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Journalism Musings Myanmar News Politics Weblog

Reminiscent of Mendiola

I have yet to hear from my friend from Myanmar. He was supposed to return last night. I saw a video clip of what happened in Yangon over Mizzima News. When I saw it, it reminded me of Mendiola Massacre–I just couldn’t take the brutality of the situation.

A friend of mine was in the front line of the protesting peasant farmers. Her colleague was hit by a bullet in the face. She survived and so did her colleague. I saw the event on TV and it became one of historical events on TV that I’ll never forget aside from the assassination of Ninoy.

It was reported that the Military Junta had cut off the internet connection in the country to avoid any leakage of any documentation of the military action against the protesters and hold a clip on the nation’s blogger informants. The military had previously cracked down on protesters in 1988 when thousands were killed. They are still defiant again despite increasing international pressure including from its strongest ally, China. If they continue their defiance at this stage, will they have the guts to annihilate more than 10,000 people at one go? Will the international community, again, just watch and contribute to the rhetoric of diplomatic scolding and spanking (economic sanction) of this country? It’s everybody’s guess and I hope that the video clip at Missima News will be the last image of that kind that I will see from Yangon.

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Journalism Life Musings Myanmar News Politics

Burma in crisis

As I’m writing this, a colleague of mine is still in Yangon (Rangoon). He called yesterday to assure us that he’s fine. Well, we all know of the news about this poor country. What followed was unprecedented. To think that all the monks wanted was just an apology. Things got worse today.

My colleague is having second thoughts of leaving Yangon. He has an obligation to finish his study here in Perth but he would be leaving his family behind with his country deteriorating day after day. He’s arriving tomorrow… maybe.

To find out more about the Burma crisis click here.

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Crime Musings News Philippines Politics Weblog

Family and politics

A special report by GMANews.TV on political clans and pork barrel caught my eye last month. The Philippines is said to have good laws against corruption including nepotism however, it seems the Filipinos have not learned in the past when only the few controlled the government.

According to this report, at least nine families have access to at least PhP1 billion of pork barrel funds–a source of corruption as this kind of fund does not usually undergo scrutiny under the Commission on Audit. Now, do you still wonder why election, more specifically politics is a BIG THING in the Philippines. People literally kill to get their hands on various political posts.

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Australia Autobiography Life Musings News Politics Weblog

Australia becoming more Asian — census

That’s exactly what the headline says on Inquirer.net. So, what’s the buzz surrounding this issue? My first thought was that they are afraid, they are very, very afraid. Why? Well, another race is overtaking true-blue Australians.

Forgive my ranting but I’m speaking from experience as a random victim of a “sporadic” racism in beautiful Australia back in 2004. While some might consider the cases that I’ve been through as mere coincidence or as nothing serious, it made me think twice whenever I walk the streets of the very quaint and peaceful Newcastle, Australia.

First case. It happened during my first quarter as a student in this developed country. I checked the mail as I usually do and one flyer caught my eye. It was from a certain political group. The flyer was full of Asian bashing arguements like Asians are taking over our jobs, Asians cannot assimilate in Australian culture among others.

The flyer was distributed at every house in our suburb. The following night, stones were raining on our house that we had to call the police for assistance. We saw some youth running away apparently from where the stones are coming from and identified the house where they sought refuge.

We saw the perpetrators but no arrests were made as the parents of the teenagers claimed that they were fast asleep inside the house during the supposed time of attack. We believe we were targetted as we were the most vulnerable Asian in the neighborhood–our house is in a street corner.

I wrote a number of authorities and attached the flyer that I saw and reported our experience. Among those I wrote was Prime Minister John Howard, the secretary of foreign affairs, University officials including Australian Embassy staff in the Philippines. No action was taken as they deemed it as a simple case of random mischief.

Second case. Simple to others but it was a big deal to me as I was shaken a bit–a group of youth on a car followed me and shouted “go home asian!!” which I did, I went home (to our house, which was nearby anyway). 🙂

This experience had shaken me and I just tried to shurg it off after my first experience in the first case. I was warned that I’ll be treated like that someday anyway.

Amazing how some people can be intolerant of others and they ask why there’s murder, rape and terrorism. Or I’m just being too sensitive??? I might be. enough said.

