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Tuesday, January 5, 2016

China’s Foreign Minister Warns Against ‘Speculation’ in Case of Missing Publishers

China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi has cautioned against “groundless speculation” in the case of five missing people who all worked at a Hong Kong–based publishing company specializing in works highly critical of Chinese leaders.
Speaking at a press conference in Beijing on Tuesday, Wang also said that one of the missing individuals, 65-year-old British citizen Lee Bo, was “first and foremost a Chinese citizen.” U.K. Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond was at the same press conference, and expressed “deep concern” over Lee’s disappearance, the South China Morning Post reports.
Lee is the latest member of Mighty Current Media — which specializes in popular but lurid and reportedly defamatory works on Chinese Communist Party officials — to have vanished since the company’s owner failed to return from a holiday in Thailand last October. The company’s general manager and two other staff members are also missing.
It is being widely speculated in Hong Kong that Lee has been abducted by mainland Chinese agents. Taiwan’s official Central News Agency reported that he faxed a message to a colleague saying that he had made “his own way” to China to take part in an unspecified investigation and that it would be “some time.” There is no official record of him leaving the city, but his wife Sophie Choi verified the handwriting on the fax as her husband’s, the Post says.
If Lee has been taken to the mainland, his case would constitute a flagrant and unprecedented breach of the autonomy that Beijing promised Hong Kong upon the former British colony’s return to Chinese sovereignty in 1997. The case has caused deep alarm in a city where, unlike other parts of China, freedom of expression and the rule of law are cherished rights.

Protest After NYE Mass Sex Assault On 90 Women

Police are hunting gangs of young, mostly drunk, men suspected of carrying out the attacks - described as "a new dimension in crime" - outside Cologne's cathedral. 
Cologne police chief Wolfgang Albers said officers described the men as looking as if they were from "the Arab or North African region" and mostly between 18 and 35 years old.
He said one of the attacks could be classed as rape.
GERMANY-NEW YEAR
The attacks occurred when around 1,000 men split into gangs as officers cleared a square to stop fireworks being thrown from steps into a crowd below.
Around 150 people gathered in front of Cologne's cathedral on Tuesday evening to protest against violence against women.
One of them held a sign saying: "Ms Merkel where are you? What do you say? This scares us!"
Angela Merkel has expressed her shock over the attacks, while politicians including Cologne mayor Henriette Reker urged Germans not to put foreigners and refugees under "blanket suspicion".
Women hold up placards during a protest in front of the Cologne Cathedral
But the incident has fuelled calls from right-wing groups to shut down migration to Germany, which has taken in more than a million people in the last year, mostly from Middle Eastern war zones.
The right-wing Alternative for Germany (AfD), which has gained in polls following a campaign against refugees, said Mrs Merkel should close the border.
AfD leader Frauke Petry tweeted: "Mrs Merkel, is Germany 'colourful and cosmopolitan' enough for you after the wave of crimes and sexual attacks?"
Merkel told Reker in a phone call the attacks deserved a tough response.
"Everything must be done to investigate those responsible as quickly and completely as possible and punish them, regardless of where they are from," she said, according to her spokesman.

