Thursday, July 01, 2010

How to win a peace medal by going to war

Bring me my spear! O clouds, unfold!
Bring me my chariot of fire!

Tony Blair, the man who sent the UK into an illegal war that has cost the lives of tens of thousands of innocent Iraqis in their own country, and who parades himself as one of the Middle East Quartet whose agenda appears to be ensuring all sides of the conflict are equal, and that Israel is more equal than others, has picked up yet another prestigious peace prize.

David Eisner, President and CEO of the National Constitution Center, announced today that former British Prime Minister Tony Blair will receive the 2010 Liberty Medal in recognition of his steadfast commitment to conflict resolution. President Bill Clinton, Chair of the National Constitution Center, will award the prestigious medal to former Prime Minister Blair at a public ceremony on Monday, September 13, 2010.

His award was endorsed by Governor Edward G. Rendell of Pennsylvania, a man who has signed over one hundred death warrants since taking office.

As well as Rendell, Blair is in good company. Other notable men of peace who have been granted the lucrative Medal include,

George W. Bush, whose contribution to peace can still be seen on the streets of Baghdad and Afghanistan

Hamid Karzai, President of Afghanistan who has turned into his country into a corruption riddled family business

Shimon Peres, former Prime Minister of Israel - a country that deserves a Medal in its name for obscene hypocrisy and their excellence in playing history's eternal victims

Kofi "What's in it for me?" Annan.

If that is the sort of company I need to keep, and the sort of contribution required to pick up fashionable Peace Medals at lavish Backslappers Balls, then I think I will stick to my certificate for swimming a width of Guilford Crescent Baths.

Wherever you may be - be safe - (although thanks to the efforts of those listed above, for millions of you, it may not be all that easy )

Copyright Mike Hitchen Online, Lane Cove, NSW, Australia. All rights reserved

OPT: Obstacles on road to Gaza rebuilding

Gazans salvage what they can from the rubble of their homes

Eighteen months after Israel’s 23-day offensive in the Gaza Strip, three-quarters of damaged homes, buildings and infrastructure remain unrepaired, according to a reconstruction needs assessment published by the UN Development Programme (UNDP) in Jerusalem.

Around US$527 million is required to return Gaza to its pre-war state (in December 2008), UNDP said, adding that the figure was just a fraction of what was needed to repair and reverse the degradation of public and private infrastructure during the four-year Israeli blockade.

The assessment said most health facilities had been repaired, along with about 78 percent of public water and sanitation facilities. However, only half the damage to the electricity network, and almost none of the transport infrastructure, had been fixed.

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) says the critical issue facing Gaza’s medical facilities is the lack of medicines, medical equipment and an acute electricity crisis. “The power supply in Gaza is interrupted for seven hours a day on average. The consequences for public services, especially the primary health-care system, are devastating,” it said in a 14 June statement, adding that hospital fuel reserves for generators kept drying up.

The UNDP assessment said the major obstacle to recovery from the war is the blockade, which only allows imports of goods which Israel deems humanitarian. The blockade severely restricts the entry of essential building materials such as cement, iron and glass, rendering mostly ineffective efforts by the international community to rebuild.

“The UN position is clear. We expect the blockade to be lifted for a restoration of basic rights for the Gaza population,” John Ging, head of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA) in Gaza, told IRIN. “This political will to end the blockade must be mobilized and turned into action, exploring every option for practical solutions, including opening the Gaza seaport.”

Israel considers Hamas, the de facto authority in Gaza, a “terrorist” organization and fears that lifting the blockade would endanger its security. Israel launched its offensive to halt rocket-fire from Gaza into neighbouring Israeli communities.

Israeli change of policy

On 27 June - following, but not necessarily as a result of, tough Israeli military action against an aid-carrying flotilla manned by activists - Israel agreed to allow a greater number of goods into Gaza: It will enable and expand the inflow of construction materials for approved Palestinian Authority-authorized projects under international supervision.

However, it said the current security regime for Gaza would not be changed - because of Hamas rule.

“We have not seen a list [of items prohibited from entering Gaza] yet, but we need a complete change of approach since the list of about 114 items allowed to enter was inappropriate,” said UNRWA’s Ging.

UNRWA, UNDP efforts

About 400 trucks of construction materials have entered Gaza over the past four months, allowing UNRWA to complete the construction of a water treatment plant in Rafah and finish about 150 housing units that were already 80 percent complete, according to Ging.

He said UNRWA had secured $460 million to rebuild the homes of 2,300 refugees, 100 schools and a teacher training college, assuming the materials would be delivered.

There are about one million Palestinian refugees and about half a million non-refugees living in Gaza.

UNDP is also rebuilding schools in coordination with specific donors for each project. International NGOs such as CHF International and Islamic Relief have also begun school reconstruction.

Some 217 schools and 60 kindergartens were damaged or destroyed during the Israeli offensive, according to UNDP.

UNDP has secured $200 million to rebuild 1,200 houses for non-refugees, but has been unable to get the building materials in, said Amran al-Kharouby, a UNDP project manager in Gaza.

“Cheap cement and steel are entering Gaza via underground tunnels along the Gaza-Egypt border, but UNDP cannot work with it,” he said.

However, UNDP said small-scale Gazan industries using crushed rubble from destroyed buildings have repaired some 25 percent of the infrastructure damage inflicted by Israel during their military operation, which destroyed or damaged at least 6,268 homes as well hundreds of public buildings.

“Building materials like cement exist in Gaza from the tunnels, but we lack the money to purchase them,” said Ansar Abu Amra, a 52-year-old refugee whose family home worth $50,000 was levelled during the offensive. The 10-room home stood next to the Ministry of Planning, which was targeted. “UNRWA promised to pay $6,000 but so far I have received nothing,” he said.

Hamas efforts

Public buildings will be rebuilt by the Hamas-led government, but construction has yet to begin, according to Yasser Shunt, a senior engineer at the ministry of housing and public works in Gaza.

“The materials from the tunnels are insufficient to repair the damage and the government lacks funding, since donors will not fund projects that use cement brought in via the tunnels,” said Shunt.

