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Russia: Olympic Sponsors Muted On Sochi Abuses, Says HRW

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Leading corporate sponsors of the Olympics have yet to speak out strongly against the rights abuses linked to the preparations for the Sochi Winter Games, to be hosted by Russiain February 2014, according to Human Rights Watch.

“Corporate sponsors have a huge stake in making the Sochi Games the celebration of fair play and human dignity that all Olympics should be,” said Minky Worden, director of global initiatives at Human Rights Watch. “Sponsors should speak up about labor abuse, discrimination, and attacks on press freedom.”

All sponsors of the Sochi Games should take a more forceful public stance against the rights violations that have marred the preparation of the Olympics and support the call from civil society for institutional reform of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to prevent similar situations in future host countries, Human Rights Watch said.

The main corporate sponsors of the Sochi Games – participants in the Olympic Partner Programme known as TOP Sponsors– are 10 major international companies: Atos, Coca-Cola, Dow Chemical, General Electric, McDonald’s, Omega, Panasonic, Procter & Gamble, Samsung, and Visa. The Games will be broadcast in the United States by NBC.

Human Rights Watch wrote three detailed letters to each of these companies earlier in 2013 to call their attention to serious human rights abuses underway in Sochi.

The article Russia: Olympic Sponsors Muted On Sochi Abuses, Says HRW appeared first on Eurasia Review.


Kyrgyzstan: Islamic NGOs Strive To Find Civil Society Niche

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By Chris Rickleton

On a warm autumn day in early November, pedestrians in downtown Bishkek met an unusual sight: a 500-strong crowd of hijab-sporting female Muslim activists riding bicycles, heading to a state hospital to donate blood. “Passersby were in shock,” laughed Jamal Frontbek kyzy, whose organization Mutakallim helped organize the event. “We wanted to dispel stereotypes. We wanted to do something good for people.”

Mutakallim leads discussions on the role of women in Islam, organizes confidence-building exercises for female Muslims, and advocates for girls’ right to wear hijab in schools. Non-governmental organizations (NGOs) with such Islamic-themed missions sit at the crossroads of an often fraught discourse on the role of Islam in a country where many civil society groups fiercely defend secularism, a Soviet legacy in a country with a lengthy Islamic cultural tradition. Groups like Mutakallim and their more secular counterparts participate together in roundtables and conferences, but often find themselves on opposite sides of heated public debates, most recently about sex-ed.

According to the State Committee on Religious Affairs, the number of registered Islamic organizations and religious educational institutions has doubled in the last 13 years, reaching more than 2,000. Few have failed to notice the swelling number of people praying in public spaces at religious festivals such as Kurban Ait, and many believe the number of Kyrgyz who regularly practice Islam is sharply rising.

Opinions on the November 5 “bicycle march” soon filled the comments sections of popular Kyrgyz online media outlets: local Internet users heaped both praise and scorn on the event. Analysts such as Medet Tiulegenov, chair of the International and Comparative Politics Department at the American University of Central Asia, believe that organizations such as Frontbek kyzy’s are trying to position themselves as “a bridge” in society. What’s unclear is where that bridge leads.

“Are they trying to send a message to society as a whole, or to the government? Perhaps they are trying to tell the government: ‘look, this process [of growing religious observance] is happening anyway, so you should work with progressive organizations like us before less progressive ones take our place,’” Tiulegenov told EurasiaNet.org. [Editor’s note: Tiulegenov previously served as executive director of the Soros Foundation-Kyrgyzstan, an entity that is part of the Soros Foundations Network. EurasiaNet.org operates under the auspices of the Open Society Foundations in New York, a separate part of the Soros network].

Muktallim’s leader has come under fire in some corners for her vociferous defense of the right of schoolchildren to wear hijab in schools, a freedom some prominent rights defenders have also supported as schools across the country implement de facto bans.

As a whole, Kyrgyzstan’s civil society remains dependent on outside assistance. Frontbek kyzy claims that her small operation is funded by private contributions from domestic businessmen and says she would welcome donations from Muslim governments abroad. While many groups working to bolster the rule of law face accusations from conservative and nationalist politicians of being agents of Western influence, Frontbek kyzy complains that people call her a “proponent of Arab culture.”

“Some people have nostalgia for the Soviet Union,” she explained. “They complain that girls used to wear headbands and now they wear hijabs, so they start handing out recommendations.”

Saltanat Musuralieva of the NGO Hadisy – named for the canonical sayings of the Prophet Muhammad – said there is a need for organizations that can reach Kyrgyzstan’s sometimes-isolated religious communities. A few years ago Hadisy partnered with the Global Fund to Fight Aids, Tuberculosis and Malaria to raise awareness about HIV/AIDS. But Musuralieva, herself a practicing Muslim and a doctor by training, says that such opportunities are fleeting.

“We called our organization Hadisy … because practicing Muslims are our target group. Of course, many donors and local NGOs see an Arabic name and get slightly frightened,” she said.

Dinara Oshurahunova, director of the Coalition for Democracy and Civil Society, said religious and secular groups are incorrectly perceived as being in perpetual opposition to each other. Human rights activists without religious affiliations were among the first to defend believers’ freedom to worship after a clash between authorities and practicing Muslims in the southern town of Nookat in 2008, she recalled. If divisions exist between Islamic and secular civil society groups, Oshurahunova maintained, they are “the work of ambitious politicians, who use religion and religious groups for their own goals.”

Frontbek kyzy of Mutakallim credits organizations like Oshurahunova’s Coalition for joining efforts to defend hijab in public schools, but is less conciliatory toward the authors of a pamphlet on sexual education that has caused a stormy public debate. The pamphlets, published by the Alliance for Reproductive Health with support from the UN and the German government, answer teenagers’ questions about sex, puberty and adolescence. By Western standards, the pamphlets, which contain no nudity or graphic drawings, are benign.

But Frontbek kyzy’s views underscore ongoing challenges in efforts to bridge the religious and secular communities. “They stupidly transferred them [the pamphlets] from some [liberal place] like Holland and transplanted them onto one like Kyrgyzstan without attention to local culture and mentality,” she told EurasiaNet.org. “Whoever did that should be put in jail.”

Chris Rickleton is a Bishkek-based journalist.

The article Kyrgyzstan: Islamic NGOs Strive To Find Civil Society Niche appeared first on Eurasia Review.

US Supreme Court Blocks Challenge To NSA Phone Tracking

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The Supreme Court announced Monday morning that it would not be considering at this time a complaint filed months earlier that challenged the legality of the National Security Agency’s dragnet telephone surveillance program.

The high court issued a notice early Monday without comment acknowledging that it would not be weighing in on a matter introduced this past June by a privacy watchdog group after NSA leaker Edward Snowden revealed evidence showing that the United States intelligence agency was collecting metadata pertaining to the phone calls of millions of American customers of the telecommunications company Verizon on a regular basis.

That disclosure — the first of many NSA documents leaked by Mr. Snowden — prompted the Washington, DC-based Electronic Privacy Information Center, or EPIC, to ask the Supreme Court to consider taking action that would end the collection of phone records on a major scale.

When EPIC filed their petition in June, they wrote, “We believe that the NSA’s collection of domestic communications contravenes the First and Fourth Amendments to the United States Constitution, and violates several federal privacy laws, including the Privacy Act of 1974 and the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 as amended.”

“We ask the NSA to immediately suspend collection of solely domestic communications pending the competition of a public rulemaking as required by law. We intend to renew our request each week until we receive your response,” EPIC said.

Five months later, though, the Supreme Court said this week that it would not be hearing EPIC’s plea. A document began circulating early Monday in which the high court listed the petition filed by the privacy advocates as denied.

With other cases still pending, however, alternative routes may eventually lead to reform of the NSA’s habits on some level. Lower courts are still in the midst of deciding what action they will take with regards to similar lawsuits filed by other groups in response to the Snowden leaks and the revelations they made possible. The American Civil Liberties Union, the Electronic Frontier Foundation and conservative legal activist Larry Klayman have filed separate civil lawsuits in various US District Courts challenging the NSA’s program, all of which are still pending.

Cindy Cohn, the legal director of the EFF, told the Washington Post only weeks after the first Snowden leak appeared that the disclosures had been a “tremendous boon” to other matters being litigated, and pointed to no fewer than five previously-filed complaints challenging various government-led surveillance programs.

“Now that this secret surveillance program has been disclosed, and now that Congressional leaders and legal scholars agree it is unlawful, we have a chance for the Supreme Court to weigh in,” EPIC lead counsel Alan Butler told The Verge on Monday.

The article US Supreme Court Blocks Challenge To NSA Phone Tracking appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Abbas: ‘Negotiations Will Continue, Only Way To Peace’

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Peace negotiations with Israel will continue for the full nine months agreed with Washington “regardless of what happens on the ground”, said Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas today, a few hours from a meeting in Ramallah with his French counterpart, Francois Hollande.

The peace talks resumed last July in an aim to reach an accord within nine months, but Israel in the past weeks announced the construction of thousands of new houses in the West Bank, “putting at risk the peace process”, explained the Palestinian leader.