North Korea Claims It Has Tested Hydrogen Bomb

"The republic's first hydrogen bomb test has been successfully performed at 10:00 am on January 6, 2016, based on the strategic determination of the Workers' Party," a state television news reader said.
"With the perfect success of our historic H-bomb, we have joined the rank of advanced nuclear states," the announcer added, claiming the test was of a "miniaturised" device.
If the claim is confirmed it would mark a major, and alarming, step forward in the isolated country's nuclear development, as hydrogen bombs are generally more powerful than nuclear bombs.
A map showing the reported location of North Korea's latest reported nuclear test.
A hydrogen, or thermonuclear device, uses fusion in a chain reaction that causes a much more powerful explosion than the fission blast generated by uranium or plutonium.
The country is believed to possess a handful of crude nuclear weapons, and has long pushed for an arsenal of warheads that can be mounted on a ballistic missile.
If the test is verified it will almost certainly lead to a push for new sanctions at the United Nations.
The surprise announcement came after an artificial earthquake was detected by South Korea and the United States.
In the wake of the test, South Korea's defence ministry said its armed forces would step up their monitoring of the North, while Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said it was a "serious threat" to his country and a "grave challenge" to nuclear non-proliferation efforts.
British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond described the test as a "provocation" and a "grave breach" of UN resolutions.
South Korea's meteorological agency said earlier its neighbour was "likely" to have conducted a nuclear test that caused an earthquake close to a known testing site in the isolated country.
But the country's intelligence agency said the device tested might not have been a hydrogen bomb, the Yonhap news agency reported.
The US Defence Department said it was "looking into reports of a possible seismic event near North Korea's nuclear facilities".
The US Geological Survey reported a 5.1 magnitude quake that South Korea said was 30 miles (49km) from the Punggye-ri site where the North has conducted previous tests.
Pyongyang has so far conducted three nuclear tests - in 2006, 2009 and 2013 - with the last one also measuring 5.1 on the USGS scale.
This latest reported test was personally ordered by Kim and comes just two days before his birthday.
The North Korean leader suggested last month that Pyongyang had already developed a hydrogen bomb, a claim that was greeted with scepticism by international experts.
Most had assumed Kim was years away from obtaining a thermonuclear bomb, while assessments were divided on how far North Korea had got in mastering the technology to miniaturise a device.

Bernie Sanders vows to break up banks during first year in office

Characterizing Wall Street as an industry run on "greed, fraud, dishonesty and arrogance," Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders pledged to break up the country's biggest financial firms within a year, should he become president, in a major policy address on Tuesday.
He coupled that promise with a series of attacks on rival Hillary Clinton, arguing her personal and political ties make her unable to truly take on the financial industry.
"To those on Wall Street who may be listening today, let me be very clear: Greed is not good," said Sanders, in a reference to Oliver Stone's 1980s film, "Wall Street."
"In fact, the greed of Wall Street and corporate America is destroying the very fabric of our nation, and — here is a New Year's resolution that I will keep if elected president — and that is if Wall Street does not end its greed, we will end it for them," said Sanders, as a cheering audience jumped to its feet.
Sanders has made regulating Wall Street a focus of his primary bid, with calls to curb the political influence of "millionaires and billionaires" at the core of his message.
But the attacks on Clinton mark an escalation in his offensive against the Democratic front-runner. Clinton's policies, he said, would do little more than "impose a few more fees and regulations."
"My opponent says that, as a senator, she told bankers to 'cut it out' and end their destructive behavior," he said. "But, in my view, establishment politicians are the ones who need to cut it out," he said.
"The reality is that Congress doesn't regulate Wall Street. Wall Street, its lobbyists and their billions of dollars regulate Congress," Sanders added.
Clinton and her husband, former President Bill Clinton, have made tens of millions of dollars in speaking fees from addresses to Wall Street banks, insurance companies and other financial firms.
She also opposes reinstating the Depression-era Glass-Steagall Act, which effectively limited the size of financial companies by prohibiting commercial banks from engaging in investment banking activities. Sanders would re-establish the law, initially repealed during the Clinton administration.
He vowed to create a "too-big-to-fail" list of companies within the first 100 days of his administration whose failure would pose a grave risk to the U.S. economy without a taxpayer bailout. Those firms would be forced to reorganize within a year.
Sanders also promised to take a tougher tact against industry abuses, noting that major financial institutions have been fined only $204 billion since 2009.
"The reality is that fraud is the business model on Wall Street," he said. "It is not the exception to the rule. It is the rule."
And he vowed to cap ATM fees at two dollars and interest rates on credit cards and consumer loans at 15 percent. He would also restructure credit rating agencies and the Federal Reserve.
Clinton's campaign tried to pre-empt Sanders speech on Monday afternoon, putting out a statement from a top aide arguing that Clinton's financial regulation proposals would do more to crack down on industry abuses.
"In his speech tomorrow, Sen. Sanders should go beyond his existing plans for reforming Wall Street and endorse Hillary Clinton's tough, comprehensive proposals to rein in risky behavior within the shadow banking sector," said the statement from Gary Gensler, a top campaign finance official and former chair of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

