Thursday, June 30, 2011

Six In The Morning

Report: Pakistan ends US use of base for drone attacks
Ties between the two countries remain strained since the bin Laden raid
REUTERS
Pakistan has stopped the United States from using an air base in the southwest of the country to launch drone strikes against militant groups, the defense minister was quoted as saying, as ties remain strained between the two countries.
Pakistan has long publicly opposed the missile attacks as a violation of its sovereignty, but has in private given support including intelligence to help target members of al-Qaida and the Taliban in the northwest region along the Afghan border.

'War on terror' set to surpass cost of Second World War

By Rupert Cornwell in Washington Thursday, 30 June 2011
The total cost to America of its wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, plus the related military operations in Pakistan, is set to exceed $4 trillion – more than three times the sum so far authorised by Congress in the decade since the 9/11 attacks.

This staggering sum emerges from a new study by academics at the Ivy-league Brown University that reveals the $1.3 trillion officially appropriated on Capitol Hill is the tip of a spending iceberg. If other Pentagon outlays, interest payments on money borrowed to finance the wars, and the $400bn estimated to have been spent on the domestic "war on terror", the total cost is already somewhere between $2.3 and $2.7 trillion.

Greece crisis: Greek MPs face second austerity vote
Greece's parliament is to hold a second vote on its austerity programme, which it needs to implement to secure the country further financial support.
The BBC
The vote is about putting into practice the tax hikes, pay cuts, privatisations and public sector redundancies approved in principle on Wednesday.

The vote was a retreat from the "grave scenario of default", the EU said.

Public reaction has been very hostile, and the debate has been accompanied by strikes and violent protest.

Clashes continued on Syntagma Square outside parliament overnight, as police fired tear gas at stone-throwing youths.


France confirms Libya arms drops
By arming civilians, France becomes first NATO country to admit supplying weapons to rebel-controlled areas in Libya.

Last Modified: 30 Jun 2011
The French military has confirmed that it airdropped weapons early this month to civilians fighting in rebel-held areas in the western part of Libya.

Colonel Thierry Burkhard, a spokesperson for the French general staff, told Al Jazeera on Wednesday that the military had dropped assault rifles, machine guns and rocket-propelled grenade launchers to groups of unarmed civilians it deemed to be at risk.

Earlier in the day, the Le Figaro newspaper and the AFP news agency reported that France had dropped several tonnes of arms, including Milan anti-tank rockets and light armoured vehicles.

The airdrops arrived somewhere in rebel-held towns in the Nafusa mountains, which run east-west from the Tunisian border around 100km south of the capital Tripoli.




The deal behind Thailand's polls
ASIA HAND
By Shawn W Crispin
BANGKOK - High-level secret talks between Thailand's royal palace, military and self-exiled former premier Thaksin Shinawatra point towards a stable outcome to this Sunday's highly anticipated election. Contrary to widespread speculation of a post-poll coup and new rounds of street violence, the military is more likely to stay in the barracks if Thaksin's Puea Thai party wins and forms a new government.

Puea Thai has surged ahead in pre-election polls, holding sway in its geographical strongholds and taking the lead in pivotal swing constituencies. The party has rallied around Thaksin's sister, Yingluck Shinawatra, a political novice whose campaign has focused on the need for national reconciliation. Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva has acknowledged his Democrats trail in opinion surveys, and party members seem increasingly resigned to a second-place finish.



Equatorial Guinea steadies itself for Africa's big stage

DAVID LEWIS MALABO, EQUATORIAL GUINEA - Jun 30 2011
Equatorial Guinea is racing to prepare for this year's African Union summit, starting on Thursday, which it hopes will mark its arrival on the continent's big stage, but which critics complain has turned into an outlandish expense eating up funds that should have been spent on the country's poor.

"This is about the projection of Equatorial Guinea," said Alex Vines, head of the Africa Programme at the UK-based Chatham House think-tank.

As Africa's sole former Spanish colony and one of its smallest states, nestling between Cameroun and Gabon with a population of 650 000, the country has often seemed isolated.

Myanmar warns Suu Kyi ahead of tour

In November of 2010 Myanmar held its first election since 1990 after the National Democratic League led by Aung San Suu Kyi won a derisive victory over the party backed by Myanmar's military rulers. Only one problem they were free and fair it your party was backed by the ruling junta.

Yes, shame elections designed to placate the major economic powers in the world need rules. Rules which are so obtuse and draconian that any opposition party wish to contest the election must allow its self to be co-opted by the vary party they wish to succeed. Given those restrictions the National Democratic League didn't register to field candidates as required thereby allowing the Myanmar's military rulers to disband the party. As these men live in a heightened paranoia where Aung San Suu Kyi is concerned it was only a matter of time before this happneded.

The home affairs ministry wrote to the Nobel Peace Prize winner on Wednesday accusing her National League for Democracy (NLD) party of breaking the law by maintaining party offices, holding meetings and issuing statements, the New Light of Myanmar newspaper reported.

"If they really want to accept and practise democracy effectively, they are to stop such acts that can harm peace and stability and the rule of law as well as the unity among the people including monks and service personnel," it said.

Myanmar's state media further warned Suu Kyi that her plans to travel outside Yangon to meet supporters could trigger riots.

A commentary, published in all three state-run daily newspapers, appeared to reflect government anxiety over Suu Kyi's plans to travel to other areas of the country.

The state press serves as a mouthpiece for the government, which otherwise makes few public announcements.

No date has been announced for Suu Kyi's travel.

Myanmar Democracy in action quash all dissent and opposition political parties and call it a day.

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Random Japan



SAY WHAT?
Dr. Satoshi Kanazawa from the London School of Economics’ management department took a lot of heat—as one might expect—for claiming in an article he wrote for Psychology Today that black women were “far less attractive” than women of other races. Guess he won’t be getting much action in Africa.

A disgruntled job-seeker in Nagoya was arrested after he hit the emergency button at a railway crossing. “My search for a job wasn’t going well, and I was irritated,” police quoted the 24-year-old as saying.

Former Yomiuri Giants pitcher Masumi Kuwata finished dead last in a low-level pro golf tournament he entered. His scorecard included a 93 and an 87. Ouch!

Despite ending up 36 over par for the tourney, Kuwata did not three-putt any holes. Go figure.

Another chucker, ex-MLB pitcher Chan-ho Park, was sent to the minor leagues by the Orix Buffaloes and was told to “stop fooling around” and get serious. The 37-year-old South Korean is in his first—and likely last—season here.


Stats

24.54 million
Registered NTT Docomo mobile phones in the 10 prefectures of Tokyo, Kanagawa, Chiba, Saitama, Ibaraki, Tochigi, Gunma, Niigata, Yamanashi and Nagano

10
Percent of their monthly paycheck donated to Japan’s earthquake/tsunami victims by a group of Bangladeshis

¥3 billion
Made by former investment fund manager Yoshiaki Murakami, an ex-trade and industry ministry official, on insider trading based on information from Livedoor boss Takafumi Horie

¥3 million
Fine Murakami faces for insider trading (plus about ¥1.15 billion in surcharges, plus another ¥200 million fine on his now-defunct MAC Asset Management company)

¥199
Price of TEPCO shares briefly on June 8, breaking a previous record low of ¥206





BIG VOICES, SMALL BALLS
Soprano Anna Netrebko and tenor Joseph Calleja of New York’s Metropolitan Opera pulled out of a tour of Japan due to “concerns about radiation.” The show went on without them.

Headline of the Week, courtesy of The Mainichi Daily News: “Study finds young women’s wisdom teeth disappearing”

Over 1.7 million bedeviled NTT Docomo mobile phone users in the Kanto and Koshinetsu regions could not get service for a few hours on June 6.

A Nagasaki hospital director and an X-ray technician were arrested for killing the director’s adoptive mother “who had headed a medical corporation that runs the institution.”

Nearly ¥170 billion in donated relief money collected by the Japanese Red Cross Society and the Central Community Chest of Japan for people affected by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami was still undistributed as of June 5.

More than ¥250 billion was collected by the two groups as of early June with just ¥82 billion, roughly a third of the total, handed over to 15 prefectures in need.



Need A Friend?
Look Else Where




Looking To Visit Hades?
Here's Your Chance


Now This
Is A Man Catcher



Monju reactor unclogged for restart

Kyodo Saturday, June 25, 2011
Tsuruga Fukui Pref. — A device that fell last August into the vessel of the Monju prototype fast-breeder reactor in Tsuruga, Fukui Prefecture, was finally retrieved Friday, paving the way for resumed test runs by fall, the Japan Atomic Energy Agency said.