The Palestinian delegation, headed by Saeb Erakat, last week resigned in sign of protest. “The Palestinian people know that the way to peace is through negotiation. But they also know we are insisting on Palestinian constants”, added Abbas in reference to an agreement based on the borderlines which existed before the 1967 Six-Day War, east Jerusalem as the capital of the future state, and resolution of the issue of the Palestinian refugees who fled or were forced out of their homes when Israel was established in 1948. A few hours earlier, Abu Mazen had called for an international inquiry into the death of Yasser Arafat similar to that conducted “on Rafiq Hariri”, the Lebanese prime minister killed in a 2005 attack in Beirut.

Tension in fact rose among top Palestinian authorities since the publication of a report, commissioned by the widow of the Palestinian leader, by a medical team from Lusan, which indicated traces of polonium found in Arafat’s body, deeming the possibility of his being poisoned “reasonable”.

The Palestinians immediately blamed Tel Aviv authorities, who denied firmly. “Let me say in the simplest terms possible, Israel did not kill Arafat”, said the Israeli Foreign ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor.

The article Abbas: ‘Negotiations Will Continue, Only Way To Peace’ appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Vietnam Communist Party Chief To Make State Visit To India – Analysis

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By Dr. Subhash Kapila

Vietnam’s most powerful leader H.E. Mr. Nguyen Phu Trong, General Secretary of Communist Party of Socialist Republic of Vietnam will be on a State Visit to India from November 19-22, 2013 at the invitation of the Indian Prime Minister Dr Man Mohan Singh.

Mr. Nguyen Phu Trang heads the two most powerful State organs in Vietnam-as Secretary General he heads the Party Secretariat and more significantly he heads Vietnam’s Central Military Commission.

In the above context and also in the context of the robust Vietnam-India strategic relationship, the visit of the Communist Party Chief becomes that more significant.

It also needs to be recalled that Vietnam forms the central pillar of India’s Look East Policy which could prove as the defining policy formulation of the coming decades.

The Communist Party Chief is no stranger to India as he had visited India in 2010 while he was the Chairman National Assembly of Vietnam.

Mr Nguyen Phu Trang is heading a powerful Vietnamese delegation on his India visit including the Deputy Prime Minister and Vice Ministers of Defence, Foreign Affairs, Public Security besides other Party dignitaries. The composition indicates the breadth of integrated and comprehensive relationship between India and Vietnam.

During his India visit, the Vietnamese Communist Party Chief is scheduled to have meetings with the President, Vice President and the Speaker of the Lower House. Delegation level meetings are scheduled with the Indian Prime Minister and the External Affairs Minister.

The Communist Party Chief’s India visit also includes a visit to Mumbai for significant business meetings with all the apex Indian business organisations.

Vietnam is pushing for increase in bilateral trade and Indian investments in Vietnam.

Comments:

Vietnam and India enjoy a robust Strategic Partnership which in the context of China’s menacing postures extending from India’s Himalayan borders with China Occupied Tibet to South China Sea should logically generate imperatives for elevating the Vietnam-India Strategic Partnership signed in 2007 to enhanced levels.

Vietnam would be expecting more assertive Indian policy formulations on the South China Sea disputes which would in the coming decades impact security and stability in Indo Pacific Asia which includes India. India is engaged in maritime and naval cooperation with Vietnam but could do more in capacity building of Vietnam Air Force and Vietnam Navy.

India need not shy away from enhancing security cooperation with Vietnam under the umbrella of increased security and defence cooperation stated in the ASEAN-INDIA Vision Statement of 2012.

Discussions and decisions on the above aspects may not be released in the public domain but are likely to be on the agenda of the Vietnamese Communist Part Chief’s State Visit to India.

More importantly, the Vietnamese Communist Party Chief will bring to these discussions his perceptions of his China visit last month and also the Russian President’s visit to Vietnam this month.

The article Vietnam Communist Party Chief To Make State Visit To India – Analysis appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Concern About Iran’s Arak Heavy Water Research Reactor: An Excuse Or A Reality? – OpEd

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By Hassan Beheshtipour

Introduction

In this article, the author aims to answer the simple, but very important question that whether Iran’s nuclear plant in Arak should be a cause of concern for the Western states. The Arak plant is located close to the city of Arak, some 290 km southwest of the capital city, Tehran. It is among 17 nuclear sites that Iran is currently operating under the supervision of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). The plant consists of two main parts:

A) Arak Heavy Water Research Reactor

As the useful lifespan of Tehran Research Reactor (TRR) almost reached its end and the equipment and systems working there gradually became obsolete, like all other similar reactors in the world, Iran decided to find a replacement for that research reactor. In addition, domestic demand in Iran for various radio drugs that are used for a variety of diagnostic and therapeutic purposes as well as demand for radioisotopes that are used in various fields of industry and research kept rising. The rise in demand came despite various limitations that Iran has been facing even for the provision and procurement of such radio isotopes from foreign sources. As a result, the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran made up its mind to build a new research reactor in order to replace the Tehran Research Reactor. To achieve that goal, a general plan was made for the construction of Arak research reactor, which is of heavy water type and capable of generating 40 megawatts of power. The reactor is known as IR40.

The basic part of the project was finished in 2002 and construction operations got underway in 2004. Paragraph 35 of the last report presented to the IAEA’s Board of Governors by Director General of the United Nations nuclear watchdog, Yukiya Amano, says, “In a letter dated 25 August 2013, Iran informed the Agency that ‘based on the practical progress of construction work’ the previously indicated ‘start-up’ date for the IR-40 Reactor was ‘not achievable, so it cannot be the first quarter of 2014.’” Construction of the power plant will most probably end in the fall of 2014 and its final commissioning has been scheduled for early 2015. In his latest report dated August 28, 2013, Amano has noted that Iran has built 10 nuclear fuel assemblies all of which have been stockpiled at the manufacturing facility. In Paragraph 47 of the same report, Amano has informed the IAEA Board of Governors that: “On 17 and 18 August 2013, the Agency carried out an inspection and a DIV at FMP and confirmed the ongoing manufacture of pellets for the IR-40 Reactor using natural UO2. As indicated above (Paragraph 34), since the Director General’s previous report Iran has started to manufacture fuel assemblies containing nuclear material for the IR-40 Reactor.”

B) Arak heavy water production plant

Arak heavy water production plant was inaugurated by the former Iranian president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, on August 26, 2006. According to Gholamreza Aqazadeh, the then head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran, the plant had an original production capacity of eight tons. Upon inauguration, its capacity reached 16 tons of heavy water with a degree of purity of 99.8 percent. The Arak heavy water production project is a hallmark of Iran’s nuclear advances and plays a determining role in meeting the country’s need to nuclear material for medical purposes such as control of various kinds of cancer and AIDS. The heavy water produced there can be also used as coolant for other heavy water reactors. As this industrial unit opened, Iran became the ninth country in the world with necessary equipment to produce heavy water. Argentina, Canada, India and Norway are among the biggest producers and exporters of heavy water in the world.

Analysis: Why Western countries are concerned about Arak project?

As Iran has frequently noted, the main goal behind the implementation of the heavy water research reactor project was to produce radio drugs that are used to treat intractable diseases such as various kinds of cancer. Such drugs are needed by about 850,000 Iranians every year. The plant is also meant to produce various radioisotopes which can be used in various fields of industry and agriculture. The Western media, however, have frequently claimed that Iran can reprocess the spent fuel of the reactor to separate plutonium. They have alleged that eight kilograms of this nuclear material is sufficient to be mounted on a missile warhead and turn it into a nuclear warhead. Mass media in the West have been launching a heavy propaganda campaign around this project claiming that Arak facility will be ready at the end of 2016 to be used for the production of enough plutonium which would be, in turn, sufficient to make one or two nuclear bombs. Since 1992, the falsehood of such claims and invalidity of dates given for Iran’s nuclear steps has been frequently proven. One clear reason for the falsehood and invalidity of such claims is that they have never come true.

Reasons that refute Western countries’ concerns about Arak facility

1. To produce plutonium from the spent fuel, a special facility built on the basis of cutting-edge technology for the separation of plutonium from nuclear refuse is needed. Iran lacks such an advanced facility.

2. To produce plutonium out of nuclear waste, “hot cells,” which are big storage facilities with special covering are needed. Iran does not have such cells.

3. For a country like Iran, which has already mastered the technology used for the enrichment of uranium, it would not be very difficult to build a nuclear bomb. To manufacture a nuclear bomb, it will just suffice to repeat the process of uranium enrichment from lower levels to over 90 percent purity, which is needed to make a nuclear bomb. However, safe maintenance of the nuclear bomb in order to prevent its detonation and destruction of the country’s facilities, and even more importantly, using such a hypothetical bomb at the right time and the right place against the enemy forces, needs very complicated and more advanced technology. The Western countries are well aware that Iran neither possesses such technology, nor has it been ever trying to obtain it.

4. Arak nuclear plant is under strict supervision of the International Atomic Energy Agency. The Director General of the IAEA Mr. Amano, and head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran Ali Akbar Salehi, recently signed an agreement in Tehran according to which Iran has voluntarily allowed the IAEA to inspect its heavy water facility in Arak just in the same way that Arak Research Reactor has been under the oversight of the IAEA since 2006. Although production of heavy water, per se, is not considered as part of a country’s nuclear activities, Iran has voluntarily allowed the IAEA to inspect this facility in order to strip the Western countries of any possible excuse to mount pressure on the Islamic Republic of Iran.

