Saturday, August 17, 2013

Rag dolls, not cops: Lynching mobs in Bolivia leave behind stuffed faces

Rag dolls, not cops: Lynching mobs in Bolivia leave behind stuffed faces

Screenshot from Rt video

With almost a half of Bolivian territory completely out of police control, citizens resort to delivering their own controversial justice. As a warning from lynch mobs to criminals, rag dolls in faded clothes hang limply by the neck from telegraph poles.
The presence of the ragdolls is flagrantly unnecessary when they are accompanied, for example, by the charred remains of a burnt-out van; recent evidence of a scene at which four people were almost burnt to death by neighbors who suspected them of conducting a burglary. 
“They put up such rag dolls in all La Paz districts. You may mistake them for scarecrows but in fact they are a warning to criminals saying that lynching is being practiced here,” an anonymous shop owner who had been burgled told RT Spanish – too scared to publically identify herself. She had been warned not to submit the names of those who attacked the burglary suspects.  
However, when unaccompanied by clear evidence of the deadly vigilante mobs, the dolls serve as a warning to potential criminals in the area that they will meet a sticky end outside the hands of the law. 
In the first half of 2013, Bolivia’s Office of the Ombudsman reported the deaths of ten people from such lynchings. The practice is most common in rural and deprived areas of Bolivia where police and local authorities do not wield much influence through their scarcity.  
“Citizens of La Paz no longer believe in the police and have chosen to deliver their own justice. That is why they put up the rag dolls, they are a warning. They hope to keep the thieves and criminals in line this way,”said RT’s Bricio Segovia from Bolivia’s capital de facto, La Paz. 
Screenshot from Rt video
Screenshot from Rt video

According to the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights in Bolivia, police don’t wield any control over more than 47% of Bolivia’s districts.
“People are subject to violent inhumane behavior and torture. We have publicly condemned these acts on numerous occasions and have strongly advised the authorities to increase the efficiency of crime-solving,”Denis Racicot, a representative of the office, told RT Spanish. 
Community justice in this extreme form isn’t just confined to La Paz. This July, in Cochabamba, central Bolivia, a 17 year old boy died on his way to hospital after he was set on fire by an angry mob following an attempted theft of a bicycle. 
The office of Bolivia’s national Office of the Ombudsman labeled the vigilante action as “the joint action of a multitude blinded by rage, mistrust and uncontrolled irrationality.”
In June, two members of the indigenous Quechua community were tried for murder after being at the forefront of a mob that buried a 17 year old teenager alive, after he was accused of raping and killing a 35 year old woman. 
The two boys ‘incited’ the 200-strong mob involved, who threw him into the victim’s grave, a local radio station reported at the time of the episode. Colquechaca is a small town of 5,000 inhabitants located only 333 kilometers southeast of La Paz.
Bolivia’s 2009 constitution permits indigenous justice and allots community leaders the capacity to administer punishments for minor social infractions in the county, as per the ancestral custom. However, punishments do not constitutionally include killings.
Screenshot from Rt video
Screenshot from Rt video

“Those who do these things justify themselves referring to the communal law that Bolivia’s Indians practiced for decades to punish their undeserving members outside of the official jurisdiction or public knowledge,” stated Segovia.
The problem may be symptomatic of broader social conflicts in the country. “The practice of power – in unions, municipalities or governments – is leading to situations in which the bulk of the population feels excluded,” Ombudsman, Rolando Villena, told a La Paz daily, Page Seven, towards the end of July. 
“Culture clashes arise between urban and rural… all this is creating alarming situations which definitely are not solutions,” he said.
The custom was condemned by the Human Rights Foundation in 2008.
“Lynching is on the rise,” the organization commented at the time, noting 46 cases between November 2005 and mid-January 2008. “Often, individuals in these mobs cite “communal justice” to justify barbaric actions such as hanging, crucifixion, stoning, live burial, and burning,” said a statement from the organization. 
However, Bolivia still has the second highest number of lynchings in Latin America to one other country: Guatemala.
Screenshot from Rt video
Screenshot from Rt video

Israeli govt to recruit students as undercover agents on social media

Israeli govt to recruit students as undercover agents on social media

AFP Photo / Stephanie Pilick

Israel is set to recruit students to work undercover in "covert units" at universities. The students will post messages on Facebook, Twitter and YouTube on the Israeli government’s behalf – without identifying themselves as government agents.
The students participating in the project will be part of the public diplomacy arm of Prime Minister Benyamin Netanyahu’s office. Leaders of the “covert units” will receive full scholarships in return for their online public diplomacy (hasbara).

The Prime Minister’s Office is looking to invest up to 3 million shekels ($840,000) to recruit, organize and fund the activities of hundreds of university students, Haaretz reported.

Sources in the Prime Minister’s Office told the newspaper that the main subjects that the campus-based units will deal with are diplomatic- and security-related issues, efforts to combat boycotts of Israel, anti-Semitism and the de-legitimization of Israel. The students will focus on Israel’s democratic values, freedom of religion, pluralism and “other subjects that give expression to the Israeli government’s public diplomacy policy.”

A member of the Israeli Knesset, Dov Lipman, and the Prime Minister’s Office’s director for interactive media, Danny Seaman, revealed the new initiative during a meeting of the Knesset’s Diaspora Affairs Committee last month.

