Tuesday, May 1, 2012

VOA News: Asia: China's Domestic Security Scandals Expose Unchecked Local Power

VOA News: Asia
Asia Voice of America
China's Domestic Security Scandals Expose Unchecked Local Power
May 2nd 2012, 03:05

After the daring escape of a blind Chinese dissident from house arrest and a string of corruption allegations in Chongqing, some are questioning whether Beijing has given local officials too much autonomy over public security. Away from the watchful eye of the central government and contrary to nascent reform efforts, a culture of impunity appears to have flourished.

James Lewis of the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington says reports that former Chongqing Communist Party leader Bo Xilai wiretapped President Hu Jintao are plausible because Beijing has relinquished control of its surveillance and information technology to regional leaders.

"Whether it's wireless or a landline or Internet, you need to control those companies in some way," he said. "And that's where the ownership and control of local networks, the security services, turns out to be the determining factor."

Bo, the charismatic son of one of the Communist Party's founding fathers, forged  powerful alliances with key telecommunications and security officials. Among the purported allies, according to the New York Times, was Fang Binxing, the dean of Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications, and the so-called father of China's "Great Firewall."

Domestic Security

The security apparatus in China is enormous. The country has dedicated about $110 billion to its domestic security budget this year, an even bigger pot than its defense spending. Keeping a close eye on the people has soared in importance as China's citizens become more connected online, and more vocal offline about perceived injustice.

Bo led the charge, receiving funding from the central government to turn Chongqing into a testing ground for China's most advanced surveillance technology. He embarked on a heavy-handed crackdown on organized crime, while reviving Mao-era Communist songs in a campaign he called "sing red, smash black." Bo's police chief, Wang Lijun, oversaw the anti-crime activites that human rights groups say involved torture and the detention of thousands of wrongly accused suspects.

The same wiretapping and surveillance equipment used in that campaign was used to monitor the activities of local officials and, according to the New York Times, President Hu in a phone call last August to an anti-corruption official visiting Chongqing.

Culture of Impunity

Using covert means to compile information to bring down political rivals is as old a practice as politics itself - in China and just about every other country, including the United States.

But rarely do you see such a high-level leader, like President Hu, under siege from such a mid-level, albeit influential, figure, like Bo.

"You have a sense of impunity, particularly at the top of the party leadership and for those who are descended from revolutionary gods," said Lewis. "You put the two together and you see things like this Bo story."

That impunity came to an end in March, when the government stripped Bo of key party posts and accused him of "serious disciplinary violations." His wife, Gu Kailing, faces murder allegations in the death of British businessman Neil Heywood.

Loss of Confidence

Cheng Li, a China analyst with the Washington-based research group the Brookings Institute, says most Chinese do not feel like they're living in a police state, but Bo's case and the story of blind dissident Chen Guangchen, have rattled the public's confidence in the system.

"The system is now known for its police brutality and torture. It failed because it does not provide any security for the Chinese public in terms of the terrible violation of law. So that certainly is a wakeup call for the Chinese government," he said.

Bo couldn't be any more different than Chen, the activist lawyer whose recent breakout from house arrest was the first news to push Bo from the headlines in weeks. But both knew intimately how Chinese officials can and will operate outside the rule of law.

After Chen served four years in prison for damaging property and disrupting traffic, the lawyer and his family were then trapped in their own home. Local Shandong province officials blocked the road to his house, put bars on his windows and installed security cameras.

An informal army of plainclothes thugs chased away visitors and, according to Chen's wife, severely beat and tortured both her and her husband. Human rights groups say local officials were punishing Chen for his work exposing forced abortions. He is now believed to be under the protection of U.S. diplomats in China.

Legal Loopholes

Beijing has not commented on Chen's case, nor has it acknowledged the reports of Bo's alleged wiretapping. But it has plastered state media reports of Bo's alleged corruption with pledges that transparency and the rule of law will be upheld.

Which laws are being enforced, is not as transparent, though. China has two legal systems: One of party discipline and the other of state law.

