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Showing posts with label Global News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Global News. Show all posts

Independent candidates test China's election experiment

Written By WN2D on Sep 23, 2011 | 4:43 PM



Beijing -- Elections are underway in China. Not for the country's presidency but for "Renmin Daibiao," or the National People's Representatives Congress.

Over the next few months, electorates in townships and urban districts all over the country will elect delegates to their local People's Congress, the lowest level of China's multi-tiered parliamentary system.

Conducted every five years, this is the only time citizens can directly vote for their legislators.

On paper, anyone can seek a seat by collecting signatures of at least 10 constituents.

But in China's tightly-controlled political system, all candidates are closely vetted by Communist Party officials. Elections are carefully choreographed.

Still, there are more than 100 people who have come forward as independent candidates.

Among them is Li Chengpeng, who has declared his candidacy on Weibo, China's version of Twitter.

A popular writer and social commentator, Li boasts of more than three million Weibo followers.

"With so many people following me, my name is ranked very high (on Weibo) and through my postings people can better understand my proposals," Li told CNN.

A native of Chengdu in Sichuan province, Li proposes bread-and-butter solutions for his constituents: how to improve use of school buses so pupils can avoid traffic jams; how to help university graduates find jobs and how to ensure prompt medical care for senior citizens.
"My purpose of running in the election is not to rebel or overthrow the government," he said. "That will be too naïve."

To avoid trouble with the police, Li said he will turn down any offers of financial donations and will avoid organizing street demonstrations.

The charismatic writer says most of his friends support him, but his wife remains worried and does not understand why he wishes to run.

"She thinks that we already enjoy a relatively good life—houses, cars, a lovely son," he explained. "She lives by the philosophy that we need not seek a pear tree since we already sit under the apple tree. But my view is, why not?

"There is so much injustice in China."

According to Li Fan, a long-time observer of grassroots elections in China, "it is the conflict that is driving so many activists and lawyers to run in these elections.

"Many people think they can make their voices heard and supervise the government by being candidates."

But the emergence of independent candidates is unsettling for Beijing officials.

Last June, an unnamed official of the National People's Congress, the top-level legislature, told state-run Xinhua that running as an independent had "no legal basis."

Few, if any, of these independent candidates are expected to get elected.

"Some of the 100 or so independent candidates have been intimidated by local officials, six have pulled out, which shows that the elections have not been going well so far," said Li Fan, who runs the World and China Institute, a think-tank in Beijing.

Nevertheless, political analysts say their participation is encouraging. "It shows that a civil society is taking root in China, although gradually," explained Wenran Jiang, political science professor at the University of Alberta in Canada.

"More people are asserting their constitutional rights rather than just living in the current situation largely dominated by the Communist Party."

Every election in China, he says, is an experiment and a glacial process.

China has been holding similar grassroots elections for years.

I remember observing one in 1980, when I was a senior at Peking University. For days, I joined campaign rallies on campus organized by student leaders who sought seats as deputies to a local legislature.

Inside a packed hall, we listened to impassioned speeches and Q&A sessions featuring candidates who extemporaneously answered questions from the audience. They debated on current affairs and national issues, akin to campaign debates in the United States and other countries.

But such political activism has caused jitters in the Chinese leadership. Over the years, experts say, Chinese leaders have tried to exclude independent candidates from local elections -- with much success.

Still, grassroots elections go on because they serve as a social safety-valve. Wenfang Tang, political science professor at Ohio University, noted that Beijing is now caught in a bind between keeping its political monopoly and coping with increasing public demand for political participation.

"The Chinese leaders know very well that people need to vent their dissatisfaction," he said. "It's certainly better to allow people to participate in elections than in protests."

In recent months, China has seen a spate of local disturbances in different regions of the country, including mass protests against land grabs, environmental pollution, and abusive behavior of officials and their children.

Last August, thousands of residents in the northeastern city of Dalian demonstrated against the building of the Fujia chemical plant to air their environmental and health concerns. The city government ordered the suspension of its construction.

Analysts say grassroots elections, even if faulty, are necessary baby steps that could allow public participation and preempt violent social unrest.

If allowed to evolve, Wenran Jiang opined, "China may well move in the direction of democracy with Chinese characteristics. If in one or two generations China can get where Singapore is today, that will be significant progress."

Independent candidate Li Chengpeng is philosophical about his seemingly quixotic quest.

"Even if only one of us gets elected, that's progress."

