Wednesday, October 29, 2014



Manila, Philippines - A guttural, heart-wrenching cry reverberated inside the crowded funeral parlour
where the body of Filipino transgender Jeffrey "Jennifer" Laude lay in a white coffin as family and friends
mouthed angry anti-American slogans on the eve of his interment.
Distraught friends and family demanded justice for Laude, whose body was found in a toilet at a motel in
Olongapo city north of Manila two-weeks ago. He was last seen with a man later identified through a closed
circuit television camera as 19-year-old US Marine private first class Joseph Scott Pemberton, who was
subsequently charged with murder.
The case is now threatening to undermine relations between the US and the Philippines, and again brings
into public discourse the controversial Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA), a treaty ratified by Manila in 1999,
that allowed for resumption of large-scale joint military manoeuvres with American troops.

West Papua: New Indonesian President Urged to Address Violations on First Official Visit (UNPO) - Maleeha

Newly elected Indonesian President, Joko Widodo, will visit West Papua on Thursday [23 October 2014]. This marks his first official visit to the area, just three days after his inauguration.  Human Rights Watch has urged President Widodo to use this visit to address the grave human rights abuses in West Papua, and to live up to his campaign promises to improve services there.
Below is an article published by the Jakarta Post:

Indonesian President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo should use his first official visit to Papua and West Papua on Thursday [23 October 2014] to endorse specific measures to address serious human rights problems in the country’s easternmost island, a New York-based rights watchdog has said.
Human Rights Watch deputy Asia director Phelim Kine said Jokowi deserved credit for recognizing that Papua’s problems demanded the urgent attention of his new government.

S. Korea takes down disputed border ‘Christmas tree’ (F24) - Maleeha

Latest update : 2014-10-22

Abbot Point spoil dumping plan will not get impact study- (BBC)- Rachel


The Australian government will not conduct a full environmental impact assessment for the disposal of dredge spoil on sensitive wetlands at Abbot Point, near the Great Barrier Reef.
The controversial project will be assessed using "preliminary documentation" only, documents show.
Abbot Point, Queensland. March 2012Abbot Point, south of Cairns, is a major coal port and is being expanded to cope with increased exports.
Environmental groups say the government's step is highly unusual.
They say fast-tracking the dredging approval would put an already threatened reef in greater danger of degradation.
Greenpeace reef campaigner Shani Tager said: "Adani, the Indian coal company behind the new Abbot Point coal terminal, has been holding the Queensland and federal governments to ransom over this development, threatening to pull out unless their demands are met.
"[Environment Minister] Greg Hunt has rolled over, again failing to stand up to Adani and its reef wrecking agenda."

Australia government reaches emissions reduction deal- (BBC) Rachel

File photo: Conveyor belts carry coal from the open cut mine to the Loy Yang B power station in the Latrobe Valley, 150km east of Melbourne, 13  August 2009The Australian government has reached a deal with a key political party and independent senators to push through a carbon emissions plan. The Palmer United Party, led by mining tycoon Clive Palmer, and senators Nick Xenophon and John Madigan agreed to a controversial emissions reduction fund.The $2.2 billion fund will be used to pay big polluters to cut emissions and use cleaner energy. The deal was criticized by the opposition and environment groups.
Australia has one of the world's highest carbon emissions per capita. The new carbon emissions plan replaces a carbon tax scheme which senators voted to repeal in July.
Prime Minister Tony Abbott's ruling coalition had campaigned partly on repealing the carbon tax and replacing it with its own reduction plan.

Japan, North Korea abduction talks- (AP) Rachel

PYONGYANG, North Korea (AP) - North Korean and Japanese officials ended two days of talks Wednesday with Japan repeating its request to focus and speed up the investigation over the fates of Japanese citizens abducted by North Korea in the 1970s and '80s.

The abduction issue has long been a major obstacle in the frosty ties between the two nations, which have no formal diplomatic relations. While the two sides have met in third countries, it's the first time in a decade that they are having official talks in North Korea.
"We emphasized again that the abduction issue should get the highest priority," Junichi Ihara, the foreign ministry official heading the Japanese delegation, told reporters after talks ende. "We strongly requested that the investigation be conducted promptly, and that they inform us of the results as soon as possible."
After years of denial, North Korea acknowledged in an unprecedented 2002 summit between former North Korean leader Kim Jong Il and then-Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi that its agents had kidnapped 13 Japanese, mainly to train spies in Japanese language and culture. It allowed five of them to return to Japan that year, but said the others had died.
Japan thinks at least some of them may still be alive, and believes hundreds more may also have been abducted.

