Saturday, November 6, 2010

SE Asian Countries Design Tourniquets to Cut Off Their Own Lifestream

Condensed from "Dams on Mekong river generate discord as environment suffers," by Yoolim Lee, published in the Phnom Penh Post, Oct. 29, 2010.  All text below is copyright Lee/the Phnom Penh Post.

     The Mekong river sparkles in the early morning sun as Somwang Prommin, a stocky fisherman wearing a worn-out black T-shirt and shorts, starts the motor of his boat.  As the tiny craft glides on the river's calm surface in the northeastern Thai district of Chiang Khong, Somwang points to a nearby riverbank.  Three days ago, he says, the water levels there were 3 meters higher.
     The Mekong, which translates roughly as "mother of the waters" in the Thai langauge, has become unpredictable since China started building hydropower dams and blasting the rapids upstream, according to Somwang, 36, who has been fishing for a living since he was 8 years old.
     In August 2008, devestating floods reduced his catches and income.  Early this year, he witnesses the most severe drought in his life.
     Tens of millions of people are experiencing similar currents of change along the 4,800-kilometer-long Mekong, which flows through six countries and is Southeast Asia's longest river.
     The Mekong and its tributaries provide food, water and transportation to about 60 million people in Cambodia, Laos, Thailand and Vietnam.  Their livelihood is now threatened as their governments turn to hydroelectric dams along the river to generate power and create revenue.
     [Proposed] projects will have a disastrous impact on Cambodia and Vietnam, says Milton Osborne, a visiting fellow at the Lowy Institute in Sydney and a historian who wrote The Mekong: Turbulent Past, Uncertain Future.  "What the Chinese are doing shows a selfish lack of concern for the serious damage their dams will ultimately do to the downstream countries," Osborne says.
     Downriver, other countries are pursuing their own objectives.  Laos has proposed building 10 hydropower plants on the mainstream of the Mekong that will export electricity and transform the nation -- one of Asia's poorest, with a per-capita gross domestic product of US$886 -- into what the government calls "the battery of Southeast Asia."
     Cambodia plans to build two dams near the border with Laos.  In all, 12 dams are planned by the countries below China along the mainstream of the Mekong.  The dams would transform 55 percent of the downstream river into a reservoir, making it into a series of impoundments with slow water movement.  [A] report prepared by an independent consulting firm in Australia recommended that the [Mekong River Commission] delay any decision on constructing the dams for 10 years.
     The dams "have the portential to create transboundary impacts and international tensions," the report says.  "One dam across the lower Mekong mainstream commits the river to irrevocable change."
     Chinese officials say they are aiding the environment, not harming it.  Building dams "is an important step taken by the Chinese government to vigorously develop renewable and clean energy and contribute to the global endeavor to counter climate change," Song Tao, the country's vice minister of foreign affairs, told a summit meeting of the MRC in April.

Friday, November 5, 2010

Condo Owners in Jakarta Want the Monkeys Gone

Condensed from "Urban Boom Threatens Jakarta Wildlife Reserve, Monkeys," by Reuters, published in the Cambodia Daily, Oct. 25, 2010.  All text below is copyright Reuters.

JAKARTA -- The last wildlife reserve left in Indonesia's vast, traffic-choked capital is under threat from a growing tide of rubbish and angry local residents who complain that it harbours thieving monkeys.
     The last such reserve in Jakarta, Muara Angke's 25 hectares are a popular destination for people eager to escape the crowded streets and view the 95 Long-tailed Macaques that live there.
     Residents of a luxury residential complex in nearby Pantai Indah Kapuk have asked the managers of the reserve to eradicate the [reserve's] monkeys, which they say steal food and bite people.  The demand has outrage those who work with the reserve.
     "How can we ban monkeys?  This is a wildlife area," said Muhammad Rifa'i, an official at Balai Mangrove Kapuk Muara, an NGO under the Muara Angke management.
     Founded in the 1930s under the colonial Dutch government, [the reserve] stretched across 1,344 hectares in 1960 but has now dwindled to its meager 25 hectares, with large parcels of land sliced off for development.  Pollution has also hit it hard, killing mangroves and destroying habitat.
     The Angke river that runs through it -- a source of food and water for the animals -- is now badly polluted with rubbish and boat fuel.  This pollution, along with illegal hunting and starvation, has helped take the monkey population down by more than 30 percent in just four years.

Japan Targets Nuclear Power in Vietnam

Condensed from "Tokyo Targets Nuclear Power in VN," by Kazumasa Takenaka, the Asahi Shimbun, published in the Cambodia Daily, Oct. 28, 2010.  All text below is copyright Takenaka/the Asahi Shimbun.

