Monday, March 24, 2008
Expert: Lhasa riot reveals hypocritical features of Dalai clique
The Dalai clique always claim that they would resort to "peaceful" and "non-violent" means to solve problems, but the recent riots only proves these claims are hypocritical, Monday's Guangming Daily reported, quoting Chen Qingying, a researcher from Institute of History under the China Tibetology Research Center.
The coincidence of recent riots in Lhasa and other ethnic Tibetan areas has proved the existence of a plot by the supporters of the Dalai Lama -- to seek "Tibet independence" at all costs, said Chen who has compiled a 10-volume General History of Tibet with other scholars.
"To realize their political ambition, they would not scruple to resort to violence," Chen was quoted as saying.
The fact the Dalai Lama and his supporters chose to create turmoil in Tibet and other areas ahead of the Olympics and make innocent people victims of riots shows that their "peaceful" and "non-violent" means are merely lies, he said.
Source:Xinhua
Tibet: What’s behind the protests?
Author: PWW Editorial Board | People's Weekly World Newspaper, 03/20/08 13:38 |
As preparations pick up steam for this summer’s Beijing Olympics, the world has looked with growing dismay at the violence associated with protests seeking independence for Tibet.
While casualty figures are conflicting, it is tragic that deaths have occurred both among demonstrators for independence and among victims of violent protest actions that reportedly included torching of public buildings and homes in Tibet’s capital, Lhasa. It is urgent to end the loss of life.
The protesters acknowledge they are motivated by the publicity surrounding the Olympic Games. The head of the Tibetan Youth League, a major exile organization calling for independence, told the Chicago Tribune that with the spotlight on the Chinese, “We want to test them. We want them to show their true colors. That’s why we’re pushing this.”
The U.S. has consistently backed supporters of Tibet’s independence from China. Tellingly, the Voice of America — a notorious instigator of opposition in socialist countries during the cold war — said this week it is stepping up its broadcasts into Tibet.
Tibet, closely linked with China long before the 1949 revolution, has gained much, both economically and socially, from being an autonomous region within People’s China. While much remains to be done, the region has come from being an abysmally poor backwater to being an area where more and more people, both ethnic Tibetans and migrants from elsewhere in China, can access health care, education, and jobs in a modernizing economy.
Undoubtedly Tibetan culture could also use more support. But some western observers point out that over 90 percent of Tibetans speak Tibetan as their first language, and report that both Buddhism and the arts are doing well there.
The current situation should also be seen in the context of Washington’s longstanding campaign to break up socialist countries, including the USSR and Yugoslavia, with dire economic and social consequences for their populations. Most recently independence for Kosovo has held the spotlight.
A look at the bigger picture suggests it is important to end cross-border efforts to dismantle countries whose social policies Washington doesn’t like, as well as to end the loss of life in Lhasa.
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
"US-Russia anti-missile dispute" hard to settle
On March 10, US President George W. Bush and Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said that progress had been attained in their talks in the White House to allow the U.S. missile defense system to house in Poland. In return, the United States will help modernize Polish military as part of a U.S. plan to base components of the US anti-missile defense system in the country.
The U.S. and Poland began contacting secretly on the construction of an anti-missile system back in 2002. About five years later, in January 2007, the U.S. side proposed to resume its talks with Poland and the Czech Republic on the construction of the U.S. anti-missile system. It plans to install 10 missile intercepting facilities in Poland and to build a radar system in the Czech Republic.
Shortly after his assumption of office, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said he would move to improve ties with Moscow gradually and, whenever he made decision, he said, he would like to consult or have "dialogues" with Russia and other relevant nations. In his latest negotiations with the United States, his government asked the U.S. to help raise its air defense capacity. To be specific, Polish negotiators have asked the U.S. to provide Patriot 3 or THAAD missiles and listed 17 areas that the country could help modernize.
Russia, however, has been and remained in firm opposition to the deployment of the U.S. anti-missile defense system in Poland and the Czech Republic, and its officials have given harsh, strong remarks time and again regarding the issue. Under such circumstances, both Poland and the Czech Republic will inevitably come under criticism by both sides.
Moreover, recent polls in Poland show that 57 percent of Poles opposed hosing U.S. missile defense base, and the former Polish Prime Minister has been jilted or sacked by his voters precisely for the dispatch of Polish troops to Iraq and his endorsement of the deployment of the anti-missile system.
Currently, the U.S. is faced with a number of "hard nuts to crack" in helping to modernize the Polish military and it is particularly difficult to modernize its air defense system. Superficially at least, the two nations have scored substantial progress on the issue. President Bush assured Tusk that his administration would appraise the Polish needs for military modernization carefully and meticulously and work out a concrete viable plan.
Meanwhile, the White House spokesman said the US task was up to U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Defense Secretary Robert Gates to accomplish. Earlier, President George W. Bush and Czech Prime Minister Mirek Topolanek also referred to a "breakthrough" progress they had attained in their talks, namely, the two countries have now been nearing the completion of their final agreement. The suspending issues, however, are only secondary matters that cover environment protection and other topics in this regard, acknowledged Czech Prime Minister Mirek Topolanek.
To date, key stumbling blocks in negotiations have been removed, and the crux of matter, however, is to dissolve or do away with suspicions and opposition from Russia, the third party. The Russian side has never comprised or retreated despite the repeated assurance of President Bush, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk and Czech Prime Minster Mirek Topolanek that the U.S. anti-missile system was definitely not to direct against Russia. "The strategic missile troops will be capable of having these facilities (in Poland the Czech Republic) as targets and of having them destroyed if necessary, warned General Nikolai Solovstov, commander of Russia's mighty missile forces, recently.
Although such occurrences shall not occur ultimately, according to Russian media analysts. With components of the U.S. anti-missile system to be deployed in Poland and the Czech Republic, it is possible for the United States to launch another, or a new round of arms race, which is hazardous to peace in the region and around the world. Consequently, it seems that the "US-Russia anti-missile dispute" will not lull and is unlikely to be settled shortly.