The Prime Minister’s Office is planning to have Israel's student union recruit up to 550 students with knowledge of foreign languages from Israel’s seven universities. The student union is to publicize the project among tens of thousands of students, and is to provide computers and work space for a project headquarters at all university campuses.

“With social media, you can’t wait,”
 an unnamed official involved in the effort told the Jerusalem Post.

“We will get authoritative information out and make sure it goes viral,
” the official said. “We won’t leave negative stories out there online without a response, and we will spread positive messages. What we are doing is revolutionary. We are putting public diplomacy in the hands of the public.”
AFP Photo / Fred Tanneau
AFP Photo / Fred Tanneau

The covert units will be set up at each university and structured in a semi-military fashion. While groups will take directions from staff at the Prime Minister’s Office, the government says that officially they will be politically independent.

“The idea requires that the state’s role not be highlighted and therefore it is necessary to insist on major involvement by the students themselves without any political link [or] affiliation,”
 Seaman said.

Leaders of covert units will receive full scholarships from the Prime Minister’s Office, which will fund a total of 2.78 million shekels ($780,000) in scholarships for the program in the upcoming academic year, Haaretz reported.

“The national public diplomacy unit in the PMO places an emphasis on social network activity,”
 the Prime Minister’s Office said in a statement. “As part of this, a new pro-Israel public diplomacy infrastructure of students on Israeli campuses is being established that will assist in advancing and disseminating content on the social networks, particularly to international audiences.”

According to details provided to Israeli media, a government liaison officer for Israel advocacy will oversee the dissemination of “rapid responses” from Israeli officials to respond to news events, and coordinate with other government bodies that deal with public diplomacy, including the Israeli Defense Force.

The IDF has recently asserted a stronger, at times controversial presence on social media with mixed results. The new program may well seek to address perceived deficiencies in the way that Israel communicates with the world online.  

Last year, during Israel’s eight-day Operation Pillar of Defense, an incursion launched into the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip in response to rocket attacks, the Palestinian group was widely seen as having won the war of words on online media.

Haaretz reported that in the fallout of the military operation, the hashtag #GazaUnderAttack with 170,000 mentions easily surpassed Israel’s own #IsraelUnderFire, with a comparably meager 25,000 mentions.

"The perception dominating the online discourse was that the IDF had embarked on an unjustified attack,”
said Tomer Simon, an Israeli researcher who studied social networking activity during the conflict.

Obama scraps Egypt military drill after crackdown, keeps aid intact

Obama scraps Egypt military drill after crackdown, keeps aid intact

ARCHIVE PHOTO: A US Naval ship deploys an Egyptian tank on the coast of Egypt's northern El-Alamein region during the Bright Star joint war games that involves 30,000 troops from 12 countries, 15 September 2005 (AFP Photo / Khaled Desouki)
ARCHIVE PHOTO: A US Naval ship deploys an Egyptian tank on the coast of Egypt's northern El-Alamein region during the Bright Star joint war games that involves 30,000 troops from 12 countries, 15 September 2005 (AFP Photo / Khaled Desouki)

US President Barack Obama has called off joint US-Egypt military drills scheduled to take place next month in protest of the Egyptian government’s brutal crackdown on protesters, in which more than 630 people were killed on Wednesday.
While Obama said that the US had national security interests in the region and "sustained commitment to Egypt", he stressed that it could not be business as usual after the crackdown on protesters. 
Violence will only feed the cycle of polarization,” the US leader said, adding that Washington opposes "the pursuit of martial law" in Egypt and calling to lift the state of emergency. 
"As a result, this morning we notified the Egyptian government that we are canceling our biannual joint military exercise, which was scheduled for next month," Obama then said.
US President Barack Obama makes a statement on Egypt August 15, 2013, in Chilmark, Massachusetts (AFP Photo / Jim Watson)
US President Barack Obama makes a statement on Egypt August 15, 2013, in Chilmark, Massachusetts (AFP Photo / Jim Watson)

The Bright Star military exercise has been a cornerstone of relations between the Pentagon and the Egyptian military, since it was inaugurated after the Camp David peace accords signed by the US, Egypt and Israel in 1978. The 2011 exercises were canceled shortly after the ousting of President Hosni Mubarak in January that year. 
Obama said that the US could not dictate Egypt’s next steps, but it remains unclear whether the cancellation of the Bright Star exercises would nudge Egypt towards a more peaceful resolution of the political crisis and halt the suppression of pro-Morsi demonstrators.  
The US leader also slammed the violence instigated by the MB. “We call on those who are protesting to do so peacefully and condemn the attacks that we’ve seen by protesters, including on churches,” he said. 
US Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel called  Egyptian army chief General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi on Thursday to say that the US remains ready to work with all parties to ensure a peaceful way forward is achieved in Egypt, stating that the US would maintain military ties with the country. However, he said that defense ties were in rocky waters. 
"I made it clear that the violence and inadequate steps towards reconciliation are putting important elements of our longstanding defense cooperation at risk," Hagel said in a statement to Reuters. 
A supporter of the Muslim Brotherhood and Egypt's ousted president Mohamed Morsi fires fireworks towards police during clashes in Cairo on August 14, 2013 (AFP Photo / Mosaab El-Shamy)
A supporter of the Muslim Brotherhood and Egypt's ousted president Mohamed Morsi fires fireworks towards police during clashes in Cairo on August 14, 2013 (AFP Photo / Mosaab El-Shamy)