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Journalism News Politics War

Retired Fil-Am General claims Bush knew about Abu Ghraib

The Fact is… we violated the tenets of the Geneva Convention. We violated our own principles and we violated the core of our military values

Photo by EPA (Source: aljazeera.net/english)

As the US forces starts a fresh campaign against insurgents in Iraq, the ghost of Abu Ghraib prison scandal continued to haunt Bush’s war on terror. The scandal was opened up again after the New Yorker magazine reporter Seymour M. Hersh interviewed Retired Major-General Antonio Taguba about his report on the alleged tortures and abuses at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq revealing fresh information and implying that top officials knew about the tortures and abuses, Al Jazeera reported.

The White House has denied that President George W. Bush knew about the Abu Ghraib tortures as implicated by Retired Major-General Taguba. Retired Major-General Taguba also alleged that then Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld had access to the photos of the alleged torture and abuses but might had refused to see it. Rumsfeld denied having knowledge of the photos and alleged that he only knew about the incident through the media.

Eleven prison guards were subsequently convicted for abusing and torturing Abu Ghraib prisoners, some of whom were beaten to death. Al-Jazeera also reported that Retired Major-General Taguba revealed previously undisclosed information:

Taguba spoke of other, undisclosed material, including descriptions of the sexual humiliation of a father with his son, who were both detainees and “a video of a male American soldier in uniform sodomising a female detainee” that was never made public or mentioned in any court.

Retired Major-General Taguba apparently received a warning from a general that he will be investigated for his report. Nearly three years after the report leaked to the public, the Filipino-American was asked to retire last January 2007 without any reason.

He (Taguba) said he was “ostracised for doing what I was asked to do”.

Related Links:

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Journalism News Politics Thailand

Human Rights Commission see Thai Judiciary as “real loser”

The Asian Human Rights Commission called the recent development in Thailand a loss to the Thai Judiciary as Thailand’s senior judges participated in a farce [proceeding] that was not of their making. They claim that the judgement has been made well before the 19 September 2006 coup. It has warned that it has tarnished Thailand’s judicial institutions, with far-reaching consequences. 

The Hong Kong-based group explained that the judiciary was trying to uphold a democratically established rule based on the authority they’ve received from unelected and antidemocratic military regime. It contend that it should have not taken the case in the first place. 

The regional non-governmental organization has likened the case to the United States Supreme Court’s action to decide on the legal winner of the US 2001 Presidential election. The US court, then, was aware that they should have not taken the case as it has put the integrity of the impartiality of the judiciary to test.

The AHRC quoted the US Supreme court decision: 

The endorsement of that position by the majority of this Court can only lend credence to the most cynical appraisal of the work of judges throughout the land. It is confidence in the men and women who administer the judicial system that is the true backbone of the rule of law. Time will one day heal the wound to that confidence that will be inflicted by today’s decision. One thing, however, is certain. Although we may never know with complete certainty the identity of the winner of this year’s Presidential election, the identity of the loser is perfectly clear. It is the Nation’s confidence in the judge as an impartial guardian of the rule of law.

The AHRC said that the current development is very clear with Thailand today as the judiciary seemed to be wielding a Damocles’ sword and unwittingly justifying an unjustified regime. 

By appointing a new tribunal in the stead of the Constitutional Court and setting it upon the former ruling party, the coup group cynically called upon the tribunal members not only to endorse the army’s displacement of the preceding political order, but also its attack on a nascent legal order that may in time have posed a threat to its interests. By complying, the judges have wounded their own authority and greatly risked lasting damage to public confidence in their integrity. Whether or not time will one day heal the wounds in Thailand remains to be seen, but as in the United States seven years earlier today the identity of the real loser is perfectly clear.

Related link: Full statement by the Asian Human Rights Commission

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Journalism Life News Politics Quotations Thailand

Assassin speaks out

The Muslim insurgency in Southern Thailand has initially been fought because of the desire of most Muslim to gain independence from Thailand. Along the way, Thailand implied that Malaysia is supporting the Muslim insurgents, which it denied. Malaysia has since tried to broker talks between various Muslim groups and the Thai government to come up with a peaceful resolution to the conflict.

The recent conflict started in 2001 and recently no group has ever claimed responsibility on the sporadic attacks on Muslim and Buddhist civilians and military in the South, which have become deadlier than previous ones. Thailand is faced with a hard nut to crack as opposed to the Philippine Muslim Insurgency where there is a defined group with a definite purpose.

Many people have contributed their two cents analysis as to the roots of the Muslim insurgency in Southern Thailand but the attacks have continued and with no signs of stopping–as to what purpose, nobody still has any idea. However, these incidences have succeeded in dividing public opinion in Southern Thailand, sometimes pitting Buddhist against Muslim (one incident when Muslim suspects were arrested).