Bo is being held under "shuanggui," informal detention enforced by Communist Party disciplinary bodies outside the court system. His wife and Wang likely will face charges under the newly revised criminal procedure law. And Chen was subject to house arrest that had no basis in Chinese law.

Jacques deLisle, the director of the Center for East Asian Studies at the University of Pennsylvania, says the cases reveal the weaknesses in China's legal system.

"In fact, it works quite badly in highly politically charged cases, which includes both people who are characterized as dissidents or activists, such as Chen Guangchen, who takes on misbehavior or human rights violations by state actors, and somebody like Bo Xilai, who is so far up in the chain that he faces essentially politically-driven sanctions," he said.

China at a Crossroads

DeLisle says the central government, concerned about social stability during a leadership transition, is at a crossroads.

"So they're facing a choice of restarting and resuming what had been stalled reform or doubling down on trying to keep things under control and keep tumult within the party and within society in check," he said.

President Hu and Premier Wen Jiabao will be transferring power to a new generation of leaders next year, after modest but steady efforts to clean up corruption in the party ranks. The demise of Bo, who was expected to join the country's top leadership body, signals Beijing wants to steer away from the Maoist-style personality cult he propagated in Chongqing.

Holding Bo, his wife and his police chief accountable for alleged murder, corruption and abuse of power sends a positive signal, says Cheng Li.

"This potentially could be a landmark event for China's civil rights movement," he said, adding that the Communist Party has an opportunity to promote an independent legal system, and make its members answerable to the constitution.

But the likelihood of massive reform during a political transition is unlikely, according to Delisle, who says it will take a couple years for China's new leaders to reveal their policies.

"I don't think anybody thinks they're going to start out of the gate being radical reformers, unless a crisis really forces that upon them," he said. "And so far, I don't think we're facing a crisis of that magnitude."

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VOA News: Africa: Path to Restoring Mali’s Democracy Set Back, Says Politician

VOA News: Africa
Africa Voice of America
Path to Restoring Mali's Democracy Set Back, Says Politician
May 2nd 2012, 01:25

A prominent politician in Mali says the ongoing military crisis is a distraction to the aim of restoring constitutional rule in the West African nation.

Niankoro Yeah Samake, leader of the Party for Patriotic and Civic Action (PACP) called for unity among sections of the military after he expressed disappointment with division among the rank and file of the army.

"We should not lose focus of where Mali is today and where we need to take Mali to…We are at a time where we need to unify the Malian army to take on the challenges [and] to protect the territorial integrity of the country," said Samake.

"We call on the leader of the junta to be the leader of the army as we work hard with the international community, the political parties the civil society in Mali to restore democracy for the benefit of the people of Mali."

Samake's comments came after soldiers who support the junta took control of the main base for troops loyal to ousted President Toumani Toure after a second day of heavy fighting following Monday's attempted counter coup d'état.

Coup leaders said in a televised statement Tuesday that they remain in control of key sites in the capital, Bamako. They described the fighting as an attack by ill-intentioned people set on destabilizing Mali's transition to constitutional order.

Meanwhile, regional heads of states and government are scheduled to attend an Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) summit Thursday. Officials say the leaders will review the current situation in Mali. The summit will be held in the Senegalese capital, Dakar.

Coup leaders in Mali have rejected an ECOWAS proposal to restore constitutional order. They accused the regional bloc of not keeping its part of the agreement it signed with the junta.

Samake said Malians should be allowed to lead the effort to resolve the country's challenges.

"Mali needs its partners, but we need to make sure that this is a Malian solution. We cannot make this solution outside of Mali [because] that will be an imposition. We don't want that and it is not going to be a lasting solution," said Samake.

"The people of Mali need to come together and define the terms of how the country should be run during the transition."

Samake said his party, together with 14 other political parties, have outlined what he said would be the best possible solutions to resolving the crisis in Mali.

"What we said is that there is a need to organize a convention [and] to put in place a national transitional committee with 30 people- seven military, 18 political leaders and five [from the] civic society. And these 30 people will elect among them the president of the transitional power, excluding any military officials," said Samake.