TOKYO -- A public-private firm has been set up to aggressively push sales of Japan's nuclear power plant technology abroad amid the intensifying international cooperation.
     International Nuclear Energy Development of Japan Co was established Friday [Oct. 22] by nine electric utilities, three plant makers and the government-affiliated Innovation Network of Japan.
     The new company initially aims to win contracts for two nuclear power reactors in Vietnam's southeast province of Ninh Thuan.  Vietnam plans to build 14 reactors by 2030.  At least 18 countries plan to build 74 reactors.

Russia Sells Subs, Nuclear Power to Vietnam

Condensed from "Russia Reaching Out to Vietnam to Firm Security, Energy Ties," by Hideki Soejima, the Asahi Shimbun, published in the Cambodia Daily, Oct. 28, 2010.  All text below is copyright Soejima/the Asahi Shimbun.

TOKYO -- Russia is strengthening security and energy ties with Vietnam . . . .
     The first step in Russia's efforts to engage in Vietnam's national security coincided with the agreement last December for Russia to build its first nuclear power plant in Vietnam.  As part of that deal, Russia agreed to sell six submarines, at a reported cost of $1.8 billion, to Vietnam.
     Russia is also providing Vietnam with missile cruisers and Sukhoi fighters to support the modernization of Vietnam's navy.

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Malaysian Prime Minister Pushes Regional Free Trade

Condensed from "Malaysia Premier Wants ASEAN to Focus on Trade," by James Hookway, the Wall Street Journal, published in the Cambodia Daily, Oct. 30-31, 2010.  All text below is copyright Hookway/the Wall Street Journal.

HANOI -- Malaysia's Prime Minister Najib Razak yesterday urged Asia and Pacific leaders gathering in Vietnam for an annual summit to push wider trade links in the region and not be distracted by the ongoing turmoil in the global foreign exchange markets.
     In an interview, Najib . . . said expanding free trade should remain a top priority for the region, which accounts for about half of global exports and imports.
     "I think we must all adhere to the principle of open and free trade . . . because that is the surest way in which we can ensure there is enough wealth being generated to underpin a long-term global recovery," Najib said.  "If you go towards protectionism, then definitely the world will take a turn for the worse in terms of wealth generation and even further recessions in the future."

A Case Study in Globalizing Food

copyright the Guardian, published in the Cambodia Daily, Oct. 30-31, 2010.


     It is good news for vampires by bad news for gourmets.  Garlic was last year's best-performing commodity in China, Morgan Stanley says, and its has continued to appreciate.
     Until last spring, garlic cost as little as $0.06 a kilo, prompting many farmers to turn to other crops.  But by April last year, demand was far outstripping supply and the price began to rocket.  A bad harvest this year sent it up against and caused speculators to pile in; some reportedly made hundreds of thousands of dollars trading warehousefuls.  This July, the price hit a high of $1.97 - where it remains.
     For Chinese consumers, it is only the most painful example of rising food prices, in many cases caused by bad weather; September saw a year-on-year increase of around 8 percent.
     Wu Fei, a 30-year-old accountant, said her family's food costs had almost doubled over the last two years, particularly because they love eating meat.  "The price of ribs has never come down since it doubled a year ago. My favorite crispy dates were [$0.90] a pack, but now they are [$1.65] and the contents are smaller.  The cooking oil we use was about [$9] a bottle; now it's [$15]," she said, adding: "The increases in prices are not matched by that of salaries in Beijing."

"Earthwalker" Stops in Phnom Penh

Condensed from "On His Way to London, 'Earthwalker' Stops in Phnom Penh," by Drew Foster of the Cambodia Daily.  All text below is copyright Foster/the Cambodia Daily.

     Yuji Miyata has circled Taiwan on foot, trekked for days through an Okinawan forest and claims he escaped being kidnapped in Hanoi.
     The Japanese national's adventures have all been part of his journey from Korea to London for the 2012 Olympic games, an expedition he is undertaking largely on foot.  Mr. Miyata, an "Earthwalker" participating in the Culture of Peace Project, which is part of th UN-designated Peace Messenger Initiative, arrived in Cambodia on Oct. 11.  The 28-year-old began his walk from Korea to London in January 2009 and has covered 7,000 km across South Korea, the Japanese island of Okinawa, Taiwan, Vietnam, and now Cambodia.  He is advocating peace and environmental stewardship along the way.
     "When we do something for the Earth, nature will do thousands of more things for us," he said.
     Mr. Miyata began his journey to London after walking to the 2008 Beijing Olympic games with seasoned Earthwalker and British national Paul Coleman, who claims to have hoofed more than 47,000 km across 39 nations.  The pair hear China was putting an emphasis on hosting an environmentally friendly Olympic games.
     "In China, I saw lots of pollution and destruction, and the Chinese government said they were going to hold a green Olympics, but they didn't," Mr. Miyata said.  "I saw both sides, so I decided to walk to the London Olympics."