The US provides some $1.5 billion in annual assistance to Egypt, $1.3 billion of which goes to the military, and about $250 million goes in economic aid. Some observers say this aid could be used to put pressure on the current Egyptian leadership to moderate its authoritarian rule. 
In July, a bill put forward by Republican leaders of the House Appropriations Sub-Committee proposed canceling the annual $250 million in economic aid for Egypt. The money was not included in the foreign aid budget for 2014, but the aid was not publicly canceled. 
Senator Rand Paul said cancelling the joint military exercise with Egypt is not enough, as federal law requires suspending military aid when there has been a military coup. 
“While President Obama ‘condemns the violence in Egypt’, his administration continues to send billions of taxpayer dollars to help pay for it,” Paul said in a statement. “The law is very clear when a coup d’état takes place, foreign aid must stop, regardless of the circumstances.”
At least 638 people were killed and 3,994 injured, as violence swept through Egypt on Wednesday, according to a tally on Thursday by the Egyptian Health Ministry. The bloodshed was sparked when Egyptian security forces brutally broke up the sit-in camps of Muslim Brotherhood supporters in Cairo. 
A state of emergency was declared in major cities including Cairo, Alexandria and Suez, on the day of the deadly upheaval, and a curfew imposed. Despite warnings from Egyptian authorities, demonstrators have continued to express anger at the government, specifically in the wake of Wednesday’s violence. On Thursday, hundreds of Muslim Brotherhood loyalists marched on Alexandria, while others set fire to a government building in Giza. 

Syria accepts essential terms of chemical weapons probe - UN



Syria accepts essential terms of chemical weapons probe - UN

In this image made available by the Syrian News Agency (SANA) on March 19, 2013, people are brought into a hospital in the Khan al-Assal region in the northern Aleppo province, as Syria's government accused rebel forces of using chemical weapons for the first time. (AFP/SANA)
In this image made available by the Syrian News Agency (SANA) on March 19, 2013, people are brought into a hospital in the Khan al-Assal region in the northern Aleppo province, as Syria's government accused rebel forces of using chemical weapons for the first time. (AFP/SANA)

Syrian government has accepted the ‘essential modalities’ under which the UN was ready to investigate whether chemical weapons had been used in the country, the body has announced, signalling that experts will shortly be traveling to Syria.
"The departure of the team is now imminent," UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said in a statement. “As agreed with the Government of Syria, the team will remain in the country to conduct its activities, including on-site visits, for a period of up to 14 days, extendable upon mutual consent.” 
The Secretary-General has expressed his appreciation to the Syrian government for accepting “the modalities essential for cooperation to ensure the proper, safe and efficient conduct of the Mission.”
The statement also reminded that the use of chemical weapons “by any side under any circumstances”would constitute an “outrageous crime.”
Two weeks ago the United Nations said that an agreement had been reached with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s government as to the three locations that UN inspectors would be investigating, led by Swedish scientist, Ake Sellstrom.
One site to be visited by the UN team is Khan al-Assal in Aleppo, where the country’s government says rebels used chemical weapons in March. The two additional locations have yet to be confirmed. 
Ban Ki-moon (AFP Photo / HO / UN Photo / Mark Garten)
Ban Ki-moon (AFP Photo / HO / UN Photo / Mark Garten)

Both Syria’s government and rebel forces have long been accusing each other of using chemical weapons, and both have denied it.
Russia cheered the move, expressing hope that it would help to resolve the ongoing crisis.
“Moscow welcomes the principal agreement on the launch of the work of a group of international experts in Syria, which, even after a delay, opens the way for a thorough and objective investigation of the alleged cases of the use of chemical weapons in the Syrian territory,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Alexander Lukashevich said.
Last month Russia submitted “a full set of documents” to the UN and its analysis of samples taken west of Aleppo. Russia’s findings indicated that it was rebels behind the Khan al-Assal incident, in which more than 30 people died. 
The United States cast doubt on the Russian findings saying its own intelligence services believed Syrian government forces had used chemical weapons. However, Paulo Pinheiro, chairman of the UN commission’s inquiry into rights violations in Syria, said the evidence provided by the US did not meet standards as his commission was “very worried about the chain of custody of the substances.” 
Back in March Damascus has requested UN investigators to visit Khan al-Assal. The UN formed a mission back then, but reluctant to send it, demanding “unconditional and unfettered” access across the country, according to Ban's spokesman Martin Nesirky. 
Syria’s Foreign Ministry rejected UN effort to broaden a probe claiming that it was “at odds with the Syrian request” and that its “possible hidden intentions” could violate Syrian sovereignty.
In total, the UN received some 13 reports of alleged use of chemical weapons in Syria and the UN inspectors will be investigating the “allegations” of chemical weapons use, rather than determining who was responsible for the attacks.

