Saturday, 30 June 2012

Tuaregs Clash With Islamists in Mali

Tuaregs Clash With Islamists in Mali:
A picture taken on May 25, 2012 shows Malian deserters in a camp near Niamey. The deserters were being guarded by Niger's army. (Boureima Hama/AFP/Getty Images)
A picture taken on May 25, 2012 shows Malian deserters in a camp near Niamey. The deserters were being guarded by Niger's army. (Boureima Hama/AFP/Getty Images)
Fighting broke out in northern Mali after an Islamist group linked with al-Qaeda broke a truce with local Tuareg rebels, with 20 people reported dead in the clashes.
The Islamist group, the Movement of Oneness and Jihad (MUJAO), had fought alongside the Tuareg-led group, National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad (MNLA), against the Mali army several months ago to take over portions of the country.
The Islamist militants broke into a building in Gao used by the Tuaregs, forcing one of the latter’s leaders to be airlifted from the scene after being shot in the leg, Al-Jazeera reported.
The MUJAO are seeking to impose shariah law in northern Mali, while the Tuaregs want to create a secular country.

On Wednesday, MUJAO officials claimed that they had taken over Gao, which is considered a key town in the region, according to AFP.
But an official with the NMLA said the buildings that were taken over were not that strategically important.
Referring to the building that was stormed, “This headquarters is just a political office. Not a military building,” Colonel Asaleth Ag Khabi with the NMLA told The Associated Press.
“We are dealing with Islamists that are from Gao, that are here from a long time ago,” he added. “Who were born and raised here. And this combat is not over.”

India Bans ‘Human Safari’ Tourism to Isolated Tribe

India Bans ‘Human Safari’ Tourism to Isolated Tribe:
Vehicles line up to enter the Jarawa reserve along the Andaman Trunk Road that connects several remote Indian Andaman Islands. (G. Chamberlain/Survival)
Vehicles line up to enter the Jarawa reserve along the Andaman Trunk Road that connects several remote Indian Andaman Islands. (G. Chamberlain/Survival)
A tourist resort in India’s Andaman Islands accused of offering controversial “human safaris” may be shut down after the Indian government banned tourism businesses from operating around the Jarawa Tribal Reserve. Resort operator Barefoot India says it is being targeted unfairly by authorities and denies that it arranges illegal trips to see the isolated group.
Barefoot says nongovernmental organizations and others looking to protect the Jarawa, a tribal people that have lived in isolation in the region for thousands of years, are taking a colonial attitude and overlooking ways the company has protected the Jarawa traditional lifestyle.

A comprehensive examination of the Jarawa situation by UNESCO notes that the situation is highly complex with no clear solutions.
Survival International is one of the main groups opposing tourism activities that encroach on the Jarawa Tribal Reserve, a 295-square-mile (765 square km) space carved out for the Jarawa by the Indian government to protect the 350 tribe members.
Survival supports the Indian government’s decision to institute a buffer zone around the Jarawa.
The issue became a hot topic earlier this year after reports emerged that tour companies were exploiting the isolated group by sending truckloads of tourists to ogle at the tribes’ people.
A secretly recorded video uploaded in January that eventually went viral on the Internet, shows tribe members dancing for tourists in return for food while being goaded on by an off-camera police officer.
Barefoot denies the claims and says that they do not interact with the Jarawa.
“The location of this Barefoot resort is … quite far from the reserve and tourism at the location is in no way connected with the Jarawa or Jarawa-related voyeurism,” the said in a statement in 2009 to similar accusations.
The video, however, prompted India’s Home Minister P. Chidambaram to order an investigation into the matter and the tourism business on the islands. There are two yet-to-be contacted tribes that live in the Andaman Islands located in the Indian Ocean south of Burma.
Yet in March, the second highest ranking police officer in the Andaman Islands was caught organizing a “VIP” safari while he was being tasked with protecting the Jarawa tribe from exploitation.
Barefoot says it promotes socially responsible tourism and its resort serves as a beneficial buffer to the Jarawa since it displaced Indian settlers who had been trading cigarettes and alcohol to the tribe.
Further, the company argues that the Andaman government promotes tourism to the area to experience its stunning sunsets, a practice that would continue even if the resort itself were closed.
“We fail to see what difference our resort makes, in the midst of this scenario,” Barefoot said in a statement.
Survival, however, rejects that Barefoot’s presence is helping the Jarawa.
“It is quite astonishing that a company, which has spent years challenging the notion of a buffer zone in the courts is claiming that its tourist resort is in itself a buffer!” said Survival Senior Campaigner Sophie Grig via email.