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Indian Government Reconsiders Development Projects

Condensed from "Amid Growing Concerns, India Closely Examining Mining Costs," by Julien Bouissou, Le Monde, published in the Cambodia Daily, Nov. 1, 2010.  All text below is copyright Bouissou/Le Monde.

PARIS -- Citing the need to protect the environment and local residents, Indian courts and government bodies have started blocking -- or even cancelling -- a growing number of industrial projects.
     Last month, the high court in Madras ordered the closure of a copper smelter operated by the London-listed conglomerate Vedanta, to protect "mother nature" from "unabated air and water pollution."
     In August, the environment ministry prevented Vedanta from opening a bauxite mine on tribal lands in eastern India held to be sacred by the Dongria Kondh community.  [Webmaster's note: The Dongria people's struggle against Vedanta was the subject by an Avatar-themed press campaign earlier this year by Survival International.]  Economic benefit is no longer sufficient reason for the government to approve applications for mining and industrial schemes.
     India is rich in mineral resources and has almost doubled mining output since 1993.  But of the 50 districts registering the largest mineral output, more than half are among the nations poorest in social terms, according to figures released by the Center for Science and Environment in New Delhi.
     In a 2006 report on national mineral policy, the Planning Commission said, "The relationship between mining companies and local communities has a legacy of abuse and mistrust."

Cambodia Keeps its Ranking as a Corrupt Nation

Condensed from “Cambodia Fails to Advance on Int'l Graft Index,” copyright Lucy Jordan of the Cambodia Daily, published Oct. 27, 2010.  All text below is copyright Jordan/the Cambodia Daily.

Despite passing a long-anticipated anticorruption law in march, Cambodia has made no improvement this year in its perceived level of corruption, according to an annual ranking of countries by Transparency International that maintained Cambodia's position among the world's most corrupt states.
“I acknowledge there is corruption, but is it not serious like this,” said Cambodian senator and businessman Mong Reththy.  He explained that some businessmen offered informal payments to some governmental institutions to speed up their investment process.
“I don't want to accuse this act as corruption, but it's the way to facilitate” trade, he said.

Brother of Chihuahua Attorney General Makes Taped Accusation that She Ordered Killings

Condensed from "Kidnapped Mexican Forced to Name Names," copyright Ken Ellingwood, the Los Angeles Times, published in the Cambodia Daily, Oct. 28, 2010.  All text below is copyright Ellingwood/the Los Angeles Times.

MEXICO CITY -- The gunmen pointed rifles at his head, demanding answers.  The captive named names.  He had lots to say about the Juarez drug cartel.
     But this drug war interrogation, captured on [video], carried a twist.
     The handcuffed man before the camera was no nameless cartel henchman.  He was the kidnapped brother of Patricia Gonzalez, the former top prosecutor of Mexico's most violent state, and his account was startling: that his sister took bribes to protect the so-called Juarez cartel and even ordered several high-profile killings.
     In the video, Gonzalez claims to have served as middleman between La Linea, a Cuidad Juarez-based gang closely tied to the Juarez cartel, and his sister, who became attorney general in Chihuahua in 2004.
     Mario Gonzalez alleges that his sister ordered several infamous killings, including that of Juarez newspaper journalist Armando Rodriguez, who had written unflatteringly about her family's legal woes shortly before his slaying in 2008.
     As attorney general, Gonzalez often spoke against deep-rooted police graft and won praise from reformers and US law-and-order experts for the state's efforts to modernize courts and root out corrupt officers.

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Guardian Alleges Abuse at UN-Funded Center for Phnom Penh Undesirables

Condensed from "Abuse Alleged at UN-Funded Detention Camp," by Ben Doherty, the Guardian, published in the Cambodia Daily on Nov. 1, 2010.  All text below is copyright Doherty/the Guardian.