By Li Xuejiang, top "People's Daily" resident reporter in the U.S. and translated by PD online
President Hu: enhancing national defense for world peace
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Chinese President Hu Jintao (C), who is also general secretary of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee and chairman of the Central Military Commission, talks to the deputies of the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) to the First Session of the 11th National People's Congress (NPC) in Beijing, capital of China, March 10, 2008. Hu Jintao attended the plenary meeting of the PLA delegation and made a speech on Monday. Chinese President Hu Jintao on Monday called for redoubled efforts to step up defense and army building to guarantee national security and make greater contribution to world peace. Hu made the remarks when he attended a meeting of the delegation of the People's Liberation Army to the ongoing annual session of the National People's Congress, or China's parliament. "We must intensify our effort to strengthen national defense and step up army building while going all out for economic, political, cultural and social development, so as to support and guarantee the progress of socialism with Chinese characteristics and make greater contribution to world peace," said Hu, also chairman of the Central Military Commission. The modernization of the armed forces should be aimed at combat readiness, and military training should be conditioned to the age of information technologies, he said. Chinese President Hu Jintao, who is also general secretary of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee and chairman of the Central Military Commission, talks to the deputies of the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) to the First Session of the 11th National People's Congress (NPC) in Beijing, capital of China, March 10, 2008. Hu Jintao attended the plenary meeting of the PLA delegation and made a speech on Monday. "We must aim at improving the capability to win high-tech regional wars and keep enhancing the ability of the military to respond to security threats and accomplish a diverse array of military tasks," the president said. While describing reform and innovation as strong impetus to national defense and army building, Hu underscored the policy of upholding coordinated development of the economy and national defense. "We should step up the establishment and improvement of the research and production system for weapons and dual-use equipment, the education system for military personnel training and the military logistics system, promoting defense and military modernization based on the achievements of China's economic and social development," the president said. Source: Xinhua |
More than three million benefit from Cuban literacy method
THOUSANDS of illiterate people in many different countries are learning how to read and write using the "Yes I Can Do It" method, which has already benefited more than three million people in 28 countries, education leaders noted.
During a press conference in Havana, Luis Ignacio Gómez, Cuban education minister, highlighted the island’s contribution in response to the humanitarian call to eradicate world illiteracy as part of the battle for social justice and human emancipation.
The Cuban project aims to help eradicate illiteracy in the world, where there are more than 774 million illiterate people, 72 million children without schools and a shortage of 30 million teachers, said Gómez. He added that many countries are interested in applying the Cuban method.
The minister reiterated that Cuba is to be the venue of the Ibero-American Congress for Literacy in Basic Education of Young People and Adults, which constitutes an acknowledgement of the island’s contribution.
The forum is to take place in Havana’s International Conference Center from June 9-12, sponsored by the Cuban Ministry of Education, the Organization of Ibero-American States for Education, Science and Culture and the Ibero-American General Secretariat.
Translated by Granma InternationalOver 152 billion VND raised for Agent Orange victims
The Agent Orange (AO) Fund of the Viet Nam Red Cross Society has over the past nine years raised more than 152 billion VND (9.5 million USD) to support AO victims throughout the country.
A portion of the funds was doled out to provide 425,000 beneficiaries with micro-business start up capital, health care services, corrective surgery, wheelchairs, vocational training, allowances and scholarships, said Tran Duc Phan, managing director of the fund, at a press briefing in Ha Noi on August 9.
From 2002-2005, the government allocated close to 9 billion VND (roughly 562,000 USD) for surgeries and rehabilitation treatment for AO victims in the southwestern province of Tay Ninh and the Central Highlands, Phan said, adding that the figure will rise to 16.3 billion VND between the 2006-2010 period.
He added that many foreign organisations have played an important role in delivering services to the suffers. They include the Ford Foundation, the Norwegian Agency for Cooperation and Development, the Belgium-Viet Nam Friendship Association, the US Fund for Reconciliation and Development, and Red Cross Societies from the US, Norway, Germany, Denmark, the UK and Spain.
Phan said the Viet Nam Red Cross Society is also organising a photo and writing contest to depict the lives of those affected with various related diseases from AO to mark this year’s Day of AO Victims, which falls on August 10.
China's foreign trade grows 23% January to February
Of the total, exports account for 196.99 billion USD with a growth of 16.8%. The growth rate is 24.7% less than the same period last year. Imports account for 168.94 billion USD with a growth of 30.9%. The growth rate is 10.3% faster than the same period last year. The total trade surplus has decreased by 29.2% to 28.05 billion USD. In February, the trade surplus fell to 8.56 billion USD – 15.2 billion USD less than the same period last year.
The statistics from China Customs shows that China's imports are increasing rapidly this year, especially those of state-run enterprises. In the first two months of this year, total imports and exports of foreign-funded enterprises was 204.52 billion USD, growing by 18.8%; while total imports and exports of state-run enterprises reached 89.05 billion USD, growing by 28.7%. The growth rate is 6.5% more than the same period last year.
In the first two months, the European Union was China's largest trade partner with the amount of bilateral trade totaling 61.16 billion USD, growing by 19.9%; the USA was its second largest trade partner with a total of 47.76 billion USD in bilateral trade, growing by 9%; and Japan was the third largest, with a total of 38.48 billion USD in bilateral trade, growing by 15.1%.
By People's Daily Online
Highlights: China launches sweeping institutional restructuring of gov't
Chinese lawmakers will on Tuesday afternoon deliberate a State Council proposal for institutional restructuring of the government, which involves the installation of "super ministries" on energy, transportation, industries and environment protection.
State Councilor Hua Jianmin, also Secretary General of the cabinet, is to make an explanation on the plan at the First Session of the 11th National People's Congress (NPC).
Following are the highlights of his report distributed to journalists before the meeting:
SUPER MINISTRIES
The target for this round of government reshuffle is to explore a "super ministry" system to streamline government department functions, and to form some "bigger departments" to strengthen macro-economic regulation, maintain national security of energy supply, integrate information development and industrialization.
It is also aimed at streamlining the country's transportation system by setting up the ministry of transport to annex civil aviation and postal services, and urban public transportation management of the Ministry of Construction.
The State Environmental Protection Administration will be elevated to be ministry of environment protection, and the Ministry of Health empowered with the function to oversee food and drug safety.
The State Council will have 27 ministries and commissions apart from the General Office after the reshuffle, compared with the present 28.
MACRO-REGULATION
To form a scientific, authoritative and effective macro-regulation system by reasonably rearranging government functions for macro-regulating departments,
-- The National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) will focus on macro-regulation and fade out from involvement in micromanagement of the economy and reduce its examination and approvals of specific projects.
-- The Ministry of Finance shall reform and improve its management over budget and taxation. The People's Bank of China shall strengthen the system of monetary policies, and improve the mechanism of exchange rate formation.
Source: Xinhua
China to set up five new "super ministries"
China will set up five new "super ministries" in the current round of government institutional restructuring, and a plan for the reshuffle will be submitted to the National People's Congress (NPC), or parliament, for deliberation on Tuesday afternoon.
According to the plan, which was distributed to journalists before the parliament meeting, the five new "super ministries" are the ministry of industry and information, the ministry of human resources and social security, the ministry of environmental protection, the ministry of housing and urban-rural construction, and the ministry of transport.
