Nov 21, 2012

Newsman’s Murder Probe Disputed

Newsman’s Murder Probe Disputed:
A provincial court in northeastern Cambodia on Wednesday concluded its investigation into the murder of an investigative journalist who had exposed corruption involving local elites, according to the man’s lawyer, but a local rights group said the probe was not far reaching enough.

Ratanakiri provincial court investigating Judge Luch Lao confirmed that military officer An Bunheng and his wife, known by her nickname “Vy,” were linked to the September murder of 42-year-old local reporter Hang Serei Oudom.

The suspects had been taken into custody a day after the reporter’s battered body was found in the trunk of his car. Police and a court prosecutor said they had found evidence linking them to the crime at the couple’s restaurant in Ratanakiri province.

Hok Phalla, the attorney representing Hang Serei Oudom’s family, said relatives expected the court to arrest additional suspects in the killing.

He said that according to other witnesses, there are “more suspects involved with the killing,” and called on the court to conduct a “proper investigation” before reaching a conclusion.

“The investigation seems to have concluded faster than usual," he told RFA’s Khmer service.

The provincial court had summoned 12 witnesses during the investigation, Hok Phalla said, and would next hold a hearing with the suspects before making a final decision in the case. A date has not yet been scheduled for the hearing.

Judge Luch Lao could not be reached for comment.

Pen Bonna, provincial coordinator for the Cambodian Human Rights and Development Association (ADHOC), echoed the concerns of Hang Serei Oudom’s family about the scope of the investigation.

“According to evidence and witnesses, the murder must involve senior military police officers in the province,” he said, adding that the court should also look into the role of the son of the Voen Sai district military police chief in the reporter’s death.

Hang Serei Oudom, a reporter for the local Virakchum Khmer Daily newspaper, had worked to expose illegal logging and forest crimes involving local elites in Ratanakiri province before he was found beaten to death in his car at a local cashew plantation days after he went missing on Sept. 10.

In his most recent article on Sept. 6, the reporter had accused the son of the Voen Sai district military police chief of smuggling logs in military-plated vehicles and extorting money from people who were legally transporting wood.

Rights groups said Hang Serei Oudom was the first Cambodian journalist killed since 2008, when reporter Khim Sambo and his son were shot dead in Phnom Penh.

Khim Sambo, who wrote for the pro-opposition Moneakseka Khmer newspaper, had published an article on nepotism and corruption within Prime Minister Hun Sen’s ruling Cambodian People’s Party.

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

Holiday travel: How to keep your PC connected on the road | PCWorld

Holiday travel: How to keep your PC connected on the road | PCWorld

Isaan Life: Buying Buddhism in Bangkok Thailand

Isaan Life: Buying Buddhism in Bangkok Thailand

Back to Don Muang, Again « Asia Airports News

Back to Don Muang, Again « Asia Airports News

Sam Rainsy Plans US Suit

Sam Rainsy Plans US Suit:
Exiled opposition leader Sam Rainsy is preparing a lawsuit in the U.S. against officials in Prime Minister Hun Sen’s government who may be linked to extrajudicial killings in Cambodia, as highlighted by a recent probe report by an international rights group.

The report, released last week by the New York-based Human Rights Watch, detailed more than 300 murders of political opponents, human rights activists and labor leaders in Cambodia over the past 20 years.

Human Rights Watch accused the Cambodian government of allowing those responsible for the deaths to act with impunity, saying that “instead of prosecuting officials responsible for killings and other serious abuses, Prime Minister Hun Sen has promoted and rewarded them.”

In a statement released through the opposition Sam Rainsy Party (SRP), Sam Rainsy said he had launched the lawsuit to bring attention to “the long-standing policy of the current Cambodian government to engage in major human rights abuses, while preventing the country’s law enforcement authorities and courts from acting to secure justice for these crimes.”

“I wish to announce plans elaborated with my American lawyer in Washington D.C. to prepare court cases to be brought before the United States courts against the perpetrators of these assassinations identified in the Human Rights Watch report,” the statement said.

Sam Rainsy said that the cases will be filed if and when any of the officials in question travel to the U.S., without elaborating on which court would handle the suits.

Cambodian officials have not responded to Sam Rainsy’s statement.

Sam Rainsy, who currently lives in Paris and who faces up to 11 years of jail time in Cambodia for various offenses he says were part of a campaign of political persecution, had used a similar legal strategy to negotiate a return to his home country from exile in 2005.

The head of the united opposition coalition National Rescue Party (NRP) has vowed to return to Cambodia to challenge Hun Sen’s ruling Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) in general elections next year.

2005 settlement

In 2005, Sam Rainsy filed a similar suit through the Federal District Court in New York alleging Hun Sen’s use of a private guard unit to carry out a grenade attack against a meeting of political opposition groups that left several of the participants dead or wounded in 1997.

A U.S. citizen observing the demonstration was also injured in the attack.

That case was temporarily settled when Hun Sen agreed to free a number of political prisoners and permit Sam Rainsy’s return to Cambodia after a year of exile following the opposition leader’s prosecution by a local Cambodian court on what he said were also politically motivated charges.

“The preparation of these court actions will provide a means for obtaining justice against major human rights abusers in Cambodia, who until now have been cloaked with impunity because the Cambodian government would not allow law enforcement authorities and the courts to prosecute them,” Sam Rainsy said of the new cases.

He warned officials cited in the Human Rights Watch report that if he files the lawsuit, they could face action if they travel overseas.

He said that the lawsuit may also subject Hun Sen to court action in the U.S. again “as soon as he leaves office and can no longer claim head of state immunity status.”

Sam Rainsy said that the preparation of the court cases was a move to end the government’s “prevailing policy … of providing impunity from prosecution in Cambodia to major human rights abusers” and to ensure that no one involved in such crimes escapes “justice and international condemnation.”

