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China says Falun Gong ban ‘works’

By Michael Bristow
BBC News, Beijing

Falun Gong session in Thong Nhat Park in central Hanoi

An Chinese official says the country has been successful in efforts to crack down on the spiritual movement Falun Gong, 10 years after it was banned.

Li Anping, from the China Anti-Cult Association, told a national newspaper that people now realised the true nature of the movement.

But Falun Gong still exists, and has organised protest events outside China to mark the anniversary.

Falun Gong was banned in China in 1999 for carrying out "illegal activities".

‘Violent campaign’

The Chinese government is not keen to mark this anniversary and there has been little mention of Falun Gong in the media over the past few days.

But Mr Li told China’s Global Times: "As people have realised the true essence of the cult, it’s [now] impossible for them to organise a massive activity."

His association is a non-governmental body made up of volunteers, although it receives government backing.

Falun Gong practitioners demonstrate in front of the Chinese Consulate July 20, 2009 in Chicago

But the Falun Gong information centre, based in New York, puts forward a different picture.

It says the Chinese government has carried out a violent campaign against practitioners over the last 10 years.

It claims that more than 3,000 people have been killed and tens of thousands tortured in China’s crackdown on the movement.

"This anniversary is a time of commemoration for the millions whose lives have been unalterably changed by this violent campaign," said Levi Browde, executive director of the centre, in a statement earlier this month.

In China, the centre’s claims are almost impossible to verify.

Falun Gong was initially tolerated in China, but was banned after 10,000 practitioners staged a protest outside the central government’s leadership compound in Beijing.

Officials said the ban was introduced because the group carried out illegal activities, promoted superstition and disrupted social order.

It is often referred to by the government as an "evil cult".

Since then the Chinese government has waged a relentless publicity campaign against Falun Gong and its followers.

But it is clear that some Chinese people continue to support the movement, which is based on breathing and meditation exercises.

Although the group is banned in mainland China, it is legal in Hong Kong, which was returned to China in 1997.

There have also been demonstrations against China’s crackdown on the movement in Hong Kong, Taiwan and the United States over recent days.

And there are still people in the mainland who ignore their government’s ban and continue to practise in secret. </p


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

Mourning as Jakarta probes bombs

Ritz-Carlton in Jakarta

Wreaths have been laid and prayers said near the site in Jakarta, Indonesia, where two bombs exploded on Friday.

A multi-faith ceremony near the Ritz-Carlton and Marriott Hotels was being organised to show community solidarity.

Police and security analysts have said the attacks were most likely carried out by an offshoot of the militant Islamist group Jemaah Islamiah.

The bombs, which struck the two US-owned luxury hotels, killed nine people including two suicide bombers.

Scores of people are still in hospital being treated for wounds received in the blasts.

Crowds have also been milling around the bomb sites, reading messages left by others – most of them condemning terrorism.

Sadness and shock

Relatives of some of the victims in the bombing have come to Jakarta for memorials and to collect the bodies.

New Zealander Timothy Mackay, 62, president director of Holcim Indonesia cement company, was among the dead, as were Australians Nathan Verity and Garth McEvoy.

Craig Senger has become the first Australian government official to be killed in a terrorist attack; he worked as a trade commission officer at the embassy in Jakarta.

Officials said 17 foreigners were among the wounded, including eight Americans and citizens of Australia, Britain, Canada, Hong Kong, India, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway and South Korea.

Several reports suggest the regular Friday morning business breakfast at the JW Marriott Hotel, hosted by well-known business consultant James Castle, was one target of the attack.

Indonesian television has broadcast security camera footage showing what appears to have been the suicide bomber coming out of the lift and walking directly to the lounge where the business breakfast was always held.

Reports also say a hotel security guard stopped the alleged bomber and asked what he was doing, before letting him make what he called "a delivery" to the room – which then exploded.

Reactions have been muted on Monday’s public holiday in Indonesia but people interviewed on the streets said they were shocked at the bomb attacks after several years of stability and economic growth.

Probing

Police say they are investigating similarities to the twin bomb attacks on Bali in 2002, which killed 202 people.