But due to the nuclear disaster at the Fukushima No. 1 power plant, triggered by the March earthquake and tsunami, it is unclear whether the country's nuclear fuel recycling project, in which the troubled Monju prototype would play a key role, can move ahead as planned. Because it is meant to produce plutonium, were it to experience a leak accident, the danger would be grave.

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Six In The Morning

Afghans Build Security, and Hope to Avoid Infiltrators

By RAY RIVERA
For someone who had once joined an insurgent group, and whose family was tied to a top Taliban commander, Akmal had a strikingly easy path into the Afghan National Army.
The district governor who approved his paperwork had never met him. A village elder who was supposed to vouch for him — as required by recruiting mandates — did little more than verify his identity.

No red flags went up when, after just six weeks in the army, he deserted. He returned more than three months later with the skimpiest of explanations and was allowed to rejoin. “I told them I got sick,” Akmal recalled.

How the demise of a trusted adviser could bring down Ahmadinejad
Iran's President has survived mass uprisings, but a corruption row engulfing his inner circle may soon be his undoing. Robert Fisk reports from Tehran
Tuesday, 28 June 2011
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad Iran's irascible, unpredictable but devout president, may be forced to resign in the coming weeks as a political crisis far greater than the massive street violence which followed his re-election in 2009 threatens to overwhelm him and his court favourites in the government.

The overweening influence of his close friend and confidant Esfandiar Rahim-Mashaee, the president's chief of staff – who is blamed for the firing of two intelligence ministers and for infuriating even the Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Sayed Ali Khamenei – is expected to bring down Ahmadinejad in one of the most spectacular putsches in the history of the Islamic Republic.

General strike under way in Greece'
National shutdown comes as parliament debates austerity reforms to help crisis-hit government secure rescue loans.
Last Modified: 28 Jun 2011
A 48-hour general strike is under way in Greece as the country's parliament debates a new round of austerity reforms that will help the bankruptcy-threatened government secure rescue loans.

The strike, which began on Tuesday, is set to disrupt or halt most public services.

The strike has been called by unions angry at a new €28bn ($40bn) austerity programme that would slap taxes on minimum wage earners and other struggling Greeks, following months of other cuts that have seen unemployment surge to more than 16 per cent.

"These measures are a massacre for workers' rights. It will truly be hell for the working man," said Thanassis Pafilis, a lawmaker with the Greek Communist Party that will lead one of Tuesday's main rallies.

"The strike must bring everything to a standstill."


'We May Be Naive, But We Are Not Idiots'
Pakistan's Nuclear Bomb

By Susanne Koelbl
SPIEGEL ONLINE: Recent attacks on a naval base in Karachi, Pakistan, which resulted in the deaths of 16 people, show that extremists are posing a serious threat to the government in Islamabad. How safe is the Pakistani nuclear arsenal?

Khan: This hype has been created by the West. There never was, there is not and there never will be any threat to our nuclear assets. Right from the early 1980s on, the army put a fully fail-safe mechanism in place, which was subsequently improved upon by successive army chiefs. The plant was always secured by a fully armed army contingent and the perimeters were made impregnable using various tiers. Since then the security of our nuclear assets has been taken care of by the National Command Authority which has put in place a system whereby decisions are to be taken by a number of people who also possess specific security codes. It would thus be impossible, even if there were an infiltration of extremists, to pass all the components of the security system and get to the bomb.





Egypt to assist international Gaza flotilla

Jason Koutsoukis, Jerusalem
June 28, 2011

EGYPT has agreed to allow an international flotilla targeting Israel's maritime blockade of the Gaza Strip to unload its cargo at the nearby port of El-Arish and transfer it into the Palestinian enclave over land.

The flotilla of at least eight ships is scheduled to set sail from a handful of Mediterranean ports, but is not expected to reach waters off Gaza until later next week.



The real face of Hizbul Tehrir

By Amir Mir
ISLAMABAD - The shadow of militant group Hizbul Tehrir (HuT) looms large in the interrogations of Pakistan army Brigadier Ali Khan and four majors who have revealed senior military officers planned to lead a coup against the government in Islamabad in an attempt to convert the country into a pure Islamic state by reviving the Khilafat (caliphate) system envisaged by the al-Qaeda-linked organization.

The officers are being interrogated in the garrison town of Rawalpindi by the Special Investigation Branch of the Military Intelligence (MI) after their arrest for suspected ties to militant organizations, reinforcing fears that the Pakistan's armed forces have been infiltrated at all levels by al-Qaeda and Taliban-linked Islamic extremists.

Monday, June 27, 2011

Six In The Morning

Europe Stifles Drivers in Favor of Alternatives

By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL
Published: June 26, 2011

ZURICH — While American cities are synchronizing green lights to improve traffic flow and offering apps to help drivers find parking, many European cities are doing the opposite: creating environments openly hostile to cars. The methods vary, but the mission is clear — to make car use expensive and just plain miserable enough to tilt drivers toward more environmentally friendly modes of transportation.

Cities including Vienna to Munich and Copenhagen have closed vast swaths of streets to car traffic. Barcelona and Paris have had car lanes eroded by popular bike-sharing programs. Drivers in London and Stockholm pay hefty congestion charges just for entering the heart of the city. And over the past two years, dozens of German cities have joined a national network of “environmental zones” where only cars with low carbon dioxide emissions may enter.






Australian government plans to replace tobacco companies' branding with grisly images of the consequences of smoking
Associated Press
guardian.co.uk, Monday 27 June 2011

The tobacco giant Philip Morris has launched legal action against the Australian government over the country's plans to strip company logos from cigarette packages and replace them with grisly images of cancerous mouths, sickly children and bulging, blinded eyes.

The government believes the rules will make the packages less attractive to smokers and turn Australia into the world's toughest country on tobacco advertising. Several cigarette makers have threatened lawsuits, arguing the move illegally diminishes the value of their trademarks. Philip Morris is the first to file a claim for compensation.

Khmer Rouge trial begins despite 'political pressure'
Genocide tribunal for four men in charge when 1.8 million Cambodians died may reveal awkward truths about role of West
By Andrew Buncombe, Asia Correspondent Monday, 27 June 2011
The four most senior former members of the Khmer Rouge regime still alive will go on trial today at a genocide tribunal that has been shaken by allegations that it has buckled under political interference. It is expected the hearing will highlight uncomfortable details about the role of nations such as the US, China and the UK in supporting the Maoist-inspired rebels and even creating the circumstances in which they swept to power.

The trial in Phnom Penh will see four ageing former rebel leaders brought before the court where they will face charges of genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity and murder.



Libya: Fierce fighting south-west of Tripoli
Rebel forces in Libya have clashed with troops loyal to Col Muammar Gaddafi about 80km (50 miles) south-west of the capital, Tripoli.

The BBC 27 June 2011
A rebel spokesman in the Nafusa mountains said there had been heavy fighting on the outskirts of the strategic town of Bir al-Ghanam.

The rebels told the BBC they were making a push for Tripoli.

Meanwhile the International Criminal Court is to decide whether to issue an arrest warrant for Col Gaddafi.

A decision by a three-judge panel is expected at 1100 GMT. The ICC's chief prosecutor has also requested arrest warrants for Col Gaddafi's son, Saif al-Islam, and the head of Libyan intelligence, Abdullah Senussi





Eternal triangle fuels Uganda tension

Josh Kron, Kampala June 27, 2011
WITH mass protests rocking the Arab world, riots and violent arrests in Uganda in the past few months have gone largely unnoticed.

The unrest has been driven by rising food and fuel prices, but it has found its focus in two men - President Yoweri Museveni and his main opponent, Kizza Besigye - once close friends and comrades in arms.

Once Mr Museveni's doctor, Dr Besigye may know Uganda's ruler of 25 years - and how to get under his skin - better than any politician.



Women's World Cup kicks off in Germany
Organizers hope the Women's World Cup soccer tournament will increase interest in the sport, but more than half of Germans questioned in a recent poll could not name a single player on the national team.
By Michael Steininger, Correspondent
When host country Germany faces Canada tonight in the second match of the 2011 Women’s World Cup, they'll be playing in front of a sold-out crowd of 70,000 at Berlin’s Olympic stadium.

World soccer's governing body FIFA and Germany's national soccer associations hope that the sixth edition of the tournament will boost the popularity of a sport that is constantly – and often unfavorably – compared to the men’s version.