“The systemic human rights abuses of the present Phnom Penh government, and their policy of repression of the political opposition, must stop if true democracy is to be realized in Cambodia by the time when national elections are held in 2013.”

Reported by RFA’s Khmer service. Written in English by Joshua Lipes.

20 Held for Girls’ Smuggling

20 Held for Girls’ Smuggling:
Laos has filed charges against 20 suspected human traffickers, including foreigners, who forced teenage girls into prostitution after luring them from rural areas, according to a government official.
The suspects were involved in12 cases of human trafficking investigated over a three-month period to October, an anti-human-trafficking official told RFA’s Lao service, speaking on condition of anonymity.
“The suspects are under prosecution,” he said.
All of the cases involved forced prostitution and most of the victims rescued by police in their investigations were women under 18, he said, though he did not say how many victims were involved.
The suspects are believed to have lured girls from mountainous northern and remote areas in Laos’s southern provinces and forced them to sell sex, he said.
But authorities have not yet been able to identify any trafficking rings behind the cases.
Stepping up
Laos has stepped up its efforts to investigate human smuggling offenses and to prosecute and punish traffickers in recent years, according to an annual report by the U.S. State Department that monitors human trafficking worldwide.
In 2011, authorities reported investigating 49 cases of suspected trafficking, involving 69 alleged offenders and resulting in 37 convictions, a step up from the 20 cases investigated and 33 convictions the year before, the report said.
Laos is a source, transit, and destination country for women and girls subjected to sex trafficking, as well as for men, women, and children subjected to forced labor, according to the report.
This year, Lao officials have exposed foreign sex rings smuggling Lao women to China, Thailand, and Malaysia.
In June, Lao and Thai officials met to launch a joint campaign to prevent human trafficking across their shared border.
Laos currently has no comprehensive human trafficking law and instead uses its criminal code to deal with the problem.
A draft law on human trafficking is currently under review and is likely to be put into law by 2014, officials have said.
Reported by RFA’s Lao service. Translated by Somnet Inthapannha. Written in English by Rachel Vandenbrink.

South China Sea Hotly Debated

South China Sea Hotly Debated:
Leaders attending a regional summit defied calls by China not to discuss territorial disputes in the South China Sea at the forum, with U.S. President Barack Obama calling for a reduction of tensions in the area that experts say is Asia's biggest potential military flashpoint..
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao warned Obama and other leaders at the 18-nation East Asia Summit  that Beijing does not want its maritime disputes with several members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) brought to the regional talks.
“We do not want to bring the disputes to an occasion like this,” Wen said at one of the summit’s final sessions on Monday, according to Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Fu Ying.
“China’s act of defending its sovereignty is necessary and legitimate … and we have properly handled the incidents that were not the making of China.”
ASEAN members Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia, and Brunei, as well as Taiwan, have claims to parts of the potentially resource-rich South China Sea.
China insists it has sovereignty rights over virtually all of the waters and prefers to settle the disputes on a country-by-country basis instead of having the disputes “internationalized.”
Obama urged a cooling of heads on the issue when the 10 ASEAN nations were joined by eight other states including the U.S. and China for the East Asia Summit on Tuesday.
“President Obama’s message is there needs to be a reduction of the tensions,” U.S. Deputy National Security adviser Ben Rhodes said after the summit.
“There is no reason to risk any political escalation, particularly when you have two of the world’s largest economies—China and Japan—associated with some of those disputes,” he said.
China is also involved in a territorial row with Japan after Tokyo bought disputed islands known as Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China from a private Japanese owner in September, triggering violent protests and calls for boycotts of Japanese products across China.
The U.S., which China has said should not interfere in discussions on the South China Sea, has said it will not take sides in the disputes but will do what it takes to protect nations’ access to shipping lanes.
Intra-ASEAN discord
But divisions over whether ASEAN nations will press their claims with China as a bloc or individually had tensions running high at the bloc’s annual summit.
Cambodia, a China ally and this year’s ASEAN Chair, said that that all 10 leaders of the bloc had agreed in a meeting on Sunday not to “internationalize” their disputes, instead reaching an agreement to limit their dispute to the bloc’s talks with China.
“Concerning the South China Sea issue, the ASEAN leaders have agreed to continue to resolve the issue through existing ASEAN-China mechanism,” Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen said in a 30-minute speech wrapping up the ASEAN meetings on Monday.
But the Philippines, which plans to bring its own dispute with China to a U.N. tribunal, has lodged a formal protest against Cambodia, accusing the China ally of stifling discussion on the disputes, according to Reuters news agency.
Philippine President Benigno Aquino said that his country and at least one other country—which many believe is Vietnam—had not agreed to limit their discussion with China on the disputes to the ASEAN-China mechanism.
The bickering was reminiscent of the ASEAN foreign ministers meeting in July, which ended without issuing the customary joint statement for the first time in the grouping’s 45-year history because of divisions over the disputes.
DOC
SouthChinaSeaTension062111-400.jpg
Leaders of ASEAN and China had met on Monday to commemorate the 10th anniversary of their Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea (DOC), an agreement that sets out a commitment to work toward a code of conduct aimed at avoiding clashes in the waters.
The talks passed without any agreement on a code of conduct, but the countries reaffirmed their commitment to the DOC.
A joint statement released at the end of the meeting said the countries undertook to “work together for the adoption of a code of conduct in the South China Sea on the basis of consensus.”
“We all agree to value the implementation and respect of the DOC based on the principles adopted in 2011 to boost mutual trust and confidence,” Hun Sen said.
He added that ASEAN leaders support Thailand’s taking a role in coordinating meetings between ASEAN and China in negotiations to formulate a code of conduct.
Wen Jiabao also told leaders at the East Asia Summit that China is committed to moving forward with the DOC.
“Premier Wen Jiabao stressed that China is ready to implement the DOC in a comprehensive manner and has worked with ASEAN members to maintain cooperation,” Fu said, according to Chinese state news agency Xinhua.
Senior officials from the member countries and China have conducted informal talks on the Code of Conduct earlier this year in preparation for the summit.
Reported by RFA’s Khmer service. Translated by Samean Yun. Written in English by Rachel Vandenbrink.

