POLITICS-US: Vote-Flipping Reported on E-Voting Machines

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Tuesday, November 04, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

By Matthew Cardinale

CHARLESTON, West Virginia, Nov 3 (IPS) – Several U.S. citizens reported watching their votes flip on electronic voting machines in different states during the early voting period, highlighting the continued vulnerability of “e-voting” systems, which about 50 million U.S. citizens will use on Tuesday, despite problems since as early as 2004.

Most of the voters with complaints so far have said they saw their votes flipped from the Democratic presidential candidate, Sen. Barack Obama, to Republican Sen. John McCain, although at least three voters in Tennessee reported the reverse.

Vote-flipping has been reported so far in at least four states — Colorado, Tennessee, Texas and West Virginia — out of the 31 states where early voting has taken place.

However, the reports of vote-flipping are just of the tip of the iceberg, according to Emily Levy of Velvet Revolution, a voter rights group.
[Read more...]

THAILAND: Anti-Coup Movement Strikes Back

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Tuesday, November 04, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

By Marwaan Macan-Markar

Supporters at an anti-coup rally cheer as Thaksin ‘speaks’ from exile.

Credit:Marwaan Macan-Markar/IPS

BANGKOK, Nov 4 (IPS) – For the past five months Ataporn Kampa has endured insults hurled at him by an anti-government protest movement, that is supported by affluent, urban-based Thais who openly profess right-wing, conservative views and want the military to take over the country.

To this protest movement, the likes of Ataporn, who come from the impoverished agricultural belt of north-east Thailand, are a bane to the country’s politics. They have been sneered at as uneducated, stupid and lacking in intelligence required of voters in a democracy.

Such brazen contempt for the country’s rural poor by this right-wing movement, which calls itself the People’s Alliance for Democracy (PAD), has also prompted calls for the rolling back of the voters’ power in the country. The PAD wants the military to turf out the ruling six-party coalition that was elected at last December’s poll.
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POLITICS-US: Can Naturalised Citizens Tip the Balance?

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Tuesday, November 04, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

By Nuzhat Naoreen

The Korean-American civic group YKASEC says it has registered more than 26,000 people to vote since 2004.

NEW YORK, Nov 3 (IPS) – Juan Carlos Jimenez had already lived legally in the United States for nearly 40 years when he became a citizen in October, at 44. He joined hundreds of other immigrants at a New York courthouse to take his oath.

“It’s the only reason I became a citizen — to vote in this election,” said Jimenez, who was born in Colombia.

The Iraq war and the foundering economy made him want to vote for the first time.

“There’s just too much at stake now,” he said.

Issues like the war, the economy, and failed immigration reform are expected to drive many first-time immigrant voters like Jimenez to the polls this year, in greater numbers than before.
[Read more...]

POLITICS-US: Massive Turnout Expected to Tip Vote for Obama

Global Geopolitics Net Sites – Global Intel Net / IPS
Tuesday, November 04, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

By Jim Lobe

John McCain (left) and Barack Obama (right) have together spent more than a billion dollars on their campaigns – about 8 dollars per vote.

WASHINGTON, Nov 3 (IPS) – On the eve of Tuesday’s elections, Sen. Barack Obama and his fellow Democratic candidates appear to be on the verge of a historic victory, according to political experts attached to both major parties and the latest polling.

The latest national polling shows Obama leads by between six and 12 percentage points, with an NBC/Wall Street Journal survey conducted Sunday giving him a 51-43 percent advantage.

While the race for the White House has tightened slightly in the last several days, Republican Sen. John McCain will have to win virtually all of the remaining half-dozen “swing states” — those which are still considered too close to call — plus carry several more states that are currently considered leaning strongly toward Obama in order to snatch victory from the jaws of defeat in the all-important Electoral College.
[Read more...]

VIETNAM: Prosperity Tough on Trash Collectors

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Monday, November 03, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Helen Clark

HANOI, Nov 3 (IPS) – As the expendable income of households in Hanoi increases, so does the amount of refuse generated. This is taking a toll on the city’s predominantly female force of garbage collectors, as well as the environment.