     UN funding is being used to run a brutal internment camp for the destitute in Cambodia, where detainees are held for months without trial, raped and beaten, sometimes to death, former inmates have said.
     The Prey Speu facility, 19 km from Phnom Penh, is officially described as a "social affairs center" offering education and health care to vulnerable people.  But human rights groups and former inmates say the center is an illegal, clandestine prison, where people deemed "undesirable" by the government -- usually drug workers, sex workers and the homeless -- are held for months without charge.
     Men, women and children are housed together in a single building and are regularly beaten with planks, whipped with wires or threatened with weapons, according to witnesses.
     The UN's Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights has described the conditions at Prey Speu as "appalling," with people "illegally confined and subject to a variety of abuses of power by the staff that included sub-humane conditions of detention, extortion, beating, rape, sometimes resulting in death and suicide."  But the department that runs Prey Speu still gets money directly from the UN's children's fund, UNICEF, and the center is also supported by several international NGOs.
     According to the rights group Licadho, three Prey Speu detainees have been beaten to death in front of other inmates.
     Another five detainees have killed themselves, including two women who had been separated from their children.

[From the Webmaster: 
\     Similar allegations have also been made against Phnom Penh-area detention centers for drug addicts and for HIV-positive Cambodians.  
     As disturbing as the allegations are, it is my firm belief that exactly the same things are happening today in detention centers across the world, including juvenile prisons and immigrant detention centers in the world's wealthiest countries.  We must take solace in the fact that these unfortunate souls, while treated terribly by their government, have not been "disappeared," and that the voices of these wretches are heard by local and intenernational groups and media.]

Independent Panel Says Alcohol Is the Most Harmful Drug

Condensed from "Drug Experts Say Alcohol Is More Dangerous than Crack in UK," copyright Reuters, published in the Cambodia Daily, Nov. 2, 2010.  All text below is copyright Reuters.

LONDON - Alcohol is the most dangerous drug in the UK by a considerable margin, beating heroin and crack cocaine into second and third place, according to an authoritative study published yesterday . . . .
     Led by sacked government drugs adviser David Nutt with colleagues from the breakaway Independent Scientific Committee on Drugs, the study says that if drugs were classified on the basis of the harm they do, alcohol would be class A, alongside heroin and crack cocaine.
     Yesterday's study . . . examines nine categories of harm that drugs can do to the individual, "from death to damage to mental functioning and loss of relationships" and seven types of harm to others.  The maximum possible harm score was 100 and the minimum zero.
     Alcohol scored 72 -- compared with 55 for heroin and 54 for crack.  The most dangerous drugs to their individual users were ranked as heroin, crack and then crystal meth.  The most harmful to others were alcohol, heroin, and crack, in that order.

Obama Overrides Ban on Military Aid to Countries With Child Soldiers

Condensed from "US to aid armies with child soldiers," by Mary Beth Sheridan, the Phnom Penh Post, published Oct. 29, 2010.  All text below is copyright Sheridan/the Phnom Penh Post.

     President Barack Obama has granted a waiver allowing four countries to continue receiving United States military aid even though they use child soldiers, officials said.
     Human rights groups reacted with surprise and concern, saying the decision would send the wrong message.  "What the president has done is basically given everybody a pass for using child soldiers," said Jo Becker, children's rights director at Human Rights Watch.
     Obama sent a memo to Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, dated last Monday, saying that it was "in the national interest" to waive a cutoff of military assistance for Chad, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Sudan and Yemen.  These countries would have been penalized under the Child Soldiers Prevention Act, which was signed into law by President George W. Bush shortly before he left office.  The law took effect this year, after the State Department identified six countries that used child soldiers -- including Somalia and Burma.

Monday, November 1, 2010

Arizona Executes Man Using Mystery Drugs

Condensed from "Arizona Chamber Execution Goes Ahead After Stay Lifted," by Chris McGreal, the Guardian, published in the Cambodia Daily, Oct. 28, 2010.  All text below is copyright McGreal/the Guardian.

LONDON -- Arizona executed a man Tuesday after the US Supreme Court lifted a stay granted when the state refused to reveal how it illicitly obtained one of the drugs used in the death chamber from a British manufacturer.
     Jeffrey Landrigan, who was convicted of the murder of Chester Dean Dyer in 1989, was pronounced dead at 10:26 pm local time.
     A federal judge put Landrigan's execution on hold on Monday after defense lawyers argued that the state's failure to reveal its supplier meant the drug might not meet US standards and that could amount to cruel and unusual punishment.
     But the ruling was [hastily] overturned by the Supreme Court, and Landrigan was put to death by lethal injection in Arizona's first execution since 2007.

France Cracks Down on File-Sharing

Condensed from "French Officials Enforce New Antipiracy Law," by Max Colchester, the Wall Street Journal, published in the Cambodia Daily, Oct. 28, 2010.  All text below is copyright Colchester/the Wall Street Journal.