Gallup - Singapore Ranks as Least Emotional Country in the World

Singapore Ranks as Least Emotional Country in the World

Nov 20, 2012

Asean to Ask China to Start Islands Talks

Asean to Ask China to Start Islands Talks:

A fishing boat carrying activists sails near the disputed islands in the East China Sea, known as Senkaku in Japan or Diaoyu in China. (Photo: Reuters)
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia—Southeast Asian leaders decided to ask China to start formal talks “as soon as possible” on crafting a legally binding accord aimed at preventing violence over disputed South China Sea territories.
Leaders of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations made the decision Sunday during their annual summit in the Cambodian capital of Phnom Penh, Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) Secretary-General Surin Pitsuwan said.
The South China Sea territorial disputes, which many fear could spark Asia’s next war, have overshadowed discussions at the summit, where the top agenda items included human rights and expanding an Asian free-trade area.
Four countries in the 10-member Asean—Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines and Vietnam—have been locked in long-unresolved territorial rifts with China and Taiwan in the resource-rich waters, where a bulk of the world’s oil and cargo passes. Since Chinese and Vietnamese naval forces engaged in deadly clashes in the region in the 1970s, the disputes have settled into an uneasy standoff.
But fresh territorial spats involving China, Vietnam and the Philippines starting last year have set off calls for Asean and China to turn a nonaggression accord they signed in 2002 to a stronger, legally-binding “code of conduct” aimed at discouraging aggressive acts that could lead to dangerous confrontations or accidental clashes in the busy region.
Asean member countries have submitted features they each want to see in such an accord and were now ready to sit as a bloc to discuss with China how the agreement could be drafted. The crucial talks could start immediately, even right after the Cambodia summit, according to Surin.
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen, host of this year’s summit, was to convey the bloc’s decision to his Chinese counterpart, Wen Jiabao, who was to join expanded Asean meetings in the next two days.
“They would like to see the commencement of the discussion as soon as possible because this is an issue of interest, concern and worry of the international community,” Surin told reporters. “It’s an issue between Asean and China to resolve together … It needs two to tango.”
President Barack Obama, who also is coming to Cambodia to attend the so-called East Asia Summit, an annual forum where Asean leaders and their counterparts from eight other nations, including China and the United States, discuss security and economic concerns. Washington has backed calls for the drafting of a South China Sea nonaggression pact.
It’s unclear how China would respond, with Asean diplomats saying they have gotten unclear signals from Chinese officials.
Vietnam and the Philippines have separately accused China since last year of intruding into their own South China Sea islands, reefs and waters and of disrupting oil explorations. China, which claims virtually the entire South China Sea, has dismissed the accusations, saying those waters belonged to Beijing since ancient times.
China has sought one-on-one negotiations to resolve the disputes, which would be to its advantage because of its sheer size, and has objected to any effort to bring the problem to regional or international forums like Asean. It has also warned Washington not to get involved, but American officials have declared that the peaceful resolution of the disputes and freedom of navigation in the vast sea was in the US national interest.
Obama was expected to reiterate Washington’s call for a legally-binding code of conduct in the South China Sea in Cambodia.
Asean leaders, meanwhile, adopted a human rights declaration despite criticism that it has loopholes that could allow atrocities to continue.
Asean, an unwieldy collective of liberal democracies and authoritarian states, signed a document adopting the Human Rights Declaration in Phnom Penh. The nonbinding declaration calls for an end to torture, arbitrary arrests and other rights violations that have been longtime concerns in Southeast Asia, which rights activists once derisively described as being ruled by a “club of dictators.”
Bloc diplomats have called the declaration a milestone despite its imperfections, saying it will help cement democratic reforms in countries such as Burma, which remains widely condemned for its human rights record.
Founded in 1967 as an anti-communist bloc in the Cold War era, Asean has taken feeble steps to address human rights concerns in the vast region of 600 million people. It adopted a charter in 2007 where it committed to uphold international law and human rights but retained a bedrock principle of not interfering in each other’s internal affairs—a loophole that critics say helps member states commit abuses without consequence.
During the summit, the leaders are expected to announce the start of negotiations for an expanded free-trade area involving Asean member countries and six regional economic powerhouses that include China but excluding the United States, which is promoting a separate Asia-Pacific free-trade arrangement.
Asean leaders meanwhile agreed that implementation of an ambitious Asean Economic Community (AEC) will be slightly delayed.
Delegates explained that the AEC will be launched at the end of 2015 rather than on Jan. 1, 2015, as originally envisioned.
The community, roughly similar to the EU, would integrate the diverse nations’ economies, covering trade, investment and other measures.
Thai Foreign Minister Surapong Tovichakchaikul said the meeting’s chairman, Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen, had proposed the later starting date, and won the approval of all members.
He said Asean economic ministers had agreed the implementation could begin on Jan. 1, 2015, but that the leaders agreed Sunday that much work had yet to be done. “ Asean is more concerned about substance than the date,” he said.

