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Today’s Talk Rss

South Korea and race

Posted by CD | Posted in Asian Affairs, Social Issues | Posted on 29-11-2009

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As far as South Korea being the melting pot that the U.S. is or not even close to the melting pot that countries such as France and the U.K. are is a big dissapointment.  Is it the lack of education that results in the “look down” of other races such as Africans and Indians particularly those of darker featuers.

Well recently a  South Korean man has been fined one million won ($865) for making discriminatory remarks against an Indian professor.  The conviction is the country’s first involving racist remarks towards a foreigner, Incheon District Court officials told local media.

The man yelled racist comments and said “Arab! Arab!” at the Indian man while on a bus in July, the judge said.  The professor felt publically insulted by the comments, he added.  The 31-year-old South Korean had objected to Bonogit Hussain talking loudly on a bus.  Mr Hussain had been in South Korea since 2007 and had studied for a master’s degree from Seoul’s SungKongHoe University, later working as a research professor there.  Park could have faced up to one year in prison and 2 million won in fines for public insult, Associated Press reported.

Spening too much time online: Go to a boot camp in China

Posted by CD | Posted in Asian Affairs, Funny and crazy stuff | Posted on 05-11-2009

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The idea of sending your child who spends too much time online might seem harsh but sending your child to a boot camp where they beat you if you can’t control your online urges is just a little too much!  Read more…

The BBC reported that there are dozens of treatment centres offering to wean youths, mostly boys, from spending hours on the web.  Many of them are military-style boot camps that rely on tough programes of physical exercise and counseling.  Two boys were beaten at separate camps earlier this year, one died and the other was severely injured.  “When intervening to prevent improper use of the internet we should… strictly prohibit restriction of personal freedom and physical punishments,” the ministry said in a draft guideline quoted by Reuters news agency.

In July, the ministry of health formally banned the use of electroshock therapy as a treatment option.  There was a public outcry after 15-year-old Deng Senshan died in August less than 24 hours after arrival at the Qihang Salvation Training Camp in Guangxi province.Days later, 14-year-old Pu Liang was put in a Sichuan hospital in a series condition after allegedly being beaten by his boot camp’s principal and other students.  Some estimates suggest up to 10% of the country’s 100 million web users under the age of 20 could be addicted, and a growing number of rehabilitation services have sprung up to deal with the problem.

Some define an internet addict as anyone who is online for at least six hours a day and has little interest in school.  The goal of intervention is… to urge the target people to use the internet in a healthy way,” the ministry of health statement said.  “It’s not to stop them from using the internet.”

US Government to Pay Taliban to Switch Sides

Posted by CD | Posted in Asian Affairs, International Politics, Middle Eastern Affairs, Social Issues | Posted on 30-10-2009

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I can tell you there are a bunch of idots in our government.  The BBC reports that the US will start to pay the Taliban to switch sides.  Well, you know you are losing the war when you have to pay your enemy not to kill you!  This of course is not the first time the US has resorted to paying off its enemies.

October 28, 2009 “BBC” — The US military in Afghanistan is to be allowed to pay Taliban fighters who renounce violence against the government in Kabul.   The move is included in a defense bill which President Obama is set to sign.  Such payments have already been widely used by US commanders in Iraq, but it is the first time the system is being formally adopted in Afghanistan.  Early on Wednesday, Afghan troops were engaged in a shootout with suspected militants at a house in Kabul.

A day earlier eight US soldiers were killed in bomb attacks in southern Afghanistan.  The deaths make October the deadliest month for American forces in the eight-year war in Afghanistan.  President Obama is yet to decide whether to send thousands more troops to Afghanistan.  Mr Obama has said he will not risk their lives “unless it is absolutely necessary”.
The latest attacks come amid heightened tension in Afghanistan in the run-up to the second round of a presidential election marred by widespread fraud in favour of incumbent President Hamid Karzai.

The Commander’s Emergency Response Programme, or Cerp, was set up to give the US military the means to clear roads, dig wells and provide other urgent humanitarian assistance to the people of Iraq and Afghanistan, the BBC’s Richard Lister in Washington says.  But in Iraq, the money can also be given to insurgents provided they switch sides. Backers of the Cerp scheme say it enabled some 90,000 formerly hostile Iraqis to form local militias and protect their towns from militants, our correspondent says.  He adds that now the same authority is being given to US commanders in Afghanistan.  A clause in the annual defense appropriations bill says they can use the money to support the “re-integration into Afghan society” of those who have renounced violence against the Afghan government.

Although $1.3bn (£691m) has been authorized for the fund as a whole, no specific sum has been allocated to the re-integration programmes, our correspondent says.  The Senate Armed Services Committee chairman, Senator Carl Levin, has said he envisages the money being used to pay former Taliban fighters to protect their communities.