Australia trying to confirm death of IS militant Mohammad Ali Baryalei (BBC) - MJ Gillis

Mohammad Ali Baryalei is believed to have recruited scores of Australians to fight with IS in the Middle East.

He was also accused of being behind a plot to carry out "demonstration killings" in Sydney.
Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said the government was seeking to verify the reports.

"I can't confirm it at this stage," she told reporters at a function in Canberra.

Mr Baryalei had reportedly been working for IS on the Turkey-Syria border, facilitating the passage of volunteer fighters into Syria.

Australian media reported on Wednesday that a Sydney friend of Mr Baryalei who is now living in Syria posted on Facebook on Tuesday night that the jihadist had been "martyred".


China could 'punish' Hong Kong over protests, says ex-HK central bank chief (Reuters) - MJ Gillis

HONG KONG (Reuters) - A member of China's central bank's advisory body warned on Wednesday that Beijing will punish Hong Kong if pro-democracy protests that have paralyzed parts of the Chinese-controlled financial center for a month are allowed to continue.
Joseph Yam, executive vice president of advisory body China Society for Finance and Banking and a former Hong Kong central bank chief, said the city's financial integrity and stability of its currency were also at risk.
"Hong Kong's economic prosperity was built on its intermediary role between the mainland and overseas, especially in the financial realm," said Yam, who urged student protesters to return to their homes.
"(When) the intermediary is uncooperative, unreliable, trouble making, the mainland will for sure reduce reliance, make a fresh start at another place, have two strings to its bow and lessen preferential policies toward Hong Kong amid the economic reform process."

Tuesday, October 28, 2014

China, Vietnam say want lasting solution to sea dispute (Reuters) - MJ Gillis

HANOI/BEIJING (Reuters) - China and Vietnam agreed on Monday to use an existing border dispute mechanism to find a solution to a territorial dispute in the South China Sea, saying they did not want it to affect relations.

The two countries have sought to patch up ties since their long-running row erupted in May, triggered by China's deployment a drilling rig in waters claimed by the communist neighbors, which lead to confrontation at sea between rival vessels and violent anti-Chinese protests in Vietnam.

After a meeting between China's top diplomat, State Councilor Yang Jiechi, and Vietnam Foreign Minister Pham Binh Minh in Hanoi, China's foreign ministry said they had agreed to "appropriately handle the maritime problem".

Beijing Zeroes In on Energy Potential of South China Sea (New York Times) - MJ Gillis



HONG KONG — For the past several years, China has been throwing its weight around the South China Sea, a body of water studded with coral reefs that laps at the shores of not only China but also Vietnam, Malaysia, the Philippines, Brunei and Taiwan.

China has sent ships to stake claims across the area, notably when a flotilla that included the country’s most advanced amphibious assault vessel arrived at James Shoal, 50 miles east of Malaysia’s coast, in 2013.

Much of this muscle-flexing is political. China is a rising power and the South China Sea is a logical place for it to exercise its growing strength. The sea is a vital freight lane, through which a third of global shipping traffic passes. It is also a main focus of geopolitical jockeying for both Beijing and the United States, which has been strengthening its relations with the Philippines, Malaysia and Vietnam.

Can New Zealand's farming boom be sustained? (SBS News) - Jessica Bae

Can New Zealand's farming boom be sustained?

New Zealand's milk industry is booming and bringing in millions of dollars, but there are concerns over the economic and environmental costs of sustaining it.

New Zealand is much more than rolling green hills, snow-capped mountains, the All Blacks and Lord of the Rings. 

All of those made New Zealand famous. But it’s milk that’s made the nation rich.

With dairy farms now dominating the landscape, New Zealand exports 95 per cent of the 19 million tonnes of milk it produces every year.

China is the biggest customer. It buys half of all its dairy products from the Kiwis.


Seoul officials say Kim Jong Un had ankle surgery (AP) - Jessica Bae

SEOUL OFFICIALS SAY KIM JONG UN HAD ANKLE SURGERY

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- South Korea's spy agency said Tuesday it has solved the mystery of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un's 6-week public absence, which set off a frenzy of wild speculation around the world.

