brad brace contemporary culture scrapbook

November 20, 2006

Soldiers shoot dead rare rhino in Kenya

Filed under: global islands,kenya — admin @ 4:01 pm

NAIROBI – British troops in Kenya shot dead a rare white rhino after it charged them while they were on night-time training, officials said on Monday.

“On the night of November 8 a British patrol on a training exercise had a close encounter with a rhino. When it charged towards them they opened fire and sadly it was fatally wounded,” said a spokeswoman at the British High Commission.

An official with the Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) said the four soldiers strayed into a rhino sanctuary on a ranch. The British spokeswoman denied media reports the troops were lost.

She and the KWS official said both their organisations had launched enquiries into the shooting. KWS says there are only 235 white rhinos in Kenya where the British army has carried out training operations for decades.

White rhinos are targeted by poachers for their horns. These fetch high prices in Yemen, where they are made into dagger handles, and in the Far East, where they are coveted for their supposed medicinal qualities.

November 17, 2006

Andaman tsunami victims protest

Filed under: global islands,india,thailand — admin @ 7:18 am

Tsunami victims are not happy with the new houses

Victims of the 2004 tsunami in India’s eastern Andaman and Nicobar archipelago have rioted in protest against the new houses provided by the government.

At least 12 people have been injured in the violence after protestors burnt official vehicles at Hut Bay in Little Andaman islands.

They were protesting against the location and quality of construction of their new houses.

Officials say the tsunami killed more than 3,500 in the Andamans.

Tsunami victims in the Hut Bay area have gone on strike in protest against what they call inadequate and shoddy housing.

“The permanent houses the government is making for us are located far away from our workplaces,” resident Somnath Banik said.

“The houses are made of pre-fabricated material which will make them very hot. Also the houses are on a twin sharing basis which is not acceptable to us.”

Locals say Hut Bay residents have observed two strikes in recent weeks in protest against what residents describe as “the high handedness of the administration.”

Tsunami victims in the Andamans were first put up in tents in more than 200 evacuee camps, then shifted to nearly 10,000 temporary shelters made of tin roofs.

They are now being shifted to more than 8,500 new houses made for them with pre-fabricated structures that have been shipped from mainland India at considerable cost.

The Nicobarese tribes people in south of the archipelago , who bore the brunt of the tsunami, were the first to protest against the pre-fabricated housing.

They said it was far too hot, given the warm climes of the archipelago.

Last month, the Nicobarese stopped erection of these new houses in some parts of their islands.

Some Nicobarese were also upset when the Indian navy tried to evict six of them from their homes.

The navy said the six were encroaching on their land – the tribals dispute that.

Most houses in the archipelago are built cheaply using local wood.

Nicobarese leaders say the pre-fab houses are hugely expensive. The authorities say they have been designed “in consultation with the local people”.

Islamic extremism threatens Bangladesh

Filed under: bangladesh,global islands — admin @ 6:38 am

MADRAS, India — Bangladesh is the latest South Asian flash point where democracy stands threatened. Bloody street battles between two rival political parties — led by two women who hate each other — and other violence have swept the small country northwest of India in recent weeks. The military is now on the streets of major cities and towns.

Once known as East Pakistan whose Bengali-speaking Muslim majority had an affinity with India’s West Bengal state on the border, Bangladesh was born in December 1971 following political developments that had driven a wedge between West and East Pakistan. The two were already divided by language (West Pakistanis spoke Urdu, Punjabi and Sindhi), culture and a huge distance.

East Pakistani feelings that the concentration of political power in West Pakistan gave it greater privileges led to the rise of Bengali nationalism, which West Pakistan tried to crush. The military murdered intellectuals and resorted to plunder, looting and rape, trying break the East’s morale. Even napalm bombs were used against innocent villagers. It was attempted genocide.

India intervened, defeating West Pakistani forces in the East, and the region declared independence. But a military coup in 1975 saw the murder of the nation’s father and first prime minister, Sheik Mujibur Rahman, and 15 members of his family. The military took over.

Although democracy was restored in 1991, recent political violence and gore have added a frightening dimension to the fragile peace of this nation of 150 million. There are fears that Bangladesh will once again slip into a military dictatorship. Many people are deeply disappointed with political corruption. The failure of mainstream politics has encouraged the extremist fringe in a land peopled by al-Qaida and Taliban sympathizers. Events in recent weeks suggest that the state is on the brink of Islamic radicalism.