Andaman Trunk Road

Perhaps even more significant than the presence of tourist operators in the area, is the Andaman Trunk Road that crosses several of the islands in the chain. The UNESCO report, a dossier of research papers about the Jarawa situation, notes the bloodshed involved in building the road.
The 213-mile (343 km) long road has “marginalized the Jarawas like nothing else” notes the report, citing a key Indian administrator.
“The Jarawas were traumatized by the large-scale tree-felling and use of noisy heavy machinery for construction of the road, which probably also drove away their prey species. The road also effectively cut off their free access to the east coast resulting in further loss of habitat and shrinkage of their area available for resource gathering.”
The report notes that Jarawas raided labor camps of men building the road and were met by armed policemen.
“Many lives on both sides were lost in skirmishes,” it notes.
In 2002, the Indian Supreme Court ruled the road should be closed, but it is still open and is used heavily by tourists, taking roughly 250 vehicles per day into the Jarawa’s forest, says Survival.
A photo published by the group shows literally dozens of cars—mostly SUVs—packed on the small asphalt road.
So although the buffer zone ruling is a good one, the road is still a major issue, says Grig.
Jarawa girls are dressed in clothes given to them by outsiders. Encroachment onto their land is exposing the Jarawa to a variety of risks and influences previously unknown to the remote tribe in India’s Andaman Islands. (Survival)
Jarawa girls are dressed in clothes given to them by outsiders. Encroachment onto their land is exposing the Jarawa to a variety of risks and influences previously unknown to the remote tribe in India’s Andaman Islands. (Survival)
“Fortunately, since the furor in January about human safaris it is much harder for tourists to stop their vehicles in order to be able to interact with the Jarawa, but every day hundreds of tourists still make the journey up the road predominantly to try to ‘spot’ the Jarawa,” says the campaigner.
In the years since the islands were populated by outsiders, the Jarawa have seen a significant change, writes UNESCO. While the tribe was once violently hostile to outside visitors, in 1998 and 1999 the tribal people began to sustain close contact with the outside world.
“Since that time the Jarawa community has changed rapidly. Instances of Jarawa begging for food along the Andaman Trunk Road … have become common. Jarawa have also taken up new technologies, for example many now use matches and match boxes to light fires, and claim not to remember how to make fires by other methods.”
The introduction to the report notes the difficult involved in resolving the issue.
“The question before everyone is a rather simple and evident one—What is it that needs to be done? The answer/s, of course are neither evident, nor simple, if they exist at all.”
With reporting by Cindy Drukier

Sea Level Rise may continue for Centuries

Sea Level Rise may continue for Centuries: Sea levels around the world can be expected to rise by several meters in coming centuries, if global warming carries on, according to new research.

The study is the first to give a comprehensive projection for this long perspective, based on observed sea-level rise over the past millennium, as well as on scenarios for future greenhouse-gas emissions.

"Sea-level rise is a hard to quantify, yet critical risk of climate change," says Michiel Schaeffer of Climate Analytics and Wageningen University, lead author of the study. "Due to the long time it takes for the world's ice and water masses to react to global warming, our emissions today determine sea levels for centuries to come."

Lots of Vegetables Found to Prevent Acute Pancreatitis

Lots of Vegetables Found to Prevent Acute Pancreatitis: Pancreatitis is the inflammation of the pancreas, the gland behind the stomach which releases digestive enzymes to break down food in the stomach. It also secretes pancreatic juice which aids in absorption of nutrients in the small intestine. It is an essential organ for digestion, and it also produces several important hormones including insulin. However, sometimes, the digestive enzymes released go to work on the pancreas itself. Enough damage to the pancreas can lead to acute pancreatitis, a potentially life threatening condition. A new study published in the journal Gut, has found that diet rich in vegetables may help stave off acute pancreatitis.

Safety warning over Britain's most common antidepressant

Safety warning over Britain's most common antidepressant: A warning has been sounded over antidepressant drugs taken by more than a million patients in Britain.

France slaps ban on Swiss pesticide as bee threat

France slaps ban on Swiss pesticide as bee threat: Paris (AFP) June 29, 2012



The French government on Friday slapped an immediate ban a pesticide made by Swiss giant Syngenta used in rapeseed cultivation that has been found to shorten bees' lifespan.

The agriculture ministry had signalled at the beginning of the month that it planned to ban Cruiser and Agriculture Minister Stephane Le Foll said Syngenta failed to provide satisfactory information to call into doubt

Bristol-Myers to buy Amylin for about $5.3 billion

Bristol-Myers to buy Amylin for about $5.3 billion: NEW YORK (Reuters) - Bristol-Myers Squibb Co will buy biotechnology company Amylin Pharmaceuticals Inc for about $5.3 billion in cash, helping Bristol-Myers extend its portfolio of diabetes treatments with the addition of drugs Byetta and Bydureon.

World Briefing | Asia: India: Floods Swamp More Than 2,000 Villages

World Briefing | Asia: India: Floods Swamp More Than 2,000 Villages: Raging floodwaters fed by monsoon rains are sweeping away homes and leaving hundreds of thousands of people marooned.