He said the government had so far spent about $500,000 on reconstruction efforts, including the repair of about 700 houses using some materials that came from Israel and through projects funded by international organizations such as Turkish NGO Foundation for Human Rights and Freedoms and Humanitarian Relief (IHH - considered a “terrorist” body by the Israeli government) and Gaza-based NGOs such as Dar al-Kitab al-Suna and al-Rahma Alamia.

Seventeen schools have been repaired by the education ministry in Gaza with funding from international donors, such as the British consulate in Jerusalem, with another 16 scheduled for repairs, said Jamal Abdel Bari, head of the education ministry’s construction department.


Disclaimer:This material comes to you via IRIN, the humanitarian news and analysis service of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. The opinions expressed do not necessarily reflect those of the United Nations or its Member States.
Photo: Free Gaza via IRIN

Child soldiers: Story of an 11 year old girl - "When it was my turn to kill someone, I always hid my face because I was afraid"

Source: MADRE News

My mother was 15 when she first fell in love. She had me when she turned 16 but only took care of me for four months before leaving me with my father and my grandmother. My dad left me a month later. I lived with my grandmother and studied and worked. I spent almost all of my childhood working. I sold things like food and toilet paper in the street. We lived in a neighborhood called La Esperanza, in the southern part of Bogotá.

I was seven when my grandmother fell ill. I was already in the 5th grade but I had to work in a bakery to earn money while my grandmother was in the hospital. Later, I started begging for money because I couldn’t make ends meet.

A week after I turned eight, my grandmother died. I became homeless but I still worked and went to school. When I turned 11, I decided that I could either go on living in the street, or I could join the guerrillas. I went to where they were and did basic training for five days.

They gave me a gun and taught me how to use it. They told me that life would be hard with them and that they don’t get paid anything for what they do. I told myself, “Life here is easier than in the street. Stay.” After basic training, the big guys from the army came to the camp. My first order was to pick up a little dog and hold it. They shot at me and killed the dog. After that, I became tougher.

When it was my turn to kill someone, I always hid my face because I was afraid. I went to bed dreaming of the people I had killed.

War is something terrible you do to people who don’t want to be guerrillas. These people are stuck in the middle and they are killed by the soldiers for saying things like, “You are guerrillas, you are assholes,” or whatever.

One day they made me kill an old man but I couldn’t do it. They sentenced me to death so I had to run away.

The guerrillas were my family but because I betrayed them, they wanted to kill me. They were a family that didn’t forgive.

**
MADRE provides critical services for children who are at high-risk for being recruited as child-soldiers, giving them the social and psychological support they need to create alternatives to a life of combat and violence.

Poland: Polish presidential candidate promises Afghanistan pull-out

FOCUS Information Agency - The conservative candidate for Polish president Jaroslaw Kaczynski pledged Wednesday that he would pull his country's troops out of Afghanistan if elected next weekend, AFP reported.

"We have to pull out, on that issue there is not a doubt," Kaczynski said in the final television debate ahead of Sunday's run-off vote, in which he is trailing in the polls behind the liberal Bronislaw Komorowski.

Komorowski has already made withdrawing Poland's troop contingent from Afghanistan within two years a key campaign pledge.

Kaczynski did not specify a timeframe for the withdrawal, but said he had discussed the prospect during recent talks with British Prime Minister David Cameron.

"In the course of his mandate, and if I am elected then within my mandate also, the two armies will definitely withdraw from Afghanistan. We cannot stay there eternally," Kaczynski said.
Polish presidents are elected for five years.

Poland is one of the leading contributors to NATO's 142,000-strong International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan. Its contingent is due to grow to 2,600 later this year.

Nineteen Polish soldiers have been killed in Afghanistan. The latest, sapper Pawel Stypula, 26, perished on Saturday in a boobytrap explosion.

Sunday's run-off ballot comes after Komorowski topped a June 20 first round but failed to clear the 50 percent hurdle to win outright. Opinion polls have repeatedly given him the edge.

The election was forced after president Lech Kaczynski -- Jaroslaw Kaczynski's twin brother and close political ally -- was killed in a plane crash in Russia in April.

Intelligence: Former MI5 agent claims Russian spy affair an inside game among U.S. intelligence agencies

Moscow and Washington say they hope FBI arrests of alleged Russian agents will not affect relations between the two. The controversy comes just after a meeting between the U.S. and Russian Presidents. Former MI5 officer Annie Mashon says an inside game among U.S. intelligence agencies could be behind the timing of these arrests.

Kyrgyzstan: OSCE should deploy police mission in southern Kyrgyzstan

Source: Human Rights Watch (HRW) - The Permanent Council of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) should deploy a police mission in southern Kyrgyzstan that is large enough to reach all areas affected by the recent violence, Human Rights Watch said today. The Permanent Council began to discuss a proposed police mission last week, but deferred further consideration to its meeting scheduled for July 1, 2010.

"While it's good news that the referendum happened without violence, no one should be lulled into believing that the situation in Kyrgyzstan is resolved," said Rachel Denber, deputy Europe and Central Asia director at Human Rights Watch. "Getting international police on the ground in Kyrgyzstan is critical to ensuring protection for civilians and stabilizing the situation."

The interim government of Kyrgyzstan reportedly requested police support from the OSCE last week. Last week the OSCE was considering sending up to 120 international police to the country, but the force may have a mandate limited to training and monitoring and would be unarmed.

"The OSCE response to this crisis risks being both too little and too late," Denber said. "To help rebuild confidence, the international police mission should be large enough to have a visible role on the ground in affected communities. And there is no time to waste."

The situation in southern Kyrgyzstan remains extremely tense, and the ethnic Uzbek community feels particularly vulnerable, Human Rights Watch said.

For example, at around 5 p.m. on June 29, several ethnic Kyrgyz men surrounded two ethnic Uzbek men who were on their way to a bazaar, mocking and threatening them. One of the ethnic Uzbek men told Human Rights Watch that the Kyrgyz men said to them, "What, you're not scared of us, walking around [the neighborhood]?" One of the men then kicked the other Uzbek man, his friend told Human Rights Watch, and punched the friend in the neck and then beat him, hitting him forcefully in the chest and leg. The two men managed to escape and ran back to their car.

Human Rights Watch researchers in Osh have received credible and serious allegations about the misconduct of the police and military during sweep operations and detentions, including reports of new abuses in recent days.

