Monday, September 27, 2010

Manhunt on after bullet fragment strikes boy's head

LONDON police were searching for a male suspect after a seven-week-old boy was struck in the head by a fragment from a bullet fired from the floor above at a home in Reading.
Bullet fragments traveled through the first-story ceiling from bedroom upstairs and hit Michael Johnson, who was in his stroller, police told the Reading Eagle.
Emergency officials said the baby was flown to Hershey Medical Center with a gunshot wound on Sunday night. A hospital spokeswoman would not release his condition.
Earlier a female neighbour drove Michael and his 20-year-old mother, Ebony Sanders, to Reading Hospital about 9.30pm (local time) after hearing Ms Sanders scream.
Ms Sanders told police the shooting was an accident. She said the man who fired the shot was with her in the bedroom while her son was sleeping in the living room downstairs.

She said she heard a gunshot and turned around to see the man holding a rifle. She heard the baby crying, ran downstairs and found him bleeding.


Schwarzenegger delays prisoner's execution

CALIFORNIAN governor Arnold Schwarzenegger delayed by one day the scheduled execution of Albert Greenwood Brown - who was convicted in 1982 of raping and strangling a 15-year-old girl - in what would have been the state’s first execution in five years.
Schwarzenegger announced his decision after a Marin County judge refused Brown's request to block his execution scheduled for Wednesday (local time).
The Governor's temporary reprieve issued late Monday (local time) was ordered to allow sufficient time for Brown's appeal to be reviewed by a federal judge, the Los Angeles Times reported
A US District Court judge had previously put Brown’s execution on hold in 2006 when the death chamber in which the execution would occur was deemed too cramped and dingy and was ruled to constitute "cruel and unusual" punishment.
The execution team set to deliver the death sentence was also said to be improperly trained.
The state then built a new death chamber but lawyers for Brown have argued that a federal judge should

Survivors unlikely after landslide buries 30 in Colombia
A LANDSLIDE buried about 30 people on a highway in northwestern Colombia, authorities said, adding it was unlikely there would be survivors found.
"It has been confirmed that about 30 people have been buried in the rubble from this landslide (in Antioquia department), which is quite large," John Rendon, Antioquia's disaster prevention chief said.
A torrent of 100,000 cubic meters of earth swept onto a highway in the town of Giraldo, which leads to the city of Medellin, Mr Rendon said.



 

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Wen urges help for developing nations

Wen

"Developed countries should fulfill in good faith their commitments, assume the main responsibility in assisting developing countries," Wen Jiabao said in his address to the Millennium Development Goals Summit on Wednesday.
Wen urged the "rich nations" to provide financial assistance and said that the aid "should be selfless and have no strings attached."
Laying out China's part in the international initiative, Wen announced his nation would donate $14 million in the next three years to fight AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria and also to reduce and cancel the debts of the least developed countries.
He also discussed China's plans to assist developing countries by providing educational, medical and environmental support.
"In the coming five years, China will take the following steps in support: build 200 schools, dispatch 3,000 medical experts, train 5,000 local medical personnel and provide medical equipment and medicines to 100 hospitals, build 200 clean energy and environment protection projects, and increase assistance to small island developing states in disaster prevention and mitigation to help build up their capacity in countering climate change," he announced.
On the subject of poverty, Wen spoke of his country's progress. "China has made tireless efforts to reach MDGs (Millennium Development Goals). Since 1978 the number of Chinese living in absolute poverty has lowered by 200 million," he said.
Since 1978 the number of Chinese living in absolute poverty has lowered by 200 million
Wen reflected on the widespread effects of the global economic crisis, numerous natural disasters and other hardships facing the countries already in dire straits, making the achievement of the development goals all the more difficult.
"Achieving the MDGs remains a long and uphill journey," Wen remarked.
Absent from the Chinese premier's speech Wednesday was any mention of the release of a Chinese boat captain held in Japan, which he commented about Tuesday night by calling for the captain's immediate release. The Chinese government cut off high-level talks with Japan on coal and increased commercial flights between the countries, after Japanese patrol officers arrested a captain and crew of a Chinese fishing boat earlier this month near the disputed islands in the East China Sea.
Wen was scheduled to give a speech at the Waldorf Astoria hotel in Manhattan Wednesday night, hosted by the U.S.-China Business Council. On Thursday, he will meet with President Barack Obama in the morning in bilateral talks at the United Nations. Agency

Troubled waters for China, Japan

The husk of a dead volcano protruding from the East China Sea has become the battleground between the two mightiest economies in Asia.

At stake are potentially lucrative gas drilling rights in waters claimed by China and Japan. But the outcome of the territorial dispute may hinge on the medicinal herbs of a Chinese empress, the collection of bird excrement by the Japanese and the definition of what really makes an "island."

The latest controversy over the simmering dispute erupted when Japanese patrol officers arrested the captain and crew of a Chinese fishing boat earlier this month near the disputed islands -- known as Diaoyu in China and Senkaku in Japan. The crew was released, but the Chinese captain remains in custody. He is to appear in a Japanese court on charges that he rammed two Japanese boats with his vessel .

Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao on Tuesday urged Japan to release the boat captain "immediately and unconditionally," China's state news agency Xinhua reported.
Disputed islands

The economic repercussions have been immediate. The Chinese government cut off high-level talks with Japan on coal and increased commercial flights between the countries. The dispute also threatens planned talks on a 2008 agreement to jointly develop gas fields located near the disputed islands and in other parts of the East China Sea.

Run-ins between China and Japan over the sovereignty of the islands are nothing new. Japanese nationalists held demonstrations on the island back in 1990. But what is most worrisome to long-time watchers of the dispute is the assertiveness of both governments in the current fracas.