State Councilor Hua Jianmin, also secretary general of the Cabinet, will make explanations of the plan to the NPC, China's top legislature.
Hua lists the reasons for the government reshuffle as follows:
-- The functions of government have not been completely transformed, and the intervention in micro economy is still more than needed. Public administration and public services are still weak.
-- Structure of government institutions is not rational enough. The problems including overlapping responsibilities, powers and responsibilities being not well matched and low efficiency are quite serious.
-- Powers in some regards were too concentrated and lack due oversight and checks. The phenomena of misuse of authority, abusing power for personal gains and corruption still exist.
Source: Xinhua
China announces overhaul of energy agencies, management
China on Tuesday announced an integration of its energy management supervision and policies, functions that are currently dispersed among many government agencies, through the establishment of a high-level consultation and coordination commission.
The commission, called the national energy commission, will be responsible for studying and drafting an energy development strategy and considering energy security and development issues, Hua Jianmin, State Council secretary-general, said at the annual session of China's top legislature.
Accordingly, a national energy bureau under the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) will be established as a standing body to undertake the new energy commission's day-to-day work.
Energy-related institutions and functions belonging to the NDRC, the entire National Energy Leading Group (NELG), and the nuclear power management of the Commission of Science, Technology and Industry for National Defense would be integrated into the energy bureau, Hua said.
The bureau would draw up and implement energy industry programs, policies and standards, promote new and alternative forms of energy and encourage conservation.
The bureau would be supervised by the NDRC to ensure the close coordination of energy management with national economic and social development programs and macro-control policies, Hua said.
The NELG and its executive organs would be disbanded, he added.
The restructuring plan was based on China's rapid economic expansion, growing energy demand, pressing desire for safe energy supply and better energy management, said Feng Fei, director of the Industry Department of the Development Research Center of the State Council.
Energy strategy shall be put in a more important position, but the current energy management pattern cannot keep up with the changing situation, he added.
The integration of the energy sector has been mulled by the central government in recent years. In 2007, the country's imports of crude oil hit 159.28 million tons, rising 14.7 year-on-year and contributing 46 percent to the total crude consumption.
The combination of a sizzling economy, soaring investment growth in the heavy industrial sector and cars crowding urban streets have driven up China's demand for oil.
Meanwhile, government-controlled oil prices in the domestic market, which doesn't cover the international crude cost, were blamed for a shortfall of oil supply. Some refineries stop processing crude to avoid losses while some producers and dealers hoard oil in anticipation of possible price rises.
Ye Rongsi, an expert with the NELG who has been engaged in the drafting of a new energy law, said how to promote the reform of the energy pricing mechanism was one of the problems challenging the energy sector.
Other problems included the introduction of various property ownerships, an incomplete legal system, an unreasonable energy structure far from satisfying both sound and fast economic development, and heavy tasks in cutting emissions and coping with climate change, he said.
"These all need an integrated and authoritative organization to unify the management and promote reforms."
Since the energy ministry was dismissed in 1993, China has seen an absence of an authoritative department responsible for enacting uniform energy policies and programs. In 2005, the NELG was set up to help integrate the planning of the energy sector.
Source: Xinhua
Calls grow for Israel-Hamas truce
Author: Susan Webb | People's Weekly World Newspaper, 03/05/08 16:31 |
Calls grow for Israel-Hamas truce
By Susan Webb
Calls are mounting for an end to the Israeli bombardment and lockdown of Gaza and for Israel-Hamas talks to end their armed confrontation. Egypt and other countries were reported to be working behind the scenes for an agreement that would end the violence and also provide some immediate relief for the besieged people of Gaza by reopening its border with Egypt.
Ori Nir, a spokesperson for Americans for Peace Now, said such steps are essential to a longer-term solution. “If the chief objective is to go on with the peace process, then an approach of escalation, isolation, belligerence, does not serve that goal,” he told the World. Americans should put pressure on the U.S. government to “lead, or at least not hinder,” efforts by third parties to resolve this crisis, he said.
Hussein Ibish, senior fellow with the American Task Force on Palestine, said diplomacy to end the armed conflict is urgent. In addition, opening Gaza’s border with Egypt is a “realistic, practical step” that should be pushed for, he said. “You can’t have people corked in a giant prison.”
The only real way to do it, Ibish said, is for Egypt and the Palestinian Authority to take over control of the crossings with observers from the European Union, and even perhaps the U.S. Hamas doesn’t want this, “but it’s the only realistic prospect,” he said, suggesting that Hamas will find it untenable to put its own political interests ahead of the people’s needs.
Israel’s ground offensive in northern Gaza last week left 117 Palestinians dead, half of them civilians including 22 children. Two Israeli soldiers were killed in the action.
Physicians for Human Rights-Israel said the offensive had created a health crisis in Gaza, with hospitals “finding it almost impossible to function due to massive overload of injured people continuing to arrive for admission.”
Israel said it launched the assault in response to escalated and longer-range rocket fire from Gaza that killed one Israeli civilian and wounded others.
However, the Israeli attacks on densely populated Gaza communities drew wide criticism. UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon assailed the "disproportionate and
excessive use of force.”
Israel pulled its ground troops out days later, but has continued air and rocket attacks.
A coalition of Israeli and Palestinian groups said the suffering inflicted on civilians in Gaza “did not and cannot” solve the problem of rocket attacks on Israeli towns, and called for a ceasefire and an end to Israel’s military and economic siege on Gaza.
Even those supporting the Israeli government questioned its military actions, which have failed to stop the Hamas rockets.
According to the Jerusalem Post, recent polls show roughly two-thirds of Israel’s public supports truce talks, and a growing number of leaders say the government will have to try to talk with Hamas to work out a ceasefire. The Post quotes Education Minister Yuli Tamir saying, "Given the terrible situation, and given the fact that we don't have a perfect option that can guarantee quiet in the south, we should try such a move."
Nir, who grew up in Israel, said the mood on the Israeli street is “do whatever works” to end the crisis. Most understand that wiping out Hamas and reoccupying Gaza would come at a very high cost. “There’s a growing realization that this is just not possible,” he said, thus the feeling is, “we have to try dealing with Hamas somehow.”
The Jerusalem Post reported that despite proclamations of victory, Hamas leaders indicated readiness for a truce. Hamas official Mahmoud Zahar told reporters his organization has been in touch with a third party to discuss a ceasefire.
Among the Palestinian victims in Gaza last week were two sisters, ages 13 and 18, killed when an Israeli shell hit their home, the Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported.
Their uncle told the reporter, "There are no gunmen here. We wouldn't let them near. There are more than 20 children here. We don't want trouble and don't like it, but why did they shoot at us? What did we do to deserve this?"