A green truck idles on a street beside one of Hanoi’s largest beer halls, Hoa Vien, popular with the capital’s movers and shakers. In the twilight, women in khaki overalls and blue helmets push heavy trolleys, piled high with refuse, into a line behind it.

”I don’t get days off,” Tram, 33, tells IPS. ”Any celebration, I work more because there’s more garbage to collect. It’s always busy; I don’t even get Tet off.” Tet is Lunar New Year and the most important holiday in the Vietnamese calendar.

Tram has been collecting the city’s garbage for 14 years, and says things have become harder in recent years. There is far more to pick up, whilst wages have remained the same — between 1.5 million VND — 1.9 million VND (90 – 115 US dollars) each month.
[Read more...]

POLITICS-MOZAMBIQUE: Ready To Roll

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Monday, November 03, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

John Keitta

CHIMOIO, Mozambique, Nov 3 (IPS) – The posters and flyers are ready, and so is Marta Simango. Ready for Nov. 4, when the municipal elections campaign officially kicks off in Mozambique.

Simango is running for a second term at the Municipal Assembly in the eastern province of Manica, bordering Zimbabwe. Her party is the opposition coalition Mozambican National Resistance Movement-Electoral Union (Renamo-UE, in Portuguese).

Renamo holds 15 of the 39 seats at the Municipal Assembly, and four belong to women. The ruling Front for the Liberation of Mozambique party (Frelimo) holds 24 seats, with 10 women (originally 12, but two died in office).

Overall, women account for 36 percent of Manica’s Municipal Assembly, beating the National Assembly, where 30 percent are women — one of the highest proportions in sub-Saharan Africa, where the average of women in Parliament is 16 percent.
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CHINA: Dam Casts Long Shadow Over Idyllic Valley

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Monday, November 03, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Antoaneta Bezlova

LIJIANG, Nov 3 (IPS) – The town at Tiger Leaping Gorge is a ghost town. Clusters of new apartments in mock-Tibetan style with whitewashed walls and ornate flat roofs sit all empty, with gaping windows. The newly widened streets are free of traffic and the surrounding beauty of nature makes for an eerie contrast to the emptiness of the place.

Nestled in the folds of the snow-peaked mountains of Shangri-la and perched over the rushing waters of Jinsha River, the place is so picturesque that it is no surprise that it was picked as the perfect retirement spot for local government officials.

They too wanted to retreat from the world in the paradise on Earth that English writer James Hilton made famous in his 1933 fantasy novel ”Lost Horizon”.

”They (the officials) all bought properties here,” says Xiao Luo, a local tour guide from the Naxi minority. ”These buildings are all new and were all built for retired cadres. But no one dares yet to come and live here. If the dam gets built this whole area will be flooded.”
[Read more...]

AFGHANISTAN: ‘If Talks With Taliban Bring Peace, I’ll Support It’

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Monday, November 03, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Analysis by Anand Gopal

KABUL, Nov 3 (IPS) – Western officials are increasingly turning to new strategies in an effort to stabilise Afghanistan and defeat the insurgency here, according to U.S. and Afghan officials. The various initiatives — from negotiating with the Taliban to arming tribal militias — have differing degrees of support from Afghans.

Violence has reached record levels this year and Afghanistan is now considered a deadlier battlefield than Iraq. Insurgents are able to operate openly in areas close to the capital and the central government’s popularity is at the lowest point in its history. The situation is prompting a number of strategy reviews in Washington as the U.S. prepares for possible strategic shifts after the next president takes office.

Some officials are quietly considering a plan to arm tribal groups, in a move reminiscent to the American strategy in Iraq that is credited with decreasing violence there. ”We are seriously looking into using tribes and local communities to provide security,” says an American intelligence officer with the international forces.
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SRI LANKA: Media Groups to Challenge New Restrictions

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Monday, November 03, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Feizal Samath

COLOMBO, Nov 3 (IPS) – Media groups in Sri Lanka, already restricted from covering the war against Tamil rebels in the north, are bracing to challenge new regulations that seek to control television broadcasting and new media.