Sixteen teams compete over a course of four weeks. Reigning champion Germany and the US, both two-time winners of the cup, are favorites to win the trophy again, but there are a number of other contenders.

Dissent Continues Its Slow Death March

As dissent continues its slow circling of the drain one has wonder how long before life support is needed followed by Hospice? Everywhere one looks be it a country one considers authoritarian or one considered representative repression of open thought continues unabated.

After protests began against the government of Basher-al Assad the usual methods of repression were abandoned in favor of armed assault which has left an estimated 1,300 people dead. Simply throwing people wasn’t enough the Syrian government is literally trying to kill any and all opposition.
Syrian forces open fire at funerals for slain political protesters, a human rights activist says, leaving two more people dead as Syria tries to subdue weeks of demonstrations against President Bashar Assad.
Rami Abdul-Rahman, the London-based director of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, says the two were killed Saturday in al-Kaswa, a suburb of the Syrian capital. Security forces opened fire when the funerals for protesters killed on Friday turned into protests themselves.

Protests in Bahrain began in mid-February styled after those in Egypt when those opposed to the governments ruled occupied Pearl Roundabout. Tolerated at first the government quickly lost patience and sent security services to break-up the protests when that failed the Saudi Arabian National Guard was asked to intervene successfully ending the occupation of Pearl Roundabout. Unfortunately the stifling of dissent didn’t end there as the government not only arrested those believed involved in the protests but the medical staff which rendered aid to those injured in the violent crack down.
Having been born and educated in the UK, I moved to Bahrain in 2009 to marry Ghazi Farhan, a 31-year-old energetic businessman, leaving a respectable job in Cambridge to start a new family life in the land of my ancestors. Little did I imagine that in 2011, when the Arab Spring hit the shores of this island, it would be swiftly nipped in the bud, and would sweep my blossoming family along with it.
On April 12, on his way back from his lunch break, my husband was abducted from his office car park. Blindfolded, handcuffed and taken away by unknown plain-clothed men. Some 48 days later, he was summoned before the Orwellian-named "National Safety Court", a military tribunal. He was charged with participating in an illegal assembly of more than five persons (having visited the Pearl Roundabout) and spreading false information on the internet (referring to a single Facebook comment). Therein began an extraordinary ordeal of Ghazi's military trial and his sentencing.

Medical personal are trained to help the injured no matter who they may me.
A mass trial in Bahrain is under way for 28 doctors and nurses charged in the crackdown on Shiite-led protests calling for greater rights.
Monday's criminal court trial comes just four days before Bahrain's Sunni rulers seek to open talks with opposition groups in the Gulf island kingdom.
But Shiite leaders say authorities must end the protest-linked trials and release detainees before serious dialogue can begin.
The medical personnel are accused of joining the protests that began in February and spreading false information, seen as a reference to speaking to foreign media.
A separate trial began earlier this month for 20 doctors and nurses accused of alleged anti-state plots.

Japan considers its self a bastion of free speech yet how can one have open speech when all Japanese reporters must belong to a press club. Press clubs are controlled by various public and private institutions. Thus they not only control the message but the messenger.

Ten years ago it was illegal to publicly criticize the President of South Korea. Here you have an elected official as chosen by the voters of that country but to be critical of his policies was a crime.

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Six In The Morning

Attackers in uniform add to anxiety in Afghanistan
Foreign troops say they're increasingly concerned about the 'enemy within,' as deadly assaults by men who appear to be police or soldiers become more frequent. But those Western personnel also stress the importance of keeping anxiety in check in a climate of deepening mutual distrust.
By Mark Magnier, Los Angeles Times
June 26, 2011

Reporting from Kabul, Afghanistan— In late May, a NATO soldier was killed as he emerged from his tent. Two weeks earlier, two NATO soldiers were killed while eating a meal. In late April, eight U.S. troops were shot dead at a meeting at Kabul airport.

The attacks had one thing in common: The killers all wore Afghan military or police uniforms.
Foreign troops serving in Afghanistan say they're increasingly concerned about the "enemy within." Yet they emphasize the importance of keeping anxiety in check amid a climate of deepening mutual distrust.

"You can't go out scared every day," said Sasha Navarro, an Air Force staff sergeant based at Camp Mike Spann in the northern province of Balkh. "You have to be confident in your training, and keep your head on a swivel."

World turning blind eye to 10 million child brides each year, charity warns
UK must help to cut level of forced marriages for girls under 18, says Plan UK report
Tracy McVeigh, social affairs editor
guardian.co.uk, Sunday 26 June 2011

One girl below the age of 18 is married off every three seconds worldwide, according to a community development charity which is calling for the British government to help end child marriage.

Plan UK will publish a report this week entitled Breaking Vows which states that 10 million under 18s become child brides every year. In developing countries in South America, North Africa and parts of Asia, one in three under 18-year-olds, and one in seven of all girls under 15, are married.

Rates of early and forced marriage are also high in Europe, with the highest percentages in central and eastern Europe where 2.2 million girls have married before their 18th birthday.


What has the war in Afghanistan really achieved?
The IoS takes stock after one of the bloodiest months since the conflict began, and a week in which President Obama announced a speeding up of troop withdrawals
By Jonathan Owen, David Randall, Jane Merrick and Rupert Cornwell Sunday, 26 June 2011
At least 60 people died in a suicide bombing just 25 miles from Kabul yesterday. In a few days' time, a report on Afghanistan from the International Crisis Group will say that violence and the billions of dollars in international aid have brought wealthy officials and insurgents together. As a result, "the economy is increasingly dominated by a criminal oligarchy of politically connected businessmen".

The negatives column in the Afghan war's balance sheet does not get any shorter. So far, the conflict has lasted nine years, eight months and 17 days, cost the lives of 2,547 coalition troops, and between 14,000 and 34,000 civilians, created millions of refugees, and opened up a black hole in Western economies that has sucked in more $500bn dollars. Afghanistan costs the US around $10bn (£6.3bn) a month; and Britain will pay £4.5bn this year.



Gaddafi 'unable to breathe'


NICK CAREY TRIPOLI, LIBYA - Jun 26 2011

A top rebel official said rebels would be ready to discuss any political settlement that did not involve Gaddafi remaining in power, although no proposals had emerged yet at talks with Gaddafi allies that were taking place through intermediaries.

The attack late on Friday was the second within hours on what Nato said were clearly identified military targets in the coastal city of Brega, around 200km west of the rebel stronghold of Benghazi.

Libyan state television said a local bakery and a restaurant had been hit, wounding 20 people in addition to the 15 dead. State news agency Jana said a strike in the same area earlier on Friday had killed five civilians.




Peru's new highway to the future
The Interoceanic Highway, which will connect Peru's Pacific coast to the shores of the Atlantic in Brazil, could revolutionize the region much as the transcontinental railroad did in the US in 1869.
By Steven Bodzin, Correspondent /
Puerto Maldonado, Peru
Traveling from Brazil’s Atlantic coast to Assis, on the border with Peru deep in the Amazon, took Raul Pereira weeks over a precarious dirt road in 1974. The trip required machetes.
Today, his house and workshop are on a paved road. “This was an animal trail in those days," he says.

For years, Assis was the end of the road. Traveling on through the Peruvian Amazon and over the Andes was an adventure on mud tracks. Asked how business is at his roadside mechanic's workshop, the Brazilian gives a thumbs-down. And the lack of a road didn't just hurt his business, but also cut billions of dollars in potential trade between Brazil and Peru.



China frees dissident Hu Jia
Hu was imprisoned for criticising human rights conditions in China ahead of the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games.
Last Modified: 26 Jun 2011
One of China's most prominent dissidents, Hu Jia, has been released after serving more than three years in jail on subversion charges.

"He is back home with his parents and me," his wife, Zeng Jingyan, told Reuters in a telephone interview.

Hu Jia was arrested in December 2007 after a long period of confinement at his home. He was sentenced in April 2008 for "incitement to subvert state power."

Hu had written a series of articles ahead of the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games criticising the Chinese government on the state of human rights in China

Saturday, June 25, 2011

Six In The Morning

Inside the secret world of the geeks with the power to unleash anarchy
Jerome Taylor tracked down one of Britain's most feared hackers to find out what motivates this new criminal underworld
Saturday, 25 June 2011
They move within a shadowy underworld using skills most of us could never acquire.

Some see themselves as crime fighters, battling injustice, corruption and oppression. Others are pranksters – the kind of people who set light to bridges just to watch them burn. Plenty more do it simply to steal and get rich.