E-learning for Africa held back by power shortage

There are well-documented problems about access to education. The Africa Learning Barometer at the US-based Center for Universal Education at Brookings says of the continent's nearly 128 million school-aged children, 17 million will never attend school.
There have been improvements, with targets for the millennium development goals widening access to primary school.
But many millions, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, never start school or learn so little that it is hardly worth them attending.
Against this backdrop, education in Africa, particularly in East Africa, has become a hotbed for e-learning.
Education providers, politicians and entrepreneurs agree on the potential of educational technology as a way to reach out-of-school children and improve the education received by those that are in school.

'Huge potential'

"The potential is huge. There are 440 million under-16s on the African continent, and the vast majority of them aren't getting a quality education, because their schools are overcrowded, with under-trained teachers, and with little to no learning resources," said Nisha Ligon, chief executive of Tanzanian company Ubongo, which creates digital content.
"E-learning gives us a great opportunity to supplement these kids' learning at a massive scale," says Ms Ligon, whose company's television output reaches over 1.5 million households in Tanzania, Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda and Ghana.
"We see e-learning as a huge opportunity to equalise the access to learning material for the majority of schools in Africa that are under-served financially or academically," said Nivi Mukherjee, president of education at Kenyan company BRCK. 
The company's product, the BRCK, is a rugged, self-powered, mobile wi-fi device aimed at connecting people to the internet in areas without reliable access to electricity.
The company has rolled out a low-cost tablet running web-based content and locally cached videos, for use by school students.

'Chronic shortage'

But how do you power it? What e-learning devices need more than anything are power and connectivity.
This is an area where many parts of Africa continue to fall short. While internet penetration and grid power have become more widespread, especially in urban areas, a chronic shortage of power still affects the continent.
According to the African Development Bank almost 620 million people - 60% of Africa's population - are without access to electricity. In East Africa, only 23% of Kenyans and 15% of Tanzanians have power.
Although he believes things are getting better, Dr Bitange Ndemo, former permanent secretary in Kenya's Ministry of Communications, says there is a problem with affordability and the means of accessing power.
"Health centres would be able to connect but there is still a challenge in arid and semi-arid regions that are sparsely populated. Telecoms firms find it difficult to connect because there is no business case. Some areas are connected via satellite," he said.
Ms Ligon says companies such as hers have almost no reach in non-electrified areas. 
"And yet in these areas people do still have technology," she said. "Radio and basic mobiles are common in rural areas. And smartphones are really starting to pick up."

Solar power filling gap?

There are positive projections for the future of power provision too. 
The International Energy Agency expects 315 million people in rural areas in Africa to gain access to electricity by 2040. This will increasingly come from off-grid and mini-grid solutions.
Both Mr Ndemo and Ms Ligon believe technologies such as solar will play a huge part in providing power to rural Africa and allow e-learning to flourish. 
Jesse Moore, head of Kenyan pay-as-you-go solar provider M-KOPA Solar, says its affordability and scalability make it the best solution, and that it could offer a lifeline to e-learning.
"Simply put, if there is no source of reliable and affordable power, then e-connected devices are going to struggle," he said.
M-KOPA has already connected over 300,000 households to solar, and expects to pass one million homes by the end of 2017. 
"I would bet that in a decade's time, distributed solar power ends up as the primary power source for half the population," Mr Moore said.

'Piece of the puzzle'

Educational technology must be delivered in a way that is relevant and accessible.
Ubongo is focusing on television and radio, popular and widely available, and combining this with mobile phone interaction. Ms Ligon says it provides "really engaging e-learning".
And she says it is important to think about why people want electricity and how they want to use it.
"Same goes for technologies like smartphones, tablets and laptops. They are all just tools, and we need to understand what people want from them."
Ms Ligon also stresses that e-learning is not the only solution to educational challenges, but rather a "piece of the puzzle". 
"Teachers are incredibly important, and we need to make sure we're also investing in teachers and schools, and see how e-learning can supplement them. It is not a replacement."
Ms Mukherjee said schools needed to be encouraged to be more innovative in the way that they approach learning, while governments needed to invest in digital content.
"As schools have budgets for textbooks, there should be a marketplace for digital content too. Only with good content will we see positive learning outcomes. Without it, it's just cool devices," she said.

