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Saturday, June 16, 2012

Beijing stays aloof of Arab Spring – for now

By DAVID ROSENBERG / THE MEDIA LINE
09/09/2011

But recent controversy in Libya points up depth of business ties China has in region, and its confusion in the face of the changing political landscape.

China’s traditional foreign policy of staying aloof of other countries’ internal affairs is being sorely tested in the turmoil of the Arab Spring as Beijing’s commercial ties with the Middle East have grown, Chinese analysts say.

China has a huge economic stake in the region, which is an important source of energy as well as a market for goods and services such as construction. But analysts said they don’t see Beijing raising its political profile for fear it lacks sufficient knowledge of the region and to avoid bumping heads with the West.

“This region is very, very complicated, with its religions, ethnic groups and big-power struggles” Wei Da, a researcher at China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations in Beijing, told The Media Line.

“The US and Europe care very much about it. We worry that if we invest too much politically, they will say ‘the Chinese are coming,’” he said in the sidelines of a conference near Tel Aviv on Wednesday organized by the Center for Global Research in International Affairs (Gloria) and Signal, a non profit that fosters Israeli-Chinese relations.

Nevertheless, China suffered an embarrassment this week when documents uncovered in a Tripoli waste bin by a Canadian journalist revealed that Libyan strongman Muammar Gaddafi’s government was conducting talks for some $200 million in arms purchases with a Chinese company as late as July, despite a United Nations ban.

Although the rebels asserted that Chinese state-owned companies did deliver the weapons, Yin Gang, a research professor at Beijing’s Institute of West Asian and African Studies, said Beijing’s denials were probably true.

“The government can’t control everything,” he told The Media Line, suggesting that junior-level employees were behind the effort but that they could not have transferred any material without the government’s permission. “They tried to do business with sales to Gaddafi, but it was only the first stage, just talking about a sale.”

Like the rest of the world, Beijing was taken by surprise by the eruption of rebellions across the Arab world this year. The country’s leaders initially adopted their traditional attitude of non-interference, but as unrest continued, scholars say, Beijing found it increasingly difficult to avoid.

A key event for China was the evacuation of its nationals from Egypt and Libya. Some 30,000 people had to be rescued from Libya alone, in the biggest such operation by the Chinese armed forces since the end of the Cold War.

However, it was as much a humanitarian effort as a sign of the increasingly commercial presence of China’s booming economy in the Middle East. China had more than $18 billion in deals with Libya before the revolution and had doubled oil imports in recent years, even though the two countries squabbled over issues like Taiwan and influence in Africa.

Libyan rebels, who have indicated they will reward with oil and other contracts the West and other foreign powers that helped their fight against the Gaddafi regime, reacted angrily to the news of the Chinese arms talks, Yin said.

Beijing had been hesitant to back the rebels and has yet to recognize the National Transitional Council (NTC) now ruling Libya. Yin suggested that rebel anger of the alleged oil-arms sales might be a reaction to that.

“They are not pleased with China’s attitude toward the revolution,” he said on the sidelines of a conference in Israel Wednesday.

But Da, of the China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations, said Beijing often ends up supporting the status quo in countries like Libya not because it supports despots but because it doesn’t know who among the opposition to support.

“In the Arab Spring, there are no clear leaders. It’s not a very pleasant situation for foreign policy makers,” he said. “We don’t know which voice is the official voice.”

He noted that some members of the TNC had visited Beijing while other had criticized Chinese policy toward Libya.

The turmoil in the Arab world presents Beijing’s leaders with a foreign policy dilemma but it has also aroused concerns that unrest could well up at home, even though a small protest inspired by Tunisia’s so-called “Jasmine Revolution” last February quickly dissipated.

Activists began wearing jasmine flowers on Sunday strolls in an otherwise silent campaign to demand more government accountability. But Chinese analysts said the protest never attracted a large number of supporters. The government, however, was concerned enough to ban the sale of the flowers in China.

Yin said that while China wants to do business with “all groups,” it does respond to international pressure. It has cancelled arms deals with Iran and stopped cooperating with it on nuclear power from 1997 as the West, led by the US, campaigns to prevent Tehran from acquiring nuclear weapons. Iran denies its atomic program has any purposes other than peaceful ones.

“China has slowed down cooperation with Iran on energy as well, under pressure from the Arabs,” he added.