NOORDIN MOHAMED TOP

  • Born in Malaysia, fled to Indonesia after 9/11
  • Wanted for planning bombings on Bali in 2002 and 2005 and other attacks
  • Said to have split from Jemaah Islamiah over strategy disagreements and set up new group
  • Main accomplice Azahari Husin killed by police in 2005
  • Escaped police raid in 2006 and continues to evade capture

Profile: Noordin Mohamed Top

Profile: Jemaah Islamiah

Noordin Top (archive image)

Friday’s bombs also resemble bomb-making material found during recent police raids on an Islamic boarding school in Cilacap, Central Java.

Police said they are trying to reconstruct the face of one of the dead suicide bombers before they can be absolutely certain of the identities of those involved.

Speculation has focused on two graduates of the Ngruki boarding school, which is led by controversial cleric Abu Bakar Ba’asyir.

Police are hunting for Noordin Mohammad Top, a fugitive Malaysian who heads a particularly violent offshoot of the Jemaah Islamiah network and has been linked to four major attacks in Indonesia since 2002.

Police are also looking for connections between Friday’s bombing and explosives discovered last week in the Cilacap region of Central Java. The explosives were buried in a garden at the house of Noordin’s father-in-law, who is also at large.

Noordin was said to be a key financier for Jemaah Islamiah but is now thought to have set up his own splinter group.

Jemaah Islamiah has links to al-Qaeda and has a long track record of bomb attacks in Indonesia, including the Bali bombings.</p


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

Fugitive linked to Jakarta blasts

Ritz-Carlton in Jakarta

Police in Indonesia’s capital, Jakarta, are studying DNA and other evidence to try to identify those behind the deadly attacks on two hotels on Friday.

At least nine people, including two suicide bombers, died in the attacks on the Ritz-Carlton and JW Marriott.

At least half of the victims are said to be foreigners but they are still to be formally identified.

A top anti-terror official was quoted as saying Malaysian militant Noordin Mohammed Top was linked to the attacks.

The BBC’s Karishma Vaswani in Jakarta says the Indonesian people have been truly shocked by these attacks as they thought they had put events like this behind them.

‘Shoulder to shoulder’

Investigators on Friday recovered an unexploded bomb and other explosives material from what they said was the "control centre" for the attacks – room 1808 in the Marriott.

See map of area

The attackers paid to stay at the hotel and smuggled in the explosives before detonating them in two restaurants on Friday.

CCTV footage showed one attacker wearing a cap pulling a bag on wheels into the Marriott restaurant, followed by a flash and smoke.

"I strongly condemn the attacks that occurred… in Jakarta and extend my deepest condolences to all of the victims and their loved ones"

Barack Obama

Eyewitnesses: Jakarta attacks

Attack waiting to happen

Indonesia braces for tourism blow

Profile: Jemaah Islamiah

A senior counter-terrorism official, Ansyaad Mbai, was quoted by the state-run Antara news agency on Saturday as saying the attacks were "clearly linked" to Noordin Mohammed Top.

He is believed to lead a splinter group of Jemaah Islamiah, which was blamed for the deadly 2002 Bali bomb attacks and a number of others in Indonesia.

Friday’s bombs contained nails, ball bearings and bolts, identical to ones used by Jemaah Islamiah, police said.

Security has been tightened across Indonesia in the wake of the attacks, with 500 troops put on standby to support police in the capital.

A new Zealander, businessman Tim Mackay, has been confirmed killed.

Australia fears for three missing nationals, including diplomat Craig Senger and Perth businessman Nathan Verity.

But details of the victims are still not confirmed. One health ministry report said the identified dead included two Australians, a New Zealander, a Singaporean and an Indonesian.

Police in Jakarta

At least 17 foreigners were among the wounded, including eight Americans.

Other foreign nationals wounded included visitors from Australia, Canada, Hong Kong, India, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, South Korea and the UK.

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono condemned the attacks as "cruel and inhuman".

US President Barack Obama said: "I strongly condemn the attacks that occurred… in Jakarta and extend my deepest condolences to all of the victims and their loved ones."

Australian Foreign Minister Stephen Smith is due to arrive in Jakarta on Saturday.

He said he wanted to stand "shoulder to shoulder with Indonesia at this terrible time".

The Manchester United football team had been booked to stay in the Ritz-Carlton next week ahead of a game in Jakarta.

