Forgotten

A reminder of the still unresolved and evolving predicament of Nepal’s Bhutanese refugees

A. ANGELO D’SILVA

BBC doc The Forgotten Refugees, is an admirably succinct summary of the Bhutanese refugee situation in Nepal and captures the complex human calculations of the resettlement solution.

BBC correspondent and director Amanda Burrell begins by following Chandra, a refugee and midwife, whose narrative describing camp life intersects nicely with a sequence of the impressively efficient food operations, representative of the humanitarian aid work honed over the 20 years of the camps’ existence. More importantly, it allows us to appreciate the trauma of Chandra’s and her elderly parents’ expulsion from Bhutan and their current plight, illustrative of the experience of many of her peers.

For the middle portion of the film Burrell shifts to Bhutan, where the crew is allowed a brief day visit to that gorgeous and tightly restricted country. It is here that she garners some of the most intriguing interviews, interspersed as it is with weak Lonely Planet-esque cultural relativisms. There are chilling comments by Michael Rutland, an apologist for the Bhutanese position, that gives a frightening double-edge to the response to human rights activists protesting the citizenships act of 1988: “Because harmony was so much part of the way of life? it was very difficult to know how to deal with this sudden promotion of disharmony? I think measures were taken to try to promote harmony.”

Nepali Times for more

How a hummingbird in love can move faster than a fighter jet

By Steve Connor, Science Editor

A hummingbird that makes death-defying dives has been found to be the fastest thing on two wings – for its size. Scientists say that it experiences G-forces that would make a trained fighter pilot faint from the stress


GETTY IMAGES
A hummingbird that makes death-defying dives has been found to be the fastest thing on two wings – for its size. Scientists say that it experiences G-forces that would make a trained fighter pilot faint from the stress.

Is it a bird? Is it a plane? Actually it’s a bird that flies faster than a plane, relatively at least.

The dramatic courtship dive of a small hummingbird has been found to be the quickest aerial manoeuvre in the natural world for an animal compared to its size. It even outpaces the movements of a jet fighter and the Space Shuttle on re-entry into the Earth’s atmosphere.

Anna’s hummingbird lives in the American south-west and the courtship display of the male is renowned for its death-defying dive that ends abruptly with a dramatic upturn with outstretched wings and tail feathers that stop the bird from crashing into the ground.

The Independent for more

Observations on recession successes

It’s a Thursday afternoon at the Brunel shopping centre in Swindon. Flanked by a muffin stand and an injection-moulded child’s ride sits the Guardian Jewellery Company. Little more than a desk and a couple of stand-up banners, it forms an outpost for one of the recession’s few success stories.

Since forming a year ago, the firm has grown from two staff to 75, and is hiring at the rate of five a week. It sets up stalls in shopping centres of medium-sized towns – Basingstoke, High Wycombe, Worcester – and people come to sell their gold jewellery for cash. Guardian then melts the gold down and sells it on. There are 30 locations now, by the end of the summer that figure will be 80, and the firm has started advertising on TV. “We’re on an exponential curve,” says the sales director, Lee Bushell.

For investors, gold is a classic safe port in the storm of recession – John Paulson, for instance, the legendary hedge funder who won big after betting against sub-prime mortgages, recently bought a stake in a South African gold mine. Philip Klapwijk, chairman of the metals consultancy GFMS, believes the price could hit a record $1,100 an ounce this year, despite a recent dip in value. So, ordinary people can make a lot of cash, quickly and easily. “Beat the credit crunch!” suggest Guardian’s banners. A photo shows a hand holding a fan of £20 notes.
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RIGHTS: Sexual Violence in War Hauled Out of the Shadows

By Danielle Kurtzleben

WASHINGTON, Jun 16 (IPS) – On Jun. 19, 2008, the U.N. Security Council passed Resolution 1820, expressly addressing the problems of sexual violence in conflict situations. One year later, three experts in the field gathered to speak at the United States Institute of Peace to evaluate the implementation of 1820 and consider how it might better prevent this widespread crime.

