RSS Feed     Twitter     Facebook

Posts Tagged ‘east Asia’

PM to leave for Thailand to attend 7th ASEAN India summit

Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh leaves for Thailand on Friday to attend the seventh Indo ASEAN summit beginning in Thailand’s resort town of Hua Hin.
Dr Singh will also participate in 4th East Asia Summit comprising ASEAN nations along with China, Japan, Australia, New Zealand and Korea.
During the three day visit, the Prime Minister is also [...]

Chinese envoy meets MEA officials

Amid media reports of rising tensions between New Delhi and Beijing, Chinese Ambassador to India Zhang Yan met officials of Ministry of External Affairs in South Block on Thursday, sources have said.
The Chinese Ambassador reportedly sought the meeting and no demarche or summon was issued by the Indian Foreign Ministry.
Highly placed sources maintained that the [...]

Burma deports Suu Kyi US ‘guest’

John Yettaw - image released by Myanmar News Agency, May 2009

The American man jailed for visiting Burma’s detained pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi is expected to be deported from the country shortly.

Visiting US Senator Jim Webb said after meeting Burma’s (Myanmar’s) military ruler Than Shwe on Saturday that he would leave with John Yettaw on Sunday.

Senator Webb also met pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

Mr Yettaw was jailed for seven years over the visit and Ms Suu Kyi’s house arrest was extended by 18 months.

The US state department has welcomed Mr Yettaw’s imminent release.

"It is my hope that we can take advantage of these gestures as a way to begin laying a foundation of goodwill and confidence-building in the future"

Senator Jim Webb

Burmese junta’s tactical manoeuvre

Profile: Aung San Suu Kyi intruder

Mr Yettaw’s wife, Betty, told the Associated Press that she had not received any official notice that he would be returning home.

"If it’s true, of course I’m extremely happy, and we’re ecstatic," she said by telephone from their home in Camdenton, central Missouri.

However, Burmese dissidents say Senator Webb’s trip could be seen as an endorsement of the poor treatment received by Ms Suu Kyi and more than 2,000 other political prisoners.

Senator Webb’s office said Mr Yettaw would be officially deported on Sunday morning and that the senator would bring him out of the country on a military aircraft that was returning to Bangkok.

After his arrest, Mr Yettaw, said he had been sent by God to deliver a warning to Ms Suu Kyi that she would be assassinated.

Senator Webb, who also asked for the release of Ms Suu Kyi, was the most senior US official to meet the Burmese leader, his office said.

"I am grateful to the Myanmar government for honouring these requests," he said in a statement announcing Mr Yettaw’s release.

"It is my hope that we can take advantage of these gestures as a way to begin laying a foundation of goodwill and confidence-building in the future," Senator Webb added.

‘Sacrifices’

Earlier, Ms Suu Kyi was taken to a state guesthouse near her home to meet Senator Webb, where the two held talks lasting about 40 minutes.

The Democratic senator described the meeting as "an opportunity for me to convey my deep respect to Aung San Suu Kyi for the sacrifices she has made on behalf of democracy around the world".

Ms Suu Kyi went on trial in May after Mr Yettaw swam to her lakeside home with homemade flippers, evading guards.

She was charged with breaking the terms of her house arrest by sheltering Mr Yettaw and, after many delays, was sentenced on Tuesday to three years in prison.

Gen Than Shwe salutes during Armed Forces Day - 27 March 2006

Although the sentence was commuted to 18 months’ house arrest by Than Shwe, it ensures the opposition leader cannot take part in planned elections next year.

Ms Suu Kyi, 64, has spent 14 of the past 20 years under house arrest.

Senator Webb, who chairs the Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee on East Asia and Pacific affairs, has previously called for more "constructive" US engagement with Burma.

He said in July that the trial of Ms Suu Kyi would make this difficult.

The UN Security Council expressed "serious concern" following Ms Suu Kyi’s conviction earlier this week and urged the release of all political prisoners, while the EU extended sanctions against Burma.

But Burma’s neighbour China said the world should respect its laws.

Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva, who is the current chairman of the Association of South East Asian Nations (Asean) told the BBC that imposing sanctions could lead to problems and that it was important to take a balanced approach to dealing with Burma.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

US senator ‘meets Burmese leader’

Senator Jim Webb in Vientiane, capital of Laos - 13 August 2009

US Senator Jim Webb has arrived in Burma on a visit during which he is to meet military ruler Than Shwe.