Human Rights Watch interviewed three ethnic Uzbeks who had been detained this week and beaten in custody before being released. One had visible bruises and all three were clearly traumatized by their ordeal. While Human Rights Watch interviewed the individuals extensively, the details of their experience are not revealed here for security reasons.

Residents of Shai-Tepe, an Uzbek neighborhood in Osh, described to Human Rights Watch a sweep operation that took place there early on the morning of June 23. They told Human Rights Watch that the personnel who conducted the sweep were armed and some were wearing masks. They said that the armed personnel beat several of the Uzbek men, and a male resident told Human Rights Watch that one of the armed personnel hit his wife in the face after their child started to cry.

Another resident told Human Rights Watch that about six or seven armed personnel kicked in the door to their home and asked to see the family's passports. The resident said that while the men were there, two mobile phones and about 1000 som (about US$20) disappeared. When the family asked that their phones be returned to them, the officers replied, "What, you think we're thieves?" Other residents of Shai-Tepe also reported that officers took valuables such as cell phones, money, jewelry, and in one case, a computer.

Residents in another ethnic Uzbek neighborhood said that on June 30, police officers who did not identify themselves detained six ethnic Uzbeks without providing any reason or informing their relatives where they were taking the men. Residents also told Human Rights Watch that an officer shot his weapon into the air several times as one of the men was being detained. The men were released later in the day without charge.

"If the security forces violate basic human rights during ongoing sweep operations, trust can't be rebuilt," Denber said. "The authorities need to ensure that anyone involved in these operations complies with the law and respects the rights of the targeted residents. Local human rights groups should be allowed to monitor these operations."

Establishment Gongs: Destroyer of Iraq Tony Blair, to receive 2010 Liberty Medal

Hey Cherie, look what I've done, I bet that will get me some nice awards

David Eisner, President and CEO of the National Constitution Center, announced today that former British Prime Minister Tony Blair will receive the 2010 Liberty Medal in recognition of his steadfast commitment to conflict resolution. President Bill Clinton, Chair of the National Constitution Center, will award the prestigious medal to former Prime Minister Blair at a public ceremony on Monday, September 13, 2010 at 7:00 p.m., at the National Constitution Center on Independence Mall in Historic Philadelphia. The ceremony will be broadcast live on WPVI-TV/6abc and webcast live on www.6abc.com.

The 2010 Liberty Medal ceremony will kick off a week of events leading up to Constitution Day on Friday, September 17.

Former Prime Minister Blair played a critical role in advancing peace in Northern Ireland during his tenure as British prime minister. Throughout the grueling negotiation process that preceded the historic Good Friday Accord, he displayed unwavering determination to settle the generations-long conflict. Since leaving government, former Prime Minister Blair has continued to facilitate productive dialogue between diverse groups, as Quartet Representative to the Middle East for the United Nations and through the Tony Blair Faith Foundation.

"It was a privilege to work with my friend Tony Blair to help end 30 years of sectarian violence and broker a lasting peace in Northern Ireland, to stop the killing in and mass exodus from Kosovo, and to develop policies that would improve living conditions for people in both our countries," said President Bill Clinton. "Now, as a private citizen, Tony continues to demonstrate the same leadership, dedication and creativity in promoting economic opportunity in the Middle East and the resolution of conflicts rooted in religion around the world, and is building the capacity of developing nations to govern honestly and effectively. I'm pleased the Constitution Center is awarding him the Liberty Medal in recognition of his work to promote the actions necessary to make peace, reconciliation, and prosperity possible."

"Tony Blair has significantly furthered the expansion of freedom, self-governance, equality and peaceful coexistence," said David Eisner at the press conference announcing plans for the 2010 Liberty Medal. "This award recognizes both his dedication to and his success in building understanding among nations and creating lasting solutions in areas of conflict."

Former Prime Minister Tony Blair said, "It is an honor to receive the Liberty Medal. I am deeply indebted to the National Constitution Center for adding my name to such a distinguished list of recipients. Freedom, liberty and justice are the values by which this medal is struck. Freedom, liberty and justice are the values which I try to apply to my work on governance in Africa and on preparing the Palestinians for statehood. They are the values which drive the work of my faith foundation as we try to show that people of different faiths can live together constructively, in peace and harmony."

"It is a particular pleasure to receive this award from my great friend and ally President Clinton," added Blair. "Bill Clinton's friendship, counsel and support were so very vital as we worked towards peace in Northern Ireland. I was proud to stand with President Clinton as we fought to end the genocide in Kosovo. And I am just as proud to receive this award from him. I accept it, not as recognition of what has already been achieved, but as a sign that we share an ambition and determination to achieve so much more in the future."

"Tony Blair, both in his time as British Prime Minister and in the work he has done since leaving office, has been one of the world's most important catalysts for reaching the goals of peace, freedom, and liberty. He is a worthy recipient of the Liberty Medal," said Governor Edward G. Rendell.

"Tony Blair's relentless pursuit of a long-elusive peace in Northern Ireland as British Prime Minister and his dedication to the Middle East Peace Process and promoting religious understanding since leaving office set him apart as one of the world's leading statesmen and a deserving recipient of the 2010 Liberty Medal," said Mayor Michael A. Nutter. "Mr. Blair joins an illustrious list of Liberty Medal recipients, recognized for their service to the international community, and it is our honor to host a true friend of the United States in Philadelphia, the birthplace of American liberty and democracy and the home of this wonderful event."

Tony Blair served as prime minister of the United Kingdom from 1997 through 2007, the longest service of any Labour Party prime minister, based on leading his party to an unprecedented three consecutive general election victories. Blair's integral role in the Northern Ireland Peace Process has been widely recognized as one of his greatest achievements while in office. On April 10, 1998, the Good Friday Accord brought an end to the sectarian violence in Northern Ireland, after a decade-long negotiation. Blair's success in navigating the contentious negotiation process places him firmly among the world's most effective modern statesmen. By extending his hand to Irish leaders in the spirit of unity and refusing to abandon discussions – despite repeated and often violent setbacks – Blair opened the door to liberty and peace in a region long plagued by turmoil.