Mission Impossible? Fukushima scientists brace for riskiest nuclear fuel clean-up yet

Mission Impossible? Fukushima scientists brace for riskiest nuclear fuel clean-up yet


An aerial view shows Tokyo Electric Power Co.'s (TEPCO) tsunami-crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Fukushima Prefecture (Reuters / Kyodo)An aerial view shows Tokyo Electric Power Co.'s (TEPCO) tsunami-crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Fukushima Prefecture (Reuters / Kyodo)

Scientists at Japan’s Fukushima nuclear power plant are preparing for their toughest clean-up operation yet – two and a half years after three of the plant’s reactors suffered a meltdown in Japan’s worst-ever nuclear power disaster.
The operation, to remove 400 tons of highly irradiated spent fuel beneath the plant’s damaged Reactor No. 4, could set off a catastrophe greater than any we have ever seen, independent experts warn. An operation of this scale, says plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Company, has never been attempted before, and is wrought with danger. 
An uncontrolled leak of nuclear fuel could cause more radiation than the March 2011 disaster or the 1986 Chernobyl catastrophe, say consultants Mycle Schneider and Antony Froggatt. "Full release from the Unit-4 spent fuel pool, without any containment or control, could cause by far the most serious radiological disaster to date," the scientists say in their World Nuclear Industry Status Report 2013. 
The operation has been tried before – but only with the aid of computers. This time it will be a painstaking manual process.
Here’s what needs to be done: more than 1,300 used fuel rod assemblies, packing radiation 14,000 times the equivalent of the Hiroshima nuclear bomb, need to carefully be removed from their cooling pool.
Arnie Gunderson, a veteran US nuclear engineer and director of Fairewinds Energy Education, told Reuters that "they are going to have difficulty in removing a significant number of the rods," especially given their close proximity to each other, which risks breakage and the release of radiation. 
Gundersen told Reuters of an incredibly dangerous “criticality” that would result if a chain reaction takes place at any point, if the rods break or even so much as collide with each other in the wrong way. The resulting radiation is too great for the cooling pool to absorb – it simply has not been designed to do so.
"The problem with a fuel pool criticality is that you can't stop it. There are no control rods to control it,”Gundsersen said. “The spent fuel pool cooling system is designed only to remove decay heat, not heat from an ongoing nuclear reaction." 
The base of the pool where the fuel assemblies are situated is 18 meters above the ground. The pool itself is 10 by 12 meters, and the rods are seven meters under the surface of the water. One problem with that pool is it has been exposed to air in the 2011 catastrophe, when its roof was blown off by the explosion.
The operation is urgent – because even a minor earthquake could trigger an uncontrolled fuel leak. 

A general view of the cover installation for the spent fuel removed from the cooling pool is pictured at the No.4 reactor building at Tokyo Electric Power Company's (TEPCO) tsunami-crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Fukushima prefecture (Reuters / Noboru Hashimoto / Pool)
A general view of the cover installation for the spent fuel removed from the cooling pool is pictured at the No.4 reactor building at Tokyo Electric Power Company's (TEPCO) tsunami-crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Fukushima prefecture (Reuters / Noboru Hashimoto / Pool)

The removal process is due to begin in November, with TEPCO predicting it will take approximately a year. Although TEPCO is confident the operation will be a success, some experts are more skeptical. TEPCO is currently failing to contain radioactive water seepage in another part of the facility. 
Two empty fuel rods were removed as part of a test operation some time ago, but "to jump to the conclusion that it is going to work just fine for the rest of them is quite a leap of logic," Reuters quoted Gundersen, of Fairewinds Energy Education as saying.
A giant steel frame currently towers over Unit 4, soon to be tasked with the extraction of the fuel assemblies. Each fuel rod weighs at around 300 kilograms and is 4.5 meters long. They also contain plutonium, one of the most radioactive substances known to man. The radiation builds up during the later stages of a core’s operation. 
Toshio Kimura, a former TEPCO technician, told Reuters that the operation would normally be assisted by computers, but that luxury is gone. "Previously it was a computer-controlled process that memorized the exact locations of the rods down to the millimeter and now they don't have that. It has to be done manually so there is a high risk that they will drop and break one of the fuel rods," he said.
He is also expecting many issues for TEPCO ahead, as the process is estimated to take years. The scientists’ task is not made easier by the fact that the building is also prone to corrosion from salt water.
Removing the fuel rods is just one part of the cleanup operation, itself expected to take around four decades - according to the IAEA - during which any number of other problems could arise. 
The fuel rod scare comes as TEPCO is currently failing to contain radioactive water seepage in another part of the facility – itself a growing issue with no concrete solution, apart from building a special underground wall. But with water quantity building up at an alarming rate, the most likely version of events is that the radioactive water will simply have to be released into the Pacific at some point. According to TEPCO, there are still “no perfect solutions.”
"If you build a wall, of course the water is going to accumulate there. And there is no other way for the water to go but up or sideways and eventually lead to the ocean," Masashi Goto, a nuclear engineer who has worked at several TEPCO plants, told Reuters. "So now, the question is how long do we have?"
This situation is not made easier by the fact that Japan is a seismically active island. Earthquakes keep striking at random, and even a small tremor could set in motion a catastrophic chain of events.
A worker walks in front of water tanks at Tokyo Electric Power Company's (TEPCO) tsunami-crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Fukushima prefecture (Reuters / Noboru Hashimoto / Pool)
A worker walks in front of water tanks at Tokyo Electric Power Company's (TEPCO) tsunami-crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Fukushima prefecture (Reuters / Noboru Hashimoto / Pool)