The girls’ father used to work across the border in Israel. "Plasterer. That was my profession by you,” he said. “I always thought you wanted peace, but what did you do? What did you do? You slaughtered my two girls.”
Nir said he thinks many Israelis are using a “defense mechanism,” a kind of denial, “in order not to face the facts” that so many civilians are being killed.
Ibish called it a grim situation, with slim possibilities for immediate improvement. Nevertheless, he noted that in the U.S. Congress there is “a growing understanding, among those who support Israel, that this doesn’t really benefit Israel.” He believes that the prospects for Palestinian statehood in the next five to 10 years may be greater now than in the past 50 years. “The reason is, it’s in everyone’s interests.”
suewebb@pww.org
True costs of war
Author: PWW Editorial Board | People's Weekly World Newspaper, 03/05/08 16:34 |
Just in time for the fifth anniversary of the U.S. invasion of Iraq, a new book by economists Joseph Stiglitz and Linda Bilmes attempts to project the real cost of the war. “The Three Trillion Dollar War: The True Cost of the Iraq Conflict” was published Feb. 29.
Stiglitz, a Nobel Prize-winning former World Bank chief economist, and Bilmes, a Harvard University economist, recently wrote in The Times of London, “A $3 trillion figure for the total cost strikes us as judicious, and probably errs on the low side.” The two pointed out that the $3 trillion applies only to the United States, and “does not reflect the enormous cost to the rest of the world, or to Iraq.”
The authors count war costs that are hidden in other parts of the U.S. defense budget. They cite the cost of privatizing much of the war and occupation, noting that contractors can make up to $400,000 a year while soldiers cost the government about $40,000. They point out that the price of oil, $25 a barrel before the invasion, has quadrupled in the ensuing five years.
But the biggest monetary cost, they say, is caring for veterans’ health and disability needs. Stiglitz told Democracy Now last week that these “will total hundreds of billions of dollars over the next decades.” Noting that so far, some 1.6 million soldiers have already fought in the war, he said it is estimated that 39 percent of those who fight will end up with some form of disability.
The resulting burden of pain and suffering for the veterans and their families is almost impossible to imagine, even if they receive state-of-the-art care. Numerous reports of substandard treatment and denial of care have revealed the real picture.
Now add the pain and suffering of the families of nearly 4,000 soldiers and countless Iraqis who have died. And the horrors experienced daily by millions of Iraqis left homeless, jobless and bereft of any normal life because of the conflict.
No troops, no bases, no war!
Sunday, March 9, 2008
Venezuela resetting diplomatic ties with Colombia
(CNN) -- The Venezuelan government on Sunday announced it is re-establishing normal diplomatic ties with Colombia after the two South American countries resolved their differences over Colombia's recent cross-border attack on rebels in Ecuador.
From left, Uribe, Dominican Republic President Leonel Fernandez and Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.
The move follows a meeting of the presidents of Colombia, Venezuela and Ecuador in the Dominican Republic on Friday. They signed a declaration to end a crisis sparked by the attack, when Colombian troops killed a rebel leader and 21 others inside Ecuadoran territory.
"The Venezuelan government will send to Bogota, immediately, diplomatic personnel charged with representing the republic before the government of Colombia," the Venezuelan government said in a statement posted online Sunday. "In the same manner, the Venezuelan government has communicated to the Colombia authorities their disposition to receive in Caracas, in a short time, the diplomatic personnel of the sister republic."
The declaration signed earlier stated: "With the promise not to ever again assault a brother country and the request for forgiveness [by Colombia], we can consider this very serious incident resolved," Ecuadoran President Rafael Correa said Friday.
Correa, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and Colombian President Alvaro Uribe shook hands at the end of what had been a contentious meeting of the Rio Group of Latin American leaders.
In the accord, the leaders condemned Colombia's action and affirmed that no country has the right to violate the territory of another. Correa and Chavez also accepted Colombia's apology for the incident and accepted that Uribe would not repeat it.
A look behind Kenya's power-sharing agreement
Author: Dennis Laumann |
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Facing the prospect of a new round of mass protests, the Kenyan regime headed by Mwai Kibaki agreed to a power-sharing arrangement negotiated by former United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan.
Signed on Feb. 28, the deal creates the new position of a powerful prime minister, to be held by Raila Odinga, the leader of the opposition Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) and the assumed winner of the disputed presidential election in December. In the interests of peace and reconciliation, the ODM dropped its earlier insistence that Kibaki resign and a new vote for president take place.
In fact, throughout negotiations over the past month, the opposition showed far more flexibility and sincerity while Kibaki’s ministers reneged on agreements and leveled unsubstantiated accusations against the ODM. Annan grew so frustrated with the government’s arrogant and incendiary behavior – one minister reportedly shouted at the former UN head and his team – that he halted the talks on Feb. 26.
Only two days later, the regime relented and agreed to share power with the ODM, which holds the largest share of parliamentary seats and draws support from across Kenya.
Kibaki’s misnamed Party of National Unity (PNU) is based almost exclusively in the Kikuyu areas of the country and his administration is dominated by that ethnic group. Indeed, one of the reasons for opposition to his rule has been the preferential treatment given to Kikuyus, not only in the allocation of governmental positions but also in the awarding of lucrative business contracts and rich agricultural land.
This dominance by the Kikuyu elite has historic roots stretching back to the period of British colonial rule and continuing through the administration of independent Kenya’s first president, Jomo Kenyatta.
In contrast, the ODM leadership reflects the nation’s diversity, not only ethnic, but also religious. Odinga’s party swept the elections along the largely Muslim coast as well as among marginalized groups in northern and western parts of Kenya. Moreover, the ODM’s support is strongest amongst the working class and unemployed who form the vast majority of the population.
From the so-called Kibera slum in Nairobi to struggling farming communities in the Rift Valley, the ODM’s campaign platform of redistributing the nation’s wealth and investing in social services resonated with a nation disillusioned with the promises of the free market model embraced by Kibaki and his predecessors.
The popular verdict was delivered in elections on Dec. 27 when the ODM crushed the governing PNU in parliamentary races. Once it became clear Odinga also would unseat Kibaki as president, the Election Commission suddenly suspended the announcement of results coming in from across the country, then bewildered Kenyans with the declaration on Dec. 30 that Kibaki had won a second term. Foreign and local election observers unanimously charged the government with fraud and tens of thousands of ordinary Kenyans took to the streets in protest.
Kibaki’s regime responded with violence and censorship, unleashing the police on peaceful demonstrators and banning live television broadcasts. In the ensuing conflict, more than 1,000 Kenyans lost their lives and at least 300,000 were forced to abandon their homes. Ignorant of the basic economic factors underlying the explosion of mass protests, the corporate media resorted to the colonialist, racist explanation for troubles in Africa, ascribing the conflict to “tribal” loyalties.
