brad brace contemporary culture scrapbook

August 6, 2007

Caught without a country

Filed under: General,global islands,thailand — admin @ 3:50 am

Everyone has the right to a nationality, according to the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights, but an estimated 11 million people across the world do not enjoy such status.

What is statelessness?

The UN defines a stateless person as someone who is not a national of any state under its laws.

That means:

No citizenship
No passport
No refugee status
No ability to claim asylum

Stateless people often have minimal, if any, access to basic rights such as education and healthcare.

Five years ago, the Thai police arrested Afang Chue Mua and threatened to deport her, to send her to back to Myanmar.

The problem is that she is not from Myanmar. She was born in Thailand and so were her parents.

They are members of an ethnic minority called the Akha, one of seven hill tribes that live in northern Thailand, near the border with Myanmar and Laos.

Afang said: “We belong to this country. We have no doubt about our nationality – we are Thai.”

Thailand’s small hill tribes are one of its biggest tourist attractions.

The tribes bring in millions of dollars each year, but half of them – nearly one million people – still are not accepted as citizens.

In fact, their children, born and raised in Thailand, are treated like illegal immigrants, refugees in their own country. They are denied equal access to schooling, to medical care.

The Akha can not get good jobs. Without proper documents, they can not travel, even within Thailand and they are vulnerable to arrest and deportation to countries they have never even seen.

There are a quarter-million refugees in Thailand from Myanmar and Laos, as well as from China, Vietnam and Cambodia.

Most of them belong to the same ethnic minority groups as the hill tribes in Thailand, so there is some room for confusion.

Kumpol, a Thai official from the government registration unit in Chiang Rai, told Al Jazeera: “Fifty per cent of the citizenship applications we receive are fraudulent.”

But Somchart Piphatraradon, who runs a hill tribe citizenship project, says the problems run deeper.

Piphatraradon, of the Mirror foundation, said: “There’s no clear cut government policy to solve this problem because they think it’s a small matter.

“There’s also prejudice towards ethnic minorities. And there’s corruption. Citizenship is a source of money for those with power.”

Afang, now an ethnic minority rights activist, has applied for Thai citizenship and she is working to help others get it too. She visits hill tribe villages to explain the procedure.

She said: “I used to cry a lot, like when I was in jail and they called me an illegal immigrant. I’m not an illegal immigrant.”

“I used to get angry because I was young and didn’t know the law. Now, I know the law, I know what to do.”

She says she will always be Akha, but the Akha do not have their own country, so she needs to be Thai.

August 4, 2007

Filed under: Film,General — admin @ 7:28 pm



August 3, 2007

Mass hysteria spreading in alarming way in Bangladesh

Filed under: bangladesh,General,global islands — admin @ 4:51 am

DHAKA, Aug. 2 — With some 90 more reported struck by mass hysteria on Wednesday, the total number of the students afflicted by the mass psychogenic illness in Bangladesh has exceeded 550 since July 14.

The mysterious illness has been spreading rapidly during the last 18 days, striking students of dozens of schools in different parts across the country, causing panic in the areas.

Mass hysteria, a sort of temporary psychiatric problem, usually affects specific groups of children or people, spreading quickly from one person to another, Bangladesh Health Adviser Matiur Rahman told a press briefing earlier on July 19.

In the first outbreak in capital Dhaka, eight girls from the same class of grade eight in Hazrat Shah Ali Model High School in Mirpur residential fell unconscious in the morning on July 24.

“The girls fainted within 15-20 minute one by one and they were immediately sent to hospital,” MA Hamid, the school teacher who was giving a mathematics class to the girls, told Xinhua on Thursday.

“The girls felt vomiting tendency, headache and weakness before they fainted,” headmaster of the school Md. Mustafiz Billah said.

“They also got breathing problems,” MA Hamid said.

Doctor Ataur Rahman of Selina General Hospital and Diagnostic Center who received the sick girls said that the students remained unconscious for about half an hour. He said they only gave sedative to one student whose condition was serious. For others, they just gave saline or spread fresh water on their faces.

“No treatment was needed as it’s not a physical disease and has no risk of death,” he said. However, the girls were kept in the clinic for 24 hours for observations.

In terms of the cause, the doctor said some of these girls didn’t have their breakfast in the morning and that some didn’t even take their supper on the previous night. That might be the cause as they are too weak, he added.

Some psychological impact might have acted because reports about the disease from different parts of the country are being published in newspapers almost everyday, he said.

The headmaster said their half-yearly examination is ahead. This might be another reason.

Experts said an outbreak of the mass psychogenic illness is at a time of anxiety and worry. The illness is aggravated by malnutrition, tension and lack of tolerance. The victims are mostly students aged between 13 and 25.

The illness usually occurs in closed communities, like schools and factories and it tends to occur more frequently among adolescent girls. Emotional factors sometimes make adolescents, with low level of tolerance for stress, to feel headache, nausea, convulsion, pain in the chest and abdomen, and difficulty in breathing.

However, experts said people don’t need to panic since no one died of the seizures. The disease has no long-term complication and remits almost automatically after a few hours of the appearance of symptoms. Counseling, nutritious food and proper health care for the sick students are very important.

The government has attached importance to the disease and called upon all especially the mass media to create public awareness so that the common people can easily cope with the disease themselves without getting unduly worried.