Untold realities about Arak nuclear plant

Now, the important question that is posed is why a nuclear plant, which is almost two years away from full commissioning, and is being inspected by the IAEA in every respect, should be a source of concern for the Western countries?

It should be noted that Arak nuclear plant is located on the surface of the ground and is quite accessible for all kinds of enemy warplanes. Therefore, in an extreme case, it would be easier to destroy this plant than the underground uranium enrichment site in Fordow, which is used by Iran to produce enriched uranium under the supervision of the IAEA.

Ephraim Asculai, a senior research associate at the London-based Institute for National Strategic Studies (INSS), has noted that inauguration of Arak nuclear plant will cause immunity for Iran’s nuclear energy program; a proposition which is totally unacceptable to the Western states. Therefore, he added, concerns about the Arak nuclear plant mostly seem to be of a tactical and military nature than being related to the proliferation of the weapons of mass destruction. (1)

Now, why the French Foreign Minister [Laurent Fabius] should use such a plant as an excuse to balk at an agreement that could have been reached between two negotiating partiers [in recent Geneva nuclear talks] and would have been a major stride toward confidence building between the two sides? To answer that question, it is noteworthy that the other negotiating parties may have already reached an agreement among them in order to play the “good cop, bad cop” game in a bid to take more concessions from Iran.

Alternatively, one may guess that the hefty amounts of money that France has received from Saudi Arabia have provided Paris with good incentive to engage in such a dirty game. One may even believe that when the Israelis saw that the United States Secretary of State John Kerry is not willing to give in to their illegitimate demands, they have asked their old friend, Laurent Fabius, to resort to childish excuses [to prevent a nuclear deal between Iran and the P5+1 group]. However, in doing so, the French foreign minister has also tarnished the political credit of France in the eyes of the Iranian people.

Conclusion

Acting on the erroneous assumption that its economic sanctions are bringing Iran to its knees, the West is just losing opportunities. The Western countries are ignoring the fact that if they lose the opportunity for reaching an agreement with Rouhani-Zarif team, it is not clear whether such an experience could be repeated in the future. The forthcoming negotiations between Iran and the P5+1 group, which have been scheduled for November 20, can be considered a turning point in this regard because in those talks, the West will come to realize that such illogical behavior and childish quibbling cannot continue forever.

Hassan Beheshtipour is researcher, documentary producer, and expert on nuclear issues, Hassan Beheshtipour received his BA in Trade Economics from Tehran University. His research topics span from US and Russian foreign policy to the Ukrainian Orange Revolution.

Notes:

(1) Serge Michel, Le Monde, Paris, Tuesday, November 12, 2013

The article Concern About Iran’s Arak Heavy Water Research Reactor: An Excuse Or A Reality? – OpEd appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Quantitative Easing And Emerging Markets: A Crisis In The Making? – Analysis

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By Zachary Fillingham

cc Medill DC FlickrBack in September, governments worldwide were braced for the US Federal Reserve to announce a scaling back of its quantitative easing (QE) program. This “taper,” as it came to be known, would have been the first incremental reduction of Fed purchases of government bonds, marking the beginning of the end of artificially low interest rates and free-flowing easy money.

But as we now know, the Fed’s September meeting left the quantitative easing program fully intact. For outgoing Chairman Ben Bernanke, the signs of US economic recovery were still tenuous and vulnerable to the market upheaval that will inevitably follow a taper; even though some would argue that equity markets had already prepared themselves to absorb the shock of just such an announcement.

Equity markets have hummed along since then, reaching a series of record highs. As for the inevitable taper, it has been put off until a vague and unspecified point in the future when the US economic recovery has become fully entrenched; a time that will now be decided by Janet Yellen, President Obama’s nominee to replace Bernanke.

Yet even though the mid-September meeting turned out to be a non-event, the market forces manifest in its lead up reveal some troubling trends, particularly in terms of emerging markets.

Quantitative easing has kept interest rates low and made US government borrowing cheap, which has had the effect of forcing capital to seek out better returns in US equities and emerging markets. When the program is eventually curtailed, and interest rates begin to rise once again, this capital will then return to the US, pulling out of emerging markets around the world.

A capital flight from emerging markets is predictable given the cause-and-effect dynamic of quantitative easing, but the burning question is one of degree. Will this flight rank as a small market correction, perhaps one that has largely played out already in anticipation of a taper, or will these capital outflows intensify into a crisis that echoes the Asian currency meltdown of 1997-1998?

Thus far, on taper speculation alone, various emerging market currencies have depreciated enough to evoke calls of ‘currency crisis’ and ‘currency war’ from some media outlets. Most of this focus has fallen on what Morgan Stanley has branded the ‘Fragile Five’: Brazil, India, Indonesia, Turkey, and South Africa.

All five of these countries have been experiencing currency disruptions over the past few months. The Brazilian real weakened to a five-year low during the peak of QE taper anticipation in late August, drawing central bank intervention, and it has dropped again in November on concerns over the government’s budget deficit. A similar situation is playing out in India, where tepid economic growth is combining with current account deficits and capital outflows to elicit heavy central bank intervention to shore up the rupee. The plunge of Indonesia’s currency has been more pronounced than in Brazil or India, with an even weaker recovery, as the rupiah has shed over 10 percent of its value against the USD since August. Over the same period, the Turkish lira has gone from hitting an all-time low against the USD (falling 13 percent from January to August 2013) to eking out a fragile recovery on central bank intervention, only to fall again in recent weeks. And then there’s the South African rand, whose valuation chart of the past six months resembles a mountain range with its weekly cycle of boom and bust.

The volatility on display in ‘Fragile Five’ economies in the second half of 2013 is cause for concern, especially since these trends will become more pronounced when the QE taper actually begins. But are fears of a repeat of 1997-1998 warranted?

On the surface, there are a few similarities between the current situation in emerging markets and that which triggered the Asian financial crisis in 1997, mainly in the double-barrelled depreciation pressure of hot money outflows and current account deficits. But there are also important differences in many cases, such as higher foreign reserves, better financial regulatory regimes, and lower interest rates – all of which augur well for a soft landing.

Ultimately, each of the ‘Fragile Five’ countries is facing its own unique set of risks ahead of the QE taper. In the coming weeks, the Geopolticialmonitor will be profiling some of these countries in the hope of identifying which are most economically vulnerable, and where exactly their weaknesses lie.

Zachary Fillingham is a contributor to the Geopoliticalmonitor.com

The article Quantitative Easing And Emerging Markets: A Crisis In The Making? – Analysis appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Kosovo Islamic Community Opposes Joining Fighting In Syria

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By Linda Karadaku

The Kosovo Islamic Community (BIK) appealed to the country’s youth to stay away from the war in Syria and urged those who have joined the fighting to return to their families in Kosovo.

The call came after Kosovo police confirmed it arrested six people on charges of terrorism and illegal possessions of weapons, at least two of whom had fought in Syria.

“[W]e send the message and let know all those who have taken such a path, not to fall prey to groups and individuals that want to make ‘jihad’ through the Syrian people’s tragedy,” the organisation said in a statement on November 13th.

Going to Syria to fight has nothing to do with Islamic principles, but serves to prolong the life of the Bashar al-Assad regime as well as the suffering of the Syrian people, the statement said.

The statement also appealed to parents and youth not to fall prey to calls by suspicious organisations which it referred to a “people without an address.”

“We do not have young people [to spare] to be recruited by unknown people in the name of Islamic faith,” it added.

Experts quickly welcomed the call by Kosovo’s leading institution on Islamic faith because it previously had been silent on the issue. There are as many as 1,000 volunteer fighters from Europe taking part in the conflict in Syria.

“This is a humane call to save the lives of Kosovo’s young people so that they return to their families. [I am] saying that, having in mind the very hard and often unclear situation in Syria,” Valon Murtezaj, professor of international negotiations at the IESEG School of Management in Paris, told SETimes.

Pristina resident Serbeze Haxhiaj, a public relations worker, said the organisation’s silence to this point had created doubts among some about the conflict.

“The suspicion for an indirect support by BIK for those groups was reinforced by the statements of the son of Mufti Naim Ternava, who issued a call on the social networks to go and fight in Syria,” Haxhiaj told SETimes.

Valdete Osmani said the call is especially important because it uses its authority to appeal primarily to young, impressionable people not to be misled.

“That does not mean, however, that I do not feel the pain of the civilian population in Syria. But I just do not want people of my age fall prey to suspicious organisations, which I do not believe have pure intentions,” Osmani told SETimes.

The Islamic Community should have repeatedly proclaimed this position, explained what is going on in Syria and sensitised believers about what may happen, said Ymer Mushkolaj, political commentator for the daily Express.

“Religious clergy should have played a greater role in this regard,” Mushkolaj told SETimes.

Mushkolaj said those who went or are considering going to Syria could have been inspired by clerics who preach in mosques in a language that entices hatred and violence against all who do not respect their alleged truth.