He would be the most senior US official to meet Than Shwe, the Democratic senator’s office said in a statement.

His visit comes days after pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi was given 18 more months of house arrest.

Adding to international condemnation, the UN Security Council has expressed its "serious concern" and the EU extended its sanctions against Burma.

Mr Webb, who is close to US President Barack Obama, is due to meet Than Shwe on Saturday, a Burmese official said.

He is not expected to meet Ms Suu Kyi or American John Yettaw, whose uninvited visit to her home led to the trial which ended on Tuesday.

Mr Webb chairs the Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee on East Asia and Pacific affairs.

‘Watered-down’ statement

Ms Suu Kyi was put on trial in May after Mr Yettaw swam to her lakeside home, evading guards. She was charged with breaking the terms of her house arrest by sheltering Mr Yettaw and after many delays, was sentenced on Tuesday to three years in prison.

Although the sentence was commuted to 18 months house arrest by Than Shwe, it ensures the opposition leader cannot take in planned elections next year.

Ms Suu Kyi, 64, has spent 14 of the past 20 years under house arrest.

A supporter of Aung San Suu Kyi hands out photos of her during a protest in Paris after the court verdict.

A UN Security Council statement on Thursday expressed "serious concern" at the sentence and urged the release of all political prisoners.

Correspondents said the statement was watered down from an original US draft, which "condemned" the verdict and demanded that Burma’s military junta free Ms Suu Kyi.

The main reason for the weaker language was China – a powerful permanent member of the council, with close ties to Burma’s rulers, says the BBC’s Tom Lane at the UN.

Together with Russia it has blocked strongly-worded condemnations in the past, our correspondent adds.

The US, Britain and France were among countries to condemn the verdict, but Burma’s neighbour China said the world should respect Burma’s laws.

The EU said judges involved in Ms Suu Kyi’s sentencing would now join military and government figures in having their overseas assets frozen and travel to the EU banned.

Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva, who is the current chairman of the Association of South East Asian Nations (Asean) told the BBC that imposing sanctions could lead to problems and that it was important to take a balanced approach to dealing with Burma.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

The Edge mid-week comment Aug 12: Back to commodities

IN THE PAST WEEK, palm oil (CPO) prices have climbed 20% from their June lows, to RM2,417 per tonne this week although it is still 16% below the 2009 highs. Sugar prices are also at 28-year highs.
 
What’s going on? Palm oil and soya oil prices are up very sharply, notes Bratin Sanyal, Head of Asian Equity Investments ING Investment Management Asia/Pacific, because “agricultural soft commodities are doing very well on the back of poorer crop expectations in India. The monsoon has been poor so far. In Brazil, rainfall has been too much. Flooding has lead to a poor outlook for the harvest.” And that doesn’t count the recent typhoon Morakot that has hit north Asia, causing flooding and more crop damage. There’s also the El Nino effect we’ve been having in South-east Asia.

The Edge mid-week comment Aug 12: Back to commodities

IN THE PAST WEEK, palm oil (CPO) prices have climbed 20% from their June lows, to RM2,417 per tonne this week although it is still 16% below the 2009 highs. Sugar prices are also at 28-year highs.
 
What’s going on? Palm oil and soya oil prices are up very sharply, notes Bratin Sanyal, Head of Asian Equity Investments ING Investment Management Asia/Pacific, because “agricultural soft commodities are doing very well on the back of poorer crop expectations in India. The monsoon has been poor so far. In Brazil, rainfall has been too much. Flooding has lead to a poor outlook for the harvest.” And that doesn’t count the recent typhoon Morakot that has hit north Asia, causing flooding and more crop damage. There’s also the El Nino effect we’ve been having in South-east Asia.

Typhoon downs web connections in Asia

Up to 90 per cent of all voice call and internet services from parts of East Asia that were disrupted after Typhoon Morakot damaged undersea cables will resume by the end of Thursday, a senior Chunghwa Telecom official said.  Many web users in Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore and the PhilippinesUp to 90 per cent of all voice call and internet services from parts of East Asia that were disrupted after Typhoon Morakot damaged undersea cables will resume by the end of Thursday, a senior Chunghwa Telecom official said. Many web users in Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore and the Philippines


Ssangyong going for a song?

