Thursday, July 23, 2009

China Farmers Protest Land Grabs

July 22, 2009

Poor farmers confront authorities and developers over land seized in central China and coastal provinces.

In an undated photo, residents of Nanwan village in southern Guangdong province protest outside a government building against alleged corruption surrounding an eel farm built on their land.

HONG KONG—Villagers in one of the poorest regions of China have vowed they will fight a government proposal to use their farmland for a cement factory, as a deadline for agreement set by local officials passed on Wednesday.

Residents of poverty-stricken Gushi county in the central province of Henan said they had been sent a letter only last week by village-level officials proposing the sale of a plot of desperately needed farmland at below-market compensation levels.

Dongba village resident Wang Dengyou said the villagers are dependent on agriculture as a way to eke out a living.

"Our plan was not to sell this land," said Wang, who received the government letter offering 12,500 yuan (U.S.$1,830) per mu (0.06 hectares). "If we sell it, then we won't have anything to eat."

"We decided that it wasn't enough compensation," he said. "Even if the price was a bit higher, if we sold it we would still have lost our food supply."

The government letter also threatened the villagers with land requisition and no compensation at all if they refused the offer, residents said.

Alleged corruption

Villagers accused local officials of skimming off a high percentage of money received from the property developers for the land.

"If you think about it, the county government has received 20,000 yuan per mu, while they are only offering 12,500 yuan per mu to the villagers," Dongba resident Yang Huaibing said.

"This is being pulled by [officials in] our village."

Calls to the Dongba village government and nearby Wangpeng village government went unanswered during office hours Tuesday.

According to local media reports, a series of land disputes has followed county Party secretary Guo Yongchang's 2004 pledge to bring more investment to Henan, which has some of the poorest rural communities in China, as local officials make bids to acquire land in the area.

New developments have included spacious business centers and palatial government office buildings, reports said.

Coastal provinces affected

China's richer coastal provinces are also seeing a rash of land-related protests, as local officials seek to use land for lucrative development projects amid fierce opposition from rural communities.

Residents of Sisha village in Zhejiang province found out last week about a secret deal facilitating the sale of their land to developers made by their own village committee only after bulldozers moved in and began leveling nearby Yanyushan hill.

Employees working for property developers Lide Co. told angry farmers that they had already bought the hill from local government officials, sparking a night-time vigil and a face-off with riot police armed with shields and batons.

"There are 40-50 special police officers stationed at the hill every day, and they are equipped with shields and truncheons," said resident He Jinxiong.

Another villager surnamed Lin said the government had also hired local thugs as reinforcements. "There are also gang members there. They blocked the entrance to the hill and stopped our villagers from getting into it," Lin said.

"If this sale had been approved by the villagers, I don’t think there would be such a confrontation," he said.

No funds from eel farm

Residents of Nanwan village in southern Guangdong province have also staged nightly protests during recent weeks outside government offices against alleged corruption surrounding an eel farm built on their land.

"About 2,000 people went to the township government on July 7 with many older people kneeling there to implore local officials to pay attention to the matter," a Nanwan farmer surnamed Shao said.

"But no one came out to take care of us. Therefore, we farmers are demonstrating every night by encircling the village. There are 6,000-7,000 of us every night," he said.

The protesters were beating drums and clashing gongs after finishing a day's work in the fields, they said, in protest at the disappearance of promised funds from the eel farm and plans to take a further 2,500 mu (167 hectares) of their farmland for development.

"We demonstrate every night. This is because we have to work in the field during the daytime," another Nanwan resident said.

Land disputes have spread across China in recent years, with local people often complaining that they receive only minimal compensation when the government sells tracts to developers in lucrative property deals.

Attempts to occupy disputed land frequently result in violent clashes, as police and armed gangs are brought in to enforce the will of local officials.

Original reporting in Cantonese by Tse Lap-wai, and in Mandarin by Ding Xiao and Qiao Long. Mandarin service director: Jennifer Chou. Cantonese service director: Shiny Li. Translated and written for the Web in English by Luisetta Mudie. Additional translation by Chen Ping. Edited by Sarah Jackson-Han.

Source: Radio Free Asia

Copyright © 1998-2009 Radio Free Asia. All rights reserved.

More Calls For Justice For Estemirova


July 22, 2009

Seven leading UN human rights experts released a formal statement on July 21 affirming their readiness to assist the Russian authorities in carrying out an independent investigation into the murders of lawyers, journalists, and human rights activists in Russia, including the recent killing of Natalya Estemirova.

The experts acknowledged that Russia's leaders have pledged to apprehend her killers and bring them to trial, but say those pledges "will be worth little unless the authorities take steps that go beyond what has been done in the past."

Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov's press secretary Alvi Karimov told RFE/RL that Russia's federal Investigative Committee is working actively on the case. He said he is sure should it need any outside help, it will seek it through the usual channels.

Read the UN experts' press release here.

"The Guardian" today published a comment, "We want justice for Natasha," signed by a number of notables, including Desmond Tutu and Susan Sarandon.

"Natasha (as she was known among friends and colleagues) was a gentle, loving woman and a brave truth-teller who was not afraid to speak out about torture, rape and disappearances in Chechnya. She paid for it with her life."

Read the full piece here.

Last week RFE/RL's Claire Bigg wrote about the string of silenced voices on Chechnya.

Source: Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty

Copyright (c) 2009. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

Media Watchdog Condemns Azerbaijan's Jailing Of Bloggers

Adnan Hajizade (left) and Emin Milli

July 22, 2009

Azerbaijan marks National Press Day today, but with three journalists in jail and two bloggers awaiting trial there is perhaps not too much to celebrate.

Reporters Without Borders (RSF) says a Baku court's rejection of an appeal to release two jailed Azerbaijani bloggers is "unacceptable," RFE/RL's Azerbaijani Service reports.

Clotilde Le Coz, of RSF's Internet Freedom Desk, said the pretrial jailing of Adnan Hajizade and Emin Milli on charges of hooliganism is "confirmation" of the lack of freedom of expression in Azerbaijan.

"Those bloggers will be forced to stay in detention for two months for something they didn’t commit, awaiting their trial that they even don’t know the date of," Le Coz said. "They were just writing on the Internet about what is going on in Azerbaijan. What has hooliganism got to do with that?"

Le Coz said that RSF has sent two letters to the Azerbaijani government asking for the journalists to be released but has received no response.

She said it also asked that the public be allowed to attend the hearing on July 20 at the appeals court, but it was held behind closed doors.

Le Coz said RSF will work to make "more and more people aware of [the bloggers'] situation."

She called the bloggers' case "broader...because it shows it can happen to anybody. You don’t have to be a journalist to be threatened by the government or to be put in jail."

Hajizade, a video blogger and member of the OL! opposition movement, was arrested with activist Milli at an internet cafe in Baku on July 8 and charged with hooliganism.

Rights groups say the charges were fabricated to punish the activists -- who post their work on the social networking website Facebook -- for their criticism of the government.

Le Coz said that they had become online leaders in Azerbaijan "and that’s why they were silenced by the government."

Source: Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty

Copyright (c) 2009. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

Report: Child Sex Trafficking a Serious Problem in US

By Gabe Joselow
Washington
July 22, 2009

Shared Hope International report

A new report says that more than 100,000 Americans under the age of 18 are victims of sex trafficking in the United States. While the illicit sex trade is often considered a scourge of the developing world, experts told lawmakers on Capitol Hill Tuesday that it is also a serious problem in the United States.

In an undercover operation, an activist with Shared Hope International, a group that rescues victims of sex trafficking, makes a deal with a pimp on a U.S. street. The scene highlights a serious problem known around the world - the prostitution of young women and children.

A new report by Shared Hope International shows how serious and widespread the problem is in the United States.

Former Congresswoman Linda Smith, Shared Hope's founder, explained the severity of the problem at a briefing hosted by the Congressional Victims' Rights Caucus.

"Our research showed that it happened all over the United States," said Linda Smith. "At first I thought, 'No, not in my town.' Yes, in my town."

The study documents cases of child sex trafficking across the country - from Florida to Nevada, in big cities and in rural areas.

According to the report, the average age of a child prostitute in the United States is between 12 and 14. Many have run away from home and are lured into the illegal sex trade by men who offer them shelter. Some become addicted to drugs - something their pimps use to keep them under their control. Beatings and physical threats are the norm.