"At the time, Tony Blair's efforts to reconcile the conflict in Northern Ireland were considered groundbreaking," added Eisner. "Today, we recognize low-intensity regional conflicts as among the world's greatest threats, making Blair's past successes and current commitment to conflict resolution even more noteworthy."

In 2007, at the end of his term as prime minister, Blair was named Quartet Representative to the Middle East, representing the United States, United Nations, Russia, and the European Union. In this role, Blair works with the Palestinian Authority, the Government of Israel, and the international community to prepare the Palestinians for statehood.

The following year, he established the Tony Blair Faith Foundation, which promotes respect and understanding among the world's religions to show how faith is a powerful force for good in the modern world. By encouraging better understanding of other people's beliefs, particularly among young people, the foundation aims to mediate and prevent conflict through increased recognition of shared values. This international organization's efforts include programs that engage secondary school students of different faiths in learning directly from and about each other and partnerships with leading universities to engage the higher education sector in a deeper understanding of the interrelationship between faith and globalization. The foundation also leads a multi-faith social action program that mobilizes people of faith to work together on issues of health and global poverty, in order to help achieve the UN's Millennium Development Goals.

Blair also spearheads the Africa Governance Initiative, which works in Rwanda, Sierra Leone, and Liberia, equipping visionary African leaders to deliver on their reform agendas, while tackling poverty and attracting sustainable investment.

In addition, he leads the Breaking the Climate Deadlock initiative. As the first major head of government to bring climate change to the top of the international political agenda at the 2005 G8 summit, Blair now works with world leaders to build consensus on a new comprehensive international climate policy framework.

The Liberty Medal was established in 1988 to commemorate the bicentennial of the U.S. Constitution. Given annually, the medal honors men and women of courage and conviction who strive to secure the blessings of liberty to people around the globe. The Liberty Medal was first administered by the National Constitution Center in 2006, when Presidents George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton were honored for their bi-partisan humanitarian efforts on behalf of the victims of the tsunami in Southeast Asia and the hurricanes on the Gulf Coast. Other past Liberty Medal winners include Nelson Mandela, Shimon Peres, Kofi Annan, Sandra Day O'Connor, and Bono. Last year's Liberty Medal was awarded to filmmaker and humanitarian Steven Spielberg for his artistic and personal commitment to the preservation of human rights. The Medal has also been awarded to organizations, including Doctors Without Borders and CNN International. Six recipients of the Medal have subsequently won the Nobel Peace Prize.

Past Recipients of the Liberty Medal


2009

Steven Spielberg


2008

Mikhail Gorbachev, former Soviet leader


2007

Bono and DATA (joint prize)


2006

George H.W. Bush and William J. Clinton, former U.S. Presidents (joint prize)


2005

Viktor Yushchenko, President of Ukraine


2004

Hamid Karzai, President of Afghanistan


2003

Sandra Day O'Connor, Associate Justice, U.S. Supreme Court


2002

Colin Powell, U.S. Secretary of State


2001

Kofi Annan, United Nations Secretary-General*


2000

Dr. James Watson and Dr. Francis Crick, co-discoverers of the structure of DNA (joint prize)


1999

Kim Dae Jung, President of South Korea*


1998

Senator George J. Mitchell, Irish peace negotiator


1997

CNN International


1996

King Hussein I of Jordan and Shimon Peres, former Prime Minister of Israel (joint prize)


1995

Sadako Ogata, United Nations High Commissioner of Refugees


1994

Vaclav Havel, President of the Czech Republic


1993

F.W. de Klerk, President of South Africa* and Nelson Mandela, President of the African National Congress* (joint prize)


1992

Thurgood Marshall, former Associate Justice, U.S. Supreme Court


1991

Oscar Arias, President of Costa Rica and Medecins sans Frontieres (Doctors Without Borders)* (joint prize)


1990

Jimmy Carter, former U.S. President*


1989

Lech Walesa, founder of Solidarity, Poland




* Liberty Medal recipients who subsequently won the Nobel Peace Prize



Source: National Constitution Center

Iran: Fears two women may be executed -- one by stoning

Amid fears that two Iranian women may be executed imminently, including one by stoning for adultery, Amnesty International renewed its demand today that Iranian authorities immediately halt all executions and commute all death sentences.

The human rights organization is also urging the authorities to review and repeal death penalty laws, to disclose full details of all death sentences and executions, and to join the growing international trend toward abolition.

Two women are feared to be at imminent risk of execution. Zeynab Jalalian, a political activist and member of the Kurdish minority , was sentenced to death in early 2009 after being convicted of "enmity against God," while Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, whose conviction of "adultery while being married" was upheld in May 2007, could be executed by stoning at any time.

Prisoners on death row are often not informed when they are due to be executed until the last minute, adding to their suffering and that of their families. Sometimes their lawyers are not informed 48 hours in advance, as is required by Iranian law.

Other prisoners under sentence of death include two members of the predominantly Sunni Muslim Baluch minority in Sistan-Baluchistan province. On May 31, 2010, the Zahedan prosecutor said they had been sentenced to death for their alleged involvement in clashes between Sunni and Shi'a Muslims which led to the deaths of six individuals. He also said that the death penalty has been sought in the trials of six other individuals. The clashes followed a bomb attack on a Shi'a mosque in May 2009, which killed at least 25 individuals, which was claimed by the People's Resistance Movement of Iran (PRMI), an armed Baluch group opposed to the Iranian government.

The PRMI's leader, Abdolmalek Rigi, was hanged by the Iranian authorities on June 20 in Zahedan. His brother, Abdolhamid Rigi, was hanged in Zahedan in May 2010.

In Kordestan province, home to many members of the Kurdish minority, government officials said on Sunday that at least 20 prisoners were being held on death row there who had been convicted of drug smuggling. At least 15 other members of the Kurdish minority, all political prisoners, are also on death row in the province and are at risk of execution. Two are said to be facing execution by firing squad. Most executions in Iran are carried out by hanging.

Many prisoners on death row did not receive fair trials, having been sentenced on the basis of vaguely-worded charges and "confessions" which they allege were made under torture or other duress while they were detained incommunicado before trial. Some were denied access to a lawyer.

