terça-feira, 12 de janeiro de 2010

7.0 quake leaves Haiti capital in 'total disaster and chaos'



People wail from the rubble across Port-au-Prince, where a hospital reportedly collapsed and bodies lie in the streets. One aid official estimates 'there must be thousands of people dead'

By Tracy Wilkinson

Reporting from Mexico City - A mighty earthquake rocked the tiny, impoverished island nation of Haiti today, collapsing a hospital, the presidential palace and other buildings and triggering what one diplomat called a "catastrophe".

As night fell on the Haitian capital of Port-au-Prince and other towns, reports of extensive destruction were trickling out. Tsunami alerts were issued for Cuba, the Bahamas and much of the Caribbean.

The quake, one of the most powerful ever in the region -- measuring a preliminary magnitude of 7.0 and centered about 10 miles west of Port-au-Prince, a city of 2 million -- had a shallow depth of just five miles. It struck at 4:53 p.m., followed by several strong aftershocks.

All of that augured vast damage and overwhelming casualties. Electricity was out tonight through the darkened capital, phone lines were down, and the airport was shut. Screams for help seeped from felled buildings, and chaos reigned.

"I can hear very distressed people . . . a lot of distress, people wailing, trying to find loved ones trapped under the rubble," Ian Rodgers, with Save the Children in Port-au-Prince, told CNN by telephone.

In Washington, President Obama pledged to help the crippled country.

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, in remarks before a speech in Hawaii, said the U.S. was assessing the situation and "is offering our full assistance to Haiti and to others in the region".

"We will be providing both civilian and military disaster relief and humanitarian assistance," Clinton said. "And our prayers are with the people who have suffered, their families and their loved ones".

Philip J. Crowley, the State Department's senior spokesman, said U.S. officials were meeting to plan "significant" assistance to Haiti.

He said U.S. Embassy personnel have reported widespread damage, including collapsed buildings and walls, and bodies lying in the streets. The presidential palace, a graceful white French colonial structure visited by President Clinton in 1994, has sustained heavy damage, Crowley said.

U.S. officials plan to send teams to assess Haiti's needs, but they first needed to determine whether airport runways were able to receive cargo planes carrying aid, Crowley said.

A spokesman for the U.S. Southern Command, which oversees American military operations in the Caribbean and South America, said officials are assessing what assistance or aid might be needed.

"We are monitoring the situation and staying in close contact with the State Department," said Jose Ruiz, a spokesman for the command.

The Associated Press said its reporters saw a hospital collapse in the wealthy suburb of Petionville that overlooks the capital.

A spokeswoman for Catholic Relief Services said the group's representative in Haiti, Karel Zelenka, described "total disaster and chaos" before the telephone line went dead. Zelenka told colleagues that the Haitian capital was covered in dust.

"He estimates there must be thousands of people dead," the spokeswoman, Sara Fajardo, said in an interview from the group's office in Maryland.

Fajardo said the group has stockpiles of food and other goods to serve 5,000 families but that aid workers are concerned that relief efforts could be impaired by poor road conditions and lack of security.

"Within a minute of the quake . . . soil, dust and smoke rose up over the city, a blanket that completely covered the city and obscured it for about 12 minutes until the atmospheric conditions dissipated the dust," Mike Godfrey, who works as a contractor for USAID, told CNN from Port-au-Prince.

"I think it is really a catastrophe of major proportions," said Haiti's ambassador to the U.S., Raymond Joseph.

People communicating by Twitter said that while they felt the quake in the Haitian city of Cap-Haitien, in the north, there was little damage.

Haiti is the poorest nation in the Western Hemisphere and one of the poorest in the world. Already battered by storms, military coups and gang violence, much of Haiti is a hodgepodge of slums, poor construction and people living on the edge.

Los Angeles Times

Megan Fox strips off to steal Victoria Beckham's Emporio Armani crown


These sexy pictures areMegan Fox's 'spirited' attempt at succeeding Victoria Beckham as Emporio Armani's top knicker flasher - and we reckon she's done rather well



The Transformers beauty kicked off her threads to sprawl out in the skimpy new briefs in her first range of shots for the designer. 
The versatile 23-year-old proved she can also do fully dressed too, all be it in a wet white shirt in another pose.