After the industrial turmoil of recent months, you might well think that South Korea’s Ssangyong isn’t exactly an attractive prospect. It’s effectively down on its knees, the previous ‘revival plan’ in need of an urgent rewrite, its main creditors none too sympathetic to the financial mess. 


But that could be exactly why now is a very good time for someone to acquire it cheaply.  


Upsides? The brand is perhaps less damaged than you might think.


The vehicles themselves are hardly sexy, but they have proven themeselves capable of garnering niche sales. And they sell in significant numbers well beyond South Korean shores. It could be a brand with good growth potential.


The manufacturing side? Well, it’s a base in East Asia. Calm the workers down and it could start to look like less of a basket case. 


A new owner or partner (probably not Chinese) and a bit of a ‘new broom’ might be just the ticket, if the short-term financial pressures can be resolved.


Remember the similarly hopeless looking mess that was Daewoo Motor at the beginning of the decade? It was turned around very cleverly by GM to become the manufacturing bedrock of the global brand that is now Chevrolet. It can be done.

SOUTH KOREA: Ssangyong dispute over, but future uncertain

Indonesia suspect ‘in shoot-out’

Noordin Top

Indonesian police hunting terror suspect Noordin Mohamed Top have been involved in a shoot-out with suspected militants, reports say.

There has been no confirmation that the exchange of fire on Java involved Noordin – one of south-east Asia’s top terror suspects.

But unconfirmed reports on Indonesian TV said that Noordin had been arrested.

He is suspected of involvement in last month’s bombings of two hotels in Jakarta and the 2002 Bali blasts.

He was thought to be a key recruiter and financier for a regional Islamist militant group, Jemaah Islamiah, but has now formed his own militant group.

A lull in militant attacks since 2005 came to an end in July with suicide attacks on two hotels in Jakarta, raising concerns that Noordin was becoming active again.

Friday’s shoot-out took place in a village in central Java, police said.

TV reports said police had closed off an area of 1 sq km and had arrested two people, but the raid was still going on.

Correspondents say the search for Noordin has focused on central Java because he is believed to have a network of sympathisers there.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Memo to Clinton: US ain’t top dog

The US doesn’t necessarily lead the pack in world affairs – something Hillary Clinton should remember on her Asian tour

Speaking in Washington before embarking on this week’s Asian tour, Hillary Clinton set out the most definitive version yet of how the Obama administration intends to deal with the world. The US secretary of state spoke of “a new era of engagement based on common interests, shared values, and mutual respect” and of a foreign policy “blending principle and pragmatism”.

Contrasting this collaborative approach with the “for us or against us” stance of the Bush administration, Clinton said the US would opt for diplomacy first when dealing with Iran, North Korea and other nations or adversaries. There were no guarantees of success; and dialogue did not imply acceptance of repressive regimes. But “we cannot be afraid or unwilling to engage … as long as engagement might advance our interests”.

Clinton’s call for a “multi-partner” rather than a multi-polar world is the diplomatic equivalent of police brutality victim Rodney King’s famous (and unsuccessful) plea for mutual tolerance at the height of the 1992 Los Angeles race riots. “People, I just want to say, you know, can we all get along?” asked King. Clinton’s similar, less eloquent call for international amity and understanding may also have limited impact. Today North Korea’s hothead leadership lambasted her, saying she resembled “a pensioner going shopping“. So no breakthrough just yet.

More surprisingly perhaps, Clinton’s visits this week to India and Thailand, where she met leaders of south-east Asian nations and her Chinese, Russian, South Korean and Japanese counterparts, suggested to some that the US may struggle to maintain constructive partnerships with its allies, let alone its enemies. These tensions are only partly attributable to George Bush’s toxic legacy and resulting anti-Americanism. They have more to do with perceived changes in the global balance of power, principally a post-crash decline in US clout and a parallel expansion of Chinese and Indian influence.

In Delhi, Clinton was publicly slapped down over pre-Copenhagen pressure from Washington and others for binding caps on carbon emissions, with environment minister Jairam Ramesh complaining about mooted carbon tariffs on Indian exports. At the same time, she acquiesced in Bush’s nuclear technology deal with India, which drove a coach and horses through the international non-proliferation regime, and gave a green light to massive future US arms sales to India, hardly reassuring prospects for Pakistan.

