Dec 8, 2012

NGO Director Expelled

NGO Director Expelled:
Laos said Friday it is expelling the director of a Swiss development organization for criticizing Laos in a letter to donors that says the country's one-party regime stifles debate and creates a hostile environment for aid groups.
Anne-Sophie Gindroz, the country director for Helvetas Swiss Intercooperation, which works on agricultural development in the country, was given 48 hours to leave Laos in a notice on Friday from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
The notice said she was being expelled because the Lao government was “dismayed” by her “improper behavior” and “unconstructive attitude” towards Laos, citing a letter she had written to donor countries and organizations ahead of an annual meeting on aid to the country.
“I have no regret about what I have said, done or written. And I will continue to have my convictions and use my freedom to defend the freedom of others,” Gindroz said in an email to friends and colleagues on Friday.
In her November letter ahead of the 2012 Roundtable Implementation Meeting in Vientiane, part of an annual process for dialogue on foreign aid strategy, Gindroz had criticized the Lao government as creating a hostile environment for development and civil society groups by stifling freedom of expression and association.
“We are working in a challenging environment: this is a country governed by a single-party regime, where there is little space for meaningful democratic debate, and when taking advantage of that limited space, repercussions follow,” she said in the letter.
She had also criticized the selection of civil society groups invited to participate in the Round Table process, suggesting that only those who cooperated with the Lao government and refrained from speaking out against poor policies were allowed to participate.
At the end of this year’s Nov. 23 meeting, 42 organizations and 35 countries who donate to Laos agreed to impose stricter conditions on aid to ensure efficiency and transparency, particularly on infrastructure projects, to deter possible corruption and ensure aid projects benefit the Lao people.
'Anti-government campaign'
The notice of Gindroz’s expulsion, sent from the foreign ministry’s Department of International Organizations General Director Phavanh Nuanthasing to Helvetas’s executive director in Zurich, said her letter on the meeting had “demonstrated her explicit rejection of the Lao PDR’s Constitution and law, particularly its political system.”
It added that she was no longer welcome in the country because she had conducted a “prejudicial anti–Lao Government campaign.”
But the ministry stressed that her expulsion was not an action against Helvetas and asked the organization to send a new country director “to continue Helvetas’s good work.”
Helvetas has worked since 2001 with rural communities and farmers in Laos, which is one of the poorest countries in Asia.
Long reliant on foreign aid, Laos is aiming to graduate from U.N. “least-developed country” status by 2020.
Reported by RFA’s Lao service. Written in English by Rachel Vandenbrink.

New Power Plant Falls Short

New Power Plant Falls Short:
North Korea’s capital is experiencing severe power shortages this winter, in part due to the inability of a recently completed hydroelectric dam to operate at full capacity during the annual dry season, according to sources inside the country.

Ordinary citizens in Pyongyang, where residents normally enjoy one of the most reliable power supplies in any city across the impoverished nation, are now facing as little as five hours a day of electricity, a source who lives in the capital told RFA’s Korean Service this week.

The power supply in the region had been significantly more consistent since the completion in April of the Huichon No. 2 Power Station—a hydroelectric plant located at a dam in Jagang province, about 175 kilometers (109 miles) northwest of the capital.

But the Pyongyang resident, who spoke to RFA on condition of anonymity during a recent trip to China, said that the dry season had rapidly depleted the dam’s water supply, hampering its rate of operation.

“The situation of Pyongyang’s electricity—which seemed okay until October—has returned to pre-dam levels,” the source said.

“I heard it is because of a lack of water during the winter.”

According to a report by the Associated Press, North Korean officials had touted the dam’s ability to provide “half of Pyongyang’s energy needs” as recently as June.

But even then, the AP reported, citing the plant’s general manager Kim Su Gil, drought had left the river above the dam too low for the power station to reach full capacity.

Select priorities

With the further lack of water during the winter dry season, the source in Pyongyang said, the dam was able to provide regular power to only a few select buildings in the capital, which included monuments to the Kim family regime and dwellings for the city’s elite.

“Only the Kim idolization facilities, apartments for Central Party officials, the [43-story] Koryo Hotel and [the new] Changjeon St. [housing development] have 24-hour electricity, while the districts where ordinary people live can only use electricity for five hours a day,” the source said.

North Korea maintains gathering places for citizens to show their allegiance to ruler Kim Jong Un, his father Kim Jong Il, who died of a heart attack in December last year, and his grandfather Kim Il Sung, the nation’s founder.

The 100,000-home development underway on Changjeon St., which former leader Kim Jong Il ordered after reportedly declaring the streets of the capital to be “pitiful” upon his return from a trip to China, and the Koryo Hotel, the second-largest operating hotel in the city, are two of Pyongyang’s few showpieces.

Electricity for ordinary residents is provided only late at night or around dawn so that people cannot use it during the evening when they really need it, the source said.

He added that people in the capital had come to see the preferential treatment for the city’s elite as “severe discrimination.”

Even in Sinuiju city—which neighbors China’s Dandong city and has traditionally enjoyed a reliable power supply due to its designation as an experimental market economy zone in North Pyongan province—ordinary residents are being limited to five hours a day of electricity, the source said.

He said an area of the city near a statue of Kim Il Sung was recently enjoying 24-hour electricity.

Electric blanket decree


Another source in Pyongyang told RFA’s Korean Service that even while residents of the capital were experiencing harsh power shortages, authorities had recently issued a decree allowing people to make use of electric blankets during the cold winter months.

“The North Korean government has allowed people to use electric blankets, which had been prohibited for a while due to the shortage of electricity,” the source said on condition of anonymity.

“People hadn’t followed the policy anyway and were using electric blankets secretly, so I think the government gave up on the prohibition and decided to play it up as a benefit from Kim Jong Un,” he said.

According to the AP, the Huichon No. 2 Power Station is North Korea's largest construction project since the 1980s and is expected to be expanded to 12 stations by 2015.

The country suffers from widespread electricity shortages and is now moving towards hydroelectric power as a supplement for its dwindling coal resources.

Reported by Joon Ho Kim for RFA’s Korean Service. Translated by Ju Hyeon Park. Written in English by Joshua Lipes.

Lawmakers Back Mekong Dam

Lawmakers Back Mekong Dam:
The Lao National Assembly—widely seen as a rubber-stamp parliament—has thrown its support behind a controversial dam under construction on the Mekong River during a debate of the legislative body’s most recent session, drawing criticism over the project’s potential regional impact.

According to state media, members of the National Assembly were invited to “debate” whether to adopt the Xayaburi Dam project, which was given a green light by the Lao government in November despite protests from neighboring riparian countries and environmental groups.

Not a single lawmaker spoke out against the government decision to build the dam during the Thursday and Friday meetings of the National Assembly, which consists of 113 members of the ruling Lao People's Revolutionary Party and two independents.