HIV vaccine trial in Thailand

Posted by CD | Posted in African Affairs, Asian Affairs, Social Issues | Posted on 20-10-2009

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Scientists announced last month that a combination of vaccines gave a 31% level of protection in trials among 16,000 heterosexuals aged 18-30.

Doubts had been raised about whether the finding was significant.

But new data published at a conference in Paris indicates that, while small scale, the findings are robust and statistically significant.hiv  opt HIV vaccine trial in Thailand

However, the scientists say they do not understand what is causing the effect, and it seems to offer less protection to those most at risk.

Despite these drawbacks, Colonel Nelson Michael from the US military HIV research program it is still a small step in the right direction.

He said: “It’s important that people understand that this is a scientific advance, a scientific breakthrough.

“It is not a public health breakthrough; there is not a vaccine that is around the corner.

“We now, after 26 years of trying, believe that we can go down that road with confidence that we will be able to develop a vaccine that is globally effective.”

Doubts raised

Despite their initial joy when the first results from the Thai trial were announced, many scientists were concerned that the protective effect was very small.

Among the 8,000 of so who got the vaccine, 51 became infected with the virus.

Among those who received a placebo, 74 got the infection.

However, the trials sponsors, the US military and the Thai government said the 31.2% protective effect was statistically significant and real.

As more data slowly emerged some scientists began to have doubts about how robust this effect really was.

When those who had not taken all their vaccines were excluded from the trial the numbers lost their statistical power.

Many experts were concerned that the data had not been subject to a rigorous examination by other scientists.

Read more

Chinese lessons in Liberia

Posted by CD | Posted in African Affairs, Asian Affairs | Posted on 13-10-2009

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A report done by Jonathan Paye-Layleh stated that China is often criticized for taking form Africa but giving little back.  Well, Liberia might be a different story where Chinese officials are moving into new territory — Chinese language lessons.

China vs America

As in much of Africa, China is heavily engaged in post-war Liberia, rebuilding roads with funding from the World Bank, managing hotels and restaurants, trading in medicines and other businesses.

o Chinese lessons in Liberia
CHINA IN AFRICA
  • China is Africa’s second-biggest trading partner, behind US
  • Between 2002 and 2003 two-way trade doubles to $18.5bn
  • By 2008 trade tops $100bn – China exports $51bn, imports $56bn
  • Almost all imports come from oil-rich nations: Angola, Equatorial Guinea, Nigeria, the Republic of Congo, and Sudan
Sources: China Daily, Reuters, Council on Foreign Relations
inline dashed line Chinese lessons in Liberia

Chinese mineral firm China Union became the largest investor in Liberia when it signed a $2.6bn deal to go into iron-ore mining earlier this year.

There is even a Chinese-language radio station broadcasting across the country for the increasing number of migrant workers and expatriates.

The growing trade ties explain why the Chinese embassy and the Ministry of Youth and Sports have decided to put on free two-hour classes in the afternoon, five days a week.

Although attendances for the first few classes were sparse because of torrential rain in Monrovia, the students who did turn up were serious about the task.

John Cooper, 57, from Monrovia, says the lessons reflect Liberia’s changing political allegiances.

“Traditionally Liberians are closer to the Americans than we are to the Chinese, but the irony is that the Chinese are more open to us than the Americans are,” he says.

“If the Chinese stay here with us for about 25 years, it will be good for us.”

A middle-aged woman attending the lessons agrees that the classes are important for the country.

“In Liberia we speak only English and instead of learning French, we play with French – it is just too bad for a nation,” she says.

For others, like 40-year-old Tubman Nyennety, the motivation for doing the class is driven by personal ambition.

“We need to learn Chinese because you never tell when you will have the opportunity to travel to China,” he says.

Another student, Musu Woodfor, recalls the difficulties she faced when she fled the civil war to Liberia’s French-speaking neighbours.

“We learn French, so why not Chinese? The language barrier was a problem when we travelled as a result of the war.”

Read more….

The death of Kim Dae-Jung

Posted by CD | Posted in Asian Affairs | Posted on 21-08-2009

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North Korea's delegation bows before portrait of Kim Dae-jung - 21 August 2009

North Korea sent several of Kim Jong-il’s senior aides to Seo

Mr Kim devoted his presidency to improving relations between the two Koreas, still technically at war.

After nuclear and missile tests in May, the North has made a series of what some see as conciliatory gestures.

The six officials from North Korea’s ruling Workers’ Party, wearing black suits and ties, placed a wreath of flowers on the steps of South Korea’s National Assembly, where Kim Dae-jung is lying in state.

The flowers were marked as a gift from North Korea’s ruler, Kim Jong-il.

Fears of snub

The delegation’s visit is, first and foremost, a sign of the esteem in which the former South Korean president was held on both sides of the border, says the BBC’s John Sudworth in Seoul.

Mr Kim died on Tuesday at the age of 85, after a bout of pneumonia. He was president from 1998 to 2003 and won the Nobel Peace Prize for his historic summit with Kim Jong-il in 2000.

