Showing posts with label World News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label World News. Show all posts

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Now in Bangladesh, Rohingya describe rape, murder in Myanmar

COX'S BAZAR, Bangladesh (AP) — The Myanmar soldiers came in the morning, the young mother says. They set fire to the concrete-and-thatch homes, forcing the villagers to cluster together. When some of her neighbors tried to escape into the fields, they were shot. After that, she says, most people stopped running away.
"They drove us out of our houses, men and women in separate lines, ordering us to keep our hands folded on the back of our heads," says 20-year-old Mohsena Begum, her voice choking as she described what happened to the little village of Caira Fara, which had long been home to hundreds of members of Myanmar's minority Rohingya community. She said that when about 50 people had been gathered together, the soldiers, along with a group of local men, pulled four village leaders from the crowd and slit their throats.


Muslims in an overwhelmingly Buddhist nation, the Rohingya have long faced persecution in Myanmar, where most are denied citizenship. The latest outbreak of violence was triggered by October attacks on guard posts near the Bangladesh border that killed nine police officers. While the attackers' identities and motives are unclear, the government launched a massive counter-insurgency sweep through Rohingya areas in western Rakhine state. Most Rohingya live in Rakhine, which borders Bangladesh.
The government, which has implied the attacks were carried out by Rohingya sympathizers, has acknowledged using helicopter gunships in support of ground troops in the sweep. While survivors and human rights groups have tracked waves of anti-Rohingya violence in recent weeks, the Myanmar government insists that stories like Begum's are exaggerations.
Myanmar's leader, the Nobel Peace laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, has accused the international community of stoking unrest.
"It doesn't help if everybody is just concentrating on the negative side of the situation, in spite of the fact that there were attacks on police outposts," she said in a recent interview on Singapore's Channel News Asia.


Suu Kyi, whose party took power in March after decades of military-backed rule, has been accused of not acting strongly enough to curb the violence against the more than 1 million Rohingya believed to be in the country. Although many have lived in Rakhine for generations, they are widely seen as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh.
"It helps if people recognize the difficulty and are more focused on resolving these difficulties rather than exaggerating them, so that everything seems worse than it really is," she said in the interview.
But Begum says she has no need to exaggerate what happened in Caira Fara.
She said that after the four leaders were killed, violence churned through the village in chaotic scenes of horror. Begum's husband, a poor, illiterate farm laborer, was beaten and then murdered by having his throat slit, along with an unknown number of other villagers, she said. Their bodies were eventually driven away in a truck.
She said attackers knocked her young son knocked from her grasp, then raped her.
Finally, when the soldiers weren't paying attention, she grabbed her son and ran into the nearby hills. After hiding for two days, her brother gave her enough money — about $38 — to pay smugglers to get her and her son into Bangladesh.
When Bangladeshi border guards stopped them, she began to weep.


"I told them I have no one to protect me there," she says, and told them: "'Look at my baby! He will die if I go back there.'" After that, they let her pass.
Much of Rakhine has been closed to outsiders, including journalists, since the violence began. However, former U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan, leader of a commission formed to investigate the situation in Rakhine state, was allowed to visit in recent days. He is expected to hold a press conference Tuesday in Yangon, Myanmar's biggest city.
Along the banks of the Naf River, which marks the border between Bangladesh and Myanmar, it's not difficult to find people who can talk about what is happening.
Some 15,000 Rohingya have arrived in Bangladesh over past month, often brought in by smugglers, according to police and intelligence officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because the government refuses to release numbers publicly. They have joined up to 500,000 undocumented Rohingya who have been living in Bangladesh after arriving from Myanmar in waves since the 1970s. Some 33,000 registered Rohingya refugees live the Cox's Bazar district. Bangladesh does not welcome Rohingya — its maritime patrols sometimes turn back refugee boats full of them — but it is seen as a haven compared to Myanmar.
The U.N. says up 30,000 Rohingya Muslims have abandoned their homes amid the recent violence. Satellite images analyzed by the rights group Human Rights Watch show 1,250 structures destroyed in November in Rohingya villages.
Osman Gani, a thin, fast-talking Arabic teacher, fled after his village, Gouzo Bil, was attacked Nov. 11.
"They came and killed mercilessly. They burned our homes," says Gani, standing near the Naf River over the weekend. "No one was there to save us."
He hid with his family for about a week near the village. But when searches intensified, and with soldiers targeting men, he was forced to leave Myanmar without his family.
"I had no other choice but to leave them behind. I came to the bank of the river and started swimming," he says. His family was able to join him in Bangladesh a few days later.
As he fled north, he used his mobile phone to film destruction in other Rohingya villages he passed through. In some, the blackened remains of what appear to be children can be seen amid the wreckage of homes. Gani's voice can be heard in some of the videos but The Associated Press could not confirm their authenticity.
"I have shot videos!" he says, holding out his mobile phone to a reporter. "Don't you see the charred bodies?"
While he was initially in hiding after the attack, Osmani said he also managed to slip back into his village and film what remained of his home.
As he walks through the village, a child can be heard talking to him.
"Where are you coming from?" the boy asks.
Gani doesn't answer, instead asking, "Where's my cow?"
Then he pans through the ashes and broken concrete. "This is my land, my home," he says. "This is Puitta's. This is Uncle Yunus."