The new rules, announced on Oct. 27, control content not only for broadcast but also MMS (Multimedia Messaging Service), a form of news dissemination that is rapidly gaining in popularity. Newspapers on the weekend also reported government plans to bring in similar rules for radio broadcasting.

”Censorship, there is no doubt about it,” warned Sunanda Deshapriya, spokesman for Sri Lanka’s Free Media Movement (FMM), the most vibrant of several associations representing journalists, publishers and private broadcasters.

Deshapriya told IPS that media groups and civil society organisations plan to challenge the regulations in the Supreme Court before Nov. 10, the deadline for objections before the regulations take effect.

”These are draconian and repressive rules never before enforced in Sri Lanka,” another journalist, who declined to be named, said. ”For any excuse they (authorities) can cancel the licence, and if a news item is seen to be unfavourable to the government.”

The new regulations provide the media minister, as the regulator, with powers to cancel licenses if content is ‘’detrimental to the interests of a national security; incites a break-down of public order; incites ethnic, religious or cultural hatred; is morally offensive or indecent; is detrimental to the rights and privileges of children”, among other restrictions.

In a statement, the FMM said the ‘Private Television Broadcasting Station Regulations’, seek to control new technology and bar foreigners from operating stations. Members of political parties may not seek licenses and the validity of all licenses are limited to one year.

The FMM said the new rules could be used for reasons other than reasonable regulation. ”In our view, these new regulations are misconceived in the way they allow governmental intrusion into freedom of expression, and media independence,” a representative said.

Opposition Leader Ranil Wickremasinghe alleged at a press briefing on Friday that the government was trying to tighten conditions for the issuance of broadcasting licenses, as it cannot control live, political talk shows and reportage of spot news. ”All these attempts are aimed at establishing control of the (Mahinda) Rajapaksa family company. In fact, the country is today under the control of a family which severely restricts all democratic rights. This gazette extraordinary has been issued as part of that attempt.”

Political analysts say President Mahinda Rajapaksa and his powerful brothers — Chamal (minister for ports and aviation), Basil (senior advisor to the President and parliamentarian) and Gotabaya (defence secretary) together with a handful of close associates, including army commander Gen. Sarath Fonseka, form a cabal that runs the country.

The government has defended the new regulations. Media minister, Anura Priyadharshana Yapa, said they were needed to bring about uniformity in the fast-growing electronic media broadcasting field. ”The same rules must apply to all television stations and these regulations were introduced for this purpose,” he said.

Under the earlier regulations, TV and radio stations were provided ‘temporary’ licenses’ with no operating period specified. Over the past few years, efforts have been underway to standardise regulations for both private and government TV and radio broadcasting.

The new regulations also seek to severely restrict news dissemination through the Internet — particularly citizen blogs, popular on news websites.

The government already controls information on the civil war in which the Sri Lankan army is fighting separatist Tamil rebels in the north of the island. In recent weeks, only state television has been reporting from the front.

Government forces are within striking distance of the key northern town of Kilinochchi, the last bastion of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), but have got bogged down by stiff resistance and heavy monsoon rains.

Since Rajapaksa was elected President in November 2005, at least 15 journalists have been killed, some allegedly by vigilante groups. Several others have been picked up by state agencies. The Tigers have also been accused of harassment and attempts to control or intimidate journalists in the areas they control.

In the latest World Press Freedom Index published by Reporters Without Borders, Sri Lanka has fallen to the lowest press freedom rating of any democratic country worldwide.

Another opposition politician, Mangala Samaraweera, a former powerful politician in Rajapaksa’s political party before the latter became president, said Rajapaka was acting ”like Adolf Hitler in a dictatorial rage.’ At least one TV channel has been asked to submit its news content to the government as a precursor to the enforcement of the regulations, IPS learns.