Despite these grave shortcomings, the Iranian authorities continue to carry out more executions than most other states. This year, Amnesty International recorded no less than 126 executions in the period from January 1 to June 6. Those hanged included five political prisoners who were executed on May 9; the authorities may have intended the executions as a warning to potential protestors in advance of the anniversary on June 12 of the disputed presidential election of 2009, which sparked mass protests and a wave of state repression.

Source: Amnesty International

China: Growing Chinese interest in Pakistan

By B Raman
See also:
www.southasiaanalysis.org and the Chennai Centre For China Studies at www.c3sindia.org


The Chinese Foreign Ministry has announced that at the invitation of the Chinese Government President Asif Ali Zardari (photo) of Pakistan will be visiting China from July 6 to 11,2010, for talks with President Hu Jintao, Prime Minister Wen Jiabao and other Chinese leaders.This will be his second official visit to China at the invitation of the Chinese Government. His first visit was in October,2008, shortly after he took over as the President. In fact, after assuming office as the President, he chose China for his first official bilateral visit to emphasise the importance attached by him to his country's relations with China.

2. He had announced during his first visit that he would be visiting various Chinese provinces once a quarter to learn from the Chinese experience in economic development. In pursuance of this, he had visited China thrice last year. These visits were not undertaken at the invitation of the Chinese Government. He visited a number of Chinese provinces and discussed with the local officials and businessmen about their experience in developing their provinces. He also discussed with them prospects for co-operation between their provinces and Pakistan. During these visits, he did not go to Beijing. The Chinese Foreign Minister flew to one of the provinces being visited by Mr.Zardari and called on him. Before leaving for Pakistan, he spoke with Mr.Hu and Mr.Wen over telephone.

3. The most productive of his visits so far has been his visit to Hang Zhou in the Zhejiang province and Guangzhou in the Guangdong province from August 21 to 24, 2009. During this visit, he sought Chinese participation in the development of hydel, thermal and solar energy projects, irrigation and fisheries and mobile telephone networks and in creating facilities for higher technical education, including the setting-up of a telecommunications university and research complex. Among the concrete results from this visit were:

* The signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) to promote cooperation in river fisheries and related technologies by representatives of the Indus River Fresh Water Fisheries Research Institute and the Pearl River Fishery Research Institute of Guangzhou.

* The signing of an MOU for the construction of a dam at Bunji in the Astore district of Gilgit-Baltistan by officials of Pakistan’s Ministry of Water and Power and China’s Three Gorges Project Corporation. The Chairman Board of Investment Saleem Mandviwala and Li Yang’an of the Chinese corporation signed the MoU. The dam, one of the eight hydel projects short-listed for construction by the Water and Power Development Authority (WAPDA), will have a capacity of generating 7,000 megawatts of electricity.

* The signing of an MOU on cooperation in drug regulation and production of hepatitis B and C vaccines.

* The signing of another MOU between the Sindh Agricultural University in Tandojam and the South China Agricultural University in the Guangzhou province for cooperation in agricultural research, plant protection and animal husbandry.
* The signing of two separate MsOU by the Board of Investment of Pakistan with the China Council for Promotion of International Trade (CCPIT), Guangdong province and the Guangdong Sub Council of CCPIT.

4.Mr. Zardari attended a presentation on small and medium sized dams, water conservation and irrigation by the Zhejiang Design Institute of Water Conservancy and Hydroelectric Power. Li Yueming, the President of the institute, said they had carried out feasibility studies of a couple of medium-sized dams in the Pakistan-Occupied Kashmir (POK).Shakeel Durrani, Chairman of the WAPDA, who was present on the occasion, said that Chinese companies were already working on a number of hydel projects in Pakistan, including Neelum-Jhelum and Gomal Zam and the raising of the height of the Mangla dam in the POK. He said the institute would be invited to bid for the construction of 12 small dams. Five of these dams were to be built in Balochistan, four in Sindh, two in Punjab and one in Khyber-Pakthoonwa.

5.In a report carried by the "News" of August 18, 2009, before Mr. Zardari's visit, Mr. Kamran Khan, its journalist, alleged that without inviting open bidding from interested companies and investors, the Pakistan Steel had signed a non-transparent secret MoU with the Metallurgical Corporation of China (MCC) for a $2.2 billion expansion programme to raise its current production capacity of 1.1 million tons to five million tons. According to him, contrary to relevant government rules and regulations as well as basic norms of transparency, the Pakistan Steel didn’t place any advertisement in the local and international press to seek the best international offers before entering into secret negotiations with the Chinese company, which was long seeking to clinch this deal. He said: "The most shocking element of this MoU, available with this correspondent, which will bind Pakistan with an additional foreign loan of $2.2 billion, is a clause that requires complete secrecy of this understanding. Clause 6.1 of this MoU states: “This MoU and any discussions related to it shall remain strictly confidential between the parties and no public announcement shall be made without written consent of both parties.” Kamran Khan quoted a Pakistani official as saying: “This was not our requirement but the Chinese company asked for this secrecy clause and we agreed.”

6. During his interactions with local officials and businessmen in the course of this visit, Mr.Zardari kept pointing out that the Western regions of China now being developed were closer to Pakistani ports than to Chinese ports and invited ideas and proposals for developing rail and road communications between Pakistan and Xinjiang. Since taking over as the President, he has reportedly been pressing the Chinese for early implementation of the ideas mooted by Pakistan when Gen.Pervez Musharraf was in office for the construction of gas and oil pipelines between the Chinese-constructed port of Gwadar and Xinjiang and for the construction of a railwayline between Pakistan and Xinjiang. Pakistan had also mooted with Beijing the idea of China purchasing part of the gas which will be coming into Pakistan from Iran when the proposed Iran-Pakistan gas pipeline is completed.

7. The Chinese have not yet shown much interest in the proposal for pipelines between Gwadar and Xinjiang because of the bad security situation in Balochistan and in the proposal for the supply of gas from Iran to Xinjiang because of the difficulties which this project is expected to face due to the threatened US sanctions against foreign companies collaborating with Iran in energy projects. However, the Chinese have agreed to conduct a feasibility study on the proposed railway line between Pakistan and Xinjiang. Two MsOU were signed on October 28, 2009, and March 6,2010, between the Railways Ministry of Pakistan and China Railway Group Limited on the feasibility study. The progress made in this regard is expected to be discussed during Mr.Zardari's forthcoming visit to Beijing.