The resolution marked a major step forward for the U.N. in addressing the problems of sexual violence in conflict zones. Anne-Marie Goetz, a chief advisor at the U.N. Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM), presents it as a groundbreaking resolution, linking sexual violence to broader peace and security concerns.

“For the very first time, the U.N. Security Council recognises that systematic sexual violence can be a tactic of warfare. And because it’s a tactic of warfare, it requires a security and policy response,” said Goetz, speaking at the USIP on Thursday.

Goetz was joined by Neil Boothby, a professor of clinical population and family health at Columbia University, and Dara Kay Cohen, a Ph.D. candidate in the department of political science at Stanford University, to mark the one-year anniversary of Resolution 1820.

The resolution acknowledges that sexual violence is often widespread in conflict zones, and that this violence is not just a social problem. Rather, the resolution says that sexual violence “can significantly exacerbate situations of armed conflict and may impede the restoration of international peace and security.”

Boothby, Goetz and Cohen addressed the unique challenges of studying and ameliorating the sexual and gender-based violence situations in conflict zones. They also presented new findings about data-collection and perpetrators’ motives that promise to help reverse the trend of sexual violence within conflict zones.

All three experts emphasised the extent to which sexual violence in conflict zones is misunderstood. The prevalence of the problem is particularly difficult to estimate.

Knowing the frequency of sexual violence in any conflict zone is difficult because being the victim of sexual violence often carries with it a heavy stigma. Thus, it is often not reported to officials, U.N. observers, or researchers.

Furthermore, rape in conflict zones is not always stranger rape; it may be performed by a partner or spouse. Domestic sexual violence is not often reported because the victims fear retribution from their partners.

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Kenyan government must act urgently to end impunity and bring about essential reforms

“Kenya has a long history of serious human rights violations but it now has an opportunity to turn the page,” said Irene Khan, Secretary General of Amnesty International, concluding the high-level mission to Kenya.

“Successive Kenyan governments have been good at establishing Commissions and Taskforces and poor at implementing their recommendations. This government must not repeat that pattern.”

Amnesty International welcomed the high level access and the frank and open dialogue with the Kenyan authorities, but found deep differences within the Government, both on the perception of the human rights situation in Kenya and on the extent and nature of reform needed.

“Time is running out and the government must act urgently to build consensus on fundamental human rights issues,” said Khan.

Amnesty International for more

Book Review – An Indian history of numbers

Pervez Hoodbhoy

BOOK REVIEWED- Kim Plofker’s Mathematics In India


F. SOLTAN/SYGMA/CORBIS
Buddha is said to have wooed his future wife by reeling off a huge number series.

In a world divided by culture, politics, religion and race, it is a relief to know one thing that stands above them — mathematics. The diversity among today’s mathematicians shows that it scarcely matters who invents concepts or proves theorems; cold logic is immune to prejudice, whim and historical accident. And yet, throughout history, different families of humans have distilled the essence of the cosmos to capture the magic of numbers in many ways.

Mathematics in India shows just how different one of these ways was, and how culture and mathematical development are intimately connected. This carefully researched chronicle of the principal contributions made by a great civilization covers the earliest days of Indian history through to the beginning of the modern period. Regrettably, it stops short of the legendary mathematician Srinivasa Ramanujan (born 1887), whose name is still seen in today’s research papers.

Kim Plofker’s book fulfils an important need in a world where mathematical historiography has been shaped by the dominance of the Greco-Christian view and the Enlightenment period. Too little has been written on the mathematical contributions of other cultures. One reason for the neglect of Indian mathematics was Eurocentrism — British colonial historians paid it little attention, assuming that Indians had been too preoccupied with spiritual matters to make significant contributions to the exact sciences. Another reason is that many ancient Indian mathematical texts have long been extinct; often, the only indication that they existed comes from scholars who refer to the work of their predecessors. As Plofker wryly notes, two historians of Indian maths recently published articles in the same edited volume, wherein the estimates of their subject’s origins differed by about 2,000 years.

