Docudharma Times Sunday November 28




Sunday’s Headlines:

Don’t let us down: UN climate change talks in Cancun

USA

F.B.I. Says Oregon Suspect Planned ‘Grand’ Attack

U.S. strategy for treating troops wounded in Afghanistan, Iraq: Keep them moving

Europe

Which domino will be the next to fall in the eurozone?

Moldova seeks to end stalemate

Middle East

Egypt’s discredited elections blighted by shadow of police violence

Yemen’s tragic tide of trafficked humanity

Asia

Monsoon gives pledge on minimum wage for Indian women

North Korea’s undercover journalists reveal misery of life in dictatorship

Africa

Gadaffi’s ‘cultural’ tours to Libya for Italian models

Diamond warfare

Latin America

Haiti presidential election gains in drama

N. Korea preps missiles amid U.S. war games

Pyongyang warns of ‘merciless’ assault if further provoked as joint naval drills begin

msnbc.com news services

YEONPYEONG ISLAND, South Korea – The sound of new artillery fire from North Korea just hours after the U.S. and South Korea launched a round of war games in Korean waters sent residents and journalists on a front-line island scrambling for cover Sunday.

None of the rounds landed on Yeonpyeong Island, military officials said, but South Korea’s Defense Ministry later ordered journalists off the island.

Don’t let us down: UN climate change talks in Cancun

As world leaders meet in Mexico, people in poor countries fear little will be done

By Jonathan Owen and Matt Chorley  Sunday, 28 November 2010

As government ministers from more than 190 countries gather today in the Mexican city of Cancun for the start of talks aimed at minimising the impact of climate change, the need for a deal could scarcely be more pressing. The stakes are high, the expectations are low.

There is scant sign of the dramatic cuts in emissions of greenhouse gases needed to stop global warming exceeding 2C and devastating vast areas of the planet..

USA

F.B.I. Says Oregon Suspect Planned ‘Grand’ Attack



By COLIN MINER, LIZ ROBBINS and ERIK ECKHOLM

Published: November 27, 2010


PORTLAND, Ore. – A Somali-born teenager who thought he was detonating a car bomb at a packed Christmas tree-lighting ceremony downtown here was arrested by the authorities on Friday night after federal agents said that they had spent nearly six months setting up a sting operation.

The bomb, which was in a van parked off Pioneer Courthouse Square, was a fake – planted by F.B.I. agents as part of the elaborate sting – but “the threat was very real,” Arthur Balizan, the F.B.I.’s special agent in charge in Oregon, said in a statement released by the Department of Justice. An estimated 10,000 people were at the ceremony on Friday night, the Portland police said.

U.S. strategy for treating troops wounded in Afghanistan, Iraq: Keep them moving



By David Brown

Washington Post Staff Writer  


AT BAGRAM AIR BASE, AFGHANISTAN Only the head and feet of Sgt. Diego Solorzano are visible outside his camouflage blanket and below the skyline of medical devices keeping him alive.

Clamped to his litter is an over-the-legs shelf. On it are three vacuum canisters putting gentle suction on wounds in Solorzano’s thighs and abdomen, two IV pumps delivering drugs to his veins, a ventilator breathing for him, and a monitor recording his pulse, EKG rhythm and blood pressure.

Europe

Which domino will be the next to fall in the eurozone?

Margareta Pagano, Mark Leftly and Laura Chesters answer all your questions about what the Irish bailout will mean for UK banks and whether the euro could be in danger

Sunday, 28 November 2010

In the beginning, in 1951, was the European Coal and Steel Community, which begat the European Economic Community, which begat the European Union, and which led, in 1999, to what seemed at the time the promised land of the eurozone. Here, for the 11 participating countries (five more have been added since then), was an apparent world of centrally subsidised milk and honey, where they would share a single currency, and benefit from the economies of scale. And, lo, the milk and honey flowed.

Moldova seeks to end stalemate  

Moldovans vote while deadlock over the appointment of a new president continues to lock the country in an impasse.

Last Modified: 28 Nov 2010  

Moldovans are voting in a parliamentary election as Europe’s poorest country seeks to end a political stalemate that has left it without a full-time president for more than a year.

The four-party liberal coalition that has ruled the former Soviet state since June 2009 has been unable to find the necessary parliament majority to elect a new head of state.

With 20 political parties and 19 independent candidates contesting this Sunday’s parliamentary poll, the country’s third in 18 months, analysts have warned that the impasse might not be broken.

“There is no guarantee that the elections will offer a way out of the political crisis,” Anatol Taranu, a political analyst, told the AFP news agency.