"A big difference this time: These incidents aren't being sparked by nationalists," said James Manicom, an expert on maritime disputes at the Balsillie School of International Affairs in Waterloo, Canada. "In the past, the most important thing (for Beijing and Tokyo) was to try to make this issue go away and to keep a lid on nationalist sentiment. Japan in particular now sees (territorial sovereignty) as a vital issue economically and as a national security issue."

"It's different in terms of the context of China rising and Japan in bit of a travail both economically and politically," said Mark Valencia, a fellow at the National Asia Research Program. Agency

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Fiji Times handover complete in Suva

THE new owners of the Fiji Times took the reins of the country's oldest newspaper today at a private handover in Suva.

The Australian arm of Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation reluctantly sold the Fiji Times to Suva-based conglomerate Motibhai Group for an undisclosed sum last week.

The newspaper, established in 1868, faced closure at the end of the month if News Limited could not find a local buyer after Fiji's interim government passed a decree ruling all media must be 90 per cent locally owned.

Chairman of the Motibhai Group Mahendra Patel and News Ltd CEO John Hartigan attended the handover signing in Fiji's capital at the Pricewaterhouse Coopers building, where the sale was conducted.

"We had a number of bidders and as you know the timeline was very tight but we managed to select Motibhai which saw the process through and we are very pleased with the outcome,'' Pricewaterhouse Coopers spokeswoman Jenny Seeto said.

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Mr Patel said he will meet with newspaper staff before holding a press conference later in the week.

Sushil Koirala is Nepali Congress new president

KATHMANDU,Nepal: Nepali Congress acting president Sushil Koirala has won the election for the party president post. In the vote count that concluded in the wee hours of Wednesday morning at the Academy Hall in Kamaladi, the incumbent acting president of the party secured more than 50 percent votes to win the top post of the country's largest democratic party.

He polled 1692 votes while his closest rival Sher Bahadur Deuba could garner 1317 votes only. Koirala maintained a distinct lead over Deuba in the vote count from the beginning.

On the other hand, Bhim Bahadur Tamang, the third candidate, polled meagre 78 votes.

Out of 3,088 National General Convention representatives of the party, 3,037 cast their votes for three key positions and 61 members in the party’s Central Working Committee.

According to the party statute, a presidential candidate has to secure more than 50 percent votes to be elected. Otherwise, the runoff would be held between the top two contenders.

The vote count was delayed by hours due to differences over the code of conduct and the process of counting among the party's election commission and the representatives of the presidential hopefuls. It counting began at 11:45 p.m. in the Academy Hall in Kamaladi

The NC had held the elections to elect new leadership along with the new Central Working Committee in Kathmandu on the last day of its 12th National General Convention.

Earlier, the party's election commission had decided to count votes for the president's post at 8 p.m. while the sealed ballot boxes of the other posts have been ferried to the party’s central office in Sanepa.

The vote count of other posts will be conducted on Wednesday.

New York City Jobless Rate Below 10 Percent

For the first time since August of 2009 New York’s unemployment rate fell below 10 percent last month. After a long recession, New York economy seems to be on a rebound now with this latest sign.

Colleen C. Gardner, New York’s labor commissioner said that the number of jobs in the private sector in the city rose up to a total of 21,000 in April which nearly triple the average increase for that month in the last 10 years.

The growth rate was spread to all industries; however, the rate of increase was particularly strong in the professional and business services which include the leisure and hospitality industries.

For the first time since 2009’s summer, the rate of unemployment in the state of New York is now lower than the unemployment rate of the whole United States.

In April the city’s rate was at 9.8 percent compared to being at 10 percent in March and at the end of 2009 was high reaching at 10.5 percent. As per the state’s rate it fell to 8.4 percent last April from the rate of 8.6 percent last March.

Ms. Gardner added that the state of New York, during this time of recession has done better than the nation as a whole.

Hamels handles Braves as Phillies extend lead

PHILADELPHIA – The Philadelphia Phillies extended their lead to four games in the National League East by beating the Atlanta Braves 3-1 on Monday.

Phillies starter Cole Hamels breezed through eight innings, allowing one run and striking out six to win his fifth successive start.

The left-hander surrendered an RBI double in the second inning to stake the Braves to a 1-0 lead, but Carlos Ruiz tied the game in the bottom of the inning with an RBI double and Philadelphia added two runs in the fifth.

Hamels improved to 12-10 while closer Brad Lidge pitched the ninth for his 24th save of the season.

"You never want to feel comfortable in this game or relaxed, but if there's ever a time when you feel confident with where you're at, that's got to be right now," Lidge told reporters.

"Considering what we've done the last two months to catch the Braves and go ahead a little - if they do their thing and we all take care of our business, then I like our chances a lot."

The streaking Phillies (90-61) won their eighth straight game to move closer to a fourth straight division crown, while the pursuing Braves (86-65) still lead the NL Wild Card race.

Atlanta starter Brandon Beachy was making his MLB debut and pitched 4 1/3 innings while allowing three runs - only one of them earned.

Right-fielder Jason Heyward made an error on an attempted catch in the fifth that led to Philadelphia's go-ahead run.

"It knuckled - it got in the wind," Heyward said. "I got a great jump right off the bat with it. I was right there the whole way. The last few rotations there took it out of my reach."

Bali Nine ringleaders beg forgiveness

BALI Nine ringleaders Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran have begged for forgiveness and a second chance at life from an Indonesian court.