“It is important that society is mobilised to identify and denounce all the suspects, who by their actions can cause great damage to the country and its prospects,” Mushkolaj added.

The article Kosovo Islamic Community Opposes Joining Fighting In Syria appeared first on Eurasia Review.


Cameroon Ends Tunisia’s World Cup Hopes

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By Monia Ghanmi and Mohamed Foily

Tunisia ended their 2014 World Cup dream on Sunday (November 17th), losing 4-1 to hosts Cameroon in Yaoundé. Ahmed Akaichi (51′) scored the Carthage Eagles lone goal in the 51st minute.

The first leg ended in a goalless draw.

The Indomitable Lions imposed their pace from the start. They scored just three minutes into the match by Pierre Webo, after a defensive error from Karim Haggui.

This early goal had a negative impact on the morale of the Tunisians, who were unable to respond and launch serious attacks.

Cameroon relied on their zeal and the individual skills of its players, especially Chelsea star Samuel Eto’o, as well as midfielder Benjamin Moukandjo. The latter prevailed in most dribbles with Tunisian defenders and doubled the score after surging from the left. With an excellent shot from outside the penalty zone, he comfortably beat goalkeeper Moez Ben Chrifia.

In the second half, the performance of the Tunisian side improved. The attack advanced on several occasions to finally allow Ahmed Akaichi to score four minutes in the second half.

But the goal did not affect the morale of the Cameroonian team. They succeeded in scoring a third goal with a header from John Makoun. Cameroon continued to control the game to the last minute and succeeded in scoring a fourth goal just four minutes before the end of the match.

With the exit of Tunisia, only Algeria remains to represent the Maghreb in the World Cup. Both will be playing Ghana on Tuesday.

ASAC takes lead in Mauritanian football

Meanwhile in Mauritania, Day 5 football action brought significant changes to the rankings.

In their Saturday match, FC Nouadhibou beat ASC Garde 2-0 at home.

Taghyoulah Denna and Prince Dara, authors of goals in the 24th and 35th minutes, turned the game in their favour, to the delight of fans who were waiting for this win after the loss to ASAC Concorde in Day 4.

With this win, the defending champions advance to third place in group A with eight points.

ASC Garde, which posted their second defeat since the beginning of the championship, stay in the 6th place in the group with six points.

In other matches, ASAC Concorde won in Kaedi 2-1 against ADK Modern. With the win, they reach the top spot with 12 points by taking advantage of the fact that CF Cansado (10 points) are not playing this week.

The match between ASC Geumel of Rosso against Assaba ended in a goalless draw. Guemel have a total of five points while Assaba recorded their first point since the beginning of the championship.

In Group B, the match between FC T. Zeina against Zem Zem ended with a 2-2 draw.

Despite the draw, T. Zeina are second overall with eight points because ASC Armée won 2-1 against CSA Trarza (one point) and continue to lead the group with 11 points. Zem Zem advanced to third place with seven points.

ASC Ksar, who beat Tidjikdja 1-0 on Sunday, now have seven points, putting them in the race.

The article Cameroon Ends Tunisia’s World Cup Hopes appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Accepting Reality Of Climate Change Means Questioning Capitalism – OpEd

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By Graham Land

So-called climate change denial is just a tactic to make sure the vast majority of the world’s power and wealth remains in the hands of a privileged few. If the people of the world could have a say in their destiny they would choose survival, quality of life and fairness over enriching the powerful elite in the hope that they’ll occasionally get some crumbs. Real democracy would not result in a dangerous choice to continue to increase man-made climate change after decades of warnings from the scientific community, especially if the overwhelming majority of people do not benefit from the causes of climate change. But capitalism does.

We know the average person is not a climate science expert. Neither are businessmen, journalists, celebrities or farmers. But all of us can be informed by the real experts. Or we can be informed by the leaders of the fossil fuel, agriculture and automobile industries via their paid political representatives and media mouthpieces. Either way we do not make the real decisions. Capitalism, not democracy, makes money count more than votes.

Capitalism does not encourage sustainability. It has no interest in it. The nature of the predominant economic system on the planet is to make as much profit in as short a time as possible. For any kind hope of a sustainable, recognizable future it must be at the very least carefully regulated by governments and kept in check by people.

There are a lot of people on earth who seem to believe we have two earths. We have seen now what has happened in the Philippines. It is an urgent warning. An example of changed weather and how climate change is affecting all of us on earth.

–UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon (via Agence France-Presse)

What Ban Ki Moon is not addressing is that there are in fact two earths: one for the richest and most powerful “one percent” and another for everyone else. The moneyed elite know they are not at risk from climate change. They are not poor, rural Filipinos living in thatched huts or residents of low-lying Pacific islands. Nor are they likely to lose their position to another damaging hurricane like Sandy if it hits the US or in an Australian bush fire.

In Australia, unlike in most other countries, there’s an atmosphere of denialism and scepticism. So many in our media and so many of our politicians, who should know better, deny that the science is settled. This isn’t the time to move backwards. You’ll hear a lot this week from Tony Abbott about his mandate. He’ll tell all of you to get out of the way as he tries to slam Australia into reverse. But we won’t be taking a backwards step, not this week, not this year, or next year or ever.

–Australian Labour Party environment spokesperson Mark Butler (via the Guardian)

The “atmosphere” the spokesperson is talking about is not really some sort of scientific skepticism, but the victory of those with obscene amounts of money over everyone else. Intergovernmental groups can discuss tackling climate change and poverty, but until power is wrested from the super-rich, these problems will continue and increase. Until we question capitalism.

350.org petition – Send a message to the UN: Haiyan is a wake-up call

The article Accepting Reality Of Climate Change Means Questioning Capitalism – OpEd appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Elections In South Asia: Prospects For Stability?

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The Maldives have elected Abdulla Yameen of the Progressive Party of Maldives (PPM) as president. He won the run-off vote on 16 November with 51.3% while ex-president Mohamed Nasheed of the Maldivan Democratic Party (MDP) received 48.6% of votes.

After the Supreme Court had declared the first elections void and cancelled the following two, voters went to the polls on 9 November, where Nasheed narrowly missed securing an outright majority by receiving 47% of votes.

Voter turnout was high with 91.4%. The EU had declared its readiness ‘to consider appropriate measures should the poll on 16 November not bring the electoral process to a successful conclusion.’

The newly-elected president Yameen is the half-brother of Maumoon Abdul Gayoom who ruled the Maldives for 30 years. In his inauguration speech on 17 November, Yameen spoke about the dire economic situation and pledged to reduce state budget expenditure. Given that the election finally went smoothly, the prospects for the building of a stable government appear good.

However, the situation is much less promising in Nepal, where a new Constituent Assembly will be elected on 19 November. Five years ago, Nepal’s Maoists ended a decade-long insurgency and were elected as strongest party of the new democracy. The inability of the Maoists to establish a stable government and unfulfilled promises have left the economy sliding, the political system gridlocked, and voters disappointed.

The Maoists currently only hold 38.1% of parliamentary seats. The Nepali Congress is the second strongest force with 19.1% of seats, followed by the Unified Marxist-Leninists with 18%. More than 100 parties representing different religions, ethnicities and castes are competing in this week’s elections and electing a stable constitution-writing assembly will be very difficult.

Tensions are running high. Last week, an alliance of 33 opposition parties tried to enforce a nation-wide strike in order to stop the elections.

Voter turnout was 63.3% in 2008 and is likely to be even lower this time as many people are turned off by the bickering between the parties. The current assembly has not managed to agree a new constitution since the abolishment of monarchy in 2008. Reaching polling stations is complicated for the large number of migrant workers due to poor infrastructure and the requirement to vote in one’s original constituency.

What is seen as a crucial step towards developing a stable democracy in Nepal is handicapped by voter apathy, disillusionment, and deep divides among parties. As candidates remain largely the same as in the 2008 elections, the situation is unlikely to change.

This is a period full of political changes for South Asia – Pakistan and Bhutan both elected new national assemblies earlier this year and general elections must be held in Bangladesh by 24 January 2014. India also goes to the polls next May.

The article Elections In South Asia: Prospects For Stability? appeared first on Eurasia Review.

CyberDeviance And CyberCrime Seem To Start And Peak In Teen Years

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By M.B. Reilly

Tech-y teens, often more curious than criminal, are likely to start turning their talents to cyberdeviance and cybercrime at about age 15, with such activities peaking at about age 18.

That’s according to a snapshot survey by University of Cincinnati researchers who will present their findings Nov. 21 at The American Society of Criminology annual conference in Atlanta.

Researchers Mark Stockman, UC associate professor of information technology; Thomas Holt, associate  professor of criminal justice at Michigan State University; and UC criminal justice doctoral students William Mackey and Michael Holiday participated in a survey of 274 university students in both computing-oriented majors and non-computing majors to ask them about their teen activities related to 25 specific cyberdeviance activities or cybercrimes.

In that survey, 71 percent of all respondents reported having engaged in at least a cyberdeviance activity as a teen.

Said Stockman, “The most-common form of what we call cyberdeviant behavior consisted of guessing at a password to gain access to a wireless network, followed by guessing at another’s password, and knowingly accessing a wired network without authorization.”