Obama Criticizes Cambodia after Praising Burma

Obama Criticizes Cambodia after Praising Burma:

US President Barack Obama shakes hands with Cambodia’s Prime Minister Hun Sen before the 4th Asean-US leaders’ meeting at the Peace Palace in Phnom Penh. (Photo: Reuters)
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia—On a history-making trip, President Barack Obama on Monday paid the first visit by an American leader to Burma and Cambodia, two Asian countries with troubled histories, one on the mend and the other still a cause of concern.
Obama’s fast-paced, pre-Thanksgiving trip vividly illustrated the different paths the regional neighbors are taking to overcome legacies of violence, poverty and repression.
Cheered by massive flag-waving crowds, Obama offered long-isolated Burma a “hand of friendship” as it rapidly embraces democratic reforms. Hours later, he arrived in Cambodia to little fanfare, then pointedly criticized the country’s strongman leader on the issue of human rights during a tense meeting.
Obama was an early champion of Burma’s sudden transformation to civilian rule following a half-century of military dictatorship. He’s rewarded the country, officially known as Myanmar, with eased economic penalties, increased US investment and now a presidential visit, in part to show other nations the benefits of pursuing similar reforms.
“You’re taking a journey that has the potential to inspire so many people,” Obama said during a speech at the University of Rangoon.
The Cambodians are among those Obama is hoping will be motivated. White House officials said he held up Burma, a once-pariah state, as a benchmark during his private meeting on Monday evening with Prime Minister Hun Sen, the autocratic Cambodian leader who has held power for nearly 30 years. Hun Sen’s rivals have sometimes ended up in jail or in exile.
Unlike the arrangement after Obama’s meetings with Burmese President Thein Sein and democracy leader Aung Sun Suu Kyi, the US and Cambodian leaders did not speak to the press following their one-on-one talks. They did step before cameras briefly before their meeting to greet each other with a brisk handshake and little warmth.
In private, US officials said, Obama pressed Hun Sen to release political prisoners, stop land seizures and hold free and fair elections. Aides acknowledged the meeting was tense, with the Cambodian leader defending his practices, even as he professed to seek a deeper relationship with the US.
Ben Rhodes, Obama’s deputy national security adviser, said the president told Hun Sen that without reforms, Cambodia’s human rights woes would continue to be “an impediment” to that effort.
White House officials emphasized that Obama would not have visited Cambodia had it not been hosting two regional summit meetings the US attends, a rare admonishment of a country on its own soil.
The Cambodian people appeared to answer Obama’s cold shoulder in kind. Just a few small clusters of curious Cambodians gathered on the streets to watch his motorcade speed though the streets of Phnom Penh.
A welcome sign did greet Obama upon his arrival—but it heralded Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao, not the American president.
Human rights groups fear that because Obama delivered his condemnation of Hun Sen in private, government censors will keep his words from reaching the Cambodian people. And they worry the prime minister will then use Obama’s visit to justify his grip on power and weaken the will of opposition groups.
“If Hun Sen’s narrative about this visit is allowed to gel, it will create a perception that the United States and other international actors stand with Hun Sen, and not with the Cambodian people,” said John Sifton, Asia director at Human Rights Watch. “It will be a tremendous blow to Cambodians who challenge his rule.”
Obama’s visit to Burma was also viewed critically by some international organizations, which saw the trip as a premature reward for a country that still holds political prisoners and has been unable to contain ethic violence.
Aware of that criticism, Obama tempered some of his praise for Burma during his six-hour visit. He underscored that the reforms that have taken hold over the past year are “just the first steps on what will be a long journey.”
Perhaps the sharpest calls for caution came from Suu Kyi, Burma’s longtime democracy champion. After meeting with Obama at the home where she spent years under house arrest, she warned that the most difficult part of the transition will be “when we think that success is in sight.”
“Then we have to be very careful that we’re not lured by the mirage of success,” Suu Kyi said, speaking with Obama by her side.
The president, winding down his first foreign trip after winning re-election, had meetings scheduled in Cambodia on Tuesday with his counterparts in the East Asia Summit. Obama has added the summit to his annual list of high-priority international meetings as he seeks to expand US influence in the region.
Obama will also meet separately on the sidelines of the summit with Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda and with Wen, the Chinese premier. It’s likely to be Obama’s last bilateral meetings with both men.
Noda dissolved his country’s Parliament last week, setting the stage for new elections his party is unlikely to win. And China is undergoing its first leadership transition in a decade, with Wen and President Hu Jintao stepping down to clear the way for new leaders in the country’s Communist Party.
Obama will return to Washington before dawn on Wednesday, in time for the ceremonial pardoning of the Thanksgiving turkey.

Nov 19, 2012

Republican Underground Emerges From The Shadows

Republican Underground Emerges From The Shadows:
They are few, but they are vocal: the pro-same-sex marriage, pro-choice, pro-tax Republican activists. For years, these groups have labored off the radar, trying to convince a party unwilling to listen that it needs to moderate on issues from social to fiscal. But after the Democrats' decisive victories on Nov. 6, the Republican Underground says its finally time to go mainstream.
In the days since the election, TPM has talked with what one could call fringe Republican activists from across the issue spectrum. Like most in the GOP since the election returns that "shellshocked" the top of the ticket came in, they're eager to see the Republican Party become more appealing to the national electorate. Unlike many Republican leaders, however, these activists say they actually know how to make the substantive changes to make that happen.

Republicans everywhere talk about a change in tone -- rejecting divisive language like Mitt Romney's post-election "gifts" comment has become the national pastime for the GOP in recent days. But even the most vocal Romney critics in the Republican mainstream have repeatedly said the party doesn't need to change substantively. It just needs a new sales pitch.

The only real policy shift to come out of the election so far is a return to support for comprehensive immigration reform that was a central plank of many Republican campaign platforms in the cycles before 2012. On other issues, there are plenty of Republican leaders who say the GOP can hold the conservative line and still win.

The Republican Underground has a different theory. They've called for the party to get with what they see as the program on issues like gay marriage and women's health for years. But they've largely been talking to themselves. Now, they say Republicans are coming to them and they're cautiously optimistic that could mean real changes for the party down the road.

• Abortion

"What happened on [Election Day] is essentially what we have been warning the party about for the last four years," said Kellie Rose Ferguson, executive director of Republican Majority for Choice, a group that supports abortion rights. The group called out its fellow Republicans in the days following the election for alienating women with its language about abortion.