Mr Armani himself was pretty chuffed with the results himself, saying: "Megan is young and sexy and has a lot of spirit."
"Emporio Armani Underwear and Armani Jeans are all about a youthful attitude making her the perfect choice for the collections."
He'll be happy to have got his monies worth after he forked out £12million for Mrs Beckham to strip. 

Metro.UK

Judiciary boosting security after website hacked


By SHAILA KOSHY


KUALA LUMPUR: The Judiciary will be upgrading the security of its court computer systems, following a hacking and defacing of its website last Thursday.
Security has become crucial with the introduction of e-filing and the online management of court documents last year.
According to court sources, the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (SKMM) had alerted the judiciary to the hacking Thursday night after which the site was taken down.
The hacker, who used the handle “Brainwash,” had issued a threat not to pursue with the matter of the Catholic Church using the word “Allah” in the Bahasa Malaysia publication of its weekly Herald.
The hacker had also written: “Allah only restricted to muslim only. Dont touch us as we dont touch you. Unless.....”
Asked whether a police report had been lodged, the sources said yes, adding the SKMM was also conducting investigations.
Asked whether computerised court files were now in danger, the sources said the Malaysian Administrative Modernisation and Management Planning Unit Mampu (which is the secretariat for the Government IT and Internet Committee) had been informed of the hacking and that the security would be upgraded.
The Malaysian Bar on Tuesday welcomed the reports of the police monitoring and investigating the incidents of arson and vandalism against various places of worship this past week.
“These, along with the hacking and defacing of the Malaysian Judiciary’s website last week, constitute attempts to harass, and put undue pressure on, the Judiciary and the judicial process,” said its president Ragunath Kesavan.
“The calls for this matter to be heard by a Muslim judge are counter-productive, as the resulting judgment might also be criticised as biased,” he said, adding that all judges are qualified as each judge takes an oath to defend and uphold the Federal Constitution.
On the news report of a court file that was purportedly found in the house of a man on trial for possession of drugs, but who has since jumped bail, the court sources said the entire file and been sent back to the judiciary on Tuesday. A police report has been lodged.
The Star Online

Romania misses inflation target for third year in a row


Romania's annual inflation rate has risen to 4.74 per cent, above the central bank’s target, the National Statistics Institute said today (Tues).




The central bank targeted an annual inflation of 3.5 per cent at the end of December, with a one percentage point variation band around the target. Last year was the third in a row in which the central bank missed the inflation target.


However, the 2009 inflation rate was slightly below analysts’ estimates of 4.8 to 4.9 per cent.

The consumer price index rose by 32 basis points in the month in December, driven mainly by higher food and tobacco prices.

In 2010, the central bank is targeting an annual inflation rate of 3.5 per cent at the end of December, with a one percentage variation band around the target, the same target as that set for 2009.


Romanian Times

Georgian Tourism Association presents results of last year’s project


Author: Liene Veide




The Georgian Tourism Association presented the results of the “Sustainable Tourism Development in Protected Areas of Georgia” project on Jan.11. 

The project was supported by BP on behalf of its oil and gas co-partners and the Eurasia Partnership Foundation. It was carried out together with the Agency of Protected Areas (APA).


In the frames of the project several workshops were carried out. “Local products for sustainable tourism in Mtirala National Park, Algeti National Park and Vashlovani national park” was one of them.


Also, school camps were organized in the Algeti, Vashlovani and Lagodekhi National parks.


Picnic areas, toilet facilities, garbage containers, road signs, explanatory boards and informational desks were built in the Algeti National park.


The constructions were very important because before there was no infrastructure in the Algeti National park,” Nata Kvachantiradze, director of the Georgian Tourism Association, told Georgia Today.


According to Kvachantiradze, the project lasted seven months and the total cost was $60,000.


Different maps, brochures and photos were printed.


Kvachantiradze added that videos were shot for the department’s international affairs.


“Such kind of project is also planned for this year, in cooperation with the Eurasia Partnership Foundation,” Kvachantiradze told Georgia Today.


Agency of Protected Areas Chairman Giorgi Shovnadze told Georgia Today that such projects are planned not only for this year but also for 2011.


“Such projects are very important for the development of tourism in Georgia,” Shovnadze said. 