But advocates for child sex trafficking victims say that despite these abuses, too often children are identified as criminals, arrested and put in jail or in juvenile detention.

Ernie Allen is President and CEO of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.

"These kids are victims," said Ernie Allen. "This is 21st century slavery. They lack the ability to walk away. The pimps who use and discard them are the criminals, as are those who patronize them."

Advocates for child sex trade victims say that charging these children with crimes infringes on their rights and creates barriers to getting them the help they need. They advocate a system that protects and rehabilitates these children.

Republican Representative Ted Poe of Texas, Co-chairman of the Congressional Victims' Rights Caucus, told the panel that there are more safeguards in place for foreign victims of sex trafficking in the United States than there are for American citizens.

"If you are a foreign child and you are in the United States and you are involved in trafficking, the police will treat you as a victim of a crime," said Ted Poe. "But if you're an American and some trafficker finds you and abuses you and then sells you out through the United States, you're treated as a criminal."

The Shared Hope International report criticizes the U.S. Congress for failing to authorize more funding for social services and shelters for sex trafficking victims.

Congressman Chris Smith, a Republican from New Jersey, says that it is always difficult to get funding through the regular congressional appropriations cycle. He suggested instead having organizations on the ground develop projects that could then receive some federal money.

"Talk to the faith-based folks in your district, talk to others who could be capable of providing shelters and ask them if they would be willing to go forward with a project, and you'd get the earmark for them," said Chris Smith.

Experts agree that the best way to fight sex trafficking is for law enforcement officials to focus on eliminating demand for the business.

They say that in order to accomplish this, more should be done to stop the buyers who pay for sex with children, including giving offenders much harsher prison terms.

Source: Voice of America

Thailand Reiterates Anti-Sanctions Stance On Burma

July 21, 2009 (DVB)–The Thai prime minister has again stressed that sanctions on Burma are ineffective, although he urged the military government to heed international warnings on its human rights record.

Speaking on his weekly television show, Abhisit Vejjajiva urged all Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) member states to resist pressure from Western countries to commit to sanctions on Burma.

Thailand holds the current revolving chair of the ASEAN bloc, which stipulates a policy of non-interference in the internal affairs of member countries.

Mr Vejjajiva’s similar comments to UN chief Ban Ki-moon earlier this month that sanctions on Burma were “not useful” coincided with an announcement that Thailand was sending a delegation of 25 businessmen to Burma to explore new investment opportunities in the country.

Despite tough sanctions on the regime by Western countries, including the United States and European Union, Burma’s economy continues to benefit from trade and investment with many Southeast Asian countries.

A report released by Burma’s Ministry of Planning and Development said that foreign investment in Burma soared from $US172.7 million in the 2007/08 fiscal year to $US984.9 million last year.

Thailand is the leading investor in its extractive sector, and relies on Burma for much of its energy needs.

Thailand has however criticized the trial of Aung San Suu Kyi and said that Burma’s credibility was “at stake”, and that it was in danger of tarnishing ASEAN’s image.

The annual 27-member ASEAN regional forum kicks off today on the Thai island of Phuket, and the issue of Burma is expected to feature in talks attended by the 10 core ASEAN members and other visiting countries, such as China and the United States.

Reporting by Francis Wade

Source: Democratic Voice of Burma

ASEAN Calls For Burma Prisoner Release

July 21, 2009 (DVB)–A meeting of foreign ministers of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations yesterday urged the release of prisoners in Burma as a prerequisite to “free, fair and inclusive” elections next year.

Foreign ministers spoke yesterday on the second day of the two-day ASEAN Foreign Ministers’ Meeting, prior to the start of the 42nd ASEAN Ministerial Meeting (AAM) beginning today in Thailand.

A joint communiqué released by Thai foreign minister Kasit Piromya acknowledged the visit to Burma earlier this month by UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon.

The statement reiterated ASEAN’s calls “to immediately release all those under detention, including Daw Aung San Suu Kyi” in order to create “genuine reconciliation and meaningful dialogue involving all parties concerned”.

The Burmese foreign minister told the UN Security Council earlier this month that the government was setting in motion plans to release some political prisoners so that they can “participate” in the 2010 elections.

Critics have said however that the move is aimed at easing mounting international pressure on the regime, and perhaps to avoid the threat of Security Council action.

The controversial elections in Burma next year must be “free, fair and inclusive… thereby laying down a good foundation for future social and economic development,” the statement continued.

It also addressed the issue of ASEAN’s much-criticised policy of non-interference in the internal affairs of Burma, preferring instead to “constructively engage” with the junta.

Thai prime minster Abhisit Vejjajiva on Sunday reiterated his anti-sanctions stance on Burma, following comments made to Ban Ki-moon earlier this month that Western sanctions were “not useful”.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton arrived in Thailand today to meet with Mr Vejjajiva.

Tomorrow she will take part in the ASEAN Regional Forum, which will also be attended by China, which has on a number of occasions defended Burma against US-led Security Council pressure.

Reporting by Francis Wade

Source: Democratic Voice of Burma

Malaysia Arrests Human Trafficking Officials

July 21, 2009 (DVB)–Malaysian authorities have arrested nine people for their role in an international trafficking syndicate that involved the sale of Rohingya refugees from Burma, a top officer said today.

Among the nine people are five immigration officials from Malaysia’s southern Johor department. The four other suspects are bus drivers who were arrested for allegedly transporting the refugees to the Thai-Malaysia border.

The director of the Criminal Investigation Department, Mohammad Bakri Zinin, said that police had been monitoring the activities of the nine suspects, aged between 25 and 40, since March this year.

"According to a victim, the suspects were directly involved in human trafficking, starting from the Malaysia-Thai border to the rat trail believed to be their exit point to international countries,” he told a press conference in Malaysia today.

"Upon reaching the exit point, the victims were handed over to a syndicate before being taken to a neighbouring country or sent back to Malaysia to work as forced labour."

Bakri said the refugees were charged between 300 to 600 ringgit ($US85 to $US169) each and those who could not afford to pay would be sold to owners of fishing industries in Thailand until they worked off their debts.

The suspects have been arrested under Section 13 of the Anti-Trafficking in Person Act 2007 which, if convicted, carries a maximum sentence of 20 years and a fine.

Last month, the United States’ annual Trafficking in Persons report said that Malaysia is failing to comply with minimum standards to eliminate trafficking and "is not making significant efforts to do so".

The report put Malaysia back on its blacklist, following its elevation to ‘watch list’ status in 2008 after finding that it was “making significant efforts” to comply with standards.

Malaysia’s deputy home minister Abu Seman Yusop stated the re-listing was unfair and that the authorities were doing their best to prevent trafficking. “We will have to consider our next action in opposing the re-listing of our country on the blacklist," he said.

As a result of the recent findings the state could face sanctions such as the withholding of non-humanitarian, non-trade related US aid.

Migrant worker groups question the Malaysian government’s commitment to tackling the problem, seeing the recent arrests as a temporary response to the US state report.

The Malaysian government has been criticised for repeatedly denying trafficking exists when the issue has been highlighted.

“I am not confident that the Malaysian government will continue to tackle the issue of immigration officials trafficking refugees,” said Irene Fenandez from International Migrant Alliance based in Malaysia.

“The system is very entrenched and so widespread that it will take continuous international pressure to keep the government cracking down on immigration officials.”

NGO’s working with the Rohingya blame the trafficking on the Burmese government for forcing the minority ethnic group out of the country.

“The Rohingya are driven out of their own country by the Burmese military regime and then some are not officially recognised as refugees,” said Salim Ula, spokesperson for the Arakan Rohingya National Organisation.

“This makes them vulnerable in countries such as Malaysia where they are not properly protected.”

The Bengali-speaking Rohingya from Burma are denied citizenship under Burma's 1982 citizenship law, which leaves them out of the 135 ethnic groups officially recognised by the state.

Reporting by Alex Ellgee

Source: Democratic Voice of Burma

Monks Harassed By Authorities

July 22, 2009 (DVB)–Monks living in a Rangoon monastery were harassed by authorities last week after accepting food donations from opposition party members given to mark Martyrs’ Day in Burma.