Costs soaring – no end in sight

Clean-up costs at the nuclear plant are projected to be in the billions of dollars, as the facility’s operator has failed to meet its targets, leading to increased public distrust and forcing the government to step in.
In the two years since the March 2011 meltdown, the costs of the cleanup project could be spiraling out of control financially. If the clean-up is not carried out, it could cause incalculable problems for Japan’s economy, particularly in agriculture.
The Institute for Industrial Sciences at the University of Tokyo has recently estimated that the levels of radiation along the country’s coastline are way above the government target. 
"We have detected over 20 spots around Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant with levels of radiation five to 10 times higher than the surrounding areas, with diameters ranging from tens to hundreds of meters," the institute said.
TEPCO had been left to its own devices two years ago to deal with the clean-up and the compensation payments to people in the contaminated region. Now, with recent news of over 300 tons of contaminated water being leaked into the Pacific for more than two years, the Japanese government has decided to step in.
In the immediate aftermath of the disaster, the government ordered Fukushima plant operator TEPCO to bear the entire costs of the clean-up, but also told it to get back to profitability as soon as possible through cost-cutting, so that it could pay off its debts. The clean-up will weigh very heavily on Japan’s energy consumption, however, on top of the already stringent energy austerity measures.
But TEPCO has insisted it will not be able to handle the clean-up bill, which is now projected at more than $10 billion. The company has already spent $3 billion and will require a major injection of $10 billion by March 2014, it says.

Snowden exchanges encrypted messages with father



Snowden exchanges encrypted messages with father

Lon Snowden (Reuters / Gary Cameron)

NSA leaker, Edward Snowden, has directly communicated with his father for the first time since fleeing the US. The relatives talked on an encrypted Internet chat on Wednesday, ignoring warnings from lawyers of possible interception by US intelligence.
The move was criticized by Edward Snowden’s legal representative in Russia, Anatoly Kucherena, who urged the family to refrain from such forms of communications until father Lon Snowden arrives in Moscow.

"I understand the feelings of Edward and his father. It appears that they have turned out to be more powerful than the concern for safety,” Kucherena told Interfax news agency. “But I would recommend that they won’t get in touch via the Internet anymore and wait until meeting in person."

The decision to use the web to get in touch with his son was made by Lon Snowden “independently, in spite of legal advice from his attorneys,” an unnamed source with knowledge of the issue told ITAR-TASS news agency.

The source added that besides fears of interception by US security services such form of communication makes it problematic to verify if Lon Snowden was actually talking to his son or somebody else.  

The American lawyers insist that all communications within the Snowden family should happen through Kucherena’s mediation as it was done previously.

“We must understand that security is the No.1 issue in his [Snowden’s] case”
 as the whistleblower has the world’s largest state after him, the lawyer stated previously.

Snowden Sr. has already received a Russian visa, saying that he’s planning to come to Moscow this week, without naming the exact date.

Kucherena, previously, stated the NSA leaker will make the important decision on his future only after a family council with his father.

Edward Snowden has received a one-year asylum in Russia on August 1 after spending over a month in the transit zone of Moscow’s Sheremetyevo airport.

The former CIA employee arrived in the Russian capital on June 23 on a flight from Hong Kong where he fled just before secret US government surveillance programs were revealed to the public. 

Australian Navy locates bombs dumped by US onto Great Barrier Reef

Australian Navy locates bombs dumped by US onto Great Barrier Reef

An aerial view of Australia's Great Barrier Reef.(Reuters)
An aerial view of Australia's Great Barrier Reef.(Reuters)

The Australian navy has tracked down four unexploded bombs that were dumped onto the country's World Heritage-listed Great Barrier Reef by two US fighter jets during a botched military exercise last month.
According to the Australian Department of Defense, its mine-hunting vessel HMAS Gascoyne has discovered the bombs and is currently working to retrieve the ordnance in a joint recovery operation with the US Navy.

The ordnance were dropped during a training activity on the second day of the biennial joint training exercise Talisman Saber that brings together 28,000 US and Australian military personnel over three weeks.

Two of the bombs did not contain explosives, while the other two were without their fusing mechanisms, The Australian reported.

The bombs were detected at a depth of 60 to 70 meters, using sonar equipment in a remote-control submersible. Officials say the timing of the recovery operation depends on the weather.
"At no stage did the jettisoned ordnance pose a threat to the safety of people or the Great Barrier Reef,"Joint Operations Chief Lieutenant General Ash Power said in a statement.

US warplanes were forced to drop the bombs weighing a total 1.8 metric tons (4,000 pounds) into the sea after they ran dangerously low on fuel. The training mission went wrong as the jets from the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit were originally told to drop the bombs at the Townshend Island bombing range.

That plan was aborted after the controllers said the area was not clear of hazards. The pilots then went ahead with an emergency jettison as they were not allowed to land with bombs on board, low on fuel, the Navy said.

The Great Barrier Reef is made up of over 2,900 individual reefs and 900 islands, stretching for more than 2,600 kilometers (1,600 miles) along Australia’s northeast coast.
Many called the dumping of bombs on the World’s Heritage-listed site "outrageous,” saying the incident proved the US cannot be trusted to protect the environment.
“How can they protect the environment and bomb the reef at the same time? Get real,” said environmentalist and anti-war activist Graeme Dunstan. 

