brad brace contemporary culture scrapbook

November 4, 2006

Rama’s/Adam’s Bridge as seen from the air

Filed under: global islands,india — admin @ 7:20 am

Rama’s Bridge, also called Nala’s Bridge is a chain of limestone shoals, between the islands of Mannar, near northwestern Sri Lanka, and Rameswaram, off the southeastern coast of India. The bridge is 30 miles (48 km) long and separates the Gulf of Mannar (southwest) from the Palk Strait (northeast). Some of the sandbanks are dry and the sea in the area is very shallow, being only 3 ft to 30 ft (1 m to 10 m) deep. This seriously hinders navigation. It was reportedly passable on foot as late as the 15th century until storms deepened the channel. A ferry links the island and port of Rameswaram in India with Talaimannar in Sri Lanka; the Pamban Bridge links Rameswaram island with mainland India.

Mythology

The names Rama’s Bridge and Nala’s Bridge originate in Hindu mythology. According to the Hindu epic Ramayana (Chapter 66, The Great Causeway [1]), the bridge was constructed at Rama’s request by his subjects. The bridge was supported on floating rocks but the gods were said to have later anchored the rocks to the sea bed, thus creating the present chain of rocky shoals. It was said to have helped Rama to reach Sri Lanka to rescue Sita from a monster (aasur) called Ravana, who was then the ruler of Lanka.

Some Hindu groups claim that the bridge is evidence that events narrated in the Ramayana epic actually took place and cite NASA’s imagery of it as proof of their claims.

November 3, 2006

Elephants rampage through Bangladesh village, killing boy

Filed under: bangladesh,global islands — admin @ 8:34 am

CHITTAGONG, Bangladesh — A herd of wild elephants rampaged through a remote, hillside village in southeastern Bangladesh, killing one boy, villagers said Thursday.

The incident occurred while a group of villagers confronted a herd of about 10 elephants that damaged crops late Wednesday in Chittagong district, 216 kilometers (135 miles) southeast of the capital, Dhaka, resident Delwar Hossain said.

He said the villagers tried to scare the elephants away by beating drums and using firecrackers and then left the area, which borders Myanmar. A 10-year-old boy who lingered behind, however, was crushed to death by the elephants, Hossain said.

Several hundred elephants make their homes in Bangladesh’s tropical forests, but their habitat has been reduced in recent years due to human development, occasionally causing elephants to invade residential areas for food, Bangladeshi expert Ainun Nishat said last month.

The country has about 250 wild elephants in its tropical forests, he said.

Last month, a herd of wild elephants killed five members of a family in the same district.

About three dozen people have been killed over the past few years by the wild elephants in the country’s northern Sherpur district, which is close to the forested border with India.

Residents in many Bangladeshi villages along its border with India use firecrackers at night and beat drums to scare away elephants, which have been known to attack villagers, damage crops and flatten trees.

November 2, 2006

Blood feud in Bangladesh

Filed under: bangladesh,global islands — admin @ 6:54 am

Warring politicians endanger the country

THE map of the Muslim world is littered with places for Western policymakers to worry about. Bangladesh is becoming one of the most alarming of the lot. At the weekend its young democracy descended into a Punch and Judy show of backbiting and violence between two parties led by women who cannot stand the sight of each other.

But this is no comic sideshow. The feud is being fought in blood on the streets of a country with nearly 150m people, 90% of them Muslims, and most of them desperately poor.

The political system is at risk of breakdown. The winners, in the short term, might be ambitious soldiers itching to say “I told you so” about corrupt, incompetent civilians.

In the long run, the failure of mainstream politics must benefit the extremist fringe. In Bangladesh that fringe is peopled with Islamists who think the Taliban and al-Qaeda to be jolly decent chaps.

The latest bout of violence was provoked, ironically, by a mechanism intended as a solution to the problem of confrontational two-party politics. At the end of every government’s five-year term, it hands over power for three months to a “neutral” caretaker to oversee elections.

This time, the main opposition, the Awami League, led by Sheikh Hasina Wajed, cried foul, fearing that the two proposed caretakers would prove anything but neutral: President Iajuddin Ahmed has taken on the job, after a former chief justice withdrew. On the streets, supporters of the League fought the police and other backers of the prime minister, Khaleda Zia, of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), whose coalition government has just passed its sell-by date. Two dozen people have been killed already and hundreds injured.

The president may manage to placate the League. But unless the two sides show an unexpected willingness to compromise, the elections, due in January, are in jeopardy. The army, rumoured at the weekend to be on the point of stepping in, may have pulled back from that particular brink. But sooner or later some impatient general will be tempted to say that enough is enough, and to set about restoring the military dictatorship that Mrs Zia and Sheikh Hasina helped overthrow in 1990.