The Bangladesh Nationalist Party and its Islamic allies ended their chaotic, five-year term Oct. 27. Their rule had been marked by a nonfunctioning Parliament, street battles and creeping poverty and diseases.

A partisan and ailing president, Iajuddin Ahmed, has become the head of an interim government with defense, foreign affairs and the military under his control. General elections are scheduled for January, but the present scenario indicates that it is unlikely that the 90 million eligible Bangladeshi voters will get a fair chance to elect a government. The judiciary is highly politicized, and the Election Commission is filled with political appointees.

The Awami League, the country’s main Opposition party led by Sheik Hasina had planned demonstrations when Ahmed took over, but when she got wind of a move by outgoing Prime Minister Khaleda Zia — who heads the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) — to declare a state of emergency, she called off the protests. Hasina realized that such demonstrations would only fuel the fire. (Prime Minister Rahman, killed in the 1975 coup, was Hasina’s father.)

Since Hasina’s Awami League has a fair chance of an electoral win, it has a lot to lose by political rashness. At least one important factor is on her side: Since democracy was restored in 1991, incumbents have not fared well in elections. In addition, the BNP has split: A new organization, the Liberal Democratic Party, led by former President Badruddozza Chowdhury, is campaigning on an anticorruption platform. He has managed to rope in some important BNP leaders. But if the Election Commission is not purged of pro-BNP elements, Zia may still manage to rig the polls. Hasina has been demanding the appointment of neutral commissioners.

There is understandable international concern that Bangladesh’s corrupt, power-hungry politicians have weakened the nation’s institutions to the extent that a free and fair electoral process is difficult. So the ground looks ideal for the emergence of violent Islamic extremism. Two possibilities are feared: military intervention leading to a dictatorship, or a takeover by Islamic radicals.

Although the Bangladesh military is not as politicized as its Pakistani counterpart, there are military leaders waiting in the wings, according to media in Bangladesh. Islamic radicalism appears to be the greater threat. Militancy has grown in recent years, targeting leftists, secularists and intellectuals plus religious minorities, such as Christians and Hindus. Bombings and suicide missions are on the rise.

The principal beneficiary of the political unrest has been the increasingly influential Islamist fringe, led by legitimate parties such as the Jamaat-e-Islami and extending to the violently militant Jagrata Muslim Janata Bangladesh and the Jamaat-ul-Mujahedin Bangladesh, reports the International Crisis Group, adding that “Islamic militancy has flourished in a time of dysfunctional politics and popular discontent.”

Perhaps what Bangladesh urgently needs today is a national government that will look beyond narrow, partisan politics. But where is the leader to head such a government? Neither Hasina nor Zia seems to have such a vision.

Rains lash Rameswaram, Mandapam

Filed under: global islands,india — admin @ 6:20 am

Rameswaram, Nov 16: Several parts of Rameswaram island and Mandapam panchayat union in the mainland are in knee-deep water following heavy rains last night.

Almost all fishermen colonies in Rameswaram, Pamban and Mandapam are surrounded by knee-deep water. Even main roads adjoining the sea are flooded in the island, officials said.

Panaikulam, Atrangarai, Perungulam, Uchupuli where an air-base is located, Vethalai, Pattinamkathan, Mandapam refugee camp, Pamban, Thangachimadam, Chinnapalam and Kundhukal have been inundated and people have to wade through the water even to go to adjoining houses.

Most parts of the highway between Ramanathapuram and Mandapam have also been inundated following torrential rains last night. Rameswaram and surrounding areas have been experiencing heavy rains for the past 10 days.

Meanwhile, the newly elected local body officials in Rameswaram and Mandapam claimed that there was a shortage of sanitary workers and they were also facing financial problems.

J Jaleel, Chairman of Rameswarm municipality, and vice-chairman M Rajamani claimed that they had to engage people and also lend a helping hand to them in draining out water from low-lying areas.

The road stretch between Tamaraikulam and Nochi Oorani, Raghunathapuram – Kumbaram, Raghunathapuram – Vazhuthur Vilakku; Sathapan Valasai – Ariyaman Beach are in waist deep water today. Local revenue officials said most coastal villages are not getting essential items, including milk, rice and vegetables.