Execution sought for Korea ferry captain (SBS News) - Jessica Bae

Execution sought for Korea ferry captain

Prosecutors want the death penalty for the captain of the Korean ferry that sank in April, killing over 300 people.
Prosecutors have demanded the death penalty for the captain of the South Korean ferry that sank in April, branding him an unrepentant liar who abandoned the more than 300 people who died in the disaster.
They also sought life sentences for three senior crew members and prison terms of between 15 to 30 years for 11 others as the trial of Captain Lee Joon-Se ok and his crew wound up in the southern city of Gwangju in an emotional session that left many of the defendants in tears.
The 69-year-old Lee "escaped the ship without making any efforts to rescue passengers", senior prosecutor Park Jae-Geok told the court.
"He made excuses and lied. He showed no repentance ... and so we ask for the death sentence," Park said.

Australia bans travel from Ebola-hit countries (Reuters) - Jessica Bae

Australia bans travel from Ebola-hit countries; U.S. isolates troops



(Reuters) - Australia became the first developed country on Tuesday to shut its borders to citizens of the countries worst-hit by the West African Ebola outbreak, a move those states said stigmatized healthy people and would make it harder to fight the disease.
Australia's ban on visas for citizens of Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea followed decisions by the U.S. military to quarantine soldiers returning from an Ebola response mission and some U.S. states to isolate aid workers. The United Nations said such measures could discourage vital relief work, making it harder to stop the spread of the deadly virus.

China 'to protect whistle-blowers' amid corruption fight (BBC News)--Lelia Busch

Chinese authorities say whistle-blowers will be protected, amid an ongoing crackdown on corruption.
China's top prosecuting body said it has, for the first time, laid out rights for those exposing malpractice.
It urged citizens to file reports in a "lawful manner" via official channels and promised a quick response.
China's President Xi Jinping has prioritised stamping out corruption in the Communist Party and government since he took office in 2012.
The BBC's Martin Patience in Beijing says the fact that the authorities are trying to reassure the public in this fashion highlights the reluctance many whistle-blowers have about coming forward.
Those reporting official wrongdoing and corruption sometimes face violent reprisals, says our correspondent.

Protection plan
The Supreme Court Procuratorate said in a statement that it had "for the first time clarified the rights that whistle-blowers enjoy", including the right to protection and rewards.
"After receiving a report from someone who provides his real name, the procuratorate should do a risk assessment and must, in a timely manner, implement a protection plan and prevent reprisals on the whistle-blower," it said.
The prosecuting body also encouraged citizens to file reports via a telephone hotline and website recently set up by the government.
"Whistle-blowers should file their reports in a lawful manner, and cannot deliberately twist the truth, falsify evidence and cause people harm," it said.
China does not give legal protection to those who make allegations outside official channels.
Correspondents say that while the authorities may want to tackle corruption, they remain wary about giving up too much control.
Since the latest anti-corruption campaign began, several bloggers who have posted their allegations online have been harassed and beaten.
Reuters reported that blogger Li Jianxin was stabbed in the face in July, blinding him in his right eye, by two unidentified men who also splashed acid on his back.
Li had posted accusations of official misconduct in Huizhou city in Guangdong province.
Earlier this month, an investigative journalist who reported on a state-controlled construction equipment maker was jailed for defamation and bribery.

Sunday, October 26, 2014

Australia parliament reverses face veil rule (al Jazeera)--Lelia Busch

Australia's parliament has abandoned amid an outcry a controversial plan to make women wearing the niqab or the face veil sit in separate glassed public enclosure in the building due to security concerns.
The backdown on Monday followed a decision on October 2 to seat people wearing face coverings in areas normally reserved for noisy school children while visiting parliament.
It followed heated debate about potential security risks since the rise of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) organisation.
The ruling was condemned by human rights and race discrimination groups, and Prime Minister Tony Abbott asked that it be reconsidered.
Race discrimination commissioner Tim Soutphommasane told Fairfax Media the original ruling meant Muslim women were being treated differently to non-Muslim women.
"No-one should be treated like a second-class citizen, not least in the parliament," he said.
"I have yet to see any expert opinion or analysis to date which indicates that the burqa or the niqab represents an additional or special security threat."

