Chiang Mai farmers and stateless persons.

At the Kruba Siwichai monument in Doi Tee, Lamphun, the caravan was joined by Mae Hongson and Lamphun farmers and stateless persons, and together they made merit at this revered monk’s statue before continuing the journey.

P-move members asking Kruba Siwichai to watch over them during their upcoming journey.

The caravan travelled to Den Chai, Phrae, where motorbikes from Chiang Rai, Nan, Phayao and Phrae joined up bringing the total to over 200 vehicles. Travelling time was decreased from here on out, as the caravan needed to stop to fill up with petrol every 50 kms or so. You can imagine the looks on the faces on the petrol station’s attendants when the caravan rolled in!

Outside of DenChai, a local monk blesses the caravan as it passes through his community.

The first night’s resting place was the large meeting room in Wat Chom Thong in Phitsanulok. A short sleep filled with mosquitoes and barking temple dogs did not do much to recharge the batteries of the weary travelers.

The next morning, the caravan travelled a short distance to Naresuan University in Phitsanulok where they made merit in front of the statue of King Naresuan and then read a press release for reporters from Thai media who were contacted beforehand to meet them there.


The caravan passing through Nakorn Sawan on day 2 of the journey. The green flags contained the logo of P-move and slogans of the movement. The motorbikes formed three lines and took up two lanes from this point on.

During the second night, caravan members ‘camped out’ in the Ayutthaya Provincial Gymnasium. Less mosquitoes and a bit cooler here than in Phitsanulok, so the next morning, we all felt more refreshed.

Finally entering Bangkok on October 1st.

Stopping in front of the Thai PBS Headquarters on the Vipawadee-Rangit Road to bring attention from the media.

The first stop within Bangkok was at the United Nations Building on Ratchadamnern Road. Here, P-move members from the four regions joined together with representatives from other Asian countries to petition them UN to assist them. This event was held because this year “World Habitat Day” fell on October 1st.

After leaving the UN Building shortly after noon, P-move members walked and drove a few blocks over to Phitsanulok Road and set up in front of the Government House. The police helped out at this point, and kept the two far lanes of the road open so that traffic could still move in two directions on this block. At this point there were estimated to be over 2,000 P-move members present.

A stage was set up directly opposite the side entrance to the Government House that was guarded by security forces equipped with anti-riot gear.

After unsuccessfully trying to meet with Yingluck during the first day, one of P-move leaders is interviewed by a cable TV reporter the night of October 1.

P-move members from Esaan sleeping out in the open on Phitsanulok Road the night of October 1st.

Sleeping on the sidewalk in front of the Government House on October 1st.

Finally, a meeting with PM Yingluck was secured the morning of October 2nd. Here, a Karen woman representing the stateless members greets Yingluck.

After the meeting was completed, a government representative climbed the stage and discussed what the government would do to address the items proposed by P-move. The committees would proceed forward with their assigned tasks and would need to have achieved results within 90 days. However, PM Yingluck refused to take the Chair position for the committees, instead delegating this role to one her deputies.

P-move members discuss the implications of the morning’s meeting with the PM and plans for future actions before dispersing. The PM agreed to pay for fuel costs for the motorbike caravan and also offered a police escort for the journey back North.

The motorcycles lined up at the Royal Plaza on October 2nd, ready to begin the long journey back home. P-move leaders were of the opinion that this campaign had been a success, although they were disappointed that Yingluck would not agree to head the re-established committee. They were encouraged that they were able to secure an appointment with the PM in such a short time. Furthermore, this was the first time that the organizations working for stateless persons’ rights had travelled together with the landless farmers to Bangkok, which would strengthen the cause of both of these movements. The P-move caravan returned safely to Chiang Mai and the rest of the Northern provinces by October 5th, and P-move leaders are currently assessing the situation and preparing for the next round of action, presumably after the 90-day deadline for action that was set by Yingluck.

Malaysia no. 1 again

Malaysia no. 1 again:

Mahathir introduced the term – Malaysia Boleh (or Malaysia Can) long before Obama introduced Yes, We Can!
Only that in the Malaysian case, Malaysia Boleh has come to capture the sheer stupidity or failures of the Barisan Nasional administration.
Not surprising that Malaysia is in the limelight again.
Not surprising that it is in the limelight again for the wrong reasons.
In a Transparency International survey of 3,000 businesses people in 30 countries, 50 per cent of business people surveyed in Malaysia, believed that they lost a contract because of bribery.
This was the highest recorded among the 30 country surveyed.
Malaysia beat other strong contenders such as Mexico (48 per cent), Indonesia (47 per cent) and Pakistan (42 per cent). Even Nigeria recorded a respectable 24 per cent.
Malaysia’s Siamese twin, Singapore, recorded 9 per cent.
Any reason to believe Prime Minister of Malaysia, Najib Razak’s proclamation that he has or had a zero tolerance for corruption?
[This post provides a comparison between the performance of Malaysia and Singapore in Transparency International's Perceptions of Corruption Index.]