Hacking is as old as computers, but the current wave of high-profile assaults across the globe has led to unprecedented interest in who hackers are and why they do what they do.
The Independent tracked down one prolific British hacker who is engaged in a personal cyber war against LulzSec, the collective behind a string of attacks on websites as diverse as the CIA's homepage, the Serious Organised Crime Agency, Fox TV and – most recently – the Arizona Police Department.

Gone West: How America ran out of champions
Poor pickings for the world's richest nation in tennis, golf and boxing can be explained, says Rupert Cornwell, by the rise of college sport
Saturday, 25 June 2011
"Where have you gone, Joe DiMaggio? A nation turns its lonely eyes to you..." The lines popped into my mind as I was sitting in the bleachers behind the 17th green at Congressional Country Club last weekend at the US Open, watching a string of good but not great American golfers go through, before the coronation of young prince Rory.

The working tool of Joltin' Joe was of course a baseball bat, not a sand wedge, but that's beside the point. These days, Paul Simon's haunting song applies to US sport virtually across the board. The great champions have disappeared; at the top international level, American sport is in a strange but pervasive decline.


Syrians defy army and take to the streets again
The Irish Times - Saturday, June 25, 2011
MICHAEL JANSEN
SYRIANS took to the streets again yesterday following Muslim communal prayers, defying the military crack-down on protests and calling for regime change.

Marches reportedly took place in half a dozen cities and towns but a heavy troop presence smothered protests in restive suburbs of the capital, Damascus, and north of the commercial hub Aleppo where pro-government demonstrations have taken place this past week.

Opposition sources said at least 15 people had been killed in the day’s demonstrations.



The Humble Kingdom of the World's Best Woman Soccer Player
Queen Marta

By Wiebke Hollersen

Marta is wearing a 1960s-style Brazilian national soccer team jersey, blue soccer cleats bearing her name, white socks and a blue, pleated skirt that reaches almost to her knees. She looks like a kid in an oversized carnival costume, though; her skirt is too big for her frame, and she has to use a barrette to gather up the loose jersey at her back.

The soccer player is walking across a gym near Elma, a town outside Buffalo, New York. She is surrounded by four women who have come from Brazil to photograph her for a glossy magazine. They're the ones who did her makeup, smoothed her hair and gave her this outfit to wear.



Life in jail for woman behind Rwanda genocide

June 25, 2011
A former Rwandan minister for women's empowerment has become the first woman to be jailed for genocide and incitement to rape by an international tribunal.

Judges at the UN court for Rwanda sentenced Pauline Nyiramasuhuko to life in prison for genocide, conspiracy to commit genocide and rape.

"For these crimes, and considering all relevant circumstances, the chamber sentences you, Pauline Nyiramasuhuko, to life imprisonment," presiding judge William Hussein Sekule said.

Survey Says? The People Are Pissed

As the months drag on and little is accomplished at any level towards the rebuilding of northeast Japan the Asahi Shinbun has conducted a survey of those displaced by the triple disasters. What the results show is reflected in the headline.

When asked their opinion on the use of nuclear energy, 70 percent of respondents said they were opposed while 26 percent said they were in favor of nuclear energy.


Despite the accident and uncertainty concerning how long the evacuation will continue, a large majority of respondents said they wanted to eventually return to the communities they were forced to leave.

A total of 79 percent said they either wanted to return or wanted to return if at all possible.
Having young children was an obvious reason for not wanting to return to Fukushima.

The deep disappointment felt by many of the respondents is due to the fact that many believed TEPCO and other experts who repeatedly said Japan's nuclear power plants were safe and that no accident would ever occur.

As a result of such experiences, a total of 80 percent of respondents said the government's response was either totally inappropriate or somewhat inappropriate.

Only 15 percent of respondents said the response was either very appropriate or somewhat appropriate.

The confused response by the central government meant many residents were forced to move from one evacuation center to another.

Friday, June 24, 2011

This Happened In America: Not In Some Dictatorship



Before the George W. Bush administration came to power was know as a defender of Human Rights not a violator. Following the September 11 attacks everything changed and not for the better instead veering towards the authoritarian as they sought justification for the abuses which occurred in Iraq and Afghanistan thanks to the likes of John Yoo and Jay Bybee who wrote the legal justification for the torture of prisoners at Anu Ghraib prison in Iraq and Bagram airbase in Afghanistan. Yet minorities in America have been abused since the Europeans arrived.

One of the methods used to justify this violation of peoples Civil Rights was Eugenics an ideology that saw and portrayed non-whites as less the human this was especially popular in the Southern United States beginning in the late 19 century. The results of which led to forced sterilizations of thousands of African Americans.

Nearly 7,600 men, women and children as young as 10 were sterilized under North Carolina’s eugenics laws. While other state sterilization laws focused mainly on criminals and people in mental institutions, North Carolina was one of the few to expand its reach to women who were poor.
Sterilization was seen as a way to limit the public cost of welfare. Social workers would coerce women to have the operation under threat of losing their public assistance.[...]
The North Carolina Eugenics Board was created in 1933 and operated for decades with little public scrutiny. It used rudimentary IQ tests and gossip from neighbors to justify sterilization of young girls from poor families who hung around the wrong crowd or didn’t do well in school. Girls like 13-year-old LeLa Dunston, who had just had a baby. Dunston is now 63.

North Carolina the U.S. state where these hearings took place is considering Paying Forced Sterilization Victims.

Somehow considering paying the victims of this state sponsored abuse and torture doesn't quite cut-it. If others can be brought before the International criminal Court for human rights abuses why not Americans?

Thursday, June 23, 2011

101 East - Thailand's battle for peace



One year after the government crackdown that left 91 protesters dead and Bangkok burning, Thailand is going to the polls.

But observers say the deep rifts in Thai society that flared into the worst political violence in decades remain.

It is the ruling Democrat Party's first test at the polls. It faces Puea Thai, a re-badged opposition party with links to the Red Shirt movement which organised the protests.

Will the polls offer reconciliation or yet another trigger for fresh political violence? As the electoral race heats up, 101 East asks: What is the future of peace and democracy in Thailand?

Six In The Morning

Afghanistan: France follows US in troop withdrawal
French President Nicolas Sarkozy has announced the phased withdrawal of its 4,000 soldiers serving in Afghanistan.
The BBC 23 June 2011
A statement said the French would follow the timetable of US withdrawals announced by President Barack Obama.

Mr Obama said 10,000 US troops would pull out this year, with another 23,000 leaving by the end of September 2012.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai welcomed the move, but the Taliban dismissed it as "symbolic" and vowed to continue fighting until all foreign forces left.

Continue reading the main story

Start Quote

Our mission will change from combat to support”

President Obama
As it happened: Speech reaction
At least 68,000 US troops will remain in the country after the 33,000 have been withdrawn, but they are scheduled to leave by 2013, provided that Afghan forces are ready to take over security.

Net neutrality enshrined in Dutch law
Netherlands becomes first European country to ensure web providers cannot charge more to access certain services
Associated Press
guardian.co.uk, Thursday 23 June 2011

The Netherlands has become the first country in Europe to enshrine the concept of network neutrality into national law by banning its mobile telephone operators from blocking or charging consumers extra for using internet-based communications services.

The measure, which was adopted with a broad majority in the lower house of parliament, will prevent KPN, the Dutch telecommunications market leader, and the Dutch arms of Vodafone and T-Mobile from blocking or charging for Internet services like Skype or WhatsApp, a free text service. Its sponsors said that the measure would pass a pro forma review in the Dutch senate.


Dissident artist bailed after 'confessing his crimes'
Ai Weiwei released after global outcry allows China's regime to save face
By Clifford Coonan in Beijing
Thursday, 23 June 2011

China is seeking to muzzle the outspoken artist Ai Weiwei after he was freed from prison yesterday, 80 days after being detained following his repeated calls for democratic reform. "I'm fine, I'm out. I'm very happy. I can't say anything more, because I'm on bail. Please understand," Ai told reporters outside his home in Beijing last night.


His release comes just before Premier Wen Jiabao arrives in Britain on a European tour and follows a sustained campaign for Ai's release by supporters outside China. The country's most high-profile prisoner, the Nobel Peace Prize winner Liu Xiaobo, remains in jail on subversion charges.



Journey Through a Divided Syria
'They Can Only Kill and Hope'

By SPIEGEL Staff

In the Syrian city of Ariha, the cherry trees are covered with deep red fruit. It is harvest time and the cherries are sweet, but no one comes to pick them

Two weeks ago, after the regime's elite troops had transformed peaceful demonstrations in the nearby provincial capital Idlib into bloodbaths, two young men tried to save the cherry harvest. They loaded their small truck full of cherries and took off for the port city of Latakia in western Syria.

