Wednesday, April 18, 2012

VOA News: Africa: Zambia Cabinet to Consider Report on Graft

VOA News: Africa
Africa Voice of America
Zambia Cabinet to Consider Report on Graft
Apr 19th 2012, 00:53

Zambia's information minister says President Michael Sata's declaration to weed out graft will "spare no sacred cows" in both previous and current administrations. His comments follow the release of a report by a government-sanctioned commission of inquiry on corruption in the Energy Regulation Board.

Fackson Shamenda said the government wants to set a standard that will discourage Zambians from aspiring to get into public office only to make money.

He said the government wants to ensure future officials desist from engaging in acts, which Shamenda said, will cause financial loss to the state.

"The report has just come out, it has got to be submitted to the cabinet [which] has got to look at the document [and then] make a decision," said Shamenda.

"Those of us who are thinking of going into leadership should not [do so] for what we are going to get out of [the] leadership. So that those who have those intentions will stay out of it, so that we have credible people who will go into [public service] to serve."

Park comments came after a commission of inquiry to probe the procurement of oil from 2007 to 2011 revealed malfeasance and corruption in the award of contracts. The commission estimated the cost of the scheme to be about $ 380 million.

According to the Zambia post, former President Rupiah Banda and his son James Banda were among other officials cited who benefited financially from awarding contracts to procure oil.

Instituted by Mr. Sata to probe the Energy Regulation Board, the commission recommended an investigation of those mentioned in the report, including the former president.

The others include former information minister Ronnie Shikapwasha; energy and water development Kenneth Konga; former permanent secretaries in the energy ministry Peter Mumba, Teddy Kasonso, and Buleti Nsemukila. The former director of the Zambia Public Procurement Authority (ZPPA) Samuel Chibuye and other senior directors in the same agency have also been named in the report.

The commission also recommended the temporary suspension of the accused who are still serving in government pending an investigation.

Supporters of the main opposition Movement for Multiparty Democracy (MMD) say the allegations are politically motivated and aimed at decimating the party ahead of the next general election.

Shamenda disagrees, insisting that institutions like the judiciary and the police continue to demonstrate their independence.

"Just because people were in leadership if they are suspected then they should not be set free. If anything, we are setting up standards… so that it controls even other people who are in government now, so that we check what we are doing. It is good for the country," said Shamenda.

"It is a serious warning to all Zambians, even those who are in leadership. Prisons …and rules are not only there to govern those who are being led. Even those who make those laws should be the first ones to observe the laws."

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VOA News: Africa: Rwandan Opposition Leader Withdraws From Trial

VOA News: Africa
Africa Voice of America
Rwandan Opposition Leader Withdraws From Trial
Apr 18th 2012, 23:41

Jailed Rwandan opposition leader Victoire Ingabire, charged with terrorism and denying the 1994 Rwanda genocide, withdrew from her trial in dramatic fashion this week saying she could not "carry on" with her case.  Ingabire told the court her trust in the judiciary had "waned" and that she and her lawyers would no longer report to the trial.  

Victoire Ingabire appeared in court Wednesday in Kigali for the ruling on how her trial would proceed after her announced boycott, but said she would not be back. The court ruled she would not be forced to attend proceedings and that she would not have a special lawyer appointed to stand in her place.

Ingabire's withdrawal came on the heels of a witness who testified in her favor but who says officials intimidated him after his testimony.

Last Wednesday, the court called a former Rwandan rebel spokesman, Michel Habimana-currently serving a life sentence in Rwandan prison for genocide related crimes.  Habimana's statements contradicted much of the prosecution's case.  But after he gave his testimony, Habimana was questioned by authorities outside of the court about notes found in his cell relating to his testimony.  That has brought fresh criticism from human rights activists who say Rwanda's judiciary lacks fairness and independence.

Rwanda's general prosecutor, Martin Ngoga, initially denied that the witness had been questioned outside of court.

"He was not interrogated," said Ngoga. "There was no interrogation outside the courtroom by the way. That's it."

But today Ngoga told reporters that the witness was, in fact, questioned outside of the court but he said that questioning was justified.

"He was searched by the prison authority and a statement was taken because that is mandatory," he said. "Every time you do a search, you do a statement to confirm on record what is being seized so that the next day someone doesn't come and say you took more than this."

Carina Tertsakian of Human Rights Watch is a vocal critic of Rwanda's judiciary and of the treatment given to Habimana.

"There are concerns about two incidents in particular," said Tertsakian. "One is the sudden search of his prison cell apparently on the orders of the prosecution, in which all these papers were seized, the notes of the statement he would make in court.  And the second aspect, which seems also very concerning, is that this same witness was questioned in the prison - not in the court but in the prison - by the prison director and another official in the absence of any lawyer and in parallel with the court proceedings."  