Gripe aviar deja 870 mil aves muertas: Senasica

Gripe aviar deja 870 mil aves muertas: Senasica: El organismo dependiente de la Secretaría de Agricultura informó que se han detectado 1.7 millones de aves afectadas

Indagan a mando de seguridad del AICM

Indagan a mando de seguridad del AICM: La SSP federal explicó que resulta atípica la forma en que la única cámara instalada en el área de comida rápida, lugar donde se realizaron los disparos, se mantuvo fija a pesar de que se ve gente corriendo y cómo se estrella una de las mamparas de cristal del lugar por lo cual indagan quién operó dicho equipo de seguridad en ese momento

Triple-digit highs scorch the U.S.

Triple-digit highs scorch the U.S.: Chad Myers has the latest on a record-breaking heat wave spreading across the U.S.

Storms knock out power to millions

Storms knock out power to millions: Residents in nine states are facing thermostat-popping temperatures after deadly thunderstorms pounded parts of the Midwest and Atlantic Seaboard.

Amazon Cloud Goes Down Friday Night, Taking Netflix, Instagram And Pinterest With It

Amazon Cloud Goes Down Friday Night, Taking Netflix, Instagram And Pinterest With It:
image thumbnail - see full story for attributions
As of 11:21 PM EST Amazon’s Elastic Compute Cloud in North Virginia went down, due to severe thunder storms in the area. The Washington Post reports torrential rains, "scary winds," lightning and massive power outages in the D.C. area. Follow Up: Crazy Weather And The Real Cost Of Cloud Computing, Add Your Thoughts Amazon EC2 runs

Worry over drug-resistant TB

Worry over drug-resistant TB:
On the same day that the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the national health care law, medical researchers from around the globe gathered at the Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT for the annual New England Tuberculosis Symposium. The focus of the all-day event was a disturbing global health trend: the emergence of a form of incurable tuberculosis that is drug-resistant.
The highlight of Thursday’s symposium was an eight-member panel, moderated by Barry Bloom, that focused on the reasons for the emergence of drug-resistant TB, especially in poorer nations such as India, and what can be done to remedy this growing crisis. Bloom is a Harvard University Distinguished Service Professor and the Joan L. and Julius H. Jacobson Professor of Public Health at the Harvard School of Public Health.
Khisimuzi Mdluli from TB Alliance, a global nonprofit working against the disease, spoke repeatedly about the need to develop new drugs to combat tuberculosis. Since the 1960s, two drugs — isoniazid and rifampicin — have been the standard TB treatment. “We need more choices,” said Mdluli, “so if people don’t respond to the first [treatment] regimen, what can we do next? We don’t have good answers.”
According to the World Health Organization, millions of people (8.8 million in 2010) contract tuberculosis each year, and about a million die from it. Mdluli called for more mobilization around fighting TB, urging a coordinated public awareness campaign similar to the one waged around HIV.
The disease, he says, is mistakenly viewed as a problem of poverty. “TB doesn’t discriminate; anyone can get it,” he said. When asked by Bloom what is needed to foster the development of new drugs, Mdluli replied: “money, money, money.”

Rob Warren of Stellenbosch University (from left) and Bob Horsburgh of Boston University listen as Scott Podolsky makes a point. Podolsky is assistant professor of global health and social medicine at Harvard Medical School.
Epidemiologist Bob Horsburgh of Boston University seconded Mdudli’s assertion that TB attacks the poor and rich alike. “We need to convince the upper classes that they are at risk too, because they really are,” he said. “It’s not uncommon [in places like India] for a lower-class household worker to spread TB to the whole [upper-class] household.”
One of the main problems in detecting, and thus treating, tuberculosis, the panelists agreed, is the public stigma attached to having the disease. Sarah Fortune, the Melvin J. and Geraldine L. Glimcher Assistant Professor of Immunology and Infectious Diseases at the Harvard School of Public Health, detailed how crucial early detection can be in treating TB, explaining that educating people about better treatment options can help remove any stigma and thus help early detection efforts.
Zarir Udwadia, a doctor and TB specialist at Hinduja National Hospital in Mumbai, India, described the rising stress that drug-resistant tuberculosis is placing on India’s already-overstretched health care system. “In India,” said Udwadia, “the public health system is lousy; people don’t want to go there,” so they go to private health providers, who are largely unregulated.
He called for a public-private partnership in India, where “TB might be diagnosed in the private sector, and then patients could get treatment in the public sector.”
The panel also included Jeremy Greene, Harvard assistant professor in the history of science and instructor at Harvard Medical School (HMS); Scott Podolsky, assistant professor of global health and social medicine at HMS and director of the Center for the History of Medicine; and Rob Warren of Stellenbosch University in Cape Town, South Africa.
The panelists agreed that more resources needed to be placed on treating drug-resistant TB. Horsburgh summed up the issue: “We’ve had the tools to cure TB for 40 years now. Why have we failed? We lacked the political will to do it. We need to do what AIDS activists have done to raise awareness” for a cure.
The symposium was a step in that direction. Early in the session, Bloom told the panel that he’d recently been asked by India’s prime minister to serve as an adviser in that nation’s search for a new health minister. Bloom garnered laughter from the panel and the audience when he described the discussion as “a job interview” for each of them.