Georgia Today

Rehab body wants JAL to tie with Delta


Plan includes making move to SkyTeam in April 2011



Kyodo News


The government-backed body in charge of turning around Japan Airlines intends to include in its rehabilitation plan a tieup between JAL and Delta Air Linesand have the struggling carrier switch to the SkyTeam alliance in April 2011, sources said Monday.



Under the plan being readied by the Enterprise Turnaround Initiative Corp. of Japan, JAL would also have to cut 15,600 jobs, or about 30 percent of its group workforce, by the business year through March 2013, the sources said.
ETIC is calculating that an alliance with Delta, the largest U.S. airline, would lead to a projected annual benefit of ¥17.2 billion, three times larger than what an expanded alliance with American Airlines would offer.
The benefit per year with American is estimated at ¥5.4 billion. American and JAL are both currently members of the oneworld alliance.
ETIC wants JAL to tie up with Delta without receiving capital from the U.S. airline, the sources said.
In recent months, both Delta and American have been wooing cash-strapped JAL with competing offers of financial aid.
No Japanese airline is a member of the SkyTeam alliance, which has more routes connecting Japan and Asia than does the oneworld alliance. Japan's other big airline, All Nippon Airways Co., is a member of the Star Alliance grouping.
As JAL prepares to file for a court-backed bankruptcy, ETIC is also highly likely to have the company delisted from the stock market.
ETIC had been trying to find a way to avoid a delisting because a high number of individual investors own shares in the airline. It eventually decided on the delisting after judging it wouldn't be able to get JAL's key creditor banks to agree to a debt waiver.
Transport minister Seiji Maehara is set to meet Tuesday with top executives of the banks to try to seek their understanding about JAL filing for bankruptcy and their continued support for the airline.
Under the turnaround plan, JAL and Delta would file for antitrust immunity for Japan-U.S. routes under the open skies agreement the two nations recently signed, the sources said.
JAL aims to beef up international routes at Tokyo's Haneda airport, where a fourth runway due to open in October will increase the number of flights. It intends to open a Haneda-Los Angeles route in fiscal 2011 and connect JAL with routes of the SkyTeam alliance.
ETIC plans to decide on its bailout package for JAL as early as Jan. 19, at the same time it will have the airline file for court protection under the Corporate Rehabilitation Law.
According to an estimate by ETIC, the carrier's liabilities exceed its assets by more than ¥860 billion, the sources said.
Under court protection, ETIC plans to reduce ¥730 billion of JAL's liabilities and invest ¥300 billion in the carrier so its assets exceed its liabilities by more than ¥160 billion, the sources said.
The government and ETIC are also arranging for 77-year-old Kazuo Inamori,honorary chairman of Kyocera Corp., to become chief executive officer of JAL during the turnaround process, they added.
Inamori is not only known for his management skills in bolstering Kyocera into one of the nation's leading electronic parts makers, but also for having rare close ties within the business community with the Democratic Party of Japan.
Even after bankruptcy proceedings, the government-backed body will guarantee more than ¥470 billion in receivables for payments of fuel and other commercial transactions necessary to keep JAL flying, they added. The carrier's creditor banks will be required to waive about ¥350 billion, out of approximately ¥430 billion in unsecured bank loans.
ETIC estimates JAL's consolidated operating loss will expand to about ¥265.1 billion for the current business year, compared with a year-earlier loss of ¥50.88 billion, due to a drop in passengers.
The Japan Times

Turkish official: Top Israel diplomats behaved like 'adolescents'


By Haaretz Service



A Turkish official denounced Israel's top two diplomats on Tuesday as "adolescent youths" for deliberately seating Ankara's envoy on a lower chair during than that of Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon during a consultation on Monday. 

Israeli officials were angered by statements made Monday by Turkish Prime Minister Reccep Tayip Erdogan, who accused Jerusalem of using "disproportionate power ... while refusing to abide by UN resolutions" relating to its policy toward the Palestinians. 



In response, Ayalon summoned the Turkish ambassador to Israel, Ahmet Oguz Celikkol, for consultations. 



During the meeting, Celikkol was seated in a low sofa, and facing him, in higher chairs, were Ayalon and two other officials - an arrangement carried out on the orders of Ayalon's superior, Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman. 