On Tuesday, lawyers for a genocide suspect being held at the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) in Arusha, Tanzania, Jean-Bosco Uwinkindi, filed a motion based on events in the Ingabire trial to prevent his transfer.  But Ngoga says that motion raised questions.

"In Uwinkindi, this defendant - and through his lawyers - they have always maintained there is no independence of the judiciary in Rwanda in Arusha," he said. "But this lawyer goes to Arusha and says there is no independence of the judiciary and he comes to Rwanda to practice before the same judiciary he says is not independent.  So he's British and he knows there's a British saying, 'You can't have your cake and eat it."

The British lawyer Ngoga referred to, Iain Edwards, says he was willing to give the Rwandan courts a chance but was disappointed with the results.

"I was sincerely hoping, sincerely wishing that the Rwandan judiciary would prove itself to be independent," said Edwards. "Certainly the position of my client, Victoire Ingabire, is that the Rwanda judiciary has definitely not proved itself to be independent and I expect that it's a question that's going to be raised in future cases relating to extraditions from other countries in Europe, in the U.S. and Canada and so on."

Jean-Bosco Uwinkindi will arrive in Rwanda Thursday unless the court blocks his transfer.  He would be the first genocide suspect transferred from the ICTR to Rwanda.

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VOA News: USA: Obama, Romney Trade Criticism on Economic Policies

VOA News: USA
USA Voice of America
Obama, Romney Trade Criticism on Economic Policies
Apr 19th 2012, 00:03

President Barack Obama returned to the U.S. Midwest on Wednesday, making his case that Republican economic proposals would harm America's middle class. Obama and the leading Republican presidential hopeful, Mitt Romney, traded criticism of each other's economic policies.

Ohio, one of the places he visited Wednesday, is a politically-important state for the president as he seeks reelection. He reiterated key points in what has become a standard campaign speech.

At Lorain County Community College near Cleveland, Obama described a situation in which he said U.S. businesses have jobs available, but struggle to find qualified workers.

The president sat down with four unemployed workers, including a former U.S. Marine, who are undergoing retraining in the hope of finding new jobs.

Obama said that creating opportunities for the unemployed and ensuring fair play in the economy are at the heart of a major election year debate in coming months.

"Should we settle for an economy where a few people do really well and then a growing number are struggling to get by?  Or do we build an economy where people like Duane and Andrea and David and Bronson, they've got a chance to get ahead, where there are ladders of opportunity, where everybody gets a fair shot, and everybody does their fair share, and everybody is playing by the same set of rules?," he said.

Obama portrayed the presidential contest as a choice between "two competing visions."  He said Republicans would extend or provide new tax breaks for the wealthy, while his proposals would grow the economy through fair play and help for the middle class.

"Instead of moderating their views even slightly, you now have Republicans in Washington, the ones running for president, proposing budgets that shower the wealthiest Americans with even more tax cuts, folks like me [who] don't need them," Obama said.

Not specifically mentioned was Mitt Romney, the former Massachusetts governor and Obama's likely opponent in this year's presidential election.

<!--IMAGE-LEFT-->

Romney delivered competing messages on Wednesday in telephone interviews with Ohio radio stations.

And in remarks in Charlotte, North Carolina, the site of the Democratic National Convention later this year, Romney accused Obama of failed economic policies.

"Even if you like Barack Obama, we can't afford Barack Obama.  It's time to get someone that will get this economy going and put the American people back to work with good jobs and rising incomes," Romney said.

In Washington, the Republican Speaker of the House of Representatives, John Boehner from Ohio, said President Obama is spending more time campaigning than working with Republicans to help the economy.

"He spent the last six months campaigning from one end of the country to the other, instead of working with members of both [major] political parties [-- the Democrats and the Republicans -- ] here in Washington to address the serious challenges that our country faces," Boehner said.

President Obama concluded his one-day cross-country trip with remarks at campaign events in Michigan, a center for the U.S. automobile industry, which he has claimed credit for reviving.  Repeating his criticism of Republican policies, Obama appealed to supporters to ensure his reelection in November and to help "finish what we started in 2008."

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VOA News: USA: Three Secret Service Employees Leaving Agency Over Colombia Scandal

VOA News: USA
USA Voice of America
Three Secret Service Employees Leaving Agency Over Colombia Scandal
Apr 18th 2012, 23:37

The U.S. Secret Service says three of 11 employees under investigation for alleged misconduct involving prostitutes in Colombia are leaving the agency.