Around 20 officials from Thingangyun township authority in Rangoon arrived at the monastery in Laydauntkan ward where monks had received meals from National League for Democracy (NLD) members, a traditional way to celebrate Martyrs’ Day each year on 19 June.

According to NLD member Naw Ohn Hla, the officials “said intimidating words” to the monks and told them to report future donations to township authorities.

“They issued warnings and interrogated them,” she said. “They asked the monks how the offerings were made, how they were blessed with water, what kind of clothes were worn.”

Authorities threatened to seal off the monastery as had been famously done to Maggin monastery during the September 2007 monk-led uprising.

Monastery abbot, U Kumara, reportedly replied that his monastery had no “complicated matters” like Maggin, but was told by authorities that he had been “tainted with a black spot”.

Ohn Hla was among the 21 NLD members arrested and briefly detained whilst returning from Martyrs’ Mausoleum on Sunday.

“They told us not to wear clothes with [the pictures of] General Aung San,” she said. “When we headed towards the museum, they arrested us on the way.”

A number of those detained were “beaten up severely” and thrown into a van, she said.

Reporting by Naw Noreen

Source: Democratic Voice of Burma

US Concerned On Burma Nuclear Ambitions

July 22, 2009 (DVB)–The United States is concerned about possible nuclear ties between Burma and North Korea and reports that North Korea has been supplying material and information on nuclear proliferation to Burma.

The comments were expressed by US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in Bangkok this morning prior to her visit to the ASEAN Regional Forum (ARF), which begins today on the Thai island of Phuket.

In a television interview Clinton said that the threat of nuclear weaponry was her biggest concern as Secretary of State, Reuters reported.

"So obviously we are very concerned about North Korea and recent reports about perhaps their dealings with what we call Burma," she said.

Fears of strengthening ties between Burma and North Korea will likely feature highly at the ARF, which will be attended by senior officials from 27 countries, including China.

Concerns stem largely from an incident last month in which a North Korean ship being tracked by the US navy on suspicion that it was carrying weaponry appeared to be heading towards Burma, before turning around.

North Korea is under tight UN sanctions following its nuclear test in May that prohibits the export of weapons materials.

Leaked intelligence documents and photographs obtained by DVB also show North Korean officials in Burma advising engineers on the construction of a network of tunnels that could hold heavy weaponry.

The US House of Representatives yesterday approved the renewal of sanctions on Burma, and will now seek approval from the Senate.

Various meetings have been held already this week in the run-up to the ARF. Following the ASEAN Foreign Ministers’ Meeting on Monday, a joint communiqué was released calling for the release of political prisoners in Burma as a prerequisite to “free, fair and inclusive” elections.

The statement also addressed the issue of ASEAN’s much-criticised policy of non-interference in the internal affairs of Burma, preferring instead to “constructively engage” with the junta.

Reporting by Francis Wade

Source: Democratic Voice of Burma

Suu Kyi Denied Final Meeting With Lawyers

July 22, 2009 (DVB)–Lawyers of Burma opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi have been denied a request to meet with her one last time before Friday’s final court hearing and will not be able to discuss a final statement.

The lawyers were due to meet with Suu Kyi to finalise her court statement prior to the hearing on Friday but, according to lawyer Nyan Win, authorities phoned and said the court would not allow it.

“Now we are planning to just make a presentation based on our previous discussions with [Suu Kyi] and our legal point of view,” he said. “This decision was not drawn together with Daw Suu but we’ll just have to go with it.”

It is widely expected that Suu Kyi will be found guilty of breaching conditions of her house arrest, which carries a maximum sentence of five years.

Critics have said that the trial is a pretext to keep her in detention beyond the elections next year.

Another lawyer for Suu Kyi said that the rejection could weaken her defense at the hearing as well as drawing more criticism towards the Burmese judicial system.

Nyan Win urged international leaders attending the Association for Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) summit and ASEAN Regional Forum in Thailand today to keep a close eye on the situation.

“I think the international community’s urging for her release is a reasonable thing as she was not even supposed to be on trial at this moment,” he said.

A joint communiqué released on Monday following the ASEAN Foreign Ministers’ Meeting called for the release of political prisoners in Burma, including Suu Kyi, as a prerequisite to “free, fair and inclusive” elections.

The statement also addressed the issue of ASEAN’s much-criticised policy of non-interference in the internal affairs of Burma, preferring instead to “constructively engage” with the junta.

Reporting by Htet Aung Kyaw

Source: Democratic Voice of Burma

US Close To Renewing Burma Sanctions

July 22, 2009 (DVB)–The US House of Representatives has approved the renewal of sanctions on Burma and will now wait for confirmation from the Senate as to whether to continue with current US policy to the country.

The United States had said in April that it may look for a different angle in its approach to pressuring the military government to end human rights violations and imprisonment of opposition members.

This followed a comment in February by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton who said that the US needed to review its sanctions policy in light of their failure.

Any hope of a softening of the embargo and increased engagement with the regime was dashed in May however following the charges brought against opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi, whose trial is now close to a verdict.

Current US sanctions ban countries from importing certain goods from Burma, and places tight restrictions on investment in the country.

Observers have said however that continued trade with a number of neighbouring countries is lessening the impact of the embargo.

“Sanctions aren’t having much effect in Burma because of China and other countries doing business with the regime,” said Burmese political analyst Naing Ko Ko.

China is Burma’s third largest investor, and recently signed a deal that will see it capitalizing on Burma’s vast natural gas reserves.

In spite of sanctions, the Burmese government claimed last week that foreign investment in the country leapt from $US172.7 million in the 2007/08 fiscal year to $US984.9 million last year.

“You need diplomatic sanctions and arms embargoes as well, not only financial sanctions,” said Naing Ko Ko, adding that the US should also now pressure ASEAN countries to apply economic sanctions.

The issue of Burma, in particular the Suu Kyi trial, will likely feature highly on the agenda of the ASEAN Regional Forum, which begins today on the Thai island of Phuket.

Reporting by Francis Wade

Source: Democratic Voice of Burma

US Urges Burma To Boycott North Korea

July 23, 2009 (DVB)–The United States has said that Burma should implement a UN resolution imposing an arms embargo on North Korea as one precursor of increased US engagement with Burma.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is currently in Thailand at the 27-state ASEAN Regional Forum (ARF), which is also attended by North Korea and China.

An anonymous US State Department official told Reuters today that the US had urged Burma to become party to a United Nations resolution that bans all North Korean arms exports.

The resolution was adopted following North Korea’s nuclear test in May, and includes an authorization allowing member states to inspect all transportation carrying North Korean exports.

The comments follow concerns voiced by Clinton yesterday that strengthening ties between Burma and North Korea could include trade in nuclear material and information.

Fears over Burma’s nuclear ambitions stem largely from an incident last month in which a North Korean ship being tracked by the US navy on suspicion that it was carrying weaponry appeared to be heading towards Burma, before turning around.

Both Burma and North Korea are likely to feature highly on the agenda of the ARF, which is now in its second day on the Thailand island of Phuket.

Clinton yesterday met with students and social assistance groups in Bangkok prior to traveling to Phuket.

Dr Cynthia Maung, who operates the Mae Tao charity clinic in the Thai-Burma border town of Mae Sot, was among the activists attending the meeting.

According to Cynthia Maung, Clinton said that there should be greater awareness of the links between North Korea and Burma, and their potential dealings in nuclear weaponry.

“[Clinton] said that China, which is close to North Korea, should help bring this under control,” she said.

“She also pointed out that the Southeast Asian nations have a responsibility on tackling human right abuses in Burma, and that the US will be cooperating with [regional countries]."

Reporting by Francis Wade and Khin Hnin Htet

Source: Democratic Voice of Burma

Displaced In Burma Lacking Medical Aid

July 23, 2009 (DVB)–Internally displaced persons hiding in jungles in eastern Burma are suffering from outbreaks of malaria and dengue fever with almost no medicine or medical facilities, according a Karen aid group.

Around 9000 people in Bago division’s Taung-ngu district are internally displaced (IDPs) and are having difficulty accessing food, water and medicine, said the Committee for Internally Displaced Karen People (CIDKP).

The prevalence of mosquito-borne diseases soars during the rainy season, and is a particular threat to people living in bush areas.

“Their traditional method of making smoke to keep mosquitoes away is dangerous because the Burmese army might see [the smoke] and find them,” said Saw Eh Wah from the CIDKP.