Speaking in Indonesian, both men today told the Denpasar District Court of their deep remorse for their roles in the 2005 attempt to smuggle more than eight kilograms of heroin from Bali to Australia.

Chan, 26, and Sukumaran, 29, were two of nine Australians convicted over the plot and are now on death row.

This appeal, which seeks to have their sentences reduced to 20 years jail, is their last legal avenue to avoid the firing squad.

Chan thanked the court for giving him the opportunity to ask for forgiveness.

"It's important to me that I can say how sorry I am for my past behaviour," he said. "I understand now how drugs ruin lives."

Chan apologised for pleading not guilty at his trial and earlier appeals.
"I stupidly thought I could walk free, without punishment, despite the crime I had committed," he said.

Chan spoke of his efforts to rehabilitate and help others inside Bali's Kerobokan Prison learn new skills.

"I am doing these things to help others and because I believe I have a purpose in life, not just to be held in prison and then executed," he said. "I accept that I deserve to be punished for my crime but I beg the court that I not be executed.

"I hope I am given another chance in life."

Sukumaran said he accepted he had committed a crime and deserved to be punished.

"Five years ago I could not have said those words," he said. "I now realise that before I was arrested I was thoughtless and ignorant.

"Before I was arrested I had no idea how harmful my drug crime would be.

"I did not think about the impact, I did not know any drug addicts and I never thought seriously about the consequences of my actions."

Sukumaran said he was "truly, deeply sorry" for his actions.

"From the bottom of my heart I can honestly say I am now a different person and a reformed person."

If their judicial review fails they will be left with just one last unlikely chance for survival: clemency from Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono

Monday, September 20, 2010

NRN USA's SOS call for Save the Himalaya

KATHMANDU: NRN America has urged the Nepali community to support 'Save the Himalaya Rally' and help make it a grand success in order to "demonstrate respect to the Nepali Everest summiters".



NRN National Coordination Council of USA, which is also known as NRN America, is the co-ordinator of the rally. The Nepali moutaineers who have conquered the world's tallest peak are set to rally at the UN headquarters in New York on September 21 afternoon.


Issuing a press statement, the body of Nepali Diaspora in the USA expressed dissatisfaction over the recent controversies, saying that it has noticed attempts to discredit the Rally. "Such attempts to mislead the Nepali community should not take your focus away from our goal to bring awareness to Save the Himalaya," it said.


The coordinators also stated that it was a golden opportunity to raise concerns to bring international attention by hosting an awareness rally in front of the United Nations while the leaders from almost 200 nations gather in New York City.


Many Everest summiters had announced boycott of the rally after denial of the US visa yesterday. The US Embassy in Kathmandu had denied visa to 10 summiters and eight officials from Ministry of Forest and Soil Conservation (MoFSC) and National Trust for Nature Conservation (NTNC).


After that mountaineers in the US had also announced to stay away from the event, saying it was unfair to turn down the record holding summiteers.

Ngawang Tenji Sherpa.

Obama Aides Weigh Bid to Tie the G.O.P. to the Tea Party

WASHINGTON — President Obama’s political advisers, looking for ways to help Democrats and alter the course of the midterm elections in the final weeks, are considering a range of ideas, including national advertisements, to cast the Republican Party as all but taken over by Tea Party extremists, people involved in the discussion said.

The latest on President Obama, his administration and other news from Washington and around the nation. Join the discussion.
White House and Congressional Democratic strategists are trying to energize dispirited Democratic voters over the coming six weeks, in hopes of limiting the party’s losses and keeping control of the House and Senate. The strategists see openings to exploit after a string of Tea Party successes split Republicans in a number of states, culminating last week with developments that scrambled Senate races in Delaware and Alaska.

“We need to get out the message that it’s now really dangerous to re-empower the Republican Party,” said one Democratic strategist who has spoken with White House advisers but requested anonymity to discuss private strategy talks.

Democrats are divided. The party’s House and Senate campaign committees are resistant, not wanting to do anything that smacks of nationalizing the midterm elections when high unemployment and the drop in Mr. Obama’s popularity have made the climate so hostile to Democrats. Endangered Congressional candidates want any available money to go to their localized campaigns.

Late Sunday night, White House advisers denied that a national ad campaign was being planned. “There’s been no discussion of such a thing at the White House” or the Democratic National Committee, said David Axelrod, Mr. Obama’s senior adviser.

Proponents say a national ad campaign, most likely on cable television, would complement those individual campaigns and give Democrats a chance to redefine the stakes. The Democratic strategist said voters did not now see much threat to them from a Republican takeover of Congress, even though some Tea Party-backed candidates and other Republicans have taken positions that many voters consider extreme, like shutting down the government to get their way, privatizing Social Security and Medicare and ending unemployment insurance.

So far, Mr. Obama has largely limited his campaigning to fundraisers and small events. That will change soon as he plays a bigger role to rally the flagging faithful, officials said.

To mobilize younger voters who supported him in 2008, Mr. Obama will hold four big campaign-style rallies, the first Sept. 28 at the University of Wisconsin in Madison, with satellite transmission to campuses in other states. The later rallies will be in Ohio, Philadelphia and Las Vegas. He also will send e-mail and record robocalls to spur voters, and conduct a national “town hall” Webcast in October.

“These events are about activating the Obama grass roots to help organizationally in terms of volunteers” for get-out-the-vote efforts, said Dan Pfeiffer, the White House communications director. “We’re not going to get all the 2008 Obama voters out. We may not get most of them. But in close races, it can be decisive.”