The agency's assistant director, Paul Morrissey, says the three leaving include one "supervisory" employee. He said the investigation into the scandal is still in an early stage.

Eleven Secret Service personnel who were stationed in Colombia ahead of U.S. President Barack Obama's arrival for the sixth Summit of the Americas were sent home and placed on administrative leave pending an investigation. Pentagon officials have said at least nine military members also may have been involved in the alleged misconduct.

The ranking Republican on the Senate's Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, Senator Susan Collins, says at least 20 foreign women were brought to the hotel in Colombia where alleged misconduct occurred involving Secret Service members, military staff and prostitutes before the president's visit.

U.S. chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Martin Dempsey, said earlier this week that he was "embarrassed" by the alleged scandal. He said the military arm "let the boss down" by causing a distraction to an important regional engagement for the president.  

The Secret Service has said none of the personnel involved was assigned to protect Mr. Obama.

Media files:
ussecretservice.jpg
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VOA News: Africa: Nigerian Foundation Promotes Private Sector’s Role in Development

VOA News: Africa
Africa Voice of America
Nigerian Foundation Promotes Private Sector's Role in Development
Apr 18th 2012, 22:52

In 1997, Nigerian Tony Elumelu and his business partners bought an unsuccessful bank for five million dollars. Eleven years later, they had built it into a multi-billion dollar business, with 20,000 employees spread throughout Africa.

This is the story that the CEO of the Tony Elumelu Foundation, Dr. Wiebe Boer, wants to tell his colleagues at an international philanthropy conference in Washington this week.

"The way we look at it is, look, the best way that Africa can develop, it has be private-sector driven," said Boer. "With that five million, look at what it got you?"

He said he plans to emphasize the importance of what foundation creator Tony Elumelu calls, "Africapitalism," which he defines as "the private sector's commitment to the economic transformation of Africa through investments that create economic prosperity and social wealth."

But Boer added the public sector plays a crucial role in creating policy that breeds a business-friendly environment.

And he said his group is also trying to shine a spotlight on the importance of African partners in building up the continent.

"We're trying to raise the profile of Africa indigenous philanthropy as a way to encourage other high net-worth Africans to consider setting up these kinds of philanthropies as well," said Boer.

Boer said Nigeria is in prime position for this type of integrated public-private investment to have a major impact. "Nigeria has so underperformed for so long and just has so much potential that that's really where growth is going to be driven from."

Boer is attending the annual three-day conference of the Global Philanthropy Forum, which aims to create a community of internationally-focused donors and investors.

The Tony Elemelu Foundation was created in 2010 and works to identify and address systemic challenges that inhibit African entrepreneurs.

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VOA News: Middle East: Demonstrations Planned as Racing Event Heads for Bahrain

VOA News: Middle East
Middle East Voice of America
Demonstrations Planned as Racing Event Heads for Bahrain
Apr 18th 2012, 23:30

The motor racing Formula One Grand Prix heads to Bahrain this weekend, a year after it was cancelled because of violent anti-government protests and a government crackdown. Bahraini authorities insist the situation is now stable - but protesters say human rights abuses are continuing on a daily basis and have vowed to do all they can to make their voices heard this weekend.

Tear gas and Molotov cocktails rained down on parts of Manama, Bahrain's capital, this week. Opposition members are stepping up their anti-government protests ahead of the Grand Prix on Sunday.

Among them, Dr. Nada Dhaif. She and 19 other medics were sentenced to 15 years in jail for allegedly aiding the demonstrations last year. She has been released pending an appeal and spoke to VOA on the phone from Bahrain.

"We will get the whole media's attention on Bahrain and then we have the chance to show to the whole world what is the reality. Actually I'm heading now to central Manama to demonstrate there and to protest to free Abdulhadi al-Khawaja," Dhaif said.

Abdulhadi al-Khawaja, a Bahraini-Danish human rights activist, was sentenced to life in prison for trying to topple the monarchy. He's been on a hunger strike for nearly 70 days, and fellow activists say his condition is critical.

London-based human rights group Amnesty International details what it claims are continuing abuses by the Bahrain government.  

"Excessive use of force by the security services, they are using a lot of tear gas, and a number of people have died as a result. They are also making arbitrary arrests and also using torture and ill-treatment. We will be seeing a lot of human rights abuses," said Amnesty's Said Boumedouha.

The Bahrain government denies such accusations.

It points to the Independent Commission of Inquiry, set up by the monarchy in the wake of last year's protests. The government insists it is making political reforms and is prosecuting those guilty of rights abuses.

But Amnesty International says only 11 low-ranking officers have been put on trial.

Bahraini activist Doctor Nada Dhaif says the political changes are just cosmetic.