FMM’s Deshapriya says that the government should have appointed an independent authority as the regulator instead of the minister.

An international media team, which carried out a fact-finding mission (Oct.25 û 29) to Sri Lanka, has said it deplored the new regulations and any effort to impose prior restraint or direct censorship on the media.

The team, comprising representatives of the International Federation of Journalists, International Media Support, International News Safety Institute, International Press Institute and Reporters Without Borders, said it found a deterioration in the press freedom situation since its last visit in June 2007.

”In recent months journalists and media institutions seeking to report independently on the ongoing conflict have been attacked and intimidated in a seeming effort to limit public knowledge about the conduct of the war and to reveal their sources. This is a violation of the public right to know and the accepted norm that media sources should be protected,” it said.

TIBET: ‘STATUS QUO PLUS’ AS AN OPTION?

Global Geopolitics Net Sites
Monday, November 03, 2008

Copyright © B. Raman – South Asia Analysis Group
www.southasiaanalysis.org

B.RAMAN

There is a note of increasing dejection in the post-Olympics statements and comments of His Holiness the Dalai Lama and his spokesmen regarding the future of Tibet. His hopes that in the wake of the protest demonstrations in Tibet in March,2008, the international community will step up pressure on Beijing to reach an accommodation with him have been belied. The restrained post-March 2008 reactions of the international community have shown that the economic links of the West with China have become so strong that the West is not prepared to risk this linkage by over-focussing on the Tibet issue to the annoyance of China. Apart from proforma expressions of reverence for His Holiness and of support for the improvement of human rights in Tibet, the West is disinclined to do anything more. It has come to the realisation that it won’t be desirable to exploit Tibet as a card against China.
[Read more...]

THE INDIAN JIHADI NET

INTERNATIONAL TERRORISM MONITOR—PAPER NO. 465

Global News Blog – Global Geopolitics Net
Monday, November 03, 2008

Copyright © B. Raman – South Asia Analysis Group
www.southasiaanalysis.org

B.RAMAN

The number of fatalities in the serial explosions in Assam on the forenoon of October 30,2008, has since gone up to 75, with the death of some of the injured in the hospitals. Another about 300 persons are undergoing treatment in the hospitals and some of them are stated to be in a serious condition.

2. According to the Police, there was a total of nine blasts timed to take place in four different cities or towns in the State between 11 and 11-30 AM.The most devastating in terms of casualties (35 killed), property damage and psychological effect on the people were the three in Guwahati, the Capital. In all these three cases, the improvised explosive device (IED) was kept in the boot of cars. The use of the boot of a car for keeping the explosives enabled the perpetrators to keep more explosive material than one could in a bicycle or in a tiffin box. In the Ahmedabad blasts of July,26,2008, the explosive device was kept in a car in the incident near a local hospital. Motor-vehicle- borne IEDs also cause more casualties due to the splinter effect and large fires, which have a traumatic effect on the local population. Many who rang me up after the Guwahati explosions remarked that the scene with cars burning reminded them of what they had been seeing on the TV about similar incidents in Baghdad. This kind of trauma one did not witness during the earlier serial explosions in three towns of Uttar Pradesh in November last year, in Jaipur in May,2008, in Bangalore and Ahmedabad in July, in New Delhi in September and in Agartala in October. The three cars had been kept parked with the IED near a vegetable and fruit market at Ganeshguri below a fly-over, in front of the office of the Kamrup Deputy Commissioner, and near a police station in the Fancy Bazaar. The Ganeshguri area is near the high security complex of the capital.
[Read more...]

Time to address trust deficit between Colombo and Tamils

Global Geopolitics Net Sites
Monday, November 03, 2008

© Copyright 2008 Malladi Rama Rao. All rights reserved.
Sunday, November 02, 2008

By Malladi Rama Rao

What a spat it was? It had turned upside down the logic of campaign journalists on either side of the Palk Strait. No surprise, therefore, all those in Colombo who have been painting a doomsday scenario of sorts between Chennai and Delhi have egg on their face and are groping for new theories to brazen out their jingoism that made the mistake of once again pitting the Sinhalese against the Tamils. Post-Basil mission to Delhi, the egg heads must realise that neither righteous indignation which is on display in abundance nor an orchestrated media campaign, for a few brownie points, which shows no let up, is a substitute for good governance, which is the only way to end the years of trust deficit between Colombo and Tamils.