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AP Explains: What's behind persecution of Myanmar's Rohingya

BANGKOK (AP) — Myanmar's Muslim Rohingya minority face discrimination and violence from the Buddhist majority in the Southeast Asian country. Their plight generally goes unnoticed by the world at large, even though some rights activists say their persecution amounts to ethnic cleansing. Here are several things to know about the group:
Although Rohingya — a Muslim ethnic minority of about 1 million among Myanmar's predominantly Buddhist 52 million people — have lived in Myanmar for generations, most people in the country view them as foreign intruders from neighboring Bangladesh. Bangladesh, which hosts many Rohingya refugees, also refuses to recognize them as citizens. "The Rohingya are probably the most friendless people in the world. They just have no one advocating for them at all," Kitty McKinsey, a spokeswoman for the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, said in 2009.


Almost all Rohingya live in western Myanmar's Rakhine state, where the military has stepped up operations since November, when nine police officers were killed in attacks on posts along the border with Bangladesh. The identity of the perpetrators remains unclear. Rohingya villagers armed with homemade weapons resisted troops and an unknown number of villagers died, along with a handful of soldiers and officials. Rohingya solidarity groups say several hundred civilians have been killed since October. The New York-based group Human Rights Watch says satellite imagery shows 1,250 houses and other structures have been burned down. In 2012, violence between Rohingya and the Buddhist community killed hundreds and forced about 140,000 people — predominantly Rohingya — to flee their homes to camps for the internally displaced. About 100,000 remain in the squalid camps and dependent on charity.
DISAPPOINTMENT WITH SUU KYI

There has been great disappointment that Nobel Peace laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, whose political party took power in Myanmar this year after decades of military rule, has failed to ease the plight of Rohingya despite her reputation as a fighter for human rights. Speaking out for Rohingya rights is an unpopular political position in Myanmar. However, Suu Kyi's government in August appointed former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan to head an advisory panel aimed at finding lasting solutions to the conflict in Rakhine state. He has visited Rakhine over the past few days and is scheduled to speak at a news conference Tuesday in Yangon, Myanmar's biggest city. The U.N. special adviser on the prevention of genocide, Adama Dieng, last week expressed concern about reports of excessive use of force and other human rights violations against civilians, particularly Rohingya, including allegations of extrajudicial executions, torture, rape and the destruction of religious property.

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Bolivia: Crashed jet's company left trail of unpaid debts

BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) — The airline involved in last week's crash in the Andes left a trail of unpaid bills that forced Bolivia's air force to seize two planes and briefly jail one of the company's owners, Bolivian Defense Minister Reymi Ferreira said Monday.
The revelation added to a string of human errors and unsettling details about the Bolivian-based LaMia charter company's checkered past that experts say should have served as warnings to aviation authorities.
A LaMia jet carrying 77 people, including a Brazilian soccer team heading to a South American championship final, slammed into a Colombian mountainside just minutes after the pilot reported running out of fuel. Investigators are centering their probe on why the short-range jet was allowed to attempt a direct flight with barely enough fuel on board to cover the distance between Santa Cruz, Bolivia, and Medellin, Colombia.