"In reality, on the ground, nothing has been changed. There are daily protests going on, there's daily raiding of the villages, the excessive use of force and the excessive use of tear gas," Dhaif said.

Most Formula One drivers have stayed silent on the issue. But two-time champion Sebastian Vettel did speak out.

"The latest comment was that we are going to Bahrain to race there. If that's still the call, then I think it's safe enough to go, then we should go there and race and not worry about something that is not our business," Vettel said.

The sport's governing body says it is satisfied with the security situation - and insists the race will go ahead as scheduled.

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VOA News: Africa: Angolan Constitution Assures Smooth Presidential Transition

VOA News: Africa
Africa Voice of America
Angolan Constitution Assures Smooth Presidential Transition
Apr 18th 2012, 22:31

Details can make a difference when it comes to writing a constitution.  That's the opinion of legal expert André Thomashausen when asked about Angola.  Thomashausen is the director of the University of South Africa's Institute of Foreign and Comparative Law.

He focuses on what he considers to be the most important detail of Angola's constitution:  the president is no longer chosen by direct vote.  Instead, the presidency goes to the leading candidate of the party than won the country's general elections.

"That's something original," he said. "There isn't any other constitution in the world that does it."

South Africa has a similar approach, though it provides a role for the National Assembly in the naming of the president.

For example in 2009, the African National Congress, the ANC, won the elections, and the National Assembly chose the party's leader, Jacob Zuma, to head the government.

"In constitutional law,"  Thomashausen explained, "the question always lies in the technicalities. Although this appears to be a ritual, it underlines the assembly's supremacy and of its deputies, that are elected by the people. […] And here in South Africa, the same assembly that chooses the president can also ask for his resignation with a simple majority. […] And that doesn't happen in Angola. Angola can only remove his president after a very complicated procedure."

Thomashausen said technically, Angola has one of the "most modern and perfect" constitutions.  Angolan President José Eduardo dos Santos calls the document "genuinely national" and "original".

The document includes 244 articles including chapters about the parameters of citizens' fundamental rights as well as their social and economic rights.

Professor of Law at the University of Lisbon in Portugal Jorge Miranda says it also gives more power to the President of Angola:

"There is a contradiction in the constitution regarding the fundamental rights and the guarantee of constitutionality, and presidential rights," he said. "The way rights are limited is an important guarantee of fundamental rights. And if there isn't a limitation of the executive's power, fundamental liberties may be at risk."

According to the Angolan constitution, the president simultaneously holds executive power as the head of State, and is the commander-in-chief of the armed forces. He can make key government appointments including judges to the Constitutional Court or the Supreme Court and pardon or commute sentences. He is the only one who can ratify international treaties.

Thomashausen said the public should have more influence on the selection of the president and his power.

"There is a difficulty in Angola's new system," he said. "The characteristics of a presidential system are all embodied in the figure of the president, but he is not directly elected by the voters, who could have a choice."

Thomashausen said it's important for Angolans to have the ability to choose a president from one party, and a National Assembly from another.

Constitutional experts say it's an important part of the foundation of many democracies:  a clear separation of power between the executive, the judiciary and the legislature.  Together, they act as a system of "checks and balances" that monitor each other's' actions, helping to keep a democracy from becoming a dictatorship.

Media files:
angola_300.jpg
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VOA News: Arts and Entertainment: Music Promoter Dick Clark Dies at 82

VOA News: Arts and Entertainment
Arts and Entertainment Voice of America
Music Promoter Dick Clark Dies at 82
Apr 18th 2012, 21:33

Dick Clark, the rock 'n' roll music promoter and television host of American Bandstand, has died at age 82.

Publicist Paul Shefrin said Clark suffered a heart attack Wednesday and died at Saint John's Health Center in Santa Monica, California.

Clark was one of the country's best-known television personalities and the long-time host of Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin' Eve broadcast from Times Square in New York City. He had continued performing on the broadcast even after he suffered a stroke in 2004 that affected his ability to speak and walk.

Clark was dubbed ``the world's oldest teenager'' because of his boyish good looks. He was a successful businessman who started his career as a teenage disc jockey in the state of New York. He also earned a business degree from Syracuse University.

By 1956, Clark started a teenage dance show in Philadelphia called Bandstand. He told people the show wiped out the competition because it used "a universal language" that would "work everywhere." Network executives picked up on the the idea, and the rock 'n' roll show American Bandstand was born.

The original American Bandstand was one of network TV's longest-running series, airing on ABC from 1957 to 1987. It hosted stars including Buddy Holly, Elvis Presley, Michael Jackson and Madonna.