At least two or three people in each household are infected with either malaria or dengue fever, many of whom are pregnant women and children under age of 10, he said.

No deaths have yet been reported and IDPs are said to be using traditional medicines to combat the diseases.

“There are no hospitals or clinics; sometimes they get one or two medical workers from the Karen National Union and the Free Burma Rangers [medical group],” he said, adding that the IDPs are using “herbs and tree roots” as medicine.

Burma is also home to over 500,000 internally displaced persons, the majority of which are in eastern Karen state.

Many of these have been forced out of their homes by fighting between the Burmese army and the Karen National Union.

A report released by the UN High Commissioner for Refugees in June said that around 723,571 people are considered to be stateless in Burma, the world’s third highest population of stateless persons.

Reporting by Naw Noreen

Source:Democratic Voice of Burma

Monday, July 20, 2009

Clearer Skies for Clouded Leopard Conservation

By Erika Celeste
Nashville, Tennessee
July 20, 2009

Clouded leopards are a highly endangered wild cat from Southeast Asia. They are also notoriously difficult to breed in captivity. With the help of an international consortium of zoos in both the United States and Thailand, members of the Clouded Leopard Project are working to develop a breeding program to increase the numbers and revitalize the demographics of the tiny population.

Clouded leopards get their name from the large, diffused cloud-like spots in their fluffy golden coats

After 20 years of research, animal specialists believe they have finally unlocked the mystery of clouded leopard breeding, and three squealing, squeaking bundles of fur at the Nashville Zoo in Tennessee provide the latest proof of their success.

Luk, which means "light" in Thai, Chet or "brother," and Sita, named for the Hindu goddess of womanhood, were born on May 30th. The nearly 2-month-old clouded leopard cubs roll over and over, pouncing on one another's tails and occasionally nipping each other's ears, oblivious to how very special they are.

"They are very interactive," says Connie Philipp, the zoo's director of animal collections, adding with a laugh, "I hate to use the word cute, but they are very cute."

At 6 weeks old, Luk is curious and unafraid

They are also acting like typical clouded leopards. "They are a tree-dwelling species, so as a result, they don't mind being picked up and brought up to heights. They love to start climbing on things. They can get up, but they can't get down yet, so you've got to keep an eye on that."


An international effort to save clouded leopards

The cubs' parents - Arun and Jing Jai - were one of two pairs of cats that came to the United States last year from the Clouded Leopard breeding project in Thailand, to diversify the U.S. genetic pool. The other pair went to the National Zoo in Washington, D.C. Both females gave birth this spring, so their cubs will introduce new genes into the American population for the first time in 20 years.

Nashville Zoo Mammal Curator Karen Rice worked with Arun and Jing Jai before they left Thailand. She points to several characteristics that set these wild cats apart from others.

"They're excellent climbers. They can climb straight up a tree and then come straight down head first, which most cats cannot do. They can hang from a branch by their back feet. Their back feet are jointed so they can twist."

There are about 30 of the cats at the Khao Kheow Open Zoo in Thailand and a few dozen more at zoos in Vietnam, Cambodia, the United States and Europe. But because they are extremely secretive in the wild, no one knows exactly how many clouded leopards are left. Instead, population is estimated from the number of pelts found on the black market.

Surrounded by toys, one of the cubs takes a break from play

Connie Philipp says due to their shy nature, almost everything known about the spotted cats comes from observing them in captivity, and that is one reason the Nashville Zoo is hand-rearing the newborn cubs.

"They do tend to be very secretive and nervous by nature, but by hand-rearing them, they can handle pretty much anything that comes their way. And we create these exhibits where they look calm and relaxed and people can come and see them in that state."

In the wild, clouded leopards live solitary lives, coming together only to breed. Forcing the cats together in captivity has had some dire consequences for the females, who have been seriously injured and even killed by the aggressive males. However, Karen Rice says program coordinators have figured out how to eliminate that problem: Introduce them young.

"If they grow up together, they don't seem to have the aggression issues, but it doesn't seem to bother them," she explains. "They will still breed. It doesn't create a familiarity where they won't breed. That's what we're trying to do, pair up young cats as young as we can and create those strong bonds early, and it seems to be working."

Restoring the species in captivity

The goal of the Clouded Leopard Project both in Thailand and the United States is to increase the cat's population and create as much genetic diversity as possible. Connie Philipp says there are no plans to release animals back into the wild.

"We realized many years ago the challenges - that the habitat just doesn't exist anymore and we really do need to deal with the cultures in those areas to make a difference. We always try to work with the country of origin when we work with endangered species, because if we don't make differences there, we don't make major differences here in what we're doing in the U.S.

The Nashville cubs play after their mid-morning meal

"So really, at this point, it's just about doing what we can to save the species, realizing it's going to be a captive situation and doing what we can to make a difference so that, who knows, maybe one decade, reintroduction will be possible."

While the original purpose of zoos was to showcase exotic animals for the public, over the last several decades there has been a shift towards conservation. Because of this, many zoos and animal parks try to devote as much space as they can to threatened species, such as clouded leopards.

But Phillip says the other animals are still very important, too. She counts on popular species to draw the public in to meet and learn about endangered animals.

"Lions are a non-threatened species, but the public enjoys when they see them. So we'll create a space for them. The public coming to see and learn about them helps us take care of more 'conservationally correct' species."

Inter-species ambassadors


Brother and sister, Ming and Mei, were featured in a television show called Growing Up Clouded Leopard

The strategy seems to be working for the Nashville Zoo. While the new cubs and their parents aren't on display yet, because the young family still needs its privacy, another pair of clouded leopards is happy to greet the public. Ming and Mei make their home in an Asian-themed display, just beyond a little bridge over rushing water, under a lush canopy of trees. When Luk, Chet and Sita are old enough, they too will be put on display.

Sita will not be here, though. She will soon be going to live at the National Zoo in Washington, D.C., to be paired with a young male, while the search is on for appropriate mates for her brothers. The Clouded Leopard Program may soon be expanding as well. Nashville is in talks with another zoo in the United Kingdom about an exchange which may further increase the genetic diversity of the clouded leopard population.

Karen Rice says while she will miss little Sita, she knows the cub, as well as her brothers, have important work ahead of them, as interspecies ambassadors. She hopes seeing them will encourage people to protect endangered species by being more conscious in their choices of the products they purchase and being more socially conscious.

Source: Voice of America News

82 Women Killed in Argentina in 6 Months

BUENOS AIRES – Sexual violence in Argentina has left at least 82 women dead during the first six months of this year, according to statistics released Sunday by an organization that protects and defends women’s rights.

“We want to warn that this is not about isolated (criminal) acts but rather a social, political and human rights problem,” said Fabiana Tuñez, the coordinator for La Case del Encuentro, in a statement.

“The reality also indicates that so far in July there were 21 cases of ‘femicides,’ which gives us an average of two women per day that are murdered in Argentina,” she said.

During last year, 208 women were murdered by their husbands, boyfriends, lovers, former boyfriends, neighbors, relatives or unknown people, presumably men, who also perpetrated sexual violence upon them.

Tuñez said that because of the lack of government statistics, the women’s rights association conducted its own study starting in 2008 on the basis of information from two national news agencies and 43 national and provincial daily newspapers.

Besides the 82 murders of women so far this year, there are nine victims who were hospitalized in critical condition and another nine cases of alleged sexual violence that are being investigated, said La Casa del Encuentro.

Between last October and June, 5,509 people complained that they had been affected by incidents of domestic violence, according to statistics compiled by the Domestic Violence Office created in 2008 by Argentina’s Supreme Court.

Some 83 percent of the complaints filed between October and June were made by women, according to data from the Judicial Information Center’s network.

The statistics also reflect that 73 percent of the complaints concern cases of violence between members of couples and ex-couples, about 21 percent correspond to children who are accusing parents and 6 percent involve other types of relationships.

Source: Latin American Herald Tribune

Afghan Bill Aims To Criminalize Discrimination Against Women


Many Afghan girls have returned to school since the fall of the Taliban -- but old attitudes persist about women's roles.

July 20, 2009

By Farangis Najibullah

An Afghan bill on eliminating violence against women is expected to be among the first pieces of legislation to be discussed when Afghan parliamentarians return from summer holidays this week.