The team has cancelled the Indonesian leg of their tour.

The attacks come just weeks after the peaceful presidential elections.

The country of 240 million people has been praised in recent years for maintaining a pluralist democracy while finding and punishing radical Islamists responsible for the series of bombings more than five years ago.

Jakarta map

Back to story
</p


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

UN sets new North Korea sanctions

North Korean missile launch - photo released April 2009

A United Nations committee has added a number of North Korean individuals and firms to a sanctions blacklist.

Five individuals, five firms and two weapons-related items are subject to the new sanctions regime.

A UN resolution in June toughened sanctions against North Korea after it conducted nuclear and missile tests.

The last time the UN imposed sanctions on Pyongyang, it responded by carrying out a nuclear test, says the BBC’s Laura Trevelyan in New York.

According to the UN Security Council sanctions committee, nations are now banned from doing business with five firms involved in North Korea’s nuclear programme, and five individuals are to have their financial assets frozen and face a travel ban.

They include:

  • three North Korean trading corporations – Namchongang, Korea Hykosin and Korea Tangun, as well as North Korea’s bureau of atomic energy
  • an Iranian-based company, Hong Kong Electronics, is also sanctioned, accused of moving millions of dollars used for North Korea’s nuclear programme
  • Yun Ho-jin, Ri Je-son, Hwang Sok-hwa, Ri Hong-sop and Han Yu-ro now face sanctions because of their involvement in the development of North Korea’s banned activities
  • countries cannot sell North Korea certain types of graphite or para-aramid fiber because they could be used to make parts for ballistic missiles

The UN resolution in June called for inspections of ships to or from North Korea believed to be carrying goods connected to weapons of mass destruction.

It also broadened the arms embargo and further cut the North’s access to the international financial system, but did not authorise the use of force.

Ties between North Korea and the outside world have grown extremely tense since it walked away from six-nation talks aimed at ending its nuclear programme.

It subsequently said it would "weaponise" its plutonium stocks and start enriching uranium, prompting fears that it is working to produce nuclear warheads small enough to put on missiles – though analysts say it could take a long time to do so.</p


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

Chinese spurt raises recovery hopes

• Annual GDP in China reaches 7.9%
• ‘The recovery is not fully balanced’ warns government

China’s economic growth accelerated in the second quarter of this year as a massive stimulus package kicked in, lifting hopes that it could drive the rest of the world towards recovery.

Annual gross domestic product growth in the world’s third largest economy rose from 6.1% in the first quarter of the year to 7.9% – well above predictions – the National Bureau of Statistics reported today.

The latest rise indicated that the country was on course to achieve its growth target of 8% for the year, said Jing Ulrich, JP Morgan’s chairwoman for China equities.

“The recovery is confirmed. The bottom was the fourth quarter last year,” Hao Daming, a senior economist at Galaxy Securities in Beijing, told Reuters.

Many have hoped that China’s huge industrial expansion and growing middle class hungry for consumer goods and previously unattainable luxuries such as cars could help to lead the world into recovery.

But while officials heralded the good news, they cautioned that the basis of the rebound was not stable.

Predictions of China’s 2009 growth have wavered up and down, but the International Monetary Fund recently raised its forecast by one percentage point to 7.5% and the World Bank boosted its forecast to 7.2%.

Li Xiaochao, a spokesman for the statistics office, said the data had laid a foundation for hitting the 8% growth target, believed by many to be the level needed to hold unemployment down.

“Our economy is continuing to turn for the better and there are more and more positive factors,” Li told a news conference.

“We see more people shopping and prices beginning to rise. The economy is recovering and the recovery is intensifying. All the government’s policies have worked together to help us overcome the financial crisis,” he said.

But he warned: “The basis of the rebound of the people’s economy is not stable. The recovery is not fully balanced, so there are some regions that have not done as well as others.”

A breakdown of the 7.1% GDP growth rate for the first half of 2009 showed that investment accounded for 6.2 percentage points – reflecting the government’s infrastructure-driven 4 trillion yuan (£356bn) stimulus package. An increase in bank lending also helped the economy to pick up.

Consumption added 3.8 percentage points to GDP, but net exports, which have slumped this year, subtracted 2.9 points.