Ferreira said that in 2014, LaMia brought its three airplanes — all of them short-haul jets made by British Aerospace — to Bolivia's air force for repair. He didn't say what maintenance work was performed but accused the airline of paying for only half the work and abandoning two of the planes.
After months of the company refusing to pay hangar fees, the government took legal action and seized the planes, Ferreira said. He added that one of LaMia's owners, pilot Miguel Quiroga, who died in the crash, was detained for a few days five months ago in the case.
Ferreira said aviation officials who signed off on LaMia's irregular flight plan would be prosecuted.
The airline, which was only licensed to fly earlier this year, has also been suspended and Bolivian officials are looking into whether the son of another owner, former air force Gen. Gustavo Vargas, favored the airline as head of the office responsible for licensing aircraft.


"This was a mistake by two or three people who are causing enormous damage to Bolivia's aviation industry, but it's not the country that's to blame," Ferreira said, alluding to the possibility that the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration could downgrade Bolivia's aviation safety ranking.
Minutes before the crash, Quiroga requested permission to land, telling air traffic controllers that he was having fuel problems without making a formal distress call, according to air traffic tower recordings. Minutes later, as the jetliner circled in a holding pattern awaiting another aircraft with its own mechanical problems to land, his voice became more desperate as he reported the fuel had run out and the aircraft was experiencing a "complete electrical failure."
Passengers on the flight were oblivious to the tense exchange and had no time to prepare for the crash, according to one of six survivors who on Monday described the final moments of the doomed flight.
"Nobody knew there was a problem," Erwin Tumiri, a technician on the flight, told Blu radio of Colombia. "We felt the plane descending but all along we thought it was preparing to land. Everything happened very quickly and from one moment to the next the plane began to shake, the lights went out and the emergency lights turned on."


Tumiri, who is recovering in a hospital in his hometown of Cochabamba, Bolivia, said the cockpit never alerted him that the plane was running low on fuel and that the pilot had requested an emergency landing.
"I think the pilot should've at least communicated to me the situation," Tumiri said, adding that he only learned about the fuel shortage from another survivor, flight attendant Ximena Sanchez.
Investigators in Colombia said Monday that they hope to have their preliminary accident report ready in 10 days.

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Defendant in recovery doesn't halt 9/11 case at Guantanamo

GUANTANAMO BAY NAVAL BASE, Cuba (AP) — A U.S. military judge turned down a request Monday to halt the latest round of Sept. 11 war crimes proceedings at Guantanamo Bay while one of five defendants recovers from a surgical procedure.
Army Col. James Pohl said defendant Mustafa al-Hawsawi may be excused from pretrial hearings in the case this week at the U.S. base in Cuba but that his apparently painful recovery is not an adequate justification to postpone the proceedings scheduled to run through Friday.

The prison doctor who oversees medical care in Camp 7, the maximum-security unit where al-Hawsawi is held with four other alleged members of the Sept. 11 conspiracy, testified that the Saudi underwent hemorrhoid surgery at the base Oct. 14 and has taken pain medication sporadically during his recovery.
Defense attorney Walter Ruiz said that al-Hawsawi cannot sit for prolonged periods in court because of what has at times been "excruciating pain" and that he has experienced side effects from medication that include dizziness and nausea.
The lawyer and others have long raised concerns about the health of the 48-year-old defendant. He had an undisclosed medical emergency while in CIA custody in 2003-2006 and was subjected to rectal exams with "excessive force," according to the Senate Intelligence Committee report on its investigation into the U.S. clandestine interrogation program. Ruiz said that treatment was connected to his most recent surgery.

"This is not some show that we are trying to put on to delay these proceedings," he said. "Mr. al-Hawsawi needs additional time to recover."
Prosecutors urged the judge not to postpone a case that has been subjected to repeated delays. The five defendants were arraigned in May 2015 on charges that include terrorism, hijacking and nearly 3,000 counts of murder for their alleged roles planning and support the Sept. 11, 2001, attack. They could get the death penalty if convicted. A trial date has not been scheduled.