They didn't make it very far. A military patrol stopped the two men in front of a sugar refinery and shot them dead.





Sudan army arrests six UN staff

KHARTOUM, SUDAN
The arrests came amid heavy fighting in the ethnically divided border state, where the conflict between government forces and troops aligned to the south has threatened to torpedo a 2005 peace deal that is set to deliver independence for the south on July 9.

The six men detained at the airport in the state capital Kadugli were among 23 Sudanese UN staff being flown to the southern city of Wau as part of the relocation plan of the beleaguered UN Mission in Sudan (Unmis).




Political party of youth splits from Egypt's Brotherhood
The Irish Times - Thursday, June 23, 2011
MICHAEL JANSEN
YOUNG EGYPTIAN Muslim Brotherhood dissidents have formed their own political party to contest parliamentary elections set for September.

The manifesto of the Egyptian Current party (Hizb al-Tayyar al-Masry) makes it clear the party is not rooted in religion, as is the Brotherhood’s Freedom and Justice Party, the political vehicle of the 83-year-old movement.

The Current party is “civil” (secular) and democratic. Its manifesto does not mention Muslim canon law (Sharia) but refers to Arab and Islamic civilisation.

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Afghan Troop Withdrawal Announced! Will it Mean Much?

Today President Barack Obama announced that the number of U.S. military personnel now operating in Afghanistan would be reduced by 10,000 with additional cuts which would eventually return troop levels to that of 2009. Even though former President George W. Bush vowed to bring to justice those involved in the attacks on September 11 by 2002 the war in Afghanistan was almost forgotten and the wrath of the Bush administration turned towards Iraq. During a memorable skit at a White House Correspondent’s dinner President Bush light of the fact that Osama Bin Laden the worlds most wanted terrorist hadn’t been captured or killed.

Being an afterthought didn’t help the situation on the ground there. Harmid Karzai the western backed candidate was elected taking office on 7 December 2004. Karzai’s government from this moment until the surge of troops ordered by President Obama controlled little of the country outside the major cities. Elected again in August 2009 his campaign was accused of rigging the election as the number of votes cast in his favor didn’t match the number of registered voters. It didn’t matter as western governments saw him as an ally in the war on terror. Karzai’s government is deeply unpopular in Afghanistan and corrupt with most of the foreign aid meant for the country at large has disappeared into the hands of the connected and the wealthy. .

What will the withdrawal of U.S. forces mean for Afghanistan and how will it affect overall security? Given recent reports that Afghan security forces weren’t up to the task of assuming the role played by the Americans a return to all-out war between the various factions seems almost certain. Further exacerbating the situation is that large majorities of Afghanistan’s population view western forces not as liberators but as just another occupying force.

Afghanistan is America’s longest war with little to show for all the time, money and personnel committed to that nation’s effort to rebuild a country and government devastated my several decades of war. Perhaps a lesson will be learned from all of this but don’t hold your breath.

Random Japan



HITTING THE ROOF
The TMG discovered that opium poppies were being sold at home improvement centers in Tokyo and 18 other prefectures.

A tanker truck spilled 18 metric tons of milk after overturning in a single-vehicle accident in Shiga Prefecture late last month. The 32-year-old driver suffered minor injuries, mostly to his ego.

The education ministry announced that the number of Japanese studying abroad has declined every year since 2004.

A collection of drawings of coal miners by artist Sakubei Yamamoto (1892-1984) are the first Japanese works that UNESCO will list as a “Memory of the World.”

Two Japanese climbers were killed—likely by an avalanche—after summiting Mt. McKinley in Alaska.

Panasonic and eight other companies have banded together to build a “sustainable smart town” in Fujisawa, Kanagawa Prefecture. The village will feature, among other energy-saving devices, “a system for sharing electric vehicles.”

Stats

16.8
Percentage of Japanese women who have been sexually harassed in the workplace, according to a survey by the Japanese Trade Union Confederation

3.6
Percentage of Japanese men who have suffered sexual harassment, according to the same survey

15
Unwanted newborns left at the so-called “baby hatch” at Jikei Hospital in Kumamoto in fiscal 2009

18
Number of babies left behind





UPWARD AND ONWARD
A team of scientists at Osaka University has come up with a new way of producing stem cells that may make it easier to use the cells in regenerative medicine.

It was announced that if the planned free-trade agreement between Japan, China and South Korea takes effect, Japan’s GDP would rise by 0.3 percent.

A study by the European New Car Assessment Program declared that the Nissan Leaf “proves that electric vehicles can achieve the same safety levels as traditional cars.”

Mitsubishi Electric launched a communications satellite into orbit from a space center in French Guyana. The satellite, a joint venture between telecom firms in Singapore and Taiwan, will beam services to the Middle East, Central Asia, India and Southeast Asia.

It will take just 67 minutes to travel between Tokyo and Osaka on JR Tokai’s proposed maglev train line. Construction is due to begin in fiscal 2014.

Headline of the Week: “Potatoes May be More Dangerous than Other Vegetables” (via Asahi.com).

The government said that hospitals, nursing homes, semiconductor factories and railways will be exempt from the 15 percent power-reduction order that’s in effect for the rest of Kanto and Tohoku this summer.

Metaphor alert: “Flip-flopping Government Shoots Self in Foot” (via The Daily Yomiuri).
The family of a 23-year-old Japanese woman killed in the Christchurch earthquake in February announced that they would fund a hostel for international students about an hour outside the city.

The Diet passed legislation that will authorize welfare officials to temporarily suspend the parental rights of people who abuse their kids.



This Train
Isn't Moving




Through A
Teenagers Eyes


That Wasn't
Meant For The Toilet



Tepco begins work to clean coolant water
Month needed to make reactor circulation safe
By KAZUAKI NAGATA
Staff writer

Tokyo Electric Power Co. confirmed Friday that the treatment facility to clean highly radioactive water accumulating at the crippled Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant started full-scale operations at 8 p.m.
Tepco also revealed its updated road map to bring the Fukushima nuclear crisis under control, saying it aims to cool the stricken reactors with a circulating coolant system through processed contaminated water in a month as well as to improve the medical care and mitigate the radiation exposure of its workers.

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Six In The Morning

Oceans on brink of catastrophe
Marine life facing mass extinction 'within one human generation' / State of seas 'much worse than we thought', says global panel of scientists
By Michael McCarthy, Environment Editor Tuesday, 21 June 2011
The world's oceans are faced with an unprecedented loss of species comparable to the great mass extinctions of prehistory, a major report suggests today. The seas are degenerating far faster than anyone has predicted, the report says, because of the cumulative impact of a number of severe individual stresses, ranging from climate warming and sea-water acidification, to widespread chemical pollution and gross overfishing.

The coming together of these factors is now threatening the marine environment with a catastrophe "unprecedented in human history", according to the report, from a panel of leading marine scientists brought together in Oxford earlier this year by the International Programme on the State of the Ocean (IPSO) and the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN).

North Korea recruits hackers at school
A former hacker and a hacking tutor say N Korea is bolstering cyberwarfare units to battle IT powerhouses like S Korea.
Al Jazeera
As South Korea blames North Korea for a recent slew of cyberattacks, two defectors share their experiences, as a hacker and trainer of "cyberwarriors" in the reclusive communist country, with Al Jazeera shedding some light into the inner workings of the North's cyberwarfare programme.

In the process, Kim Heung-kwang and Jang Se-yul also warn of the regime's concentrated efforts to bolster its cyberwarfare capabilities.

The hackers' professor

Kim Heung-kwang was a computer science professor in North Korea. Kim graduated from the Kim Chaek University of Technology in Pyongyang, where he majored in data processing. He pursued graduate studies at Hamhung Computer College where he studied operating systems, hardware technology and network theory - before going on to spend 19 years teaching students-turned-recruits for the North Korean regime's cyberwarfare units at Hamheung Computer College and Hamheung Communist College.


How the Euro Became Europe's Greatest Threat
Time for Plan B
By SPIEGEL Staff
In the past 14 months, politicians in the euro-zone nations have adopted one bailout package after the next, convening for hectic summit meetings, wrangling over lazy compromises and building up risks of gigantic dimensions.

For just as long, they have been avoiding an important conclusion, namely that things cannot continue this way. The old euro no longer exists in its intended form, and the European Monetary Union isn't working. We need a Plan B.