Top Kenyan university opens campus next to world's largest refugee camp

Top Kenyan university opens campus next to world's largest refugee camp: Nairobi's Kenyatta University opens a campus in Dadaab and courses will be open to Kenyan citizens and to refugees living in the nearby refugee complex.

SOUTH AFRICA: Anti-migrant sentiment increasing

SOUTH AFRICA: Anti-migrant sentiment increasing:
JOHANNESBURG, 10 October 2012 (IRIN) - Distrust of foreigners has increased in South Africa in the four years since a wave of xenophobic violence swept the country. Some 67 percent of South Africans say they do not trust foreigners at all, compared to 60 percent in 2008, survey findings released this week revealed.

MIGRATION: Greece failing asylum seekers

MIGRATION: Greece failing asylum seekers:
ATHENS, 15 October 2012 (IRIN) - When Vahid Pejman, a former journalist from Afghanistan, arrived in Greece with his wife and 11-year-old daughter, he anticipated a brief stay before heading somewhere more welcoming.

NIGERIA-CHAD: Child migrants reuniting with families

NIGERIA-CHAD: Child migrants reuniting with families:
DAKAR, 15 October 2012 (IRIN) - Most of the Chadian Koranic students who fled Boko Haram related violence in northern Nigeria to return to their country in March 2012, have now been reunited with their parents, say the International Organization for Migration and the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF).

Analysis: “Deradicalization” - Is Indonesia’s approach working?

Analysis: “Deradicalization” - Is Indonesia’s approach working?:
JAKARTA, 15 October 2012 (IRIN) - Ideology that fuels violent acts in the name of Islam remains potent in Indonesia despite government efforts to “deradicalize” militants and prevent the spread of religious extremism.

BURUNDI-TANZANIA: A troubled homecoming

BURUNDI-TANZANIA: A troubled homecoming:
BUJUMBURA, 15 October 2012 (IRIN) - The imminent return of more than 35,000 Burundians from Tanzania poses major logistical challenges to aid agencies and the densely populated country they fled amid civil war almost 20 years ago. The return could degenerate into a “humanitarian disaster” if they ignore a 31 December deadline to leave willingly and end up being deported en masse.

ICG Report - Implementing Peace and Security Architecture (II): Southern Africa

Implementing Peace and Security Architecture (II): Southern Africa: To preserve Southern Africa’s relative peace in the face of rising challenges and threats, Southern African Development Community (SADC) member states must collectively reinforce its peace and security architecture.

Philippine court suspends anti-cybercrime law

Philippine court suspends anti-cybercrime law: Supreme court issues temporary restraining order while it decides whether certain provisions violate civil liberties.

Egypt Copts mark massacre anniversary

Egypt Copts mark massacre anniversary: March staged to commemorate dozens of Coptic Christians killed in Cairo last October by security forces.

Bali marks 10th anniversary of bombings

Bali marks 10th anniversary of bombings: Hundreds of survivors and relatives gather for ceremony honouring the 202 victims of nightclub attack.

Al Jazeera speaks with PKK rebel leader

Al Jazeera speaks with PKK rebel leader: Murat Karayilan, chief of armed wing of Kurdistan Workers'Party, says his group has been inspired by the Arab Spring.

Mali rebels threaten France over intervention

Mali rebels threaten France over intervention: Al-Qaeda-linked fighters say they will "open the doors of hell" if France keeps pushing for armed intervention in Mali.

Syria and Turkey ban flights as ties plummet

Syria and Turkey ban flights as ties plummet: Both countries ban civilian flights from their airspace, just days after Turkish interception of a Syrian passenger jet.

Tunisia reveals date for 2013 elections

Tunisia reveals date for 2013 elections: Presidential and parliamentary polls to be held in June, after widespread criticism of ruling coalition's hold on power.

Gunmen kill worshippers at Nigeria mosque

Gunmen kill worshippers at Nigeria mosque: At least 20 people killed as they left a mosque in remote village of Dogo Dawa in northern Nigeria's Kaduna state.

South Africa police arrest dozens of miners

South Africa police arrest dozens of miners: Crackdown on sit-in by thousands of workers of Gold Fields mine near Johannesburg to demand better pay, sparks violence.