Mr. Obama will also step up his efforts to draw contrasts between the parties, in particular by pounding away on his call for extending the expiring Bush-era tax cuts, except for “millionaires and billionaires.” Republicans want the tax cuts extended for people of all income levels, not just incomes below $200,000 for individuals and $250,000 for families, as the president has proposed.

Republicans strategists remain confident of the party’s prospects for big gains in November, even as they acknowledge that they are unlikely to win the Senate race in Delaware after the victory in the Republican primary there of Christine O’Donnell, a Tea Party-backed candidate with a long record of controversial statements, over Representative Michael N. Castle, a moderate and popular former two-term governor.

Also last week, Alaska’s Senate race was upended when Senator Lisa Murkowski, who lost the Republican nomination to a Tea Party adherent, Joe Miller, mounted a write-in candidacy against him, saying, “Alaska is not fair game for outside extremists.”

“While we may have a handful of nominees out of the mainstream, the American people have come to the conclusion this administration and this Congress are out of the mainstream,” said John Weaver, a Republican consultant.

In 1994, Democrats were in power and similarly took hope when Republican primaries yielded candidates deemed too far right for the general election. Yet the wave against Democrats that year was strong enough to carry those newcomers into office and put Republicans in control of Congress for the first time in 40 years.

Except for Ms. O’Donnell in Delaware, Republican nominees that Democrats like to showcase as extremists — including in Senate races in Nevada, Colorado, Kentucky and even blue-state Connecticut — are even with their Democratic rivals in polls or ahead.

And even as the White House maps the final campaign push, advisers are distracted by the expected exit of the chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel, to run for mayor of Chicago. Mr. Emanuel, who as a member of Congress helped engineer the Democratic takeover of the House in 2006, is among his party’s foremost strategists when it comes to Congressional elections.

Peter M. Rouse, one of Mr. Obama’s closest advisers, has assumed additional responsibilities. But Mr. Rouse, who is intensely private, does not want the high-profile job of chief of staff; instead he is helping Mr. Obama vet names. Leading candidates are said to be Thomas E. Donilon, the deputy national security adviser, and Robert Bauer, the White House counsel.

On top of the personnel distractions at the White House, the strategy discussions with Congressional Democrats come after 21 months of legislative and political battles that have strained relations between the two camps.

Democrats on Capitol Hill say that Obama aides, including Mr. Axelrod, and Jim Messina, the deputy chief of staff, do not consult with them enough and are more concerned with positioning Mr. Obama for his 2012 reelection race than with re-electing Democrats now.

At the Democratic National Committee, aides already have started work on a database to link the most controversial statements of the Tea Party-backed candidates to possible Republican presidential aspirants.

The database will point out, for example, that Sarah Palin and Mitt Romney are supporting the Republican candidate for Senate in Nevada, Sharron Angle, who once said that victims of rape should make “what was really a lemon situation into lemonade,” and Ms. O’Donnell, who has said that having women in the service academies “cripples the readiness of our defense.”

The tactic of linking potential Republican rivals to such statements was already in evidence last week. After Ms. O’Donnell’s victory, a party spokesman told reporters, “The fact that Mitt Romney and Sarah Palin would put their name behind a candidate that believes women who serve our country ‘cripple the readiness of our defense’ make them unfit to be commander-in-chief.”

Source: Agency

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Afghan Vote Marked by Light Turnout and Deadly Attacks

KABUL, Afghanistan — Hundreds of polling stations either closed or came under attack and at least 10 civilians were killed in Afghanistan’s parliamentary elections on Saturday, even as officials insisted the vote was generally safe nationwide.
Election workers wait for voters at a polling station in Kandahar province.

Manan Vatsyayana/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
A polling station in Kabul, Afghanistan on Saturday.
The city of Kandahar seemed particularly hard hit. Explosions were heard every half hour through the morning, and 31 rockets were fired by insurgents, according to an intelligence official there, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the news media. Kandahar Gov. Tooryalai Wesa toured polling places to encourage voters to turn out, but his own convoy was hit by a roadside bomb, slightly damaging his armored car but hurting no one.

Nationwide, authorities could only confirm that 92 percent of the planned 5,816 polling centers had opened as planned, and no word had been heard from the other 8 percent, raising concerns that security conditions had forced them to close, according to the Independent Election Commission. The commission had previously canceled about 1,000 polling centers because the authorities could not secure them.

The 8 percent of non-reporting polling places were in nine provinces in the northeast, northwest, east and south, Fazal Ahmad Manawi, the chairman of the I.E.C., said at a news conference. He added, however, that every province had at least 50 percent of its polling places open.

Halfway through the voting day, even in a safe neighborhood of downtown Kabul, only 150 men and 130 women had cast their ballots at the Naderia High School. But there was little violence in the capital, and late in the day, long lines began to form at some of the centers around the city.

Still, Abdul Hadi, an observer for an incumbent, Anar Kally Hunaryaar, complained that observers at the high school greatly outnumbered voters. “Right here there are almost zero voters, and a thousand observers, it’s ridiculous,” he said.

Outside the capital, in the rural Guldara District in Kabul Province, village polling places were lightly attended. And in one spot, only four women voted, other than official election observers. In the more populated district center, however, 650 people, including 150 women, had voted, and others were streaming in an hour before polls closed at 4 p.m.

In Kandahar, the Taliban papered the city with nightletters on the eve of the election, warning people not to vote in “Americanized elections” and that anyone doing so would be a target. The letters, signed by the Taliban’s military commander for Kandahar, Al Haj Ahmad Sayid, gave two phone numbers, one for information about the warning, and another for complaints.

In Dand District just outside the city, polling places set aside for women had not received a single voter, although several hundred men had cast ballots. In the center of the city, another women’s polling center had attracted only 23 voters in the morning.