Vis-à-vis Israel, China has signaled in recent months closer relations, even though Beijing has come out in support of the United Nations’ recognizing Palestinian statehood – an initiative Jerusalem strongly opposes. Defense ties had been frosty after US intervention twice scuttled Israeli arms deals with China: The sale of advanced Phalcon spy planes in 2000 and of spare parts for Israeli-built Harpy killer drones five years later.

China's chief of staff, Gen. Chen Bingde, met his Israeli counterpart Gen. Benny Gantz and Defense Minister Ehud Barak in Tel Aviv three weeks ago. In June, Barak made a rare visit to Beijing for talks with Chinese leaders, at the invitation of his Chinese counterpart Liang Guanglie.

Source: The Jerusalem Post.
Link: http://www.jpost.com/ArtsAndCulture/Entertainment/Article.aspx?id=237317.

Moroccan youths lack religious knowledge, survey finds

Moroccan young people struggle to find a balance between their religious convictions and modern practices.

By Siham Ali for Magharebia in Rabat - 07/09/11

Moroccan authorities need to re-visit the way religious knowledge is presented to young people to nurture a better understanding of faith, a recent study concluded.

Moroccan youths lack religious knowledge and have limited confidence in state religious institutions, according to the survey carried out by the Moroccan Center for Contemporary Studies and Research (CMERC).

To reach the conclusion, the center conducted two surveys among young people aged 15 to 35 in twelve regions.

The problem lies in the way religious knowledge is passed on to young people to enable them to live out their faith in total harmony with their beliefs and behavior, said CMERC chief Mustapha El Khalfi. He added that violence was not apparent in young people's conduct.

Few of the people interviewed were able to identify the rites adopted by the kingdom or remembered the name of the Minister of Habous and Islamic Affairs. Young people do not join religious movements and associations, which shows a lack of communication with youths, according to the study.

The mosque and the family constitute the main sources of religious education for young people, with television and the internet used as a last resort. Over 40% of the respondents said that they derived their knowledge from imams, while 23% learn from families.

A broad national dialogue is required to discuss the nature of public youth policy, Khalfi said.

The state and religious scholars need to re-think what they say and adapt to the needs of the current age, argued Mohamed Chantoufi, a teacher of Islamic education.

"We need to ban the traditional methods and be innovative in our communication," he added.

Among the new methods are appealing television programs with new faces to lure people instead of satellite channels, which often send fundamentalist messages, the scholar added.

According to the survey, Moroccan youths have a particular interest in Middle Eastern preachers.

Egyptian Mohamed Hassan tops the list, followed by Amr Khalid and Yusuf al-Qaradawi.

Given the conservative nature of Moroccan society, religion still has a social role to play, and a great many young people live a life of contradiction between their concept of religion and their daily behavior, explained sociologist Samira Kassimi.

"I know a lot of young people who don't pray, but who are convinced that it's their duty and they hope that one day they'll have the faith to do it regularly," young teacher Saad Moutaraji told Magharebia. "Many others do it, but at the same time they remain completely open and tolerant."

Source: Magharebia.
Link: http://www.magharebia.com/cocoon/awi/xhtml1/en_GB/features/awi/features/2011/09/07/feature-02.

Rival groups mend differences in Somalia

Sept. 6, 2011

MOGADISHU, Somalia, Sept. 6 (UPI) -- An agreement signed between rival leaders in Somalia could pave the way to the end of transitional rule there, a U.N. special envoy said.

Somalia, in the grips of drought and famine plaguing much of the Horn of Africa, hasn't had a functioning central government since the 1990s. The transitional government, meanwhile, had controlled only a tiny portion of the capital Mogadishu before militants with al-Qaida's affiliate al-Shabaab pulled out recently.

Augustine Mahiga, the U.N. special envoy to Somalia, said a deal signed between leaders in the Somali states of Galmudug and Puntland paved the way to a unified Somalia.

"Puntland and Galmudug are on Somalia's front lines in the ongoing fight against violent extremists that increasingly are relying on terror tactics to try and disrupt the peace process," he said in a statement.

At least 30 people were killed last week when forces from the two self-proclaimed autonomous regions clashed near the border town of Galkayo.

Somalia is in the grip of a cholera outbreak, which complicates humanitarian efforts to deal with widespread famine in the country.

Al-Shabaab is said to be intercepting aid deliveries in the country despite pulling back from Mogadishu.