One speaker commended the government for “convincing” neighboring countries and environmentalists that the dam will “not have any adverse impact on humans or the environment,” state media said.

The National Assembly is convening from Dec. 5-20 and usually votes upon issues raised at the end of each session. Political dissent is almost unheard of in one-party communist Laos.

Arne Trandem, the Southeast Asia program director for global conservation group International Rivers, criticized the legislature for supporting the Lao government in proceeding with the dam.

"The Xayaburi Dam is a threat to the development of Laos and other countries in the region,” Trandem said.

Environmental concern about hydropower projects in Southeast Asia have focused on the Xayaburi dam, the first across the main stream of the Lower Mekong.

Laos held a groundbreaking ceremony in November for the U.S. $3.5 billion hydropower megadam, which has faced sharp criticism from downstream Cambodia and Vietnam.

Environmental groups say the dam, the first on the main stream of the Lower Mekong, will block fish migration and sediment flow, affecting the millions of people in Southeast Asia who rely on the river’s ecosystem for their food and livelihoods.

The 1,200 megawatt dam is being financed by companies in Thailand, where 95 percent of the dam’s electricity will be sent, and built by the Bangkok-based Ch. Karnchang in cooperation with Laos’s Xayaburi Power Co.

Mekong dams


Critics fear the Xayaburi project will pave the way for nearly a dozen other dams that have been proposed on the mainstream Lower Mekong, in addition to five already built on the upper part of the river in China.

The Mekong River Commission (MRC), an intergovernmental body including Cambodia, Laos, Thailand, and Vietnam which manages development along Southeast Asia's main waterway, ruled at a meeting on the Xayaburi dam last year that there is “a need for further study on the sustainable development and management of the Mekong River including impact from mainstream hydropower development projects."

The decision followed an earlier recommendation by an expert study group for a 10-year moratorium on all mainstream Mekong dams due to a need for further research on their potentially catastrophic environmental and socioeconomic impact.

Environmental groups have said that adequate studies on dam’s impact have not been conducted and the effects on downstream communities have not been studied.

Reported by RFA’s Lao Service. Written in English by Joshua Lipes.

‘I Felt So Humiliated’

‘I Felt So Humiliated’:
The following is an open letter circulated on the Internet by a young ethnic Mongolian woman named Gowaa, which addresses her personal experience in fighting for the right to use Mongolian language for official government documents in China’s Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region. Mongolian is recognized as an official language according to China's "Regional National Autonomy Law."

A Letter to My Brother (1)

Dear Brother,

How are you?

Since you left, it has been snowing and the temperature has dropped abnormally, making me put on my thick winter coat. The place where you are must be colder than here. Make sure you take good care of yourself and don’t catch a cold.

Today, as you suggested, I went to the Bureau of Inner Mongolia Daily and obtained the newspaper that published my declaration of a lost tax certificate. Your friend was very kind and treated me as his own sister, giving me two copies of the newspaper. I happily put the newspaper into my pocket and went to the Tax Bureau. Upon entering, an unkind elderly lady as cold as ice asked me in standard Mandarin, “What business are you coming for?”

“How are you? I lost my company tax certificate, and would like to apply for a replacement,” I answered in Chinese with a heavy Mongolian accent.

“Did you publish the lost certificate declaration? Did you pay the fine? Give me all the proof!” She extended her hand stiffly toward me, urging me to submit all the documents immediately. I put the newspaper into her hand. She snatched it quickly, held it high, and started talking to her coworkers.

“My goodness! Look at this! She published it in a Mongolian newspaper!” Her bursting laughter surprised me. People in the hall all turned their eyes toward me. While I was completely puzzled and not sure what to do, she returned my newspaper and told me to go to the other window, where her coworkers were laughing along with her at the Mongolian newspaper.

I went to that window as directed. One of her coworkers looked at my newspaper and yelled, “This is not acceptable. It must be a Chinese newspaper! This is common sense! Don’t you understand?”

Completely forgetting your advice of being calm in any situation in order not to make things worse, I fought back: “What is this 'common sense'? Isn’t the only requirement that it has to be a municipal or higher level of newspaper? This is the Inner Mongolia Daily, and this is the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region! Why is it unacceptable?”

This stirred them up. “A Mongolian newspaper is unacceptable! Absolutely unacceptable!” They fired up their objections from all directions toward me. I came out of the office because I knew I couldn’t convince them; they would reject anything I said.

My dear brother, I cried. I felt like they were still laughing at me. But I collected myself shortly after the incident, confidently walked back to their office, and told them, “Can you do me a favor? Please show me an official document stating that a declaration published in a Mongolian newspaper is unacceptable. It would be even better if you can print it out for me.

“We don’t have such a document,” one of them answered.

I didn’t give up. “So, whatever you say is the law?”

“No, I didn’t mean that. What I am saying is that a Mongolian newspaper is unacceptable. It must be a Chinese newspaper,” he said.

Giving up this time, I walked out of the office and telephoned your friend in the Bureau of Inner Mongolia Daily. He was even more outraged by this than I was, and promised to speak with the Tax Bureau over the phone. After about ten minutes, he called me back and said, “My sister, we are living on our own land. We should not be afraid of them. I spoke to them very strictly. You should be able to complete the paperwork tomorrow. I will escalate this to a higher level. Things can’t be like this forever.”

I decided to return the next day.

I thought about many things today. Until now, I hadn’t had this kind of personal experience since you have done everything for me in the past. I felt helpless today, and could not do anything about this but wipe away my tears. I was not aware that we Mongolians are today subjected to humiliation on our own land. Their ugly faces and humiliating laughter still haunt my mind.

Brother, I miss you so much. I wrote this letter to you today because I felt so humiliated and discriminated against. I know you are very busy with your studies, so I will post this letter on my blog to share with others as well.

Wish you the best!

Your sister

November 12, 2012


------------------------------------


A Letter to My Brother (2)

Dear Brother,

How are you doing today?

To save your money I kept our earlier phone conversation brief. In this letter, I would like to tell you in detail what happened to me today.

This afternoon, I went to the Tax Bureau again. Another lady with even colder attitude asked me in standard Mandarin, "What is your business here?"

"How are you?” I said. “I lost my company tax certificate, and would like to apply for replacement." I spoke in Chinese with an apparent Mongolian accent.

"Are you the one who published the lost certificate declaration in a Mongolian newspaper and came here yesterday?" she asked. As I remember, she was not among those who were laughing at me yesterday, but she was able to identify me clearly. I guess yesterday's incident was heard by many of them.

"Yes, I am," I replied with confidence.

"Little Li, the one is here," she said to one of her coworkers, directing me to go to Window 4.