'No security reason'
Labor opposition member Tony Burke welcomed the backdown but said the initial decision should never have been made.
"What possessed them to think that segregation was a good idea?" he said. "Segregation was previously introduced, apparently, with no security advice attached to it and no security reason attached to it."
The October 2 announcement was made a few hours before the end of the final sitting day of Parliament's last two-week session and had no practical effect.
A statement announcing the reversal of the ban said face coverings would have to be removed temporarily at the security check point at the front door so that staff could "identify any person who may have been banned from entering Parliament House or who may be known, or discovered, to be a security risk.''
Security has increased at Parliament House since the government stepped up its terror warning to the second-highest level on a four-tier scale last month in response to the domestic threat posed by supporters of ISIL. Australia is participating in the US-led coalition against the fighters in Iraq.

North Korea frees detained American man (al Jazeera)--Lelia Busch

North Korea has freed Jeffrey Fowle, one of three Americans detained by the country, and he is being flown home to his family in Ohio, according to the White House.
After departing from Pyongyang, North Korea's capital, on Tuesday, the US plane carrying Fowle flew to the Pacific island of Guam, site of a major US navy base, before leaving for the US, Marie Harf, State Department spokesperson, said.
"In this time-frame the Department of Defence was able to offer a plane," she replied when asked if a military aircraft was used.
Harf said the release was facilitated by Swedish diplomats.
Sweden has an embassy in Pyongyang and acts as a "protecting power" for the US.
Passengers on another flight at Pyongyang airport reported seeing a blue-and-black US military passenger jet, a stars-and-stripes emblem on its tail, parked on the tarmac on Tuesday afternoon, a source in Pyongyang told Reuters.
Fowle, 56, a street repair worker from Miamisburg, Ohio, was arrested in May for leaving a bible at a sailor's club in the North Korean city of Chongjin, where he was travelling as a tourist.
The communist state is particularly sensitive to religious proselytising.

Move welcomed
North Korea made it a condition of Fowle's release that the US government transport him out of the country and set a time for him to be picked up, US officials said.
Josh Earnest, White House spokesperson, said on Tuesday the US welcomed the move, but pressed North Korea to free the two remaining Americans.

"While this is a positive decision ... we remain focused on the continued detention of Kenneth Bae and Matthew Miller and again call on the DPRK to immediately release them," Earnest said, referring to the country's official name of Democratic People's Republic of Korea.
The US will continue to work actively on those cases, he said.
Miller was arrested in April for a separate incident. The longest to be held by North Korea is Bae, a Korean-American missionary arrested in November 2012 and sentenced to 15 years hard labour.
US officials declined to give details of the negotiations that led to Fowle's release, or to speculate why North Korea released him in case it jeopardised talks over Bae and Miller.
The US has long insisted that the release of the prisoners should be unconditional and not linked to talks on North Korea's disputed nuclear programme.

Thursday, October 9, 2014

Indonesia Markets Slide as Opposition Shakes Confidence (WSJ) - Maleeha

Indonesia’s currency and stocks are sliding as investors’ confidence in the country’s next president fades even before he takes office later this month, and fears are growing that the selloff may have further to go.
The rupiah has slumped to its weakest level in eight months, while the country’s benchmark stock index has lost 4.5% over the past three weeks, as of the market’s close Thursday.
The losses are spurred by worries that President-elect Joko Widodo will be unable to follow through on promises to build infrastructure and cut expensive fuel-price subsidies, moves deemed critical to juicing up economic growth and attracting foreign investment.
The latest setback came Tuesday when Indonesian lawmakers selected an opposition politician as the next head of a consultative assembly that has the power to amend the constitution and impeach the country’s president. On Wednesday stocks fell 1.5%.
“The opposition has thus far proven more united than our previous expectation and is bent on using every possible mechanism to deter and derail President-elect Joko Widodo’s potentially progressive reforms,” Nomura said. Foreign investors, whose buying of Indonesian equities has been a support all year, may pull back if expectations are not met, it said.

Wednesday, October 8, 2014

North and South Korean Boats Exchange Fire (The Diplomat) - MJ Gillis

North and South Korean Boats Exchange Fire

North and South Korean naval boats exchanged fire on Tuesday, but the skirmish won’t impact otherwise improving ties.