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VOA News: Africa: Students Build Robots at New Camp in Uganda

VOA News: Africa
Africa Voice of America
Students Build Robots at New Camp in Uganda
May 2nd 2012, 01:11

The high school students have broken off into five groups of six and picked team names like The Decepticons, The Autobots and Predators.

They are participating in Uganda's first-ever robotics camp, a weeklong crash course where students learn how to apply their classroom science lessons into building a robot.

"The process of building a robot encompasses so much critical thinking, so much scientific innovation," said the camp's founder, Solomon King.

"It opens these kids to a whole new dimension of thought, of understanding, of creativity. They look at the world through a whole different lens the next time they are thinking about solutions to their issues."

In addition to this week's camp, King also founded Fundi Bots, a local organization that focuses on solving technical problems through education.

King's personal journey in science speaks to his passion about the hands-on experience. During his studies at Kyambogo University, he dropped out of his science technology class because it was too theoretical. "What I wanted to study was something that allowed me to build and create with my hands," he said.

Besides the camp, Fundi Bots holds robotics outreach programs in schools that help children realize how their physics homework can lead to solving real-life problems. "A lot of what happens in schools, it's just academia and they're doing these lessons, these courses, they're reading just to be able pass these exams at the end of the day," said King.

But when they have an opportunity to use the information to create something, he says "there's that moment when they realize that 'ah!' all that stuff that I was learning in classroom is actually extremely relevant in the real world." He said this motivates the students to pay more attention to their studies.

King's organization recently received a Google RISE (Roots in Science and Engineering) Award, and King said they will use the $9,000 in prize money to expand their programs into additional schools.

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VOA News: Europe: French Far Right Key to Election Outcome

VOA News: Europe
Europe Voice of America
French Far Right Key to Election Outcome
May 2nd 2012, 01:08

France's far-right National Front party leader Marine Le Pen finished a strong third in the first round of presidential elections last month.  Now, her supporters may be key in determining the outcome of the runoff vote May 6 that pits French President Nicolas Sarkozy against front-runner Socialist rival Francois Hollande.  

The thousands of National Front supporters attending the party's traditional May Day rally in Paris were in a festive mood.  They cheered as the party's leader, Marine Le Pen, celebrated her third-place finish in the first round of French presidential elections and they booed as Le Pen mocked the two finalists in next Sunday's runoff vote - French President Nicolas Sarkozy and Socialist party challenger Francois Hollande.

Hours later and several kilometers away from the National Front rally, President Sarkozy held his own May Day gathering in Paris.

In interviews like this recent one on French radio, Sarkozy says it is important to listen to French who voted for the National Front.  Theirs is a call of anger and despair, he says, at a time when the French economy is ailing and unemployment is close to 10 percent.

Le Pen is not endorsing President Sarkozy or Hollande.  And her supporters, like student Helene Justin, are uncertain about how they will cast their ballots.

Justin says she is not really happy with either choice.  Justin says that as far as she is concerned, the two are about the same and only care about the elite.

Retiree Gerard Virginier expressed similar sentiments.

Virginier says he is turned off by both candidates, but especially by Sarkozy.  He accuses Sarkozy of stealing the National Front's agenda when he first ran for office in 2007 - and then failing to honor it as president.

During these tough economic times, many French have identified with the National Front's anti-European Union and anti-immigration message.  Nearly one in five voters cast ballots for Le Pen in the first round.

How they vote in this runoff may determine its outcome. Sarkozy is expected to lose without a massive amount of National Front support.

Analyst Philip Whyte is with the Center for European Reform, in London.

"In the campaigning in the second round, Sarkozy has definitely been flirting with the voters of the National Front," said Whyte. "And that's manifested itself in two areas in particular.  The first is on immigration - he's been making some relatively hostile remarks on immigration.  And second, he's been making much more protectionist noises on economic policy."

Polls have suggested Sarkozy will be defeated in Sunday's final vote. Sarkozy has just days to convince National Front voters to back him for another term.