And, he added, this cyberdeviance might not be such a bad thing, as these are just the types of activities – as well as many others – that information technology programs teach and government and business-sponsored cyber competitions encourage and even reward talented students for. The ultimate goal, after all, is to prepare students for high-paying IT jobs in tech security in order to fight off bad-guy hackers, many of whom are based overseas.

The survey also asked respondents about their motivations when it came to any of these activities. According to Stockman, the motivation tended to be curiosity or a joke on a friend: “The respondents reported wanting to test out software or to solve a computer logic puzzle or to play a joke on a friend.  Sometimes, they wanted to help improve a system’s security, or they felt it was wrong for a hotel to charge $15 for wireless access.”

Stockman and his fellow researchers plan to expand their survey’s numbers and to conduct it annually because he believes that the onset age for computerdeviance and cybercrime will trend downward in years to come.

He explained, “In this first survey, we asked about the teen activities of those who were now, on average, 20 years old at the University of Cincinnati. When they were 15, today’s 20-year-olds did not have all the easy-to-use tools that are available to today. I would not be surprised if future surveys show that the onset of computerdeviance begins at younger and younger ages, simply because the tools are becoming easier and easier to use.”

CODE-CRACKING DETAILS: FURTHER FINDINGS FROM THE CYBER SURVEY

  • Overall, 71 percent of all respondents reported having engaged in a cyberdeviance activity as a teen: 80 percent of those in computing majors reported having had done so, while 58 percent of students in non-computing majors reported having had done so.
  • Overall, there was no statistical difference between men and women when it came to having tried at least one cyberdeviance activity as a teen.  Among students in non-computing majors, 62 percent of women reported participating in a cyberdeviance or cybercrime activity vs. only 55 percent of men. For those in computing majors, 81 percent of men reporting having engaged in cyberdeviance as a teen vs. 66 percent of women. (These findings are distinct from those of more-traditional delinquent or crime activities, where men are far more likely to commit offenses.)
  • However, on average, men had made more teen attempts at cyberdeviance or cybercrime. Men reported an average of five cyberdeviance or cybercrime activities among the 25 listed possibilities, while women reported an average of three cyberdeviance or cybercrime activities among the 25 listed possibilities. Computing majors reported having tried, on average, six cyberdeviant or cybercrime activities vs. three such attempts by non-computing majors.


MOST COMMON AND LEAST COMMON CYBERDEVIANCE/ CYBERCRIME ACTIVITIES REPORTED IN THE SNAPSHOT SURVEY

The most-common forms of cyberdeviance engaged in by the surveyed students were

  • 52 percent of surveyed students had guessed at a password to gain access to a wireless network.
  • 42 percent had guessed at another’s password to get into his/her computer account or files.
  • 30 percent had knowingly accessed a wired network without authorization.

The least-common forms of cyberdeviance and cybercrimes engaged in by the surveyed students were

  • 4 percent of those surveyed reported having used “a man in the middle” attack in order to direct users to altered sites. (This involves intercepting data going across a network and then rerouting it elsewhere. For instance, traffic could be rerouted to a website to sell something, or, a hacker could even redirect you from going to your bank’s website to a fake website.)
  • 3 percent of those surveyed had knowingly sent out phishing emails as teens.
  • 3 percent of those surveyed had knowingly sent out SPAM emails as teens.

The article CyberDeviance And CyberCrime Seem To Start And Peak In Teen Years appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Disney Research Algorithms Improve Animations Featuring Fog, Smoke And Underwater Scenes

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A team led by Disney Research, Zürich has developed a method to more efficiently render animated scenes that involve fog, smoke or other substances that affect the travel of light, significantly reducing the time necessary to produce high-quality images or animations without grain or noise.

The method, called joint importance sampling, helps identify potential paths that light can take through a foggy or underwater scene that are most likely to contribute to what the camera – and the viewer – ultimately sees. In this way, less time is wasted computing paths that aren’t necessary to the final look of an animated sequence.

Wojciech Jarosz, a research scientist at Disney Research, Zürich, said the computation time needed to produce noise-free images when rendering a complex scene can take minutes, hours or even days. The new algorithms his team created can reduce that time dramatically, by a factor of 10, 100, or even up to 1,000 in their experiments.

“Faster renderings allow our artists to focus on the creative process instead of waiting on the computer to finish,” Jarosz said. “This leaves more time for them to create beautiful imagery that helps create an engaging story.”

The researchers, including collaborators from Saarland University, Aarhus University, Université de Montréal and Charles University, Prague, will present their findings at the ACM SIGGRAPH Asia 2013 conference, November 19-22, in Hong Kong.

Light rays are deflected or scattered not only when they bounce off a solid object, but also as they pass through aerosols and liquids. The effect of clear air is negligible for rendering algorithms used to produce animated films, but realistically producing scenes including fog, smoke, smog, rain, underwater scenes, or even a glass of milk requires computational methods that account for these “participating media.”

So-called Monte Carlo algorithms are increasingly being used to render such phenomena in animated films and special effects. These methods operate by analyzing a random sampling of possible paths that light might take through a scene and then averaging the results to create the overall effect. But Jarosz explained that not all paths are created equal. Some paths end up being blocked by an object or surface in the scene; in other cases, a light source may simply be too far from the camera to have much chance of being seen. Calculating those paths can be a waste of computing time or, worse, averaging them may introduce error, or noise, that creates unwanted effects in the animation.

Computer graphics researchers have tried various “importance sampling” techniques to increase the probability that the random light paths calculated will ultimately contribute to the final scene and keep noise to a minimum. Some techniques trace the light from its source to the camera; others from the camera back to the source. Some are bidirectional – tracing the light from both the camera and the source before connecting them together. Unfortunately, even such sophisticated bidirectional techniques compute the light and camera portions of the paths independently, without knowledge of each other, before connecting them together, so they are unlikely to construct full light paths that ultimately have a strong contribution to the final image.

By contrast, the joint importance sampling method developed by the Disney Research team chooses the locations along the random paths with mutual knowledge of the camera and light source locations. This approach allows their method to create high-contribution paths more readily, increasing the efficiency of the rendering process.

The researchers found that their algorithms significantly reduced noise and improved rendering performance. “There’s always going to be noise, but with our method, we can reduce the noise much more quickly, which can translate into savings of time, computer processing and ultimately money,” Jarosz said.

The article Disney Research Algorithms Improve Animations Featuring Fog, Smoke And Underwater Scenes appeared first on Eurasia Review.

It Only Took 84 Years: Von Neumann-Day Math Problem Finally Solved

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A famous math problem that has vexed mathematicians for decades has met an elegant solution by Cornell University researchers. Graduate student Yash Lodha, working with Justin Moore, professor of mathematics, has described a geometric solution for the von Neumann-Day problem, first described by mathematician John von Neumann in 1929.

Lodha presented his solution at the London Mathematical Society’s Geometric and Cohomological Group Theory symposium in August, and has submitted the work to a journal. “People were very excited by this,” Lodha said. “[The solution] is natural and compelling enough to study for its own sake.”

Lodha works in the field of geometric group theory. A group is a mathematical construct that describes the notion of the symmetries of an object, whether it’s a physical object or a theoretical space. For example, a polygon has rotational as well as reflectional symmetries, all of which, together with the operation of composition, form what’s called a finite group, because the polygon can be described as a finite sequence of operations that reflect its symmetries.

Formally, a group can be described as words in an alphabet together with a set of rules that are called “relations.” Group theorists, Lodha said, are like biologists who classify species; mathematicians try to categorize groups that have properties A, B or C – but is there one that has A but not C?

The inspiration for Lodha’s work originated in the early 20th century, when mathematicians first proved that a ball that exists in three-dimensional space can be chopped into a finite number of pieces – “like tearing up a piece of paper without stretching or squeezing,” Lodha explained – and can be reassembled, like a jigsaw puzzle, into two balls, each the size of the original ball. This is known as the Banach-Tarski paradox.

von Neumann, in studying this paradox, was the first to describe the reason behind it: He attributed it not to the geometry of 3-D space, but to the algebraic properties of the symmetries inherent to the sphere. He was the first to isolate this property, which mathematicians today call “non-amenability.”

von Neumann further observed that if a group contains free groups, which are groups that have a finite alphabet and no rules, then it must be non-amenable. He posed the question of whether the opposite is true – are there groups that do not contain free groups and are also non-amenable? The problem, later popularized by M.M. Day, waited another 40 years before mathematician Alexander Olshanskii cracked it, although Olshanskii’s group had an infinite set of rules.

Another two decades went by before Olshanskii and Mark Sapir supplied another solution in response to the von Neumann-Day problem. This time, their example was governed by a finite, but large set of rules – close to 10,200. It also lacked a natural geometric model. So mathematicians probed further for a group with a finite set of rules, that is non-amenable and does not contain free groups.

For the first time, Lodha describes a group that has only nine rules, a natural geometric model, is non-amenable and does not contain free groups.

Advances in mathematics are almost always incremental and build upon previous work, Lodha said. To complete this work, among his most valuable insights was one first described by the late Bill Thurston, Fields medalist and Cornell’s Jacob Gould Schurman Professor of Mathematics, which involved a way of expressing the group in a different light, as a “continued fractions model.”