Rights group says Syria used cluster bombs

Rights group says Syria used cluster bombs: Human Rights Watch report finds government forces have dropped anti-personnel cluster munitions on civilian areas.

Bosnia kicks off pilot census

Bosnia kicks off pilot census: Exercise to pave way for first population count since 1990s inter-ethnic war that brought major demographic change.

Brazil police take over Rio de Janeiro slums

Brazil police take over Rio de Janeiro slums: Authorities try to clean up city's drug-riddled favelas in preparation for 2014 Soccer World Cup and 2016 Olympics.

Libya assembly elects new prime minister

Libya assembly elects new prime minister: Ali Zeidan, a career diplomat and long-time Gaddafi critic, elected a week after the last prime minister was dismissed.

Philippines signs truce with Muslim rebels

Philippines signs truce with Muslim rebels: The peace pact outlines steps to end the conflict in the island of Mindanao by 2016.

Haitians stage anti-president protests

Haitians stage anti-president protests: Young protesters in the quake-ravaged nation accuse President Michel Martelly of not living up to promises.

UN envoy to Syria calls for Eid ceasefire

UN envoy to Syria calls for Eid ceasefire: Shuttling between neighbours Iran and Iraq as Syria fighting rages on, Lakhdar Brahimi welcomes "ideas from all sides".

Scotland's independence referendum deal inked

Scotland's independence referendum deal inked: British and Scottish leaders sign a deal to give Scotland a referendum on independence in 2014 after 300 years of union.

Pakistani schoolgirl Malala arrives to UK

Pakistani schoolgirl Malala arrives to UK: Teen activist seriously wounded in Pakistani Taliban attack is airlifted to Birmingham for specialist medical treatment.

New EU economic sanctions target Iran

New EU economic sanctions target Iran: Foreign ministers agree on asset freezing and travel ban on 34 additional entities in oil, gas and financial sectors.

Former King Sihanouk Dies

Former King Sihanouk Dies:
The former king of Cambodia, who guided the country to independence and later allied with the ultra-Maoist Khmer Rouge regime, has died at the age of 89 after a sustained bout with cancer.

King Norodom Sihanouk had been receiving medical treatment in China since January and died after suffering a heart attack at a hospital in Beijing early on Monday morning local time, according to a member of the royal family.

Born in 1922, Sihanouk led Cambodia through the eras of French colonialism, Japanese rule during World War II, and the Vietnam War—guiding the nation with a nationalist sentiment throughout its tumultuous history during the latter half of the 20th century, while deftly maintaining his claim to the country’s throne.

Educated in secondary school at Vietnam’s Ho Chi Minh City, Sihanouk ascended the throne in 1941 at the age of 19 following the death of his maternal grandfather, King Sisowath Monivang, while Cambodia was part of French Indochina, along with modern-day Laos and Vietnam. He later attended military school in France.

In 1945, the Japanese Empire deposed the French administration and took control of French Indochina, pressuring Sihanouk to declare Cambodian “independence” from France.

When Japan surrendered after its defeat in World War II later that year, the French retook control of French Indochina and allowed Sihanouk to retain his right to the throne.

In the early 1950s, Sihanouk began demanding independence from the country’s French colonists and their removal from Indochina.

Threats to his life from the French forced Sihanouk into exile in Thailand in 1953, though he returned to Cambodia later that year to retake the throne when the country was granted independence.

In 1955 Sihanouk abdicated the Cambodian throne in favor of his father, Norodom Suramarit, and established the Sangkum, or “Popular Socialist Community,” becoming the country’s first prime minister through an overwhelming victory in parliamentary elections that year.

He survived an assassination attempt by agents of the anti-communist South Vietnamese government in 1959 when his son, and head of protocol, opened a package that included an explosive which was purportedly sent by a former American engineer who had earlier worked in Cambodia.

Khmer Rouge ally

In 1960, after the death of his father, Sihanouk was officially designated head of state. He managed to keep Cambodia out of the Vietnam War by playing different political factions off of one another, but was deposed by then-Prime Minister Lon Nol in 1970 while traveling outside of the country.



The former king relocated to Beijing and allied with the communist Khmer Rouge, which overthrew the U.S.-backed Lon Nol regime in 1975. 


The group sought to turn Cambodia into an agrarian utopia, but devastated the country through economic mismanagement and purges that led to the death of nearly 2 million people.



Sihanouk became a voiceless prisoner in his own palace until a Vietnamese invasion removed the Khmer Rouge from power in 1979 and he returned to exile. The Vietnamese withdrew from Cambodia in 1989 leaving a pro-Vietnamese government in place under the lead of former Khmer Rouge cadre Hun Sen.



