Archive for September, 2009

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The claim is, of course, almost impossible to verify, but there is one consideration that should allay at least some of the fears about North Korea’s nuclear ambitions.
It is not yet thought to have developed the technology necessary to mount a nuclear weapon on a war-head, much less a reliable long-range rocket system with which to deliver it.
And a uranium-based weapon is even harder to miniaturise than a plutonium-based one.
Whatever the truth of North Korea’s claim to be entering the “completion phase” of its experiments with uranium enrichment, the statement does seem to be at odds with its recent behaviour.
During the past few weeks it has been making gestures that many observers see as an attempt to lower tensions.

Ethnicity makes many a target. I visited Madhav Acharya, an old, deaf man. A militant group has confiscated the land where he grows his paddy.
“More than 70% of the Pahadis here in Janakpur have left. They’ve been displaced,” he said.
“Most of the armed forces are from the hilly area,” he says. “They don’t know about the cultural, social sensitivity of the Terai. Most politicians perceive the problems in the Terai as a security problem rather than looking at the political, social, economic, cultural demands. So the situation is getting worse and worse.”
In several other regions, too, as ethnic sentiment grows, self-defence groups are emerging in the name of different communities.
In fact, Nepal consists of dozens of minorities, geographically intermingled but now demanding a voice.

Nepal’s new centre-left Prime Minister, Madhav Kumar Nepal, says he plans to reverse the previous government’s decision to sack the country’s army chief. He was giving his first interview since taking up his post to Rabindra Mishra, editor of the BBC’s Nepali service. The following are excerpts from the interview.
Q: The previous government collapsed over the move to dismiss the army chief. The dispute has not died down yet. How are you going to address the issue? Will your government revoke the dismissal move?
A: Our party had dubbed the previous government’s decision wrong. So, there is no question of endorsing it. Obviously, it is clear that the army chief Rookmangud Katawal will continue in office.
Q: Will the move to dismiss him be revoked or not?
A: I have already said that he will remain in office.

Despite the biggest-ever publicity campaign for an album, estimated at $30m, HIStory enjoyed a brief appearance in the charts.
Whether this was due to the star’s increasingly erratic behaviour, continuing speculation about his private life or just the public turning increasingly to rap and hip-hop, is a matter for debate.
But one track, in particular – They Don’t Care About Us, with the lyrics, “Jew me, sue me” – outraged many people including Jackson’s long-time friend and supporter Steven Spielberg, who saw it as anti-Semitic.
And his appearance at the 1996 Brit Awards ceremony in London, surrounded by children and a rabbi, proved too much for some, most notably Pulp’s Jarvis Cocker, who showed his displeasure by storming the stage and interrupting the performance.

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Russia’s navy has been deployed to find a ship reportedly hijacked three weeks ago in the Baltic Sea.
Up to five vessels – reported to include nuclear submarines – will be involved in the search for the Maltese-flagged Arctic Sea, the navy confirmed.
It has a 15-strong Russian crew and was reportedly taking timber worth $1.5m (£900,000) from Finland to Algeria when it was boarded by gunmen on 24 July.
The Arctic Sea was last sighted off the north coast of France on 30 July.
British authorities say the 4,000-tonne vessel may have been spotted subsequently by a Portuguese coastal patrol aircraft, but its current location remains unknown.
Maltese authorities have said it is unlikely to be in the Mediterranean

From the outset, all the experts appeared to agree that the ship could not have sunk, as floating wood or oil would have been seen. But they also said this was no typical hijacking.
The Arctic Sea, carrying 15 Russian crew, left Finland on 23 July bound for the Algerian port of Bejaia
A day later, in the Baltic Sea, the ship was reportedly boarded by masked men who claimed to be Swedish anti-drugs police. They tied up the crew and searched the vessel, apparently leaving about 12 hours later.
These events were reported to the Swedish police in a round-about way.
A police spokeswoman told the BBC that the ship’s crew first alerted their shipping company to what had happened. The firm then informed Russian embassy officials in Finland, who contacted their counterparts in Sweden, who informed the Swedish authorities.
The police spokeswoman would not comment on any alleged drug link to the ship, saying only that no line of inquiry could be ruled out.
The facts about what happened remain unknown for now.

Eight men accused of hijacking the Arctic Sea cargo ship have been charged with hijacking and piracy, Russian prosecutors have said.
The men are suspected of seizing the ship and its 15-man Russian crew after raiding it disguised as police.
The ship vanished last month days after leaving Finland with a cargo of timber. The alleged hijackers, mainly from Estonia, were taken to Russia after the ship was found nearly three weeks later off the west coast of Africa.
It was spotted up 300 miles (480km) off Cape Verde in the Atlantic Ocean on 16 August.
Observers have questioned why the alleged hijackers would risk seizing the Arctic Sea in one of Europe’s busiest shipping lanes for a relatively inexpensive cargo.
There has been speculation that the ship, which was scheduled to travel to the Algerian port of Bejaia, may have been carrying an illicit cargo, possibly arms.

King Fahd’s rule saw Saudi Arabia ally itself closely with both the United Kingdom and the United States. Domestically, he had to contend both with the impact of falling oil revenues and an increasingly fragmented society.
King Fahd, who ascended the Saudi throne in 1982, was one of seven sons of the founder of Saudi Arabia, King Abdel-Aziz, and his favourite wife, Hassa.
He was the fourth of his siblings to be king. Two of his brothers lost power violently – one was deposed in a coup; the other was assassinated.