German lower house approves EU's fiscal pact

BERLIN (Reuters) - The lower house of Germany's parliament, the Bundestag, resoundingly approved on Friday the EU's new fiscal compact that sets tough budget rules championed by Chancellor Angela Merkel.

Reported by Reuters 1 hour ago.

Bomb explodes in Mexican city days before election

Bomb explodes in Mexican city days before election: MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - An explosive device blew up inside a truck parked outside the town hall of Mexico's northern city of Nuevo Laredo on Friday, injuring seven people but causing no casualties, officials said.

Summit gives birth to common EU patent

Summit gives birth to common EU patent: Arrival of common patent system should ease administrative burden for businesses, but only came about through a messy diplomatic compromise

Hopes wilt for bumper US corn harvest

Hopes wilt for bumper US corn harvest: Farmers have sown the most acreage since 1937 in response to high prices but a heatwave has lead to concerns for a significant chunk of the crop

Greek militant group claims Microsoft attack

Greek militant group claims Microsoft attack: ATHENS (Reuters) - A little-known leftist militant group claimed responsibility on Friday for an attack on Microsoft's Greek headquarters earlier this week.

Friday, 29 June 2012

Scientists hack into flying drone

Scientists hack into flying drone: US researchers took control of a flying drone by hacking into its GPS system - acting on a dare from the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS).

RBS set for fine as Barclays boss remains defiant

RBS set for fine as Barclays boss remains defiant: LONDON (Reuters) - Royal Bank of Scotland could face a hefty fine from the same interest rate rigging scandal that has hammered Barclays this week and left its boss Bob Diamond fighting for his job.

Scotland cut off as 'superstorms', floods and landslips close main rail links

Scotland cut off as 'superstorms', floods and landslips close main rail links: Hundreds of rail passengers were left stranded on Thursday night after freak thunderstorms left England and Scotland cut off from each other.

Petronas in $5.3bn Progress deal

Petronas in $5.3bn Progress deal: Malaysia's Petronas agrees to buy Canada's Progress Energy Resources in a deal worth 5.5bn Canadian dollars ($5.3bn; £3.4bn).

Black Market for Body Parts Spreads in Europe

Black Market for Body Parts Spreads in Europe: A phenomenon’s momentum is abetted by the Internet, a global shortage of transplant organs and, in some cases, unscrupulous traffickers ready to exploit economic misery.

Thursday, 28 June 2012

Wyndham hotels face hack charges

Wyndham hotels face hack charges: US officials allege that more than half a million customer accounts were compromised after hackers overcame inadequate security measures.

No need to comply with data laws if it's too difficult - EU ministers

No need to comply with data laws if it's too difficult - EU ministers:

If you don't know data is personal, maybe it isn't?

Organisations will not have to abide by data protection laws if it would be too difficult, time-consuming and use up too many important resources to check whether information they hold is personally identifiable, the EU's Council of Ministers has proposed.…

Natural Contamination

Natural Contamination: Groundwater is water located beneath the earth's surface in soil pore spaces and in the fractures of rock formations. A unit of rock or an unconsolidated deposit is called an aquifer when it can yield a usable quantity of water. The depth at which soil pore spaces or fractures and voids in rock become completely saturated with water is called the water table. Ground water, of course, can be contaminated. However, it is not only contaminated due to man made activities. Potentially harmful levels of naturally occurring arsenic, uranium, radium, radon and manganese have been found in some bedrock groundwater that supplies drinking water wells in New England, according to a new U.S. Geological Survey study. While the presence of contaminants, such as arsenic, in some groundwater was already known, this new study identifies several that hadn’t been previously identified. This new report also provides information on the type of bedrock geologic formations where high concentrations are most likely to be found, which will help identify areas most at risk of contamination.

Canada builds up arctic region defenses

Canada builds up arctic region defenses: Ottawa (UPI) Jun 26, 2012



Canada is building up arctic defenses as part of its long-term program of projecting Canadian presence in a region increasingly claimed by competing powers.
Effects, including melting ice, of global climate change on the Arctic Ocean and Arctic Circle have raised possibilities the region may open up to maritime navigation and competing naval operations by Canada and neighbors in Europe

Significant sea-level rise in a two degree warming world

Significant sea-level rise in a two degree warming world: Potsdam, Germany (SPX) Jun 27, 2012



The study is the first to give a comprehensive projection for this long perspective, based on observed sea-level rise over the past millennium, as well as on scenarios for future greenhouse-gas emissions.