"[GOP leaders] look at the polls that show that the country is essentially split on the labels, but they lack an understanding of what the issue of choice means," she said. "It's not just abortion and what you would do personally. There's a political side of it."

Making the Republican Party into a pro-abortion rights party is a tough sell, but Rose Ferguson said Republicans are suddenly a lot more open to hearing what her group has to say. The group intends to take advantage of the situation and "talk to the myriad of donors and voters outside of the party that realize we collectively as a Republican body we need to do something."

• Same-Sex Marriage

Conservative LGBT group GOProud is perhaps best known from the 2012 cycle for its tussles with the Log Cabin Republicans, the more mainstream LGBT rights advocates inside the GOP. But with a clear line drawn between Democrats and Republicans on same sex marriage this election, GOProud says its time for all LGBT activists in the GOP to work together toward the goal of getting the party in line with national polling showing public support for expanded LGBT rights on the rise.

Like the pro-choice Republicans, GOProud says its phones have been ringing off the hook since the election with Republicans asking for advice. The group suggests Republicans adopt a "federalist" stance to same-sex marriage, advising future presidential candidates to support the rights of states to make their own decisions about marriage, rather than signing "NOM's crazy pledge" calling for a federal ban on LGBT marriage rights.

"There's two types of people right now in the Republican Party and in the conservative movement," said Chris Barron, a co-founder of GOProud. "There are the Holocaust Deniers, the folks who don't think that there's anything structurally wrong...and then there are people who understand that what we're facing is what some people have been warning about for a decade now, which is a demographic tsunami."

• Moderates

Moderate Republicans -- or "former elected officials" as they're often known today -- have suffered great losses in recent years after conservatives voted them out in primaries or Democrats defeated them by painting them with conservative policies of the modern Republican mainstream. After seeing conservative stances drag down Romney and lose the GOP a chance at the Senate, one of the moderates leaving Congress this year says his type of Republican is ready to fight back.

Rep. Steve LaTourette (R-OH) announced he wouldn't run for a another term in Congress back in July. But he gained national fame in the past couple of weeks as he smacked down tea party claims that Romney lost because he wasn't conservative enough. In his new job heading up the moderate Republican Main Street Partnership advocacy group, LaTourette says donors have been beating a path to his door hoping to prevent the moderate GOP from being primaried into oblivion. LaTourette says the answer is a super PAC, and he hopes to get one off the ground soon.

"The goal would be that if attacked, we're going to defend," he said.

"One of the things that drives me crazy is all these new faces. Most of the guys from the South used to be Democrats. And all of a sudden they try to hop on the Republican Party," he said. "Well, I've been a Republican all my life. And to say that I'm not a good Republican? That's nonsense. Those are the people that we're going to defend."

Moderates may have several super PACs to rely on for cover in the next round of primaries. Romney's Hispanic outreach director and one of the men behind his super PAC -- which ran ads attacking candidates for being too soft on immigration -- say they're planning a new group to support pro-immigration reform Republicans.

• Women's Health

As part of the party's swing to the right, Republicans have taken a hardline against Planned Parenthood. The defenders of the organization at the edges of the GOP say they're getting new attention from the mainstream after Democrats succeeded with their "war on women" messaging, which centered around the attacks on Planned Parenthood.

"A clear message was sent," said Randy Moody, a co-founder of Republicans for Planned Parenthood. He noted that a committee in the Ohio legislature is trying to get state Planned Parenthood funding eliminated during its post-election lame duck session, a sign that not everyone in the GOP paid close attention to Nov. 6. "You have to wonder what they're thinking," he said.

His group is taking advantage of the electoral results and dispatching lobbyists to warn Republicans of the consequences that could come with another fight over Planned Parenthood funding. The election proves it's a risky battle Republicans will probably lose, Moody said, and it's time Republicans embrace Planned Parenthood supporters once again. "We're going to reach out to the RNC to get a seat at the table," he said.

• Taxes

There have been Republican voices calling on the party to drop its fundamental opposition to tax increases for years. But only now, after President Obama won an election where he called for new taxes at nearly every campaign stop, are those voices starting to be heard. Even though it might be the most sacrilegious policy shift the Republican party could take, there are signs a shift away from 100% opposition to tax hikes in any circumstance is starting to take hold.

Head Scarves To Be Banned In Some Russian Schools

Head Scarves To Be Banned In Some Russian Schools: Russia's multiethnic region of Stavropol will introduce a dress code that bans religion-related clothing in schools.

Media Watchdog Condemns Murder Of Pakistani TV Reporter

Media Watchdog Condemns Murder Of Pakistani TV Reporter: The Committee to Protect Journalists has called on Pakistani authorities to "immediately investigate" the murder of journalist Rehmatullah Abid.

Politicians friendly to S'pore in China ranks

Politicians friendly to S'pore in China ranks: Patchy at the top but not too bad further down the rungs. After cultivating several Chinese politicians in recent years, the Singapore Government will find a rather mixed report card when it analyses .....


Indonesia proposes hotline for South China Sea

Indonesia proposes hotline for South China Sea: Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natelegawa said Sunday that his country had proposed a hotline for the South China Sea where Asean members Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines and Vietnam have overlapp .....


China offers Cambodia US$53m to develop water resources

China offers Cambodia US$53m to develop water resources: Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao pledged 329 million yuan (US$53 million) in assistance to Cambodia on Sunday during a meeting with Prime Minister Hun Sen, a Cambodian official said. Ieng Sophalet, an assi .....