8. Despite the public controversy in Pakistan over the poor quality of the railway engines and other rolling stock supplied by Chinese companies to the Pakistan Railways, Mr.Zardari has reportedly been keen to seek Chinese help for improving management practices and maintenance facilities in the Pakistan Railways. He has also been pursuing the idea of a private railway company run by the Chinese which can use on payment the tracks of the Pakistan Railways.

9. Mr.Zardari's visit will be taking a place less than a month after the China Nuclear Industry Fifth Construction Company (CNIFCC) and the China Zhongyuan Engineering Corp, which specialises in foreign nuclear projects, signed at Shanghai on June 8, 2010, an agreement to work together on the third and fourth nuclear power plants at the Chashma complex. A Chinese language announcement regarding the signing was made on June 8 on the website of the Construction Company. China also reportedly informed the Nuclear Suppliers' Group during its recent meeting at Christ Church, New Zealand, of its decision to go ahead with the supply of Chashma IV and V to Pakistan. Pakistani sources say that while there were questions raised as to on what basis the Chinese claimed that these additional projects are not subject to NSG restrictions on the supply of nuclear equipment and technology to non-signatories of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), there were no formal objections to the Chinese move.

10. All formalities for the inauguration of the construction, including arrangements for a soft Chinese loan to fund the construction, have been completed on the Chinese side, but a formal agreement between the Governments of China and Pakistan under which Pakistan will agree to place Chashma III and IV also under the safeguards and supervision of the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency is still to be signed. This will be similar to the earlier agreements about Chashma I and II. The signing of this formal agreement is likely to be discussed during Mr.Zardari's visit.

11. Recent comments by Chinese officials intriguingly indicate that China now projects not only the proposed Chashma IV and V, but even the wider agreement between the two Governments for civil nuclear co-operation as beyond the purview of the NSG as it was reached before China joined the NSG in 2004. This interpretation, if it prevails, would mean that China considered itself free to supply not only Chashma III and IV, but also four other nuclear power stations, not part of the Chashma grandfather project, which Musharraf had requested for. Musharraf, a Mohajir, as well as Mr.Zardari, a Sindhi, have been keen that at least one or two Chinese-aided nuclear power stations must be located in Karachi, the capital of the Sindh province, which has been going through a severe power crisis for some years now affecting local industrial production. Mr.Zardari is expected to press this issue further.

12. The Chinese will face difficulty in discussing nuclear matters with Mr.Zardari because the Pakistan Army does not trust him in nuclear matters just as it didn't trust Mrs.Benazir Bhutto when she was the Prime Minister. This lack of trust in Mr.Zardari became evident on November 27,2009, when Mr.Zardari gave up the chairmanship of the Nuclear National Command Authority and transferred it to Prime Minister Yousef Raza Gilani. Though this was made out as a decision taken by Mr. Zardari at his own initiative, it was believed to have been prompted by the Army.

13.But, even in the case of Mrs.Benazir Bhutto, the Army did not allow its distrust of her to come in the way of using her services during her second term as the Prime Minister for reaching a secret agreement with North Korea on the acquisition of North Korean missiles and related technology. It is therefore, unlikely to have any objections to Mr.Zardari using his friendships and contacts in China for facilitating an agreement for the construction of more Chinese nuclear power stations in Pakistan.

14. Mr.Zardari's forthcoming visit will coincide with the third joint counter-terrorism exercise between the armies of the two countries. The Chinese Ministry of National Defence announced on June 24 that the third joint counter-terrorism exercise will be held at Qingtongxia in northwest China's Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region from July 1 to 11. The first exercise was held in 2004, in Xinjiang's Taxkorgan Tajik Autonomous County bordering Tajikistan, Afghanistan and Pakistan. About 200 soldiers from both countries participated. The second exercise was held in 2006 in the Abbottabad area of Pakistan. About 400 soldiers from both sides participated. The third exercise was to have been held in China in 2008, but was postponed for unexplained reasons. According to Uighur sources, the authorities of the two countries were probably concerned that a joint exercise in the wake of the anger over the Chinese role in the Lal Masjid raid in July 2007 could lead to fresh attacks on Chinese nationals in Pakistan.

15.Though no joint exercise has been held since 2006, the close co-operation in counter-terrorism continues at two levels---between the two armies and between the Interior Ministry of Pakistan and the Ministry of Public Security of China. Mr.Rehman Malik, Pakistan's Interior Minister, had visited China in 2009 and again earlier this year to discuss counter-terrorism co-operation, including exchange of intelligence.

16.Replying to the debate on the budgetary demands of the Ministry of the Interior in the National Assembly on June 24, 2009, Mr.Malik said: “Due to the efforts of the President and the Prime Minister, the Chinese Government has provided $290 million for capacity building of our security forces.”

17. The decision of the Chinese authorities to assist Pakistani capacity-building in counter-terrorism was officially conveyed to Mr.Malik when he visited Beijing and Shanghai from June 9 to 12, 2009. The visit was preceded by the Pakistan Government’s handing over to the Chinese of 10 members of the Uighur diaspora in Pakistan despite objections from the Amnesty International, which feared that these Uighurs might be executed by China without proper trial, The Pakistani authorities, who officially revealed the handing-over on June 5, 2009, as reported by the "News" of June 6, claimed that these Uighurs, who were rounded up during the Pakistan Army's counter-insurgency operations in the Federally-Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), belonged to the Eastern Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM).

18. The "News" of June , 2009, reported as follows: "According to some sources in Islamabad, the Chinese militants were extradited despite opposition by the Amnesty International. In March 2009, Tim Parritt, Deputy Director of the Amnesty International’s Asia-Pacific Programme, had observed that whatever these militants were accused of, the risks posed to them were extremely grave, if forcibly returned to China. He had maintained that under the international law, states were obliged not to expel, return or extradite any person to a country where they risk torture or other ill-treatment. However, the Pakistani authorities insist that all those who had been extradited to Beijing were involved in terrorist activities both in China and in Pakistan and had also developed links with al-Qaeda network in the tribal areas of Pakistan. They said the fact that the ETIM militants had extended their network of terrorist activities to Pakistan was evident from a threat they had conveyed to the Chinese Embassy in Islamabad, saying they intended to kidnap Chinese diplomats and consular officers stationed in the Pakistani federal capital with a view to highlighting their cause. The Chinese mission subsequently informed the Pakistani authorities in a letter that some members of the ETIM had already reached Islamabad and planned to kidnap their staffers from the federal capital. The letter reportedly pointed out that terrorist groups located in Pakistan, including al-Qaeda, had been providing support to the ETIM activists for the likely kidnappings. Subsequent investigations had established that the anonymous threat was issued by none other than the East Turkistan Islamic Movement and that the would-be kidnappers had first travelled to Jalalabad in Afghanistan to finalise their plans."