Another elderly woman who I did not recognize from yesterday spoke to me with a surprisingly kind attitude. While I started filling out the necessary paperwork I noticed that the "enemy" who gave me a hard time yesterday was also there, laughing and chatting as if nothing had ever happened. Everything went smoothly. I completed the paperwork in half an hour including copying some papers.

I was able to get all the necessary documents, and walked out happily. On my way home, I telephoned your friend in the Bureau of Inner Mongolia Daily and informed him of the triumphant return. He simply said, "This is how it should be!"

Ok, let me stop here and save your precious time.

Wish you the best,

Your sister

November 13, 2012

Translation by Southern Mongolia Human Rights In China (SMHRIC).

Lawyers Slam Forced Birth Control

Lawyers Slam Forced Birth Control:
China's draconian family planning controls continue unabated, with women routinely required to use intrauterine contraception as a condition of registering their first-born child, rights lawyers and activists said.

Twelve women rights lawyers, including Beijing-based Huang Yizhi, wrote a letter this week to the public security ministry and the population and family committee, calling for the act of registering a baby in one's town of origin to be de-linked from the compulsory fitting of intrauterine devices (IUDs).

"In China, babies must be entered onto the household registration documents soon after they are born," Huang said in an interview. "This gives them a 'hukou' in that locality, and most babies must be registered within a month of birth."

"When the mothers take their babies to be registered, they are required to have an IUD fitted," she said. "This is a coercive requirement for contraceptive purposes, to stop them having a second child."

Forced sterilizations and other forms of official abuse are still commonly reported in rural areas of China, where family planning officials try to avoid fines from higher authorities if their region exceeds local birth quotas.

Unsanctioned births under China's population controls usually incur large, and often arbitrary fines, as well as the loss of access to certain welfare services.

Huang said that Chinese law clearly states that changes to household registration documents must be made with no conditions attached.

In practice, however, many local governments have adopted the tactic of forcing parents to make a trip to their local family planning bureau before they would add newborns to the registration booklet.
Women's rights

"We think that babies born in China should have the right of registration, and that making this conditional on having an IUD fitted has no basis in law," Huang said.

"This practice is curbing women's reproductive rights; after all, men can use contraception too -- why do they insist that the woman have an IUD fitted?"

Guangzhou-based rights lawyer Tang Jingling said local family planning officials would often use any means at their disposal to meet birth quotas imposed on them from above.

"They use coercive measures by making one thing tied up with another," he said. "This forces citizens to accept unjust and inhumane rules."

"This method of law enforcement should be immediately abandoned."

Tang said some parents who had succeeded in having their babies registered without fitting an IUD were faced with the same demand when the time came to enroll them in a local school.

"This sort of conditional practice happens across many areas of Chinese law enforcement, so that people's interests are affected when it comes to sending their kid to school, or [their elderly relatives] claiming their old age pension," he said.

He said the sole purpose of household registration should be to establish a child's date and place of birth, and its family relationships.

Under the "hukou" registration system which dates back to the Mao era of collective farming and a planned economy, every household accesses services, including healthcare and education, from its place of registration.

Reported by Gao Shan for RFA's Mandarin service. Translated and written in English by Luisetta Mudie.

Hun Sen Mocks Land Dispute

Hun Sen Mocks Land Dispute:
Prime Minister Hun Sen mocked a group of ethnic minority villagers who tried to petition him on Friday about their land dispute in northern Cambodia’s Rattanakiri province, after they were stopped from presenting their complaint during his visit on a land-titling campaign.
Hun Sen was attending an event in Andoung Meas district to distribute deeds for land that his volunteer youth movement had been sent to measure for local villagers, when four representatives from a Charai hill tribe community in neighboring Bar Keo district came to present him with their petition.
The four were representing some 200 families involved in the dispute with a Cambodian company whose rubber plantation, they say, had been encroaching on their community-owned indigenous land after the company bought 10 hectares (25 acres) of property from nearby villages.
The company, Kouv Kem Leng, has banned villagers from cultivating their land and local authorities have failed to resolve their dispute, according to one of the representatives, Hang Ror.
The activists wanted to hand their petition to Hun Sen, but were stopped by security guards at the event, Hang Ror said.
"I wanted to hand the petition over to Samdech [Hun Sen] to have him review the case but the guards searched me," he told RFA’s Khmer Service, using the prime minister’s honorific title.
Later, during his speech at the land-titling ceremony, Hun Sen mocked the Bar Keo activists for saying that the government should not develop the indigenous areas in order to preserve their culture.
"I was so angry. Do you want to have development or do you want to have the indigenous people collecting stuff in the forest?" he asked.
But in the same speech, he also pledged to protect indigenous land and culture.
He said rubber plantations are part of how the government is working to develop remote areas in the province, which is home to many indigenous communities and hill tribes.
Land disputes
Hun Sen was on a tour of Rattanakiri to inaugurate a new national highway linking the province to Stung Treng province, and to distribute land titles.
Over 10,000 land titles have been distributed across the country since June when Hun Sen’s program to deploy student volunteers to measure private land began, as part of a campaign to address land disputes across the country.
Land disputes are a bitter problem for Cambodia, where rural villagers and urban dwellers alike have been mired in conflicts that the U.N.’s special rapporteur for human rights to Cambodia has warned could threaten the country’s stability.
The country’s land issues date from the 1975-79 Khmer Rouge regime, which forced large-scale evacuations and relocations, followed by a period of mass confusion over land rights and the formation of squatter communities when the refugees returned in the 1990s after a decade of civil war.
Hun Sen vowed last month that his government would help to resolve land disputes, but only those in which nongovernmental organizations or political parties had not become involved, warning victims of land disputes not to turn to such organizations for support.
He later walked back his criticism of such groups, but reiterated that they had worsened the country’s land problems by meddling in land conflicts.
According to local watchdog Licadho, at least 400,000 people have been affected by land disputes over the past decade in just half of Cambodia’s provinces, mostly after land concessions were granted to private companies in their area.
Indigenous land
Rights groups say indigenous communities can be particularly vulnerable to losing their land.
Penn Bonnar, senior investigator for the local rights group Adhoc, which monitors land disputes in the country, said indigenous land protection is important for the communities and to preserve their culture and livelihoods.
He said that since 2003, thousands of hectares (thousands of acres) of indigenous land have been encroached upon and urged the government to protect land belonging to indigenous people.
"So far we have seen forest destruction committed arbitrarily within their rotation plantations but when [the communities] file complaints to the court, the court threatens to imprison them.”
“We are demanding the government resolve land disputes without discrimination," he said.
Reported by Sok Ratha for RFA’s Khmer Service. Translated by Samean Yun. Written in English by Rachel Vandenbrink.