Germany to become first European state to allow ‘third gender’ birth certificates

Germany to become first European state to allow ‘third gender’ birth certificates

AFP Photo / Didier Pallages

German parents will no longer be legally obliged to register their newborn child as male or female, and will instead be officially allowed to assign the baby a “third gender” if the sex cannot be clearly identified at birth.
The new law will come into force on November 1, on the back of a constitutional court decision which states that as long as a person “deeply feels” that they belong to a certain gender, they have a personal right to choose how they legally identify themselves.
Parents of newborn infants will be allowed to leave the gender form on the child’s birth certificate completely blank if it is born with unusual physical characteristics making it impossible to determine the gender.
The new law will apply to intersexuals, also known as hermaphrodites, rather than transsexuals. Hermaphrodites are people in possession of both female and male physical characteristics.
Justice Minister Sabine Leuthheusser-Schnarrenberger said the decision will have deep repercussions and will require “comprehensive reform” of all documents issued by the state. Adult passports currently require people to state their gender, partly to avoid potential problems when traveling abroad.
The ‘third gender’ designation will also have an effect on marriage laws. As of now, only men and women are allowed to legally marry in the country. Homosexual couples can enter into a civil partnership, and no provisions are made for unions between other genders.
Germany is the first European country to implement such legislation, although Australians have allowed citizens to mark their gender on a passport as X since 2011. New Zealand followed suit last year. Activists in both countries say the legislation has helped curb discrimination against transsexuals and those of indeterminate gender, whether they have had gender reassignment surgery or not.
Silvan Agius, policy director at human rights organisation ILGA Europe - the European branch of the International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association - told Spiegel newspaper that the decision will push the rest of the EU to do the same.
"Germany's move will put more pressure on Brussels," Agius said. "That can only be a good thing."

China’s military flexes muscles in East China Sea amid Japan war shrine tensions

China’s military flexes muscles in East China Sea amid Japan war shrine tensions
China Coast Guard vessel No. 2146 sails in the East China Sea near the disputed isles known as Senkaku isles in Japan and Diaoyu islands in China, in this handout photo taken and released by the 11th Regional Coast Guard Headquarters-Japan Coast Guard August 8, 2013.(Reuters / 11th Regional Coast Guard Headquarters-Japan Coast Guard)

China Coast Guard vessel No. 2146 sails in the East China Sea near the disputed isles known as Senkaku isles in Japan and Diaoyu islands in China, in this handout photo taken and released by the 11th Regional Coast Guard Headquarters-Japan Coast Guard August 8, 2013.(Reuters / 11th Regional Coast Guard Headquarters-Japan Coast Guard)

China has launched four days of live-fire naval exercises in the East China Sea that coincide with the anniversary of Japan’s defeat in WWII. The exercises come after Japanese Cabinet ministers visited Tokyo’s most controversial war shrine.
China and South Korea, which both suffered under Japan’s militarist expansion in the 1930s and 40s, have expressed concern at Japanese Cabinet ministers’ visit to the Tokyo Yasukuni Shrine as glorification of the country's militaristic past and aggression. Established in 1869 and funded by the Imperial Japanese government until 1945, the shrine has been dedicated to the nation's 2.5 million war dead, including – controversially – 1,000 convicted war criminals.

The Chinese Foreign Ministry summoned Japan's envoy and issued a statement condemning the visits by nearly 100 Japanese lawmakers, saying they "fundamentally attempt to deny and gloss over Japan's history of invasion."

According to the Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post, the East China Sea drills will be conducted off the coast of Zhejiang province by the East Sea Fleet, which oversees the waters around the disputed Diaoyu Islands.

Earlier this month, on August 8, four Chinese coast guard vessels stayed a record 28 hours in waters near islands claimed by Japan and China. Japan summoned the Chinese envoy in Tokyo to lodge a formal protest. The latest intrusion into Japanese territorial waters near the Senkaku Islands in the East China Sea by Chinese ships was twice as long as the last one, on February 4. Chinese ships have been entering the disputed area regularly since last September, when the Japanese government bought the islands.

China and Japan have long struggled for the ownership of supposedly oil-rich islands located in the East China Sea. The islands are known as the Diaoyu to the Chinese, and Senkaku to the Japanese. The dispute over the islands and the maritime boundaries around them has continued for years. The Senkaku Islands have been controlled by Japan since 1895, but China insists that it has historic rights to them dating back to the 16th century.

The standoff escalated after Tokyo announced the purchase of three of the islands from a private Japanese owner in September of last year. After that, China witnessed mass anti-Japanese demonstrations. A diplomatic scandal led to problems in bilateral economic relations, with Japanese businesses withdrawing investment. Several Japanese companies in China suspended their work for security reasons, and Chinese Customs’ clearance of goods slowed from Japan.

The tiny archipelago of islands, which is halfway between both countries, are currently uninhabited, but the ground below could house significant mineral resources.

"It is expected that there will be more drills in the East China Sea to build up the combat capabilities of the Chinese Army," Ni Lexiong , director of the Sea Power and Defense Policy Research Institute at the Shanghai University of Political Science and Law, told the South China Morning Post. "It is also possible that China's aircraft carrier will participate in some of these drills."

China News Service reported that Liaoning, the country's first aircraft carrier, which it refitted after buying a Soviet-era vessel from Ukraine, has also been dispatched from its home port of Qingdao, in Shandong province, for training of ship-borne aircraft in the East China Sea. The ship is reportedly sailing to the northern Bohai Sea, off Liaoning province, where a separate round of military exercises was launched on Thursday. 

