Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Bangkok faces protests against PM


Tens of thousands of protesters have gathered in the Thai capital, Bangkok, in a fresh bid to force Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva out of office.

The protesters are mainly supporters of the former premier, Thaksin Shinawatra, who was deposed in a 2006 coup and faces jail if he returns from exile.

Security forces are deployed at major sites around Bangkok.

Thailand's long political crisis has yet to end despite a court's removal of Mr Thaksin's allies from government.

As protesters gathered, Mr Abhisit said he would not dissolve parliament.

Red shirts gather

Police said around 30,000 red-clad supporters of Mr Thaksin had gathered outside the main government offices in the capital, where demonstrators have been staging a sit-in for the last two weeks.

The protest comes a day after Mr Abhisit's motorcade was attacked following a cabinet meeting in the resort town of Pattaya.

The demonstrators, from the United Front for Democracy against Dictatorship (UDD), claim Mr Abhisit came to power illegally, and accuse the current government of being a puppet of the military.

Protest leaders say they expect thousands more to come from around the country for what they have called "D-Day" in their efforts to push Mr Abhisit to dissolve his four-month-old government and hold elections.

Police said they believed protesters were planning to surround the residence of one of the widely respected king's top advisers and a former Prime Minister Prem Tinsulanonda, who has been accused by Mr Thaksin of orchestrating the coup that toppled him in 2006.

Mr Thaksin, who is living in an undisclosed foreign country, said late on Tuesday that the protests would mark a "historic day for Thailand".

"We will come peacefully but we need as many people as possible to show that the Thai people will not tolerate these politics any more," he said in a speech via video-link to supporters outside Government House.

Quake village crumbles in aftershocks

In the ancient mountain-top village of Fossa, surrounded by the soaring snow-capped peaks of the Appenine mountains, the aftershocks of Monday's earthquake are still being felt.

Fossa was badly hit when the quake first struck but some of the houses that remained standing are far from secure.

Just before I arrived in the village - home to about 500 or so people - a large aftershock rocked the mountain.

Four officials had a narrow escape as the building they were inspecting at the time started to collapse. They ran for their lives as it crashed to the ground around their ears.

The first earthquake seems to have weakened some of the buildings so they now collapse from the inside. The men who escaped were very lucky.

Now the village has been closed once again amid fears that more buildings could fall as the aftershocks continue.

Those shocks are an unhappy reminder of the earthquake to the thousands who now find themselves with no home to go to. As many as two thirds of the buildings in L'Aquila and surrounding villages like Fossa are unsafe.

Last night many chose to sleep in their cars rather than leave the town they call home.

Field kitchen

But that is no long-term solution, so at an army base not far from the centre of town the Italian Red Cross is building a temporary field kitchen that will provide 10,000 meals a day for families who have nowhere else to turn.

Volunteers are busy putting flooring down and unloading pallets of food - borlotti and cannelloni beans are stacked along with huge tins of plum tomatoes.

There are also large supplies of milk as well, of course, as water. The centre seems well resourced and well run.

The head of the Italian Red Cross, Francesco Rocca, says the situation is very grave. Tens of thousands face months of uncertainty.

History lessons stymied in Lebanon


Despite a long and varied history, classes on the subject are blinkered when taught in Lebanon, as the BBC's Natalia Antelava found out when she visited a school in the capital, Beirut.

Kristina and Ali sit side by side in their history class and together they learn about the Phoenicians and the Romans, the Greeks and the Ottomans.

But when it comes to Lebanon's more recent, turbulent past - their school teaches them nothing.

Modern history is not part of the curriculum in Lebanon, and just like thousands of other children Kristina and Ali, who are both 14, turn to their families for answers their history teacher cannot provide.

"When I want to know something, I ask my dad," Ali says.

Kristina, who comes from a different religious background, says she does the same.

Their history teacher does not like the arrangement, but in a country split along sectarian lines, she prefers to stick to it.