Some commentators have termed India’s Sri Lanka policy as a farce. Some others have branded as tamasha DMK patriarch Muthavel Karunanidhi’s politics of ultimatum. Both schools of thought felt that Delhi and Chennai were trying to have the cake and eat it in their own way. Expecting Karunanidhi to reduce Manmohan Singh government to a minority just five-six months ahead of a general election, these critics had gone to the town declaring that Delhi was caught between the devil and the deep sea. They have obviously failed to understand, much less care to read, the fine print on coalition dharma. And also how adroitly the old Dravidian fox was outmanoeuvring his arch rivals – Jayalalithaa Jayaram of AIADMK and trusted follower turned political foe V Gopalaswamy alias Vaiko.

Karunanidhi had split Vaiko’s MDMK a couple of months ago. Now by regaining the Tamil centre space, he has marginalised the likes of Vaiko who are the ardent campaigners of LTTE. The icing on the cakes, as DMK faithful see it, is the arrest of Vaiko on charges of sedition and anti-national activities. The arrest should have come as a surprise to the India-baiters in Colombo.

Needless to say, these worthies have not understood the dynamics of democracy and the contours of an administration that swears by the Constitution in India. If they have any doubt they should listen to the recording of Pranab-Karunanidhi joint press conference in Chennai last Sunday.

Said Karunanidhi: “This issue (ethnic issue in SL) has been going on for 40-years; we cannot expect it to be resolved in four days”. Pranab Mukherjee, on his part, put the record straight saying India stands for countering terrorism with resolve. Put differently, it means India will do nothing to reduce the momentum of the SLA operations in Kilinochchi. .

Firstly, Pranab rejected the demand voiced by a section of TN politicians for withdrawal of non-lethal military support to the SLA like supply of radars and technical and personnel backup to keep operational these anti-aircraft radars. Secondly, he reasoned that the ‘help’ is in India’s interest. “Because, given the position of the Indian and Sri Lankan coastlines, the radar that was given would cover vital installations in Indian areas as well”, the Indian minister told a questioner, certainly as much to the delight as surprise of his SL friends.

There is substance, therefore, in the contention that the latest low in India-Sri Lanka relations is not because of any misunderstanding between Delhi and Chennai but because of forked tongues in Colombo. Consider these two facts – one about fishermen and the other about humanitarian aid.

The Basil mission to New Delhi has put in place some practical arrangements to deal with bona fide Indian and Sri Lankan fishermen crossing the International Maritime Boundary Line (IMBL). GOSL will designate sensitive areas along the Lankan coastline. These areas will be out of bounds for Indian fishing vessels. “Further, there will be no firing on Indian vessels. Indian fishing vessels will carry a valid registration or permit and the fishermen will have on person valid identity cards issued by the government of Tamil Nadu,”, a joint statement on fishing arrangements released on Oct 26 at the end of BR talks with the Indian foreign minister, said.

The fishermen issue has been a principal concern of Tamil Nadu Chief Minister and most law makers from the state cutting across party-lines. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh took up the issue personally two months back with President Rajapaksa on the sidelines of SAARC summit. These concerns have been met with more firings on the Indian fishermen. Undoubtedly, the latest agreement is the most practical way of dealing with what happens when illiterate fishermen cross the maritime boundary line. On its part the TN government is taking steps to equip fishing vessels with satellite based equipment to indicate their exact location on the high seas.