Demolition in the desert: Israel destroys Bedouin village for 54th time

Demolition in the desert: Israel destroys Bedouin village for 54th time

Bedouin women from al-Turi family sit next to their destroyed homes in the village of al-Akarib in the Negev Desert (AFP Photo / Menahem Kahana)
Bedouin women from al-Turi family sit next to their destroyed homes in the village of al-Akarib in the Negev Desert (AFP Photo / Menahem Kahana)

Israeli authorities destroyed the Bedouin village of Al-Araqib for the 54th time in the last three years on Thursday, as the country struggles to relocate Bedouins in the Negev desert to specially built towns.
Forces arrived at Al-Araqib carrying arms and batons as bulldozers tore down homes, resident Aziz al-Turi told Palistinain news agency Ma’an.
Another resident, Maher Abu Qreinat, said that homes and other structures were pulled down in the Negev village of Abu Qreinat on the same day. 
The Israeli government approved the Prawer-Begin Bill in January, calling for the relocation 30,000-40,000 Bedouins and the demolition of about 40 villages which the Jewish state considers to be illegal. 
The bill was approved by the country’s parliament, the Knesset, during its first reading in June. Two additional votes are expected to take place.  
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu previously said that the move would “put an end to the spread of illegal building by Negev Bedouin and lead to the better integration of the Bedouin into Israeli society.”
The Bedouins refuse to be relocated, saying they purchased their land in the Negev desert before the establishment of the state of Israel. However, they say the agreements were verbal ones – and there is no way to prove their ownership of the territory. 
Protesters confront Israeli's riots police during a demonstration against Israeli government's plans to resettle Bedouins in the Negev desert on August 1, 2013 in the Arab Israeli city of Ar'Ara, north of Israel (AFP Photo / Jack Guez)
Protesters confront Israeli's riots police during a demonstration against Israeli government's plans to resettle Bedouins in the Negev desert on August 1, 2013 in the Arab Israeli city of Ar'Ara, north of Israel (AFP Photo / Jack Guez)

Amnesty International called on Israel to stop “demolitions of Arab Bedouin homes” after Israeli forces performed a previous raid on Al-Araqib in July.
"The Israeli government's Prawer-Begin plan would lead to the forced eviction of tens of thousands of Arab Bedouin citizens of Israel,” Philip Luther, director of Amnesty International's Middle East and North Africa Program, said. “The plan is inherently discriminatory, flies in the face of Israel's international obligations and cannot be accepted in any circumstances."
UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay also slammed the bill in July, urging Israel to reconsider its plans to relocate the Bedouin to officially recognized towns such as Rahat, Khura, and Ksayfe.
"If this bill becomes law, it will accelerate the demolition of entire Bedouin communities, forcing them to give up their homes, denying them their rights to land ownership, and decimating their traditional cultural and social life in the name of development," he said.
There are around 210,000 Bedouins in Israel, most of whom live in and around the Negev desert in the southern part of the country. More than half of them reside in unrecognized villages which lack basic infrastructure. Many Bedouins also live in extreme poverty.
The Israeli government said it would grant legal status “as much as possible” to the currently unrecognized Negev villages if they meet minimum population criteria – but those requirements were never revealed.

Bloomberg suggests fingerprinting NY public housing residents

Bloomberg suggests fingerprinting NY public housing residents

New York City residents should be fingerprinted whenever they enter public housing facilities, Mayor Michael Bloomberg said during his radio show on Friday. The measure would help fight crime, Bloomberg said. He added that city officials are already in the process of instituting an electronic key-card system. City leaders promptly blasted Bloomberg, referencing the stop-and-frisk policy and calling his new theory “another direct act of treating minorities like criminals,” ex-comptroller Bill Thompson told AP.

Requests for asylum along US-Mexico border have doubled in 3 years

Requests for asylum along US-Mexico border have doubled in 3 years

Asylum requests along the south-western border of the United States have more than doubled, according to data released by the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS). “Defensive” applications, also known as credible fear claims, numbered 14,610 as of the end of June. In the entire fiscal year of 2011, 6,824 such claims were made. Those numbers do not include “affirmative” asylum claims made by those already in the US sans permanent legal status. The bar is high for defensive applications – the DHS says about 91 percent of Mexican citizens seeking credible fear asylum are denied.

Brotherhood pledges week of protest, Egypt’s military seeks regional support

Brotherhood pledges week of protest, Egypt’s military seeks regional support

Members of the Muslim Brotherhood and supporters of ousted Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi march in protest towards Ramses Square in Cairo August 16, 2013.(Reuters / Amr Abdallah Dalsh)
Members of the Muslim Brotherhood and supporters of ousted Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi march in protest towards Ramses Square in Cairo August 16, 2013.(Reuters / Amr Abdallah Dalsh)