"Sometimes students ask about more recent events," she says, "but it's difficult to explain things to them without getting into sectarian divisions."

Thorny issue

In Lebanon children are not taught modern history because adults cannot agree on it.

Even the ancient history is a thorny issue here.

There are dozens of the government-approved history textbooks that offer different takes on the past.

While Christian schools tend to focus more heavily on the Phoenician past, which the Christian community here identifies with, the Muslim schools teach more about Lebanon under the Arabs.

But when it comes to contemporary times, in schools across Lebanon history simply comes to a halt.

"It's a real problem," says Ohaness Goktchian, professor of political science at the American University in Beirut.

"We are raising another generation of children who identify themselves with their communities and not their nation.

"History is what unites people, without history we can't have unity."

Back in the 1970s, that lack of national unity combined with the complex geopolitics of the Middle East to erupt in a lengthy civil war.

For 15 years blood was shed across Lebanon in the name of politics and religion.

The war forced millions out of the country, killed almost 200,000 people and left Beirut in ruins.

'One narrative'

Today, much of Beirut has been rebuilt and memories of the violence have faded.

But the legacy of the war - the bitterness and the deep divisions - continue to live on and opinions are as divided as they were in the 1970s.

Lebanese historian Antoine Messarra believes the war will haunt Lebanon until its people agree on one, unified, version of history.

"We are the people without collective memory," he says.

"But for the sake of the future, we need to create one narrative that all of us will be able to believe in."

While Christian schools tend to focus more heavily on the Phoenician past, which the Christian community here identifies with, the Muslim schools teach more about Lebanon under the Arabs.

But when it comes to contemporary times, in schools across Lebanon history simply comes to a halt.

"It's a real problem," says Ohaness Goktchian, professor of political science at the American University in Beirut.

"We are raising another generation of children who identify themselves with their communities and not their nation.

"History is what unites people, without history we can't have unity."

Back in the 1970s, that lack of national unity combined with the complex geopolitics of the Middle East to erupt in a lengthy civil war.

For 15 years blood was shed across Lebanon in the name of politics and religion.

The war forced millions out of the country, killed almost 200,000 people and left Beirut in ruins.

'One narrative'

Today, much of Beirut has been rebuilt and memories of the violence have faded.

But the legacy of the war - the bitterness and the deep divisions - continue to live on and opinions are as divided as they were in the 1970.

Lebanese historian Antoine Messarra believes the war will haunt Lebanon until its people agree on one, unified, version of history.

"We are the people without collective memory," he says.

"But for the sake of the future, we need to create one narrative that all of us will be able to believe in."


Afghans run risks for work in Iran


In a cavernous UN reception tent on the Afghan-Iranian border, eight men and a young boy sit and drink tea at a white plastic table.

Two of the men had bandages around their heads and another wore a neck brace.

The group of Afghans had been packed into a speeding vehicle on the way to the Iranian capital, Tehran, when they had swerved to avoid an oncoming vehicle.

"Our car then flipped," said Nowrous Haji Yakous, 22. "One of my relatives was killed in the accident."

The men were all then arrested by the Iranian police and an hour later were deported from the country because they had no relevant paperwork.

N Korea threatens 'strong steps'


A North Korean diplomat warns "strong steps" would follow, should the UN take action against the country after its launch of a satellite on Sunday.

The UN Security Council has been debating whether North Korea should be punished for the launch.

The US, Japan and key European powers say the launch was a ballistic test in clear violation of a UN resolution.

China and Russia have been more cautious, saying they are yet to be convinced Pyongyang broke the rules.

Pyongyang says the test of the three-stage Taepodong-2 rocket was a success, putting a satellite into orbit which is now transmitting data and revolutionary songs.

Chances for cancellation of Pak-Aus series bleak after MoU signing


LAHORE: Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) after finalising the MOU with Cricket Australia announced the itinerary of ODI series against Australia starting from 22nd April in UAE. Following the MoU signing, it is widely hoped that there might not prop up likelihood for the cancellation of series.