Kandahar is the traditional stronghold of the Taliban where NATO and Afghan forces have stepped up military operations recently.

Those who did vote in Kandahar were nervous. “I am so scared to come to the polling station,” said Shafiqa, 49, “my family insisted I not come, but I have to because this is my country and I want to use my vote for someone I like.”

In Kunduz Province, northern Afghanistan, 16 civilians were injured during election-related violence, some while casting their votes and others in their homes when rockets were fired into them by insurgents, Mohammed Omar, the governor of Kunduz, said at a news conference. In addition, according to hospital officials there, five people were killed and three wounded in rocket, mortar and roadside bomb attacks in the province.

In eastern Nangarhar Province, bombs were hidden in a mosque that was to be used as a polling place but exploded with out harming anyone, officials said. However, in Chapayar town, two people were killed by a rocket that hit the road where they were walking.

The governor of Baghlan Province in the north, Munshi Abdul Majid, said a NATO air strike accidentally killed three members of a village defense team during a firefight with Taliban, eight of whom were also killed. A spokesman for NATO said the force so far had no knowledge of the incident.

A statement posted on a pro-Taliban website claimed the insurgents had attacked more than 100 polling centers.

However, the Afghan monitoring organization, the Free and Fair Elections Foundation, said generally the elections were safe. “Though there were numerous attacks, none were severe enough to disrupt voting on a wide scale,” F.E.F.A. said in a statement.

There were numerous accounts of fraud.

In the first reported instance of fraud, a woman who worked for the I.E.C. in Lashkar Gah, Helmand Province, was arrested with 1,500 fake voter registration cards, according to Dawood Ahmadi, the spokesman for the Helmand governor’s office. He said the employee, whom he did not name, was the daughter of a female candidate, Habiba Sadat.

In Paktika Province, a man was arrested for trying to use 1,600 fake voter registration cards on behalf of a parliamentary candidate, Rahmatullah Wahid Yar, according to Rohullah Samoon, the spokesman for the governor.

At a polling center at the Ghazi Khan High School in Kunduz city, journalists and election observers watched as I.E.C. officials and supporters of some of the candidates locked the doors for two hours and filled out ballots themselves.

F.E.F.A. also said that in nearly 3,000 polling centers — about half of the total — its monitors discovered that the ink used to mark voters’ fingers to prevent repeated voting was easily washed off, even though it was supposed to have been indelible.


Contributing reporting were Sangar Rahimi and Sharifullah Sahak in Kabul, Taimoor Shah in Kandahar and Afghan employees of The New York Times in Helmand, Khost, Nangarhar and Kunar provinces.

Source, Agency
Ngawang Tenji Sherpa.

आफन्तलाई दूतावासको भिसा, काम रेष्टुरेन्टमा

लन्डन, आश्विन २ - लन्डनस्थित नेपाली राजदूतावासका कूटनीतिक कर्मचारीले मर्यादा विपरित आफ्ना मान्छेलाई कर्मचारीका रुपमा भिसा दिलाएको रहस्य खुलेको छ । दूतावास कर्मचारीका रुपमा भिसा लिएपनि ति 'भाग्यमानी' कर्मचारीहरु भने कहिल्यै दूतावास हाजिर हुँदैनन् । बरु उनीहरु अन्यत्रै रेष्टुरेन्ट, वेयर हाउस वा घरमा काम गरिरहेका पाइएका छन् ।

शक्तिको दुरुपयोग गर्दै अनावश्यक कर्मचारीलाई भिसा दिलाएको सम्बन्धमा नेपालको परराष्ट्र मन्त्रालयले 'गम्भीर' मान्दै विस्तृत जानकारी समेत मागेको छ ।

कान्तिपुरलाई प्राप्त भदौ २५ को मितिमा परराष्ट्र उपसचिव हरिश्चन्द्र घिमिरेद्वारा हस्ताक्षर गरि फ्याक्समार्फत दूतावास पठाइएको पत्रमा 'प्रसाईं थरका र हुमराज नामका व्यक्तिलाई भिसा दिलाएकोबारे खास कुरा के हो' जानकारी दिन भनिएको छ । मन्त्रालयले नाम र थर स्पष्ट नलेखेपनि उनीहरु गोपीकृष्ण प्रसाईं र होमराज लम्साल रहेको दूतावास श्रोतले

जनायो ।

'त्यस राजदूतावासका कूटनीतिक कर्मचारीले राजदूतावासमा हुँदै नभएका प्रसाईं थरका र हुमराज नामका व्यक्तिलाई दूतावासका कर्मचारीको रुपमा भिसा प्राप्त गराई दिएको र हाल उनीहरु बाहिर रेष्टुरेन्टमा काम गरिरहेको जानकारी प्राप्त भएकोले यसबारे के भएको हो यथाशीघ्र जानकारी पठाई दिनुहुन निर्देशानुसार अनुरोध गरिन्छ'- पत्रमा उल्लेख छ ।

पत्रको संकेत नंः/ए.आई./०६७/२१४ छ । पत्रमा भिसा दिलाउने कूटनैतिक कर्मचारीको नाम भने उल्लेख गरिएको छैन् ।

परराष्ट्रबाट पत्र प्रेसित भएको एक साता पुग्न लाग्दा पनि 'मिसन हेड' नेपाली राजदूत डा. सुरेशचन्द्र चालिसे भने यसबारे बेखवर छन् । 'खोइ मैले अहिलेसम्म पत्र पाएकै छैन् । पत्र नै गायव हुनुले त कर्मचारीकै नियतमा शंका गर्ने ठाउँ रह्यो'-चालिसेले कान्तिपुरसंग भने । उनले त्यस्तो काम भएको भए त्यो गैर कानुनी हुने जनाए । 'यो त मानव तस्कर नै भयो'-चालिसेले थपे-'यस्तो क्रियाकलापले देशकै छवि बिग्रन सक्छ ।'