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With Brexit pending, early-career researchers ponder their futures

Brexit—the United Kingdom’s exit from the European Union, which the country voted for in the 23 June national referendum—has plunged the U.K. scientific community into uncertainty. As an EU member, the United Kingdom has for several decades enjoyed access to EU research funds and scientific collaborations. Free movement of people has allowed EU researchers and students to gain valuable training and education in the country, and many have chosen to stay.
But now, as the United Kingdom seeks a national strategy to negotiate and implement Brexit, all of these opportunities are up in the air. Both the European Commission and the U.K. government have offered reassurance that, until the United Kingdom officially leaves the bloc, nothing will change. But nobody knows what the landscape for U.K. researchers will look like once the country’s divorce from the European Union has taken place, which could be as early as 2019, or much later.

The uncertainty is casting a shadow over the entire U.K. scientific community, but it is likely to be particularly hard on EU early-career scientists who need to plan their next career move years ahead and now see their rights to live and work in the country threatened. Here are a few of their stories.
Do I stay or do I go?

The country’s vote for Brexit, which was fueled by anti-immigrant feelings, “made me feel a little less welcome,” says Sabine Lengger, an Austrian organic geochemist who has been living and working in the United Kingdom since 2014. Nonetheless, Lengger plans to stay, both for professional and personal reasons: She is currently a research fellow at the University of Bristol and a lecturer at the University of Plymouth, and her partner is from the United Kingdom.
But she knows that Brexit is likely to present some challenges. Once it is implemented, “there is a chance that it might get a lot more difficult for us [EU nationals] to stay,” she says. A greater concern for Lengger is how her ability to get funding when she becomes a group leader may be affected. “I am worried about how the funding climate is going to change in the U.K. and, if we cannot apply for EU funding [anymore], whether it will be replaced by U.K. funding,” she says.
Marie Bruser, on the other hand, has already made her decision to leave the United Kingdom when she finishes her Ph.D. in crop genetics at the John Innes Centre in Norwich next October. It is largely a matter of principle. “I don’t want to be in a country that doesn’t want to be part of the EU,” says Bruser, who came to the United Kingdom in 2010 for her undergraduate studies. “You can’t just look inwards and work by yourself as a small country, without partners. I’ve been brought up in an international environment, and I’d hate to lose that.”
Besides, Bruser does not feel optimistic about her chances to find a position in the United Kingdom now that the country is on a course for Brexit. When she applied for her Ph.D. studentship in 2013, eligibility criteria for non-U.K. nationals were already strict: EU nationals had to have 3 years of U.K. residency to be considered. Bruser now fears that U.K. funding bodies may further restrict their eligibility criteria for grants, including postdoctoral ones. “I think [Brexit] could impact my opportunities for finding a postdoc in this country,” she says. Moreover, Bruser, who is still undecided about whether to pursue a postdoc or go into industry, thinks that Brexit will decrease her chances there as well. “There is a lot of uncertainty and I fear that some companies are likely to downsize or leave the country. At least that is what they said before the referendum,” she says.

Devising a plan B

Estrella Luna-Diez, a Spanish agricultural researcher at the University of Sheffield who is currently applying for group leader positions, says that her plan A is to stay in the United Kingdom. Her partner and newborn son are British nationals, and the family has a house and mortgage in Sheffield. Even though she was very upset after the Brexit vote—“It showed me I didn’t know the society where I am living,” she recalls—she took heart in the reassurances she received from British friends, family, and even strangers on the street that she was welcome in the country.
Immediately after the vote, Luna-Diez considered applying for British citizenship in the hope that it could ease potential difficulties post-Brexit. But she eventually decided against it. “In Spain we are quite nationalistic, and changing nationality is not something I want to do,” she says. 
Despite her desire to stay, Luna-Diez, who is vice president of the Society of Spanish Researchers in the United Kingdom, fears that universities may have paused their hiring because of the financial uncertainties brought on by Brexit. Luna-Diez, who hopes to be ready next year to apply for a Starting Grant from the European Research Council (ERC) to launch her lab, also worries about how her opportunities to get funding will be affected. “It is likely we [researchers in the United Kingdom] will not be able to apply for ERC [grant]s or other sources of European funding, [and] it is [also] likely that the funding landscape will get more complicated in the U.K.,” she says. With the country’s exit still to be negotiated, “it is this uncertainty that is making everything really complicated. We just don’t know how the U.K. is going to be after Brexit.”
So Luna-Diez, who wants to put down secure roots for her family, is keeping an eye on group leader positions in France and Germany, in addition to the United Kingdom. She is also considering a move back home, and she just applied for a Marie Skłodowska-Curie postdoctoral fellowship to have the option to return to Spain. Wherever she goes, “it is going to be complicated to move my family. My partner also has a position at the university here, but we want to go where we can live well,” she says. With Brexit looming, “I now need a plan B.”