While there is no doubt the disputed presidential poll exposed ethnic divisions, blame for the post-election violence lies solely with Kibaki’s regime. Blindly embracing the dictates of neo-liberalism, partial to its own ethnic base, and rejecting the democratic choice of the Kenyan majority, it clung to power at all costs, agreeing to this week’s power-sharing deal only after the ODM promised to resume nationwide protests.
Even the Bush administration, his chief backer, encouraged Kibaki to assent to a coalition government as it became clear one of Africa’s strongest economies was being severely damaged by the dispute. Annan underlined this risk, saying "Compromise was necessary for the survival of this country."
Vladimir Lenin’s thesis on imperialism still rings true in this new age of capitalism. Like most underdeveloped countries, Kenya supplies raw materials to the industrialized world, imports manufactured goods, and is continually forced to further open its economy to foreign capital. More importantly to the Bush/Cheney gang, Kenya’s strategic proximity to the vast oil wealth of the Middle East makes it a crucial outpost of America’s global military network. Kenya is a key ally in Washington’s so-called War on Terror, providing military bases, communication networks, and intelligence-sharing. While Odinga’s progressive agenda may be perceived as a threat by Washington, even more dangerous would be Kenya’s collapse.
Across the world, far from the halls of the Pentagon, working-class Kenyans simply voted for a better future with Odinga and supported the battle to claim his electoral mandate. Their new prime minister has vowed to “destroy that monster that is called ethnicity from this nation". He declared, "With the signing of this agreement, we have opened a new chapter in our country's history, from the era or phase of confrontation to the beginning of cooperation.”
Cuba signs UN human rights pact
Author: W. T. Whitney Jr. | People's Weekly World Newspaper, 03/04/08 16:04 |
Cuban Foreign Minister Felipe Perez Roque announced at a Feb. 28 press conference at UN headquarters in New York that he had just signed two human rights accords originally introduced in the world body in 1976. Opponents of Cuba’s revolutionary government have long criticized Cuba’s reluctance to sign the treaties until now.
James McKinley, writing in The New York Times, raised the possibility that Cuba’s action signified a loosening of restraints under the presidency of Raul Castro. Yet the government’s intention to sign the agreements had been announced on Human Rights Day, Dec. 10, 2007.
Perez Roque said the change of course was inspired by the United Nations’ decision in 2006 to replace its widely criticized Commission on Human Rights with a refurbished Human Rights Council. He said the former agency had unfairly subjected Cuba to U.S. “pressure and blackmail.”
Under the new circumstances, Cuba has agreed to allow the UN Rapporteur on Human Rights to visit Cuba for monitoring purposes, with the first visit expected in 2009. Last June, the UN Human Rights Council dropped Cuba from a special list of countries subject to mandated inspections, which Cuba had refused.
Perez Roque assured reporters that Cuba signed both treaties — the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights — as a “sovereign decision.” He pointed out that “Cuba has never and will never act under any pressures.”
He added that “it was the Revolution that made it possible for the Cuban people to enjoy those rights included” under the pacts.
The New York Times recalled objections to the treaties expressed by President Fidel Castro in 2001 that mandates for independent labor unions invite manipulation by imperialists and that provisions on educational rights may open the door to privatization.
Perez Roque pointed out that in Cuba “the most serious obstacle to the enjoyment of rights enunciated in those agreements” stems from “the economic, commercial and financial blockade imposed by the United States and its policy of hostility and aggression against Cuba.”
In New York the Cuban foreign minister met with UN General Secretary Ban Ki-moon, General Assembly president Srgjan Kerim, and the Coordination Bureau of the Movement of Non-Aligned Nations. Cuba currently serves as president of that organization.
The next day in Geneva, Perez Roque met with Louise Arbour, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, other UN officials, and representatives of the Movement of Non-Allied Nations to plan the group’s next gathering in Iran. He addressed the UN Human Rights Council on March 3.
atwhit @roadrunner.com
Saturday, March 8, 2008
Economy continues to grind to a halt
http://www.pww.org/article/articleview/12623/1/266/
Author: John Wojcik | People's Weekly World Newspaper, 02/29/08 19:26 |
The government, in a transparent attempt to “spin” bad economic news, said Feb. 29 that consumer spending posted a 0.4 percent rise in January and that this was better than economists had been expecting.
A closer look at economic indicators, however, shows that all of that increase came, not from people having more to spend but from people having to spend more for less. A continued surge in inflation, particularly in prices of food and fuel, forced people to spend more of the little they have.
Minus inflation, people have been purchasing less now for several months. Not counting the months just after Hurricane Katrina in 2005, consumer spending figures have not been as dismal since November, 2001, when American workers were struggling to recover from the first Bush recession, a recession many have not yet overcome.
The government also claimed in its Feb. 29 report that in January incomes posted a 0.3 percent rise. The reality here is that the “higher” January income figures resulted from a one time event – obscene annual bonuses paid to corporate executives.
President Bush told reporters on Feb. 28 that he did not think the country was in a recession. The readings mean that President Bush’s claims notwithstanding, a second Bush recession is a reality. Flat or declining spending figures for the end of last year and the beginning of this year mean an extremely weak economy because consumer spending accounts for two thirds of total economic activity.
Other parts of the Commerce Department report issued Feb. 29 tell more than what Bush was willing to admit when he spoke with reporters. When analyzed, they show that the economy had already grounded to a halt in the last quarter of last year when the effects of the slumps in housing and credit caused everyone to tighten their belts tighter than they have in a long time.
The Commerce Department report noted that the gross domestic product increased at a tiny 0.6 percent pace in the last quarter of 2007. In the prior quarter it had grown 4.9 percent.
Gross domestic product, not spending figures unadjusted for inflation or CEO salary hikes, are a better measure of the country’s economic health. Gross domestic product measures the total value of all goods and services produced in the United States.
Federal Reserve Board chairman Ben Bernanke, using well modulated and often incomprehensible phrases such as “downside risk,” discussed the weakening economy at congressional hearings the day before the figures were released.
Workers, of course, don’t need to debate whether or not we are in a recession. For millions the first Bush recession never ended.
Median income has declined by $1,100 per year since Bush took office.
Worker productivity rose by seven percent since Bush took office while wages suffered the same decline as median income has. This, of course, means that extra profits from this rising productivity have gone directly into the pockets of the corporations.
More than one fifth of the total income in the U.S. is going to the top 1 percent. A shrinking share goes to the so called middle class and to the bottom 20 percent. That completely reverses the trend that started after World War II and lasted until the early 1970s. The U.S. now has the greatest inequality of incomes in any developed nation with the gap wider now than it was before the Great Depression.