दूतावास श्रोतका अनुसार, निश्चल अर्याल, विपिन पौडेल र कमलेश भुषालले दूतावास कर्मचारीको भिसा लिए पनि बाहिरै बसेर काम गरिरहेका छन् ।

लन्डनस्थित राजदूतावासमा हाल राजदूत, मिनिष्टर काउन्सिलर, मिलिट्री एट्याची र अरु दुई एट्याची गरि ५ कुटनैतिक कर्मचारी छन् भने ७ अस्थायी कर्मचारी कार्यरत छन् । कुटनैतिक कर्मचारीले एक एक जना 'एटेन्डेन्ट' राख्न पाउने प्रावधान छ र उनीहरु दूतावासमै रहेर काम गर्नुपर्ने भएपनि यथार्थमा त्यो छैन् । 'दूतावासमा मात्र सिमित हुँदा नेपाली रुपैंयामा आउने तलवले धान्नै नसकिने भएकाले अन्यत्रै काम गरिरहेका छन्'-दूतावासका एक कर्मचारीले भने ।

Ngawang Tenji Sherpa

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

नयाँ प्रक्रियामा जाऔं: दाहाल

काठमाडौं, भाद्र ३१ - माओवादी अध्यक्ष पुष्पकमल दाहालले निष्कर्ष ननिस्कने प्रधानमन्त्री चयन प्रक्रियाले मुलुकलाई दुःखद अवस्थामा पुर्‍याउन लागेको उल्लेख गर्दै राजनीतिक 'ट्रयाक' बदल्न जरुरी भएको बताएका छन् । 'जनताको विश्वास जित्न राजनीतिक ट्रयाक बदल्न जरुरी छ,' उनले भने, 'केही दिनभित्र नयाँ प्रक्रियामा लैजान जरुरी छ ।'

दाहालले बुधबार चारवटा पुस्तक विमोचन कार्यक्रममा माओवादीको पहलमा राजनीतिक गतिरोध अन्त्य गर्न चाहेको पनि बताए । उनले प्रधानमन्त्री निर्वाचन अग्रगामी र प्रतिगामीबीचको संघर्ष भएको उल्लेख गर्दै त्यो मोर्चा जित्नैपर्ने बताए । 'झट्ट हेर्दा प्रधानमन्त्री निर्वाचन दुई उम्मेदवार लड्छन्, हार्छन् जस्तो देखिन्छ,' उनले भने, 'सारमा राष्ट्रियता, स्वाधीनता पक्षधर र राष्ट्रिय आत्मसमर्पणवादीबीचको लडाइँ हो ।'

उनले नयाँ प्रक्रियाबारे भने व्याख्या गरेनन् । माओवादीले एकतर्फी उम्मेदवारी फिर्ता लिने विषयमा निर्णय भने भइसकेको छैन । कांग्रेसले उम्मेदवारी फिर्ता नलिएसम्म एकतर्फी फिर्ता लिने सम्भावना कम छ । कांग्रेस महाधिवेशनपछि मात्र प्रमुख तीन पार्टीबीच नयाँ प्रक्रियामा जाने विषयमा छलफल हुनेछ । कांग्रेस यही प्रक्रियाबाट टुंगोमा पुग्नुपर्ने पक्षमा छ ।

स्थायी समिति सदस्य नेत्रविक्रम चन्दले कांग्रेस-एमाले तयार नभएसम्म नयाँ प्रक्रियामा जान गाह्रो हुने बताए । 'सहमति नगरी माओवादीले मात्र उम्मेदवारी फिर्ता लिने कुरा आउँदैन,' उनले कान्तिपुरसँग भने, 'सहमतिका लागि कांग्रेस-एमाले तयार हुनुपर्‍यो ।' उनले माओवादी सहमतिका लागि त्याग गर्न तयार भएको पनि जनाए ।

निष्कर्ष ननिस्कने प्रधानमन्त्री निर्वाचन प्रक्रियाले जनता 'दिक्क' भएको उल्लेख गरे । 'न निष्कर्षमा पुग्ने, न पछि हट्ने अवस्था छ,' उनले भने, 'यसले मुलुकको परिस्थितिलाई जटिल बनाउँदै गएको छ ।'

संसद्को बैठकमा विशेष समय लिएर बोल्दै उपाध्यक्ष नारायणकाजी श्रेष्ठले अन्य दलले सरकार बन्न नदिने षड्यन्त्र गरेको आरोप लगाए । 'राष्ट्रिय सहमतिमा जोड दिँदै उम्मेदवारी फिर्ता लिने घोषणा गर्‍यौं तर अन्य दल सरकार बन्न नदिन षड्यन्त्र रच्दै अघि बढेका छन्,' उनले भने, 'फेरि पनि हामी राष्ट्रिय सहमतिका लागि अपिल गर्छौं ।'

नयाँ प्रक्रियाका लागि माओवादी र कांग्रेसले प्रधानमन्त्रीको उम्मेदवारी फिर्ता लिई अन्तरिम संविधान र संसद् कार्यव्यवस्था संशोधनका लागि सहमति जुटाउनुपर्ने हुन्छ । यसमा दलहरूबीच गृहकार्य नै भएको छैन ।