Factory output growth rose 10.7% in June, faster than May’s 8.9% growth, the bureau said.

“It’s clear to me that China is really successfully shifting from export-driven growth to domestic-driven growth. It’s very encouraging,” Tim Condon, head of Asia Research at ING in Singapore, told Reuters.

Analysts are warning that concerns about inflationary expectations could soon lead to a tightening of monetary policy.

“There are still quite a lot of uncertainties. We should remain watchful about changes in prices,” Li told reporters.

Brian Jackson, an economist at the Royal Bank of Canada in Hong Kong, told Reuters: “In the near term, we think the focus will remain on supporting growth, but there is an increasing chance that policy will need to be tightened sooner and more forcefully to deal with potential problems caused by very easy liquidity. The accelerator is clearly working well, but at some stage the brake will need to be used.”

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


Michael Strong: The Most Progressive Movement on the Planet

What if we could apply the power of creativity, innovation, and entrepreneurship to the problem of poverty reduction?

‘This will be our biggest pandemic’

As swine flu sweeps the planet, Margaret Chan, head of the World Health Organisation, tells how she is leading the battle against it – and the personal price she is paying

Although she would no doubt point out that swine flu should properly be called H1N1, there is something pleasing in the fact that the first thing Margaret Chan, director-general of the World Health Organisation, does when I enter her office is pick up a cut-out of a pig that has fallen on its face and carefully place it upright. A pink and gilt confection, it’s left over from celebrating the Chinese year of the pig in 2007: it was so cute, she says, that she couldn’t bear to throw it out.

A year earlier, Chan had been a surprise candidate in a surprise election (the previous incumbent died halfway through his term), but she won with a clear majority to become the first Chinese national to run a major UN agency. A rule change in 2005 (the WHO no longer has to beg states for information about threats to global health, but can just demand it) also makes her the most powerful public health official in history.

Tiny in her orange jacket and neat little orange-brown Miu Miu mules, she wears that authority not lightly, exactly, but naturally: in an organisation famed for its bureaucratic circumlocutions, she is refreshingly direct. It’s a strength she’s aware of – “I have a reputation for being a straight-talker, I will tell them the story like it is” – but that makes it no less striking, or true. (Also striking, for those who have witnessed it, is her penchant for bursting into song: she once punctured a tense moment at a summit about bird flu by singing a few lines of Getting To Know You, from The King and I.)

Months later, on 11 June 2009, she found herself the first WHO chief in 41 years to stand before the world and announce that a new virus had reached pandemic proportions. Right up until the last minute, scientists were calling her up and warning her to be careful about raising the threat alert so high — but the strict definition of “pandemic” is a new disease spreading uncontrollably through numerous countries, and on that count her decision has been completely borne out. On 11 June, swine flu had been registered in 74 countries; when we meet in Geneva four weeks later, it has just been confirmed in 140 countries.

Born in another year of the pig, 62 years ago, Chan began her career as a liberal arts graduate and a high school teacher of home economics, Chinese and English, but when her boyfriend moved to Canada to study medicine, she followed him. Finding that she still saw him very little, she applied to study medicine herself, in the same class. When they graduated they returned to Hong Kong, and in 1994 she was appointed as director of health there, with a staff of 7,000. Three years later, she faced a major outbreak of bird flu.

Chan learned then that clarity of communication is of utmost importance, and that over-reassurance can be as bad as no reassurance at all. She has in mind the (infamous in Hong Kong) moment when she was trying to tell people that it was still safe to eat chicken. “They asked me, ‘Do you eat chicken?’ and I said, ‘Yes, I do. I eat chicken every day.’” It’s the last sentence she regrets, because it is so patently undermining. No one would go on that kind of diet, right?

Her critics were not to know that it was, in fact, true: Chan did eat chicken every day, just as she has had a tuna sandwich every single lunchtime (barring official functions) for the five years she has lived in Geneva. Her job is so big, so unpredictable, that she says these fixed points are crucially important “to maintain my sanity”. So now it’s a tuna sandwich every day, and a session on a treadmill every morning.