19. During his stay in Beijing, Mr. Malik met State Councillor and Minister for Public Security Meng Jianzhu, the Communist Party of China Politburo Standing Committee member Zhou Yongkong and the Chinese Vice-Foreign Minister Wu Dawei, who hosted a dinner for him. There were no reports of any meeting with President Hu Jintao or Prime Minister Wen Jiabao. Talking to pressmen at Beijing, Mr. Malik said: "We have signed a number of agreements to build the capacity of our law enforcing agencies. We have signed agreements worth $ 300 million to acquire state of the art equipment to combat terrorism. The first consignment of these most needed equipment would be reaching Pakistan within three weeks. We want to ensure that our law enforcing agencies are well equipped, so that they could thwart with full force militancy. The equipment Pakistan needed included most modern mobile scanners that can detect hidden explosives and drugs. Initially, we would start employing these equipment in the metropolitan cities under threat of terrorism, like Islamabad, Lahore and Karachi and then gradually we plan to cover the entire country. "

20. On June 12, 2009, a blogspot of the "People's Daily" of China devoted to military issues had the following commentary: "Will China play a more "direct" role in both the Pakistan and Afghanistan conflicts? During the past two days, both Afghanistan and Pakistan are sending envoys to China to ask for China’s "direct" help in their fight against militants. The previous attempts to draw China into the conflicts by both NATO and US met with little success as China preferred to stay in the background and aid only in forms of financial and hardware support.

China’s previous rejection to joining the military coalition is understandable as others have noted; while China does not view NATO/US missions in Afghanistan with suspicion compared to other Shanghai Co-operation Organisation states but allowing a military alliance to use China as a military supply route seem to undermine the Chinese Security-Umbrella that took 60 years and four wars to build. In addition, such an act violates China’s core foreign policy doctrine of non-interference in others' internal affairs. At the same time, the core Chinese military doctrine is changing with the release of the new “Outline of Military Training and Evaluation” which for the first time placed focus on Military Operations Other Than War (MOOTW) role for the PLA outside of China’s borders and anti-terror operation is considered part of the MOOTW. China is hosting the first “Non-traditional Security Forum of Armed Forces of ASEAN, China, Japan and ROK , something unthinkable just a few years ago. Maybe China is ready to move out of the “hide my capabilities and bide my time” phase to the “make some contributions” phase to be in line of what Hu coined the “harmonious world” (a.k.a, making the world safe for Confucianism) in his “Go Abroad” policy shift. It is also noted that both the Pakistan and Afghanistan’s request is coordinated and without "US/NATO involvement" which makes the request a bit more politically acceptable in China and the statement by Rehman Malik that "Pakistan has handed Chinese nationals accused of insurgent activity back to China and will continue to do so" is clearly aimed at audiences in China.

Judging from China's Foreign Ministry Press Release, China might be ready to take a more direct role. China is ready to further expand and deepen our cooperation in various fields on the basis of mutual benefit so as to push forward our comprehensive partnership of cooperation."

21. Recent media reports emanating from the US about the existence of large mineral deposits in Afghanistan have given rise to speculation in Pakistan about the prospects of joint Pakistan-China projects for the exploration and exploitation of these minerals. China is already involved in the development of copper mines in Afghanistan. Its likely interest in the other minerals would make it receptive to suggestions in this regard from Pakistan. In the calculation of Pakistani officials, bringing in China in a big way for assisting in the economic development of Afghanistan would be one way of having the Indian role limited and ultimately reduced.

22.Why the recent indications of an enhanced Chinese interest in Pakistan? What role has the People's Liberation Army (PLA) played in it? On March 31, 2010, the China Studies Division of the Center for Naval Analyses of the US had hosted a half-day roundtable to discuss
China’s relations with and activities in Pakistan. Among its conclusions were the following: "China-Pakistan relations have a strong military component, which some participants alleged makes the PLA a key player in China’s decisions involving Pakistan. Bilateral military cooperation ranges from naval cooperation, to past nuclear assistance, to arms sales, to combined military and anti-terror exercises.

Roundtable participants held that PRC leaders much prefer the military-led governments of Pakistan’s past and appear less confident about the capabilities and effectiveness of the current, democratically elected civilian government in Pakistan. The United States and China share important existential concerns in Pakistan. Both view stability in Pakistan as an important policy goal, and both see their interests better served by secular government rule in Pakistan rather than by the ascension of a hard-line or fundamentalist regime. Close U.S.-China coordination on many issues involving Pakistan was assessed as likely to remain difficult given Beijing’s predilection for bilateral action. Moreover, while the United States and China at this juncture share common interests in Pakistan on an existential level, Washington and Beijing have neither the same threat assessment nor the same hierarchy of priorities that could facilitate robust coordinated action.

Even without close U.S.-China cooperation, participants felt there are good possibilities for complementary U.S. action, aid, and investment in Pakistan. It was suggested that the United States could capitalize on China’s aid and infrastructure investments in Pakistan by making complementary investments that would serve U.S. interests in Pakistan." A detailed report on the Round Table put out by the CNA is available at http://www.cna.org/sites/default/files/research/D0022883.A1.China-Pak.pdf (30-6-10)

The writer is Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New Delhi, and, presently, Director, Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai, and also Associate of the Chennai Centre For China Studies.

Guatemala: Experienced advocate against organized crime to head UN-backed crime probe in Guatemala

UN - A renowned Costa Rican advocate against organized crime has been chosen as the next head of the United Nations-backed commission charged with dismantling illegal armed groups and tackling impunity in Guatemala.