The district administration had been requested to supply essential commodities and house people in flood-affected areas in some mandapams.

Officials said that efforts were being made to drain the flood water into the sea by forming channels and also maintain the supply of essential commodities. Many office-goers and students had been stranded in villages as there were no bus services to many coastal villages.

Work on strengthening the banks of big lakes, tanks and ponds is being taken up on a war-footing to preserve water for the summer, district officials said.

Sand bags were being used to prevent flood waters from entering residential areas. Cyclone relief centres had been opened in many villages in Mandapam and Rameswaram, they said.

The services of the Navy and Coast Guard had not been sought so far, but it would be done if required, they said.

Officials said they did not have sufficient funds as the new local body chief had just assumed office. They agreed that there was severe shortage of sanitary workers, but said that steps were being taken to provide temporary hands in all the affected places.

November 16, 2006

Garifuna Dictionary Goes Electronic

Filed under: belize,global islands — admin @ 7:00 am

In 1975, Jesuit priests John Stochl published volumes 1, 2 and 3 of the dictionary of Central American Garifuna. It’s considered the definitive work on the Garifuna language and now just in time for Settlement Day, it is being released in an electronic format on a compact disc. It’s the combined effort of the Belizean Studies Resource Center and the National Garifuna Council. They hope this new effort leads to the preservation and grater use of the language. The new digital work will be formally presented to the National Garifuna Council at the official ceremonies on November 19th in Dangriga Town.

India’s beaches are bellwether of Sri Lanka’s war

Filed under: global islands,india — admin @ 6:23 am

Some 16,000 refugees have fled by boat to India this year to avoid escalating violence.

TAMIL NADU, INDIA – Early one morning last week, K. Thangaraja, a tractor driver from eastern Sri Lanka, stood knee-deep in seawater fearing his end was near. Surrounding him was the murky confluence of the Bay of Bengal and the Indian Ocean – the barrier between his home in Sri Lanka and a new life in India.

Five hours earlier, a fisherman pushed Mr. Thangaraja and 19 relatives, some of them young children, from his 26-foot wooden boat and onto a shallow sand bank. “Someone will be along shortly to take you to the Indian coast,” he had said, before hurrying off into the darkness.

No one came. Not until 4:30 the following afternoon, when they were nearly unconscious from exhaustion, hunger, and dehydration. An Indian fishing vessel happened to spot their improvised white flags and brought them ashore.

“It was the worst experience of my life,” says Thangaraja. “If I had to do it all over again, I would take my chances in Sri Lanka.”

Yet for ethnic Tamils now caught in the crossfire of an increasingly bloody civil war between the ethnic Sinhalese dominated government and armed Tamil rebel groups, staying can be an equally undesirable option.

Fighting since August in the northern Jaffna region – considered the heartland of Sri Lanka’s minority Tamils – has left hundreds of combatants dead in some of the bloodiest clashes since the government and rebels signed a 2002 cease-fire that temporarily halted two decades of civil war.

Many fear that the near-daily attacks and killings will drive Sri Lanka back to full-scale war, although the government and Tigers say they are committed to the truce.

Since January, over 16,000 refugees from Sri Lanka have fled to the shores of Tamil Nadu, India’s southeastern state, where they fan out in refugee camps across the region and receive basic support from the Indian government. The refugees who have arrived in India constitute only a small fraction of the nearly 200,000 people who have been displaced since April. But they represent some of the most desperate cases – those who have given up hope for a quick end to hostilities and are trying to start anew.

“It is an expensive and difficult journey to the Tamil Nadu coast,” says Meenakshi Ganguly, with New York-based Human Rights Watch. “These are people who are so terrified that they believe survival is impossible back home.”

The number of monthly arrivals has decreased significantly since August, when over 5,700 arrived here; so far this month, less than 200 have attempted the journey. That is partly because of the weather, with rough seas and thunderstorms making the crossing far more perilous in November and December. Many Sri Lankans had also held out hope for peace talks last month in Geneva. The talks collapsed, however, when the two sides disagreed over whether to reopen the major north-south artery that connects northern rebel-controlled Sri Lanka with the rest of the country.