Does it really matter whether we call this a recession?
$300 Million from Chavez to FARC a Fake
Axis of Logic
March 8, 2008
Do you believe this?
This past weekend, Colombia invaded Ecuador, killed a guerrilla chief in the jungle, opened his laptop – and what did the Colombians find? A message to Hugo Chavez that he’s sent the FARC guerrillas $300 million – which they’re using to obtain uranium to make a dirty bomb!
That’s what George Bush tells us. And he got that from his buddy, the strange right-wing President of Colombia, Alvaro Uribe.
So: After the fact, Colombia justifies its attempt to provoke a border war as a to stop the threat of WMDs! Uh, where have we heard that before?
The US press snorted up this line about Chavez’ $300 million to “terrorists” quicker than the young Bush inhaling Colombia’s powdered export.
What the US press did not do is look at the evidence, the email in the magic laptop. (Presumably, the FARC leader’s last words were, “Listen, my password is ….”)
I read them. While you can read it all in español, here is, in translation, the one and only mention of the alleged $300 million from Chavez is this:
“… With relation to the 300, which from now on we will call “dossier,” efforts are now going forward at the instructions of the boss to the cojo [slang term for ‘cripple’], which I will explain in a separate note. Let’s call the boss Ángel, and the cripple Ernesto.”
Got that? Where is Hugo? Where’s 300 million? And 300 what? Indeed, in context, the note is all about the hostage exchange with the FARC that Chavez was working on at the time (December 23, 2007) at the request of the Colombian government.
Indeed, the entire remainder of the email is all about the mechanism of the hostage exchange. Here’s the next line:
“To receive the three freed ones, Chavez proposes three options: Plan A. Do it to via of a ‘humanitarian caravan’; one that will involve Venezuela, France, the Vatican[?], Switzerland, European Union, democrats [civil society], Argentina, Red Cross, etc.”
As to the 300, I must note that the FARC’s previous prisoner exchange involved 300 prisoners. Is that what the ‘300’ refers to? ¿Quien sabe? Unlike Uribe, Bush and the US press, I won’t guess or make up a phastasmogoric story about Chavez spending money he doesn’t even have.
To bolster their case, the Colombians claim, with no evidence whatsoever, that the mysterious “Angel” is the code name for Chavez. But in the memo, Chavez goes by the code name … Chavez.
Well, so what? This is what.
Colombia’s invasion into Ecuador is a rank violation of international law, condemned by every single Latin member of the Organization of American States. And George Bush just loved it. He called Uribe to back Colombia, against, “the continuing assault by narco-terrorists as well as the provocative maneuvers by the regime in Venezuela.”
Well, our President may have gotten the facts ass-backward, but he Bush knows what he’s doing: shoring up his last, faltering ally in South America, Uribe, a desperate man in deep political trouble.
Uribe’s claims he is going to bring charges against Chavez before the International Criminal Court. If Uribe goes there in person, I suggest he take a toothbrush: it was just discovered that right-wing death squads held murder-planning sessions at Uribe’s ranch. Uribe’s associates have been called before the nation’s Supreme Court and may face prison.
In other words, it’s a good time for a desperate Uribe to use that old politico’s wheeze, the threat of war, to drown out accusations of his own criminality. Furthermore, Uribe’s attack literally killed negotiations with FARC by killing FARC’s negotiator, Raul Reyes. Reyes was in talks with both Ecuador and Chavez about another prisoner exchange. Uribe authorized the negotiations, however, he knew, should those talks have succeeded in obtaining the release of those kidnapped by the FARC, credit would have been heaped on Ecuador and Chavez, and discredit heaped on Uribe.
Luckily for a hemisphere the verge of flames, the President of Ecuador, Raphael Correa, is one of the most level-headed, thoughtful men I’ve ever encountered.
Correa is now flying from Quito to Brazilia to Caracas to keep the region from blowing sky high. While moving troops to his border – no chief of state can permit foreign tanks on their sovereign soil – Correa also refuses sanctuary to the FARC . Indeed, Ecuador has routed out 47 FARC bases, a better track record than Colombia’s own, corrupt military.
For his cool, peaceable handling of the crisis, I will forgive Correa for apologizing for his calling Bush, “a dimwitted President who has done great damage to his country and the world.”
Amateur Hour in Blue
We can trust Correa to keep the peace South of the Border. But can we trust our Presidents-to-be?
The current man in the Oval Office, George Bush, simply can’t help himself: an outlaw invasion by a right-wing death-squad promoter is just fine with him.
But guess who couldn’t wait to parrot the Bush line? Hillary Clinton, still explaining that her vote to invade Iraq was not a vote to invade Iraq, issued a statement nearly identical to Bush’s, blessing the invasion of Ecuador as Colombia’s “right to defend itself.” And she added, “Hugo Chávez must stop these provoking actions.” Huh?
I assumed that Obama wouldn’t jump on this landmine – especially after he was blasted as a foreign policy amateur for suggesting he would invade across Pakistan’s border to hunt terrorists.
It’s embarrassing that Barack repeated Hillary’s line nearly verbatim, announcing, “the Colombian government has every right to defend itself.”
(I’m sure Hillary’s position wasn’t influenced by the loan of a campaign jet to her by Frank Giustra. Giustra has given over a hundred million dollars to Bill Clinton projects. Last year, Bill introduced Giustra to Colombia’s Uribe. On the spot, Giustra cut a lucrative deal with Uribe for Colombian oil.)
Then there’s Mr. War Hero. John McCain weighed in with his own idiocies, announcing that, “Hugo Chavez is establish[ing] a dictatorship,” presumably because, unlike George Bush, Chavez counts all the votes in Venezuelan elections.
But now our story gets tricky and icky.
The wise media critic Jeff Cohen told me to watch for the press naming McCain as a foreign policy expert and labeling the Democrats as amateurs. Sure enough, the New York Times, on the news pages Wednesday, called McCain, “a national security pro.”
McCain is the “pro” who said the war in Iraq would cost nearly nothing in lives or treasury dollars.
But, on the Colombian invasion of Ecuador, McCain said, “I hope that tensions will be relaxed, President Chavez will remove those troops from the borders - as well as the Ecuadorians - and relations continue to improve between the two.”
It’s not quite English, but it’s definitely not Bush. And weirdly, it’s definitely not Obama and Clinton cheerleading Colombia’s war on Ecuador.