"Sea-level rise is a hard to quantify, yet critical risk of climate change," says Michiel Schaeffer of Climate Analytics and Wageningen University, lead author of the study. "Due to the l

Eating garbage: Bacteria for bioremediation

Eating garbage: Bacteria for bioremediation: Urbana, IL (SPX) Jun 27, 2012



A 150-foot-high garbage dump in Colombia, South America, may have new life as a public park. Researchers at the University of Illinois have demonstrated that bacteria found in the dump can be used to neutralize the contaminants in the soil.

Jerry Sims, a U of I associate professor of crop sciences and USDA-Agricultural Research Service research leader and Andres Gomez, a graduate student

Sea Level Rise on US Atlantic Coast 3-4 Times Faster than Global Average

Sea Level Rise on US Atlantic Coast 3-4 Times Faster than Global Average: The East Coast of the United States is home to many of its major population centers. While some of the early colonizers migrated west, many stayed and built up some of America's great cities, including Portland, Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Norfolk, Charleston, and Miami. Now this region is facing an unprecedented challenge caused by the changing climate. The sea level is rising, and due to a variety of oceanographic and topographic factors, it is rising faster on the US Atlantic Coast than it is globally. The greatest increase will be felt in the "hot zone", from Cape Hatteras, North Carolina to north of Boston, Massachusetts.

Small farmers cause substantial damage in the Amazon rainforest

Small farmers cause substantial damage in the Amazon rainforest: Small farmers are less likely than large landowners to maintain required forest cover on their property in the Brazilian Amazon, worsening the environmental impact of their operations, reported a researcher presenting at the annual meeting of the Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation (ATBC) in Bonito, Brazil. Fernanda Michalski, an ecologist with the University of São Paulo and the Pro-Carnivores Institute, analyzed forest cover trends on properties of various sizes in Alta Floresta in the southern Amazon and conducted interviews with farmers on the presence of wildlife on their holdings. She found that small properties (under 440 ha) tend to have less forest cover. Riparian zones are less likely to be maintained, reducing the connectivity of what forest patches do survive, making it more difficult for wildlife to move. Smaller forest blocks were affected by edge effects, leaving them without the cool, dark, stable conditions of the forest interior that some species require. Accordingly large-bodied mammals, birds, and reptiles are scarce on smallholder properties.

A jab that 'vaccinates' people against smoking for life being developed

A jab that 'vaccinates' people against smoking for life being developed: Scientists have invented a jab that takes the pleasure out of smoking, it has emerged.

Megaupload raid warrant 'invalid'

Megaupload raid warrant 'invalid': Warrants used to carry out a search and seize data from online storage site Megaupload were invalid, a New Zealand judge rules.

Moody’s downgrades eight Brazilian banks

Moody’s downgrades eight Brazilian banks: Rating agency says subsidiaries and local lenders significantly exposed to government securities and are not insulated from a sovereign debt crisis

Reported by FT.com 14 minutes ago.

NY Times launches site in Chinese

NY Times launches site in Chinese: The New York Times launches a Chinese language version of its website in a bid to tap into the world's biggest internet market.

China dairy recalls hundreds of cartons of tainted milk

China dairy recalls hundreds of cartons of tainted milk: BEIJING (Reuters) - A Chinese dairy company has recalled hundreds of cartons of milk after a mechanical error tainted the batch with alkaline water, the latest blow to China's scandal-plagued dairy industry.

Mexicali Lures American Tourists With Medical Care

Mexicali Lures American Tourists With Medical Care: Mexicali has made medical care its primary lure for visitors from the United States.

Chinese paper slams U.S. candidates for playing "China card"

Chinese paper slams U.S. candidates for playing "China card": BEIJING (Reuters) - China's top newspaper slammed both U.S. presidential candidates on Thursday for playing the "China card" in their election campaigns, saying the real economic problems confronting the United States were being ignored in the process.

États-Unis - Le « cannibale de Miami » n'avait consommé que de la marijuana, selon le coroner

États-Unis - Le « cannibale de Miami » n'avait consommé que de la marijuana, selon le coroner: Les tests toxicologiques effectués sur un homme de la Floride abattu par un policier alors qu'il dévorait le visage d'un autre homme n'ont détecté que de la marijuana dans l'organisme du suspect, a annoncé mercredi le bureau du coroner du comté de Miami-Dade.

FDA OKs first obesity drug in 13 years

FDA OKs first obesity drug in 13 years: NEW YORK/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. health regulators approved the first new weight-loss drug in 13 years, allowing Arena Pharmaceuticals Inc to bring its Belviq pill to market as public health advocates push for new solutions to the nation's growing obesity epidemic.