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VOA News: USA: Occupy’s May Day on the Streets

VOA News: USA
USA Voice of America
Occupy's May Day on the Streets
May 2nd 2012, 00:45

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The Occupy Wall Street movement took to the streets of several U.S. cities Tuesday to mark the May First International Workers Holiday.  Activists sought to expand support for the movement.

Demonstrators in New York started banging drums early despite rainy skies that appeared to threaten the day's turnout.  But this Occupy activist was undaunted.

"If the NYPD [New York Police Department] can't stop us, Mother Nature can't stop us,"said the activist. "You can't stop the truth."

Activists in various venues throughout New York came to deliver a core message of the Occupy movement:  growing income disparities between the wealthiest 1 percent of Americans and the remaining 99 percent.  David Harvey, an anthropology professor at the City University of New York, made the point at an Occupy teach-in in Manhattan.

"We've got this situation where we don't have the money power," said Anthropology Professor David Harvey. "The only power we have is people.  The only way politics is going to work for us is  on the street.   That's the only thing we got.  That's the only power we got."

Police arrested at least four marchers on the Williamsburg Bridge between Brooklyn and Manhattan for not obeying an order to turn around.  Police also made arrests at other venues.

Demonstrators handed out messages to shopkeepers calling for a general strike - no work, school or shopping.  Hairdresser Lizzy Steelheart said she sympathizes with the Occupy movement.

"I definitely support people speaking up about some of the economic injustice that's going on in our country," she said.

Activists targeted banks and corporations they consider corrupt and greedy.  Demonstrators took that message to Bank of America.  But the movement's call for a general strike did not materialize.  As the hairdresser explained, she could not afford to take the day off.  

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VOA News: Middle East: UN: Syrian Heavy Weapons Still in Cities

VOA News: Middle East
Middle East Voice of America
UN: Syrian Heavy Weapons Still in Cities
May 1st 2012, 23:00

The U.N.'s peacekeeping chief said Tuesday that the Syrian government still has heavy weapons in cities, and that both the government and opposition have committed violations of a U.N.-brokered truce.

U.N. peacekeeping chief Hervé Ladsous says the 24 monitors already in Syria have reported heavy weapons are still in several cities - a violation of the peace deal brokered by U.N.-Arab League mediator Kofi Annan.

"Yes, our military observers do see a number of APCs [armored personnel carriers], for instance, they see a number of howitzers and other military equipment in most places where they are. It is being claimed the APCs have been disarmed, but that is not verified in all cases," Ladsous said.

Ladsous said the level of violence has been "appalling" and urged both sides to respect the cessation of hostilities. He said the monitors have reported violations from both government forces and the opposition.

"I think the violations that are observed come from both sides. I would not establish ratio, I think now is perhaps not the time, since after all, we still have a limited number of observers in a limited number of localities. The fact is, I think politically, the important fact is, that violations do come from both sides," Ladsous said.

On Monday, Syrian state media reported several attacks on government buildings in the northern city of Idlib, which killed mostly security forces, while the opposition reported that government bombings killed several civilians in Idlib on Tuesday.

Meanwhile, the United Nations is working to deploy the full monitoring mission. Ladsous said 24 observers are now in Syria and he expects that number to rise to rapidly, with the full deployment of about 300 to be in place by the end of May.

He acknowledged that the United Nations only has "solid" commitments from member states for half the force so far.  But despite the shortfall, he said he is confident to have the full 300 by the end of the month.

The mission faces other challenges, including the ability to move freely in Syria. Ladsous said the United Nations is still negotiating an agreement with Damascus regarding whose helicopters would be used - Syria's or the U.N.'s - to ferry observers around the large country.

There are also security challenges. In a country where more than 9,000 people have died in the past 13 months, the observers are unarmed and beholden to the Syrian military for their protection, even when they enter areas controlled by the opposition. They also are operating in a country where a cessation of hostilities has been in name only.

The U.N. Security Council authorized the observer mission for an initial deployment of 90 days. The United States has said it may not vote to renew the mandate if there is not a sustained cessation of hostilities, full freedom of movement for the mission and real progress on the other points in Kofi Annan's peace plan.