"I was a very young fellow," said Dick Clark. "That show was getting huge audiences in Philadelphia. Sixty-five per cent of the people watched the Bandstand when it was in Philadelphia. It wiped out all the competition. I said, 'It doesn't matter. It isn't just Philadelphia, this is a universal language. It will work everywhere. Trust us, it will work. Give us 5 weeks.' And in August of 1957 they did, and, as they say, the rest is history."

"People say, 'Why do you work so hard? You made enough money to retire on when you were a kid.' And I say, everybody always should be this lucky to live out the fantasy of their youth. I wanted to be in the radio business when I was 13 [-years-old]. I started working on it when I was 17, and I don't want to stop," said Clark.

"I think Dick's [contribution] has been very massive, in that he was the first and one-of-a-kind who allowed all of us that conduit to the public; who not only was a very viable force then, but stayed very contemporary through all of these years and uniquely kept everything that he was about very special," said singer/songwriter Paul Anka.

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VOA News: Asia: Reports Focus on Indian Shipbreaking

VOA News: Asia
Asia Voice of America
Reports Focus on Indian Shipbreaking
Apr 18th 2012, 20:41

Alang beach in India's Gujarat province is one of the world's biggest shipping graveyards, an access-restricted, mafia-controlled funerary ground for hulking steel-container vessels marooned for demolition.

Eighty percent of the world's international trade crosses the globe by ship, and each year hundreds of these massive retired freighters are physically dismantled in ocean-shoreline breaking yards.

Two reports released in New Delhi this week are renewing focus on the industry's near total lack of environmental or labor oversight, and its connection to organized crime.

According Federico Demaria, an Italian economist affiliated with New Delhi's Jawaharlal Nehru University, even gaining permission to watch shipbreaking in progress can prove extremely difficult.

"Access to Alang is not permitted for foreigners, for journalists, for researchers, for anyone who can actually find out what is going on on the ground," he says, explaining that he got a glimpse of Alang in 2009, only after posing as a scrap trader.

"You are supposed to ask permission, [and] I have been waiting for it for three years now, and I've [still] not got it."

What he did get, however, was first-hand exposure to an aspect of trade and international commerce that few ever hear about.

A surreal scene
At Alang, he says, defunct trans-oceanic vessels stand like decrepit, abandoned city skyscrapers that have washed ashore, awaiting the arrival of laborers who, armed with torches, enter the structures to manually deconstruct them.

On any given day, he says, one might see a two- or three-ton slab of steel fall to the beach below, or sometimes onto workers.

<!--IMAGE-RIGHT-->While advocates of Indian shipbreaking say the industry recycles cheap steel into the economy, fueling development and providing jobs, critics object, citing lack of health care, adequate housing or compensation for debilitating accidents that frequently befall its labor force.

"How much do you count for a worker's life?" Demaria asks. "For example, I was not allowed to enter one ship in the Alang beach explicitly because the shipbreaker told me, 'If an accident happens, you'll be too expensive. I can't pay you.'"

Yet compensation for Indian workers, he says, is cheap. "If they [compensate their own employees for work-related injuries], they would give something like $1,000 to $2,000, which is insignificant."

A formerly regulated trade
Shipbreaking used to take place mainly in Europe, under more controlled conditions, but globalization has opened the market for unregulated operations like those in Alang, where shipping companies sell older vessels to intermediary companies that exist only on paper, who then sell the steel structures to shipbreakers.

Gopal Krishna, an Indian environmental activist, says the industry is hazardous not only to laborers, but to the entire ecosystem and people whose livelihoods depend on it.

"Most of the ships, which are 25-30 years old, are asbestos-laden. They are laden with persistent organic pollutants like PCBs, polychlorinated biphenyls; with waste oil; with ballast water," he says, none of which is managed in an environmentally sound manner.

Prying eyes of industry observers, he adds, are shielded by local mafias driving the enterprise.

"It is a source of black money in the country, one of the least acknowledged sources of black money," says Krishna. "There is collusion between the ruling party and the opposition party. Business interest, the profit motive alone, guides the political parties, which provide patronage to shipbreakers. There is no rule of law in Alang."

Demaria and Krishna warn that the industry's lack of oversight could impact the West in the form of contaminated and radioactive imports wrought of improperly treated steel.

New Delhi's failure to regulate and modernize shipbreaking, they say, will probably cause India's share of the industry to be subsumed by China's shipbreaking market within a decade.

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VOA News: Asia: US Lawmakers Call for Tougher Approach to North Korea

VOA News: Asia
Asia Voice of America
US Lawmakers Call for Tougher Approach to North Korea
Apr 18th 2012, 20:44

A U.S. congressional panel has held a hearing called "North Korea After Kim Jong Il: Still Dangerous and Erratic." The hearing on U.S. policy towards North Korea coincides with Pyongyang's announcement that it will no longer abide by an agreement to halt testing of nuclear devices and long-range missiles after Washington canceled food aid.  