Here’s a rare look at the mind of a confessed Thai Muslim militant, who was recently arrested.

ASSASSIN SPEAKS OUT

Inspired by Mideast jihadists, local militants add beheadings to arsenal

Story by AMBIKA AHUJA (From the Bangkok Post, printed last 4 June 2007, page 1)

It took two days for the young Muslim assassin to calm his nerves before the slaying. Then, Mohama Waekaji says, he walked to a rice mill, carrying a knife and following orders from a guerrilla commander to behead the 72-yearold Buddhist owner.

He asked the elderly man, Juan Kaewtongprakam, for some rice husks. As he turned to collect them, Mr Mohama says, he slashed the blade through the man?s neck.

“I didn’t dare to disobey,” the 23-year-old said in an interview with the Associated Press the first time a Thai militant accused of a beheading is thought to have spoken to the Western media. “I knew they would come after me if I did not do what I was told.”

The killing in February was one in a spate of beheadings in Thailand that has fuelled fears that the brutal terrorist tactics of the Middle East are spreading in Asia.

Twenty-five beheadings ‘including 10 already this year’ have been reported in the South since an Islamic-inspired insurgency erupted in 2004.

“Beheadings are certainly on the rise outside of the Middle East proper,” said Timothy Furnish, professor of Middle Eastern history at Georgia Perimeter College. “These groups do take their cues from … hardcore Islamic thought coming out of the Arab world. Beheading infidels not only shocks, but also demonstrates Islamic bona fides to other groups.”

The authorities say jihad videos from the Middle East, captured from rebel training camps, may be inspiring young men like Mr Mohama. One clip said to have come from Iraq shows a woman lying on her side on a patch of grass as a man slowly cuts her throat with a knife. Blood spurts from the wound, the screaming finally stops and her head is completely severed.

“The inspiration is clearly coming across the internet or through DVD clips,” said Zachary Abuza, an expert on terrorism in Southeast Asia at Simmons College in Boston. “Islamist militants in Southeast Asia are frustrated that the region is considered the Islamic periphery.”

“Militants of the region are actively trying to pull the region into the Islamic core. They want people to understand that their jihad is a part of the global jihad.”

Mr Mohama’s account of his journey ‘from a quiet, average student to a confessed killer’ offers insights into how young Muslims fall under the influence of militant Islam.

He was attending a private Islamic school in Pattani when a school friend persuaded him to join a religious event at a mosque. There, “ustad,” or teachers, told him about an organisation to liberate southern Thailand, asking him to take an oath to become a servant of Allah, obey the teachers and take the secrets of the organisation to his grave.

Although confused and with little knowledge of politics, he took the oath and began secret training at age 19. His teachers stressed the sufferings of Palestinian Muslims and those in Afghanistan and Thailand, where many Muslims feel they are secondclass citizens in a Buddhist-dominated land.

The teachers talked about the Tak Bai tragedy of 2004 when security forces confronted Muslim protesters, resulting in the deaths of 85.

“I was shaken when I heard the story. I did hate them, those who did this to us Muslims,” Mr Mohama said at the prison in Pattani’s tambon Na Pradu.

During rigorous training, he learned how to do knuckle push-ups, wield knives, swords and guns and how to take a life by squeezing an opponent?s Adam?s apple with his hands or breaking a victim’s neck.

After two years, he was sent out to burn tyres and spread nails on roads to puncture tyres and distract police before attacks staged by his comrades.

“They recruit responsible, tightlipped and trouble-free teenagers … people who can carry out orders and who don’t attract attention to themselves,?? said Col Shinawat Mandej. When the order came to slay the mill owner ‘a person he had seen but didn’t know’ Mr Mohama said he was frightened, both by the orders and what his leaders would do to him if he failed.

Police found the man?s headless body at the rice mill and his head in a nearby field. Mr Mohama was arrested and charged with the killing two months later.

“It was too late to want out,” he said, his eyes closed and his head downcast. “It was either me or him.”

Mga Kategoriya
Life Musings Politics Thailand Weblog

Jittery times in Thailand


The September coup last year resulted in the scrapping of Thailand’s 1997 constitution. The move was in response to the alleged abuses of the former prime minister by capitalizing on the various loopholes of the constitution for his wealth gains. A new constitution is being drafted by a military appointed committee. Elections were promised in December 2007. 

Thailand is considered as one of the last bastions of democracy here in the Greater Mekong Subregion being the only country with a democratically elected government until the coup. Now most of the GMS countries are under military rule from Burma, Lao PDR, Cambodia and Vietnam. The latter three are not technically ruled by the military but are socialist/communist governments.