Lodha’s work also builds heavily on work by Nicolas Monod, who constructed a geometrically oriented, but not finitely presented, counterexample to the von Neumann-Day problem. Lodha and Moore’s contribution was to isolate a finitely presented subgroup, with only nine relations, of Monod’s example.

Further work on the group, which doesn’t yet have a name, could make the solution to the von Neumann-Day problem even stronger: by isolating stronger finiteness conditions for proving that the group has a finite number of rules.

The article It Only Took 84 Years: Von Neumann-Day Math Problem Finally Solved appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Spectre Of 9/11 Haunts Freedoms In US – OpEd

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Though in many aspects the attacks of 9/11 attacks have lost their power, they are still a trauma standing in the way of a restoring individual freedoms in the U.S.

By Mehmet Yegin

Before the September 11 attacks, the balance between freedom and security in the U.S. tilted towards freedom. The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 brought an intelligence structure that focused on foreign powers. Its domestic activities were intended to protect U.S. citizens and their information from foreign powers. However, new legal arrangements brought by the Patriot Act after 9/11 placed American citizens under the spot, irrevocably breaking the balance in favor of security.

Changing balances after 9/11

After 9/11, intelligent bodies became the first and foremost targets of investigations on the failure to prevent attacks. Besides the centralized intelligence gathering envisaged by the 9/11 Commission Report, the Report was the first step toward intelligence-gathering on U.S. citizens. Interestingly, the fearful environment created by the attacks led to a general acceptance for these measures among the American people. According to research by Leonie and Huddy at Stony Brook University, the post-9/11 threat perception in society raised preferences for security (as opposed to freedom) by 18 percent.

The Patriot Act granted sweeping authorities to intelligent agencies. Its “lone wolf” clause allows individuals without any connection to terrorist organizations to be monitored. Furthermore, gathering information about the books read, websites surfed, and purchases made by individuals were made legal under the “library” clause.

Additionally, the Act legalized amassing data -without making a distinction between the innocent and suspects- through a warrant issued by seven judges appointed by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. For instance, this year the Supreme Court authorized access to all of Verizon’s databases. The Turkish equivalent of this decision would be to give third parties access to the telephone service and internet traffic data of Vodafone or Avea.

This legal arrangement enables e-mail and telephone communications to be monitored limitlessly. Many may think that the end of the Bush administration meant the end of the Patriot Act. However, due to extension measures in 2005 and 2011, the Act is in effect today and will remain so until 1 June 2015. Regulations made during this term provide small restrictions but wider authorizations. For instance, a 2006 regulation transfers the authority to monitor U.S. citizens connected to international terrorists from a court warrant to presidential approval.

The Snowden affair

Debates about protecting privacy were re-ignited when Edward Snowden, an employee of a U.S. government contractor, Booz Allen Hamilton, leaked information to the press. By leaking slides about two programs named PRISM and X-Keyscore and giving an interview to the Guardian, Snowden announced to the public that the National Security Agency (NSA) can limitlessly access the private data of U.S. citizens. PRISM can monitor e-mail and telephone traffic and X-Keyscore can monitor all internet traffic. Moreover, it is not technically possible to make a distinction in these data heaps between the guilty and the innocent, nor between American citizens and non-citizens. Critically, even a low-level, non-governmental employee like Snowden was capable of accessing the data.

The Snowden affair put the Obama administration in a difficult position domestically and internationally. Relations with Moscow, which refused to extradite Snowden, deteriorated as the administration was forced to explain itself to the countries whose phones it had tapped. When Snowden’s allegations were brought up on U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry’s visit to Brazil, it was a clear sign that the issue had become a soft spot for Washington. On the other hand, a domestic debate emerged over why Obama had waited for such a scandal before proposing a reform package

Monitoring intelligence activities

On the other side of the debate, those who defend intelligence-gathering activities argue that surveillance programs are necessary in order to ward off a second 9/11. According to NSA Director Keith Alexander, had the existing authorities been provided before 9/11, the attacks could have been prevented. Alexander ties the intelligence failure behind 9/11 to an inability to connect the dots abroad with those at home because they lacked the authority to tap phones. He also argues that with the authorities granted after 9/11, 50 potential attacks have been thwarted.

Despite the problems posed by programs, nobody wants to bear a responsibility for a second 9/11, and consequently all are forced to support these policies. The arms of the U.S. government, therefore, are inclined to maintain the existing authorities.

Although President Obama announced a four-item reform package, he did not neglect to defend the existing programs. Commenting on the announcement, Michael Hayden, NSA Director under the Bush administration, remarked on CBS that Obama’s statement was not seeking to change the policy, as it was, in the president’s words, “legal, effective, and ethical”. In an appearance with Charlie Rose, the president stated that intelligence gathering activities do not target U.S. citizens and that all activities were performed under judicial and legislative review. Thus, the White House support continuing the surveillance.

Nor does Congress have a different view. According to Mike Rogers, Chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, all of the allegations made against the NSA are wrong. Moreover, a proposal offered at the end of July that envisaged a budget-cut for the programs was voted down 207 to 217 thanks to the active lobbying of House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi. The legislative arm of intelligence monitoring, too, is complacent.

Whether or not the third arm, the Supreme Court, will render a different decision remains unknown, but the court decisions continue to open doors to data collection. In other words, the arms of the U.S. government are all on the same page when it comes to prioritizing security.

The majority of American people, despite their concerns, also support these programs. According to a PEW public opinion poll made in July, 56 percent of Americans don’t consider court supervision to be sufficient. 70 percent believe that the data collected is being used for purposes other than counterterrorism. Still, only 44 percent of the American people oppose the policy to the 50 percent who support it. Americans’ acceptance stems from worries about terrorist attacks and the belief that they personally are not being targeted.

American mentalities concerning intelligence-gathering are undergoing a transformation. In the search for protection, U.S. citizens have brought themselves to accept what they used to fear. The trauma of 9/11 has paved the way for an understanding that security comes first, individual freedoms second. Even if intelligence-gathering activities are under the supervision of the legislative, judicial, and executive powers, the replacing of specific warrants with a wholesale approach has rendered it impossible to differentiate between right and wrong. In the end, despite the problems of the policy, no one wants to bear the responsibility for a second 9/11.

The article Spectre Of 9/11 Haunts Freedoms In US – OpEd appeared first on Eurasia Review.


Addressing Human Rights Violations In Armenian Armed Forces – OpEd

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With human rights violations in the Armenian Armed Forces having become a taboo subject, Peace Dialogue used simulations to raise awareness about the situation faced by soldiers, thereby helping breakdown the culture of silence that prevailed.

By Edgar Khachatryan

Attempting to raise public awareness about human rights violations in the Armenian army, Peace Dialogue, an NGO from Armenia, organized various activities to help educate Armenian society. At the beginning of 2013, Peace Dialogue launched a new initiative, a two-year project called ‘Safe Soldiers for a Safe Armenia’, with the support of the Dutch organization, IKV Pax Christi. The aim of this initiative is to end human rights violations in the armed forces and to develop Armenia’s safety, plus the safety of those soldiers who protect it. The organization hopes that this project will result in greater public awareness about the poor human rights situation facing the armed forces.  In order to create public demand to solve this problem, Peace Dialogue works to mobilize local, national and international actors, who in turn involve experts from the EU, NATO and the OSCE.

Based on Peace Dialogue’s research, 25 fatalities were recorded in the Republic of Armenia (RA) Armed Forces between January and October 2013. Only three of these were the result of violations of the ceasefire signed between Armenia and Azerbaijan in 1994. Regular ceasefire violations and constant information warfare indicate that the previously open war has become a hidden war. As people demand security from government, the government responds through the Army. At this stage, a strong Army remains the main means of securing stability, for both society and the government.

There are, however, developments in this structure that are beyond the control of society. As society perceives the Army as the only means of protecting stability, they are inclined to forgive all of its human rights transgressions. A major part of society thinks that silence should be maintained in the face of human rights violations because of the precarious geopolitical status of the country. Many people perceive Armenia as being surrounded by enemies. However, the regime uses the taboo nature of the issue and a lack of civilian control over the Army to advance their interests.

Although the dangers in the army affect thousands of young conscripts and their families, the issue of this forgotten massacre remains unspoken in Armenian society. What is more, it has become a taboo issue in the country.

In order to address these challenges, Peace Dialogue is organizing a simulation trial, called ‘Fair Court’, in various cities across Armenia. Simulations help staff reveal the underlying factors and dynamics that are at work in real situations, whist creating a learning method that is oriented on practical experience. Simulations generally attempt to recreate real life situations in a controlled context, often for educational or entertainment purposes. It is also a powerful method that gives the participants an opportunity to test their negotiation skills and their ability to manage conflicts. Furthermore, it promotes a space in which such taboo issues can be openly discussed in society. Fair Court, which is organized using the conflict modelling methodology, was presented first to a number of Vanadzor citizens, and then in a number of cities and towns in Armenia. This case was based on a true story concerning the death of a soldier in the armed forces. The soldier was beaten and killed by fellow soldiers due to an argument. The incident could have been prevented by an officer on duty, but was not.