House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen of Florida says the Obama administration has fallen into the same failed pattern of negotiations with North Korea, followed by betrayal by Pyongyang, that the Bush and Clinton administrations had also pursued in vain. She says the new North Korean leader, Kim Jong Un, seems to be following in his late father Kim Jong Il's footsteps, in responding to an outstretched hand by provoking the world with last Friday's failed rocket launch.

"North Korea's rhetoric should have told our negotiators all they needed to know," said Ros-Lehtinen. "The 'military first' policy of starving the people to feed the army and supply the munitions industry remains.  The South Korean Defense Ministry estimated this month that the North Koreans spent $850 million on the failed missile launch - enough to buy corn to feed the entire population for an entire year."

The lawmakers and experts present at the hearing agreed that North Korea has shown that it is indeed still dangerous and erratic.  Michael Green of the Center for Strategic and International Studies says he believes we may see a North Korean nuclear test in the future.

"So the North is clearly heading towards a nuclear weapons capability, deliverable through ballistic missiles or through country transfer, and our efforts to date have slowed but hardly deterred them from that path," said Green.

Scott Snyder of the Council on Foreign Relations says the United States has long made negotiations the cornerstone of its North Korea policy, and he believes this is a mistake.

"There is no deep harm in talking to North Korea, we can learn a lot, it is an important aspect of our diplomacy," said Snyder. "But I think the National Security Council meetings on North Korea should begin with pressure, coercion, interdiction, implementation of sanctions, and then at the end consider where the diplomatic and engagement piece fits in, and I think we have had it backwards for some time."

In response to last week's failed rocket launch, the United States canceled its offer to provide tons of food assistance to North Korea.  Republican Congressman Dana Rohrabacher of California says he believes Washington should not be doing this in the first place, because the North Korean government prevents the food aid from actually being distributed to North Korean citizens in many parts of the country.

"When did the United States assume the responsibility for the nutrition of the North Korean people?  I mean, this is, again, this is a looney [crazy] policy on our side," said Rohrabacher.

The expert witnesses at the hearing said they do not feel that it is a good idea to link nuclear negotiations with North Korea to food aid for the country's starving population, but agreed that Pyongyang should agree to let international relief agencies distribute the food.

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VOA News: USA: Music Promoter Dick Clark Dies at 82

VOA News: USA
USA Voice of America
Music Promoter Dick Clark Dies at 82
Apr 18th 2012, 21:33

Dick Clark, the rock 'n' roll music promoter and television host of American Bandstand, has died at age 82.

Publicist Paul Shefrin said Clark suffered a heart attack Wednesday and died at Saint John's Health Center in Santa Monica, California.

Clark was one of the country's best-known television personalities and the long-time host of Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin' Eve broadcast from Times Square in New York City. He had continued performing on the broadcast even after he suffered a stroke in 2004 that affected his ability to speak and walk.

Clark was dubbed ``the world's oldest teenager'' because of his boyish good looks. He was a successful businessman who started his career as a teenage disc jockey in the state of New York. He also earned a business degree from Syracuse University.

By 1956, Clark started a teenage dance show in Philadelphia called Bandstand. He told people the show wiped out the competition because it used "a universal language" that would "work everywhere." Network executives picked up on the the idea, and the rock 'n' roll show American Bandstand was born.

The original American Bandstand was one of network TV's longest-running series, airing on ABC from 1957 to 1987. It hosted stars including Buddy Holly, Elvis Presley, Michael Jackson and Madonna.

"I was a very young fellow," said Dick Clark. "That show was getting huge audiences in Philadelphia. Sixty-five per cent of the people watched the Bandstand when it was in Philadelphia. It wiped out all the competition. I said, 'It doesn't matter. It isn't just Philadelphia, this is a universal language. It will work everywhere. Trust us, it will work. Give us 5 weeks.' And in August of 1957 they did, and, as they say, the rest is history."

"People say, 'Why do you work so hard? You made enough money to retire on when you were a kid.' And I say, everybody always should be this lucky to live out the fantasy of their youth. I wanted to be in the radio business when I was 13 [-years-old]. I started working on it when I was 17, and I don't want to stop," said Clark.

"I think Dick's [contribution] has been very massive, in that he was the first and one-of-a-kind who allowed all of us that conduit to the public; who not only was a very viable force then, but stayed very contemporary through all of these years and uniquely kept everything that he was about very special," said singer/songwriter Paul Anka.