EWC Study - Mobilizing Resources, Building Coalitions: Local Power in Indonesia | East-West Center | www.eastwestcenter.org

Mobilizing Resources, Building Coalitions: Local Power in Indonesia | East-West Center | www.eastwestcenter.org

Dec 6, 2012

Around 350 Perish in Philippine Typhoon, 400 Missing

Around 350 Perish in Philippine Typhoon, 400 Missing:
Residents cross a flooded road which was destroyed after Typhoon Bopha hit Compostela Valley. (Photo: Reuters)
Residents cross a flooded road which was destroyed after Typhoon Bopha hit Compostela Valley. (Photo: Reuters)
NEW BATAAN, Philippines—Stunned parents searching for missing children examined a row of mud-stained bodies covered with banana leaves while survivors dried their soaked belongings on roadsides as the death toll from the southern Philippines’ powerful typhoon climbed to about 350 people on Thursday with nearly 400 missing.
The Office of Civil Defense reported that more bodies were retrieved from hardest-hit Compostela Valley and Davao Oriental as well as six other provinces.
At least 200 of the victims died in Compostela Valley alone when Typhoon Bopha struck on Tuesday, including 78 villagers and soldiers who perished in a flash flood that swamped two emergency shelters and a military camp.
“Entire families may have been washed away,” said Interior Secretary Mar Roxas, who visited New Bataan on Wednesday. The farming town of 45,000 people was a muddy wasteland of collapsed houses and coconut and banana trees felled by Bopha’s ferocious winds.
Bodies of victims were laid on the ground for viewing by people searching for missing relatives. Some were badly mangled after being dragged by raging floodwaters over rocks and other debris. A man sprayed insecticide on the remains to keep away swarms of flies.
A father wept when he found the body of his child after lifting a plastic cover. A mother, meanwhile, went away in tears, unable to find her missing children. “I have three children,” she said repeatedly, flashing three fingers before a TV cameraman.
Two men carried the mud-caked body of an unidentified girl that was covered with coconut leaves on a makeshift stretcher made from a blanket and wooden poles.
Dionisia Requinto felt lucky to have survived with her husband and their eight children after swirling flood waters surrounded their home. The 43-year-old said they escaped and made their way up a hill to safety, bracing themselves against boulders and fallen trees as they climbed.
“The water rose so fast,” she told The Associated Press. “It was horrible. I thought it was going to be our end.”
In nearby Davao Oriental, the coastal province first struck by the typhoon as it blew from the Pacific Ocean, at least 115 people perished, mostly in three towns so battered that it was hard to find any buildings with roofs remaining, provincial officer Freddie Bendulo and other officials said.
“We had a problem where to take the evacuees. All the evacuation centers have lost their roofs,” Davao Oriental Gov. Corazon Malanyaon said.
The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies issued an urgent appeal for US $4.8 million to help people directly affected by the typhoon.
The sun shined brightly for most of Wednesday, prompting residents to lay their soaked clothes, books and other belongings out on roadsides to dry and revealing the extent of the damage to farmland. Thousands of banana trees in one Compostela Valley plantation were toppled by the wind, the young bananas still wrapped in blue plastic covers.
But as night fell, however, rain started pouring again over New Bataan, triggering panic among some residents who feared a repeat of the previous day’s flash floods. Some carried whatever belongings they could as they hurried to nearby towns or higher ground.
After slamming into Davao Oriental and Compostela Valley, Bopha roared quickly across the southern Mindanao and central regions, knocking out power in two entire provinces, triggering landslides and leaving houses and plantations damaged. More than 170,000 fled to evacuation centers.
On Thursday, the typhoon was over the South China Sea west of Palawan province. It was blowing northwestward and could be headed to Vietnam or southern China, according to government forecasters.
The deaths came despite efforts by President Benigno Aquino III’s government to force residents out of high-risk communities as the typhoon approached.
Some 20 typhoons and storms lash the northern and central Philippines each year, but they rarely hit the vast southern Mindanao region where sprawling export banana plantations have been planted over the decades because it seldom experiences strong winds that could blow down the trees.
A rare storm in the south last December killed more than 1,200 people and left many more homeless.
The United States extended its condolences and offered to help its Asian ally deal with the typhoon’s devastation. It praised government efforts to minimize the deaths and damage.

Thais Celebrate 85th Birthday of Revered King

Thais Celebrate 85th Birthday of Revered King:
People hold pictures of Thailand's King Bhumibol Adulyadej as they wait for him to arrive at the Anantasamakom Throne Hall in Bangkok. (Photo: Reuters)
People hold pictures of Thailand’s King Bhumibol Adulyadej as they wait for him to arrive at the Anantasamakom Throne Hall in Bangkok. (Photo: Reuters)
BANGKOK—Vast crowds of devoted Thais turned out on Wednesday to catch a brief glimpse of their beloved King as the world’s longest-reigning monarch celebrated his 85th birthday with a rare public appearance.
King Bhumibol Adulyadej sat on a throne on a balcony overlooKing a plaza packed with a crowd that police estimated at 200,000 as he delivered a brief homily on national harmony.
Most in the crowd were dressed in the royal color of yellow, many waving Thai flags and flags adorned with the King’s insignia.
Respectfully silent during the monarch’s halting words, they shouted “Long live the King” afterward, as well as when he made his way to and from the ceremonial Ananta Samakhom Throne Hall.
The turnout was a vivid demonstration of the affection in which many hold the King, despite political turmoil in recent years that has raised doubts about the future of the monarchy.
The King’s infrequent public appearances are poignant, since he is very visibly infirm with age and uses a wheelchair. He has spent the last three years living in a hospital, where he sometimes carries out royal duties such as the swearing-in of high officials.
The King, who took the throne in 1946, was originally hospitalized in September 2009 with a lung inflammation. Official statements have said he remained at the hospital for physical therapy and nourishment to regain his strength.
Bhumibol’s family flanked him Wednesday for part of his appearance, including Crown Prince Vajiralongkorn, his son and heir-apparent. However, his wife, Queen Sirikit, 80, was absent from the ceremony.
The royal palace issued a statement saying the queen’s doctors advised her against attending as even standing by the King’s side for an extended period might be strenuous for her because she is weak. She suffered stroke-like symptoms in July.
Several spectators in the packed crowd fainted in the high heat and humidity and needed medical attention. The King’s occasional speeches in recent years have stressed the need for unity.
On Wednesday, he thanked people for coming, saying their apparent show of unity “delighted and encouraged” him.
“If Thai citizens still hold this virtue (harmony) in their hearts, there is hope that in whatever the situation, Thailand would surely get through it safely and stably,” he said.
He called on Buddha and holy spirits to bless the country and its people.
The King traditionally has played a conciliatory role in Thai society, and his decline in health has coincided with trouble in the Southeast Asian nation.
A 2006 military coup ousting then-Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra ushered in a period of political instability marked by sometimes violent street protests. Supporters of Thaksin blamed the palace—though not so much the King himself—for supporting the coup.
The resulting social polarization brought into question the monarchy’s role in politics, undermining what had previously been near-universal respect for the royal institution.
The King’s near-disappearance from the public scene has also raised concerns about what will happen after his passing. Crown Prince Vajiralongkorn does not command the same respect and affection as the King, who was closely and actively involved in his country’s development efforts.
Thaksin’s sister Yingluck Shinawatra, Thailand’s current prime minister, led senior officials from government, the military and the courts in swearing allegiance to the King Wednesday. Her brother, who is in self-imposed exile avoiding prison on a corruption conviction, remains the No. 1 enemy of Thai royalists, who accuse Thaksin of trying to usurp the King’s powers and denigrating the monarchy.
Open discussion of the monarchy and its future is difficult, because a lese majeste law makes it easy to prosecute people who have been accused of insulting the King or royal family. If convicted, they can be sentenced to three to 15 years in jail. There have been dozens of such cases in recent years, with several people convicted and jailed.