Instead, those in responsible positions are getting bogged down in crisis management, as they seek to placate the public and sugarcoat the problems. They say that there is only a government debt crisis in a few euro countries but no euro crisis, citing as evidence the fact that the value of the European common currency has remained relatively stable against other currencies like the dollar.

Fresh Libya civilian deaths pile pressure on Nato


SAIF TAWFIQ SURMAN, LIBYA - Jun 21 2011
Libyan officials took reporters to Surman, 70km west of Tripoli, to the site of what they said was a Nato air strike on the home of Khouildi Hamidi, a member of Libya's 12-strong Revolutionary Command Council, led by Gaddafi.

Rescue teams were looking for survivors while reporters visited the site. Reporters were then taken to a hospital in nearby Sabrata where they were shown nine bodies, including those of two children, plus some body parts, which the Libyan government said were all of people killed in the attack.





Early human fossils unearthed in Ukraine
Ancient remains uncovered in Ukraine represent some of the oldest evidence of modern people in Europe, experts have claimed.
By Jennifer Carpenter
Science reporter, BBC News

Archaeologists found human bones and teeth, tools, ivory ornaments and animal remains at the Buran-Kaya cave site.

The 32,000-year-old fossils bear cut marks suggesting they were defleshed as part of a post-mortem ritual.

Details have been published in the journal PLoS One.

Archaeologist Dr Alexander Yanevich from the National Ukrainian Academy of Science in Kiev discovered the four Buran-Kaya caves in the Crimean mountains in 1991.

Since then, roughly two hundred human bone fragments have been unearthed at the site.



Venezuelan troops 'use weapons of war' against rioting prisoners
National Guard use assault rifles and teargas to combat gun battles at Rodeo I and II, inmates claim
Associated Press
guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 21 June 2011


Venezuelan troops have been accused of using teargas and "weapons of war" against rioting prisoners as they tried for a fourth day to dislodge a group of heavily armed inmates who have staved off attempts to retake control.

National Guard troops escorted 36 inmates from cellblocks inside the Rodeo II prison to areas that were no longer controlled by rebellious prisoners, the justice minister, Tareck El Aissami, told state television. At least 11 of the inmates were wounded, he said.

National Guard General Luis Motta Domínguez said the inmates evacuated "were hostages of the violent prisoners".

Japan Stupid Is As Stupid Does

With the resignation of Prime Minister Naoto Kan on the horizon the political idiots who run this country are maneuvering to further their political power while Northeast Japan is mired in a recovery so slow that only time-lapsed photography might notice any movement. People left homeless are forced to endure a lottery system to be placed in temporary housing. TEPCO continues to misinform and lie about the health risks posed by the disaster at the Daiichi-Fukushima power plant but what the real condition of the four damaged plants remains a mystery even though they keep insisting there will be completely transparent

Taking a page from America's Republican party the Liberal Democratic Party has decided to hold hostage the implementation of a third supplementary budget or an extension of the current Diet session needed to pass funding for earthquake recovery.

So, as these fools argue over when Kan will resign and who will fill the power vacuum people in the stricken area continue to suffer from a lack of recovery effort and a complete lack of leadership from any quarter.

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Six In The Morning

NATO put on defensive over Libya attacks
'This is another night of murder, terror and horror in Tripoli caused by NATO,' Gadhafi aide says; NATO denies targeting civilians
msnbc.com news services
TRIPOLI, Libya — The Libyan government accused NATO of bombing a residential neighborhood in the capital and killing civilians early Sunday, adding to charges that the alliance is striking nonmilitary targets.
Journalists based in the Libyan capital were rushed by government officials to a neighborhood where rescue efforts were under way at a destroyed building, which appeared to have been partially under construction.

Yelena Bonner, Russian rights activist, dies at 88
Yelena Bonner was the widow of Nobel peace prize winner Andrei Sakharov and a tireless human rights campaigner
Associated Press
guardian.co.uk, Sunday 19 June 2011

Yelena Bonner, the Russian rights activist and widow of the Nobel peace prize winner Andrei Sakharov, has died aged 88.

Bonner died of heart failure on Saturday afternoon in Boston, according to her daughter, Tatiana Yankelevich. She had been in hospital since February, Yankelevich said.

Bonner grew famous through her marriage to Sakharov, the Soviet Union's leading dissident, but she carved out her own reputation as a tireless human rights campaigner in the face of relentless hostility from Soviet authorities.


Revolting! Jamie wins battle of Los Angeles
Schools ban junk foods after chef's TV campaign
By Guy Adams in Los Angeles Sunday, 19 June 2011

They can take away his television series, but they'll never take Jamie Oliver's freedom to do what he does best: attempting to cajole and shame the world's fattest nation into slowing the flow of junk-food into the stomachs of its schoolchildren.

After a rocky few months, in which the Los Angeles version of Jamie Oliver's Food Revolution was temporarily pulled from the airwaves due to falling viewership, the British chef (pictured left) has achieved one of his key aims: persuading America's largest school board to remove chocolate and strawberry-flavoured milk from its canteen menus.

Emmerson Mnangagwa vs Morgan Tsvangirai: the two opposing faces of Zimbabwe
Power-sharing brought Zimbabwe back from the brink of anarchy, but now fears are growing for what follows when Robert Mugabe finally departs

By Colin Freeman, Harare7:30AM BST 19 Jun 2011

His enemies call him "The Crocodile", but even that does scant justice to the long list of charges levelled against Emmerson Mnangagwa, the one person in Zimbabwe more feared than Robert Mugabe.
The former head of Zimbabwe's ruthless central intelligence organisation, his name gets a dishonourable mention in many of the most sinister episodes of Mr Mugabe's rule, from the massacre of thousands of political opponents during the 1980s, through to the violence of the disputed 2008 election, in which Mr Mugabe is widely accused of stealing victory from Morgan Tsvangirai.




Missing Iraq cash 'as high as $18 billion'
Iraq's parliament speaker tells Al Jazeera unaccounted reconstruction money is three times the reported $6.6bn.
Last Modified: 19 Jun 2011
Osama al-Nujaifi, the Iraqi parliament speaker, has told Al Jazeera that the amount of Iraqi money unaccounted for by the US is $18.7bn - three times more than the reported $6.6bn.

Just before departing for a visit to the US, al-Nujaifi said that he has received a report this week based on information from US and Iraqi auditors that the amount of money withdrawn from a fund from Iraqi oil proceeds, but unaccounted for, is much more than the $6.6bn reported missing last week.

"There is a lot of money missing during the first American administration of Iraqi money in the first year of occupation



Little lizard could cause big disruptions for Texas drillers

BY ANNA M. TINSLEY
atinsley@star-telegram.com

Deep in the West Texas sand dunes is something that some say could threaten the state's oil and gas production:

A tiny lizard.

But it's not just any lizard: It's a dunes sagebrush lizard, also known as the sand dune lizard.

This little brown reptile is a concern for state officials, who hope that federal officials don't designate it an endangered species. That, they say, could disrupt oil and gas exploration in the heart of Texas' oil country, leading to higher gas prices and shrinking dollars for schools.

Saturday, June 18, 2011

Six In The Morning

Obama pressed for swift U.S. troop withdrawal from Afghanistan
Rep. Barbara Lee (D-Oakland) urges president Obama to quickly pull out at least half of the 100,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan, another sign of Congress' unease with the conflict.
By Lisa Mascaro, Washington Bureau

Reporting from Washington— A leading antiwar congresswoman established a new marker in the Afghanistan war debate Friday, calling on President Obama to swiftly withdraw at least 50,000 U.S. troops in a further indication of Congress' growing unease with the 10-year-old military operation.

The push from Rep. Barbara Lee (D-Oakland) offers the president a view from the political left as the White House engages in internal deliberations over the scale of the drawdown Obama plans to announce in July. Lee said anything less than a halving of the 100,000 U.S. troop presence would be too modest.

Drought and poachers take Botswana's natural wonder to brink of catastrophe
Aerial survey reveals some wildlife populations have shrunk by 90% in 15 years
David Smith in Johannesburg The Guardian, Saturday 18 June 2011
The Okavango delta in Botswana has suffered "catastrophic" species loss over the past 15 years, researchers have announced , in the latest sign of a growing crisis for wildlife in Africa.

Some wild animal populations in the delta, one of the wonders of the natural world, have shrunk by up to 90% and are facing local extinction, according to the most comprehensive aerial survey yet undertaken there.

The findings come after a study this month showed dramatic declines in animal numbers in the Masai Mara wildlife reserve, south-west Kenya, raising anxiety about the effectiveness of conservation across the continent.