Both women are to be blamed for this sorry mess―and especially Ms Zia. Her government has indeed tried to rig the election, or, at least, to give itself an unfair chance. It has never properly investigated the bombing in August 2004 of an Awami League rally, where Sheikh Hasina nearly died, and several of her colleagues were less lucky. To retain the loyalty of its Islamist coalition partners, it has connived in the spread of violent extremism. It even denied the very existence of some of the groups responsible, until long after they had perpetrated one of the most elaborate terrorist attacks ever―the explosion, in the space of about one hour in August 2005, of nearly 500 small bombs in 63 of Bangladesh’s 64 districts.

But nor has the League shown much commitment to democratic politics. It has scorned parliament, and, like the BNP, it has used thugs to do its dirty work. Its weapon of choice is the general strike, shutting the country down with tiresome regularity.

If there is an argument now for optimism, it stems not from the League’s moderation, but from its fear of military intervention, and its hopes for a winner-takes-all electoral victory. The BNP has split―and, however much they try to fix elections, incumbent governments in Bangladesh always lose.

Bangladesh’s voters are for the most part a tolerant bunch with surprisingly astute political judgment. They are not easily bullied or hoodwinked. But their disillusionment with the main parties has created a vacuum, which the Islamists are trying to fill. Some are harmless charitable workers. Some have dangerously illiberal social views. A few are violent jihadists. Bangladesh is still a long way from becoming a hardline Islamic state, but its secular rulers are doing their best to give secularism a bad name.

Bangladesh port world’s most dangerous but global piracy decreases, says watchdog

Filed under: bangladesh,global islands — admin @ 6:47 am

Bangladesh’s Chittagong port is the world’s most dangerous with more than 30 pirate attacks reported in the first nine months of this year, an international maritime watchdog said Wednesday.

However, the number of sea attacks worldwide decreased to 174 between January and September, compared to 205 in the same period last year, thanks to stricter law enforcement, the International Maritime Bureau said in its quarterly report.

Ships were boarded in 113 cases and 11 ships were hijacked, with six crew killed, 20 kidnapped and 163 taken hostage, the bureau said through its piracy reporting center in Kuala Lumpur.

“Although the number of attacks overall have reduced, there is a worry that in some key hot spots the situation has deteriorated,” it said in the report.

“Bangladesh recorded 33 incidents — 22 actual and 11 attempted — most of which took place in and around the port of Chittagong, resulting in it being accorded the title of the world’s most dangerous port,” it said.

Bangladesh recently conducted a joint coast guard and navy operation involving 17 vessels and 3,000 troops to capture pirates in the Bay of Bengal, which led to the deaths of two pirates, the report said.

Overall, Indonesia remained the world’s No. 1 piracy hot spot with more attacks recorded in its waters than anywhere else in the world, the bureau said. Still, the number dropped to 40 in the January-September period compared to 61 attacks in 2005.

The report also singled out Nigeria where attacks were marked by violence with large number of pirates carrying guns and knives. Even though only nine cases — six actual and three attempted — were reported, it said 17 crew members had been kidnapped and held hostage for ransom.

The bureau said the attacks were “symptomatic of a large rise in the number of incidents against foreign oil workers” and political unrest in Nigeria.

The bureau welcomed British-based global shipping insurer Lloyd’s move in August to drop the busy Malacca Straits — which carries half the world’s oil and more than a third of its commerce — from its list of dangerous waterways.

Only eight cases were reported in the first nine months of this year, compared to 18 for the whole of 2005, but it urged ships to maintain a strict watch when transiting the straits.

October 31, 2006

Belize barrier reef suffers, global warming blamed

Filed under: belize,global islands — admin @ 6:41 am

CAYE CAULKER, Belize, Oct 30 – A rainbow-hued parrot fish nibbles on a veined purple sea fan in the tranquil waters of Belize’s barrier reef, the largest in the western hemisphere.

But the fish stays well away from a large patch of dying coral, a white skeleton amid the bright colors of spectacular ocean life along the coast.

Much of the 200 miles (320 km) of Belize’s coral reef has been “bleached” in the last decade and some scientists warn it is likely to die, a victim of global warming.

Reefs around the world are in peril with people damaging the delicate ecosystems and endangering some 1 million species of animals and plants that call the coral home.

Scientists estimate over 27 percent of the world’s coral has been permanently lost and at current rates of destruction, another 30 percent will disappear over the next three decades.

Reefs across the Caribbean have been hit particularly hard, making them vulnerable to deadly diseases.

Greenhouse gas emissions raise the sea surface temperature and increase the acidity of the ocean, hurting the reef, said Melanie McField from the World Wildlife Fund in Belize City, and the damage is almost impossible to control.