Washington Post Plans Paywall

Washington Post Plans Paywall: The Washington Post, one of the last holdouts against the trend of charging readers for online access to newspaper articles, is likely to reverse that decision in 2013, according to people familiar with the matter.

Cliff Talks Resume After Standoff

Cliff Talks Resume After Standoff: After days public posturing, private talks over how to avoid the fiscal cliff have resumed between the staff of House Speaker John Boehner and the White House.

India Accused of Kashmir Coverup

India Accused of Kashmir Coverup: India and its courts have prevented fair investigations and prosecutions of security officials accused of human rights violations in Kashmir, ignoring its own laws in the restive Himalayan region, two rights groups said.

Former Thai Prime Minister May Face Murder Charges

Former Thai Prime Minister May Face Murder Charges: Thai law enforcement authorities intend to file murder charges against former Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva and his deputy for the death of a taxi driver whom a court ruled was shot by soldiers during a rally.

Morsi Invites Opposition to Talks on Crisis

Morsi Invites Opposition to Talks on Crisis: Egypt's leader invited opposition leaders to meet on Saturday for a dialogue aimed at resolving the crisis over his recent decree extending his powers, as tensions continued to simmer in Cairo.

McAfee Antivirus Software Pioneer Arrested in Guatemala City

McAfee Antivirus Software Pioneer Arrested in Guatemala City: Mr. McAfee slipped over the border from his home in Belize, where police want to question him in a neighbor’s death.

Resignations Continue in Egypt as Tanks Deploy Around Presidential Palace

Resignations Continue in Egypt as Tanks Deploy Around Presidential Palace: Two top officials quit in protest on Thursday, as the special presidential guard took up positions around President Mohamed Morsi’s palace after battles between Islamists and secularists that left at least six dead.

Wider Chaos Feared as Syrian Rebels and Kurds Clash

Wider Chaos Feared as Syrian Rebels and Kurds Clash: Kurdish militias have joined the fighting in Syria and are seeking autonomy, raising fears of balkanization if the government of President Bashar al-Assad falls.

King Abdullah II of Jordan Visits West Bank to Show Support for U.N. Vote

King Abdullah II of Jordan Visits West Bank to Show Support for U.N. Vote: The king’s arrival, coming three weeks after violent protests in Jordan over gas price increases, signaled an effort to maintain balance and stability in a region in turmoil.

Hispanic campaign donors look for new ways to flex their political muscle - The Washington Post

Hispanic campaign donors look for new ways to flex their political muscle - The Washington Post

Pentagon planning for multinational military operation in Mali - The Washington Post

Pentagon planning for multinational military operation in Mali - The Washington Post

Afghan intelligence chief injured in suicide attack - The Washington Post

Afghan intelligence chief injured in suicide attack - The Washington Post

Some in GOP urge lawmakers to back tax hikes for changes in safety-net programs - The Washington Post

Some in GOP urge lawmakers to back tax hikes for changes in safety-net programs - The Washington Post

What Jim DeMint’s resignation says about him, the Senate and the conservative movement

What Jim DeMint’s resignation says about him, the Senate and the conservative movement

Liu Xiaobo’s wife describes his imprisonment and her house arrest - The Washington Post

Liu Xiaobo’s wife describes his imprisonment and her house arrest - The Washington Post

Graft Up in Vietnam, Laos, China



Vietnam, Laos, and China have dropped significantly in a ranking of global graft, while North Korea remains the world’s most corrupt nation, according to a new report released Wednesday.

Vietnam fell to 123rd among 176 nations and territories from 112nd a year ago, the Berlin-based corruption watchdog Transparency International said in its annual Corruption Perceptions Index. The group’s 2011 report ranked a total of 183 countries and territories.

On a second graph, based on perceived levels of public-sector corruption, Vietnam was given a score of 31 on a scale where 0 indicates “highly corrupt” and 100 represents “very clean.” The nation scored a 2.9 on a scale of 0 to 10 in 2011.

Vietnam’s economy is in turmoil amid a spate of corporate scandals and inefficient management of major government-run firms which have sparked investor concerns.

Growing public frustration over the economy has led the government to renew an anti-corruption drive leading to the arrests of a number of banking executives and heads of failed state-owned companies. However, many see the arrests as a result of political infighting.

Laos slipped to 160th this year from 154th in 2011 and received a score of 21 in 2012 from 2.2 a year ago, the report said.

The poorest Southeast Asian state has moved to step up development, but rights groups complain of government repossession of land from the people and other human rights problems, including rampant official corruption, in the one-party communist state.

China dropped to 80th down from 75th a year ago and scored 39. The country scored 3.6 a year ago.

China implemented a once-in-a-decade leadership change last month, with incoming Chinese president Xi Jinping warning that the ruling Chinese Communist Party must beat graft or lose power.

Official privilege, rampant graft, and the impunity with which well-connected people break the law have caused widespread public fury in recent years, which is particularly evident on China's popular microblogging services.

North Korea tied with Somalia and Afghanistan for dead last on the list, according to the report—equal to its position in 2011, when Transparency International ranked the nation for the first time.

“Afghanistan, North Korea and Somalia once again cling to the bottom rung of the index,” the report said.

“In these countries the lack of accountable leadership and effective public institutions underscore the need to take a much stronger stance against corruption.”

North Korea scored 8 out of 100—the lowest of all rated countries—on the 2012 report. The pariah nation received 1 out of 10 a year ago.

Slight improvements

The index uses data from a combination of surveys and assessments of graft that look at factors such as bribery of public officials, kickbacks in public procurement, embezzlement of public funds, and effectiveness of anti-corruption efforts.

Meanwhile, Burma improved slightly to 172nd from 180th last year and scored a 15 compared to a 1.5 in the 2011 report.

The new ranking brought the nation, undergoing rapid democratic change under a new quasi-civilian government, to third from the worst in corruption from second from the worst a year ago. Sudan was ranked second from the worst in 2012.