Early this evening, I was surprised to see the king of Thailand speaking on TV. He seldom do that unless there’s a very significant event in Thailand. So I waited for the news.

Indeed, he did said something on the state of Thailand. He wasn’t happy at the course Thailand is going. However, news in Thailand showed a different angle of the news while still having the worst case scenario warning.

The political parties here in Thailand are being prosecuted after alleged fraud in the April 2006 election. The said election was boycotted by most parties and eventually was won by the former minister’s party, the Thai Rak Thai (Thai Loves Thai) Party. The election was later nullified after probable evidence of fraud (fielding ghost candidates to avoid failure of election since the opposition was boycotting it).

Individual judges are expected to issue their opinion on the case on 29 May and the constitutional tribunal will meet to hand a verdict on 30 May.

Next week is a critical time–the judgement, the absence of the prime minister (for an official trip) and the expected rallies in support of TRT party and the opposition Democrat Party. To make matters worse, rumours of elephants joining the rallies are persisting (I’m not kidding). Previous rallies by monks were marked with the involvement of these giant pachyderms, which caused traffic and confusion (and posed danger to the public).

If the two parties are convicted, they will be dissolved with senior party officials forbidden to run for office for five years. The military has promised an election come December 2007 but if the parties are dissolved and prominent politicians are excluded in the election, the coming election might as well be a staged one and not a true, fair and free election.

Most people here are growing uneasy with the military’s seemingly tight hold on power. As of now, let’s wait and hope for the best for this country.

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Humor Journalism Life Musings Philippines Politics

Pacquiao loses to rival and a few million pesos

Filipino boxing champ Manny Pacquiao’s decision (to agree to the prodding of Pres. Arroyo) to join the congressional race proved to be a wrong move for Pacman. He was reportedly ‘sad,’ ‘depressed’ over poll results and was also reported to have lost some cash. Aggravating the situation is the circulating manipulated photo that went around as soon as the results became apparently clear.

Poor Pac-Man, he should have stuck to holding his gloves rather than trying to put on those dirty barong!

Pacquiao after the elections

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Journalism Musings Politics

World Bank President won’t leave without a bang

This hasn’t hugged the headlines in Southeast Asia and not much in the Americas but the significance of the news is the institution involved–the World Bank.

The saga started when World Bank President Paul Wolfowitz unwittingly gave her girlfriend a pay raise. The raise was too much that it made a number of staff and even outsiders howl in disgust. We’re talking about US$194,000 annual salary–tax free! This is roughly US$16,166.67 a month–how sweet is that?!

Wolfowitz came on board World Bank on a rough start. Being one of Iraq War’s acknowledged architects, his nomination was not welcomed, as usual by most developing world. His girlfriend, Shaha Riza, worked at the bank before Wolfowitz’s appointment in 2005. As a communications adviser in the bank’s Middle East department, she was earning close to US$133,000. She was transferred to the State Department to avoid a conflict of interest but remained on the bank’s payroll.

Wolfowitz insisted that the Bank ethics committee knew all about the details about his action on her girlfriend’s pay raise and acted in good faith. In good faith, he acted to increase Ms Riza’s salary to US$180,000 then finally to US$193,590–tax free.

The bank ethics committee, however, is acting on a whistleblower’s complaint on Wolfowitz ethical lapses with one identifying Riza’s pay raise. Wolfowitz insisted that the ethics committee knew of the pay raise (so, as to who’s saying the truth one will never know).

World Bank President Paul Wolfowitz. Photo from Aljazeera.net/english

The EU once supported Wolfowitz appointment but it is now one of the group strongly calling for his firing. Bush, as expected, threw his support behind his man but eventually said that the investigation should take its course

Still trying to fight for his job, Wolfowitz even threatened  the panel that his firing would be that bad, as in very bad, for the bank. He cited that policies he started and his campaign against corruption among others.

In the end, Wolfowitz saw that the only way out of the mess is OUT. So, he’s now trying to broker a deal with the bank for his graceful exit (well so he can dupe another organziation, company or country–maybe the UN might want to take him in?).

The World Bank has not come out always as a good guy ever since it was established and this recent development is not helping it in anyway. But I am aghast to know that Wofowitz won’t take this matter as is. If he’s coming down, others should also go down or take the blame. And now, he’s trying to negotiate a financial package for his departure??? I just can’t take how intelligent people like Wolfowitz could be so slyly witty to go around the system and still have his last laugh–I guess the package won’t be lower than US$500,000?? enough said. grrrrrrr.

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