A drought gripping most of the Horn of Africa is expected to linger for much of the year.

Source: United Press International (UPI).
Link: http://www.upi.com/Top_News/Special/2011/09/06/Rival-groups-mend-differences-in-Somalia/UPI-34711315333904/.

Rivalries still exist in Ivory Coast

Sept. 7, 2011 at 12:10 PM

MONROVIA, Liberia, Sept. 7 (UPI) -- Ivorian refugees at camps in Liberia are dealing with harassment and threats as tensions remain after the near civil war in Ivory Coast, authorities say.

Laurent Gbagbo refused to step down following November presidential elections in Ivory Coast after the international community recognized Alassane Ouattara as the winner. The ensuing violence left thousands dead and many more displaced as rival groups pushed the country to the brink of civil war.

Authorities in charge of a refugee camp in Liberia said they are trying to make sure the environment there is free of weapons and harassment. T-shirts expressing support for Gbagbo were banned and security forces were told to keep weapons hidden or leave them behind when entering the camp.

"This cannot become a political environment," Steve Anyia, a manager at the refugee camp overseen by the Norwegian Refugee Council, told the United Nations' humanitarian news agency IRIN. "It is the only way to make sure people are safe."

Ivory Coast is struggling to recover from the political crisis. Gbagbo was arrested with the help of French peacekeepers in April and Ouattara has asked the International Criminal Court to look into the post-election violence.

At least 220 civilians were killed by pro-Gbagbo forces and Liberian mercenaries while they fled to Liberia after the former president's arrest early this year.

Human rights groups said both sides likely committed atrocities during the conflict.

Source: United Press International (UPI).
Link: http://www.upi.com/Top_News/Special/2011/09/07/Rivalries-still-exist-in-Ivory-Coast/UPI-10991315411836/.

South Sudan: Lakes State Community Welcome Relocation of Capital to Ramciel

6 September 2011

Rumbek — Around a thousand people in Lakes state turned out on Sunday to celebrate the relocation of South Sudan's capital from Juba in the south of the country to centrally positioned Ramciel.

The Governor of Lakes state Chol Tong Mayay congratulated South Sudan's President Salva Kiir and the country's newly appointed council of ministers for the bold decision, which comes just less than two months after the country gained its independence.

Sunday's celebrations were held in Yirol West, Yirol East and Awerial counties.

Mayay said that Lakes state was "very proud" to become the host of the capital for Africa's 54th country.

Governor Chol said the community in area had offered the land to build the new capital without any conditions to the government.

"I here also would like to thank chiefs and community of Yirol West, Yirol East and community of Awerial for their courageous to offer this land to the government without any condition".

John Garang, the first president of Southern Sudan, reportedly wanted to place the national capital in Ramciel during his administration, but he died before South Sudan achieved independence and its largest city of Juba became the capital instead.

The area is inhabited by the Chiec community of the Dinka ethnic group, who keep cattle and cultivate crops in the highlands of the area during the dry season, while moving to the Nile marshes during the wet season.

There are conflicting reports over its suitability for larger-scale construction, with some characterizing the area as sunken and swampy. Others contend that the rocky highland areas could can support a major city.

Abraham Maker Gol, a student from Lakes said that it was a "radical decision that deserves popular support from logical citizens. The issue of land in Juba, was derailing development. In the six years since South Sudan gained self governance there have been political tension in Juba between the states and national legislature and ministries, with both trying to assert their authority on land issues in particular".

"I am very happy for the president of Republic of South Sudan, to choose Ramciel as [the] capital city of South Sudan", James Malou a Lakes state resident said in Rumbek. "I am really telling our citizens [that] it is the right time to build international city in that place."

According to Kau Matueny, having the capital city in Ramciel was the answer for their suffering during the 22 year with the Khartoum government in North Sudan. "It is a privilege and a gift to the people of Lakes State for our contribution in the liberation struggle no matter how marginalized we are - this is our only gift", he said.

Mark Ochieng, said that it had been a mistake to have the capital in Juba as it was a junction between neighboring Kenya, Uganda and Ethiopia. "I love the president's decision to relocated [the] capital to relate [to] all the 10 states of the Republic of Southern Sudan", he said.

The new location is near the geographic center of the country and borders the three greater regions of Equatoria, Bahr el Ghazala and Upper Nile. It is very close to the point at which the borders of Central Equatoria, Eastern Equatoria, Jonglei, and Lakes states meet.