But in Hong Kong the damage was done, and she eventually ordered a cull of all 1.5m chickens in the country. By the time the Sars epidemic came round in 2003, she was experienced and tough enough to have earned the nickname “Iron Lady”; although 299 people died in Hong Kong, and she was criticised in some quarters for being slow off the mark (she replied that she had found it hard to get accurate information from mainland China), most experts applauded her efficiency. She was headhunted to improve the WHO’s response to infectious disease threats because, as the then director-general told her, “You are the only person who has managed crises. I have many armchair experts. I need generals.”

Chan’s war has arrived with a vengeance. A 2007 WHO report, A Safer Future, estimated that a flu pandemic could affect more than 1.5 bn people, or 25% of the world’s population. Could swine flu be that big? “Quite likely. Quite likely. But it probably won’t happen in one run. It will probably come back [in two or three waves].”

How does she expect it to compare to other pandemics? “In terms of the number of countries affected and the number of people infected, this has got to be the biggest.”

Bigger than 1918? “If you’re talking about mortality then it’s different. 1918 is the biggest in terms of mortality. I would not like to make any predictions . . . I hope we don’t see the 1918 picture. But we should expect to see more people infected, and more severe cases coming up, including deaths.”

Swine flu is probably already much bigger than anyone knows. Ten days ago, only six countries in Africa had reported cases, but as Chan readily admits, this is rather misleading: until the WHO started sending out lab kits in early May, many developing countries had no means of testing for it. Furthermore, modelling suggests that swine flu has an attack rate of 30% — once it enters a country, the likelihood is 30% of citizens will catch it at some point.

In wealthy countries such as Britain, she observes, “The disease is self-limiting. Some even recover without medicine. But is it going to be the same in a country where they have a high proportion of people suffering from HIV? Or chronic malnutrition? Or diabetes? [all of which damage immune systems]?”

Pregnant women are among the groups most severely affected; already, every minute of every day, a woman dies in childbirth or pregnancy. Furthermore, unlike seasonal flu, H1N1 tends to affect previously healthy 30-50 year-olds; developing countries have large, young populations often living in crowded conditions.

As well as having no testing facilities, these countries will often have almost no access to antivirals such as Tamiflu. “Is it fair,” demands Chan, rhetorically, “for these countries to go into a pandemic empty-handed?” So she has gone, cap in hand, to the companies that produce them: Roche has just provided 5.6m free doses of antivirals, which Chan has dispatched to the developing world; she is angling for another 5-6m, and hopes they will soon come through.

“Vaccines are much more difficult,” she says with some understatement, “because of the limitations in production capacity.” Companies in Europe and North America, and a few small ones in Asia, are racing to make a vaccine to combat this new disease. “One should be available soon, in August. But having a vaccine available is not the same as having a vaccine that is proven safe. Clinical trial data will not be available for another two to three months.”

The process of acquiring a vaccine is already a salutary lesson in health inequality. “Most of the production capacity has already been booked up by wealthy countries. Again I have to ask the question: do the developing countries have to wait at the end of the queue? Because if that’s the case, they won’t have a vaccine for six months.”

So Chan is trying to persuade manufacturers to free up a percentage of their production capacity for developing countries – 10% is her modest request. “The most important thing is to have a supply of vaccine to protect, first and foremost, a functioning health system. It is always important to keep taking care of pregnant women, cancer patients, diabetics and so forth. And I’m also mindful that a certain amount of vaccine should be provided to countries so they can maintain a stable society — that they must vaccinate law enforcement officers, and fire brigades, for example. Making sure that society can function in a normal way.”

There is, of course, the caveat that swine flu has been “mild so far”. Many countries may opt not to vaccinate at all, or not to make it compulsory. But it is also the case that an estimated 250,000-500,000 people die every year from seasonal flu (not including those who die of respiratory failure or heart disease which hasn’t been traced back to an initial flu virus), and that the situation with swine flu could change at any moment. British scientists admitted this week that they were taken by surprise by swine flu’s sudden spread; Chan is aware that while it could work itself out with comparatively minimal damage, she could also suddenly find herself dealing with a far more virulent, more deadly mutation.

And that, of course, would be on top of the myriad other epidemics and crises currently demanding her attention; the massive health impacts of climate change, for example, which she is in no doubt “will be the defining issue of the 21st century”.