As part of Burma’s reform process, the country’s press is now free of censorship and stories about government corruption appear weekly, singling out the individuals responsible. In addition, the new government is drafting new legislation to crack down on corruption.

Cambodia also increased in rank to 157th from 164th and scored 22 compared to 2.1 last year.

Cambodia’s Anti-Corruption Unit, a government body started in 2010 to fight graft, launched a new initiative in May to eliminate bribes solicited by local commune councilors for performing public services.

At the time, Transparency International called the campaign “a vital step” in the government’s efforts to fight corruption, although the organization still considers Cambodia one of the most corrupt countries in the world.

Governments and agencies around the world have frequently called on Prime Minister Hun Sen and the Cambodian leadership to more seriously tackle corruption.

Regional corruption

Transparency International said that of the nations it ranked in the Asia Pacific region, 68 percent scored below 50 on its scale of 0 to 100.

It said that many of the countries in Asia where citizens challenged their leaders to stop corruption “have seen their positions in the index stagnate or worsen.”

Cobus de Swardt, managing director of Transparency International, urged wealthier nations to set an example for developing countries.

“The world’s leading economies should lead by example, making sure that their institutions are fully transparent and their leaders are held accountable,” he said.

“This is crucial since their institutions play a significant role in preventing corruption from flourishing globally.”

Huguette Labelle, the chair of Transparency International, said efforts at combating graft must be better implemented into national legislation, even in the world’s more developed nations.

“Governments need to integrate anti-corruption actions into all public decision-making,” she said.

“Priorities include better rules on lobbying and political financing, making public spending and contracting more transparent and making public bodies more accountable to people.”

Reported by Joshua Lipes.

Beijing Rebukes Hanoi on Oil

Beijing Rebukes Hanoi on Oil:
China on Thursday warned Vietnam to end exploration of oil and gas deposits in disputed areas of the South China Sea and to stop harassing its fishing boats, as tensions escalate between the two nations over the maritime row.

The caution from Beijing comes days after reports that Chinese vessels had cut the cables of a ship belonging to Vietnamese state-owned oil and gas company PetroVietnam while it was surveying waters in the area.

"Vietnam's statement is inconsistent with the facts," Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said of the reported incident at a news briefing in Beijing.

PetroVietnam authorities said that the confrontation occurred Friday when its ship, the Banh Minh 02, was surveying an area off the coast of Vietnam’s Con Co Island where it encountered a large number of Chinese fishing boats which then sailed behind the ship, cutting its seismic cables.

Hong claimed Thursday that the Chinese fishing boats were in a disputed area of the sea off of China’s Hainan province. He said they had been “conducting regular fishing activities” and were “unreasonably” expelled from the area by Vietnamese military vessels.

His remarks followed a statement by Vietnamese foreign affairs spokesman Luong Thanh Nghi on Tuesday that China had "violated Vietnam's sovereignty.”

According to a report by Agence France-Presse, Nghi also called for China to "immediately end this wrongdoing and not allow similar acts to reoccur.”

The incident is the second time that Chinese fishing vessels have reportedly damaged the ship’s cables, after a similar occurrence at the end of May 2011 that triggered street protests in the capital, Hanoi.

Vietnam has overlapping territorial claims with China in the potentially oil and gas-rich South China Sea, as do the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei, and Taiwan.

But China insists it has sovereignty rights over virtually all of the waters within a “nine-dash line”—sometimes called the "Cow Tongue" line—which demarcates its territories in the South China Sea.

Hong said that Beijing and Hanoi were in negotiations over the area where the most recent incident took place, which he referred to as the “North Bay Estuary.”

“We hope relevant parties don’t take any unilateral action of the oil and gas extraction in relevant waters and stop interference of China’s normal fishing in order to create favorable conditions for the friendly negotiations between China and Vietnam,” Hong said.

Frequent warnings

China, which is also exploring for oil and gas in the South China Sea, routinely warns nations with similar interests in the area to back off.

India said earlier this week that it was prepared to send navy vessels to the area to protect its joint oil exploration interests with Vietnam, earning a rebuke from Beijing.

China also recently announced that beginning next year patrol vessels will "intercept and board" any foreign vessels in areas over which it claims sovereignty in the South China Sea.

The escalating tensions come as China has made moves to increase the might of its navy, launching its first aircraft carrier in September and recently testing its first two stealth jet fighters.

Beijing also recently issued new passports for its citizens that include an official Chinese map which incorporates all of the disputed territories in the South China Sea according to the “nine-dash line,” drawing criticism from neighboring countries.

China has refused efforts to resolve disputes internationally, preferring to deal individually with rival claimants.

Despite 10 years of diplomacy, China has refused to hold formal talks with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) on devising a binding code of conduct aimed at reducing any chances of conflict in the sea, which experts say is Asia's biggest potential military flashpoint.

Reported by Joshua Lipes.

Dec 5, 2012

US Navy sees 110,000 cyber attacks every hour, or more than 30 every single second

US Navy sees 110,000 cyber attacks every hour, or more than 30 every single second: 1382671 61080901 520x245 US Navy sees 110,000 cyber attacks every hour, or more than 30 every single second
The US government and all its military branches are naturally a prime target for cyber attacks, but exactly how bad is the situation? Those numbers aren’t thrown around loosely, but Hewlett Packard on Wednesday inadvertently released some statistics for the US Navy’s IT network, and they don’t look pretty.
“For the US Navy we provide the network for 800,000 men and woman in 2,000 locations around the world, protecting them against 110,000 cyber attacks every hour,” Mike Nefkens, the head of enterprise services at HP, told V3 at the company’s Discover event in Frankfurt. “This means the attacks average out at about 1,833 per minute or 30 every second.”
Those figures are simply astonishing. Extrapolating the other way, it means the US Navy is attacked some 96.36 billion times every year. If the last century was about world wars, this one is definitely all about cyber wars.
HP has this data because it has been managing the Navy Marine Corps Intranet (NMCI) contract, and its transition to a Next Generation Enterprise Network (NGEN). The $3.3 billion deal was signed back in October 2010.
Just two months ago, the FBI declared it has started working 24/7 to investigate hackers and network attacks. The US government has shown expertise in the field of Computer Science, but it has also made some glaring mistakes.
Yet it’s not just governments that are being targeted by an increasing number of cyber attacks. Poor security practices are something that has the potential to affect everyone on the Internet, from the individual, to a small business, to an enterprise, to a government. Nobody is safe: not the public sector and not the private sector.
See also – Hacking attempts will pass one billion in Q4 2012, claims information assurance firm and The US government is hacking Android phones and sending them to the troops
Image credit: Bern Altman

Twitter updates Trending Topics, adds 100 more cities to share news people care about the most