North and South Korean naval patrol boats exchanged fire on Tuesday, according to South Korea’s Defense Ministry and Joint Chiefs of Staff.

The incident occurred near the Northern Limit Line (NLL), the de facto maritime border between the two Koreas. A statement released by the Republic of Korea (ROK) Joint Chiefs of Staff said said the incident began when the North Korean patrol boat crossed into South Korean waters, prompting an ROK naval patrol boat in the area to send warning messages and fire a warning shot in an attempt to get the North Korean vessel to retreat back across the maritime border. Instead of retreating, however, the North Korean vessel responded to the warning shot by firing at the ROK naval patrol boat.

China Detains Supporters of Hong Kong Protests (Al Jazeera) MJ Gillis

China detains supporters of Hong Kong protest
Artists and journalist among several people detained in Beijing, and accused of supporting Hong Kong demonstrations.
Chinese police have detained a well-known poet and seven other people ahead of a poetry reading planned in Beijing to support pro-democracy protesters in Hong Kong, relatives of the detained said.
Police apprehended poet Wang Zang in front of his Beijing home on the night of October 1 and then searched his apartment and confiscated a computer, a router and other materials, his wife Wang Li told the AP news agency on Wednesday.
On September 30, Wang had posted on Twitter a picture of himself raising his middle finger and holding an umbrella, a symbol of solidarity adopted by the protesters demanding open nominations for Hong Kong's chief executive elections.
A message over the picture read: "Wearing black clothes, bald and holding an umbrella, I support Hong Kong."

Hong Kong protests at crossroads, talks to start on Friday (Reuters) MJ Gillis

HONG KONG (Reuters) - Pro-democracy protesters in Hong Kong agreed with the city's government late on Tuesday to start formal talks later this week to address concerns that have brought tens of thousands of people onto the city's streets.
The student-led demonstrations have calmed since clashes with police over a week ago, and the number of protesters has fallen since violent scuffles broke out at the weekend between demonstrators and pro-Beijing opponents.
On Tuesday a few hundred protesters remained camped out on the roads leading into the city's main government and business districts, blocking traffic and causing some of the city's schools to close.
The protesters have demanded that the city's Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying step down and that China allow Hong Kong people the right to vote for a leader of their choice in 2017 elections. China wants to select candidates for the election. Leung, appointed by China, has ignored calls to step down. ID

Hong Kong Enters a Standoff Over Barricades as Protests Ebb (New York Times) MJ Gillis


HONG KONG — The pro-democracy demonstrations that paralyzed blocks of downtown Hong Kong for nearly two weeks have dissipated to a few hardy thousand, but for reasons many residents cannot comprehend, the streets are still impassable.

The battle for territory between the student-led pro-democracy demonstrators and the Beijing-backed city government has come down to a strange standoff over the metal barricades themselves, set up on the streets and then virtually abandoned by protesters.

The students insist they remain, while the government is afraid to touch them, fearing a backlash that will inflame and re-energize the protests.

Senior government officials “don’t want to give them any excuse that the government is taking things by force,” said a person involved in the government’s decision-making, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the delicate political nature of the situation.

Japan, US revising defense plans with eye on China- Rachel AP

Japan, US revising defense plans with eye on China


TOKYO (AP) - Japan and the United States are revising their mutual defense guidelines for the first time in nearly two decades to respond to China's military expansion and increase Japan's role in regional defense.
An interim report released Wednesday says the U.S. and Japan are pursuing a wider partnership that requires "enhanced capabilities and greater shared responsibilities."
The revision, the first since 1997, comes at a time of heightened Japan-China tensions over islands claimed by both countries in the East China Sea, as well as continuing concern about North Korea's missile and nuclear weapons development.
"What we need to address today is quite different from what we were aiming for in 1997," Koji Kano, a Defense Ministry official in the Japan-U.S. cooperation division, told reporters earlier this week. "The point is how Japan and the U.S. can respond better in the current environment."
The revised guidelines will factor in policy changes under Prime Minister Shinzo Abe that enable Japan to shoulder more responsibility for its own and regional defense, and relieve some of America's military burden in the Asia-Pacific region.
China, ahead of the report's release, said it would closely watch the new guidelines and warned that they should not infringe on its interests.
"It should not go beyond its bilateral scope. It should not hurt the interest of a third party such as China," Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said at a regular news briefing in Beijing.
In July, in a historic shift in Japan's post World War II defense policy, Abe's Cabinet approved a new interpretation of Japan's pacifist constitution. The reinterpretation allows the military to defend the U.S. and other allies under what is known as collective self-defense.
Japan also adopted defense guidelines last December that make southern island defense a priority, notably the Japanese-controlled disputed islands, which are called Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China.
The interim report stresses the importance of "seamless" coordination between Japan and the U.S. to ensure a swift response to a range of contingencies, including ones that fall short of an actual military attack. Japan has raised concern in earlier reports about so-called gray zone incidents, such as Chinese fishermen occupying the disputed islands or a foreign submarine entering the waters around them.
The revised guidelines will cover new areas such as missile defense, military equipment and maritime security to reflect better the changing security environment, Japanese officials said.