Wednesday, 27 June 2012

Robust demand for GM corn lifts Monsanto

Robust demand for GM corn lifts Monsanto: Revenues for the third quarter rise to $4.2bn, well ahead of Wall Street expectations, on record sales of corn seed, the company’s biggest product

Another Boat of Asylum-Seekers Sinks Near Australia

Another Boat of Asylum-Seekers Sinks Near Australia:
A barge carrying rescued suspected asylum seekers nears Christmas Island on June 22. Rescuers are searching for survivors off the coast of Christmas Island after a boat carrying suspected asylum seekers capsized. (Scott Fisher/Getty Images)
A barge carrying rescued suspected asylum seekers nears Christmas Island on June 22. Rescuers are searching for survivors off the coast of Christmas Island after a boat carrying suspected asylum seekers capsized. (Scott Fisher/Getty Images)
For the second time in a week, a boat carrying asylum-seekers capsized around 100 miles north of Australia’s Christmas Island near Indonesia early on Wednesday, authorities said.
The Australian Maritime Safety Authority (AMSA) said that a search was called off late on Wednesday after authorities rescued 130 survivors and recovered one dead body.

“Based on information from the survivors, including crew members, it is now believed that there were 134 people on board and that three people went down with the vessel,” the agency said in a statement.
However, the Australia Broadcasting Corporation reported that 19 people are still missing, citing AMSA.
Last week, a boat carrying more than 200 asylum-seekers from Afghanistan capsized only miles away from Wednesday’s sinking. Around 110 people were rescued.
Tubagus Hasanudin, the deputy head of the Australian Parliament’s committee that oversees defense, intelligence, information and foreign affairs, said that Australia needs to fix its approach to dealing with asylum-seekers.
“The government of Indonesia has done its best to guard this territory with limited equipment. But still these cases keep appearing,” Hasanudin said on Wednesday, referring to the two recent capsized ships, reported The Age.
“In my opinion all countries involved must sit together, country of origin, country of destination, country of transit and countries that are passed by these people,” he added.

Jewish and Muslim groups condemn German circumcision ruling

Jewish and Muslim groups condemn German circumcision ruling: Jewish and Muslim groups in Germany on Wednesday condemned a court ruling that deemed circumcision equivalent to grievous bodily harm, claiming the ruling trampled on religious freedom and could lead to "circumcision tourism".

Brasil apoia entrada da Venezuela no Mercosul

Brasil apoia entrada da Venezuela no Mercosul:
BRASÍLIA - O porta-voz do Itamaraty, Tovar Nunes, disse nesta quarta-feira que o Brasil apoia, individualmente, a entrada da Venezuela como membro pleno do Mercosul. Mas ele esclareceu que uma discussão em torno do tema pelos líderes do bloco terá de ser precedida pela aprovação da suspensão do Paraguai da união aduaneira, proposta que será votada na sexta-feira em Mendoza, na Argentina. Os paraguaios foram os únicos do Mercosul que ainda não aprovaram a Venezuela como novo sócio.
A exclusão dos paraguaios será votada na parte da manhã, pelos presidentes do Mercosul e, à tarde, por todos os chefes de Estado da União das Nações Sul-Americanas (Unasul). O ministro das Relações Exteriores, Antonio Patriota, embarca na quinta-feira à noite para a Mendoza, onde terá uma conversa prévia, e de caráter mais político, com os chanceleres da região.
- Com relação à entrada da Venezuela, não há dúvida. Nosso Parlamento já se pronunciou e o Brasil, individualmente, apoia seu ingresso no Mercosul. Surgiu um fato novo, que é a expectativa de suspensão do Paraguai. Mas é preciso que ela ocorra primeiro - disse o diplomata.
Ainda segundo Nunes, o ministro das Relações Exteriores, Antonio Patriota, conclamou nesta quarta-feira os movimentos sociais e os parlamentares brasileiros a defenderem o diálogo entre o presidente deposto, Fernando Lugo, e o recém-empossado, Federico Franco, nos contatos que mantiverem com representantes da sociedade paraguaia. Em reunião com representantes da sociedade civil, de instituições como o MST e deputados e senadores, Patriota recebeu uma moção de repúdio ao que foi chamado por seus interlocutores de “golpe”. O ministro pediu o envolvimento dos movimentos sociais na questão, para evitar a ruptura do diálogo.
- Em referência a uma menção sobre a necessidade de garantir a paz e a segurança do continente, (Patriota) disse que a América do Sul ainda se mantém como a região mais segura do mundo. É uma zona desnuclearizada, onde não há armas de destruição em massa, que conquistou, em um processo histórico penoso e com muito sacrifício, a democracia. Portanto, permanece uma região onde a paz impera e a todo custo - disse Nunes. - Mas é preciso seguir passo a passo, para decidirmos sobre sua permanência ou não. A entrada da Venezuela não é nenhuma novidade. (O país) tem sido convidada para as reuniões do Mercosul - acrescentou.

Tuesday, 26 June 2012

Mexican media scandal: secretive Televisa unit promoted PRI candidate

Mexican media scandal: secretive Televisa unit promoted PRI candidate: Broadcaster commissioned videos rubbishing rivals of candidate who is now favourite to win presidential race on Sunday, documents seen by the Guardian reveal

A secretive unit inside Mexico's predominant television network set up and funded a campaign for Enrique Peña Nieto, who is the favourite to win Sunday's presidential election, according to people familiar with the operation and documents seen by the Guardian.