अर्का माओवादी स्थायी समिति सदस्य गिरिराजमणि पोख्रेलले सबै दलसँग छलफल गरी 'प्रधानमन्त्री निर्वाचन चक्र' लाई तोड्ने केन्द्रीय समितिको निर्देश भएको जानकारी दिए । 'सबै दलसँग छलफल गरी यो चक्रलाई तोड्नुपर्छ भन्ने हो,' उनले भने, 'सहमति गरी नयाँ प्रक्रियामा जानुपर्छ ।' तर उनले जनादेशअनुसार माओवादीकै नेतृत्वमा सरकार हुने अडान कायम रहेको बताए ।

केन्द्रीय समिति बैठकले उम्मेदवारी फिर्ता लिने/नलिने निर्णय गर्ने जिम्मा स्थायी समितिलाई दिएको छ । माओवादीको नेतृत्वमा सरकार बन्न नदिने षड्यन्त्र भइरहेको माओवादी बुझाइ छ । 'सरकार गठन हुन नदिन भारतको भूमिका छ,' पोख्रेलको भनाइ छ, 'यही स्थिति रहन दिए थप संकट आउँछ ।'

नेपालमा वैदेशिक हस्तक्षेप भए अस्वीकार्य: चिनियाँ टोली

काठमाडौं

नेपाल भ्रमणमा रहेको उच्चस्तरीय चिनियाँ टोलीले नेपालमा वैदेशिक हस्तक्षेपको चीनले सँधै विरोध गर्ने बताएको छ । चिनियाँ कम्युनिष्ट पार्टीका सहसचिब हि याङ नेतृत्वको टोलीले आइतबार विहान राष्ट्रपति डा.रामवरण यादव र प्रधानमन्त्री माधबकुमार नेपाललाई छुट्टा छुट्टै भेटी उक्त कुरा बताएको हो । टोलीले एउटा छिमेकीको नाताले नेपालका हरेक कृयाकलापप्रति चीनको चासो राख्नु स्वाभाविक भए पनि हस्तक्षेपको सँधै विरोधी रहेको स्पष्ट पारेको छ । उपप्रधानमन्त्रीको हैसियत सरहका याङ टोलीले प्रधानमन्त्री नेपाललाई सिंहदरबारमा भेट गरी नेपालको आन्तरिक समस्या आफै समाधान गर्न नेपाल सक्षम रहेको विश्वास व्यक्त गर्दै राजनीतिक दलहरुबीचको आपसी बेमेल छिटो अन्त्य गरी नेपालले शान्तिप्रक्रिया र संविधान लेखनलाई गति दिनुपर्नेमा जोड दिएको छ ।
प्रधानमन्त्रीका परराष्ट्र सल्लाहकार राजन भट्टराइले शान्तिप्रक्रिया, संविधान लेखन र दुई देशबीचको सम्बन्धको विषयमा छलफल भएको जानकारी दिनुभयो । प्रधानमन्त्रीलाई भेटेलगत्तै चिनियाँ कम्युनिष्ट पार्टीका सहसचिब हि याङ नेतृत्वको टोलीले शीतल निबासमा राष्ट्रपतिलाई भेटेको थियो ।
यसैगरी चिनियाँ टोलीले अपरान्ह तीन बजे होटल सोल्टीमा नेकपा एमालेका अध्यक्ष झलनाथ खनाललाई भेट्ने कार्यक्रम तय भएको छ । भेटमा नेपालको शान्तिप्रक्रिया, संविधान निर्माण, दुई देशबीचको सम्बन्धलगायत विषयमा छलफल हुने बताइएको छ । शनिबार काठमाडौं आएलगत्तै उच्च राजनीतिक भेटवार्ता सुरु गरेको थियो । नेपालका मुख्य तीन दलको निमन्त्रणा आएको भनिएको चिनियाँ उच्चस्तरीय टोलीले हिजो एकीकृत नेकपा माओवादी र नेपाली काङ्ग्रेसका शीर्ष नेतृत्वलाई भेट गरी नेपालको पछिल्लो विकासक्रम, शान्ति प्रक्रिया, संविधान लेखनमा भइरहेको ढिलाइप्रति चासो र चिनियाँ सरकारको धारणासमेत सुनाएको थियो ।
ङवाङ तेन्जी शेर्पा
काठमन्डौ

Monday, September 13, 2010

माओवादी लचिलो भएकोले छिट्टै सहमति हुने: प्रधानमन्त्री

काठमाडौं २८ भाद्र

कामचलाउ सरकारका प्रधानमन्त्री माधबकुमार नेपालले अनमिनको म्याद थप र कार्यादेशको विषयमा माओवादी लचिलो भएकोले छिट्टै सहमति हुने बताउनुभएको छ । सोमबार कोटेश्वरस्थित निजी निबासमा पत्रकारसँग कुरा गर्दै प्रधानमन्त्री नेपालले उक्त कुरा बताउनुभएको हो । उहाँले अनमिनको कार्यादेश र समयावधिको विषयमा एकीकृत नेकपा माओवादीसँग सहमति चाँही भइनसकेको बताउदै केही विषयमा कुरा मिल्न अझै बाँकी रहेको र सहमति नभई अनमिनको म्याद नथप्ने बताउनुभयो ।

Chinese Remake the ‘Made in Italy’ Fashion Label

Over the years, Italy learned the difficult lesson that it could no longer compete with China on price. And so, its business class dreamed, Italy would sell quality, not quantity. For centuries, this walled medieval city just outside of Florence has produced some of the world’s finest fabrics, becoming a powerhouse for “Made in Italy” chic.
IMMIGRANT SWEEP A Chinese immigrant was questioned in June at Prato police
And then, China came here.