Bhumibol, Obama, Yingluck

Bhumibol, Obama, Yingluck:

President Barack Obama’s short stopover in Thailand was rich in political symbolism.
Coming two and a half years after Bangkok was torn apart by urban warfare, Obama’s visit signals just how quickly political stability has been restored following the election of Yingluck Shinawatra in July 2011.
Over the past month or so there has been more than the usual chatter about the prospect of a military coup against Yingluck but it would be a brave or, more plausibly, foolish general who would challenge Yingluck’s legitimacy. Domestically, her diversion of tax-payers money to rice farmers continues to infuriate the commentariat but holding firm to Thaksin Shinawatra’s legacy of populism will do her no political harm. Faster than expected economic growth is also helping to secure her domestic authority.
On a broader stage, Obama’s visit is another sign that Yingluck is internationally accepted as a leader in her own right, further weakening the claim that she is a puppet of her exiled brother.
Prior to the meeting with Yingluck, there was an audience with King Bhumibol, in which Obama presented a photo album featuring the King’s meetings with former U.S. Presidents. This was a noteworthy encounter at many levels. In recent years rumours about the king’s health have been even more popular than rumours about military intervention. Lately there has been talk that the king’s condition is very fragile indeed. This very public appearance will, if only briefly, silence the rumours.  The televised encounter between two very different heads of state was a public relations triumph of royal persistence. Thai royalty thrives on auspicious imagery and, for some, the audience with the all-powerful Obama will help to prolong the magic.
But the montage of images—Obama with the ailing King at Bangkok’s Siriraj Hospital; Obama with a beaming Yingluck at Government House—also spoke to Thailand’s contemporary transition…
Read the full story here.

Red Shirts in Bang Pla

Red Shirts in Bang Pla:

On Sunday, 18 November 2012, about 40,000 Red Shirts from central Thailand gathered at a United Front for Democracy against Dictatorship (UDD) stage in Bang Pla, Samut Prakan, close to Bangkok. With all the buzz over Obama’s visit and Pitak Siam’s looming rally, it appears to have escaped the attention of most media that this, together with the recent UDD rally in Udon Thani have been by the by far biggest Red Shirt gatherings in more than a year.

Most parents do not want their children to become lawmakers

Most parents do not want their children to become lawmakers: Most parents and new couples do not want their children or future children to become lawmakers because of the growing negative perception of the profession, a survey reveals. The Indonesian Survey ...

Pontianak to use Internet to register voters

Pontianak to use Internet to register voters: The Pontianak mayoralty in West Kalimantan is exploring the possibility of using the Internet to register eligible voters for the upcoming mayoral election.The local chapter of the General Elections ...

Beef disappears from Jakarta’s wet markets

Beef disappears from Jakarta’s wet markets: Since Friday, beef kiosks in the capital’s wet markets have stood empty after the city’s beef sellers staged a walk-out that left many Jakartans stunned.The traders said their strike was in ...

Filipino meals: Isa pa (One more), please!

Filipino meals: Isa pa (One more), please!:
By: Joan Mae Soco-Bantayan

Philippine Food, By: Philippine Department of Tourism
Philippine Food, By: Philippine Department of Tourism
Filipinos are food lovers! They take regular meals thrice a day; one in the morning (around 8:00 am), another at noon (12:00 nn), and one more for dinner. Aside from that, they have in-between meals and snacks which they call merienda. The country’s staple food is rice, so expect having rice every meal if you plan to dine in local style.

So, if you’re on the road to Philippines, be sure to open up your palette and get ready for a gastronomic romance with the country.

The perfect breakfast: TAPSILOG, By: Shubert Ciencia
The perfect breakfast: TAPSILOG, By: Shubert Ciencia
  • Garlic rice matched with beef tapa and egg sunny side up is known as TAPSILOG – The name is a contraption of these three recipes, Garlic rice (Sinangag), Beef Tapa (Tapa), and Egg (Itlog). Filipinos call cured beef (muton or venison) Tapa. They slice it into thin pieces and preserve it with salt and other spices. For many, this type of meal is served on the table as a sign of abundance. If you don’t mind adding up carbs, then this is one meal you should try. This meal is best when coupled with native brewed coffee.

  • Dried Fish with rice – There are a good variety of fried rice in the Philippines, all referred to as Sinangag. But in the Philippines, there is nothing more delectable than combining dried fish with tomato and cured vinegar. There are many rice dishes with meat and sausages, but for the common masses fried “tinapa” (smoked fish) or “tuyo” and “daing” (dried fish) is the usual viand. Often, these are also the most tasty!

  • Puto Maya (Sticky Rice) with Tableya Drink (Native Cacao Drink) – This delightful combo is probably the best pair up that you can have after a night of booze and laughter. It is cooked in a claypot steamer with coconut milk and ginger. The result is a wonderfully soothing sweet rice mixture wrapped up in banana leaves.

Adobo, the Philippines' national stew, By: Patricia Feaster
Adobo, the Philippines' national stew, By: Patricia Feaster
  • Adobo – If you enjoy pork, then adobo is the dish to satisfy your cravings and increase your appetite. Adobo is pork cooked in soy sauce and native vinegar, seasoned with spices and herbs.Adobo also comes in a chicken version and sometimes with vegetables or seafood. Adobo has been called the quintessential Philippine stew, served with rice both at daily meals and at feasts. It is commonly packed for Filipino travelers because it keeps well without refrigeration. Its relatively long shelf-life is due to one of its primary ingredients, vinegar, which inhibits the growth of bacteria.

The inside of a balut, By: Marshall Astor
The inside of a balut, By: Marshall Astor
  • Street food – the Philippines has caught up with the street food craze all over Asia. Filipinos are particular when it comes to food handling and you can trust that the dishes are tasty and not like anything you’ve ever had in your area!

    One of the most infamous dishes commonly sold as streetfood is balut, fertilized duck embryo that is boiled and eaten in the shell. It is commonly sold as streetfood in the Philippines. The ideal balut is 17 days old, at which point it is said to be balut sa puti (“wrapped in white”). The chick inside is not old enough to show its beak, feathers or claws, and the bones are undeveloped.