Pakistan as host to play five-match ODI series and a Twenty20 International at Dubai and Abu Dhabi and all matches will be played under floodlights.

The schedule of Pakistan-Australia forthcoming ODI cricket series has been made available as per which, the first and second matches will be played in Dubai on April 22 and 24 respectively while three matches to be held in Abu Dhabi on April 27, May 01 and May 3 correspondingly.

Pakistan has already announced its squad and Australia meanwhile is due to announce their touring squad following its ongoing ODI series in South Africa on April 17.

Bearish trend continues in KSE, Index crosses 7600 points


KARACHI: The Karachi Stock Exchange witnessed a continued bearish trend on Tuesday as index crossed the psychological bearer of 7,600 points.

Today, trading began in positive way and this trend continues throughout the day. On one occasion, the KSE 100-index was seen at a level of 7,689 points and investors were looking active in banks and energy stocks.

At the end of the day’s trading, the KSE 100-index closed at 7,635 points with an increase of 117 points.

Today, trade volume was 470 million shares which is the highest level in 18 months.

The most transactions were made in the shares of NIB Bank price of which with an increase of 55 paisa went up to Rs6.80.

Gaddafi says fears Obama assassination


SIRTE: Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi Tuesday called Barack Obama a "flicker of hope in the middle of the imperialist darkness," but said he feared the president could be assassinated.

Gaddafi, known for his controversial statements, did not say who might want to kill Obama but gave the examples of the assassinations of Presidents John F. Kennedy and Abraham Lincoln, as well as black rights leader Martin Luther King.

"I fear that they could liquidate this young man or force him to submit to their imperialist policies," Gaddafi told a university gathering of his supporters in Sirte, without specifying who might put Obama under pressure.

"Obama is a flicker of hope in the middle of the imperialist darkness," the Libyan leader said, adding: "There is a fear that they would liquidate him as they liquidated Kennedy, Martin Luther King and Abraham Lincoln."

Gaddafi praised Obama for breaking with what he said was the previous American foreign policy that dictated to the rest of the world what to do to serve U.S. interests.

"He (Obama) speaks logically. Arrogance no longer exists in the American approach which was previously based on dictating to the rest of the world in order to meet its own conditions," Gaddafi said in the remarks carried by state media.

Public flogging of Pakistani woman 'unacceptable': UN

UNITED NATIONS: UN chief Ban Ki-moon on Tuesday slammed as "unacceptable" the public flogging of a veiled woman in Pakistan's North West Frontier Province (NWEP).

"This is just unacceptable," he told a press conference in answer to a question about the case. "Respecting and upholding basic human rights is universally accepted."

On Monday Pakistan's top judge ordered government officials to submit a detailed report within 15 days over the flogging case, an incident that incensed the volatile Asian nation.

Pakistani Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry gave the directive as eight judges opened a hearing into the case, apparently that of a 17-year-old girl who was caught on an amateur video being whipped face down on the ground.

The date of the flogging, the location and the details of the woman's alleged crime have been confused but the footage showed two men pinning her down while a bearded man in a turban flogged her 34 times with a whip.

Haqqani asks for $30 billion US aid for Af-Pak


WASHINGTON: Pakistan ambassador to US Hussain Haqqani has urged on Tuesday that United States must bag-out 30 billion dollars as aid for Afghanistan and Pakistan to counter terrorism sparked by Taliban and al-Qaeda.

Talking to US daily Haqqani said extremists wish to destabilize Pakistan so in this connection, ambassador urged, US’s additional economic aid package to slash anti-US sentiments and fight al-Qaeda is utterly necessary.

“The US’s economic packages for Pakistan keep no status in comparison with the bailout package sought for US itself to tackle ongoing global economic meltdown in America”, he compared and underlined, “$5 billion needed for Pakistan and Afghanistan every year from US and its allied countries for training of local people to fight against Taliban and al-Qaeda here in this part of the world.”