Source : CNN
4:43 PM | 0 komentar | Read More

Analysis: Battle for Libya not quite over

Written By WN2D on Sep 4, 2011 | 1:26 PM

Ten days ago the vanguard of rebel forces streamed into the Libyan capital. Moammar Gadhafi's forces put up virtually no resistance, and it seemed that the end of Libya's six-month conflict was imminent.
The people of Tripoli could smell freedom; there was an anarchic euphoria about the city despite continuing gun battles.
Today the picture is less clear, and the future holds many questions. The joy at being liberated from Gadhafi's brutal and capricious rule is still unconfined, especially as residents celebrate the end of Ramadan.
Security in Tripoli has improved, but the humanitarian situation remains precarious, with water shortages especially a problem. The National Transitional Council's political leadership has not installed itself in any organized fashion as a government-in-waiting and there appears little command and control over the disparate groups of fighters consolidating their hold on Tripoli.


There also seems to be an emerging dispute within the NTC over who administers Libya's enormous sovereign wealth fund, while relations with neighboring Algeria are not exactly stellar.

Water and Basics

Much of Tripoli's water comes to the capital through a 1,700-kilometer pipeline from an aquifer deep in the Sahara desert, an area that is apparently still under the control of pro-Gadhafi forces. Basically, they have sabotaged the flow. The massive holding tanks to the south of Tripoli are said to be virtually empty, and 60% of the city's residents are without main water. Many have to rely on bottled or trucked water; others are using wells.
The United Nations Secretary General, Ban Ki-moon, said Tuesday that engineers were working to repair the pumping stations that bring in water from the desert, but it wasn't clear how long it would take to restore service. "The humanitarian situation in Libya demands urgent action," he said.
Supplies are beginning to arrive. The World Food Program sent in a convoy from Tunisia, carrying water, medical supplies and blood. The main road between the Tunisian border and Tripoli appears to be more secure, while the World Health Organization is sending 45 tonnes of medical supplies, as Tripoli's seaport is open again.
There are also other shortages -- especially of gasoline and cash. But the NTC is organizing tankers of fuel into the capital, and lines at gas stations (as well as prices) are now close to pre-war levels. CNN correspondents Wednesday reported that garbage collectors were out on the streets.
The cash shortages at banks should be eased with the decision by the U.N. sanctions committee to release $1.55 billion in Libyan assets that were being held in Britain.

Resistance

While resistance from Gadhafi forces has effectively ended in the capital, it continues elsewhere with fighting reported in some parts of the country, most notably Gadhafi's home town of Sirte, Sabha and points to the south.
The rebels have given pro-Gadhafi elements in Sirte, about 400 kilometers east of Tripoli, until Saturday to surrender or face attack. "Unfortunately, to preserve blood sometimes you have to shed blood," said the newly appointed deputy prime minister of the NTC, Ali Tarhouni. Sabha, deep in the desert, is an important junction leading to the Algerian and Chadian borders. Another pro-Gadhafi hold-out is Bani Walid, south of Misrata. Royal Air Force jets targeted three command and control buildings there on Monday.

NATO has acknowledged that resistance from Gadhafi forces is not over. "The pro-Gadhafi troops that we see are not in total disarray. They are retreating in an orderly fashion," said NATO spokesman Colonel Roland Lavoie Tuesday. Gadhafi had the ability "to exercise some level of control and command," he said.
On Wednesday, Saif al Islam Gadhafi, one of Gadhafi's sons still in hiding, broadcast a defiant message via a TV station in Syria. Gadhafi did not divulge the whereabouts of his father, but said, "The leader is fine. We are fighting and we are drinking tea and drinking coffee and sitting with our families and fighting." Saif said he was speaking from a suburb of Tripoli, but there was no way of independently confirming his whereabouts.
It is unclear whether the remnants of the pro-Gadhafi forces will reorganize underground and begin an Iraq-style insurgency, or whether they will just melt away. While there is no occupying power to focus on, tribal and sectarian rivalries in Libya run deep. 

NTC troubles

The rebel fighters don't exactly march in step. Different groups from different parts of the country patrol different parts of the capital. There is no overall command, despite the appointment of Abdel Hakimal-Hasadi to lead the Tripoli Military Council. Hasadi is also known as Abdelhakim Belhaj, a former jihadist who was an important figure in the militant Libyan Islamic Fighting Group. An effective military leader, Hasadi's past unsettles others in the loose rebel coalition.
Some fighters have reached Tripoli from Misrata in the east; while some have come from the mountains to the south-west. There was little co-ordination ahead of their arrival in Tripoli. The NTC leadership in Benghazi tried to exercise some influence over the rebels in the west, but never had direct control over their campaign.
Rifts within the NTC's military leadership were exposed in July with the murder of the overall commander, Fatah Abdel Younis. The NTC's investigation into his killing continues but has been shrouded in mystery; Younis' supporters say they want answers.
Some of the NTC's Executive Committee and other senior officials are now in Tripoli; others are still in Benghazi or Doha in Qatar. There are clearly disagreements and competition among them for influence. The Financial Times reported Wednesday that there was a tussle for control of Libya's $65 billion sovereign wealth fund, with two different officials named to take control of it. Tarhouni, who holds the Oil and Finance brief for the NTC, has promised more clarity in coming days.