Is Kim Jong Un still in charge of North Korea?- Rachel CNN

Is Kim Jong Un still in charge of 

North Korea?

(CNN) -- Events in North Korea have left the world wondering: Where's leader Kim Jong Un and is he still running perhaps the most isolated country on Earth?
Some analysts speculate Kim may have been ousted by an old guard from the era of his late father, whose 2011 death put the son in power.
First, Kim Jong Un gained a lot of weight. Then he developed a limp. Now the 31-year-old leader has been out of the public eye since September 3, during which he missed an important state meeting and, more recently, a meeting Tuesday to mark the 17th anniversary of his father's election as general secretary of the Workers' Party.
Those events may not seem like much. After all, Kim could merely be ill, analysts say. In fact, official North Korean media said Kim was "suffering from discomfort," with no elaboration.
But a surprise weekend visit by the No. 2 and No. 3 leaders of North Korea to South Korea has many wondering if bigger intrigue is afoot. Those two leaders plus another top official attended the closing of the Asian Games and then told the South that the North is willing to hold high-level meetings this fall, according to the South.
Though such talks have been attempted in the past, a new round could be significant toward advancing any potential reconciliation on the long divided Korean peninsula.
Which raises the question, where is Kim? And why did the North make a last-minute visit to the South?
Is Kim Jong Un lying low?

6 die in dengue virus outbreak in southern China- Rachel AP

6 die in dengue virus outbreak in southern China


Published: Yesterday

BEIJING (AP) - The dengue virus has killed six people and infected more than 23,000 in southern China's worst outbreak of the mosquito-transmitted disease in about two decades, officials said Tuesday.
Authorities in worst-affected Guangdong province attribute the severity of this year's outbreak to exceptionally hot and wet weather, plus increasing travel by residents to regions where dengue is endemic, especially Southeast Asia.
The Guangdong health agency said on its website that 19,631 of the 23,146 cases reported as of Monday were in the provincial capital of Guangzhou, a sprawling city in China's manufacturing heartland near the border with Hong Kong. It said more than 1,000 new infections were being registered in Guangdong every day, with other provinces reporting a few dozen cases.
Authorities have dispatched teams around Guangzhou to spray insecticide to kill the mosquitoes that spread the virus, China's official Xinhua News Agency said.
Dengue causes flu-like symptoms and rashes. It usually is not fatal, but can be especially severe for younger victims.

N. Korea declares 2015 year of unification, boosts readiness for all-out war: Seoul (Yonhap) - Maleeha

SEOUL, Oct. 7 (Yonhap) -- With a goal to achieve national reunification in 2015, North Korea has geared up for all-out wars by conducting tactical trainings and boosting its attack capabilities, Seoul's defense ministry said Tuesday. "After declaring 2015 the year of completing unification, North Korea has been prepared for full-scale wars," the ministry said in a report presented to the National Assembly for an annual audit of state agencies.

The communist country has ratcheted up tensions on the Korean Peninsula by firing off a series of
rockets this year, though it has made peace offensives toward the South recently. Last week, Pyongyang sent key aides to its leader Kim Jong-un to the western port city of Incheon and sat down for talks with Seoul's high-ranking officials to agree upon holding another high-level inter-Korean meeting later this month or early November.