German physicist Jakob Runge is also evaluating his options. Upon obtaining a fellowship from the James S. McDonnell Foundation, Runge could have gone anywhere in the world to do his postdoc. He picked the Grantham Institute on Climate Change and the Environment at Imperial College London for its ample opportunities for interdisciplinary collaborations, both within the United Kingdom and internationally. “Scientific life is all about exchange, and the U.K. has always been an attractive place for scientists from all over the world,” says Runge, who started his fellowship in February 2016. “However, in a post-Brexit U.K., this international competitiveness could be jeopardized,” Runge adds—noting that, had he anticipated the Brexit vote, “maybe I would have gone to a different place.”
As he prepares to apply for faculty positions, Runge is drawn more to the European Union. “After Brexit, staying in the U.K. would make me probably unable to take part in EU grants,” says Runge, who immediately after the vote experienced difficulties convincing potential EU collaborators to keep him on their grant applications. Ultimately, staying “would very much depend on how funding is reorganized in the U.K. to make it an attractive place to stay and [on future] accessibility to excellent students and postdocs” from abroad, he concludes.
Wait and see
Other young researchers prefer, and may have more latitude, to wait and see. French postdoc Jonathan Grizou, who just over a year ago started applying his background in developmental robotics to chemistry at the University of Glasgow, is focused on succeeding in his new lab. Right now, “what’s important is the work I’m doing here,” he says. Grizou remains optimistic about the future. Although he shares the concern that Brexit will harm the ability of U.K. scientists to get EU funding, he remains confident that he would still be able to stay and do good work in the United Kingdom. Ultimately, even post-Brexit, “there will still be U.K. funding for science,” he anticipates. As for the chances of landing a permanent position in the United Kingdom, it will continue to be “extremely competitive,” Grizou thinks, but that’s no different from all the other “big academic countries.” So he is keeping his options open, and is ready to move elsewhere if that is where the job opportunities are.
This position is shared by Guillermo Navalon, a Spanish paleobiologist at the University of Bristol who plans to finish his Ph.D. in 2019. He expects that his next move after that will be based on institutions and opportunities rather than a specific country. Soraia Rosa, a Portuguese Ph.D. candidate in cancer radiotherapy research who came to Queen’s University Belfast with a Marie Skłodowska-Curie fellowship, also feels that it is too early to be concerned. “There is still 18 months of the project left and that is around the time the U.K. [has been planning] to leave the EU. Nothing will change before that,” she says. “After that, I don’t know. But I don’t think it will limit my options.”



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No one knew about the existence of these people, until the cameras found them / VIDEO

For many a time the Earth is explored behind new discoveries, new peoples and civilizations, but as much as we think that knowledge is vast and the unknown is not so great and unreachable, we are still periodically discovering the new things that our planet saves . That's why the place we live in is so full of surprises.

We have confirmation of this fact in a distinct place in the Amazon, where a lost tribe impacts the whole and causes changes in what we know about civilization. Hidden for centuries from the rest of the world, these people have never been seen by anyone outside. So far.


However, it is a people in extinction and the government has done nothing to protect them from an imminent disappearance. But we can! At Survivor International, it is possible to find all kinds of information, be it about the people, the cause of their extinction or even, donations.

You can make a difference, help prevent illegal logging from threatening this tribe and all other native cultures.

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