Monday, December 15, 2014

Police storm Sydney cafe in bid to free hostages; fatalities reported

Gunfire and explosions heard in climax to standoff; at least two people killed, according to local media

Heavily-armed Australian police stormed a downtown Sydney cafe early Tuesday following a 16-hour standoff with a gunman who was holding an unknown number of hostages..

Japan's ruling party wins in landslide victory

Prime minister’s ruling coalition triumphs in lower house elections, securing mandate to continue economic reforms

Japan's ruling coalition won big in Sunday's lower house elections, returning the party of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to power and ensuring the continuation of reforms aimed at lifting the country's economy out of its two-decade funk.
At stake in the snap elections, called by Abe last month, was the 475-seat lower house, which is the more powerful of Japan's two houses and has the final say in picking a prime minister and approving most legislation.
With most of the votes counted, the ruling coalition claimed 326 seats, with the Liberal Democrats' 291 and 35 for the Buddhist-backed Komei party, according to NHK. The main opposition party, the Democratic Party of Japan, had about 73 seats — a stronger showing than many had expected.

Last Hong Kong pro-democracy camp cleared

A small group chanted ‘We will be back’ as Hong Kong police removed what remained of the Causeway Bay encampment

Hong Kong police pulled down barricades Monday, folded up tents and arrested some protesters at the third and final pro-democracy protest camp, putting an end to demonstrations that have blocked traffic in the southern Chinese city's streets for 2 1/2 months.

Thursday, December 4, 2014

Thai lawmakers vote to outlaw surrogacy industry


Thailand's parliament has voted to ban commercial surrogacy after outrage erupted over the largely unregulated industry following allegations an Australian couple abandoned a baby with Down's syndrome, a legislator said Friday.

A draft bill - which would see anyone profiting off surrogacy given a maximum ten year prison sentence - passed its first reading in the country's military-stacked parliament on Thursday, legislator Wallop Tungkananurak said.
"We want to put an end to this idea in foreigners' minds that Thailand is a baby factory," he told AFP. "The bill was adopted with overwhelming support."
Commercial surrogacy was technically banned by Thailand's Medical Council, but until recently even top fertility clinics were believed to offer the service.
The murky industry came under intense scrutiny this summer after a series of surrogacy scandals broke involving foreigners.
In August, a Thai mother who carried twin babies for an Australian couple accused them of abandoning a baby boy with Down's syndrome while taking his healthy sister.
The couple have denied deliberately leaving the boy, called Gammy, with the surrogate mother - who was paid around $15,000 to carry the twins.
In a separate case, police believe a Japanese man fathered at least 15 babies with surrogate mothers for unknown motives.
A gay Australian couple were also stopped from leaving Thailand with a baby because they had incomplete documents.
Thailand's military junta, which took over in a May coup, vowed to crack down on the industry.
Dozens, possibly hundreds, of foreign couples are thought to have been left in limbo after entering into surrogacy arrangements through clinics in the kingdom.

Taiwan’s premier resigns after local election losses

Taiwan’s pro-China ruling Nationalist Party suffered stronger-than-expected defeats in municipal elections Saturday, dealing a stiff blow to a president who has staked his reputation on closer ties with Beijing, and leading the premier to resign.

With more than 80 percent of precincts reporting, the Nationalists had lost eight city and county elections, including in longtime strongholds Taipei, the capital, and the major central city of Taichung. Nationalist Party candidates also lost elections in three counties, the northern port city of Keelung, the southern agricultural city of Chiayi and the city covering Taiwan’s main airport.
Pre-election polls had forecast Nationalist Party losses only in Taipei, Taichung and Keelung. Premier Jiang Yi-huah – the government’s No. 2 – resigned Saturday night after the defeats.
The heavy losses point to an electorate that is souring on President Ma Ying-jeou’s forging of closer ties with mainland China. The defeats will make it tougher for the Nationalists to hold onto the presidency in 2016 and jeopardize six years of landmark talks with China that have led to 21 agreements.
Those trade and investment deals have lifted Taiwan’s half-trillion-dollar economy, while raising Beijing’s hopes for political reunification. Beijing has claimed sovereignty over Taiwan since the Chinese civil war of the 1940s, but since taking office in 2008, Ma has set aside the old disputes to ease tensions through talks.
Taiwanese have been watching closely as Beijing takes a hard-line stance on demands for democratic rule in Hong Kong, a semiautonomous Chinese city that has been gripped by more two months of pro-democracy protests.
“We want to send the Nationalists a warning,” said Lin Wen-chih, a 48-year-old film producer who voted for the winning independent Taipei mayoral candidate, Ko Wen-je. “Taiwan is an independent country. We don’t want the Nationalists to take measures that would have it eaten up (by China).”
Preliminary results show that the chief opposition Democratic Progressive Party gained most in Saturday’s vote. The DPP favors continuing talks with China’s Communist leadership, but disputes the dialogue framework that binds the two sides under Beijing’s jurisdiction, instead preferring talks in an international setting.
A weakened Nationalist Party, also known as the Kuomintang, or KMT, may erode Ma’s mandate before 2016 to sign a pact with China to cut import tariffs, set up official representative offices on both sides and push for a meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping. If the opposition party wins the presidency, Beijing is likely to suspend deals with Taiwan.
Alan Romberg, East Asia Program director with the Stimson Institute, a think tank in Washington, said the opposition party remains a wild card in Taiwan-China relations.
“The Democratic Progressive Party has made a number of adjustments over time, moving from outright opposition to various economic ties to acceptance of such ties as important,” he said.
When Democratic Progressive Party President Chen Shui-bian ruled the island from 2000 to 2008, he angered China by advocating for constitutional independence. Beijing threatened then to use force to stop the move.
In March, Ma’s government faced thousands of student-led protesters who occupied parliament and nearby streets in Taipei to stop ratification of a service trade liberalization agreement with China.
“The electorate in general is not happy with the KMT running the country overall, and they’re also not happy with the local administration run by the KMT, and they want to have someone new to be in office,” Democratic Progressive Party Secretary-General Joseph Wu said.
Taiwanese elected a total 11,130 people to local offices Saturday after months of fierce campaigning marked by personal insults, truck-mounted loudspeakers and firecracker shows.
(AP)

Deaths reported in China 'terrorist attack'

State news agency says 15 people, including 11 assailants, killed in Shache district of violence-hit western region.



Up to 15 people have been killed in an attack in China's western Xinjiang region, according to the state news agency.
Xinhua said besides the dead, 14 people were injured in what it said was a terrorist attack on Friday in Shache county.
The Tianshan news portal said on Saturday that the attackers used vehicles, knives and explosives in the assault. The dead included 11 of the attackers, it said.

China to end using executed prisoners' organs

Under pressure from human rights groups, China set January 1 to end using executed prisoners for organ transplants.


China has said it will stop relying on executed prisoners as the source of transplanting organs, in response to human rights concerns, although uncertainties linger over where a replacement supply will come from, state media reported.
China has previously said it would phase out the practice by sometime in early 2015, but state media on Thursday reported January 1 as the first firm date to end the practice, citing the architect of China's transplant system, Huang Jiefu.