Declining food security will, she predicts, mean massive rises in people dying from malnutrition and diarrhoea, and probably more wars. More floods will mean more water contamination and issues with water security, and more deaths due to injuries and drowning. More waterlogged areas and changes in temperature will mean sharp rises in vector-borne diseases such as malaria and dengue fever.

“The prediction is that, within the next 10-20 years, food production in Africa will drop by 50%. If that’s the case, how many more people will go hungry? Remember that malnourished, stunted children cannot reach their education potential, which will have a massive social and economic impact.”

Chan worries, too, about massive rises in non-communicable diseases (cancer, diabetes, smoking-related illnesses) outside their traditional stamping grounds of the well-fed west. The trouble, from her point of view, is that these diseases attract nothing like the funds that, say, malaria or polio or HIV/AIDS do: “60-80% of the disease burden in developing countries is now due to so-called lifestyle diseases” – and yet, until the last two years when the Bloomberg and Gates foundations got in on the act, non-communicable diseases received no donor funds at all.

Then, of course, there are the ongoing battles — malaria (at least seven African regions have reduced deaths by half), polio, measles, HIV and TB, where another crisis of global proportions threatens: “The challenge is drug-resistant TB. And this is really huge. If it gets out of control,” Chan warns, “it will take us back to the pre-antibiotic era.”

And so her days begin at 7am, on her treadmill, and end hunched over her files late at night. Her husband opted not to come with her to Geneva (there would be nothing for him to do, and she travels frequently), so she lives alone in a flat five minutes’ walk away from WHO headquarters. She does not drive, and speaks so little French that when she first came she couldn’t even find a tin-opener in the shops.For 30 years her husband did all the cooking, so she had forgotten how – after a year and a half she fell ill with anaemia. Living apart from him for the first time in 50 years is taking its toll.

“I’m sorry!” she says, flapping her hands helplessly and wiping tears away. “When I talk about my husband . . . you know, he is so interesting, he is such a lovely man. I once said, ‘David, can I have a contract?’ He said, ‘What do you mean?’ I said, ‘Can I marry you again in the next life?’ It’s not easy. But it is the kind of sacrifice I think you have to make in the interests of global health.”

And it is a fixed term; she will be done in another two-and-a-half years. In the meantime, there are aeroplanes. The day after we met, Chan flew to Sharm-el-Sheikh to address the spouses of world leaders on maternal death rates; it was a brief stop on her way home to Hong Kong for a couple of weeks’ annual holiday. Although “with a pandemic,” Chan says wryly, “you can’t really be on leave” •

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Religious row flares in Malaysia

Christians light candles outside a church in Kuala Lumpur - file photo 25/12/2006

Police in Malaysia have said they will release nine Christians mistakenly accused of trying to convert Muslim university students to Christianity.

A university security guard wrongly thought they were handing Christian pamphlets to Muslims, police said.

Trying to convert Muslims to another religion is forbidden in Malaysia, though Muslims may proselytise.

Members of religious minorities have complained that their rights are being ignored in Muslim-majority Malaysia.

The nine Christians, five students and four friends from Hong Kong, were arrested late on Tuesday at Universiti Putra Malaysia in Serdang, near Kuala Lumpur.

District police chief Zahedi Ayob said they had been distributing questionnaires to other Christians, not Muslims, as security guards at the university had believed.

Religious disharmony investigation

The arrests followed a controversy last week centring on two journalists who wrote about hiding their Muslim identity in order to receive Communion at a Roman Catholic church.

One of the journalists said they were investigating reports that Muslims had committed apostasy by attending prayers or Communion at the church, but that they found no evidence of this.

A Christian priest complained about the article, published in the Malay-language magazine al-Islam.

Police said officials were investigating whether the two men had caused religious disharmony, a crime punishable by up to five years in prison.

Religious issues are highly sensitive in Malaysia, which has a 60% Muslim population. Christians, Buddhists and Hindus make up most of the rest of the population.

Religious freedom is guaranteed by law, but minority groups have accused the Muslim Malay majority of trying to increase the role of Islam in the country. </p


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

Katrina : “a star misses her dad”

Katrina kaif has six sisters out which three are older and another three are younger. Even she has one brother who is professional skier and rock climber.
All the seven kids were raised with her mother who was a Harvard graduate and a successful lawyer but gave it all up in order to join [...]