Vietnam tanker and 18 crew missing amid piracy fears (BBC) - Maleeha


A Vietnamese oil tanker has gone missing en route to Vietnam from Singapore, prompting fears that pirates may be responsible.
The Sunrise-689 was carrying 5,226 tons of oil products and 18 crew members when it went missing last Thursday.
It was scheduled to reach Quang Tri province in Vietnam on Sunday.
Vietnamese authorities have asked counterparts in Malaysia, Indonesia and Singapore for help in locating the vessel.
The tanker went missing 40 minutes into its journey from Singapore, sparking a search-and-rescue operation.

Tuesday, October 7, 2014

Asia shares buckle beneath global growth woes (Reuters) - Jessica Bae

Asia shares buckle beneath global growth woes


(Reuters) - Asian stocks slid on Wednesday as worries about waning global growth lifted safe-haven bonds and the yen, while shoving oil prices to their lowest in more than two years.
Government bonds were in big demand as investors wagered global inflation would continue to slow and even put off the day when U.S. interest rates might rise.
Minutes of the Federal Reserve's last policy meeting are due later in the session and markets will be acutely sensitive to how the debate between hawks and doves on the committee was playing out.

S.Korea offers measures to shield exporters from falling yen (Reuters) - Jessica Bae

S.Korea offers measures to shield exporters from falling yen

Oct 8 (Reuters) - South Korea announced several measures to aid local exporters hit by a falling yen, as it expressed concern that prolonged weakness of the Japanese currency could do long-term damage to the Korean economy.
The government will work to cut the costs of insurance on exchange-rate volatility for the roughly 4,000 small-to-medium sized companies directly affected by fluctuations in the yen , the Ministry of Strategy and Finance said in a statement on Wednesday.
It said the government will provide affected companies one-on-one consulting on business difficulties stemming from the weakened yen and provide concessional loans.
Roughly 1 trillion won ($937.7 million) will be allocated for such loans and financial aid for firms, but no details were given on the terms for extending them.

Hong Kong protests: Formal talks agreed as protests skrink (BBC) - Jessica Bae

Hong Kong protests: Formal talks agreed as protests shrink
Representatives of Hong Kong's pro-democracy protesters have agreed to hold formal talks with the government.
No date has been set but the students made it clear the talks would be called off if the remaining demonstrators were cleared from the streets by force.
As the protests continued for their second week, crowds began to die down early on Tuesday.
Pro-democracy activists are protesting at China's plans to vet candidates when Hong Kong holds elections in 2017.
They are demanding that the central government in Beijing allow a fully free vote for the territory's leader.


Sunday, October 5, 2014

Australia probes sexual abuse claims on Nauru (al Jazeera)--Lelia Busch

Australia has ordered an inquiry into claims of sexual misconduct by staff at a refugee camp in Nauru, including whether the reports were fabricated by aid workers.
The government said on Friday that 10 aid workers were removed from the South Pacific island following reports of coaching detainees to commit self-harm protests.
Asylum seekers who arrive on people-smuggling boats are denied resettlement in Australia and sent to camps on Nauru and Papua New Guinea. The UN and rights groups have criticised the policy, under which migrants face long periods of detention while they are processed.
If people want to be political activists, that's their choice, but they don't get to do it on the taxpayer's dollar and working in a sensitive place like Nauru
Scott Morrison, Immigration minister
Refugee advocates this week said women in the Nauru centre were regularly required to strip and exchange sexual favours with guards for access to the showers, prompting calls for an investigation by the opposition Labor and Greens parties.
Greens senator Sarah Hanson-Young said there were also accusations children had been forced to have sex in front of guards at the centre.
Immigration Minister Scott Morrison said the reports were serious and "abhorrent" if true.
"Such allegations should never be taken lightly; should never be made lightly," he told reporters in Canberra.
He said he had also received reports that staff of service providers at the Nauru centre allegedly engaged in a broader campaign seeking to undermine the government's immigration policies.
This included the alleged misuse of official reports, orchestrating protest activity - including the use of children in protests and coaching detainees to harm themselves to ensure their evacuation to Australia for treatment.