Manyher Makuendit, another resident, cautioned that "there will be advantages and disadvantages of the new capital's location, warning local inhabitants of the consequences. The capital will be governed by the national government and not by the host state.

Ramciel no longer belongs to the local residents, he said, it now belongs to all Southern Sudanese people regardless of their tribe.

Source: allAfrica.
Link: http://allafrica.com/stories/201109070478.html.

Protests erupt amid Tunisia police union ban

Tunisia's transitional government will ward off any attempts to disrupt public order, Prime Minister Beji Caid Essebsi vowed.

By Monia Ghanmi for Magharebia in Tunis – 07/09/11

Tunisian police are now banned from joining unions "given the danger that such activity represents for the security of the country", Interim Prime Minister Beji Caid Essebsi announced on Tuesday (September 6th).

"Many dangerous things happened in this country and that concerns all its citizens," he said. Caid Essebsi announced a host of measures to restore security following recent clashes that left at least two people dead in the southwest and spurred a curfew on Sbeïtla.

The caretaker prime minister added the transitional government would "strictly" apply the state of emergency and prohibit "all demonstrations, all strikes and all meetings that could affect the security of the country". He authorized the interim prime minister to "place under house arrest any person known for activities affecting internal security".

The announcement came amid renewed riots in the Tunis Kasbah. Scores of angry security servicemen protested accusations that they killed protestors during the January 14th revolution. Twenty-three officers have been arrested on charges of killing demonstrators.

Police pressed for the dismissal of Interior Minister Habib Essid, Public Security Director Taoufik Dimassi and National Security Director Nabil Abid. The demonstrators also called for adopting a legal framework that would guarantee the protection of security agents. Several security centers were set alight last week, causing the union of internal security forces to call for a strike on Monday.

The speech caused resentment among police officers, who continued their protests.

"This was a very harsh speech that has greatly offended the entire security community," Habib Jlassi, secretary-general of the special anti-terrorist brigade. "We didn't expect that the number one official in government would describe us as monkeys. Therefore, we will continue our protests to demand the prime minister to apologize and to defend our rights and dignity."

On the subject of political transition, Caid Essebsi reiterated the government's obligation to safeguard the revolution.

"The revolution doesn't mean chaos," he said. "It is the government that is defending the revolution, while the rest are trying to take advantage of it, but we won't allow them to do so."

"The elections will take place on October 23," the prime minister added. "Our aim is to ensure that a transparent and free poll takes place for the first time in this country."

Caid Essebsi evoked the possibility of holding a referendum to specify the tasks and powers of the constituent assembly.

The idea must "be discussed in the cabinet, and the president of state is the one who can take such a decision", he said. "However, I don't exclude this step; it's possible, but we have to consult with all parties."

While some political parties, including the Progressive Democratic Party (PDP), support the idea, others dismiss it as an attempt to circumvent the revolution.

The Constituent Assembly, which will be democratically elected, will be a sovereign entity and will appoint the executive power, said Communist Labor Party chief Hamma Hammami. Therefore, the idea of organizing a referendum simultaneously with the October 23rd vote is unreasonable, he added.

Source: Magharebia.
Link: http://www.magharebia.com/cocoon/awi/xhtml1/en_GB/features/awi/features/2011/09/07/feature-04.

9,000-Year-Old Advanced Civilization Found in Saudi Arabia

September 6, 2011

Archeological evidence that an ancient society was domesticating animals including horses 9,000 years ago, 4,000 years earlier than previously thought, has been unearthed at Al-Maqar in central Saudi Arabia.

Named the Al-Maqar civilization, around 80 artifacts have been collected from the site, including mummified skeletons, spinning and weaving tools, and statues of animals such as ostriches, falcons, and a one-meter-tall bust of a horse. A horse burial has also been discovered.

Ali al-Ghabban, vice president of Antiquities and Museums at the Saudi Commission for Tourism & Antiquities (SCTA), said these findings challenge the theory that animal domestication took place 5,500 years ago, which is based on previous excavations in Central Asia.

“A statue of an animal of this dimension, dating back to that time, has never been found anywhere in the world,” Ghabban said, according to the Saudi Gazette.

The remains were found in a valley that was formerly a riverbed, close to Abha, in southwestern Asir province near the Yemen border, an area once known as Arabia Felix.