PARIS -- France's new Internet piracy police have been scouring the Web this month for people illegally downloading films and music, sending hundreds of warning e-mails to suspected intellectual property thieves.
     The implementation of France's new antipiracy law -- which is one of the first in the world, along with similar legislation in South Korea, Taiwan and Britain -- is considered a litmus test by other nations hoping to crack down on intellectual property theft.
     To catch offenders, the government has hired a private company to monitor file-sharing websites, such as eMule and BitTorrent, to determine when a computer is illegally downloading music or video.  A computer's Internet Protocol address can be viewed freely by anyone using these sites.

UN Again Votes to Urge US to Drop Cuba Sanctions

From Reuters

     Last Tuesday, the United Nations General Assembly passed for the 19th consecutive year a resolution urging the US to drop its economic sanctions against Cuba, which date back to the time of US President John F. Kennedy.  Representatives from 187 nations voted in favor of the resolution, with two votes against (the US and Israel) and three abstentions.

WSJ Editorial: "Singapore's Exchange Bid Panics Aussies"

All text below is copyright the Wall Street Journal.  This editorial was published in the Cambodia Daily on Oct. 28, 2010; it has been condensed below.

     The latest outbreak of economic nationalism comes from Down Under.  No sooner had the Singapore Exchange made an $8.3 billion bid on Monday for ASX, Sydney's stock exchange, than some politicians began talking about defending Australia's "national interest" against the foreign invaders.  If they're not careful, these leaders actually will damage the national economic interest.
     Political grandstanding against this deal is by far the greater danger [Ed: greater than various arguments purportedly advanced by opponents of the plan, and shot down by the editorial].  Australia's economy is thriving due to the global commodities boom, but more broadly as well thanks to the opening of the country's economy to competition and investment undertaken by a succession of governments over the past 25 years.  But the Australian economy will only thrive so long as the government stays true to the free-market principles that have spurred national growth.  One of the most important of these principles is openness to foreign investment.

Sunday, October 31, 2010

The W.H.O. explains IMF Policies

by the Webmaster

     As explained below, loans from the World Bank and the IMF to developing countries are typically made conditional on the implementation of certain policies which the lenders believe will advance their institutions' goals and decrease the likelihood of sovereign default.  These policies are widely unpopular in every country in which they are imposed -- in recent months, similar "austerity measures" have caused mass protests in France, Greece, and the United Kingdom -- yet they continue to drive government policies across the globe.  The World Health Organization provides on its Web site an explanation of these policies, which is reproduced below (all emphasis is added):


     Structural Adjustment Programmes (SAPs) are economic policies for developing countries that have been promoted by the World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF) since the early 1980s by the provision of loans conditional on the adoption of such policies. Structural adjustment loans are loans made by the World Bank. They are designed to encourage the structural adjustment of an economy by, for example, removing “excess” government controls and promoting market competition as part of the neo-liberal agenda followed by the Bank. The Enhanced Structural Adjustment Facility is an IMF financing mechanism to support of macroeconomic policies and SAPs in low-income countries through loans or low interest subsidies.
     SAPs policies reflect the neo-liberal ideology that drives globalization. They aim to achieve long-term or accelerated economic growth in poorer countries by restructuring the economy and reducing government intervention. SAPs policies include currency devaluation, managed balance of payments, reduction of government services through public spending cuts/budget deficit cuts, reducing tax on high earners, reducing inflation, wage suppression, privatization, lower tariffs on imports and tighter monetary policy, increased free trade, cuts in social spending, and business deregulation. Governments are also encouraged or forced to reduce their role in the economy by privatizing state-owned industries, including the health sector, and opening up their economies to foreign competition.

http://www.who.int/trade/glossary/story084/en/index.html

Election Violence in the Philippines is Widespread

by the Webmaster 

     Mindanao, a province in the south of the Philippines, appears regularly in global news reports recounting political violence and election-related murders.  These reports typically reference the ongoing conflict between a Muslim majority and Christian groups supported by the Philippines armed forces.
     Unfortunately, political violence and murders are widespread in the Philippines.  Each day's newspaper recounts multiple new murders of candidates for office in every region of the country, including in Manila and barangays throughout the country's most developed island, Luzon.  
     Evidence of the importance given by Filipinos to elected office is everywhere in the country, from large signs on street corners in each neighborhood listing local officials' names and positions; to ubiquitous flyers for various candidates; to the parades of hired cars and moto-taxis which roll through towns, plastered with the name and photos of a local election candidate, blaring slogans and music through loudspeakers.  The importance of elected offices is also reflected in the countless murders which have been perpetrated to obtain them.
     While the Philippines was a de facto and de jure colony of the United States throughout much of the 20th century, it remains a world apart, with its internal affairs bearing little relation to those of its former patron.