Tiny wasps deployed to kill crop-eating pests (al Jazeera)--Lelia Busch

Scientists will release 3,000 parasitoid wasps in a cassava plantation in the Indonesian city of Bogor, hoping they will prey on the pink mealybug pest that has devastated the crop, the second-most-consumed starch in Indonesia.
The mealybug, a sap-sucking insect originally from South America, thrives in tropical climates and reproduces year-round. Each female lays about 500 eggs at a time, resulting in up to 15 new generations of the bugs annually.
"If not brought under control [in Indonesia], this invasive pest has the potential to considerably reduce cassava yield as it previously did in Thailand and elsewhere in the Asia region," said Johannes Willem Ketelaar, the integrated pest management specialist for vegetables with the Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) in the Asia-Pacific region.
A photo of the parasitoid wasp released by the International Center for Tropical Agriculture [AP]
Parasitoid wasps lay eggs inside the mealybug - and when the eggs hatch as larvae, the mealybug implodes. The strategy has been successfully used before to address a mealybug infestation in Thailand in 2010, as well as in Africa's cassava belt, where the pest population was reduced to less than 10 percent of its peak, according to the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research Centres (CGIAR).
But repeated introductions of new crops and species to foreign ecosystems were what created the mealybug problem in the first place. Neither the insect nor cassava are indigenous to the Greater Mekong subregion, which includes Thailand, Indonesia, Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Vietnam, and China's southern Yunnan province.
"There is always a risk of unintended consequences when introducing a new species into an ecosystem," said Laura Kahn, a physician and co-founder of the One Health Initiative, a scientific research movement investigating interaction among humans, animals and ecosystems.
Nevertheless, using the parasitoid wasps as a form of biocontrol is more environmentally sound than pesticides, scientists say, and has a proven track record.
Taking over, 'alien-style'
Indonesian cassava farmers first sighted the mealybug in 2010. The pests infected entire plantations in Lampung and Java by 2014, according to Aunu Rauf, an entomologist at Bogor Agricultural University.
Mealybugs slowly perish and completely die within about two weeks, while the parasitoid wasp develops and feeds inside the mealybug body.
- Kris Wyckhuys, cassava entomologist
"The farmers did not know how to contain it. They tried to cut the tips off the leaves, but it wouldn't stop spreading," said Rauf.
Scientists at the International Centre for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT) and FAO, in partnership with the Bogor Agricultural University, decided to introduce the wasps.
With heads the size of pins, the two-millimetre-long wasps use the mealybug's body as a host by implanting their eggs inside and growing into larvae, eventually taking over the plant-sucking pests, "alien-style", according to Kris Wyckhuys, a cassava entomologist at CIAT based in Hanoi.
"Following parasitism, mealybugs slowly perish and completely die within about two weeks, while the parasitoid wasp develops and feeds inside the mealybug's body," Wyckhuys explained.
It will take two years to bring down the mealybug population using the wasps, which scientists hope will adapt to local conditions and reproduce to initiate a long-term, full-fledged assault on mealybugs, which otherwise could become more resilient because of temperature increases associated with climate change.
Better than pesticides
The use of parasitoids, or parasite-like organisms that develop inside other life forms and later kill them, is more effective, safe and sustainable than pesticides, especially in Southeast Asia where farmers often do not use protective equipment, according to the FAO.
"Use of pesticides are often ineffective, contaminate the environment, can result in secondary pest outbreaks and can be hazardous for the applicator's health," said Ketelaar. 
Agricultural officers prepare to release parasitoid wasps at a cassava field in Bogor, Indonesia [AP]
In addition, the waxy substance covering the mealybug's body acts as an armour against insecticide, while the toxic poison is likely to kill other beneficial insects including the wasps, according to Rauf. 
According to the FAO, for the wasp deployment to be successful, "farmers must stop use of pesticides", stressed Ketelaar. 
The study conducted before the wasp release did not find any potential negative side effects on Indonesian flora and fauna, noted CIAT's Wyckhuys, who added the wasps have never been known to host in other species besides mealybugs.
But given that 75 percent of all emerging infectious diseases originate in the animal world - often when exotic species are introduced to a new place - risks cannot be completely ruled out, said Kahn.
For example, Kahn said, "black nose syndrome, the fungal disease that is decimating the little brown bat population in the US, was probably introduced by [a European species]. Hopefully nothing bad will happen with the wasps, but you never know."
Entomologists, however, say the greater risk is that the initiative will not work, because of the use of pesticides or unforeseen wasp predators. 
"The huge task of tackling the mealybug problem is just starting, and lots of work remains to be done," concluded Wyckhuys.