Democrats, are you listening? The only thing worse than the media attacking Obama and Clinton as amateurs is the Democratic candidates’ frightening desire to prove themFriday, March 7, 2008
Okinawa rape provokes fury at role of U.S. base
Author: Dan Margolis | People's Weekly World Newspaper, 03/04/08 13:42 |
What would happen if there was a highly organized group of people in a U.S. state that was responsible for more than 100 crimes per year on average? What if a member of that group was likely responsible for the rape of a 14-year-old junior high school girl? What if another member was responsible for another rape only a few weeks later?
What if, about thirteen years before, several members of that group were responsible for the gang rape of an elementary school girl?
This is not a made-up situation. The only difference from what is stated above is that the setting is not a U.S. state, but the Japanese prefecture of Okinawa—and the group is the U.S. Marines.
Last month’s rape of a 14-year-old girl, and then the rape of a Filipino woman four days later, both allegedly by U.S. service members, have set local residents on edge and have led to renewed calls for the removal of all U.S. bases.
On Feb. 15, a huge demonstration, called by women’s groups, teachers’ and other unions and medical professionals, took to the streets demanding justice.
“As a woman, I feel scared,” said a 25 year old bartender who works in the area where the incident occurred.
The alleged perpetrator was freed after the victim’s family decided not to prosecute. The girl was fearful of being involved in such a high profile case.
“Crimes occur wherever U.S. bases are located,” said Ichida Tadayoshi, leader of the Japanese Communist Party citing murder of a woman and an attempted murder of another woman in 2006, and a 2007 rape of a woman all in the areas of U.S. bases.
Tomon Mitsuko, the mayor of Okinawa City, said that there was a long list of other crimes committed by U.S. troops and that she had called on the U.S. military to tighten its discipline—and nothing had been done.
As of press time a curfew has been imposed on U.S. bases, but since Feb. 11, more crimes have been committed in Okinawa. A 54-year-old woman found Cpl. Shawn Cowdy sleeping on a sofa in her house at 4 a.m., Feb. 18. The 21-year-old corporal said he was drunk and had no memory of how he got there. A day before, another marine was arrested for drunk driving.
A day after Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda, of the pro-U.S. right wing Liberal Democratic Party and U.S. Ambassador Thomas Schieffer vowed to crack down on the crime, a drunken soldier climbed over a fence, broke a glass door with a pipe and trespassed on the property of a local construction firm.
U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice had to express “deep regret” on the Okinawa rape, while on a trip to Japan. U.S. officials have promised to take action.
But, “the unusual privileges that U.S. forces are given under the Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA) can be a source of the serious crimes being committed repeatedly,” wrote the Japanese newspaper, Akahata.
Since 1951, there have been over 200,000 accidents and crimes committed by U.S. soldiers in Japan, resulting in the deaths of over 1,000 Japanese citizens. Because of agreements made in the SOFA, virtually none of them have been prosecuted. There are currently more than 33,000 U.S. soldiers in Japan, and the Japanese government pays about $2 billion annually to support them.
Echoing tens of thousands of citizens, elected officials and others, Nakama Yoshishige, who runs a local pharmacy told Japan Press Service, “I am really fed up with this. As long as U.S. bases exist, this will never end.”
Wednesday, March 5, 2008
Our Way: Building Socialism with Chinese Characteristics
By Wang Yu | |
click here for related stories: Socialism
Unfinished Business: Socialist Market Economy
By Al L. Sargis |
click here for related stories: Socialism
Lenin, on the other hand, devoted much attention to both political and economic aspects of the transition period, discussing this issue in some detail. From even before the October Revolution until his death, the issue is analyzed in such works as "The April Theses," "The Impending Catastrophe and How to Combat It," "The Tasks of the Proletariat in Our Revolution," and "'Left-Wing' Childishness and the Petty-Bourgeois Mentality." He concluded that in a predominantly peasant country, with a multi-sectoral economy and low levels of productive forces and education, there could be no "leap to socialism" (unless, of course, there was a revolution in a developed capitalist country which could then aid them). Instead there had to be a series of transitional steps with appropriate economic and political tasks for each one. These measures constructed the material-technical and democratic foundations for socialism that had, in other cases, been developed by capitalism in advanced industrial societies. As such, they could include state capitalism, the law of value, money-commodity relations and other market mechanisms. However, there were two political conditions under which this must occur: (1) a workers state to promote a trajectory towards socialism and (2) a worker-peasant alliance to assure that the majority petty-bourgeois population could be won to the socialist goal. Reflecting on this situation Lenin formulated a series of propositions and practices leading to a socialist market economy in embryonic form, most explicitly exemplified in the New Economic Policy (NEP). For example, state capitalism was realized in the following forms: (1) foreign joint ventures and even foreign ownership of enterprises ("concessions"); (2) cooperatives based on market principles; (3) the use of capitalist merchants, as well as economic administrators and technical specialists trained in capitalist methods of management and organization; (4) the leasing of state-owned enterprises and natural resources to both foreign and domestic capitalists. State owned enterprises, which controlled the "commanding heights," were self-sufficient and operated on profit-and-loss principles, supplying themselves out of their own circulating assets. The law of value was recognized in the state economic sphere as an objective category and extended to cover the economy as a whole; market links existed not only between the socialist and non-socialist sectors but within the socialist sector itself. Economic competition was to be the norm both within and between sectors. State plans were materialized through market, not primarily administrative, mechanisms. If competition was conducted properly the socialist sector would demonstrate its superiority thereby ousting or marginalizing the capitalist sector. Lenin referred numerous times to this process as "paying our (capitalist) tuition for an undeveloped capitalism," "learning to trade like European businessmen," "advancing towards socialism...by capitalist management methods" and "test(ing) through competition between state and capitalist enterprises." Among the rural and urban petty-bourgeois majority - against which state capitalism was to counter their spontaneous development into capitalism - individual farms and shops were allowed, but the goal was to have them voluntarily join cooperatives of various types and levels of socialization as pathways of transition to socialism. This history indicates that the socialist market economy has its roots in the Marxist-Leninist experience, specifically in the early attempts to create socialism in multi-sectoral Soviet Russia. These origins are one of the sources drawn upon for contemporary China, Vietnam, Laos and, most recently, Cuba, as well as for the current concept of the socialist market economy. It's important to note that the idea of socialist market economy is somewhat different from market socialism, although in practice itís sometimes difficult to distinguish. The socialist market economy presumes a multi-sectoral socioeconomic formation that has a transitional character. The immediate goal is economic and social development, and the long-range goal is achieving entry into the first rung of socialism proper; the means is to use the advantages of all sectors to develop the productive forces, while attempting to minimize their disadvantages. This leads to a second presumption: that the level of economic, social and political development is inadequate to the task of entering socialism immediately, or after a brief transition period. In other words, the socialist market economy is designed for transition from an early capitalist or even pre-capitalist society, and