He returned to Cambodia from China in 1991 and was restored to the throne in 1993, but was marginalized by Hun Sen with threats to abolish the monarchy.

Sihanouk served until abdicating to his son Norodom Sihamoni in 2004 due to health problems.

The former king was known for his often lavish lifestyle, which included a love of film, jazz, cars, food, and women. He married at least five times—though some say he had six wives—and fathered 14 children. But despite his life of excess, he was beloved throughout Cambodia.

Sihanouk was diagnosed with B-cell lymphoma in his prostate in 1993 and again in his stomach in 2005. He was diagnosed with an additional cancer in 2008. The former king also suffered from diabetes and hypertension.

His son will fly to Beijing to retrieve his body on Monday and he will be given an official funeral in Cambodia.

Reported by Joshua Lipes.

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.

Yekaterina_Samutsevich freedom of speech roundup
Yekaterina Samutsevich, the eldest member of the Russian punk rock group Pussy Riot, was released on Wednesday while the remaining two band mates stay in jail. Photo: Denis Bochkarev



This week, controversy arose over conflicting reports about the legitimacy of the recent Venezuelan presidential election. Liu Futang, a former Chinese government official and environmental activist, was put on trial for “printing his books without proper licenses,” and the United Nations condemned the killing of Indian correspondent Chaitali Santra who died on September 26th from a mail bomb.
In other news, Syrian cartoonist Juanzero, spoke about how he uses his work for nonviolent protest in Syria; Yekaterina Samutsevicha, a member of the Russian band Pussy Riot has been released from prison; and Chinese writer Mo Yan won the Nobel Prize for literature.
Follow the links below covering these stories and more for the week of October 7- 13.

Venezuela: Differing Opinions on Chavez’s Victory; Argentine Reporter Harassed

The Guardian. “As opposition leaders concede, Venezuela is by any rational standards a democracy, with exceptionally high levels of participation, its electoral process more fraud-proof than those in Britain or the US, and its media dominated by a vituperatively anti-government private sector.” Read here.
CNN. “Venezuela’s Election Agency showed Chavez winning massively, by nearly 10 percentage points. Is the result legitimate? That’s hard to say. Venezuela has not invited any international election observers since 2006 and anomalies have been observed in past votes.” Read here.
The New York Times. Venezuelan secret service agents detained Argentine TV journalist Jorge Lanata and his crew for two hours in the basement of the Caracas international airport on Monday. Only after the agents had erased Lanata’s video of the Venezuelan elections were the journalists permitted to leave the country. Read here.

Q & A: Nedim Șener, A Turkish Journalist Under Fire

CPJ. This month, CPJ will release an in-depth report on press conditions in Turkey. In advance of the report they present an interview with Nedim Șener, a Turkish investigative reporter who was jailed for more than a year in 2011-12 and charged with involvement in a plot to overthrow the government. Șener denies the charges. Read here.

Pussy Riot: it was clear Yekaterina Samutsevich had a get-out-of-jail card

The Guardian. Pussy Riot member Yekaterina Samutsevich, who recently switched lawyers, has just been given a suspended sentence on appeal. Two other band members, Maria Alyokhina and Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, remain behind bars. Read here.

Syrian Cartoonist Pushes the Boundaries

Al Jazeera. Syrian cartoonist, Juanzero, discusses how he uses his work as a form of nonviolent protest against the Syrian government.

Syrian cartoonist pushes the boundries by aljazeeraenglish

Free Speech: Just a Recent Fad?

The Huffington Post. Greg Lukianoff rejects claims that freedom of speech was not valued in the United States until the 1960s—it goes back much further, he says. He also traces changes in legal interpretations of the First Amendment across history. Read here.

China: Interview with Author Mo Yan

Granta. Mo Yan, one of China’s most celebrated and widely translated writers, won the Nobel Prize in literature this week. He spoke to Granta editor John Freeman about writing strong women, retaining idioms and puns even in translation, and avoiding censorship. Read here.

Chinese Environmental Activist on Trial over Books

The Guardian. Liu Futang, a former Chinese official who won an award for his exposé of illegal forest clearing, has gone on trial accused of profiting by printing his books on environmental conflicts without proper licenses. Read here.

Head of UN agency defending press freedom deplores murder of Indian journalist

United Nations. Chaitali Santra was a correspondent in Howrah, West Bengal, for the Hindi- language weekly Julm se Jang. She was killed on September 26 by a mail bomb that she opened in her home. Read here.