Clinton also appears to have tip-toed around the issue of divided Kashmir, mindful perhaps of British foreign secretary David Miliband’s bruising experience in Delhi earlier this year. This is odd, given the high importance Washington attaches to its Afghanistan-Pakistan strategy and its wish that Pakistani troops, currently deployed along the Line of Control facing India, be redirected into the battle against the Taliban and Islamist militants. These and other strains are certain to resurface once the jolly bonhomie surrounding Clinton’s visit, more resembling a campaign trail meet-and-greet than a diplomatic summit, dissipates.

“Obama is committed to ratifying the comprehensive test ban treaty and strengthening the non-proliferation treaty [India is party to neither] … He also intends for the US to be part of the international effort to replace the Kyoto protocol with a treaty-based climate control regime including India, China and other emerging powers,” noted Strobe Talbott of the Brookings Institution thinktank in a recent article. Such fundamental differences do not bode well for the strengthened, strategic partnership with India that Clinton enthused about.

Clinton’s declaration in Thailand that the US was “back” in south-east Asia, and intended to give greater priority to its friends in the region, also elicited mixed responses. Her ever tougher line on North Korea, coupled with US pressure on Asean members to do more to confront the Burmese junta, makes many countries nervous.

This cage-rattling could yet prove counter-productive. Old ally Japan, for example, may be about to elect a party pledged to re-examine the role of the US military in the Asia-Pacific region. Others, such as Thailand, Malaysia and Singapore, are increasingly drawn towards Beijing’s powerful economic orbit. For its part, China itself may no longer be a US enemy – but it remains unclear whether, on a range of international issues, it can really be classed as a friend. Mostly China suits itself. These days it can afford to.

Yet possibly the biggest obstacle to the “new mindset” partnerships Clinton envisaged in her Washington speech is of her own creation – her very old-fashioned assumption that, in all such arrangements, the US will naturally be top dog and pack leader. This is what Iranian conservatives term the “global arrogance”. Memo to HC: it ain’t necessarily so.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Krishna leaves for Thailand to attend India-ASEAN Ministerial meeting

External Affairs Minister S M Krishna left for Phuket, Thailand on Tuesday to attend the three-day Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) and East Asia Summit.
Speaking to reporters, Krishna said that India’’s participation in the ASEAN meet and the East Asia Summit is an important element of the country’’s ”Look East” policy.
“India shares civilizational [...]

Florida launches mass python hunt

Death of Shaiunna Hare, two, sparks state to license trappers to hunt up to 100,000 pythons on the loose owing to exotic pet fad

The death of a Florida toddler in the coils of an 8ft (2.5 metre) Burmese python has sparked an official crackdown to eradicate a menacing population of slithering predators in the sun-drenched holiday state.

A small band of newly licensed trappers hit the trail this week of pythons living in the swampy wetlands of southern Florida. Experts believe that as many as 100,000 of the reptiles are loose in the region, in an unfortunate outcome of a fad for keeping exotic pets.

Earlier this month, a two-year-old girl, Shaiunna Hare, was strangled to death in her bedroom near Orlando by a python belonging to her mother’s boyfriend. The snake had escaped its glass cage during the night and wrapped itself around the child’s crib.

The tragedy galvanised Florida’s politicians into action over mounting alarm about the danger posed by pythons, which grow as long as 8 metres, weigh up to 89kg (14 stone) and can eat animals as big as deer.

“It’s just a matter of time before one of these snakes gets to a visitor in the Florida Everglades,” said Bill Nelson, a Democratic senator from the state.

Native to Africa and south-east Asia, pythons are interlopers to Florida and face no predator to keep them in check. Florida locals blame a booming wild population on irresponsible pet owners who release pythons into the wild when they become unmanageably large.

Others trace the problem back to hurricane Andrew which destroyed pet shops, hatcheries and zoos as it swept across the Floridian peninsula in 1992. Wildlife experts fear that if left unchecked, the snakes will decimate the population of smaller mammals, birds and reptiles.

Florida’s governor, Charlie Crist, last week licensed an initial group of fewer than 10 python hunters to begin trapping the snakes. Pursued by a pack of photographers, the hunters snared a 3-metre long python during their first foray on Friday.

“[Pythons] don’t make a lot of noise, when they’re agitated, they may hiss,” said Shawn Heflick, a licensed hunter. “They can hold on pretty tight but they’re well camouflaged and when they sit in vegetation, they’re pretty hard to see.”