A photo-op was held at the start of the meeting, during which Ayalon told the photographers in Hebrew: "Pay attention that he is sitting in a 
lower chair and we are in the higher ones, that there is only an Israeli flag on the table and that we are not smiling".

Celikkol's associates told Army Radio on Tuesday, that the meeting with Ayalon was the most shameful display he had seen in 35 years as a diplomat. 

According to the associates, Celikkol had no idea what the topic of conversation was to be when first seated. When the cameras left the room, the sources said, the meeting was normal and professional. 

"Had the ambassador understood Ayalon's intentions, which were only expressed in Hebrew, he would have responded in kind," the source told Army Radio. 

Celikkol told Army Radio that the episode was the most shameful experience of his 35-year career. 

Israel's Foreign Ministry said on Tuesday that Ayalon did not intend to humiliate Celikkol by seating him in a lower chair without flag representation during their meeting. 

Celikkol was called in regarding a recent Turkish television drama depicting actors dressed as Shin Bet officers who kidnap babies. 

In response to the incident, the Turkish Foreign Ministry on Tuesday summoned Israeli Ambassador Gaby Levy for clarification. 

"It would be worthwhile for Israel to know its boundaries and to not dare cross them," a Turkish official said. 

He added that Ankara knows to differentiate between the various constituent elements of the Israeli government, and that it would prefer to deal only with ministers and leaders who assume a more moderate line. 

Ankara on Tuesday rejected Israel's criticism of Turkey's past while accusing Lieberman and Ayalon of staging the incident to enhance their domestic political standing. 

"Turkey has always been a friend to Jews," the Turkish Foreign Ministry said in a statement. 

"Deep-rooted relations between Turks and Jews that precede the establishment of the Israeli state and the general structure of our relations give us the responsibility to make such warnings and criticism," the statement read. 

The Foreign Ministry stressed that it had summoned the envoy and ordered the seating arrangment to make clear that it would respond to any insult made by the Turkish leadership

Just three months ago, a similar diplomatic instance occurred between the two countries after Turkey aired the controversial television drama Ayrilik ("Separation") which featured actors dressed as Israeli soldiers killing Palestinian children. 

Israeli officials: Liberman wants to keep tense ties with Turkey 

Meanwhile, ministry sources said Monday that Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman was trying to stop Defense Minister Ehud Barak from visiting to Turkey next week, in order to keep up the recent tensions between the two allied countries. 

Barak was scheduled to leave for Turkey on Sunday to meet with his counterpart and the foreign minister there, in an attempt to improve deteriorating relations. 

Tensions were renewed on Monday, after Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan declared that Israel was endangering world peace by using exaggerated force against the Palestinians, breaching Lebanon's air space and waters and for not revealing the details of its nuclear program. 

According to Foreign Ministry sources, Lieberman is now looking to "heat things up" before Barak's trip, so as to torpedo attempts to mend the tensions. 

"We get the sense that Lieberman wants to heat things up before Barak's visit," a senior Foreign Ministry source said. "All of the recent activities were part of Lieberman's political agenda".

The Turkish government was expected to give a warm welcome to Barak, who alongside Labor Minister Benjamin Ben-Eliezer was looking to bring the allies' relations back to stability. 

The Foreign Ministry sources surmised that Lieberman's efforts were aimed at preventing Turkey from resuming its role as mediator in Israel's peace talks with Syria.

Haaretz

RI’s old friend comes back to Jakarta with a new vision


Ary Hermawan ,  The Jakarta Post ,  Jakarta

Malaysia has sent its Foreign Ministry’s most experienced Indonesian hand, Dato’ Syed Munshe Afdzaruddin Bin Syed Hassan, to Jakarta as a new ambassador with a new mission.

“I came here with a new vision,” Ambassador Syed Munshe, an Harvard-educated and adept career diplomat, told The Jakarta Post after submitting his letter of credentials to President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono on Tuesday in Jakarta.

With US$15 billion of bilateral trade between the two partners in 2008, Malaysia is one of Indonesia’s biggest trading partners.

When asked about his main mission in Indonesia, Syed Munshe, who joined the foreign ministry in 1984, said he will focus on taking the existing good relations to new heights.