It is the first time representatives from the North have come to Seoul since the conservative government of President Lee Myung-bak took office early last year.

Relations have soured since President Lee cut the flow of aid to the North, tying its resumption to nuclear disarmament.

The delegation’s visit is being seen by some as a rare chance for inter-Korean dialogue after a recent series of positive gestures from the North.

A South Korean worker detained in the North since March was released, and the North has said it will ease restrictions on cross-border traffic to the joint industrial zone in the Northern town of Kaesong.

Pyongyang has also offered to re-introduce tourism visits to the North, and reunions of families split by the 1950-53 war.

But there are fears that the delegation’s two-day visit could be used by Pyongyang to give Seoul the cold shoulder, says our correspondent.

Beyond paying tribute to Kim Dae-jung, no itinerary has been agreed. The visit was arranged through Mr Kim’s family, not South Korean government officials, and they will leave on Saturday – before the funeral on Sunday.

It is not clear if the North Korean envoys will meet any South Korean officials.

Suu Kyi conviction

Posted by CD | Posted in Asian Affairs, Social Issues | Posted on 11-08-2009

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Anger greets Suu Kyi conviction

A supporter of Aung San Suu Kyi reacts to her conviction, outside the Burmese embassy in Japan

Supporters of Aung San Suu Kyi reacted angrily to her conviction

World leaders have reacted with anger and disappointment at the conviction of Burmese pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi for violating security laws.

The UN called for her immediate release after she was sentenced to a further 18 months of house arrest – where she has spent 14 of the past 20 years.

The US, the European Union, Britain and France were among those who condemned the verdict.

However, trading partners China and India have made no public comment.

Ms Suu Kyi was on trial for allowing a US national, John Yettaw, into her lakeside home after he swam there uninvited. Mr Yettaw was jailed for seven years, including four years of hard labour.

o Suu Kyi conviction
start quote rb Suu Kyi conviction Keeping Aung San Suu Kyi under arrest… does not serve the proclaimed national interest end quote rb Suu Kyi conviction
Ton van Lierop
EU spokesman
inline dashed line Suu Kyi conviction

Critics of Burma’s military regime say the verdict is designed to prevent Ms Suu Kyi from taking part in elections scheduled for 2010.

‘Sham trial’

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon has said he “strongly deplores” the verdict and called for Ms Suu Kyi to be freed.

“Unless she and all other political prisoners in Myanmar [Burma] are released and allowed to participate in free and fair elections, the credibility of the political process will remain in doubt,” he said.

The UN Security Council is meeting to discuss the verdict.

The UN special envoy to Burma, Ibrahim Gambari, said Ms Suu Kyi was “absolutely indispensable to the resumption of a political process that can lead to national reconciliation”.

China’s iPhone man has committed suicide

Posted by CD | Posted in Asian Affairs, Social Issues | Posted on 22-07-2009

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A Chinese man suspected of stealing a prototype for the fourth generation iPhone has committed suicide.

Before his death, Sun Danyong told friends he had been beaten up by security staff from his firm, Foxconn, one of Apple’s largest manufacturers.Man holds Apple iPhone               

 

The probe was centred on an Apple manufacturing plant

Foxconn, a large Taiwanese company which employed Sun in its huge Shenzhen factory, has launched an investigation.

Apple says it is saddened by the death and is waiting for the results of the investigation.

“We require our suppliers to treat all workers with dignity and respect,” Jill Tan, an Apple spokeswoman in Hong Kong, told reporters.

‘Humiliating’

Sun Danyong was 25 when he threw himself off a 12-storey building last week.

As part of his job, he was responsible for shipping iPhone prototypes to Apple.

Such prototypes are a closely guarded secret, as Apple likes to keep its new products and upgrades under wraps until their launch date, to heighten customer anticipation.

On 13 July, Sun reported that he was missing one of the 16 units in his possession.

The company immediately launched an investigation into the disappearance; three days later he had jumped to his death.

Sun’s former classmates have told Chinese newspapers that during the firm’s investigation he was beaten, his house was searched and he was locked up alone in a room.

 

The cover of the Nanfang Metropolitan newspaper, 22 July

A local newspaper showed CCTV footage of Sun the day before he died

They say he described what happened in an online chat with them as one of the most humiliating experiences of his life.

Foxconn and the local public security bureau are investigating the allegations, and the firm has expressed its condolences to Sun’s family and set up extra counselling services for employees.

It has also has suspended its chief of security, Gu Qinming.

Mr Gu denies hitting Sun, and a CCTV image of the worker on the day before he died – which was featured on the front page of the local Nanfang Metropolitan Daily on Wednesday – appears to back up Mr Gu’s version of events.

According to a BBC correspondent in Beijing, Chris Hogg, Foxconn has faced allegations in the past that it treats its employees poorly.

It has always denied such claims, and was cleared by Apple of any serious abuses, our correspondent says.