Nature for more

Having Their Say

By Kari Lydersen

UNESCO lists almost 2,500 languages worldwide as “endangered,” meaning they are at risk of falling out of use and even disappearing as fluent native speakers die and younger generations fail to take up the language. A bulk of endangered languages are the tongues of indigenous groups who have been colonized or encroached upon by a dominant culture and forced or coerced to give up their native language. In the past, students were beaten for speaking their language in strict boarding schools in the United States and Australia. More recently in parts of the U.S. and countless other regions worldwide, people feel cultural and economic pressure to switch to the dominant language, seeing it as a means of opportunity and feeling a sense of shame in their indigenous identity.

But recent years have also seen a resurgence in the interest to preserve indigenous languages among academics, nongovernmental organizations and indigenous communities. In many cases, young people, who did not grow up speaking their native language, are now studying and embracing it as a way to understand and celebrate their heritage and connect with their elders.
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June 16, 2009: A Sunday with Vanunu

Occupied East Jerusalem, June 15, 2009- Mordechai Vanunu and I, first crossed paths on the first day of summer in 2005, which was five days before my return to the USA from my first 16 Days in Israel Palestine .

On my last evening of my seventh trip to occupied east Jerusalem, Vanunu and I had a drink at the American Colony. Vanunu had a Taybeh beer, which is produced in the last remaining self-sufficient and last remaining Christian village in the entire West Bank.

I ordered a Vodka tonic and Vanunu warned me, that I should never have more than one shot a day. I replied, it was only my first and I had my last in the taxi on my way to Ben Gurion Airport. I knew it would be hours before I cleared SECURITY and the game we played had gotten tiresome for me- and I imagine it a death unto them who make a paycheck for interrogating those who are Telling the Truth at Ben Gurion…

For the first eight days of my ten day trip, I was embedded with CODE PINK activist’s, but missed their June 14th demonstration during Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s speech at Tel Aviv University against Israel’s invasion of Gaza, illegal settlements and the apartheid wall.

“Heavy handed police treatment of the CODEPINK: Women for Peace delegation began immediately after members of the group unfurled several pink banners that read “Free Gaza” and “End the Occupation.” CODEPINK co-founder Medea Benjamin and New York activist Zool Zulkowitz were physically dragged across the street…A French journalist who was a member of the CODEPINK delegation, was arrested as she crossed a small street in an attempt to take photos of the demonstration…Israeli police and military violently shoved the group back into a wall. Delegation member Tighe Barry from Santa Monica, California was struck in the face with the butt of a military rifle and pushed to the ground…he was treated for a concussion, an injured neck and an asthma attack.

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Countercurrents

Vogue editor launches new war on size-zero fashion

By Will Pavia


Left: (Timothy Allen/eyevine) Alexandra Shulman accuses designers of making magazines hire models with ‘jutting bones and no breasts or hips’

The editor of Vogue has accused some of the world’s leading catwalk designers of pushing ever thinner models into fashion magazines despite widespread public concern over “size-zero” models and rising teenage anorexia.

Alexandra Shulman, one of the most important figures in the multi-billion-pound fashion industry, has taken on all the largest fashion houses in a strongly worded letter sent to scores of designers in Europe and America. In a letter not intended for publication but seen by The Times, Shulman accuses designers of making magazines hire models with “jutting bones and no breasts or hips” by supplying them with “minuscule” garments for their photoshoots. Vogue is now frequently “retouching” photographs to make models look larger, she said.

Her intervention was hailed last night as a turning point in the debate over model size that has raged after the deaths of three models from complications relating to malnutrition, and the decision of leading fashion shows to ban size-zero models.

Times on line for more