During the simulated court trial, the audience members take on the roles of all parties and strive to achieve justice for their characters. The court hears the details of the case, the witnesses and the defendants. The defendants were soldiers who, under the influence of alcohol, had beaten their fellow soldier and unintentionally caused his death. The court also hears the officer on duty who, although he did not take part in the fight, did not prevent the soldiers from using alcohol on duty, either. Moreover, he also took part with great pleasure in the birthday party of one of those soldiers. After clarifying the circumstances of the case and after hearing arguments from the prosecution and the defense, the court issues its verdict, based on the development and dynamics of the simulated trial case. At the real court trial of the same case, the officer received a mild punishment, was given an amnesty, and was released from the courtroom. The soldiers, who unintentionally caused the death of their fellow soldier, were sentenced to a long period of imprisonment.

Initially, the organizers believed that this simulation game would have an impact on the people and when they would take up the roles they would actually understand the issues and realize the significance of human rights protection. The results of the simulated court trial and its impact were reflected in the discussion that followed.

The participants and the audience were given an opportunity to share their impressions. Some of them expressed that the simulated court trial provided an opportunity to learn more about the judicial process and its peculiarities, allowing to put themselves in the shoes of those who take part in a trial. It is most important, however, that although some of the participants were previously unaware of the problems in the army, they were willing to discuss the problem after the simulation, rather than perpetuating the culture of silence.

Edgar Khachatryan is the Director of Peace Dialogue, a member of the Global Coalition for Conflict Transformation. Further information about this project is available by clicking here.

The article Addressing Human Rights Violations In Armenian Armed Forces – OpEd appeared first on Eurasia Review.

US Immunity To Top Bill At Afghan Assembly

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By Mina Habib

As 3,000 delegates prepare to attend a meeting in Kabul to decide crucial aspects of future relations with the United States, some say it has no real authority to decide on these matters.

Loya jirgas or “grand assemblies” drawn from people across the country are periodically convened in Afghanistan to debate important national issues and arrive at a consensus view. The idea is that with broad-based participation, the congress will produce decisions that will be accepted by everyone. President Hamed Karzai called this loya jirga for November 21 to rule on the Bilateral Security Agreement, which is intended to govern US-Afghan defence cooperation after most international troops leave Afghanistan next year.

He agreed most terms of the document at a meeting with US Secretary of State John Kerry last month, but some important issues remain unresolved, notably whether any remaining American soldiers should have immunity from prosecution in Afghanistan.

“Legal immunity does not lie within the powers of the Afghan government, but is a matter for the people of Afghanistan, and the loya jirga will decide on it,” Karzai told reporters after his talks with Kerry. (See Afghan-US Pact Still Hangs in Balance.)

Both the legitimacy of the loya jirga and the nature of the deal it will discuss have provoked strong reactions.

On November 10, hundreds of people took part in a demonstration in Kabul organised by a group calling itself the Front for National Unity and Opposition to US Military Bases.

A spokesman for the movement, Wahid Mozhda, told IWPR that Afghans were being led unawares into a wholly one-sided arrangement.

“With this agreement, the Americans want to get Afghanistan for free,” he said. “They want to use Afghan airspace and territory however they please beyond 2014…. How will this pact, and this consultation by a ceremonial jerga, benefit Afghanistan?”

The following day, hundreds of people gathered for a counter-protest organised by the National Islamic Peace Party.

“The president’s decision to convene a consultative loya jirga reflects an important wish of the Afghan people,” said party head Shah Mahmud Popal. “Our party supports the jirga and the decisions it will take. The people of Afghanistan need peace more than anything else. We support any step that brings us closer to peace and security.”

The National Coalition of Afghanistan, a prominent opposition group whose leader, Abdullah Abdullah, is hoping to succeed Karzai as president in next April’s election, said the assembly should never have been convened, and announced a boycott.

National Coalition spokesman Fazel Hussein Sancharaki told IWPR that Afghanistan already had a decision-making structure in the shape of a two-chamber parliament plus the provincial councils.

By contrast, the loya jirga was merely a consultative body whose decisions were not binding, Sancharaki said. He expressed concern that the text of the Bilateral Security Agreement had not been made public, and questioned whether those attending the loya jirga would get to see it.

Sancharaki dismissed the entire process as a waste of time and money.

“Afghanistan is a poor country,” he said. “Inviting some 3,000 people to Kabul and hosting them for five to seven days, providing security for them, and other things are a heavy cost for this impoverished nation to bear.”

Political analyst Atiqullah Amarkhel said the people invited to the loya jirga were not qualified to rule on matters of state, and accused the president of trying to shift the burden of responsibility from his own shoulders.

“The president should consult experts on the law, politics, economics and military affairs, as well as political parties and civil society institutions… not people who know nothing of such matters,” he said. “These people can’t do anything except raise and lower their hands when it comes to a vote.”

In an attempt to make the loya jirga as legitimate and inclusive as possible, Karzai announced that he would welcome representatives of the Taleban and another insurgent group, Hezb-e Islami, led by Gulbuddin Hekmatyar.

The Taleban made it clear they were not coming by claiming responsibility for a November 16 bomb attack near the loya jirga venue in western Kabul. Ten people died and 13 others were injured. Taleban spokesman Zabihullah Mojahed warned that if participants approved the US pact, they would be branded traitors and added to the Taleban’s hit list.

Sadeq Modaber, an official responsible for arranging the loya jirga, said a Hezb-e Islami delegation had submitted a list of possible participants. But this was denied by a senior member of the faction, Ghairat Bahir, who told IWPR, “As a matter of principle, we are convening jirgas like this, and we particularly oppose jirgas like this one which is harmful to the liberty and national interests of Afghanistan.”

On the streets of Kabul, opinions about the value of this week’s meeting were just as divided.

One resident, Shah Mahmud, said he was sick of the entire process.

“Karzai has organised so many jirgas and gatherings over the past 12 years that we’re fed up with them,” he said. “There’s no gain, just headaches for the public. Most roads in the city have been closed for the last month because of this jirga. There are stop-and-search checkpoints everywhere. People can’t get from one place to another in less than two or three hours, and universities have sent their students home. And the final result will be zero.”

However, civil servant Farhad said still held out hopes for a process which might just make Afghanistan a more stable place.

“In my opinion, the jirga should agree to the security pact with the US as long as they don’t sell out the country’s national interests,” he said. “We want to have good relations with the US, and we need pacts like this in order to rid ourselves of troublemaking by our cowardly [Iranian and Pakistani] neighbours.”

Mina Habib is an IWPR-trained reporter in Kabul. Hafizullah Gardesh is IWPR’s Afghanistan editor. This article was published at IWPR’s ARR Issue 467.

The article US Immunity To Top Bill At Afghan Assembly appeared first on Eurasia Review.

In A Changing Middle East, Israel And Saudi Arabia Cling Together – OpEd

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By Carl Bloice

For years, Iranian Shiite pilgrims arriving in Saudi Arabia for the annual Hajj observance would hold a demonstration denouncing what they termed “enemies of Iran,” aimed particularly at Israel and the United States. A couple of times the protests resulted in violence.

One such occasion came July 31, 1987 when—for reasons that to this day are not entirely clear—a riot occurred. Saudi security forces crushed the demonstrators, but in the ensuing stampede over 400 people lost their lives and over 600 were wounded. A few days later, I encountered a clandestine leftist Saudi activist and asked what had happened. “We had nothing to do with it,” he said. “But the rulers are terrified. It showed that they no longer had complete control.”

Today, the kingdom’s rulers must look back on those days with envy. As the Saudi royals look out from their palaces in Riyadh, they see trouble everywhere. And they don’t have to look very far.

Despite the fact that Saudi Arabia has the Arab world’s largest economy, the unemployment rate for its citizens is 12 percent, much of it concentrated among the swelling ranks of young people. The royals recently decided to deal with the problem by expelling many of the country’s estimated 9 million migrant workers from Bangladesh, India, the Philippines, Nepal, Pakistan, and Yemen. According to the BBC, 30,000 Yemenis departed for their impoverished home country in the first 10 days of November alone. Nearly 1 million Yemenis live and work in Saudi Arabia, remitting close to $2 billion every year.

On November 10, fighting broke out between the angry migrants on one side and Saudi civilians and security forces on the other. At least two people were killed and 70 others injured, and over 500 migrant workers were arrested.

International media briefly covered the riot and the expulsions, but most of its attention has focused on Saudi unhappiness about any potential agreement between the United States and Iran over Tehran’s nuclear enrichment program. What the Saudis are really worried about is that any lessening of international tensions with Iran could have an impact on the internal stability of Saudi Arabia and its Gulf allies.

It’s a worry shared by the Israelis, who appear to have lost their veto power over U.S. diplomacy with Iran.

A Burgeoning Alliance

The Saudi monarchs’ crowns do not rest easy on their heads.

Nothing illustrates this clearer than the recent Saudi invasion of neighboring Bahrain. Two years ago, when Arab Spring protests spread to that country, the Saudis mobilized troops from the allied Gulf Coordinating Council, invaded Bahrain, and smashed the protests.