A UN spokesperson announced today that Francisco Dall’Anese Ruiz, the current Attorney-General of Costa Rica, will succeed Carlos Castresana at the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (known as CICIG).

Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, who made the appointment, thanked Mr. Castresana – who resigned earlier this month – for his “excellent work” heading CICIG since its inception two and a half years ago.

“The achievements of CICIG during that period have been praised by Guatemalan authorities, civil society and the international community alike,” Mr. Ban said.

Since becoming Costa Rican Attorney-General in 2003, Mr. Dall’Anese has waged campaigns against narco-trafficking and organized crime, led major investigations against corruption and helped introduce prominent legislation against organized crime.

Mr. Dall’Anese has also served as an alternate magistrate in the Supreme Court, taught criminal law at university and co-authored numerous books and articles on criminal, judicial and procedural law. In 2005 he received a prize from the National Values Commission for his work against organized crime.

The UN and the Guatemalan Government set up CICIG as an independent body to support the public prosecutors’ office, the national civilian police and other institutions to investigate a limited number of sensitive and difficult cases regarding illegal security groups and clandestine security organizations and also dismantle them.

Based in Guatemala City, the capital, the Commission seeks to bolster the rule of law and is permitted by its mandate to conduct independent investigations and help authorities bring representative cases to trial in national courts.

Human Trafficking: Five charged in human trafficking Scheme that smuggled young Ukrainians

WASHINGTON—An indictment unsealed today in Philadelphia charged Omelyan Botsvynyuk, Stepan Botsvynyuk, Mykhaylo Botsvynyuk, Dmytro Botsvynyuk, and Yaroslav Botsvynyuk, a/k/a Yaroslav Churuk, with extortion and conspiracy to violate the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) for their alleged involvement in a human trafficking operation, the Justice Department announced.

Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Thomas E. Perez, U.S. Attorney Zane David Memeger of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, FBI Special Agent-in-Charge Janice K. Fedarcyk of the Philadelphia Field Office and ICE Special Agent-in-Charge John P. Kelleghan announced the indictment.

Four of the Botsvynyuk brothers were arrested today and are charged with conspiring to engage in a pattern of racketeering activity, from the fall of 2000 through the spring of 2007, by operating a human trafficking organization that smuggled young Ukrainian migrants into the United States and forced them to work for the brothers with little or no pay.

According to the indictment, the defendants promised the victims they would earn $500 per month with free room and board by working for the Botsvynyuk organization. They smuggled the workers into the United States and put them to work as cleaning crews in retail stores, private homes, and office buildings without paying them. They used physical force, threats of force, sexual assault, and debt bondage to keep the victims in involuntary servitude. The indictment further alleges that even after some of the victims escaped, the defendants continued with their extortionist activities in order to recoup the organization’s investment in the workers. If direct threats failed and the workers did not return or make good on their debts, the Botsvynyuk brothers threatened violence to the workers’ families still residing in Ukraine. In one instance, according to the indictment, Omelyan Botsvynyuk threatened to place a worker’s then 9-year-old daughter into prostitution to pay off the family debt.

“Human trafficking is a scourge that denies human beings their fundamental right to freedom. Those who prey on the most vulnerable through force, fraud, or coercion will be investigated and prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law,” said Assistant Attorney General Perez. “The Civil Rights Division will continue to work with U.S. Attorney's Offices nationwide, law enforcement agencies across the globe, and victim assistance organizations to vindicate the rights of victims, bring traffickers to justice, and dismantle human trafficking networks.”

“The victims in this case entered this country with dreams of great opportunity only to find themselves living a nightmare,” said U.S. Attorney Memeger. “They trusted this band of brothers, they performed the work they were told, only to be rewarded with false promises, threats of brutality, and deprivation of their basic human needs. No one trying to immigrate to this country should have to endure such mistreatment.”

Rather than bringing the workers to the United States legally, the indictment alleges that the Botsvynyuk organization obtained tourist visas to Mexico and had operatives who coached the workers on how to enter the United States illegally. While some of the workers successfully entered the country, others were taken into custody by U.S. immigration officials and remained in detention for almost two months. Once the victims were released, with immigration documents and summonses to appear for immigration hearings, the Botsvynyuk organization transported them to Philadelphia either by bus or by plane. The brothers then confiscated the immigration documents and summonses from the workers and put them to work at night cleaning large chain stores, such as Target and Walmart, as well as smaller stores.

Throughout their employment with the brothers, the workers lived with up to five people in one room, slept on dirty mattresses on the floor, and were rarely, if ever, paid. None of the victims was paid what was promised and they were told that they had to continue working until their debts, ranging from $10,000 to $50,000, were paid. Workers were allegedly struck and beaten, sometimes in the presence of others, if they attempted to quit or leave the employ of the Botsvynyuk brothers. According to the indictment, one female worker was brutally raped on several occasions. After some workers escaped, Omelyan Botsvynyuk resorted to extorting the workers’ families in Ukraine, threatening them with harm if the workers did not return to work or pay their debts.

Omelyan Botsvynyuk, 51, was arrested in Germany; Stepan Botsvynyuk, 35, was arrested in Philadelphia; Mykhaylo and Yaroslav Botsvynyuk, 41, were arrested in Canada. Dmytro Botsvynyuk remains in Ukraine, a country that has not entered into an extradition treaty with the United States. The defendants in Canada and Germany were arrested pursuant to Interpol arrest warrants and are in the process of being extradited to the United States to face the charges.

If convicted of all charges, the defendants face the following maximum penalties: Omelyan Botsvynyuk—life in prison and a $750,000 fine; Stepan Botsvynyuk—40 years in prison and a $500,000 fine; and defendants Mykhaylo, Dmytro, and Yaroslav Botsvynyuk—20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

The case was investigated by the Joint FBI Organized Crime/ICE Human Trafficking Alien Smuggling Task Force. Assistance was provided by Pennsylvania State Police, the Philadelphia Police Department, the Department of Labor and Racketeering - Office of Inspector General, Toronto Police Department, German National Police, Berlin State Police, Ukraine Security Service, U.S. National Central Bureau, the Department of Justice Office of International Affairs, and INTERPOL. It is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Daniel A. Velez, and Trial Attorney Eric Gibson of the Civil Rights Division.

Source: U.S. Department of Justice