Saudi women take to the road in show of defiance

'Independent' correspondent sees her female driver stopped and questioned by police after joining historic day of protest
By Lubna Hussain in Riyadh Saturday, 18 June 2011
"I have some gifts to buy for one of my daughter's friends," said Maha Al Qahtani, a Saudi mother of four, and before we knew it we were in the back of her family car, with her husband sitting in the passenger seat.

As we left the car park, we saw some expatriate workers on the side of the street staring at the driver, but she seemed unfazed.

Her husband, Mohammed Al Qahtani, a professor at a university in Riyadh, continuously told her how to negotiate the traffic.


Paris and Berlin unite behind new Greek aid package
The Irish Times - Saturday, June 18, 2011

DEREK SCALLY in Berlin
FRANCE AND Germany made a show of unity in Berlin yesterday, calling for a second Greek aid package involving voluntary private-sector participation by next month.

Ahead of next week’s EU summit, German chancellor Angela Merkel officially ditched Berlin’s earlier demand for more extensive private-sector involvement, a tacit acknowledgement of warnings from the European Central Bank that this approach could trigger adverse market reaction.

The German proposal had caused alarm in Paris too, given French banks’ considerable exposure in Greece.

News of a Franco-German reconciliation after bilateral talks in Berlin calmed markets, pushed up the euro and triggered a Greek bond rally.





TEPCO documents show problems encountered in venting, pumping water to damaged reactors

2011/06/18
Despite the orders of Masao Yoshida, head of the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant, venting of reactors and injections of water did not proceed smoothly in the early stage of the crisis, documents showed.

Fearing reactor core damage could lead to a serious accident, Yoshida started issuing instructions to prepare pumping in water to the No. 1 and No. 2 reactors around 90 minutes after all power sources to the reactors were lost by 3:40 p.m. on March 11, according to the internal documents of Tokyo Electric Power Co.

His orders were in accordance with procedures prepared to deal with serious accidents. But the work ran into a number of problems, some of them unexplained in the documents.



Deploying New Tools to Stop the Hackers

By CHRISTOPHER DREW and VERNE G. KOPYTOFF
Published: June 17, 2011

Trying to secure a computer network is much like trying to secure a building — the challenge is trying to screen out real threats without impeding the normal traffic that needs to go in and out.

And as the recent hacking attacks against Citigroup, RSA Security and Lockheed Martin show, even sophisticated security systems can be breached.

“We’re seeing an inflection point where the attackers are extremely smart, and they are using completely new techniques,” said Nir Zuk, the chief technology officer at Palo Alto Networks, a firewall company based in Santa Clara, Calif. “Every piece of content that you receive can attack you.”

Friday, June 17, 2011

101 East: Asia's speed trap

One Hundred Days

One hundred is just a number quite common really as there is one hundred Yen, one hundred Euros’, one hundred dollars or one hundred days. These one hundred markers come and go with little notice. Are there times when a common number can become important it may not seem so, but the common can have resonance when applied to a specific time or incident. Today June 18 is the one hundredth day since one of the worlds worst natural disasters occurred.

One hundred days ago on March 11 at 2:46pm a sunny Friday afternoon the fifth largest earthquake ever recorded shook northeast Japan resulting in a 10 meter tsunami and the nuclear disaster at the Daiichi-Fukushima power plant. More than 25,000 people died as a result of these 3 disasters. One hundred days ago the world came to halt in Japan with towns wiped completely from the face of the earth and the economy of the Tohoku region was destroyed. One hundred days ago 2/3 of the students at an elementary school in Minami Sanriku died when they were swept away by the tsunami. One hundred days ago 100,000 people became homeless. One hundred days ago survivors’ guilt became a part of peoples lives. One hundred days ago no one believed this could happen.

The number one hundred may seem common to those in Japan that number means nothing but grief and despair,

Six In The Morning

Egyptian revolution's unsung heroes languish in hospitals
An estimated 11,000 people were injured in protests that toppled Hosni Mubarak. But months later, as many still undergo costly treatment, officials have done little to compensate their families or prosecute their attackers.
By Molly Hennessy-Fiske, Los Angeles Times
June 17, 2011


Reporting from Cairo— When Rahma Mohamed steps out of her son's line of sight, he begins to tremble. She rushes to cradle the 23-year-old's thin frame, kissing his stubbly cheek.

"Relax," she murmurs. "I'm here next to you; you're all right. Don't cry."

Since Jan. 28, when security forces beat him and ran him over during the protests that toppled President Hosni Mubarak, Mahmoud Mohamed has been unable to speak, walk, eat or use the bathroom on his own. His head is a tapestry of scars and bandages, tubes sprout from his neck, and his palsied hands are clasped in front of a now-bony chest.

He was trying to protect two friends. His mother says both were shot to death by security forces.

Tunisia woos tourists with controversial advertising campaign
Commercial messages mock country's post-revolution reputation in attempt to win back important source of income
Angelique Chrisafis
The Guardian, Friday 17 June 2011

With tourism in crisis since the revolution, Tunisia is trying to woo back British and other European holidaymakers with a controversial advertising campaign mocking its post-revolution reputation.

Fresh to London buses after gracing the Paris metro, the ads include a woman being massaged and the line "They say that in Tunisia some people receive heavy-handed treatment". Another shows an archaeological site captioned: "They say Tunisia is nothing but ruins".

Ad executives said they were playing on misplaced fears. Tunisia's tourism minister has argued that despite Tunisia's state of emergency, tourists are not in danger and the country is a safer than South Africa.



Athens on 'political suicide mission' to pass cuts after €12bn loan deal

By John Lichfield and Nathalie Savaricas in Athens Friday, 17 June 2011

Fears that the Greek debt crisis could generate another banking meltdown and global economic crash persisted yesterday despite a short-term fix by the EU and IMF.

The European Union agreed terms with the International Monetary Fund to release a €12bn (£10.5bn) tranche of loans to prevent Greece becoming the first developed economy to default since the 1950s. But the loans are conditional on an increasingly fragile Greek government pushing through new spending cuts and tax rises against street and parliamentary opposition in the next two weeks.

Syria crisis: Troops move into towns in north
Syrian troops travelling on tanks, armoured personnel carriers and buses have moved into two northern towns.

The BBC
Security forces were gathering in Khan Sheikhun and Maarat al-Numan, a town of 90,000 between Damascus and Aleppo.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has urged Syria to halt the bloodshed and "stop killing people".

The UN says that at least 1,100 people have died as the government has violently sought to quash protests over the past three months.





Nato pounds Tripoli as rebels reject election offer

NICK CAREY TRIPOLI, LIBYA - Jun 17 2011
Gaddafi's son, Saif al-Islam, told an Italian newspaper that the elections could be held within three months and transparency could be guaranteed through international observers.

He said his father would be ready to cede power if he lost the election, though he would not go into exile.

But Prime Minister al-Baghdadi Ali al-Mahmoudi appeared to throw the potential concession into question, saying on Thursday that the leader of the revolution was not concerned by "any referendum".



Vietnam-China Spratly Islands dispute threatens to escalate
Tensions between China and Vietnam have risen in recent weeks, with Vietnam expressing alarm at what it says are increasingly aggressive actions by China in disputed waters.
By Helen Clark, Contributor
Hanoi, Vietnam
Tensions between Vietnam and China over disputed claims to the resource-rich Spratly Islands in the South China Sea are threatening peace in the region.

China sent its largest patrol ship Thursday on what it claimed was a routine trip through the area, but the deployment comes after a spate of other moves, including Vietnam’s staging of a live-fire exercise in the area and China’s denouncement of it.

Neither country is likely to back down easily, and if they did, neither population would see it in a favorable light. Because of this, some worry tensions could escalate to the point of exchange of fire.

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Six In The Morning

Al-Zawahri succeeds Osama bin Laden as new al-Qaida leader
Al-Qaida statement gives no details about the selection process
msnbc.com news services
Al-Qaida has selected its longtime No. 2 to succeed Osama bin Laden following last month's U.S. commando raid that killed the terror leader, according to a statement posted Thursday on a website affiliated with the network.
Ayman al-Zawahri, who will turn 60 next week, is the son of an upper middle class Egyptian family of doctors and scholars.
Al-Qaida "announces that Sheikh Dr. Ayman al-Zawahri, may God guide him, assumed responsibility as the group's amir [leader]," the BBC reported.

Iran launches second satellite into orbit, claims state TV
Tehran says Rasad launch is to help produce high-res maps but move prompts concern over nuclear ambitions
Associated Press
guardian.co.uk, Thursday 16 June 2011


Iran has launched a satellite into orbit, state television reported, a move likely to raise concerns among those who fear Iran's intentions and nuclear development programme.