Accustomed to alligators, Florida locals are not easily fazed by wildlife. The subtropical state numbers black widow spiders and fire ants among its more exotic residents. But pythons are proving particularly chilling. The snakes reproduce rapidly, laying as many as 100 eggs at a time.

“We do have a serious python problem, and this programme is a good first step in helping to stop the spread of this exotic species,” said Rodney Barreto, the chair of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission.

Curbs have been imposed on keeping pythons as pets – including a compulsory annual $100 (£61) permit and embedded microchips to track escaped pets. But animal rights groups have called for more radical steps.

The Humane Society of the United States said a ban on the trade in pythons would be more effective than any hunt for wild snakes.

“We should not pursue wasteful and futile strategies like bounty programs and public hunts,” said Wayne Pacelle, the society’s chief executive. “They won’t work, and could do more harm than good.”

The Floridian authorities are encouraging anyone who spots a python to call a telephone hotline. In an increasingly elaborate operation, researchers at the University of Florida are even working on miniature drones which can detect the heat given off by pythons from the air.

If the initial hunt proves promising, many more trapping licences could be issued. The hunters are ready for the kill.

“They’ve got beautiful colouration and they’re sleek and powerful,” said Heflick. “They’re actually magnificent animals. They just don’t belong here.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Suicide bombers kill eight in Jakarta

• Co-ordinated attacks on neighbouring buildings
• Killers checked in and made bombs in rooms

The menace of international terrorism returned to Indonesia when explosions ripped through two luxury hotels in Jakarta, killing eight guests and injuring at least 50 others.

Two suicide bombers who had checked in as hotel guests triggered the blasts, which occurred within minutes of each other at the neighbouring JW Marriott and Ritz-Carlton hotels in the Indonesian capital’s business district.

Two Australians and a New Zealander were reportedly among the dead, and the wounded included 18 other foreign nationals from the US, Australia, Canada, India, the Netherlands, Norway and South Korea. The Foreign Office said it had no indication of any British casualties.

The attack forced Manchester United, who are on a pre-season tour of south-east Asia, to cancel a friendly fixture against an Indonesian XI in Jakarta on Monday. The team, currently in the Malaysian capital, Kuala Lumpur, had planned to stay at the Ritz-Carlton this weekend.

Investigators say the bombers had checked in to the Marriott on Wednesday and assembled the bombs in a room on the 18th floor, where an unexploded device was found after the blasts. CCTV cameras recorded the moment of the Marriott blast; grainy images show a man pulling a bag on wheels across the lobby before the flash of the explosion.

The bombs went off in the hotels’ restaurants during breakfast. Witnesses reported seeing bloodied bodies being carried away moments after the explosions, which turned the facades of both hotels into masses of twisted metal. Others said they had seen hundreds of guests, most of whom appeared to be westerners, emerge dazed from the Ritz-Carlton as plumes of thick smoke engulfed nearby buildings and restaurants. “There were bodies on the ground, one of them had no stomach,” said a local man.”

The attacks came as Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim country, appeared to be re-establishing itself as a tourist destination. They were the first in the country since 2005, when 20 people died in blasts on the resort island of Bali.

No group has claimed responsibility, but analysts believe they were the work of Jemaah Islamiyah, an Islamist militant group that advocates an Islamist super-state spanning Indonesia, Malaysia, the southern Philippines, southern Thailand, Singapore and Brunei. The group carried out a bombing at the Marriott in 2003 in which 13 people died, and is blamed for over 50 other attacks in Indonesia in the last decade. They include the October 2002 bombings of two nightclubs in Bali in which 202 died, mainly westerners.

Indonesia’s president, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, condemned the attack as “cruel and inhuman” and vowed to hunt down the perpetrators. Yudhoyono, who was reelected last week, has been credited with bringing peace and stability to a country that had become a target for Islamist militants.”[The bombers] do not have a sense of humanity and do not care about the destruction of our country, because this terror act will have a wide impact on our economy, our business climate, our tourism, our image in the world and many others,” he said.

Australia warned its citizens to reconsider plans to travel to Indonesia, and urged those already there to exercise “extreme caution.” Britons have been advised not to go there unless absolutely necessary.

The Australian prime minister, Kevin Rudd, said he was “sick in the stomach as I think all Australians would feel sick in the stomach. Australians accounted for 88 of the victims in the 2002 attacks on Bali.