Middle East

Egypt’s discredited elections blighted by shadow of police violence  

As Egypt goes to the polls today, allegations are multiplying of political torture and killings by a security service beyond the control of the courts

Jack Shenker in Alexandria

The Observer, Sunday 28 November 2010  


The Mahmoudia canal wends its way through some of Alexandria’s poorest quarters before eventually reaching the middle-class suburb of Somoha, where elegant blocks of flats abut the water’s edge and a rickety old footbridge connects one bank to the other.

It was here that 19-year-old Ahmed Shaaban’s body was found floating among the reeds, battered and bruised. The police say he drowned himself deliberately, though it is difficult to see how – the channel is so shallow it barely reaches one’s knees.

Yemen’s tragic tide of trafficked humanity  

The poorest Arab state is the target of criminal people-smuggling

By Maryrose Fison Sunday, 28 November 2010

There is a tide of death and misery that washes up almost daily on the shores of Yemen. This is the Arab world’s poorest nation, a land whose lawlessness has made it a fiefdom of al-Qa’ida, and the launch pad for the recent attempt to bring down a plane over the US. It is also at the centre of a vast people-smuggling industry.

Nearly 80,000 were trafficked by criminal gangs last year. There would have been more, but some of the human cargo die en route. Treated no better than consignments of contraband freight, they perish on the hazardous sea crossing from the Horn of Africa.

Asia

Monsoon gives pledge on minimum wage for Indian women

Retailer says that thousands of women workers will receive minimum legal pay within 12 months  

Gethin Chamberlain in Panjim

The Observer, Sunday 28 November 2010


The retailer Monsoon has said it will ensure that thousands of women workers in India will receive the minimum legal wage within 12 months.

The company pledged to tackle the issue of illegally low payments to women who stitch its goods after the issue was highlighted in the Observer last week. In a statement on its website, the company confirmed that the women – who currently receive about 21p an hour for their intricate hand stitching – would be paid the legal minimum wage within 12 months.

The statement added: “Supply chains are complex, particularly where home working is involved, and it requires considerable effort to ensure that payments made to our suppliers reach the workers involved in the production of our products.”.”

North Korea’s undercover journalists reveal misery of life in dictatorship

With its ruthless dictator, network of forced labour camps and iron grip of its ruling party, North Korea is the last country one might expect to see a middle-aged woman berating a policeman for demanding a bribe.

By Julian Ryall in Tokyo 12:01AM GMT 28 Nov 2010

But extraordinary video images smuggled out of North Korea, combined with reports of graffiti and posters critical of the regime, indicate a growing willingness among a previously cowed public to speak out and demand change.

Such dissent would once have been unthinkable in the reclusive state, but now hunger and plummeting living standards are now triggering demands for freedom – something that no North Korean has ever experienced.

Evidence of the rising tide of discontent has been captured on film by a small group of “citizen journalists”, who newsgather at great personal risk to themselves. They then carry the footage across the heavily guarded border into China.

Africa

Gadaffi’s ‘cultural’ tours to Libya for Italian models



Nov 28 2010 07:18

Maria M, aged 28, declined to give her full name, but allowed the Observer to examine her account of a lavish trip to the Libyan desert in October after she was recruited by the Rome-based agency Hostessweb. In her diary Maria tells of an eccentric week-long tour for which she and 19 other young women were reportedly each paid €3 000.

Six such “cultural” visits to Libya by agency recruits have been organised since Gadaffi visited Rome in 2009. The next is scheduled for next month. On one visit Gadaffi tried to marry off one of his guests to his nephew

Diamond warfare

Kurotwi takes Mpofu to court to demand gems

By ZOLI MANGENA and HARARE CORRESPONDENT  

Kurotwi, who recently accused the minister of soliciting bribes, last week took Mpofu – along with state-owned entities the Zimbabwe Mining Development Corporation (ZMDC), Marange Resources, Minerals Marketing Corporation of (MMCZ) and Canadile Miners, half-owned by government – to court accusing them of clandestinely grabbing and selling diamonds worth more than $80-million without involving him in violation of their contract.

Kurotwi is involved in a mining venture with the government.

Latin America

Haiti presidential election gains in drama

The vote had seemed an obscure piece of theater foisted by the world on a country reeling from a catastrophic earthquake, a near-miss from a hurricane, and an ongoing deadly cholera epidemic. No more.

By Joe Mozingo, Los Angeles Times

Reporting from Port-au-Prince, Haiti – In the final hours of a chaotic presidential campaign in a country that needs no more drama this year, candidate Michel “Sweet Micky” Martelly sent out a “breaking news” announcement: He had survived an assassination attempt by a member of the nation’s leading party.

His campaign called a news conference in the capital Saturday, and Martelly’s cousin – the manager of a hotel immortalized by Graham Greene as a place where you expect to be greeted by “a maniac butler, with a bat dangling from the chandelier” – gave his account of the shooting.

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