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VOA News: Africa: South Sudan is World Bank's Newest Member

VOA News: Africa
Africa Voice of America
South Sudan is World Bank's Newest Member
Apr 18th 2012, 20:57

South Sudan became the newest member of the World Bank on Wednesday when the country's finance minister, Kosti Manibe Ngai, signed an agreement in Washington formalizing the country's membership in the organization.

South Sudan has suffered from decades of conflict, and the World Bank says the world's newest country has some of the lowest levels of education and health resources in the world.  About half the country's population lives in poverty.

South Sudan is about the size of France, but has few roads and other forms of infrastructure.

World Bank membership will help South Sudan gain access to low interest loans and technical advice.


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VOA News: Economy: South Sudan is World Bank's Newest Member

VOA News: Economy
Economy Voice of America
South Sudan is World Bank's Newest Member
Apr 18th 2012, 20:57

South Sudan became the newest member of the World Bank on Wednesday when the country's finance minister, Kosti Manibe Ngai, signed an agreement in Washington formalizing the country's membership in the organization.

South Sudan has suffered from decades of conflict, and the World Bank says the world's newest country has some of the lowest levels of education and health resources in the world.  About half the country's population lives in poverty.

South Sudan is about the size of France, but has few roads and other forms of infrastructure.

World Bank membership will help South Sudan gain access to low interest loans and technical advice.


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VOA News: Asia: US Removes Ban on Charity Activities in Burma

VOA News: Asia
Asia Voice of America
US Removes Ban on Charity Activities in Burma
Apr 18th 2012, 20:38

This week the United States relaxed some long-standing economic sanctions on Burma, in hopes of encouraging additional reforms after landmark elections earlier this month.

Under rules issued Tuesday by the Treasury Department, private humanitarian, religious and other non-profit organizations will be allowed to carry out charity work in Burma.

The new rules allow U.S. citizens to invest money in and undertake projects meant to meet basic human needs in Burma, including disaster relief and assistance to refugees, displaced persons, and conflict victims.  They will also allow distribution of food, clothing, medicine, and medical equipment, and provision of shelter, clean water, sanitation, and hygiene assistance.

The move will also allow Americans to work in Burma on democracy-building and good governance projects, including conflict resolution and citizen participation, and on educational activities meant to fight illiteracy and increase access to education.

U.S. funds may now be spent on non-commercial projects in Burma that would benefit the Burmese people.  These include disease prevention, promotion of mother/child health, food security, conservation of endangered species, and construction and maintenance of schools, libraries, medical clinics, hospitals, and other infrastructure.

Americans can also now spend money on religious activities in Burma such as religious education, the training of missionaries, and establishment and maintenance of houses of worship.

A Treasury Department spokesman confirmed Wednesday that sanctions on commercial transactions, such as import of Burmese gemstones and other goods, are still in place.

Status of Sanctions on Burma

United States


  • Apr. 17, 2012: U.S. Treasury allows U.S. based groups to do charity and humanitarian work in Burma.
  • Apr. 4, 2012: Announced sanctions will be further eased.
  • Arms embargo, bans investment in Burma and most imports.

Europe


  • Apr. 13, 2012: British Prime Minister David Cameron called for further easing of sanctions during a visit to Burma.
  • Feb. 2012: Lifted visa restrictions on some top officials.
  • Bans weapons sales, restricts exports, imports and investments.

Australia


  • Apr. 16, 2012: Lifted travel restrictions, except on senior military officers and human rights abuse suspects.
  • Imposed sanctions against members of Burma's leadership in 2007.

Canada


  • Apr. 12, 2012: Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird said sanctions are under review.
  • Banned exports of arms and all non-humanitarian goods in 1988.

Japan


  • Announced it would resume full development assistance in February 2012 after nine-year freeze.


After Cyclone Nargis devastated Burma in May of 2008, killing tens of thousands of people, the U.S. temporarily eased financial sanctions against that country, to allow humanitarian agencies and individuals to offer financial assistance to the Burmese people.

Since the election of a nominally civilian government in Burma in 2010, the Obama administration in Washington has been shifting away from long-standing U.S. policy of isolating that country, gradually easing sanctions as a reward for the Burmese government's democratic changes.  Washington also plans to send a full-time ambassador to Burma for the first time in more than two decades.  Selected Burmese officials and members of parliament now will be allowed to travel to the United States.

After the former Burmese military government's bloody crackdown on peaceful pro-democracy protests in 1988, and its refusal to honor the results of a free election in 1990, the United States imposed an arms embargo against Rangoon and a visa ban on senior government officials there.