“Other effects of development like pollution and over-fishing are caused by locals and can be mitigated. But with bleaching nothing is off limits,” she said.

Belize lost nearly half of its reef, a World Heritage Site, in 1998 when global warming and the “El Nino” weather phenomenon combined to cause the highest sea temperatures ever recorded worldwide.

Experts say 16 percent of the world’s coral was wiped out that year and the damage was made even worse off this Central American nation by Hurricane Mitch, which ravaged the reef with huge waves and covered it with silt and sand.

In July, environmental organizations petitioned the World Heritage Committee to sanction big polluters for harming reefs in Belize and Australia and speeding the melting of glacier parks in Nepal, Peru and the Rockies.

The United States fought the measure and the U.N. body put off labeling the sites as endangered, a title usually reserved for monuments threatened by wars.

The U.S. Coral Reef Task Force gathered in St. Thomas last week, focusing on management challenges for reefs in the eastern Caribbean.

STARVED TO DEATH

Reefs, often called the rainforests of the ocean, are home to over a quarter of all marine life in the world, even though they cover less than one percent of the ocean floor.

In Belize, a dip of a snorkel mask into the crystal clear water reveals black and yellow striped angel fish, spotted eagle rays, nurse sharks and sea turtles all bobbing along in the mild current.

Found in tropical and subtropical oceans, the reefs depend on algae called zooxanthellae to give them nutrients and brilliant color.

“Even a slight increase in water temperature disrupts the relationship between the coral animal and the algae,” said Richard Aronson a marine scientist at the Dauphin Island Sea Lab in Alabama.

“The coral actually pukes out 90 or 95 percent of the algae and those that are left are ill,” said Aronson, who studies the bleaching of coral reefs worldwide. With no algae to sustain them, the coral basically starves to death, he said.

The coral can recover by taking up new algae from the surrounding water but if temperatures stay high and the coral stays “stressed”, it can become vulnerable to disease and die.

“It’s like a boxing match,” say McField. “You can get hit by one big pow that knocks you out or you can be punched over and over again until you go down.”

SMALL ISLANDS SUFFER

Tiny islands, like the cayes of Belize, suffer the brunt of global climate change, said Kenrick Leslie the director of a regional climate monitoring center in Belize’s capital, Belmopan.

“The United States contributes more than 25 percent of the greenhouses gases in the world while Caribbean islands produced altogether less than 0.1 percent. But we are suffering the major impacts,” said Leslie.

Many islands like the idyllic Caye Caulker, a sliver of sand just four and a half miles (7.5 km) long and 40 minutes by boat taxi from Belize City through a floating mangrove forest, are completely dependent on tourism for survival.

On Caye Caulker, motorized golf carts circle its three sandy streets lined with clapboard guest houses and lobster restaurants.

Tor Bjuland, a brawny blonde medical student, traveled for almost two days from his home in Norway to snorkel here and see a school of electric blue hamlets swim by or a spotted moray eel peak its head out of a crevasse.

“In Norway, it used to snow all year round, which is good for skiing. Now the snow melts early and we have to find somewhere else to go on vacation,” he said, pointing out global warming’s perils for both arctic and tropical climates.

Close to a third of Belize’s 230,000 tourists last year visited the Hol Chan Marine reserve, a coral reef park near the cayes. Income from fishing and travelers is a lifeline for poor residents.

“If the coral disappears, we’ll have to see what else we can do,” said Carlos Ayala a 40-year-old guide with his own boat and tour company who has taught groups about the reef wildlife for 15 years. “It’s hard to imagine.”

Kenya: Uproar of Exam Leak Scandal

Filed under: global islands,kenya — admin @ 6:33 am

Nairobi

Faced with glaring evidence of massive Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education (KCSE) examination leakage, top officials of the examining body returned to their offices on a weekend to re-assure furious parents and teachers that the exam was still credible.

There were angry reactions from across the country, with all stakeholders calling for the overhaul of the Kenya National Examinations Council (KNEC).

And police in Kilifi, the epicentre of the leakage, moved swiftly and arrested 10 people, including a secondary school principal and five candidates suspected of playing a key role in the exams leakage scandal .

Deputy officer commanding Kilifi police division, Mr Nehemia Lang’at, confirmed his officers had arrested the principal and the candidates from the same school.

Reporters bought English and Physics papers

Lang’at said the police were also holding a manager and three employees of a local bureau in Kilifi, where some papers of the leaked examinations were impounded.

In a faxed statement KNEC Secretary Mr Paul M Wasanga said police, the Ministry of Education and KNEC had commenced investigations and the culprits, if convicted, would face imprisonment, fines or both.