The hardships of Delhi's street vendors

New Delhi, India - An estimated 10 million vendors sell goods and services on the streets of India.
A Street Vendors Act aimed at regulating these vendors and to protect their rights has been passed by parliament, but the New Delhi High Court says the local government has failed to implement the law.
The court ordered it to present a clear policy on Tuesday to regulate the number of vendors and help others find new jobs.
"The sooner the street vendors get licenses, they can freely carry on their trade without harassment from the policemen or authorities. This process will regularise the street vendors, besides eliminating the middlemen and brokers who exploit the vendors," says Anurag Shankar from the National Association of Street Vendors of India.
But vendors say they have little hope for the act's implementation. Most come from rural areas where declining agriculture production forced them to move to the Indian capital to earn their livelihoods.
Their lives are insecure as they are routinely harassed for weekly bribes called "hafta" in Indian parlance.
“It's always painful to pay a weekly bribe out of my hard-earned money. We are made to act like criminals as we have to grease their palm to seek protection and carry on trade without harassment," said Rajesh Kumar, 53, selling mobile phone accessories.
Another vendor selling clothes said he regularly pays bribes to police and local authorities. "For so many years I have been hearing about this act, but frankly speaking nothing seems to move on," said Vinod Kumar, 69.
"With the license, at least my hard-earned money will go to the government treasury. I have reasons to believe that the ring of brokers will never let this happen because they have strong contacts."
Prabhu Shah, 35, who sells candy from a bicycle, was also sceptical.
"I have been carrying on the trade for the past 10 years and I am always on the move to avoid getting caught... The well-off people will get the licenses - and then they will sell it to us to earn big money," said Shah.

Chicago pays reparations in police torture case

The city of Chicago has paid $5.5 million in reparations to 57 people whose claims that they were tortured by police decades ago were found to be credible.
The money was paid Monday to victims of a police unit commanded by disgraced former police commander Jon Burge from the 1970s through the early 1990s, the Chicago Sun-Times reported.
More than 100 men, mostly African-American, have accused Burge and officers under his command of shocking, suffocating and beating them into giving false confessions, some of which landed them on death row. Burge has never been criminally charged with torture, but he served a 4 ½-year sentence for lying about the torture in a civil case and was released from a halfway house last year.
The $5.5 million adds to more than $100 million that has been paid in court-ordered judgments, settlements of lawsuits and legal fees — most of it spent by the financially strapped city of Chicago and some by Cook County — over the years related to the torture scandal. The $100,000 payment most victims received Monday is a fraction of some previous settlements.
A months-long claims process for the payments included vetting by an arbitrator and by a professor at the Illinois Institute of Technology's Kent School of Law.
The reparations were part of an ordinance the City Council passed last year that also mandated a formal apology, the construction of a memorial to the victims and the addition of the police torture to the city's school history curriculum. It also provides psychological counseling and free tuition at some community colleges. Some of the benefits are available to victims' children and grandchildren.
Paying reparations "is a moral compunction and a moral reckoning to right a wrong," Mayor Rahm Emanuel told the newspaper. "There is no statute of limitations on that."
The payments come as the Chicago Police Department is under withering criticism since the release in November of a video showing white police officer Jason Van Dyke shooting black 17-year-old Laquan McDonald 16 times in 2014. The video prompted protests and led to a civil rights investigation of the entire department by the U.S. Department of Justice.
One torture victim, Darrell Cannon, said Monday that the payments were only the first step toward healing the city.
"We still have a long way to go," he said.
Cannon was freed after 24 years in prison when a review board determined that evidence against him was tainted.