With the recent surge in violence, aid workers are expecting an increase in the number of arrivals in the coming weeks and months ahead. The cost of being smuggled to India is anywhere from 6,000 to 15,000 Sri Lankan rupees, or US$55 to $140. Refugees often sell property or family jewelry to fund the trip.

The recent surge is not the first time India has hosted Tamil refugees. Tens of thousands have come in successive waves since the war between the Tamils and Sinhalese majority began in 1983. The official conduit for new arrivals in India is the Mandapam transit camp in the town of Rameswaram, a fenced-off series of dilapidated one-story cement apartment blocks with communal water faucets. The camp was originally established and controlled by the British until 1964 as a transit site for thousands of poor Indians who were sent to sprawling tea estates in Sri Lanka and elsewhere in the British Commonwealth. Today, they arrive from the other direction.

Mandapam has over 5,000 residents, the majority of whom have been there for months, waiting to relocate elsewhere in Tamil Nadu state, but a housing shortage keeps them in the camp for the time being.

Although conditions in Mandapam are substandard, its leaders are reticent to voice their concerns too loudly. “We do not complain about the conditions because just next to us there are Indian citizens who don’t get even what we get,” says S.C. Chandrahassan, an officer with the Organization for Eelam Refugees Rehabilitation (Eelam is a Tamil reference for Sri Lanka), which helps run the 130 refugee camps throughout Tamil Nadu.

The Indian government provides the refugees with 400 Indian rupees, or about US$9 a month per head of household and a little less for every other member, as well as cooking materials, a refugee ID card, and rice subsidized to 1983 prices, which comes to less than a couple pennies a kilo, far below what Indians receive on the dole. “We always have to keep that in mind and encourage people to work,” says Mr. Chandrahassan.

There is a close affinity between the Tamils in Tamil Nadu, and those in Sri Lanka. But it is to find work, and not just the flight from violence that many refugees cite as the reason for taking the perilous flight to India. Here, they can join the informal economy, taking undesirable jobs in rural areas as this country’s economy surges ahead at breakneck speed.

Vikram Raja, a mason who arrived in early September with his wife and three young children, sits by the highway each day looking to be picked up for a day’s work. He has worked two days in two months, but doesn’t regret the move.

“My life was in danger there,” he says. “The Army will arrest anyone without any grounds.” Mr. Raja’s home was destroyed in the 2004 tsunami, and he paid for the journey by selling his wife’s jewelry. His mother, father, and sister live in displaced persons camps in Sri Lanka, but Raja wanted the opportunity to provide for his family and not sit idly in a camp, which he considers unsafe.

Young men are often forcibly conscripted by Tamil rebels on both sides of the front line. In government-controlled areas they are also under constant suspicion by the Army and police for working or conspiring with the rebels.

Subramaniam Karisuthan, a teenager, arrived here last week with his younger sister. “We were afraid to leave the house,” he says of Sri Lanka. Twice he had seen tortured, headless bodies dumped along the side of the road near his home. He didn’t want to become another anonymous victim.

“The Army targets the youth,” he says. “They suspect that we support the [rebels].” He had heard stories of the rebels grabbing young Tamils off the street or snatching them from school. “I’ll stay here until the war is over,” he says.

November 15, 2006

Heavy rain lashes Rameswaram

Filed under: global islands,india — admin @ 7:13 am

Rameswaram, Nov. 14 : Four persons were admittd to hospital when they fainted in the shock following a lightning, police said here today.

They were attending a meeting at a school when the incident occurred. The students ran helter-skelter after the lightning struck the sea coast yesterday, police said.

Heavy rains lashed Rameswaram Island and surrounding areas since last night and the sea level had increased by 25 cms, they said.

U.S. Dollar Gains Against Bangladesh Taka Further

Filed under: bangladesh,global islands — admin @ 7:09 am

Dhaka, Bangladesh – The U.S. dollar gained further against the Bangladesh Taka (BDT) and reached at a new record at Tk 72.95 on Tuesday due to short supply of the greenback in the inter-bank foreign exchange (forex) market.

The banks quoted the dollar rate at Tk 68.50-72.95 on the day against Tk 68.50-71.90 of the previous day in the forex market. It rose by Tk 1.05 per unit in a single day.