In 1997, then-U.S. President Bill Clinton issued an executive order prohibiting any new investment in Burma by U.S. individuals or companies.

In 2003, the U.S. Congress passed the Burmese Freedom and Democracy Act, which banned imports from Burma.  

In 2007, then-President George W. Bush issued an executive order imposing financial sanctions against military government officials in Burma, their families and friends, barring them access to the U.S. financial system.  The list of officials was expanded in 2008.

Also in 2008, Congress passed the Tom Lantos Block Burmese JADE Act.  The law, named after the late House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Tom Lantos of California, bans the importation of rubies and jade from Burma into the United States.

In announcing the new easing of some sanctions against Burma, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton warned that the democratic reform process in that country still has a long way to go.  She said the U.S. will continue to ease sanctions as long as the Burmese government continues making progress toward a fuller democracy.

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VOA News: Asia: Cambodian Artists Respond to Phnom Penh’s Rapid Urbanization

VOA News: Asia
Asia Voice of America
Cambodian Artists Respond to Phnom Penh's Rapid Urbanization
Apr 18th 2012, 19:53

Cambodia's capital city, Phnom Penh, was once known as the "Paris of the East" for its resemblance to the famous European city. During French colonial rule, Phnom Penh boasted spacious villas with French courtyards that were homes and reception venues to both the wealthy French and Khmers.

The mansions and villas are now faded memories of the city's former grandeur before it was left in shambles from the Khmer Rouge regime. Many of these former symbols of sophistication and wealth are now abandoned and waiting to be demolished to make way for skyscrapers.

Skyscrapers are Cambodia's new symbols of prosperity and modernity. While the city skyline is still largely spartan, all that is about to change, with Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen endorsing the construction of more skyscrapers in the city by Korean and Chinese contractors.

But this push toward a moden city has a cost in lost history, vanishing natural areas and evictions.

To increase the development, the government has recently filled in Boeung Kak Lake, which is located in the heart of the city, and evicted thousands of households living in the surrounding areas.

The ensuing controversy has prompted a movement among Cambodian artists and photographers to respond to the rapid urbanization of Phnom Penh.

Going against the tide, this group is concerned with the rapid urbanization of Phnom Penh and the mass demolition of its colonial-influenced buildings. In response, they have created and exhibited works to comment on the issue.

Erin Gleeson, a curator and researcher who has lived in Cambodia for a decade, said there is a strong pattern among Cambodian artists to document and archive the city's landscape, with the anticipation that it could become unrecognizable in years to come.

"Almost 80% of the local artists in advanced practices are committedly making commentaries on the rapid urbanization of Cambodia. These local artists are responding to the change in their lifestyles, culture and environment and some of them are also expressing their personal experiences as they are also residents near the lake that is now vanished," she said.

Gleeson added that this movement of artists is not pre-planned, but the works seen so far have turned out to be a cohesive collection that presents a similar view.

"Phnom Penh is a flat city, and has never been a concrete city. But, as it develops, the artists here mourn for the loss of that landscape that they are so used to. It is an irony, as we feel that some things are dying, even though the city is growing," she said.

Among the artists that have prominent works on the subject include Kim Hak, a photography artist that has exhibited several projects in and out of Cambodia, mainly on people living in and among colonial buildings in Phnom Penh.

"More often than not, a new building or skyscraper is constructed at the expense of existing buildings that have historical and social values, including schools and hospitals. I believe that the colonial buildings should co-exist with the new ones, instead of changing Phnom Penh's landscape entirely," he said.

<!--IMAGE-LEFT-->Another artist, Khvay Samnang, has worked extensively in producing art works to express his views on the vanishing lakes in Phnom Penh's city centre. He has recently exhibited a series of photographs of himself standing in the middle of the now-gone Boeung Kak lake and pouring earth over his body as the shot was being taken.

"My work is for the people. I use my body to react towards the loss of lakes situated in the heart of the city. I am not trying to change the government's mind about how they should develop this country but rather, I am expressing my experience of this loss and be critical about this issue," he said.

Khvay said he is not against the government developing the land in Phnom Penh. But, he says it has to be done with proper urban planning. "Filling the lake with earth will result in environmental consequences such as increased floods in Cambodia in future years," he explained.

Responses to these artists' work have been encouraging. Kim said his photographs of colonial architecture have helped raise awareness of preserving some heritage monuments. "When these photographs are exhibited in Phnom Penh, UNESCO wanted to use some of them as exhibits to discuss with the government on preserving these buildings," he said.

Gleeson said the local artistic community did not produce art works to quickly change people's minds, but rather to engage with the community. "In their own individual ways, these artists want to be initiators of conversations, and not want to let things pass without saying something," she said.

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