The Sri Lanka Navy has used the moral right to prevent pro-LTTE Indians from Tamil Nadu from assisting the Tigers with material that could be used in the war against Sri Lanka –batteries that can power improvised explosive devices, ball-bearings to add lethality, petrol, oil and lubricants and small arms and ammunition—to be indiscriminate and vindictive in its actions against the fisher folk. The proposed system of licenses would induce an element of inspection that would give the fishermen an opportunity to explain their presence and thus avoid being killed instantly on being sighted by the Sri Lanka Navy. So, there is room for optimism that there will be no ‘a flare up’ near Katchiativu. It will certainly lead to a cooling of political temperature in the State.

During Basil-Pranab talks, India had offered to send humanitarian aid – 800 tonnes of relief material- through the Red Cross as a gesture of goodwill. President Rajapaksa welcomed the Indian decision and also appreciated Tamilnadu’s offer to make an additional contribution to ‘this humanitarian endeavour’.

But his Essential Services Chief S. Divaratne doesn’t appear to share President’s enthusiasm. In fact, he shares the indignation expressed by a section of the Lankan leadership which sees in the Indian food aid a repeat of food air drop in 1987. “Sri Lanka is not an African state in need of food. We can even feed the poor people of India, if need be”, he told the media. His remarks are not contradicted till date. He also went on to add: The government has buffer food stocks in Kilinochchi and Mulaithivu with a surplus of rice in the Wanni. Even anti malaria drugs, medicines are constantly reaching the Wanni”.

Basic thrust of Basil-Pranab agreement and President Rajapaksa’s exclusives to select Indian dailies is that civilians would be spared in the course of Wanni war. But even before the ink on the Delhi agreement dried, three Tamillians – one of them a 50-year –old mother of three, living in the conflict zone were wounded in SLAF strafing of two civilian settlements in Kilinochchi and Paranthan. The victims belong to the ever increasing tribe of internally displaced persons from Mannar and Kilinochchi. A school with some 750 students was just 750 meters from the bombed site. This incident could be one of those hazards in a military operation but doesn’t help improve confidence levels.

At this point in SL history, who pushed whom to war is not material. What is germane is, as some SL commentators have also noted, President Mahinda Rajapaksa, while professing full commitment to political package, has allowed the Sinhala extremists to set an agenda that allows only for a military solution. Defeating the Tigers militarily may not be big deal. The war may at the best drag on for a few days or months; the army and air force have to work to a plan jointly and without indulging in their own games. But how is the government to control the large Tamil-speaking areas in the north that have been under LTTE domination for a decade or more. There is no plan in evidence.

Yes, the President promises that he himself will take charge of the political process and see it through politically. But he makes it clear that the current military operations are required to ‘free our own Tamil brothers and sisters from the cruel grip of terror and implement a just and enduring political solution based on the four ‘Ds’ — Demilitarisation, Democratisation, Development, and Devolution’. He also asserts that his first priority is Demilitarisation. “Without demilitarisation first, you won’t be able to achieve anything. No democratisation, no development, no devolution. It is useless to give them devolution when they are not ready to accept it or you can’t implement it”, the President told N Ram of The Hindu.

This assertion puts a fresh question mark on the future course of events promised by President’s emissary, Basil Rajapaksa to his interlocutors in Delhi. More over, the LTTE appears to demonstrate its ability to strike even when it has been hurt very badly. As the Stratfor experts say in their forecast, the Tigers will make a stronger attempt to carry out attacks inside Colombo ‘in an attempt to prove to their constituency that they are still viable’. From a military point, that is bad news. Also from a political point. Because it will give fresh lease to the Sinhala chauvinism and deepen the Faultlines further.

Ethnic SL Tamil diaspora has enormous financial and political clout; it is numerous in crucial Western countries. And they can provide the muscle to the LTTE for decades irrespective of the outcome of today’s military campaign. If the diaspora is to be checkmated and LTTE is to be given a knockout blow, MR, as President Mahinda Rajapaksa is addressed by his close circle, should look into the causes of anger of the Tamils with the Sinhala state with a sense of urgency and commitment. Rhetoric offers no solution. Certainly not banking on State created quislings like TMVP who have neither the reach nor vision.