Jaw-jaw and law-law: Freedom of Speech Online

The Guardian. Once dealt with through social censure, ill-advised ‘jokes’ are being criminalized today now that they are given online airings. In the UK you might go to jail for what you say online, but the guidelines for decency are hazy at best. Read here.

Pakistani Journalists Must Brace for Election Violence

The Huffington Post. Covering political rallies in Pakistan must be considered a dangerous assignment. One journalist was killed and three others injured on Sunday when gunmen opened fire on a Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) rally in Khairpur in Sindh province. Read here.

Indonesia Economic Quarterly: Maintaining Resilience

Indonesia Economic Quarterly: Maintaining Resilience

Oct 13, 2012

Suicide Attack on National Day

Suicide Attack on National Day:
A Uyghur man has killed an undetermined number of people after driving his motorcycle into the wall of a border guard base in China’s restive northwestern Xinjiang region in a suicide attack on Chinese National Day, police and residents in the area told RFA this week.
The motorcycle crash caused an explosion at the People's Armed Police facility in a rural area of Kargilik (in Chinese, Yecheng) county in Kashgar prefecture on Oct. 1, sources said, though the exact number of casualties was unknown.
The police station chief at nearby Besheliq village, Abdurahman Abdusattar, confirmed an attack had occurred shortly before 12:00 p.m. at a border guard base located between Wahpi and Chasamechit villages in Kokuruk hamlet.
“When we were informed about this it was around noon and we were on our way to the flag-raising ceremony for National Day.”
“We were told that some people died and some were injured. But because it happened on the base, we were not given the details,” he told RFA’s Uyghur service.
One resident in Chasamechit village speaking on condition of anonymity said a total of 20 people had died or been injured in the incident, but police have not confirmed the figure.
Domestic media have silenced news of the incident because the political sensitivity of an attack occurring on the national holiday—the anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China in 1949—could heighten tensions in a region where ethnic Uyghurs chafe under Chinese rule, a local official in another nearby village said.
Before the attack, a group of two or three young Uyghur men on motorcycles had ridden into Kargilik from neighboring Guma (Pishan) county and driven around the base, surveying the location, a local resident said, speaking to RFA on condition of anonymity.
Around 11:00 a.m., the group stopped in Besheliq, about 10 kilometers (6 miles) from the base, where one or two of them stayed while the remaining rider drove on alone to attack the base, the source said.
The man is believed to have died in the explosion.
Arrest warrants
Police have arrest warrants and are searching for two Uyghur men around age 21 or 22, Abdurahman Abdusattar said.
“From what we can see from their pictures they are modern-looking Uyghur boys with unshaved heads and without beards,” he said.
He said local authorities had tightened security, setting up checkpoints around the county and putting police stations on alert.
“We have set up checkpoints at every entry point to the county and are checking every person and vehicle coming and leaving Kargilik,” he said on Thursday.
“Right now even the village cadres are working at the checkpoints. We were told from the top to protect local police stations with extra vigilance in case of an attack,” he said.
He added that county officials were holding a meeting to discuss the incident and could release information later.  “Maybe soon we will receive more information about it,” he said.
Revenge attack
A local official in a nearby village, speaking on condition of anonymity, said news of the incident had been kept out of the media in order to quell fears among the Han Chinese living in Kargilik, where 20 people were killed in a stabbing incident in February.
Last week’s attack could have been a reaction to the shooting in December of a group of Uyghurs in Guma county last December, the official said.
The group of seven Uyghurs, including women and children, had been traveling to the Pakistani border in an attempt to flee the country, but were killed in a confrontation authorities described as a “terrorist” attack.
Chinese authorities often link Uyghurs in Xinjiang to violent separatist groups but experts familiar with the region have said China has exaggerated the threat and cited a “war on terror” in attempt to redirect criticism of domestic policies that cause unrest.
Uyghurs say they are subjected to political control and persecution for opposing Chinese rule in Xinjiang, which has been gripped by persistent ethnic tensions between Muslim Uyghurs and the rapidly growing Han Chinese population.
Reported by Shohret Hoshur for RFA’s Uyghur service. Translated by Mamatjan Juma. Written in English by Rachel Vandenbrink.

Oct 12, 2012

FOOD: How good is the new hunger data?

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ADDIS ABABA, 11 October 2012 (IRIN) - After years of criticism, the UN's Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) has announced it is exploring new ways to measure “hunger”, “undernourishment” and “food insecurity” - terms used interchangeably - which will dramatically alter the number of people believed to be going hungry.

SOUTH AFRICA: Straight talk with Fareed Abdullah, head of the South African AIDS council

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