Under the bill, which has been in the works for years, anyone who bars a woman from attending school, going to work, or visiting a doctor would face prison time.

The bill criminalizes discrimination against women and envisages various punishments -- from fines to prison terms -- for those found guilty of violating women's rights.

Women's rights activists in Afghanistan and abroad have welcomed the bill, saying it could pave the way for broader rights for women and their greater inclusion in public life.

The overall situation of women and girls in Afghanistan has improved significantly since the collapse of the Taliban. Under the Taliban’s hard-line rule, the most basic rights of women were severely restricted, but millions have now returned to work and millions of girls have returned to school.

Fateh Muhammad, a former mujahedin turned farmer in northern Balkh Province, told RFE/RL that public attitudes have changed regarding the role of women in society.

"Only a couple of years ago, it was beyond our imagination to accept a woman as a politician, for instance, but now we go and vote for a female candidate and it’s completely normal," Muhammad said.

"In our area, Mazar-i-Sharif, no one gets in the way of their children's education -- no matter if their child is a girl or a boy,” said the former mujahed, whose teenage daughter attends a nearby high school. “Younger girls don't cover their heads. After coming of age, girls cover their heads according to Islamic requirements, but they still continue their education. No one stops them from going to school."

Women ‘Not Valued’

But the situation in Afghanistan's relatively safe and less conservative north is not reflected everywhere in the country.

"Silence Is Violence," a report issued earlier this month by the UN High Commissioner on Human Rights and the UN's Assistance Mission in Afghanistan, warns that a common attitude noted throughout the country is that "women and girls are not valued as individuals with inherent human rights."

"Women participating in public life face threats, harassment, and attacks," sending "a strong message to all women to stay at home," the report warns. This "has obvious ramifications for the transformation of Afghanistan, the stated priority of Afghan authorities and their international supporters."

In Afghanistan's deeply religious society, many people remain wary of women pursuing an education or working outside the home. By and large, a woman's role is society continues to be seen as bearing children and doing housework.

More than 50 percent of Afghan girls marry before the legal age of 16, and most marriages are arranged by relatives. Afghan women are often victims of domestic violence, and some families even marry off their underage daughters to settle debts or disputes.

Asadullah, a 50-year-old resident of southern Helmand Province, says no law or official decree alone can change centuries-old traditions or beliefs.

"Those who have prepared the bill have completely ignored Afghanistan's realities," he said. "I don't believe any woman would ask the police or authorities to punish her family if they didn’t allow her to work."

"It would be very difficult to implement this kind of law in our society,” Asadullah continued. “It is unlikely that families would allow their daughters to discuss their problems with government officials, or let the government interfere in solving their problems. All issues are discussed inside the house by the parents."

Shukria Barakzai, a member of the Afghan parliament and a women's rights activist, agrees that implementing the bill, which is expected to be signed by President Hamid Karzai once it makes its way through parliament, will be a serious challenge.

"Surely, at this point this law cannot be put into practice, even in Kabul,” Barakzai said. “However, by no means should we say ‘we don't need this law because it cannot be implemented.’ We have to pass the law and then try to create conditions to realize it.”

“At the same time, we have to work on raising people's awareness about their rights," she said.

Barakzai says the government, rights activists, and intellectuals must work to break old taboos and change perceptions about women's roles and rights.

"The Afghan people, too, step by step, have to learn and accept a new approach to women's position in society," she said.

Source: Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty

Copyright (c) 2009. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

U.S. Political Experts Examine Impact Of Iran Crisis

July 20, 2009

By Nikola Krastev

NEW YORK -- Speaking at the New York-based Council on Foreign Relations last week, two political experts on Iran discussed the impact that Iran's postelection situation will have on its future policies at home and abroad. They were Mohsen Milani, a professor who chairs the Department of Government and International Affairs at the University of South Florida, and Suzanne Maloney, senior fellow at the Saban Center for Middle East Policy at the Brookings Institution.

"What we have seen in Iran is nothing short of a war of the Islamic Republic against the Islamic Republic itself because what we are witnessing is the struggle between two different visions for the Islamic Republic," asserted Milani.

He said the situation that Iran finds itself following the country's controversial June 12 election is the result of a combination of factors, including a split within the governing elite, major divisions among powerful factions and individuals, and public discontent on the streets.

Maloney said that hard-liners in Iran today have a greater capacity for repression than the former shah's security apparatus.

It is unlikely, she said, that there will be reconciliation between the forces backing Mahmud Ahmadinejad, whose landslide presidential victory has been fiercely disputed, and the reformist camp represented by former Prime Minister Mir Hossein Musavi, the leading reformist challenger who believes large-scale fraud led to his second-place finish to Amadinejad.

Maloney also addressed the role of Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, a former president who backed Musavi during the elections and whose sermon at Tehran's Friday Prayers on July 17 was heavily scrutinized by both camps for signs of support.

"Surely people like Rafsanjani are going to continue to be part of this system," Maloney said, "but many of them who've been disaffected in a way that I think will be difficult for them to come back in a serious way and make peace with Ahmadinejad; participate in his government such as it is when it's reconstructed with an inauguration in August."

Milani said there are fundamental differences between the scale and instruments of repression under the shah's regime and under the current establishment.

"The repressive capability of the Islamic Republic is significantly more than the shah ever had," Milani said. "The shah simply had the SAVAK [Intelligence Agency], but these people have the Basijis, they have the [Islamic] Revolutionary Guards, and they have their own intelligence agency. So, they do have considerable repressive capability and I don't think you have seen it all yet and, most importantly, they are willing to use it."

Maloney noted a critical difference in the command structure and the composition of the Baisji and Revolutionary Guards rank-and-file compared to that of SAVAK.

"This Islamic Republic is nowhere near collapse at this stage," Maloney said. "There are still many of us who wonder to what extent you would see the Basiji, the Revolutionary Guards willing to fire on large crowds in large numbers."

Reports by amateur journalists and Youtube videos make it evident, Maloney said, that the Basiji and Revolutionary Guards at this point are proceeding cautiously, trying to persuade protesters to dissipate peacefully and encouraging them to leave the streets.

At the same time, she said, if the unrest continues and the authorities feel threatened, they will not hesitate to issue orders for mass suppression of protests and to resort to much greater violence than we have witnessed so far.

Source: Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty

Copyright (c) 2009. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

Australia Warns of More Terrorist Attacks in Indonesia

By Phil Mercer
Sydney
July 20, 2009

Australia has upgraded its travel advisory to Indonesia after the fatal hotel bombings in Jakarta. The Department of Foreign Affairs in Canberra warns Australians to reconsider their need to travel to Indonesia because of the possibility of further terrorist attacks.

Forensic investigators examine the ruins at the site of the bomb blast at the Ritz-Carlton hotel in Jakarta, Indonesia, 18 Jul 2009

The explosions at Jakarta's Marriott and Ritz-Carlton hotels killed nine people, including three Australians and a New Zealander.

The attacks have prompted the Australian government to warn its citizens to think twice before traveling to Indonesia.

The upgraded travel advisory warns that further acts of terrorism are possible.

In Canberra, officials say that Bali, a resort island popular with Australian tourists, remains vulnerable to attack.

David Mackney, a security expert in Jakarta, says Indonesia has responded quickly to this new threat.

"Security has been beefed up at the big hotels and also in the shopping malls," Mackney said. "I know that the police in Bali for instance have reported that they've gone on a higher alert and there is extra security at Bali airport and all the main tourist spots in Bali."

Security has been tightened across Indonesia, with 500 troops put on standby to support police in the capital, Jakarta.

No arrests have yet been made but investigators think the suicide bombings were part of a sophisticated plot.

Suspicion has fallen on fugitive Malaysian militant Noordin Mohammed Top. He is suspected of involvement in a series of attacks, including the twin blasts that killed more than 200 people died on the Indonesian holiday island of Bali in 2002.

Noordin is thought to have been a key figure in Jemaah Islamiah, a militant Islamic organization, but is now believed to lead a splinter group.

Relatives of the Australians killed in Friday's blasts have traveled to Indonesia to claim their bodies as the investigation continues.

Source: Voice of America News

An Enduring Byproduct Of War

Daniela Nayu

July 20, 2009 (DVB)–For half a century, Burma’s jungles and mountains have hosted a conflict where conventional weaponry has been traded for tactics designed to forever scar the ethnic population of the country.