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VOA News: Asia: Cambodia Activist Laid to Rest After Shooting Death

VOA News: Asia
Asia Voice of America
Cambodia Activist Laid to Rest After Shooting Death
May 1st 2012, 23:22

Family members and activists vow to follow a prominent environmentalist's footsteps after his shooting death in Koh Kong province last week.

Chut Wutty, director of Natural Resource Protection Group, was shot and killed in a forest while escorting two journalists covering illegal logging. A military policeman was killed in the same incident and the Cambodian government says it will establish a joint committee to investigate.

"Even though he is dead, I am happy because his death was for the sake of the nation," said Sam Chanthy, the wife of slain anti-illegal logging activist Chut Wutty. "I'm proud of him because he had fulfilled his task as a good Khmer citizen, so I don't regret [losing him]," she said at her husband funeral on Monday. "What I regret, however, is that our government did not see such a good man," she said in front of her husband's coffin.

"I want my children to be trained to work like their father because it's a good work; it's an honest work, it's not a theft nor a robbery, but instead it preserves our national forestry assets," said Sam Chanthy. "I will let my children walk on his father's footsteps; I don't fear," she said.

Authorities said Chut Wutty was gunned downed by a military policeman In Ratana, who they said took his own life later, with one gunshot in the chest and another in the stomach. But the account of the shooting incident was not convincing to other activists.

"From today on, the government must find the real killer of my mentor," Vong Phan, 60, a Prey Lang activist from Stung Treng province, said referring to Chut Wutty. " He did not sell the national territory, but he just protected the forest for the people in the country and around the world," she said weeping in front of the coffin.

Chut Wutty was previously threatened for his work against illegal logging network, but he had said he would ignore it.

Yeng Virak, the executive director of Community Legal Education Center, said, "The killing of Chut Wutty even strengthens our mind and determination that what he did was right and we would continue his bravery.".

Forestry activist Monk Loun Sovath said, "Chut Wutty is a human resource almost impossible to find in Cambodia. However, the loss of him is just one as thousands, tens of thousands and millions of Chut Wutty's still remain," he said.

Nonetheless, family members, villagers, civil society representatives and members of parliament and those supporting the slain environmentalist insist a thorough investigation be carried out to find those behind his killing.

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VOA News: Americas: Bolivia Government Seizes Spanish-Owned Power Company

VOA News: Americas
Americas Voice of America
Bolivia Government Seizes Spanish-Owned Power Company
May 1st 2012, 22:18

Bolivian President Evo Morales says the government is taking over the Spanish-owned power company and he ordered the army to seize control of the electricity grid.

Mr. Morales said Tuesday Spain's Red Electrica company's investment in Bolivia was inadequate. He also said the government should be responsible for generating electricity.

Mr. Morales did not say how the Bolivian government would compensate the Spanish company. Its Bolivian assets were responsible for less than 3 percent of its 2011 revenue.

Bolivia's move comes just weeks after Argentina said it would nationalize the local branch of Spain's Repsol's oil company. Argentine President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner also accused that Spanish-owned company of a lack of investment in the local economy.

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VOA News: Asia: In Hong Kong, Maritime Militarization on Display

VOA News: Asia
Asia Voice of America
In Hong Kong, Maritime Militarization on Display
May 1st 2012, 21:52

The Yuncheng 571 frigate docks at Hong Kong's Victoria harbor for a five-day visit, and following just behind is the Haikou 171 destroyer.

The vessels, two of the Chinese Navy's most advanced warships and part of the 10th Chinese Naval Escort Task Force, are making a port call to celebrate the15th anniversary of the handover of Hong Kong from Britain to China.

Their arrival at Ngong Shuen Chau, the Naval Base also known as the Stonecutters Island, which sits just off the harbor's western entrance, comes at a time of rising tension in the South China Sea.

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The current standoff between China and the Philippines is but the latest in a series of maritime incidents between Beijing and its Southeast Asian neighbors, and a new report from security analysts at the International Crisis Group (ICG) confirms the trend of increasing militarization.