Chinese laborers, first a few immigrants, then tens of thousands, began settling in Prato in the late 1980s. They transformed the textile hub into a low-end garment manufacturing capital — enriching many, stoking resentment and prompting recent crackdowns that in turn have brought cries of bigotry and hypocrisy.

The city is now home to the largest concentration of Chinese in Europe — some legal, many more not. Here in the heart of Tuscany, Chinese laborers work round the clock in some 3,200 businesses making low-end clothes, shoes and accessories, often with materials imported from China, for sale at midprice and low-end retailers worldwide.

It is a “Made in Italy” problem: Enabled by Italy’s weak institutions and high tolerance for rule-bending, the Chinese have blurred the line between “Made in China” and “Made in Italy,” undermining Italy’s cachet and ability to market its goods exclusively as high end.

Part of the resentment is cultural: The city’s classic Italian feel is giving way to that of a Chinatown, with signs in Italian and Chinese, and groceries that sell food imported from China.

But what seems to gall some Italians most is that the Chinese are beating them at their own game — tax evasion and brilliant ways of navigating Italy’s notoriously complex bureaucracy — and have created a thriving, if largely underground, new sector while many Prato businesses have gone under. The result is a toxic combination of residual fears about immigration and the economy.

“This could be the future of Italy,” said Edoardo Nesi, the culture commissioner of Prato Province. “Italy should pay attention to the risks.”

The situation has steadily grown beyond the control of state tax and immigration authorities. According to the Bank of Italy, Chinese individuals in Prato channel an estimated $1.5 million a day to China, mainly earnings from the garment and textile trade. Profits of that magnitude are not showing up in tax records, and some local officials say the Chinese prefer to repatriate their profits rather than invest locally.

The authorities also say that Chinese and probably Italian organized crime is on the rise, involving not only illegal fabric imports, but also human trafficking, prostitution, gambling and money laundering.

The rest of Italy is watching closely. “Lots of businesses from Emilia Romagna, Puglia and the Veneto say, ‘We don’t want to wind up like Prato,’ ” said Silvia Pieraccini, the author of “The Chinese Siege,” a book about the rise of the “pronto moda” or “fast fashion” economy.

Tensions have been running high since the Italian authorities stepped up raids this spring on workshops that use illegal labor, and grew even more when Italian prosecutors arrested 24 people and investigated 100 businesses in the Prato area in late June. The charges included money laundering, prostitution, counterfeiting and classifying foreign-made products as “Made in Italy.”

Yet many Chinese in Prato are offended at the idea that they have ruined the city. Instead, some argue, they have helped rescue Prato from total economic irrelevance, another way of saying that if the Italian state fails to innovate and modernize the economy, somebody else just might.

“If the Chinese hadn’t gone to Prato, would there be pronto moda?” asked Matteo Wong, 30, who was born in China and raised in Prato and runs a consulting office for Chinese immigrants. “Did the Chinese take jobs away from Italians? If anything, they brought lots of jobs to Italians.”

In recent months, Prato has become a diplomatic point of contention. Italian officials say the Chinese government has not done enough so far to address the issue of illegal immigrants, and they are seeking a bilateral accord with China to identify and deport them. Some Prato residents suspect that the flood of immigrants is part of a strategy by Beijing to exploit the Italian market, though the Chinese government does not generally use illegal migrants to carry out its overseas development plans.

Italian officials say Prato is expected to be on the agenda when Prime Minister Wen Jiabao of China visits Rome in October.

Sunday, September 12, 2010

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     I'm a  student of MBA 6th semister. Here i want to discribe about journalists, There are many types of journalists, from the local beat newspaper reporter to the foreign correspondent, the magazine feature writer to the freelance book reviewer, and so on. It is difficult to pin down the daily routine of an average journalist. Journalists interview sources and review records to assemble, collect, and report information and explore the implications of the facts. Journalism informs, educates, chastises: Do not underestimate the power a journalist holds. Remember Watergate, when RobertWoodward and Carl Bernstein, two reporters working for The Washington Post, discovered and published information that led to the resignation of President Richard Nixon? Professionals must be able to report quickly and accurately. More than 80 percent of our respondents listed time pressure as one of the most distinguishing features of this job. Journalists must maintain a point of view while remaining objective about their subjects, which can be difficult; around half our respondents said that their colleagues sometimes got too involved in the stories. Interpersonal skills, excellent writing skills, and a reporter’s instinct (the ability to accurately assess the significance of obscure and incomplete information) are essential to success. The uncertainty of the daily routine makes it difficult to incorporate family, hobbies, and any regularly scheduled plans; but those who detest the predictability of nine-to-five jobs are attracted to journalism because “no day is a carbon copy of the day before.” Long hours and chronic deadline pressure can be significantly negative factors. When an editor calls you in on a breaking story, you have to be prepared to drop everything; when you’re on deadline, you can get crazed trying to write a complicated story in half the time you need. This ball and chain to the offices leads many to resent, and eventually reject, the reporter’s life. Some journalists complain about being “under the thumb of Napoleonic editors who control your every word based on their own taste.” (Editors are sometimes Napoleonic, but more often, they are simply perfectionists.) Journalists who are protective of their prose rarely last in this profession, since articles are often edited for publication without their consultation. More than 40 million people read newspapers in the United States each day, and more than 50 million people read magazines each week. The opportunity for your writing to reach a large audience is tempting indeed, and many find the initial low pay, uncertain and occasionally dangerous conditions, and chaotic schedule a fair tradeoff to be allowed to do what they do. In fact, many seem drawn by the excitement and challenge of these very conditions.

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