the focus is to create the prerequisites for socialism that were put in place in the societies of developed industrial capitalism. Chinese and Vietnamese theorists of socialist market economy see underdeveloped forces of production leading to an underdeveloped form of socialism, and as the former become more robust, so does the latter. These theorists view market socialism, on the other hand, as a mechanism for negotiating all the steps of socialism through to the communist phase of development. Market socialism is not employed to "get to" socialism, but to ìget throughî socialism. While many similar economic and political tools may be used by both the socialist market economy and market socialism, the types of social formations and their final objectives differ. So, briefly, what does a contemporary socialist market economy look like? Economically, it is a mixed economy with a public sector of state, cooperative and mass organization-owned enterprises; a private sector of petty bourgeois, domestic capitalist and foreign capitalist owned enterprises; an intermediate state capitalist sector with various combinations of the public-private sectors (e.g., joint private-public stock enterprises). The public sector controls the "commanding heights" with the state macro-managing the overall economy, mostly through economic but also administrative means. State functions include the accumulation and protection of state assets, ownership of infra-structural and other strategic industries, maintaining sectoral proportions and overall balance, regulating income distribution, coordinating regional economic and social development and providing human services and public commodities, among others. Enterprises within each socioeconomic sector operate on the basis of market regulation. It may be summed up by saying that the state macro-manages the market and the market regulates the enterprises. Politically, the state is the instrument of working class rule. Hence, one of its main functions is to keep society on the path to socialism and maintain the dominance of the working class. While the state must accommodate the interests of all classes and strata represented by each socioeconomic sector, it must gear those interests to the goal of proletarian socialism. Although the working-class party has its economic base primarily among state enterprises in the public sector - since that sector is the foundation for socialism - it represents workers in every sector. Petty bourgeois, capitalist and other non-working-class people voice their interests in associations, parties and legislative bodies. The task of the working class is to prevent the capitalist class shifting from a class-in-itself to becoming a class-for-itself. These economic and political aspects raise certain questions that need to be addressed. A few of the crucial ones are: (1) How does the public sector remain strong enough to be competitive with the capitalist sector in the market? (2) While state enterprises control the "commanding heights" do these "heights" vary in accordance with historical conditions? (3) How does the state deal with the negative phenomena produced by the market economy? (4) How does the working class maintain the path towards socialism over several generations of transition? (5) Does the scope of the state and market alter as the socialist market economy reaches the threshold of socialism proper and what role, if any, does the market play after this plateau has been reached? Issues of this sort are not only grist for theoretical analysis, but urgent problems facing the concrete test of political practice in the countries currently constructing socialism via a socialist market economy. --Al L. Sargis is the Director of the Center for Marxist Education. |
Experts suspect U.S. military involvement in Ecuador
Experts from the respected United States research center COHA indicated in a dispatch issued Monday that there was "a strong possibility" of U.S. involvement in the Colombian military incursion into Ecuador.
Ecuadorian troops evacuate a woman wounded during the attack |
The operation led to the death of Colombian Revolutionary Armed Forces (FARC) Commander Raúl Reyes.
Analysts from the Council on Hemispheric Affairs are examining in particular the role possibly played by Southcom, the so-called U.S. Southern Command, based in Miami that manages U.S. operations in the region, "the planning, supply and implementation" of the Colombian intervention into Ecuadorian territory.
"There are good grounds to speculate that the entire game plan seems to have been carried out at too sophisticated a level by a Colombian military which normally is dismissed as incompetent, corrupt, drug sodden and ill-deposed to risk dangers."
Founded in 1975, COHA is a think tank described as a group of U.S. academics, experts in hemispheric affairs.
"The U.S. role could have involved the supply of intelligence based on satellites and heat sensors, a supply of smart bombs and the seconding of some of the scores of U.S. trainers in the country," the COHA report states and continues, "In addition, there could have been possible authorization of the use of Black Hawk helicopters provided under the auspices of Plan Colombia." (JGA)
Translated by Granma InternationalDefense budget to rise by 17.6%
The government plans to increase the defense budget by 17.6 percent this year to increase benefits for military personnel, a senior official said yesterday.
The planned allocation for the People's Liberation Army this year is 417.77 billion yuan ($58.79 billion), a rise of 62.379 billion yuan ($8.23 billion) from actual military spending last year, Jiang Enzhu, spokesman for the annual session of the National People's Congress (NPC), told a press conference.
Jiang said the increased amount would be used to raise the pay of service personnel and offset the impact of price hikes. More money will also be spent on education and training.
Military equipment will be "moderately" upgraded to enhance the troops' capability to fight a defensive war based on information technologies, he said.
Jiang called the budget growth a "compensatory" rise, given the low base and the rapid and steady growth of the country's economy and fiscal revenues in recent years.
From 1979 to 1989, defense expenditure registered an average annual decrease of 5.83 percent, and its growth in recent years is still far below the increase in fiscal revenues, he said.
Official figures show China saw an average annual rise of 15.8 percent in military spending from 2003 to 2007, while fiscal revenues grew 22.1 percent on average per year during the same period.
Jiang also noted that China's military spending remains low compared with some other countries, especially the big powers.
Last year, for example, he said, China's military expenditure accounted for only 1.4 percent of GDP, the lowest compared with 4.6 percent in the United States, 3 percent in Britain, 2 percent in France, 2.63 percent in Russia and 2.5 percent in India.
Jiang reiterated that China's national defense policy is defensive in nature.
"China's limited military capability is solely for the purpose of safeguarding independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity, and will not pose a threat to any country," he said.
But Jiang made it clear that Chen Shui-bian and Taiwan authorities are destined to pay a "dear price" if they stubbornly take the dangerous path of "Taiwan independence" in a desperate throw of the dice.
He said the so-called "referendum on UN membership" pursued by Chen is a grave step toward seeking "de jure independence" and will seriously harm peace and stability in the Taiwan Straits and the Asia-Pacific region.
But he stressed that conflicts and disputes could be resolved by equal consultations in the process of peaceful development of cross-Straits relations.
Commenting on the country's defense budget, Luo Yuan, a researcher with the PLA Academy of Military Sciences, said the Chinese army, now in a critical "transitional" period, will naturally need more money for high-tech upgrades.
China still lags behind developed countries by "one or two generations" in major military equipment, he said.
"To narrow the gap, we have to increase input," Luo, who attended the annual session of the country's top political advisory body yesterday, was quoted by the Xinhua News Agency as saying.
He added that in recent years, Chinese troops have also undertaken new tasks such as disaster relief works, and so need more funding.
Source: China Daily
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This is the only good type of Military budget increase, one that increases soldier benefits.