It was not the first time Saudi Arabia has dispatched troops into a neighboring country in an attempt to put down a perceived threat. In the fall of 2009, Riyadh launched an assault on Shiite Houthi rebels who control much of Saada province on the border with Saudi Arabia in neighboring Yemen. As with Bahrain, the Saudi excuse for the aggression was alleged Iranian influence in the area.

Of course, alleged Iranian influence is only part of the problem. “Saudi Arabia, perpetually in fear of chaos and instability, is a leading force in the counterrevolution against the Arab Spring,” explained Princeton Middle East scholar Bernard Haykel in the June 2011 issue of Foreign Affairs. “As a self-identified bulwark of stability and conservatism, Riyadh wants no change in the political structures or balance of power in the Middle East and is threatened by the potential emergence of representative forms of government in its neighborhood.”

David Gardner, international affairs editor at the Financial Times, recently piled on, identifying the Saudis’ two main fears: “the chaotic change wrought by the upheavals of the Arab awakening and the possibility of a U.S. rapprochement with Iran, its rival for Gulf control.”

Gardner believes the Saudis “happen to be on the right side on Syria, against a vile despot slaughtering his own people. But “that is not because they want democracy for the Syrians,” he continued. “It is because they wish to undermine Iran by bringing down its Syrian allies, the Assads, and because the Wahhabi fanaticism underpinning the Saudi state at home and abroad abominates the Shia as heretics.”

Enter the Israelis.

The right-wing government of Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu has also been thrown for a loop by the shifting sands in the region.

While there has been considerable coverage of the burgeoning alliance between Israel and Saudi Arabia, the extent to which it has evolved remains murky. According to Israeli television, “Israel is negotiating an unlikely diplomatic alliance with several Gulf and Arab states, including Saudi Arabia, to deal with Iran’s nuclear program.” According to the report, “High-profile Israeli and Gulf diplomats held a series of meetings overseen by Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu in the weeks leading to his speech to the UN General Assembly,” and a “high ranking official” from the Gulf even “came secretly to Israel to address growing concerns on Tehran’s nuclear program, following U.S. President Barack Obama’s decision to open a dialogue with his Iranian counterpart Hassan Rouhani.”

What the governments of Saudi Arabia and Israel fear most is not an Iran capable of producing a nuclear bomb, but rather the easing of the tension between the United States and Iran. “Shiite Iran is Sunni Saudi Arabia’s great rival in the region, and while a negotiated solution to end sanctions against Iran in return for assurances that it won’t be able to build a nuclear bomb is in the interests of the US and much of the world, the Saudis don’t see it that way,” wrote Dan Murphy in the Christian Science Monitor. “They, like Israel, want Iran to be economically and ultimately militarily crushed—not freed of the shackles of sanctions.”

The Israeli-Saudi alliance got a public airing in September when outgoing Israeli Ambassador Michael Oren told the United Nations General Assembly that “in the last 64 years there has probably never been a greater confluence of interest between us and several Gulf States. With these Gulf States we have agreements on Syria, on Egypt, on the Palestinian issue. We certainly have agreements on Iran. This is one of those opportunities presented by the Arab Spring.” Netanyahu himself told the UN, “The dangers of a nuclear-armed Iran and the emergence of other threats in our region have led many of our Arab neighbors to recognize, finally recognize, that Israel is not their enemy. And this affords us the opportunity to overcome the historic animosities and build new relationships, new friendships, new hopes.”

Friends in Low Places

It goes without saying that the Saudis stand to lose more than a little credibility on the Arab street by openly allying with Israel, but they enjoy little already. And the optics of Israel’s burgeoning alliance with a repressive monarchy don’t look good for a country that likes to call itself the Middle East’s only democracy.

Political rights, after all, are a nonstarter in the kingdom, and social rights don’t fare any better. Women aren’t allowed to drive in Saudi Arabia and men who say publicly that they should are threatened with jail time. Public beheadings are common, and reportedly 69 people have been executed so far this year.

The kingdom came under fire in October over multiple human rights abuses, including its use of the death penalty and discrimination against women, in a report by United Nation Human Rights Council. “Many countries have problematic records, but Saudi Arabia stands out for its extraordinary high levels of repression and its failure to carry out its promises to the Human Rights Council,” said Joe Stork, Human Rights Watch deputy director for the Middle East.

But as unsavory as it may look, Israel and Saudi Arabia—and their backers in Washington—have likely decided that they need all the help they can get.

In the weeks and months ahead, we probably won’t hear much talk about human rights in the Gulf states, not even from the liberal interventionists and neo-conservatives always anxious to invade other countries under the banner of bringing “freedom” and “democracy.” Nor from the Israeli lobby in Washington or from Republican critics of the Obama administration like Lindsey Graham and John McCain. Nor from House Intelligence Committee Chair Mike Rogers, who recently spoke of “critical issues” that for the Saudis and others have “rattled their faith in the administration’s ability to protect them in a very dangerous world.”

A dangerous world makes for strange bedfellows. But neither Israel nor Saudi Arabia wants to see the bedding changed.

FPIF columnist Carl Bloice, a member of the National Coordinating Committee of the Committees of Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism, is a columnist for the Black Commentator. He also serves on its editorial board.

The article In A Changing Middle East, Israel And Saudi Arabia Cling Together – OpEd appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Russia: Bail Granted For More Jailed Greenpeace Activists

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Two district courts in St. Petersburg granted bail Tuesday to several more Greenpeace activists awaiting trial, signaling a possible softening in the authorities’ stance over the case.

Nine activists, including nationals of Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Finland, France, Italy, New Zealand and Poland, can leave their detention facilities after they have posted bail of 2 million rubles ($61,500) each, the courts ruled.

A group of 28 Greenpeace activists and two reporters was initially charged with piracy for attempting in September to scale an Arctic Sea oil platform owned by an affiliate of energy giant Gazprom in protest at offshore drilling in the environmentally sensitive area. That charge was later downgraded to hooliganism, which is punishable by a maximum sentence of seven years in jail.

Another three members of the group were granted bail Monday at another court in St. Petersburg. The environmental group said earlier in the day that it has already raised the funds to pay the bail.

Greenpeace said in a statement that it was waiting for the Investigative Committee, which is handling the case, to provide details for a bank account into which the bail money can be transferred.

The article Russia: Bail Granted For More Jailed Greenpeace Activists appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Quality Of Uganda’s Education And Health Services Poses Serious Risk To Long-Term Economic Progress

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Uganda has reduced poverty and child mortality by half, and has enrolled most primary-age children in school. However, new service delivery data published today suggest that the quality of education and health services remains weak, posing serious challenges to the country’s long-term social and economic progress as outlined in its Vision 2040 for the future.

The new Uganda Service Delivery Indicators (SDI)—based on independent surveys of 5,300 teachers and health workers in 400 primary schools and 400 health facilities—show that Uganda is still very far from achieving optimal performance in schools and health centers. SDI is an Africa-wide initiative led by the World Bank, the African Economic Research Consortium, and the African Development Bank. The Uganda SDI surveys were implemented by the Economic Policy Research Centre, Uganda.

A key Uganda SDI finding is that there are significant knowledge gaps among teachers and health workers in both public and private schools and clinics. Only a third of public health workers could correctly diagnose at least 4 out of 5 very common conditions such as diarrhea with dehydration, or malaria with anemia; and only 1 in 5 teachers showed mastery of the curriculum they taught.

“Being able to pinpoint weaknesses in health and education services will enable the kind of change that is extremely important not only for the progress and prosperity of individuals and families, but also for the entire Ugandan economy.” said Moustapha Ndiaye, Country Manager, World Bank, Uganda.

Absenteeism is also a major issue, the SDI data show. Over half (52%) of public health providers were not present in the facility when surveyed. Much of the absence was sanctioned, calling for better management. In public schools, roughly 1 in 4 teachers was absent from school, and of those present in school, 1 in 3 were not teaching. As a result, 40% of public school classrooms did not have a teacher teaching in them.

SDI data also reveal regional inequalities, with the Northern region and rural areas faring worst in terms of knowledge levels of teachers and health workers. Further, the average Northern public school Primary Four pupil received about 90 days of teaching time less in a school year than his/her Kampala counterpart.

“Education and health services do not improve overnight, which is why we need to make sure that the authorities take evidence-based action right now to secure the future for all young Ugandans,” said Sarah Ssewanyana, Executive Director, Economic Policy Research Centre, Uganda.

Finally, while most types of infrastructure and equipment were largely available, both public and private schools and health facilities fared badly on the availability of textbooks and essential drugs. Overall, just 11% of Primary Four classes were observed using textbooks during English and Mathematics classes.

“Even in the best-equipped schools and clinics, children and patients will not get good services unless teachers and health workers are well-trained and motivated,” said Ritva Reinikka, Director, Human Development, Africa at the World Bank. “Uganda Service Delivery Indicators are an objective snapshot of what teachers and health providers know and do on the job, raising systemic and management issues in a country which has already shown progress on increasing accountability for service delivery outcomes.”

SDI findings are already available for Kenya, Tanzania, and Senegal, and will soon be available in Nigeria, Togo and Mozambique. Surveys will be repeated every two to three years in each country.

The article Quality Of Uganda’s Education And Health Services Poses Serious Risk To Long-Term Economic Progress appeared first on Eurasia Review.

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