The byproducts of the world’s longest running internal conflict, grossly underreported, have been so severe that international lawyers and rights groups believe that the ruling junta in Burma could warrant investigation for war crimes. Perhaps most chillingly, young girls have been subject to appalling sexual violence at the hands of a military bent on creating a means of intimidation that will far outlast the brandishing of a gun.

System of Impunity, a 2004 report by the Women’s League of Burma (WLB), describes the case of a 13-year-old Shan girl, Nang Ung, who was detained by Burmese troops on false charges of being a rebel. “She was tied up in a tent and raped every day for 10 days [by five to six troops each day]. The injuries she sustained from the repeated rapes were so severe that she never recovered. She died a few weeks after her release.”

Naang Ung’s story has been echoed in every ethnic region of Burma for generations. Burmese rights organisations suggest that military rape of ethnic women has been rife in the country for the last five decades since the consolidation of military rule, and shows no signs of abating.

“It can happen in homes, in the villages, in the forests, in the paddy fields, whether the woman is working alone or whether they are going to their villages,” said Cheery Zahau, an activist from the India-based Women’s League of Chinland (WLC). “In some circumstances they just rape the women in front of the men.”

Sexual torture and violence often accompanies such acts. Testimonies from victims show cases of both old women and young girls being gang-raped by up to 20 men, while others report that women who have endured days of rape are then shot in the vagina or have their breasts cut off. Crimes in Burma, a report released in May by the Harvard Law School, said that on many occasions there had been “no attempt to conceal the bodies of dead women who were raped and subjected to other acts of violence.”

Such descriptions are perhaps indicative of a military which has been partially brutalized by debasement, poverty and high levels of institutionalized corruption. Yet this cannot account for all cases. During an interview, Cheery relayed an account of a woman from Chin state whose son had just been killed by the military. After she was gang-raped, the mother was strung up on a wooden cross: “She was hanging outside of the camp the whole night in the freezing winter weather,” said Cheery. “Why would they make the cross to hang the women? The cross is the symbol of Christianity in Chin state; it’s one of the mockeries against their beliefs.”

Religious persecution adds weight to a belief common among ethnic groups that the generals are attempting an ethnic cleansing campaign to strip non-Burmans of their identity. The regime’s suspected policy of ‘Burmanisation’, as referred to in a number of official reports including one by Christian Solidarity Worldwide (CSW), could also help to explain such widespread attempts to impregnate non-Burmese women. While some are convinced on ‘Burmanisation’, the UN’s torture rapporteur for Burma in 2006 reported that state-sanctioned violence against women was used as a control mechanism, and as “punishment” for allegedly supporting ethnic armed groups and “a means of terrorizing and subjugating the population”.

According to Ben Rogers, the Southeast Asia advocacy officer for CSW, it is important to note that “these incidents documented are not simply isolated acts by individual, badly behaved frontline soldiers”. Reports have shown that a high percentage of rapes committed by the Burmese military have been orchestrated by officers. Furthermore, an alarming number have been gang rapes. Moan Kaein, from the Thailand-based Shan Women’s Associated Network (SWAN), stated that 83 percent of the rapes SWAN had documented in Shan state were committed by officers, while 61 percent of all military rapes were gang rapes. Furthermore, there have been reports of officers ordering their men to rape ethnic women on threat of death. “Those who refuse to rape will be shot and killed,” Captain Ye Htut from Pah Klaw Hta army camp was quoted as telling his men in the Karen Women’s Organisation (KWO) report, Shattering Silences.

“When we document all these cases, none of the perpetrators are punished,” says Cheery, referring to WLC’s 2007 Unsafe State report. Despite international publications of reports that specifically name high-ranking officials and officers involved, no actions have been taken by the Burmese government to punish perpetrators even though such crimes are illegal under Burmese law. “This impunity suggests it is a deliberate policy, and is condoned by the regime,” says Rogers.

While the consequences of rape can be horrific – they include unwanted pregnancy, contraction of HIV, and psychological damage for both victim and family – support for victims is virtually non-existent. Even women who manage to flee to the borders have no real hope of any professional psychological assistance, given that they are often not officially recognised by their country of arrival. While some women have been pushed to suicide, others are forced to keep their rape a secret in order to avoid social stigmas.

“The only solution for them is silence, and often they get rejected by their communities,” says Cheery, while Moan Kaein claims that “some husbands will not accept their wives after they have been raped”. Some women also get accused of “sleeping with” Burmese troops and are told to leave their villages.

There is also the real chance of retaliation from troops and government officials. Rape victims and their families have been the most severely punished when such sexual crimes have been reported. According to press releases from the Women’s League of Burma (WLB), four girls aged 14 to16 from a village in northern Kachin state were arrested and jailed after they relayed to independent Burmese media about having been gang-raped by three army officers and four soldiers from a local military base.

Reports of state-sanctioned rape have been consistently met with a tide of public smears within Burma, as well as mass intimidation and deliberate distraction by the military. The problem has been further aggravated by callous retorts from the Burmese government, including the release of a report, License to Lie, attacking authors of License to Rape.

Perhaps more worrying are threats of violence and even death against those who report such cases. System of Impunity describes how the local military officers threatened to “cut out the tongues and slit the throats” of villagers who had dared speak out to the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) during their visit to Shan State in January 2003. On 1 June this year, Kachin News Group reported that Kachin youths had been “brutally assaulted” for having prevented the gang-rape of a Kachin girl by four soldiers.

Inaction following international condemnation has also served to dampen hope that ethnic women and campaigners will see change in their lifetimes. On the 24 June, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said that “If we ignore sexual crimes, we trample on the principles of accountability, reconciliation and peace. We fail not just women but all people." The statement coincided with the one-year anniversary of the Security Council’s adoption of resolution 1820 (2008), which notes that “rape and other forms of sexual violence in conflict zones can constitute war crimes, crimes against humanity or a constitutive act with respect to genocide”.

The irony of Ban’s proclamation is that sexual crimes in Burma were ignored on his recent visit to Burma earlier this month, just as they are ignored by countries like China and Russia who supply weapons to the junta and by neighboring countries which provide no support for the raped women pouring over the borders. “We call and call,” says Blooming Night, joint secretary of Karen Women’s Organisation, “but nothing happens”.

Increased militarization in many ethnic regions in lieu of the 2010 elections has led to increasing concern for the safety of women living there. “When we documented Unsafe State [in 2007], there were about 33 army camps. Now there are 55 camps, so they’re spreading” says Cheery, adding that “as long as [Burmese] troops are there, there will be sexual violence”. Burma shows no sign of abating its aggressive expansion of the military. If, as it would seem, rape of ethnic women is a byproduct of this, perhaps we should expect the stories of Naang Ung and the thousands of other women and children to continue echoing throughout Burma.

Source: Democratic Voice of Burma

Mass Opposition Arrest On Martyrs’ Day

July 20, 2009 (DVB)–Around 20 members of Burma’s opposition National League for Democracy party were briefly detained yesterday whilst returning from an annual celebration marking Martyrs’ Day.

Around 50 National League for Democracy (NLD) members had marched to the Martyr’s Mausoleum in Rangoon to pay their respects to General Aung San, Burma’s independence leader and father of Aung San Suu Kyi, and other national heroes.

The event was marred by tight security, and 20 people were arrested on their return, said NLD spokesperson Nyan Win.

“About 30 to 40 people who went to the Martyrs’ Hill this morning were nabbed in a truck but all were released after about 30 minutes,” he said.

“Apparently they were detained for wearing t-shirts with pictures of General Aung San and Daw Aung San Suu Kyi.”

According to one NLD member, security officials had also collected personal information from each person as they entered the mausoleum.

“They also check our bags for digital equipments such as mobile phones, cameras and voice recorders and didn’t allow us to take those into the mausoleum,” he said.

“I felt so disturbed about it; I wanted to salute our national leaders who brought us independence without any restriction.”

Suu Kyi, who is on trial at Rangoon’s Insein prison on charges of breaching conditions of her house arrest, marked the day by sending food to patients inside the prison hospital.

Government officials also visited the mausoleum and laid wreaths in remembrance.