The new revelations of bias within Televisa, the world's biggest Spanish-language broadcaster, challenge the company's claim to be politically impartial as well as Peña Nieto's insistence that he never had a special relationship with Televisa.

The unit – known as "team Handcock", in what sources say was a Televisa codename for the politician and his allies – commissioned videos promoting the candidate and his PRI party and rubbishing the party's rivals in 2009. The documents suggest the team distributed the videos to thousands of email addresses, and pushed them on Facebook and YouTube, where some of them can still be seen.

The nature of the relationship between Peña Nieto and Televisa has been a key issue in Sunday's election since the development in May of a student movement focused on perceived media manipulation of public opinion in the candidate's favour.

Televisa refused to comment on the specifics of the documents but denied the suggestion of favouring the PRI, saying it had done political work for all the major parties.

The documents, which consist of scanned copies of signed contracts as well as other instructions and proposals, suggest that Televisa subsidiaries and named Televisa executives took part in the project, putting their employees and knowhow to work to the benefit of Peña Nieto in the buildup to crucial 2009 midterm congressional elections.

The material follows the publication by the Guardian three weeks ago of a cache of documents from 2005 that appeared to detail the network's sale of favourable coverage to a number of politicians, including Peña Nieto. The documents also appeared to contain evidence of a smear campaign orchestrated from the company against Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who at the time was preparing his first presidential candidacy. López Obrador is currently Peña Nieto's closest rival in the presidential race, though most polls put him more than 10 points behind the leader.

Televisa has dismissed these allegations as libellous, questioned the authenticity of the documents, and demanded an apology.

According to well-placed sources, the Handcock project ("Hancock" in some documents) emerged in the runup to the 2009 midterm congressional elections.

The resounding victory that Governor Peña Nieto delivered for the PRI in the region known as State of Mexico in those elections helped cement his claim to the presidential candidacy.

*Confidentiality agreements

One source told the Guardian the team worked in semi-secrecy within Televisa's offices, bound by confidentiality contracts and encouraged not to use their Televisa email addresses or Televisa IPs to distribute material.

A second source said external companies contracted by Televisa to produce videos and other materials destined for the web were also bound by secrecy because of confidentiality agreements. The contracts suggest that these "providers" are legally responsible for "any individual or collective complaints of all kinds" associated with the material.

One of the leaders of the team was Alejandra Lagunes, then director general of Televisa Interactive Media, the sources said.

Lagunes later left the company and went on to help Peña Nieto's chosen successor as governor of the State of Mexico win the local election in 2011. She currently holds the position of "co-ordinator of digital and social network strategy" in Peña Nieto's presidential campaign team.

A PRI spokesman, Aurelio Nuño, denied a Guardian request to speak with Lagunes. "The campaign and the candidate Enrique Peña Nieto has no knowledge of the existence of the contract that the Guardian showed us," he said. "Enrique Peña Nieto reiterates that he has never had a special relation with Televisa. Both as governor and as presidential candidate, Peña Nieto has sought a cordial and respectful relationship with all the media."

A central part of the brief for the Handcock team, according to one source, was distributing pro-PRI campaign videos through mass emailing and promotion on sites such as YouTube.

The documents suggest that at least some of the videos were commissioned by Televisa from an outside production company called Zares del Universo, which was partly owned by a Televisa-associated celebrity, Facundo Gómez.

According to one of the contracts, dated 1 May 2009, a wholly owned Televisa subsidiary called Comercio Más S.A. De C.V. commissioned Zares to provideseries of short videos at a cost of 1,722,000 pesos (around US $133,000 at the time).

The contract is signed by Jorge Agustín Lutteroth Echegoyen, Televisa vice-president and comptroller. His name and signature also appear on other contracts, along with an official stamp.

In this case the "client" is identified as "Handcock" for some of the videos commissioned and "Televisa Digital" in others. Some can be found on YouTube. There is no author listed, but the titles, topics, and exact length match those detailed in the document.

*Snoopy Concept*

These include a series of six videos for a campaign mysteriously codenamed the Snoopy Concept.

The contract states that the aim is to produce "videos that mock some of the errors and weak points of the national action party", referring to President Felipe Calderón's PAN party. It specifies that the videos should not be signed.

Gómez told the Guardian: "We have done a lot of work for Televisa but we have never, as far as I know, produced political videos for Televisa of any kind."

One of the episodes, entitled Enrique Peña's Tie, jauntily rebuts criticism the then governor received for not following federal government suggestions not to wear a tie during the 2009 swine flu epidemic. It features an interview with the governor on Televisa's flagship nightly news show in which he explains his decision as an effort "to stop projecting the image of a sick country that has really hurt our economy".