“We have excellent relations in all fields with Indonesia. We have also very good personal rapport between our Prime Minister Najib Razak and President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono.

“My main job is to overcome the challenges and enhance the existing relationship further,” Syed Munshe said.

Being neighbors, both Malaysia and Indonesia face some serious problems like border issues, migrant workers and smoke haze, which puts bilateral relations to the test.

Syed Munshe is not new to Indonesia. His first posting was in Medan as Consul General from 2000 to 2002. Then he  continued his career as deputy chief of mission at the Malaysian Embassy in Jakarta from 2002 to 2005.
The Jakarta Post

Mongolia’s Balancing Act



As most people, who are even remotely connected to Mongolia know, the much publicised (and long overdue) Mongolian economic boom is set to start in earnest. World analysts have now jumped in and tried to predict the shape of things to come.
Mr. MacNamara, a journalist from the Financial Times has recently written an article about Mongolia’s third neighbour policy, while today the news about Mongolia seems to be all about the pre-IPO road-show of South Gobi Energy trying to raise $400m in HK for its Mongolia projects.  Before that it was the agreement between Areva and Mitsubishi to develop Uranium deposits in Mongolia together. Not a week goes by that Mongolia does not make the international business headlines with a new deal or story about its upcoming growth, it is clear that the world media’s are slowly catching up to the “Mongolia story” but where is that story heading?
Principally, it seems that the main questions asked by analysts are:
  • How will Mongolia juggle its appetite for foreign investments while maintaining national and political integrity?
  • How will Mongolia play its formidable neighbours to its advantage yet retain a real independence from both?
  • Will the much flaunted “third neighbor policy” work and be efficient or is it merely an elaborate trap for foreign investors?
While the Mongolian economy and its democratic movement are notoriously wild and unpredictable, all the signs seem to point towards a real desire from the political class to move in the right direction. All the ingredients for Mongolia to become this decade’s success story are present, now it is simply a case of blending the right mix of ingredients together to obtain a performing economy. This is actually a lot trickier than it sounds. Thankfully, Mongolia is still a functioning democracy and its elected representatives are still answerable to the people of Mongolia, if only through a system of fair elections and a generally free press.
The will to move in the right direction is clearly demonstrated by the new generation of Mongolia’s politicians who are fast becoming a formidable force, Mr. Zorig, the minister for Mineral Resources, has already accomplished much; he not only achieved the completion of the OT agreement but he has also restored Mongolia’s tainted reputation with Foreign Investors. Mrs. Oyun from the Civil Will Party seems to be one of the political shooting starts and also one of the finest and most driven politicians I have ever seen.
Mongolia’s main weakness has always been its isolation, landlocked between two enormous powers. With the correct exploitation of its resources, Mongolia now has the opportunity to turn that weaknesses into a strength and take full advantage of both neighbours. To achieve this, Mongolia will need to thread a fine line and play a tricky political game if it is to come out on top. Mongolia’s position is not an easy one; it is likely to become the setting of the clash of the titans over its resources. Russia’s agenda for Mongolia seems to be more a question of political dominance while China seems to be primarily concerned with securing easy and cheap access to the resources Mongolia is so abundant in and that China so desperately needs. The country itself seems locked in a love / hate relationship with China while it still has ambiguous feelings about Russia.
Concerning Russia, Mongolia seems uncertain as to where its relationship now stands and worries that Russia will increasingly use the carrot and stick method to obtain what it wants from Mongolia, this was demonstrated with the opposition to the Millennium Challenge railway funds as well as the timely reminders of Mongolia’s supposed outstanding debt to Russia. Russia has notoriously used threats, blackmail and occasional symbolic rewards in dealing with its own internal affairs as well as its previous (Soviet) area of influence; the pressure from Russia is likely to come from the Public sector and will be aimed squarely at the Mongolian Government. China on the other hand is more likely to play a more subtle game, using discrete methods of cajoling, bribery, corruption and its own economic dominance to ascertain its power over Mongolia but this is unlikely to be done by the state but rather led by private Chinese entities.
The best way for Mongolia to leverage its enormous resources against its neighbours is to use what has now been termed “The Third Neighbour Policy”, essentially a loose understanding that whenever possible and advantageous, Mongolia will deal with countries or entities that are neither Chinese nor Russian. This policy has a number of clear advantages, the most obvious of which is that Mongolia should be able to retain a greater independence from either of its neighbours but should also be able to obtain greater transparency and accountability from the  “third neighbour” companies such as Rio TintoBHPPeabody and so forth than from its geographic neighbours.