General Aung San was instrumental in setting in motion Burmese independence from British rule, although he was assassinated in July 1947, six months before it was successfully achieved.

As a revered symbol of civilian rule, the military government is now reportedly removing references to General Aung San from school textbooks.

Reporting by Thurein Soe and Ahunt Phone Myat

Source: Democratic Voice of Burma

100-Foot Wide Tornado In Rangoon

July 20, 2009 (DVB)–A large tornado has swept through Burma’s former capital Rangoon today, damaging a number of buildings, including some belonging to the Myanmar Oil and Gas Enterprise.

Authorities and a regional military commander are said to be investigating the incident, which occurred this afternoon in Tharkayta township in east Rangoon.

“We are still calculating the damage caused [by the twister],” said an officer at Tharkayta police station.

“Roofs from about five different buildings were also pulled off by the wind, as well as those at the Myanmar Oil and Gas Enterprise.”

Tharkayta township has a large industrial park and is at the confluence of three large rivers.

“It was about 100 feet wide - it’s the kind of twister you see in Hollywood films,” said the policeman.

No one was reported injured.

Reporting by Naw Say Phaw

Source: Democratic Voice of Burma

Sunday, July 19, 2009

Top UN Officials Call For Thorough Investigation Into Killing Of Russian Activist

Natalia Estemirova

16 July 2009 – Russian authorities must conduct a thorough and independent investigation into the murder of a prominent activist looking into alleged human rights abuses in Chechnya, top United Nations officials said today.

Natalia Estemirova, who worked for the Russian non-governmental organization (NGO) Memorial, was kidnapped on Wednesday near her home in the Chechen capital, Grozny, and her body was found in neighbouring Ingushetia later in the day with bullet wounds to the head and chest.

UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay today welcomed the announcement that Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has ordered a high-level investigation, urging authorities “to do all they can to ensure that the perpetrators are prosecuted and brought to justice.”

Ms. Estemirova’s death – the latest in a series of killings or attacks against rights activists, journalists and lawyers in the country – “sadly underlines once again the need for governments to do much more to protect human rights defenders,” Ms. Pillay said.

For his part, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said he is appalled and saddened by Ms. Estemirova’s “heinous” killing, calling on authorities to bring the perpetrators to justice “to send a strong and unambiguous message that the targeting of human rights will not be tolerated,” according to a statement issued by his spokesperson.

“The Secretary-General expresses his solidarity with human rights defenders around the world who work courageously and selflessly each and every day, in defense of basic rights and freedoms,” it added.

The slain activist had worked for many years to promote human rights in the North Caucasus, having received numerous awards. Those included the Anna Politkovskaya Prize from the Nobel Women’s Initiative, which was named for the Russian journalist and outspoken human rights campaigner who was killed in 2006, with whom Ms. Estemirova had worked.

She had also worked alongside Stanislav Markelov, a human rights lawyer who was killed after having given a press conference in Moscow on 19 January.

Source: United Nations News Centre

Senior Official Shot Dead In Russia's Ingushetia

July 17, 2009

NAZRAN, Russia (Reuters) -- A senior official in the volatile Russian province of Ingushetia has been shot dead, police said, in the latest high-profile killing in the mainly Muslim North Caucasus.

The minister for sport in the regional administration, Ruslan Balayev, was shot dead in his car, a police source told Reuters.

Last month an assassination attempt left regional leader Yunus-Bek Yevkurov gravely wounded in hospital.

"The minister was shot near Nizhny-Achaluki and died of his wounds," the source said, referring to a village 20 kilometers north of Nazran, Ingushetia's largest city.

Ingushetia has overtaken its neighbor Chechnya as the main center of violence along Russia's turbulent southern flank.

On July 15, the body of prominent human rights activist Natalya Estemirova was found in Ingushetia hours after she was kidnapped in Chechnya.

Earlier this month nine Chechen policemen sent to help crush Ingushetia's insurgency were killed by rebels.

Analysts say Islamist insurgencies in the North Caucasus have been fuelled in recent months by new recruits bitter at economic hardship and heavy-handed antiterror tactics used by regional leaders.

In a separate incident on July 17, a policeman was shot dead in the Chechen capital Grozny, Interfax news agency reported, the latest in a daily stream of attacks.

Source: Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty

Copyright (c) 2009. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

Thousands Of Crimean Tatars Rally To Demand Land Restitution

Crimean Tatars rally in Kyiv.

July 16, 2009

SIMFEROPOL, Ukraine -- Some 2,000 Crimean Tatars have protested to demand the restitution of land that they lost when they or their relatives were deported more than 60 years ago, RFE/RL's Tatar-Bashkir Service reports.

Representatives of the Crimean Tatar National Congress met with Crimean Supreme Council Speaker Anatoliy Hrytsenko to discuss the Tatars' demands.

Crimean Tatars have also been protesting in front of the Ukrainian Parliament in Kyiv for some 60 days, with some of the protesters engaging in hunger strikes.

Hundreds of thousands of Crimean Tatars were deported to Central Asia in 1944. After the breakup of the Soviet Union, they began returning to Crimea and demanding the return of their land. Their ongoing protests typically escalate during the summer.

The Crimean Parliament has adopted a law on land restitution, but any return of land has been rejected by the Simferopol State Council.

Source: Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty

Copyright (c) 2009. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

Failed Test To Delay Russia's Newest Missile

A Bulava missile launch, undated

July 17, 2009

MOSCOW (Reuters) -- The introduction of Russia's newest nuclear missile may be delayed by at least six months after a failed test launch this week, Interfax news agency has quoted an arms industry source as saying.

Last month Russia's deputy defense minister in charge of weapons, Vladimir Popovkin, said that Russia expected to commission the much-delayed Bulava strategic missile this year once testing was completed.

But on July 15 a Bulava missile self-destructed after a malfunction during the first stage of its flight from the White Sea in the northwest of the country.

"In the best-case scenario, the next test-flight of the Bulava will take place in five or six months, meaning that the time frame for introducing this missile will be postponed by at least half a year," Interfax quoted an arms industry source close to a commission investigating the accident as saying.

The submarine-launched Bulava (Mace), which is capable of carrying up to 10 warheads for up to 8,000 kilometers, now has a history of six unsuccessful launches and just five successful ones.

An intercontinental ballistic missile, the Bulava is designed to be deployed on Russia's newest Project 955 nuclear submarines of the Borei (Arctic Wind) class being built at Sevmass shipbuilder in northern Russia.

Russia's war with neighboring Georgia last August exposed a Soviet-style army with obsolete equipment, prompting the government to embark on an ambitious program to modernize its military, analysts have said.

The country relies heavily on its still-formidable nuclear triad of ground-based, submarine-launched, and bomber-carried missiles.

Source: Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty

Copyright (c) 2009. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

Nazarbaev Says Customs Union With Russia May Grow

Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbaev

July 18, 2009

MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Several other former members of the Soviet Union are interested in joining a customs union with Russia, Belarus, and Kazakhstan, Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbaev is quoted as saying.

"I am sure that the customs union will begin operations on January 1. This is a very serious step toward integration and several other members of the CIS [Commonwealth of Independent States] are already interested," Nazarbayev told Russian President Dmitry Medvedev in Moscow, ITAR-TASS news agency said.

The three former Soviet republics plan to launch the customs union at the start of next year as part of a move to join the World Trade Organization (WTO) together.

Russia surprised the WTO last month when it announced that it would abandon its long-running bid to join the group in favor of a joint application with its two neighbours.

Russia is the largest economy to remain outside the 153-member global trade watchdog.

Nazarbaev did not say which other members of the 11-nation CIS were interested in joining the customs union.

Source: Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty

Copyright (c) 2009. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

Iraq To Consider Unjustly Accused In Hussein Era

Saddam Hussein reacts to his death sentence at his trial in Baghdad on November 5, 2006.

July 18, 2009

BAGHDAD (Reuters) -- Iraq's government is considering reprieving some Iraqis deemed to have been unjustly targeted in moves to seize the assets of those close to ousted Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein, a top official has said.

A government spokesman said a bill would set up a committee to decide whether some of those whose assets had been frozen since Hussein's ouster in 2003 might have been wrongly accused.

"There are many people whose assets have been seized that were not guilty...Some peoples' assets were frozen because they were from Tikrit or from the army," spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh said, referring to Hussein's hometown.