Another of the videos, entitled The Bad Guy of Toluca, attacks the record of a former mayor of the state capital who was running for the post again in the 2009 elections. To a soundtrack of Prokofiev's Montagues and Capulets, it types out accusations such as: "He's the one who got divorced in order to marry his secretary, who he then promoted in his administration."

Other contracts shown to the Guardian detail blogs and websites promoting the PRI, to be constructed by other outside companies and individuals for the Televisa subsidiaries Comercio Más and Desarrollo Vista Hermosa SA de CV.

One set of instructions to team members tells them to distribute a video and post it on Facebook and the US social networking site Hi5.

The video, the origin of which is not revealed, accuses the mayor of a city in the state of using public resources to campaign for the PAN. The text makes no mention of any party political affiliation, and ends with the words: "Send this mail to your mates … I am really pissed off about it."

Televisa refused to meet the Guardian to discuss the allegations. It first ignored requests for comment, then proposed a meeting with legal counsel present. When the Guardian submitted a list of eight questions with a small sample document attached, a spokesman cancelled the meeting, saying the documents had not been not been submitted in a "timely" fashion.

Televisa added that Comercio Más acted for all major parties. It said: "Comercio Más is a small, wholly owned subsidiary that is and was in charge of the portal Esmas and since 2008 has been trying to develop skills for the placement of online advertisements. Comercio Más or Esmas has done presentations of its capabilities to both private and public sector. With regards to political parties, Comercio Más has signed agreements with a number of political parties, including all the major parties across the political spectrum (PRI, PAN, Movimiento Ciudadano and PRD). The scope of Esmas's work has always been legal."

Furthermore, after the 2009 federal elections, Comercio Más's work and its income from political parties was audited by the electoral authority the IFE, under resolution GC223/2010. The IFE was satisfied with the review."

But a spokesman for the PRD denied any knowledge of Comercio Más or Esmas. "I've never heard of it. They haven't done any work for us, not in this [presidential] campaign or previously," said the spokesman, César Yáñez. If Televisa or the PRI had suggested otherwise, he said, they were wrong: "It's completely false."

Further evidence of Televisa-commissioned work to promote Peña Nieto comes in a document apparently sent by an employee of the US company Blue State Digital enquiring about payment after the completion of "several tasks for Televisa". The subsequent list includes "many conference calls and meetings to discuss the web strategy for Handcock".

*Blue State Digital*

Blue State Digital is known for helping to develop Barack Obama's internet strategy in the 2008 US presidential elections. Blue State Digital did not respond to a request for comment.

Another document, apparently sent by a company called Producciones Salón to the address of a high-level Televisa employee called Germán Arellano, contains the subject title "edomex proposal", in reference to the acronym for the State of Mexico. It includes a budget for websites for the PRI in the state as well as "the design and implementation of an integrated strategy that articulates the totality of efforts around Handcock".

The contracts detail payments to be made by Televisa subsidiaries to outside providers for the pro-Peña Nieto materials. The documents leave it unclear whether Televisa footed the bills itself.

The Guardian was unable to obtain a response from Producciones Salón, which was to be found neither at the addresses and phone numbers contained in the contract nor at those on its website.

Seismologists Warn Japan against Nuclear Restart

Seismologists Warn Japan against Nuclear Restart:
TOKYO (Reuters) - Two prominent seismologists said on Tuesday that Japan is ignoring the safety lessons of last year's Fukushima crisis and warned against restarting two reactors next month.
Japan has approved the restart of the two reactors at the Kansai Electric Power Ohi nuclear plant, northwest of Tokyo, despite mass public opposition.
They will be the first to come back on line after all reactors were shut following a massive earthquake and tsunami last March that caused the worst nuclear crisis since Chernobyl at Tokyo Electric Power's Daiichi Fukushima plant.
Seismic modeling by Japan's nuclear regulator did not properly take into account active fault lines near the Ohi plant, Katsuhiko Ishibashi, a seismologist at Kobe University, told reporters.
"The stress tests and new safety guidelines for restarting nuclear power plants both allow for accidents at plants to occur," Ishibashi told reporters. [More]

Greek finance minister quits over health

Greek finance minister quits over health: Athens scrambles for successor before EU summit as the country’s six-day-old government is plunged further into disarray

Reported by FT.com 34 minutes ago.

China möchte Freihandelszone mit Mercosur

China möchte Freihandelszone mit Mercosur: Peking bleibt geschäftstüchtig: Ministerpräsident Wen hat bei einem Aufenthalt in Argentinien eine Freihandelszone mit der südamerikanischen Wirtschaftsgemeinschaft Mercosur vorgeschlagen. Was sagt die Mercosur dazu?

Brasil e China ampliam cooperação e criam fundo comercial bilionário

Brasil e China ampliam cooperação e criam fundo comercial bilionário: A China é o principal parceiro comercial do Brasil, responsável por 17% do comércio nacional. Parcerias firmadas entre os dois países prometem alavancar ainda mais as relações bilaterais.