“We wish to inform the public that any person who gains access to the examinations material and knowingly reveals the contents, whether orally or in writing shall be guilty of an offence and is liable to imprisonment or fine or both”, said Wasanga.

KNEC did not deny exclusive reports by our sister publication,The Saturday Standard, in which we detailed how a cartel of greedy people was selling KCSE examinations papers at prices ranging between Sh5,000 and Sh15,000.

Our reporters bought English and Physics examination papers hours before they were given to the candidates. They were assured that they could get any other paper so long as they had the money.

Papers have been on sale since exams started

Wasanga did not explain how the examination papers had been sneaked out of the 567 strong rooms countrywide, which are guarded around the clock.

The examinations, we established, are usually leaked long before they are distributed to the countryside. Sources indicate that the examinations are usually leaked by examiners during the proofreading stage.

Although Wasanga said the leaked examination papers were sold on Thursday, our investigations reveal that the KCSE papers have been on sale since the exams started.

Lang’at said the arrest of the 10 people and the ongoing crackdown would assist police to arrest all suspects behind the circulation and selling of the examination papers.

He said police officers on Friday stormed the secondary school and carried checks on the students who were sitting the chemistry theory paper.

The officers found one student had a paper with hand written answers .

Another student was arrested after he attempted to swallow a paper which also had answers for the same paper.

October 29, 2006

12 killed, 2,000 hurt as violence hits country

Filed under: bangladesh,global islands — admin @ 7:37 am

At least 12 people were killed and about 2,000 wounded, many by bullets, as activists of outgoing BNP-led four-party coalition government and Awami League-led 14-party opposition combine clashed in an escalation of violence across the country yesterday.

Reports came that seven were killed while over 1,400 injured in clashes between the activists of the two alliances at different places outside the capital. Five were killed in Dhaka.

The political activists vandalised and set fire to offices and houses of rivals as they came out on streets with vengeful programmes a few hours after curtain fell on the coalition government.

Local administrations imposed section 144 on political gatherings in different parts of the country to check violence, but the political activists carried on with their programmes defying the ban.

The dead include two activists of Awami League (AL) and Jubo League killed in Kushtia and Meherpur, a Jamaat-e-Islami member in Magura, an Islami Chhatra Shibir leader in Kurigram, and three BNP men in Narsingdi and Bagerhat.

October 27, 2006

Four Rameswaram fishermen missing

Filed under: global islands,india — admin @ 6:53 am

Rameswaram, Oct 26: Four fishermen who had ventured into the sea from here, despite the rough weather yesterday, have not returned, Additional Director of Fisheries Velpandian said today.

In a complaint lodged with the Fisheries department by the kin of the missing persons, they had gone in a mechanised boat along with nearly 2,000 fishermen in 589 boats. Others, however, returned late last night or early this morning.

Velpandian said the sea was rough throughout the night and added Coast Guard personnel have been asked to search for the missing fishermen, Jerome, Selvam, Syed and Ryon.

Heavy rains lashed Ramanathapuram district for the second night yesterday with Ramanathapuram town recording 96.7 mm rain, Mandapam 66 mm, Rameswarm 45.3, Thangachimadam 23 mm and Pamban 20.9.

Officials said traffic on the Rameswaram highway was paralysed as the rainwater inundated the road. Water was flowing two feet above the road near Paramakudi town last night. Most parts of Paramakudi town were flooded, they added.

Ramanathapuram had received a record rainfall of 280 mm on Wednesday night.

Bridge over Moheshkhali channel opens

Filed under: bangladesh,global islands — admin @ 6:49 am

BSS, COX’S BAZAR
Oct 21: The long-cherished bridge constructed over the Moheshkhali channel in the district was inaugurated today.
The Roads and Highways Department constructed the two lane Shaheed Ziaur Rahman Bir Uttam bridge at a cost of Taka 27.4 crore.
The bridge is 347 meter long and 7.32 meter wide with eight spans and seven pillars.
Construction of the bridge has fulfilled the dream of thousands of islanders of Moheshkhali that was detached from the mainland for a natural channel for hundreds of years.
From now on Moheshkhali people will be able to go anywhere in the country directly by road.
State Minister for Communication Salahuddin Ahmed inaugurated the bridge. Alamgir Muhammad Mahfujullah Farid, MP, and local leaders were present.
Salahuddin said the four-party alliance government fulfilled the dream of the people of Moheshkhali and Cox’s Bazar through constructing the bridge.
The bridge will bring dynamism to trade and the economic activities of Moheshkhali, an island upazila, which is famous for the production of shrimp, salt and battle leaf.

October 25, 2006

Filed under: bangladesh,global islands,india — admin @ 7:08 am

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