"So that we can free up their funds, the number of people whose assets are targeted for seizure has been narrowed down and they will remain off the list unless the opposite is proved."

A statement from Dabbagh's office listed 52 people close to Hussein, including top aides like Ali Hassan al-Majeed, known as "Chemical Ali" for his role in gassing minority Kurds, whose assets have been frozen.

Hussein's family members' assets have also been frozen.

Hussein, a Sunni Muslim who ruled the majority Shi'ite nation with an iron fist from 1979 until 2003, was executed in 2006 by the government of Shi'ite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki.

Some minority Sunnis have complained that Maliki has unfairly marginalized those even loosely connected to Hussein's government, and has dragged its feet in implementing steps to reverse the purge of thousands of Ba'ath party members from government jobs in 2003.

Maliki's government says it will embrace former Ba'athists but not those with blood on their hands.

Some on the list are jailed and facing trial, some have been sentenced to death, and others are still at large.

Dabbagh said the new committee would be headed by Deputy Prime Minister Rafie al-Esawi, a Sunni Arab, and would include Iraq's justice minister and other officials.

The proposed bill would have to be approved by parliament.

Source: Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty

Copyright (c) 2009. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

New Iranian Nuclear Head Urges Mutual Trust With West

By Edward Yeranian
Cairo
July 18, 2009

Ali Akbar Salehi (file photo)

Iran's newly-appointed nuclear energy chief is calling for an end to hostilities between his country and the West, and renewed efforts to build trust.

Iranian government TV says that the country's new nuclear energy chief, Ali Akbar Salehi is urging the West to end hostilities with Tehran and to start building trust.

"Legal and technical discussions about Iran's nuclear case have finished," he insists, "and there is no room left to keep this case open."

"We hope," he added, "that more efforts will be made [by the West] to obtain mutual confidence, instead of the last six years of hostility."

They were Salehi's first comments to the media, since being appointed by President Mahmoud Ahmedinejad, Friday, following the resignation of veteran nuclear negotiator Gholam Reza Aghazadeh.

The soft-spoken Salehi was educated at the American University of Beirut and holds a doctorate from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Salehi is Iran's former envoy to the International Atomic Energy Agency and signed a protocol allowing for freer inspections of Iran's nuclear sites. His appointment appears to be something of a gesture to the U.S.

Neither the U.S., nor the other members of the so-called Group of five-plus-one, including the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council, plus Germany, however, are likely to agree with Salehi about the closure of Tehran's nuclear file.

U.S. President Barack Obama warned Tehran, during the G-8 summit in Italy, that the world is giving it until September to comply with U.N. resolutions over its controversial nuclear program.

Iran has persistently refused to stop enriching uranium, and the West fears that it will use highly enriched uranium to build atomic weapons.

The Iranian government, however, continues to insist that its nuclear program is intended for peaceful, civilian purposes, alone.

Iran analyst Meir Javedanfar of the MEEPAS (Middle East Economic and Political Analysis) center in Tel Aviv argues that Tehran is hardening its position over its nuclear dossier, in response to Western criticism over its violent crackdown against its own people following the June 12 presidential elections.

"I think Ayatollah Khamenei is sending the message that the more we are pushed on other fronts, the more we're going to adjust the balance in our favor, and one area is the nuclear program, because Khamenei knows how important the nuclear program is to the West, especially to President Obama," he said.

"So, I think this is kind of a backlash against what Iran sees as Western interference in its own affairs. I also think that the Iranian government still sees the West as divided and there's not much the West can do at the moment to stop Iran's nuclear program, so they're toughening their policy and they want to see what the reaction will be, if the reaction is going to be hard or if the West is going to come up with an even [better] offer," he added.

Javedanfar, however, believes that those who are seeking a compromise with Iran should not despair completely, because Iranian leaders are pragmatists, and may at the end of the day be ready for an agreement.

Iranian Foreign Minister Manuchehr Motaki said one week ago that Tehran was preparing to present a "new package" of proposals, concerning what he called "international, security and political issues," to the West for talks.

Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has also warned the West that Tehran would weigh their criticism over its crackdown on protesters following the June 12 election, in assessing future relations with their countries.

Source: Voice of America

People Smugglers Offer Bargain Trips to Australia

By Phil Mercer
Sydney
July 16, 2009

An expert in illegal migration warns that people smugglers are encouraging more asylum seekers to head to Australia by cutting prices because of the economic downturn.

Photo by Australia's Dept. of Home Affairs shows 2 launches trying to intercept boat carrying suspected asylum seekers (file photo)

This year, more than 900 boat people have been intercepted by Australian patrols, a significant increase on arrivals in 2008.

Dr. Khalid Koser from the Geneva Center for Security Policy, an international foundation, thinks that is because traffickers have lowered their prices, to cope with the global economic slowdown.

Rising unemployment in Southeast Asia and conflicts in Afghanistan, Sri Lanka and Pakistan have caused a surge in desperate people willing to pay smugglers large fees to help them flee to Australia.

Dr. Koser says that people smugglers are often legitimate travel agents who have branched out into the illicit world of trafficking.

"The evidence that I have from various sources is that smugglers themselves are, of course, being impacted by the global financial crisis and one of the responses is that they are lowering their costs, said Koser. "So, I think it is very possible that as a result of the financial crisis, you have potentially increasing smuggling, so I think smugglers are out there trying to drum up business and make sure that they can keep their profits coming in," he said.

Opposition politicians accuse the Australian government of going soft on illegal immigration, causing the recent spike in illegal arrivals. Senior officials in Canberra reject those criticisms.

Since his election in November 2007, Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has closed controversial processing centers for asylum seekers in small South Pacific countries. He also has relaxed the policy of automatically locking away all illegal entrants until their claims for refugee status are assessed.

Koser also warns that Australia's decision to reduce levels of skilled migration could make it harder for its economy to bounce back from the economic slowdown.

This year Canberra cut 25,000 places from its skilled immigration program to help protect local workers.

Australia resettles about 13,000 refugees annually as part of official humanitarian programs.

Source: Voice of America

Monsoon Rains in Pakistan Kill 26

By Voice of America News
July 19, 2009

A Pakistani homeless family fixes their damaged hut caused by heavy monsoon rainfall, at a slum in Hyderabad, Pakistan on Saturday, 18 July 2009

Heavy monsoon rains in Pakistan's south have killed at least 26 people and cut off electricity in the country's largest city, Karachi.

The rainfall started Saturday and flooded areas of the port city. Officials say some of the victims died from drowning and electrocution. Others were killed by collapsing homes.

The 15 centimeters of rainfall damaged hundreds of buildings and downed power lines across the city. Pakistani officials say they are working to restore electricity and control the situation.

Despite the downpour, meteorologists are predicting almost a third less rainfall this year.

Karachi suffers from outdated infrastructure and a poor drainage system that leaves parts of the city vulnerable to flooding.

Some information for this report was provided by AFP, AP and Reuters.

Source: Voice of America

Afghanistan, Pakistan Pledge Cooperation Against Terrorism

By VOA News
July 18, 2009

Afghanistan and Pakistan have pledged to work closely together on counter-terrorism, by boosting border security and co-operation on arresting terror suspects.

Pakistani Interior Minister Rehman Malik and his Afghan counterpart, Mohammad Hanif Atmar, held talks in Kabul Saturday.

Militants along the Afghan-Pakistani border have carried out attacks against international forces and civilians in both countries. Atmar said it is not important where the "terrorists" are from, but what both Afghanistan and Pakistan can do to stop them.

On Saturday, the Afghan defense ministry said a suicide bomber detonated his explosives-laden vehicle next to an Afghan army convoy in the Shah Joy district of Zabul province, killing at least three soldiers.

In Nangarhar province, two civilians and three militants were killed when local residents tried to stop militants from attacking an Afghan army officer.

A local official (Ahmad Zia Abdulzai) said residents detained 11 Taliban militants, including eight from neighboring Pakistan.

And the U.S. military said an F-15 fighter jet crashed in eastern Afghanistan early Saturday, killing the two crew members on board.

A military statement said the plane crash was not caused by "hostile fire." A local Afghan official (Mohammad Qasim Naziri) said the plane crashed in a remote area of Nawur district in Ghazni province. It said U.S. forces sealed off the area.

Source: Voice of America