Squabble with the neighbors

The escape to Algeria of Gadhafi's wife and two of his sons, along with their families, has deepened the mistrust between the NTC and Libya's powerful neighbor.
Algeria described the move as a humanitarian gesture, but it angered the NTC, with one official calling it "an aggressive act." The NTC has previously accused the Algerian government of supporting the Gadhafi regime; the Algerians have complained to the United Nations about damage done to their embassy soon after the rebels entered Tripoli.
NTC officials are trying to play down any differences with Algeria. Tarhouni told CNN Tuesday that relations with Algeria were good, and the Algerian authorities would not permit Moammar Gadhafi to cross the border.

Source : CNN
1:26 PM | 0 komentar | Read More

Motivation Behind Hitler slaughtered Jews

Written By WN2D on Jun 14, 2011 | 7:13 PM

Adolf Hitler
Often, nature, and the establishment of one's behavior is the result of past experience. Hitler's childhood was a rejected child, his father was hated and considered behavior "antisocial" is a curse because Aloes Hitler (Hitler's father) married his own niece.

Adi (Adolf Hitler's first name) was born on April 20, 1889 in a small town in Austria near the German border. His father was a hard in educating children is a good mother to him.
"I could have destroyed all the Jews in the world, but I leave a few were alive. That ye may know the reason why I killed them," said Hitler.

His mother was one of the few people who truly loved by Adolf. Her mother strongly believed that his son is a genius, and always consider their children to normal, although since childhood have been showing symptoms of destructive and antisocial.

Age 18 years; Adolf had become an orphan after his mother died while her father had died the previous advance. Childhood filled with hatred and 'abasement' from his father was giving a big hand in Hitler's mental and psychiatric adults.

There are things that we must understand that, never underestimate the "childhood grudge." Another example can we find the story of Mao Test Tung.

Small Mao had attended a school founded by missionaries from Europe, and therefore a matter of Mao Demakis by one of Father with invective that is racist "yellow dog!" And from then Mao was never returned to school.

Then become leaders communist China's largest, also become mass murderers, millions of intellectuals and artists have been killed and sentenced to hard labor in the Cultural Revolution of 1965. No less violent with Hitler, this is the danger of a childhood grudge, especially if it is experienced by a leader!
Hitler initially wanted to be an artist and not a soldier or a politician. As a lover of art, then he tried to sign into an art school in Vienna, Austria, but was rejected. This refusal has a big impact on him.

Frustrated, an orphan, no money, so he's for about a year become homeless, live from the mercy of others on the street. During that time, he also began to hate against Jews, immigrants who live more luxurious, and this is reinforced by hearing from the lectures that are "anti-Semitic" by the Mayor of Vienna, Karl Léger.
Léger theories that blame the economic and political chaos to the Jews inspired a hater of the Jews all his life.
This is also an ideological construct and considers the Aryans was the highest race. Many people say, if only he received in art school, maybe Hitler would only be an artist like Picasso for example, history may well be a different story.

Here lies the importance of one of Hitler; he changed the history (though the road is considered to be wrong.) The line of his life was like destiny that cannot be changed.

In 1914, Germany took part in World War 1 and Hitler in the military. As the war on the front lines, he was injured, sent home and get a medal for bravery. During the war, Hitler gradually became a patriot to Germany even though he himself was not a German citizen (he was born in Austria).

Therefore, when Germany lost the war, he could not accept the fact; because of Hitler, Germany was the strongest. He then blamed the "traitor" civilians, mainly Jews as the cause of Germany lost the war.
After losing the war ravaged Germany, his condition is very pathetic with the cities that were destroyed, high prices coupled with the arrival of communist revolutionary movements. Hitler himself remained silent on the military.

Hitler hated the people of various ideologies, including communism (Karl Marx was a Jew), socialist and liberal capitalist. Actually, Hitler's military career only to Corporal, you can imagine how great this guy, he became 'Army Commander' who feared throughout the world during World War 2.
Hitler Picture
In 1919, Hitler and then joined a small party called the German Workers Party and left his military career. Hitler managed to become a leader and eventually changed its name to the Nazi party. In 1920, Hitler and Swastika symbols published in 1921 the party was more solid with militia groups backed by the SA.

Here we can see one of Hitler's genius, organize and make a speech. If you've seen this documentary about Hitler, though did not understand the language, but anyone who saw it can feel intrigued and excited when I saw him making a speech.

When his followers shouted, raising his hand "Hail Hitler!" truly extraordinary! Whatever Hitler said is like a "Religion's order" that makes his followers into a super fanatic

Source : ApaKabarDunia.com
7:13 PM | 0 komentar | Read More