    Balut are thought to be highly nutritious and aphrodisiac. Most visitors will probably find this very hard to swallow…Don’t worry though, the Philippines have a lot to offer foodwise, so it’s easy to steer clear from the occasional dish that seems a bit too exotic.

Indonesian Islamic Parties at Crucial Crossroads - Jakarta Globe

Indonesian Islamic Parties at Crucial Crossroads - Jakarta Globe:

Jakarta Globe

Indonesian Islamic Parties at Crucial Crossroads
Jakarta Globe
This 2009 file photo shows thousands of Islamic political party Prosperous Justice Party (PKS) members at a campaign at Bung Karno Stadium in Jakarta. If elections were held today, each of four Islamic parties in Parliament would garner less than 5 ...

Indonesia rights group calls on Singapore to protect domestic workers - Bikya Masr

Indonesia rights group calls on Singapore to protect domestic workers - Bikya Masr:

Jakarta Globe

Indonesia rights group calls on Singapore to protect domestic workers
Bikya Masr
JAKARTA: A Southeast Asian human rights organization has called on the Singapore government to do more to ensure domestic workers in the country are protected through labor laws and policing. A paper published by the National Population and Talent ...
Singapore Urged to Improve Foreign Maids' Work ConditionsJakarta Globe

all 3 news articles »

New Poll Puts Indonesia’s Subianto Ahead in Presidential Race - Southeast Asia Real Time - WSJ

New Poll Puts Indonesia’s Subianto Ahead in Presidential Race - Southeast Asia Real Time - WSJ

Plan calls for Indonesian guest workers - The Australian Financial Review

Plan calls for Indonesian guest workers - The Australian Financial Review:

The Australian Financial Review

Plan calls for Indonesian guest workers
The Australian Financial Review
US President Barack Obama (C) smiles as he poses for a photo with (L-R) Japan's Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda, Indonesia's President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, Brunei's Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah, Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen, China's Premier ...
Businesses agree on Indonesian guest worker planBusiness Spectator
Asia link reinforced by skilled workersThe Australian
Keating on IndonesiaThe Interpreter
The Conversation -Foreign Policy (blog)
all 24 news articles »

Turkey cannot be model of democracy without a free press - Huffington Post (blog)

Turkey cannot be model of democracy without a free press - Huffington Post (blog):

Turkey cannot be model of democracy without a free press
Huffington Post (blog)
More reporters are jailed in Turkey than in any other country in the world. According to CPJ's recent survey, at least 61 are imprisoned directly for their work, representing the second biggest media crackdown in the 27 years we have been documenting ...

and more »

Iraqi president heads to Kurdish area over tensions between Kurds and central government - The Washington Post

Iraqi president heads to Kurdish area over tensions between Kurds and central government - The Washington Post

Somalia: Puntland Nab Al Shabaab Agents and a Cache of Explosives

Somalia: Puntland Nab Al Shabaab Agents and a Cache of Explosives: [Garowe Online]Galkayo -Puntland forces captured two top Al Shabaab agents and a cache of explosives in Galkayo on Saturday, Garowe Online reports.

Nigeria: No Negotiations With Boko Haram - Jonathan

Nigeria: No Negotiations With Boko Haram - Jonathan: [Vanguard]Lagos -President Goodluck Jonathan, yesterday, dismissed insinuations of a secret dialogue between the administration and the Boko Haram just as he declared former President Olusegun Obasanjo's invasion of Odi in Bayelsa State in 1999 as a failure that did not help to curb militancy in the Niger Delta region.

South Africa: Saving the Strawman - Jacob Zuma On the Skids

South Africa: Saving the Strawman - Jacob Zuma On the Skids: [Daily Maverick]As more ANC structures come out in support of President Jacob Zuma’s second term, his presidency is plunging into further crisis, forcing his loyalists to undertake extreme measures to try to save him. Zuma, accustomed to others taking the fall for him and doing his bidding, may have landed himself in another pot of boiling water when he told Parliament that he was paying off a bond on his Nkandla homestead. Can the Teflon man survive once more or could he be facing a break point for the first ti

Sudan: Sudan Warns Juba Against Ruining Addis Ababa Deal

Sudan: Sudan Warns Juba Against Ruining Addis Ababa Deal: [Sudan Tribune]Khartoum -The speaker of the Sudanese parliament, Ahmad Ibrahim Al-Tahir, has warned South Sudan against causing the collapse of the cooperation deals it signed with his country two months ago, accusing Juba of continuing to support rebel groups in Sudan.

Morocco moves to set up military field hospital in Gaza

Morocco moves to set up military field hospital in Gaza: Morocco on Sunday said it would set up a military field hospital in the Gaza Strip, in the first move of its kind by an Arab or Muslim state.

Palace spokesperson Abdelhak Lamrini said in a statement, carried by the official MAP news agency, that King Mohammed VI “gave his orders to immediately

Syrian Chief Justice announces defection from regime

Syrian Chief Justice announces defection from regime: The Chief Justice of the court of Deir al-Zour in eastern Syria, Ali al-Aoun, announced his defection from Bashar al-Assad’s regime citing the systematic killing of the Syrian people.

“The Syrian regime is embarking on a genocidal campaign against the people with the help of its allies,”

Lebanese army dismantles rockets aimed at Israel

Lebanese army dismantles rockets aimed at Israel: Lebanese military experts on Monday dismantled two Katyusha rockets that were equipped with timers and ready to fire at Israel, a senior Lebanese security official said.

The official said the rockets found near the south Lebanon village of Halta were set up about four kilometers

Colombia rebels declare unilateral ceasefire

Colombia rebels declare unilateral ceasefire: Two-month truce declared as FARC rebels meet in Cuba with peace negotiators in the latest attempt to end the conflict.

Palestinians protest in the West Bank

Palestinians protest in the West Bank: Two deaths attributed to shooting by Israeli security forces as anger over Gaza bombardment leads to clashes.