The government decided to raise awareness about the illness by forming a platform comprising representatives from all affected sections of the population, the Health Adviser announced on July 24 at a seminar.

A seminar on “Mass Psychogenic Illness” was held at Dhaka Medical College Hospital in line with the government’s plan to launch the awareness program.

The adviser said a platform of doctors, teachers and parents of students will initiate an awareness raising program, rendering support to emotionally distressed adolescents.

August 2, 2007

Filed under: Film,General — admin @ 6:35 am




11 killed in attacks in south Thailand

Filed under: General,global islands,thailand — admin @ 6:03 am

PATTANI, Thailand – Rebels staged an ambush and set off bombs across southern Thailand in violence Wednesday that left 11 people dead, including two soldiers and five suspected Muslim insurgents, police said.

Attackers opened fire on a unit of soldiers on a search operation in the Bannang Sata district where Muslim insurgency has been particularly active, he said. No soldiers were hurt in the hour-long firefight.

“They were acting on a tip-off that these insurgents have been hiding in the village,” said Sompien.

Also Wednesday, at least three assailants sprayed dozens of bullets into a house in Narathiwat province, killing two men, said police Lt. Vorapong Klomsakun.

Police said it was one of six bombs that exploded in several areas of Narathiwat Wednesday morning.

More than 2,300 people have been killed in the predominantly Muslim provinces of Yala, Pattani and Narathiwat and some parts of Songkhla since early 2004, when a separatist movement flared up after a lull of more than two decades.

Nearly 400 young Muslim men suspected of involvement with the separatist movement have been arrested and detained during the past few months, Akara said.

August 1, 2007

Half of Bangladesh still submerged

Filed under: bangladesh,General,global islands,weather — admin @ 4:45 am

As many as five million people have been stranded by floods in low-lying areas of Bangladesh and eleven people, mostly children, have drowned.

Half of the country is now submerged and officials say they expect the situation to get worse before it gets better.

“We expect the flood situation to deteriorate further over next few days,” MM Mustafa Sarwar, of the Dhaka-based Bangladesh flood forecasting and warning centre, said.

The flood waters from the tributaries of the Brahmaputra and Padma rivers are expected to reach the eastern suburbs of the capital Dhaka in the next two days.

More than half a million people have been marooned in more than 30 districts of the low-lying country, officials said. Newspapers put the number of people stranded at five million.

Tens of thousands of people in neighbouring India have also been displaced from their homes or cut off in their villages as the annual South Asia monsoon drenches much of the subcontinent.

People were facing shortages of food, drinking water and medicine at relief camps, while a lack of boats has hampered rescue efforts, officials said.

A local official in northern Bogra district said he had received frantic calls from people in flooded villages.

“Please send us a boat,” commissioner Furti Begum quoted one desperate villager as telling her in a mobile phone call from the village of Kajlarchar, 50 km (30 miles) from the Bogra town.

“Probably this is my last call as the mobile is running out of battery charge,” the man named Soleman said.

Begum said thousands of people have been perching on the roofs of their homes for over a week, but evacuation was difficult because of a lack of boats.

Rising rivers

On Tuesday, the entire Sirajganj town with about 150,000 people was under waist-high water, witnesses said. Boats were plying the town, selling dry food rations to residents.

Over a dozen rivers, including the Brahmaputra, Jamuna, Padma and Meghna were flowing more than one metre above their danger levels, and are still rising, weather officials said.

Meanwhile thousands of villagers near the Bangladeshi city of Chittagong flocked to see the rare sight of a beached whale on Monday.

The whale carcass washed up on a beach near the port city and Mohammad Faruk, a fisheries department official said: “Local fishermen initially thought it was wreckage from a grounded ship.”

It was not clear what species the whale belonged to or how it died.

The tail and fins of the whale, meanwhile, appeared to be mutilated, private television channel ATN Bangla said.

Migrating whales are sometimes sighted in the Bay of Bengal off Bangladesh’s southern coast, but rarely come near shore, experts and witnesses say.

Nicaragua Offers US Missiles for Meds

Filed under: General,global islands,nicaragua — admin @ 4:38 am

Managua, Jul 31 — Nicaragua President Daniel Ortega suggested the United States exchange more than half of the 1,051 ground-to-air missiles in the hands of the Nicaraguan Army for helicopters or medical equipment and medicine.

We will keep 400 missiles, and give them the rest, but they have to give us something in return. If they don’t want to give helicopters, they could give surgical instruments to improve hospitals, or medicine, Ortega said in a ceremony to mark the 28th anniversary of the Nicaraguan Air Force.

The president explained that it would be a simple swap, and warned that any technological equipment should be new.

“They are quite capable of sending us second-hand stuff,” said the Sandinista leader, who added that the remaining 400 missiles are “untouchable,” and will be renewed when their life-span is over.

In the wake of 9 11, Washington started pressing Nicaragua to destroy its Russian-made SAM-7 missiles in the hands of the local Army since the 80s.

According to the US, these weapons, capable of downing planes in mid-flight, might fall into the hands of international terrorists, which is rejected by the Nicaraguan military, who claim to have the missiles in a safe place.

During the government of ex President Enrique Bolanos (2002-2007), over 1,000 SAM-7s were destroyed. However, as requested by the Sandinista National Liberation Front, Congress intervened, preventing a total disarmament of Nicaragua.

The Nicaraguan Army says that 400 missiles will suffice to defend the country’s airspace.

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