The report said the locally produced satellite, called Rasad, or observation, was launched successfully by a Safir missile on Wednesday. There was no independent confirmation of the launch or of the satellite achieving orbit.

If successful, it would be the second satellite Iran has put into orbit. The first, named Omid, was launched in 2009.



Pakistanis accused of CIA collusion over Bin Laden raid
Spy agency arrests at least five in attempt to 'shut down unauthorised US operations'
By Omar Waraich in Islamabad and David Usborne in New York Thursday, 16 June 2011

Pakistan's most powerful intelligence agency is interrogating at least five Pakistanis on suspicions of collusion with the CIA in the months leading up to the US raid that killed Osama bin Laden in a garrison town just two hours from the capital.

The New York Times reported that the arrested men include a serving Pakistani army major – a claim that the Pakistani military fiercely denied yesterday. It is unclear how many are being held. A Pakistani army officer said that 30 to 40 civilians had been questioned in recent days, with some released on Tuesday.


Greek PM George Papandreou to unveil new cabinet
Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou is set to announce a new cabinet in a concessionary move as he seeks support for new austerity measures.

The BBC
Mr Papandreou, who will stay in his post, says he will put the new government to a vote of confidence in the parliament.

Renewed fears that Greece will default on its debt have shaken markets.

The proposed measures are necessary to gain EU and IMF aid, but have been met with fierce opposition in Greece.

Athens witnessed some of the most violent protests in more than a year on Wednesday as demonstrators went on to the streets and took part in a general strike.





'Urban Mining' Could Reduce Reliance on Metal Imports
Treasure from the Trash
By Alexander Jung
Thierry Van Kerckhoven has an eye for hidden value. The Belgian can look at a pile of shredded scrap metal from electronic devices and recognize what it is made of. Not only that, he can tell how much it's worth.

Kerckhoven works as a buyer of such waste in the world's largest recycling facility for complex precious metals in Hoboken, a section of the Belgian city of Antwerp. The Umicore Group owns the facility, where deliveries are stored in individual concrete bays. Kerckhoven removes his sunglasses and surveys his treasures.
The powdery and shiny material in Box 2051 on the far left, Kerckhoven explains, used to be printed circuit boards and monitors.



Côte d'Ivoire launches probe into conflict crimes

ABIDJAN, CôTE D'IVOIRE - Jun 16 2011
The government led by President Alassane Ouattara made the decision at a Cabinet meeting, said a statement from spokesperson Bruno Nabagne Kone on Wednesday.

The "national commission of inquiry is to shed light on all the human rights violations committed during the post-electoral crisis," said the statement.

The president had called for the inquiry to be carried out as quickly as possible so that those responsible could be identified and punished, he added.

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

New documentary shows Sri Lanka 'war crimes'



Britain's foreign ministry says Sri Lanka must look into new allegations of war crimes, or face possible international action, after a video of the apparent killing of Tamil prisoners by government forces was aired in a UK documentary.
The Channel 4 programme also showed the bodies of female Tamil fighters who appeared to have
been sexually assaulted by government forces.

"I was shocked by the horrific scenes," said Alistair Burt, a minister from the UK's foreign ministry.

Burt said on Wednesday that a failure to probe the claims of human rights abuses at the end of the
26-year war with fighters from the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) could lead to international action against Colombo.

The government of Mahinda Rajapaksa, the Sri Lankan president, says the video material is fabricated.

Pakistan Arrests Those Who Helped The C.I.A. FInd Bin Laden

Pakistan is dysfunctional what else could possibly explain the arrest of five Pakistani's by the Inter Service Intelligence for assisting the United States hunt for Osama Bin Laden which led to his death by U.S. Navy Seals on May 1 after a raid on his compound in Pakistan. One might believe that with thousands of Pakistani's killed in terrorists attacks the government might do more to prevent such attacks. Given what what has taken place in that country one must conclude that the government has no interest


Pakistan’s top military spy agency has arrested some of the Pakistani informants who fed information to the Central Intelligence Agency in the months leading up to the raid that led to the death of Osama bin Laden, according to American officials.
Pakistan’s detention of five C.I.A. informants, including a Pakistani Army major who officials said copied the license plates of cars visiting Bin Laden’s compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, in the weeks before the raid, is the latest evidence of the fractured relationship between the United States and Pakistan. It comes at a time when the Obama administration is seeking Pakistan’s support in brokering an endgame in the war in neighboring Afghanistan.

Random Japan



RECORD HAUL
Mongolian yokozuna Hakuho won his seventh straight grand sumo tournament with a 13-2 record, equaling the record of former sumo bad-ass Asashoryu.

A pair of masked men made off with ¥604 million after strong-arming a dozing security guard at a Tachikawa depot that handles cash deposits from the Tokyo Central Post Office. It was the biggest cash heist ever in Japan.

Sony was hit by more bad news when it was revealed that an “online intruder” accessed one if its subsidiaries and pinched over $1,200 worth of redeemable gift points.

The breach pales, of course, to an earlier one on Sony’s PlayStation Network and Online Entertainment services that “compromised the personal information” of over 100 million accounts.

Then later, Sony revealed that “personal info on 8,500 customers of its online music service in Greece may have been leaked due to a cyber attack, while similar assaults by hackers occurred in Thailand and Indonesia as well.”

So it might not come as a surprise that Sony said it was expecting to be in the red again in fiscal 2010 for the third year in a row with a group net loss of ¥260 billion, its biggest hit since 1995. They’re blaming this one on the March 11 earthquake.

As expected, the March 11 earthquake and nuclear accident resulted in a huge drop off in the number of foreign visitors to Japan in April (295,800), down a record 62.5 percent from a year earlier, according to the Japan National Tourism Organization.

BTW, April 2011 was the first month with less than 300,000 visitors since May 2003, when the SARS epidemic was all the rage in Asia.

Stats


30
Percent of fishermen polled in disaster-hit Miyagi Prefecture who plan to find a new line of work, according to a Miyagi Prefectural Fisheries Association survey

9
Straight wins to start the May basho by Brazilian sumo wrestler Kaisei, who was making his debut in the top makuuchi division

10-5
Kaisei’s record by the end of the 15-day tournament

23.29 million
Working women in Japan in 2010, up 0.8 percent from 2009 and the largest number ever, according to a labor ministry white paper

91.1
Percent of new university grads getting jobs at the April 1 start of fiscal 2011, down 0.7 of a percentage point from the year before and matching a record-low from 2000

469
People in Japan who developed AIDS in 2010, the highest since the government started collecting data in 1984, according to the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare




WELL IT’S ABOUT TIME
Japan will finally get in line and abide by international rules on the abduction of kids from failed international marriages by signing of the 1980 Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction.

Japan has decided to give back to South Korea some ancient Korean royal archives, known as “Joseon Wangsil Uigwe” (Royal Protocols of the Joseon Dynasty), that were moved here when Japan had control of the Korean Peninsula.

Four huge cranes used to build the 634-meter Tokyo Sky Tree, the world’s tallest tower that is currently under construction, were dismantled and taken down.

Two teachers in Akita Prefecture were in hot water for posting the names of students who didn’t donate money for victims of the March 11 earthquake and tsunami.

It was reported that more than 300 elementary and junior high school students from six Fukushima Prefecture cities left and enrolled in schools elsewhere “due to lingering fears about radiation from the Fukushima No. 1 Nuclear Power Plant.” Can’t say we blame them.

Two brothers already accused of stealing cash from the home of a nuclear crisis evacuee were hit with more charges after targeting another empty house in Hirono. “We were after money to cover our living costs and just to have fun with,” the brothers told police.



Lies Lies
And More Lies




Who's Honey
Is It?


Moron's
Are Still Morons



Reconstruction remains distant as quake victims languish in shelters

SENDAI
Three months after the March 11 earthquake and tsunami disaster and with a nuclear power plant crisis still unfolding, over 90,000 evacuees are still living in shelters as construction of temporary housing for them has made slow progress and many have stopped short of moving into the units citing insufficient life support services.

Even though lifeline services are mostly back to normal, excluding the devastated coastal areas in northeastern Japan, only half of the needed 52,200 temporary homes have been completed and 60 percent of them have been vacant in the worst-hit prefectures of Iwate, Miyagi and Fukushima.

As of Friday, a total of about 23,500 are dead or remain missing in 12 prefectures following the disaster, according to the National Police Agency.

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