Twitter updates Trending Topics, adds 100 more cities to share news people care about the most: 153788956 1 520x245 Twitter updates Trending Topics, adds 100 more cities to share news people care about the most
Twitter has expanded its Trending Topics feature to 100 more cities around the world, including Istanbul, Frankfurt, Guadalajara, and Incheon. Now, users will be able to scan through and see what the most popular trend people are talking about around their neighborhood and city — over 200 locations.
As more companies and people take to Twitter and use hashtags to help form conversations around communities, the Trending Topics feature has been good as it helps people discover what’s happening around the world. Events like the US Presidential Election, the Arab Spring, Hurricane Sandy, and other major events have all been listed.
Even some that were downright amusing are listed, such as #YouCantBeTakenSeriouslyIf or #MentionATwitterBestFriend. And it doesn’t necessarily have to be a hashtag, but a topic many people are discussing. In fact, here in the United States, at the time of this post, Dave Brubeck, the legendary jazz musician, is listed as a trending topic.
The social network says that it is uniquely situated to “capture the pulse of the planet, and the pulse of your city” through Trending Topics — something that it says will display topics people care about.
Users can choose the country or city that they’re in or closest to and instantly will be shown the latest topics being discussed — think about it like your local news station, but for Twitter.
Snap 2012 12 05 at 10.34.56 Twitter updates Trending Topics, adds 100 more cities to share news people care about the most
Photo credit: NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP/Getty Images

ICG Report - The Philippines: Breakthrough in Mindanao

The Philippines: Breakthrough in Mindanao: The next round of talks between the Philippines’ largest Muslim insurgent group and the government is a crucial step towards implementing a sweeping peace agreement signed in October.

Child servants a blot on Haiti's abolitionist past | Reuters

Child servants a blot on Haiti's abolitionist past | Reuters: http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/12/04/us-haiti-restaveks-idUSBRE8B300320121204

Source: Reuters


By Anastasia Moloney

Mon Dec 3, 2012 7:02pm EST

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Dec 4 (TrustLaw) - Dayana Denois was always the last to go to bed and the first to wake up. By dawn, she had washed the dishes and clothes, cleaned and swept the floor and emptied the chamber pots.

"I didn't know what resting meant. Even when I was sick, I'd never get a break," Denois said, recalling the years she spent living with her aunt in Haiti's capital Port-au-Prince.

"She didn't care if I was tired or not. She kept telling me to do things. She beat me with electric cables, shouted at me, punched and slapped me on the face," the 12-year-old said.

Denois was a "restavek", from the French "rester avec" or "to stay with", a Haitian Creole word that refers to the practice of parents giving away children they are too poor to feed and look after.

Mostly from rural areas, these children are sent to stay with wealthier relatives and acquaintances in the hope they will be given a better life and sent to school. But instead many of them are treated as little more than slaves.

The irony is not lost in a country that was the first in the Americas to abolish slavery more than 200 years ago.

Experts say the number of restaveks accelerated after the massive earthquake on the Caribbean island nation in 2010.

"Many children lost their families. They didn't have a place to sleep and have someone to take care of them. And they met people who put them in domestic servitude," said Marline Mondesir, who founded a refuge for restavek children.

The International Labour Organisation estimates that one in 10 Haitian children is a restavek - across the country that amounts to around 300,000 individuals.

REFUGE

For Denois, four years of verbal and physical abuse finally ended when a concerned neighbor put her in touch with Haiti's social services, which referred her to the Action Centre for Development.

An hour's drive from Port-au-Prince, the refuge is home to nearly 100 former restaveks and street children.

Mondesir, who founded the centre in 1994, says poverty fuels the system of slavery. Haiti is the poorest country in the Western hemisphere; nearly 80 percent of Haitians live on less than $2 a day.

"When a mother has eight children, living with no electricity and little food, taking care of all her children and sending them all to school is very difficult," Mondesir said.

"The mother has no choice but to send some away. It's a very sad situation for many mothers. They tell me, 'I have no work and no money. I have too many mouths to feed'."

Middlemen, or "koutchye", as they are known in Creole, are sometimes paid to recruit restaveks for host families living in the affluent neighborhoods of Port-au-Prince.

But restaveks are also found living in the slums, where the lack of water and electricity means demand for child labour is high. These families, though poor, tend to be better off than those living in rural areas, and use children sent by their country relatives as restaveks in their homes.

The children are often seen going about their daily chores in the capital: carrying buckets of water on their heads or shopping at the market, lugging charcoal and firewood.

UNUSUAL WEDDING GIFT

The restavek system is driven by a combination of long-standing economic and social problems in Haiti, from widespread poverty and high unemployment to a lack of family planning and health care in rural areas.

Campaigners say the failure of the Haitian authorities to focus on the rights of children or enforce existing laws against child labour is a big contributor.

The government protests it is addressing the restavek problem by helping rural women and promoting free education.

"The government believes the best way to fight this problem is to empower poor mothers living in rural areas and to help those mothers so they don't have to give their children away," said Guy Delva, secretary of state for communications for the government of President Michel Martelly.

Initiatives include food aid and small loans to mothers as part of a $125-million-a-year state-funded programme, and a government drive to provide free education and school meals to all Haitian children.

But the restavek tradition could not exist if it was not accepted, or at least tolerated, in Haitian culture.

It is not uncommon for high society brides to ask for a little person - "ti moun" in Creole - for a wedding present.

"Some families believe they're doing their restavek children a favor by saving them from living on the streets and a life of hunger in the countryside. Some families do send their restaveks to school and feed them," said Mondesir.

But this is more the exception than the rule, she said. Most restaveks arrive at her refuge unable to read and write, malnourished and with scars from beatings.

Sexual abuse, including rape, is not uncommon.

"They've all been deprived of love and maternal affection," said psychologist Luckenson Dardompre, who works and lives at the refuge.

"But the source of their trauma is the mistreatment they've received for years, including rape and sexual abuse. Many are beaten by the families they live with, by the father, mother, uncles and aunts."

The abuse, isolation and loneliness restaveks have endured is hard for them to overcome, he said.

"Some have suicidal thoughts. Other children will tell you about the abuse they've experienced using exactly the same words every time for weeks. It's something they can't forget," Dardompre said.

SAFE HAVEN

The spacious and clean refuge, with its mountain and sea views, is a safe haven for the children. Here they receive three meals a day, go to school and play.

Inside the girls' plain dormitory are rows of neatly made bunk beds. For the first time in her life, Denois can sleep on a proper bed and not on the floor. She cherishes her few belongings - a toothbrush and cup, a teddy bear, some pens and a change of clothes - which she keeps in her own locker.

"Before I never had the time to play and now I do. No-one bothers me. I found people that love me, they give me what I need," Denois said.

At the canteen during lunchtime, the only sound that can be heard is the clatter of forks on plates as children tuck into a meal of rice and beans.