Chinese police kill two Uighurs

Breaking News

Two ethnic Uighurs have been shot dead by police in Urumqi, capital of China’s Xinjiang province, officials have said.

A government statement announced that a third "lawbreaker" had been injured.

A reporter with Hong Kong’s RTHK radio said two police officers were also shot in a confrontation in a Uighur district of the city.

The violence comes after Chinese officials said calm had been restored to the city after at least 180 people were killed in rioting last week.

Other reports said police had fired at a group of Uighur men armed with knives and poles who had attacked the police.

Thousands of extra security personnel have been patrolling the city of about 2.3 million people since violence erupted on 5 July.

Ethnic Han Chinese make up the majority of Urumqi’s population, but Uighurs form a significant minority and have long-standing complaints of discrimination.

Rioting began during a protest by Uighurs over a brawl in southern China in late June in which two Uighurs were killed.

Chinese officials have said 184 people are known to have been killed in the violence in Urumqi, and 1,680 injured.

The officials said 137 were Han Chinese, 46 were from the indigenous Uighur community and one was an ethnic Hui, the officials said.

Uighur groups in exile have said hundreds of Uighurs were killed.</p


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

Osaka: the world’s greatest food city

There are at least a dozen very good reasons why author and blogger Michael Booth rates Osaka number one. Which city would you rate your gourmet great?

Simple question: what’s the most greatest, most exciting, most dynamic food city in the world today, the culinary It City of our age?

Paris is past it (going to a restaurant shouldn’t be like going to church). London isn’t quite there yet (where’s the street food?). Hanoi, Bangkok, Hong Kong, Shanghai and most major Indian cities will all have their advocates, but is the refinement there? New York is always going to be in with a shout but its great strength is its immigrant cuisines: it lacks an indigenous food culture. Sydney is stuck in the 90s, Lyon in the 1890s, and, as far as I’m concerned, to be a real contender the food roots have to go deep, so that rules out places like Vegas and Cape Town. The market’s nice, but I’ve never had a good meal in Barcelona and though Copenhagen may be flavour of the month, a couple of good restaurants do not a global food capital make.

At the risk of alerting John Crace, I have a new book out, ‘Sushi and Beyond – What the Japanese Know About Food‘. So you’d probably expect me to go with a Japanese city, but it’s not Tokyo or Kyoto that I pine for on a daily basis, but Japan’s often overlooked third city, Osaka.

I originally went to Osaka on the recommendation of Anton Ego – the restaurant critic in Ratatouille (or rather François Simon of Le Figaro, on whom, rumour has it, Ego was based). I interviewed him a few years back for one of those ‘Can Paris Still Cut the Mustard?’ type pieces (answer – ‘no’) and was surprised to hear this most chauvinistic of food writers dismiss my adopted home city out of hand, and plump for Osaka instead.

I booked my flight soon after and found a city fit to burst with incredible places to eat, from the dazzling depichika basement food halls (the greatest food shows on earth), to the exuberant restaurant quarter of Dotonbori, to the top end places like Kahala, a tiny, exclusive counter restaurant beloved of Tetsuya Wakada.

This is a city entirely at ease with its culinary identity but open to foreign influences (in this case, largely Korean), with several unique dishes, and a population possessed of an admirable gluttony for life. They even have a word for their insatiable gluttony, ‘kuidaore’, meaning ‘eat until you burst / go bust’.

The city has an irresistible triumvirate of highly addictive, indigenous fast foods: okonomiyaki (thick, filled pancakes, made with yam flour batter, seafood, pork and kimchi); tako yaki (octopus doughnuts); and kushikatsu (deep fried, breaded skewers – invented at the restaurant Daruma, and much loved by Ferran Adrià, so the chef there told me), each of them slathered in a sweet, savoury, mahogany-coloured sauce. And let’s not forget that kaiten sushi and instant ramen noodles were both invented in the city in the same epochal year (1958 – the latter are rather better than Pot Noodles, I should add).

This is also where you’ll find the world’s greatest (largest, most expensive, best equipped, toughest etc) cooking school, the Tsuji Culinary Institute; and a fish and produce market to rival Tsukiji.

Beat that, Ludlow.

So, I’ve nailed my culinary colours to the mast. Which city would you rate your gourmet great?

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