"In China, the South Sea Fleet, which is the one responsible for the South China Sea, has traditionally been the least well-endowed of all the three fleets," says Stephanie Kleine-Ahlbrandt, ICG's project director for Northeast Asia. "And so these tensions in the South China Sea are the perfect justification for their modernization."

The 3.5-million square kilometers of the South China Sea are variously contested by China, Malaysia, the Philippines, Brunei and Vietnam.

Last year Vietnam accused Chinese patrol boats of interfering with one of its oil and gas survey ships. Tensions between China and the Philippines, however, have soared because of a set of disputed islands known in English as the Scarborough shoal.

Last week, the United States and the Philippines held joint live-fire naval drills, prompting China to warn Washington against getting involved in the region. But on the eve of a visit to Beijing, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton insisted Washington is not taking sides.

"As a Pacific power we have a national interest in freedom of navigation, the maintenance of peace and stability, respect for international law," she said.

But ICG analysts say the lack of legal clarity about competing territorial claims is central to the rising tensions.

Steven Tsang, director of the China Policy Institute at the University of Nottingham, suggests China may have wider strategic aims.

"What [officials in Beijing] really are after is not so much the territorial bit, but to be able to basically get the region to accept that it is the Chinese sphere of influence, that they will all accept Chinese leadership or pre-eminence in that part," says professor Tsang. "They would then wish the Americans not to be so deeply involved, [such] that [the South China Sea] would become almost a Chinese lake."

Chinese officials say they plan to present a maritime border claim based on the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea. But with such strategically important and resource-rich waters, analysts say finding agreement between so many competing nations will be difficult.

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VOA News: Economy: Chinese Company Bets Big on Laos Casino Project

VOA News: Economy
Economy Voice of America
Chinese Company Bets Big on Laos Casino Project
May 1st 2012, 21:25

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Near the famed golden triangle where Laos, Thailand and Burma meet, a Chinese company plans to turn huge tracts of jungle and farmland once associated with the opium trade into a tourism magnet.  The company, Kings Romans, says it is building a new economy, anchored in part by a glittering new casino.

The Chinese-run Kings Romans' casino is one of the most noticeable and flashy features on the Lao side of the Mekong River's Golden Triangle.

Kings Romans signed a 99-year lease with the Lao government to develop and run a special economic zone in a stretch of rural land spanning more than 100 square kilometers.

The plans are ambitious. "Here will be the airport. Here will be the industrial zone. Here will be a bridge to connect with Thailand and Burma. The whole project will be finished within the next 20 years," explains a staff member while pointing at a map.

For now, the future airport runway is still just a road.

But construction is brisk and workers are chopping down forests and flattening hills.

Hundreds of people displaced by the building have already been relocated, and given new houses in the recently opened Golden Triangle Village.

During a recent gathering for a funeral, new residents played cards, gambled and talked about life in the company-built village.

Ouy Kham says there are not enough trees, making it too hot to grow food. Her children now farm in Thailand to make money. "In the old village we had income but coming to this village we only spend money.  We don't know what to sell to earn a living.  Living here we cannot grow anything.  We try to grow vegetables but they are not healthy," she said.

As Kings Romans' remakes the Golden Triangle's skyline, there are new jobs for workers with the right skills.  

Burmese laborer Khun Kyar Kan has been working in the special economic zone for three years.  Even though the pay is better than back home, he says there are drawbacks. "In Burma I worked in farming. It was my own job and I could set my own working schedule… Here I am always worried about losing my job because I cannot find another job. There is only one company here," he said.

For now, trade ships and fishermen are the picture of life here on the Mekong River.

But Kings Romans is betting hundreds of millions of dollars that Asia's growing wealthy will soon join them as a fixture of the scenic and notorious Golden Triangle.

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VOA News: USA: Obama Arrives in Afghanistan on bin Laden Death Anniversary

VOA News: USA
USA Voice of America
Obama Arrives in Afghanistan on bin Laden Death Anniversary
May 1st 2012, 21:21

U.S. President Barack Obama has arrived in Afghanistan on a secret trip to mark the first anniversary of the killing of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden.