After lunch, the children play dominoes, cards, and a game of musical chairs. Some crowd around a book to hear the story of Aladdin read aloud by a teacher. Several girls play with a doll's house, others plait each others' hair.

"Some children when they first arrive here, go through rubbish bins looking for food," said Dardompre. "The routine of breakfast, lunch and dinner, brushing their teeth in the morning, washing their hands - this is all new to them."

Mondesir and her staff do their best to give the children an education. Inside the brightly painted green and pink classrooms, they learn how to use computers, to read and write, and other skills like sewing.

Mondesir hopes it will allow the children to fend for themselves and get a job when they leave the refuge at 18. But in a country where one in every two adults is unemployed, few will find decent jobs.

The long-term aim of the refuge is to reunite children with their biological parents. Social workers often go to the countryside to track down their families. The children's yearning to be with their mothers again is strong.

Meanwhile, the healing continues.

"We can't totally erase the trauma these children have but we can diminish the trauma they feel by getting them to play and make friends," Dardompre said. "But their wounds are very deep. The wounds have become part of their souls and spirit."

(TrustLaw is a global news service covering human rights and governance issues and run by the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters)

(Editing by Katie Nguyen and Sonya Hepinstall)

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Southeast Asia Faces Dilemma on Wages - WSJ.com

Southeast Asia Faces Dilemma on Wages - WSJ.com

Drug Makers, Universities Team Up on Stem Cells - WSJ.com

Drug Makers, Universities Team Up on Stem Cells - WSJ.com

Gaza Peace Prospects Hinge on Sinai

Gaza Peace Prospects Hinge on Sinai: Prospects for a lasting peace in Gaza hinge largely on Egypt, and whether its embattled new Islamist government will have the will and strength to control weapons flowing through an increasingly unruly Sinai Desert.

Boehner Deficit Plan Irks Conservatives

Boehner Deficit Plan Irks Conservatives: Conservatives took aim at House Speaker John Boehner's deficit-reduction proposal in the fiscal cliff talks.

U.S. reducing plans for large civilian force in post-2014 Afghanistan - The Washington Post

U.S. reducing plans for large civilian force in post-2014 Afghanistan - The Washington Post

Obama Tells G.O.P. Not to Tie Debt Ceiling to Fiscal Debate

Obama Tells G.O.P. Not to Tie Debt Ceiling to Fiscal Debate: President Obama said he refused to engage again in the sort of brinkmanship that brought the country close to default last year and damaged its credit rating.

The Lede Blog: Clashes in Cairo After Morsi Supporters Attack Palace Sit-In

The Lede Blog: Clashes in Cairo After Morsi Supporters Attack Palace Sit-In: Supporters of Egypt's president attacked protesters camped outside the gates of the presidential palace in Cairo on Wednesday, according to journalists and activists who witnessed the raid.

Syrian Government Beset by Battles and Diplomatic Setbacks

Syrian Government Beset by Battles and Diplomatic Setbacks: As the battle for the Syrian capital worsened, a Turkish official said that Russia had agreed to try a new approach to persuade President Bashar al-Assad to relinquish power.

Gen. Carter F. Ham Details Al Qaeda Influence in Mali - NYTimes.com

Gen. Carter F. Ham Details Al Qaeda Influence in Mali - NYTimes.com

Pakistan’s Hazara Shiites Under Siege - NYTimes.com

Pakistan’s Hazara Shiites Under Siege - NYTimes.com

G.O.P. Seeks Fallback Position on Tax Fight - NYTimes.com

G.O.P. Seeks Fallback Position on Tax Fight - NYTimes.com

Typhoon Kills Hundreds in Philippines - NYTimes.com

Typhoon Kills Hundreds in Philippines - NYTimes.com

Free-Messaging Apps Siphon Profits from Cellular Providers - NYTimes.com

Free-Messaging Apps Siphon Profits from Cellular Providers - NYTimes.com

Young Latino Students Don’t See Themselves in Books - NYTimes.com

Young Latino Students Don’t See Themselves in Books - NYTimes.com

Campaign in Haiti to Close Orphanages - NYTimes.com

Campaign in Haiti to Close Orphanages - NYTimes.com

Obama to Ask Congress for $50 Billion in Storm Aid - NYTimes.com

Obama to Ask Congress for $50 Billion in Storm Aid - NYTimes.com

Egyptians split on new constitution - The Washington Post

Egyptians split on new constitution - The Washington Post

Syrian army weakening as rebels make gains - The Washington Post

Syrian army weakening as rebels make gains - The Washington Post

Run Hillary Run!: Majority want a Clinton 2016 candidacy

Run Hillary Run!: Majority want a Clinton 2016 candidacy

Dec 4, 2012

U.S. pushes to restart peace talks with Taliban - The Washington Post

U.S. pushes to restart peace talks with Taliban - The Washington Post

The open-and-shut administration - The Washington Post

The open-and-shut administration - The Washington Post

Senate rejects treaty to protect disabled around the world - The Washington Post

Senate rejects treaty to protect disabled around the world - The Washington Post

NATO deploys missiles to Turkey-Syria border - The Washington Post

NATO deploys missiles to Turkey-Syria border - The Washington Post

Egyptians take anti-Morsi protests to presidential palace - The Washington Post

Egyptians take anti-Morsi protests to presidential palace - The Washington Post

Is the tea party dead? Or just resting?

Is the tea party dead? Or just resting?

Software Programs Help Doctors Diagnose, but Can’t Replace Them - NYTimes.com

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Global Terrorism Index « Vision of Humanity

Global Terrorism Index « Vision of Humanity

The Best Secret Gmail Feature Is Hiding In Plain Sight

The Best Secret Gmail Feature Is Hiding In Plain Sight

Dec 3, 2012

Asylum seekers reveal misery at the mercy of Indonesia-based people smugglers - Perth Now

Asylum seekers reveal misery at the mercy of Indonesia-based people smugglers - Perth Now:

NEWS.com.au

Asylum seekers reveal misery at the mercy of Indonesia-based people smugglers
Perth Now
People smugglers aiming to ensure no one on their vessels could contact authorities during voyages confiscated mobile phones before leaving Indonesia - giving rise to significant risk for people's safety if a boat begins to sink, as often happens.
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Radio Australia
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Manila Rhino Horn Bust Shows Smugglers' Resilience

Manila Rhino Horn Bust Shows Smugglers' Resilience: HONG KONG—Authorities in the Philippines recently seized a consignment of rhino horn, which they believe was being shipped through Manila to China.  Environmentalists say the find highlights how adept crime syndicates are at exploiting new routes to smuggle endangered wildlife from Africa into Asia, and how resilient they are when it comes to writing off losses and evading arrest.  ​​According to Oliver Valiente, chief of the Philippines Customs Intelligence Investigation Service ...