“This is an assault on all of us and we are dealing with some very ugly people here,” Rudd said. “Very, very ugly people … and dangerous.”

President Barack Obama said: “These attacks make it clear that extremists remain committed to murdering innocent men, women and children of any faith in all countries.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Eight dead in Jakarta hotel bombings

Jemaah Islamiyah terrorist group being blamed for bomb attacks at Ritz-Carlton and Marriott hotels in Indonesian capital

At least eight people have been killed and 50 injured in two separate bomb attacks at western-owned hotels in the Indonesian capital, Jakarta.

No group has claimed responsibility but the bombings, which appear to have been carried out by suicide attackers, are being blamed on Jemaah Islamiyah (JI), an al-Qaida-linked terrorist group suspected of carrying out similar attacks in south-east Asia.

The blasts occurred virtually simultaneously at the JW Marriott and the Ritz-Carlton hotels in central Jakarta at about 8am local time. Several of the bombing suspects were believed to have been staying at the Marriott.

A New Zealander who died was identified by his employer as Timothy David Mackay, 62. He worked for the cement products manufacturer PT Holcim Indonesia and was reportedly attending a business meeting at the Marriott when the explosions occurred. Seventeen other foreigners were among the wounded.

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono said the attack was carried out by a “terrorist group” and vowed to track down the bombers.

“Those who carried out this attack and those who planned it will be arrested and tried according to the law,” Yudhoyono told a news conference.

A third bomb exploded in a car along a toll road in north Jakarta, where it is thought two people were killed.

JI was suspected of attacking the same Marriott hotel in 2003, when a car bomb killed 12 people, but Yudhoyono said it was too early to say if they were was responsible for today’s attacks.

The south Jakarta police chief, Firman Santyabudi, confirmed that the explosions had occurred at the luxury hotels in the upmarket district of Kuningan, an area popular with foreigners and host to many bars, offices and embassies.

“There were explosions heard from two separate places, one the JW Marriott, the other in the Ritz-Carlton. We are still trying to check because right now we are still helping the victims,” Santyabudi said.

Theo Sambuaga, chairman of the parliamentary security commission, said there were “indications of suicide bombs” at both hotels.

The Manchester United football team was scheduled to stay at the Ritz tomorrow and Sunday for a friendly match against the Indonesian All Stars. In the wake of the attacks, United cancelled the game and its flight to Jakarta.

The bombings came two weeks after a presidential vote which is expected to result in the re-election of Yudhoyono, who has been credited with tackling militancy in Indonesia.

The bombs were planted in the Ritz-Carlton’s Air Langga restaurant and the basement of the Marriott, according to police intelligence reports.

Jakarta police chief Major General Wahyono said the suspects of the Marriott bombing were staying on the 18th floor of the hotel, where un-detonated explosives were found after today’s twin explosions.

“There were several perpetrators,” he told reporters. “They were disguised as guests and stayed in room 1808.”

An employee of the Marriott, named only as Yanuar, told Reuters: “I fell because of an explosion, I did not know where it came from, but after I saw clearly it came from the left side of the JW Marriott Hotel.”

“There were bodies on the ground, one of them had no stomach,” said a man who lives near the hotels and who arrived at the Marriott before emergency services. “It was terrible.”

There have not been any major bomb blasts in Indonesia for four years, and the presidential election passed off peacefully. A terrorism analyst, Rohan Gunaratna, said: “The only group with the intention and capability to mount attacks upon western targets is Jemaah Islamiyah. I have no doubt Jemaah Islamiyah was responsible for this attack.”

Police have detained most of the key figures in the group, and rounded up hundreds of other sympathisers and lesser figures. But Gunaratna said radical ideologues sympathetic to the network were still able to preach extremism in Indonesia, helping provide an infrastructure that could support terrorism.

Hillary Clinton, the US secretary of state, condemned the bombings as reflecting “the viciousness of violent extremists” and said they “remind us that the threat of terrorism remains very real”.

Sidney Jones, a Jakarta-based expert on Islamic militants for the International Crisis Group, said: “It’s more likely to be a splinter group than JI itself, which doesn’t mean you couldn’t have JI members but it’s very unlikely to be JI as an organisation behind this attack.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


The Tiger Could Lose Its Roar

M’sia needs to work harder and faster if it does not want to be left
behind: Analyst

William Pesek

Those wondering where Malaysia is headed should keep an eye on Mr Tony
Fernandes.