Mr. Obama is expected to sign a strategic partnership agreement setting conditions for a U.S. presence there after a 2014 deadline for the withdrawal of most NATO combat forces.

The president arrived at Bagram Air Base late Tuesday and immediately flew by helicopter to the Afghan capital, Kabul. He is meeting with Afghan President Hamid Karzai at his palace and will later give remarks to U.S. troops at Bagram.

From Bagram, he also plans to deliver a live, televised address to the American people about the Afghanistan war at 7:30 p.m. EDT (2330 GMT).

The president's speech will focus on the strategic partnership agreement and is likely to emphasize his plans to wind down the costly and unpopular Afghanistan war where nearly 3,000 U.S. and NATO soldiers have died since the country was invaded in 2001.

The address will come exactly one year after U.S. special forces, on his order, began the raid that led to the killing of bin Laden at his Pakistani safehouse.

Since then, ties between the United States and Afghanistan have frayed due to the burning of Muslim holy books at a U.S. base and the massacre of 17 civilians, including children, allegedly by an American soldier.

Mr. Obama is scheduled to be on the ground in Afghanistan for about seven hours.

Some information for this report was provided by AP, AFP and Reuters.

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VOA News: Arts and Entertainment: Lionel Richie Takes a New Musical Direction With 'Tuskegee'

VOA News: Arts and Entertainment
Arts and Entertainment Voice of America
Lionel Richie Takes a New Musical Direction With 'Tuskegee'
May 1st 2012, 21:27

Legendary singer Lionel Richie has spent the past five decades making timeless pop songs.  He takes a new musical direction with his latest album, "Tuskegee."

Richie pays tribute to his Southern roots on his new duets album.  The album features 13 of his famous pop hits, this time performed with some of today's biggest Country stars.  They include Little Big Town, Rascal Flatts, Tim McGraw, Kenny Chesney and Sugarland's Jennifer Nettles, as well as Country legends Kenny Rogers and Willie Nelson.  Each was given the choice of what song they would cover and Lionel encouraged them to sing them as if they were their own.

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The album is named after Richie's hometown.  He describes what it was like growing up in Tuskegee, Alabama.

"It was probably just about as normal as life could be, except I was born and raised on a university campus," he said.  "More academics than there was hunting and fishing, but the good news was that it was 15 seconds from Country.  And when I say that, in that community, Country music was pop music on the radio and R&B music was just the standard form.  That music kept squeaking in the side door.  Between gospel music, Country music and R&B music, I was deeply influenced right there on that wonderful campus of Tuskegee."

"Tuskegee" debuted at Number One on the Country Albums chart and at Number 2 on the Billboard 200.  First-week sales reached nearly 199,000 copies, making it Richie's highest-charting album since 1986.

Promotion for "Tuskegee" included a stop at this year's South By Southwest festival in Austin, Texas.  Several thousand people attended the show, and to Richie's surprise, the new younger generation of music fans knew all the words to his songs.  That might not have been the case, had Richie listened to some of the ideas he was given for his latest project.

"I had lots of suggestions from people in the record business, my friends, 'Lionel you should do a Gershwin album, a tribute to Gershwin.' 'Lionel, you should do a tribute to Cole Porter.' 'Lionel, you should do Nat King Cole's catalog,'" he said.  "And, I kept thinking, 'Why don't I do Lionel Richie's catalog?'  I only know how to be me.  Do I rap?  No, terrible.  Am I a Gospel singer?  Terrible.  I'm a Southern boy.  And, I went back and thought about it and I said, 'What's the place I haven't been?  Country.  Where have all the songs gone?  Country.'  So, I'll put it out there to see if I get any response.  The answer was everybody called."

The first single from "Tuskegee" teams Richie with international superstar Shania Twain to sing a Country version of his 1981 Number One hit, "Endless Love."

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VOA News: Asia: Chinese Company Bets Big On Laos Casino Project

VOA News: Asia
Asia Voice of America
Chinese Company Bets Big On Laos Casino Project
May 1st 2012, 19:55

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Near the famed golden triangle where Laos, Thailand and Burma meet, a Chinese company plans to turn huge tracts of jungle and farmland once associated with the opium trade into a tourism magnet.  The company, Kings Romans, says it is building a new economy, anchored in part by a glittering new casino.