According to treasury officials, the volatility showed in the local forex market from the beginning of this week as declining the flow of remittances, increased pressures on import payments and political unrest.

The Bangladesh Bank (BB), the country’s central bank, has directed the chief executive officers of commercial banks to monitor closely the forex deals to avoid abnormal volatility in the market, the central bank sources said.

The instruction came at a meeting with the managing directors and chief executive officers of 14 commercial banks, held at the central bank on Tuesday with the BB Governor Salehuddin Ahmed in the chair.

“A few number of Private Commercial Banks (PCBs) are quoting higher rates of the US dollar against the local currency without maintaining ethical practices,” a senior fund manager of a commercial bank told the AHN in Dhaka on Tuesday.

He also said the central bank should intervene in the market through selling the greenback to the dollar-hungry banks to bring back normalcy in the forex market.

November 13, 2006

Sri Lanka: Corpses of Tamils youths float in sewages

Filed under: global islands,india — admin @ 6:14 am

Sri Lankan Tamil refugees in Rameswaram told Thinakaran, a Tamil Nadu daily that corpses of Tamils youths float in sewages in the North-East of Sri Lanka.

A large number of Tamils flee from Sri Lanka to the southern coast of India due to escalation of violence in Sri Lanka.

17 refugees including five children from Thirukadalure in Trincomalee and Illupankaulam in Vavuniya reached Kothandar Ramar Kovil Beach in Rameswaram on November 11th.

Koneswaran, one of the refugees, told Thinalkaran that the Tamil youths arrested by the army disappear and later they are found dead in sewages and that they are fleeing from North-East to save their lives.

Another refugee by the name of Jagetheswaran stated that the army brands every Tamil youth as a tiger and attacks.

Pirinthiny, a woman refugee, stated that due to the closure of A9 there is a scarcity for food items leading to a price hike.

November 12, 2006

Buddhist monks hurt in Thai bombing

Filed under: global islands,thailand — admin @ 7:25 am

One soldier has been killed and 11 people wounded after a group of Buddhist monks was attacked by bombers in southern Thailand.

Several monks were among those injured when a remote-controlled device in a rubbish bin was detonated by mobile phone as five Buddhists collected alms in a street in the city of Narathiwat, police said.

The attack is believed to have been carried out by Muslim separatists who have been fighting Thailand’s mainly Buddhist government since early 2004.

The soldiers were accompanying the monks to protect them from attack.

One soldier died on his way to hospital, while other soldiers, monks and four passers-by were wounded, police said.

Muslim insurgency

The insurgency in the three southernmost provinces of Pattani, Yala and Narathiwat – an Islamic sultanate until Bangkok annexed the region a century ago – has shown no sign of abating since a coup led by a Muslim general overthrew Thaksin Shinawatra, the elected prime minister, on September 19.

Muslim separatists carried out a series of attacks last week.

In Narathiwat province, separatists set off a bomb under a table at a crowded teashop, killing four people, on Friday.

A week earlier, a migrant worker from Myanmar was beheaded in front of his teenage daughter.

The militants tossed his head on the side of a village street in Narathiwat and then set off a remote-control bomb when police tried to retrieve it.

Since the coup, Surayud Chulanont, the former army chief appointed prime minister by the military, has said he wants a peaceful solution to the violence.

He has offered to hold talks with leaders of the Muslim insurgency, a reversal of policy from the days of Thaksin.

However the military also extended the emergency rule ordered by Thaksin, which gives sweeping powers to the authorities.

Aceh peace-deal eyed

During an official visit to Jakarta on Saturday, Surayud hailed Indonesia’s Aceh peace accord signed in Helsinki last year which ended a separatist insurgency which had killed 15,000 people since 1979.

“Indonesia has set a model in solving the conflict in the Aceh province successfully,” a Thai government web site, thaigov.go.th, quoted Surayud as saying after meeting Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, the Indonesian president.

“The Aceh model is a good example to bring peace to southern Thailand,” Surayud said.

Surayud also went to Kuala Lumpur this week for talks with Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, who promised full co-operation with Thailand.

Under Thaksin-era relations between Thailand and Malaysia became strained after Bangkok accused mainly-Muslim Malaysia of sheltering Islamic insurgents.

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