Perhaps no one personifies the promise of Asia’s 10th-biggest economy
better than the 43-year-old entrepreneur. In 2001, he created a budget
airline, beating the odds in an industry dominated by government-linked
companies. AirAsia has been turning heads ever since.

Airline magnate Aristotle Onassis once said the key to succeeding in
business is knowing something others don’t. Mr Fernandes knew that not
only were Asians ready for no-frills carriers, but so were investors.

Mr Fernandes is often called South-east Asia’s answer to Mr Richard
Branson. It seems highly appropriate, then, that the two men teamed to
launch AirAsia X, a long-haul budget carrier that made its maiden flight
this month. Mr Branson’s Virgin Group is among its key backers.

For all his success, Mr Fernandes is a microcosm of why Malaysia’s economy
isn’t on the upward trajectory it could be.

Politicians’ efforts over the years to protect the turf of Malaysia
Airlines (MAS) backfired, leaving Kuala Lumpur lagging behind in the race
for Asia’s travel hub. Malaysia has tied one hand behind its back to help
national champions at the expense of the bigger picture.

“I’m asking this for national interest, not MAS’ interest or that of
anything else,” said Mr Fernandes of his battle to fly from Kuala Lumpur
to Singapore. “The consumers have suffered enough.”

Politicians continue to dither over another national champion:
State-controlled carmaker Proton Holdings. While talks on an alliance with
Volkswagen AG are progressing, the saga is a reminder that Malaysia’s
leaders are wasting time the nation doesn’t have.

In Proton’s case, the exercise is about finding a partner to help revive
sales and return the 24-year-old company to profit. Yet this, like Mr
Fernandes’ fight to expand his innovative airline, is emblematic of how
politicians often don’t grasp that Malaysia’s place in Asia is rather
tenuous.

Malaysia is a remarkable place with incredible potential. Its economy has
achieved great things in the 50 years since independence from Britain.
Once a tropical backwater, Kuala Lumpur is now a modern, skyscraper-filled
city home to the world’s second-tallest buildings, the twin Petronas
Towers.

Yet, the next 50 years will arguably be harder than the last. It wasn’t
one of the original Asian tigers, but Malaysia became one over the years.

However, “the world is moving ahead at a rapid pace and it won’t wait for
Malaysia”, said Mr Razlan Mohamed, chief executive of Malaysian Rating
Corp. The nation “needs to work harder and work faster”.

Ms Chrisanne Chin from MIMS Business School, Malaysian Institute of
Management and INTI University College, puts it this way: “It’s not so
much what Malaysia is lacking, but that China, India, Vietnam and even
Thailand and Indonesia have improved so much they are capable of
leapfrogging Malaysia in another five years because of specific
comparative advantages, from low costs to human capital to technology.”

Human capital is a particular concern. The government needs to do more to
train the leaders of tomorrow and import the talent that companies need to
thrive. It also has to win more of the foreign direct investment flowing
elsewhere in Asia.

There is much backslapping about how the US$147-billion ($213-billion)
economy may expand 6 per cent this year and 6.5 per cent next year. The
real picture can be found in the World Economic Forum’s latest
competitiveness survey, in which Malaysia slipped two spots to 21st place.

A huge obstacle for Malaysia is something that can barely be discussed: A
37-year-old affirmative-action programme favouring the predominant Malay
community.

It alienates non-Malays, limits foreign investment, stifles competition
and keeps the economy from moving toward a meritocracy. Yet, it is a
third-rail issue. Most Malaysians won’t even discuss it without first
looking around to see who is listening.

A sense of political drift doesn’t help. Four years in office, Prime
Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi has spent more time trying to solidify the
influence of his political party – the United Malays National
Organisation – than bringing Malaysia’s economy to the next level.

For a glimpse of the future, one could do worse than ask Mr Ramon
Navaratnam, president of anti-corruption group Transparency International
Malaysia and author of the book, Where to, Malaysia?, who has this to say:
“The future is bright, but only if we are honest with ourselves that we
have a lot of difficult work to do … Otherwise, we will see the rest of
Asia pulling ahead and Malaysia walking in place.”

William Pesek is a Bloomberg News columnist. The opinions expressed are
his own.