"The antiquities proved that Al-Maqar was the oldest place in the world so far with people interested in horses," an official statement said, adding that the artifacts also showed the cultural activities of people in the region during the Stone Age.

Ghabban said these people used “methods of embalming that are totally different from known processes,” the Gazette reported.

"This discovery will change our knowledge concerning the domestication of horses and the evolution of culture in the late Neolithic period,” he said.

“The Maqar Civilization is a very advanced civilization of the Neolithic period," he added. "This site shows us clearly, the roots of the domestication of horses 9,000 years ago.”

Ghabban said DNA tests and carbon dating had confirmed the age of the excavated artifacts.

An international team of archeologists published an article in Science in January suggesting humans may have been present on the Arabian Peninsula as long as 125,000 years ago.

Source: The Epoch Times.
Link: http://www.theepochtimes.com/n2/science/9000-year-old-advanced-civilization-found-in-saudi-arabia-61239.html.

TRC to modernize water pipeline network in Gaza

September 8, 2011

ANKARA, (PIC)– The Turkish Red Crescent (TRC) announced plans to overhaul the water pipeline network in the Gaza Strip, which suffers acute shortage in potable and irrigation water due to the ongoing five-year Israeli blockade.

The organization said in a statement on Wednesday that repair works would focus on eight sites that were badly damaged in the 2008 Israeli war on the Strip, adding that on completion 400000 Palestinian would benefit from it.

The TRC has been working for the past two years in Gaza in a bid to solve the water crisis and had recently finished modernizing water tanks in many areas in the Strip allowing 50000 citizens to enjoy anew clean running water.

Source: Occupied Palestine WordPress News Blog.
Link: http://occupiedpalestine.wordpress.com/2011/09/08/trc-to-modernize-water-pipeline-network-in-gaza/.

No nuclear weapons, pledge Latin powers

Buenos Aires (UPI)
Sep 7, 2011

Two of Latin America's leading emergent nuclear powers, Argentina and Brazil, said they would campaign to keep the South Atlantic region free of nuclear weapons even as they push multibillion-dollar nuclear power development programs.

The Latin American countries' interest in nuclear power development contrasts with dwindling support for the alternative to hydrocarbons as fuel, especially after the Fukushima nuclear disaster in Japan.

Argentina has a nuclear program going back to the 1950s and Brazil first initiated nuclear fission development in the 1930s. Both pursued covert nuclear weapons program under their respective military regimes but, even as they put those programs on hold, both maintained and enhanced their nuclear power generation capacity.

Despite the latest pronouncements, Brazil is on track to build its first nuclear-powered submarine with French help and Argentina is actively following similar aims to integrate its military and nuclear programs.

The two countries in a joint declaration confirmed a strategic alliance and pledged to campaign for a South Atlantic zone of peace free of nuclear weapons.

Neither country has a known enemy country but Argentina has ratcheted up its rivalry with Britain over its claim of sovereignty over the Falkland Islands, the British overseas territory Argentina's former military dictatorship tried to seize in a 1982 invasion.

The attempt failed with a formal Argentine surrender and deaths of more than 1,000 military personnel and civilians from both sides but didn't extinguish Buenos Aires' championing of Argentine sovereignty over the Falklands.

The joint declaration signaled the two countries' preparations for a more vigorous pursuit of nuclear power, in which Brazil would help Argentina with its more advanced expertise and technologies. Brazil has set development of nuclear fuel reprocessing as one of its high-earning business objectives.

Argentina has plans to build two more nuclear reactors, with Canadian help, in addition to two in operation.

Argentine Defense Minister Arturo Puricelli and Brazilian counterpart Celso Amorim met in Buenos Aires to follow up on a recent summit in Brasilia between Presidents Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner and Dilma Rousseff.

The joint declaration outlined a mechanism for closer political dialogue on defense cooperation and joint production.

Both sides want to go into joint production of military vehicles and transport planes, advancing Brazil's experience in both fields.

However, the ministers also outlined plans to hold combined military exercises to which they would invite neighboring Latin American countries.

Climate change in the Antarctic has heightened Latin American concerns that the region will likely attract more countries interested in exploring and exploiting the thawing ocean's natural resources. Chile has begun reinforcing security measures in its southern territories.

Source: Space War.
Link: http://www.spacewar.com/reports/No_nuclear_weapons_pledge_Latin_powers_999.html.