Thanksgiving gone Google

Thanksgiving gone Google: Thanksgiving is about sharing, giving thanks and connecting with family and friends. Yet, all too often we get caught up in the holiday rat race—the mad dash to the airport, the supermarket, the mall—and forget to take time out to enjoy the holiday.



To kick off the holidays this year, we wanted to crank up the fun and tone down the stress. So we did a little planning for you and created a one-stop-Google-shop to get you through the week.



Cooking

With tools like recipe search and YouTube cooking videos that show you the right (and wrong) ways to carve a deep-fried turkey, Google can help you master your Thanksgiving meal with lots of laughs along the way. You can also join members of the Google+ cooking community for cooking lessons over live hangouts. Learn how to make new dishes like pumpkin brulee for the sweet tooths at the table or mix things up this year with a vegan-friendly feast.





Connecting

Though we can’t control the skies and guarantee a turbulence-free flight home, we can help minimize the time you spend waiting around, with real-time flight updates. Download the Google Search App to get flight updates on the go. And don’t forget to download TV shows, music and more from Google Play to stay entertained on board.





Of course, for those of you who couldn’t make it home this year, you can still get everyone together with Google+ Hangouts. Try scheduling a hangout to video chat with up to nine people you’d otherwise miss this holiday.



Sports

Whether you’re rooting for the Cowboys or the Jets, Texans or the Patriots, we can help you stay on top of all the scores and stats. If you’re on the run, ask for real time scores or game details using Voice Search on the Google Search App.





Shopping

This year Black Friday starts on Thursday, with Wal-Mart, Target and Toys R Us all kicking off sales on Thanksgiving night. To help you get a head start on the deal-seekers, try our new shortlists, a super-simple alternative to sharing lists of links or bookmarks, as well as 360-degree imagery for many of the season’s hottest toys on Google Shopping. For those of you brave enough to face the masses at the store, use indoor Google Maps to get in and get out of the mall fast.





By putting all your favorite Google features in one place, we hope we can help make things just a little bit easier this Thanksgiving—giving you more time to make memories with those who matter most and enjoy every last bite of that much deserved pumpkin pie. Visit our Thanksgiving hub to get started.



Posted by Carolyn Witte, Search Marketing Team

UNHCR tackles problem of shelter in Yemen refugee camp

UNHCR tackles problem of shelter in Yemen refugee camp: After four years living in a tent, Faduma and her children are among the families who have moved into 300 newly built houses

CLIMATE CHANGE: A four-degree warmer world

CLIMATE CHANGE: A four-degree warmer world:
JOHANNESBURG, 19 November 2012 (IRIN) - A new report released just days ahead of the UN climate change talks to be held in Doha, Qatar, paints an unnerving picture of a four-degree Celsius warmer world by the end of the century.

OPT: Gaza hospitals need more drugs

OPT: Gaza hospitals need more drugs:
GAZA, 19 November 2012 (IRIN) - The nurses at Shifa hospital in the Gaza Strip have seen bombing casualties before, but never on this scale.

“I was here when the [23-day] 2008-09 war took place, and I think this one is more difficult in [terms of] injuries and the type of demanding work we do”, said Tal'at Al Ejla, a 30-year-old nurse.

Something to smile about: A 5,000-mile walk across Asia, guided by Google Maps

Something to smile about: A 5,000-mile walk across Asia, guided by Google Maps: Inspiration comes in many shapes and forms. For U.S. Marine Sgt. Winston Fiore, it was a news article about the International Children’s Surgical Foundation (ICSF) and Dr. Geoff Williams, who provides free facial-reconstructive surgeries for children with cleft lips/palates in developing countries. Although cleft palates are quite correctable, if left untreated the deformity can cause serious health issues. Many children don’t have the surgery because the cost of each procedure ($250 USD) is out of reach for their families.





Inspired to do something to help, Winston set out on a 5,000-mile trek across Southeast Asia to raise money and awareness for the ICSF—a mission he dubbed Smile Trek. Armed with sturdy boots, a 20-pound vest carrying essentials and an Android phone with Google Maps, Winston set off on his mission in October 2011. In the last year, he has walked (yes, walked!) through Brunei, China, Laos, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand, and Vietnam. Along the way he’s met countless individuals who have contributed to his cause, whether it was a place to stay, a hot meal or a monetary donation on his website.



Trekking along: Winston, standing in front of a durian fruit stand near Sematan, the westernmost town of Malaysian Borneo


Out on the road, Winston’s Android phone and Google Maps became “the hub” of his entire operation. He used Google Maps to find accurate and easy-to-use walking directions everywhere he went, whether it was through remote villages and farms, down tiny dirt roads, or across rice paddies and desolate sugar cane fields. “Walking directions in Google Maps were critical to my trek. The directions were accurate and efficient—it’s essential to take the shortest route when you’re walking 20-25 miles each day,” said Winston. “But the best part was being routed onto roads and trails through areas I otherwise never would have discovered with, say, driving directions, or even a physical map.”



View the complete map of Winston's journey on his site


In addition to using Google Maps, Winston relied on many other Google products during his trek. He used Google Latitude to keep his family, friends and supporters informed of his whereabouts, and MyTracks to record his speed, distance and the places he visited. He also used Google Translate to communicate with locals, and in one case found it essential: when bit by a stray dog outside of Bangkok, he typed "I got bit by a dog, can someone take me to a hospital?" into his app. A taxi driver took him to the hospital, where he got 11 shots!



Today, after walking 5,000 miles in 408 days, Sgt. Fiore completes his journey, with more than $65,000 raised for ICSF. The money will help to fund more than 200 life-saving surgeries for children in Southeast Asia and other parts of the world. If you’d like to contribute to the International Children’s Surgery Fund and Winston Fiore’s effort, we encourage you to visit smiletrek.org.



Posted by Jennifer J. Chen, Product Manager, Google Maps