The Chinese-run Kings Romans' casino is one of the most noticeable and flashy features on the Lao side of the Mekong River's Golden Triangle.

Kings Romans signed a 99-year lease with the Lao government to develop and run a special economic zone in a stretch of rural land spanning more than 100 square kilometers.

The plans are ambitious. "Here will be the airport. Here will be the industrial zone. Here will be a bridge to connect with Thailand and Burma. The whole project will be finished within the next 20 years," explains a staff member while pointing at a map.

For now, the future airport runway is still just a road.

But construction is brisk and workers are chopping down forests and flattening hills.

Hundreds of people displaced by the building have already been relocated, and given new houses in the recently opened Golden Triangle Village.

During a recent gathering for a funeral, new residents played cards, gambled and talked about life in the company-built village.

Ouy Kham says there are not enough trees, making it too hot to grow food. Her children now farm in Thailand to make money. "In the old village we had income but coming to this village we only spend money.  We don't know what to sell to earn a living.  Living here we cannot grow anything.  We try to grow vegetables but they are not healthy," she said.

As Kings Romans' remakes the Golden Triangle's skyline, there are new jobs for workers with the right skills.  

Burmese laborer Khun Kyar Kan has been working in the special economic zone for three years.  Even though the pay is better than back home, he says there are drawbacks. "In Burma I worked in farming. It was my own job and I could set my own working schedule… Here I am always worried about losing my job because I cannot find another job. There is only one company here," he said.

For now, trade ships and fishermen are the picture of life here on the Mekong River.

But Kings Romans is betting hundreds of millions of dollars that Asia's growing wealthy will soon join them as a fixture of the scenic and notorious Golden Triangle.

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VOA News: Africa: UNICEF: Thousands of Somali Children at Risk

VOA News: Africa
Africa Voice of America
UNICEF: Thousands of Somali Children at Risk
May 1st 2012, 19:56

The United Nations Children's Fund warned that thousands of acutely malnourished children in Somalia are at risk of death because little money is available to help them. UNICEF said it has received only 12 percent of its $289 million emergency appeal for humanitarian operations this year.

The famine declared in southern Somalia last year is over. But, that does not mean that the crisis is finished. Somalia remains the world's most complex humanitarian situation.  

The U.N. Children's Fund reported that almost one-third of Somalis are unable to meet their essential food and non-food needs. About 70 percent of these people live in south and central Somalia, areas that have been wracked by conflict for years and recurrent drought.

UNICEF spokeswoman Marixie Mercado said some 325,000 acutely malnourished children are in great need of assistance. She said her agency scaled up nutrition programs significantly between July and December at the peak of last year's crisis. But, those programs now are at risk.

"This work continues and it is a huge operation that is saving children's lives every day… Those who are most severely acutely malnourished are at imminent risk of death.This is a fact," said Mercado.

"And those even moderately malnourished are also at significantly at higher risk of death. If we do not get funding, all of our programs will have to get cut back. That is just a fact," Mercado said.  

The chronic state of war in Somalia intensified late last year, when Ethiopia and Kenya sent in troops to fight militant group al-Shabab. The Islamist group has banned most foreign aid organizations from operating in the territory it controls, hampering efforts to assist many Somalis in need of food.

Mercado said insecurity and lack of access to affected areas remains a huge problem for aid agencies that are trying assist people in need.

"One big area where it has influenced our programs significantly is, for example, immunization where we have 1.9 million children who have not been reached by immunization in the south and central zones because of access restrictions." Mercado added.

"There are cases of measles now. The rains have just started and that generally brings with it a wave of disease," she added. "So, it is critical to reach those people in south-central Somalia with immunizations. 

UNICEF noted Somalia's famine in 2011 was not a one-season crisis. It said the recovery from last year's drought and famine remains extremely fragile. It warned additional shocks, such as poor rains, less access, more displacement and disease outbreaks could easily tip communities back into disaster.

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