Supporters of ousted President Mohamed Morsi are calling for a week of protests after three days of clashes with security forces left hundreds dead. The violence in Egypt has been condemned by the West, but regional powers are split over the crisis.
Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood brought tens of thousands of people to the streets across the country following traditional Muslim prayers in what it called a “Friday of Rage.” In Cairo and other cities violent clashes erupted.
Overall, an estimated 90 people were killed Friday across Egypt, including some police and members of the security forces, bringing the official death toll from the violence to more than 700 since Wednesday, when security forces evicted two large pro-Morsi sit-in camps in Cairo. The crackdown was the worst episode of violence in the country in decades, triggering condemnation from a number of international organizations and foreign governments.
The Brotherhood has called for protest demonstrations to continue every day for the next week.
"Our rejection of the coup regime has become an Islamic, national and ethical obligation that we can never abandon," the Brotherhood said in a statement.
Hundreds of pro-Morsi supporters barricaded themselves in the El Fath mosque in central Cairo’s Ramses Square, where a major confrontation with the police took place Friday. Police are surrounding the mosque, saying that they would let women and children leave, but want to take male protesters into custody for questioning. The protesters refused these conditions and remained inside as of Saturday morning.
A supporter of the Muslim Brotherhood and of ousted president Mohamed Morsi runs past a burning vehicle during clashes with security officers close to Cairo's Ramses Square, on August 16, 2013.(AFP Photo / Virgnie Nguyen Hoang)
A supporter of the Muslim Brotherhood and of ousted president Mohamed Morsi runs past a burning vehicle during clashes with security officers close to Cairo's Ramses Square, on August 16, 2013.(AFP Photo / Virgnie Nguyen Hoang)

Egyptian security forces detained some 1,000 people during Friday’s protests, many of them armed, police said. More than half of the arrests were made in the capital. The streets of Cairo were quiet overnight, as police, pro-interim government militias and neighborhood watches sought to enforce a dusk-to-dawn curfew.
As the stand-off continues, both sides are seeking to rally supporters to their cause. Egyptian state TV has depicted the protest leaders as dangerous terrorists plotting against the country, and its footage of the clashes in Cairo showed people shooting firearms at police. 
Other reports said Morsi supporters used rockets in an attack on a governmental building in El Arish, a city in the turbulent Sinai Peninsula, and tried to shoot down a military helicopter flying over Cairo.
Supporters of ousted president Mohamed Morsi throw stones as they clash with security officers in Cairo's Ramses Square, on August 16, 2013.(AFP Photo / Virgnie Nguyen Hoang)
Supporters of ousted president Mohamed Morsi throw stones as they clash with security officers in Cairo's Ramses Square, on August 16, 2013.(AFP Photo / Virgnie Nguyen Hoang)


Egypt’s Coptic Christian Church issued a statement on Friday, saying it supported the crackdown on the Muslim Brotherhood. The statement comes after numerous reports of attacks on Christian churches across the country. 
The Muslim Brotherhood has accuses the military of using indiscriminate lethal force against peaceful demonstrations, and have accused the police of sending armed provocateurs into the ranks of the protesters.
Anti-military bloggers on social networks claimed that an army unit had defected to the side of the protesters Friday, taking an armored vehicle with them. The military denied the report as an unfounded rumor coming from the “ill imagination” of the protesters.
The killings in Egypt were condemned by many in the West, including the EU and the US government. Washington called off key joint military exercise with Egypt in a show of disaffection with the military’s violent crackdown, but stopped short of cutting off annual military aid of $1.3 billion to the country. Britain and France called an emergency meeting of EU foreign ministers on Friday to discuss "appropriate measures" in reaction to the violence. Several Latin American countries recalled their ambassadors to Egypt.
Reaction in the Arab world was split toward the Egyptian crisis. Turkey, whose moderate Islamist government is friendly toward the Muslim Brotherhood, strongly criticized the crackdown and called off a joint military drill with Egypt. Criticism also came from Qatar and Tunisia, while Iran voiced concerns that the violence would spread.
Strongly-worded support for the security crackdown on the Egyptian opposition came Friday from Saudi Arabia, a country ruled by an Islamist monarchy. King Abdullah called on Arabs to stand together against "attempts to destabilize" Egypt and endorsed the use of term “terrorists” to describe the Brotherhood protesters.
Saudi’s support was mirrored by the United Arab Emirates, another gulf monarchy. UAE’s King Abdullah said in a statement he stood against “those who fan up flames of hatred and [think that] chaos will promote the victory of Egypt, Islam and Arabism,” Emirates news agency WAP said.
In the West Bank city of Hebron, a pro-Morsi demonstration organized by the radical Hamas movement was dispersed by local security forces controlled by the moderate Fatah movement, which runs the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank.

Friday, August 16, 2013

Kyrgyz-Kazakh 'alcohol smuggling pipeline' discovered

Kyrgyz-Kazakh 'alcohol smuggling pipeline' discovered

Map
Border and customs officials in Kyrgyzstan have discovered a makeshift underwater pipeline, which they say is being used to smuggle alcohol into the country from neighbouring Kazakhstan.
The pipeline was discovered on the bed of the river Chu, which forms the border between the two countries.
They suspect thousands of litres of pure spirit have passed through it.
It is unclear how officials made the discovery, but a search is now on for the smugglers behind the pipeline.
Local media has reported that the pipeline was found just a few kilometres from a border checkpoint.
Correspondents say that Kazakhstan is one of the biggest grain producers in Central Asia and spirits are far cheaper there than in neighbouring countries.
Kazakhstan is also a recent member of a customs union - along with Russia and Belarus - which has made it far more expensive for neighbouring countries to import alcohol without paying hefty duties.
Border guards recently discovered a similar pipeline used to smuggle oil products, including petrol and diesel.
It was set up because Kazakhstan is also a big oil producer - and oil products are much cheaper there than in its neighbours.