Mongolia’s favoured third neighbours have traditionally been considered to be Japan, Korea, India, the USA and sometimes a few of the European countries. The policy allows them to indiscriminately pick and choose the  most  suitable partner for each project. The next mega project in the pipeline is the famed Tavan Tolgoi project, the huge coal deposit in the South Gobi. It is too big for a single company to exploit and so will have to be divided and its licenses allocated accordingly. The way this will be done will really settle the question of Mongolia’s foreign policy and its use and abuse of the third neighbour policy. Mr. Zorig has announced that they will announce the shape of things to come regarding Tavan Tolgoi early in 2010 and choose its companies soon thereafter. If Oyu Tolgoi was the appetizer, the amuse-bouche even, Tavan Tolgoi will be the main course.
But, for the policy to have any chance of success it is not simply sufficient to wish it so, Mongolia must become an attractive destination for foreign investments. While some progress has certainly been made, it still needs to improve its offering; the corner stones of foreign investments in Mongolia will be the introduction of effective measures against the rising problems of corruption and the creation of a strong, independent, judicial system. The business environment of Mongolia is still good but can be further strengthened with more comprehensive, transparent and accessible information to foreign investors. Improving political stability is a longer term goal but is part of the greater understanding required on the part of Mongolia as to what is essential for the country to remain competitive in an increasingly globalised world.
Mongolia has already learned much with the debacle of the 68% windfall tax, it must carefully manage its fiscal and foreign policies, a too obvious show of greed on the part of the government will force foreign investors to seek their fortunes elsewhere while a too lenient policy will mean that Mongolia gets taken advantage of and will not receive its fair share of revenues.
On the flip side of the coin, if the third neighbour policy becomes truly effective, it may well anger its two very large and powerful neighbours who feel that they are missing out and see their influence diminish within Mongolia. Mongolia depends on those neighbours for its survival as they are (China in particular) Mongolia’s majority trading partners. Furthermore, Mongolia could be perceived as setting a bad example for its neighbours; a democratic and successful economy on their doorstep might set a dangerous precedent, in particular for the inner Mongolian region of China. It does not take a big stretch of the imagination to understand that both Russia and China have every interest to see Mongolia’s democracy and its third neighbour policy fail. A strong Mongolia is the last thing they want to see. How Mongolia handles this potential political and economical backlash from both countries is the most interesting of questions.
In the end it might well be the case that Mongolia’s abundant availability of minerals might end up being  the catalyst that will lead the country to its very own demise. As many other ex-Soviet, resource rich, central Asian countries have already demonstrated, the tightrope balancing act of democracy and good governance is hard to achieve, leaving very little room for errors. It would only be too easy for Mongolia to become a failed state, ruled by despots and only concerned with the well being of its ruling class.
Most people are confident that Mongolia will manage this difficult balancing act well, it will of course make mistakes along the way but as long as it retains a fair system of checks and balances, it will be able to recover from those mistakes and forge ahead. I look forward to seeing Mongolia develop into one of the most successful economies of this decade and will continue to be an avid spectator of this fantastic story.
This article was written by Christopher de Gruben
Mongolia-Web

Baidu taken offline by hackers



BEIJING, January 12 (Xinhuanet) -- Baidu, China's search engine, became unavailable on Tuesday after apparently being attacked by Iranian hackers.


    Internet users attempting to open the site were greeted with a graphic stating that the site had been attacked by the Iranian Cyber Army. According to a report on the People's Daily website, hackers changed Baidu's DNS records, redirecting traffic to another site.


    One Baidu insider told Chinanews.com.cn at 09:40 [01:40 GMT] that the problem has been solved, and that "it will be OK in half an hour." The site was still inaccessible until shortly before midday, though some users around the world reported problems several hours later.


    The news travelled swiftly around Twitter which itself had been the target of a similar attack in December last year. Little is know about the Iranian Cyber Army which is believed to be aligned with the current ruling party in Iran.


China View

luishipolito@outlook.com

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