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Philippines mourns Corazon Aquino

The Philippines has declared 10 days of mourning for its former leader Corazon Aquino, Asia’s first female president, who has died at the age of 76.

Flags are at half-mast and hundreds of people have tied symbolic yellow ribbons to cars and trees.

Mrs Aquino had been suffering from colon cancer for more than a year and recently refused further treatment.

She became president when the 1986 "people power" uprising deposed dictator Ferdinand Marcos.

"Cory remained untainted by corruption up until her last days in office"

Nelson, Long Beach USA
BBC News website reader

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Hundreds of people have been visiting her home and the shrine where her 1986 revolution culminated, leaving yellow flowers and lighting candles.

Mrs Aquino’s body will lie in state at the De La Salle Catholic school in Manila from Saturday evening to Monday morning.

She will be buried beside her husband at the Manila Memorial Park in a private ceremony on Wednesday, her son said.

Coup attempts

"Our mother peacefully passed away at 0318 [1918 GMT Friday] of cardio-respiratory arrest," the son, Senator Benigno Aquino Jr, told the media.

People, many dressed in symbolic yellow, hold candles in front of a huge poster of Mrs Aquino

"She would have wanted us to thank each and every one of you for all the prayers and the continuous love and support," he said.

"It was her wish for all of us to pray for one another and for the country."

Mrs Aquino, who was known as Tita (Aunty) Cory, had been admitted to hospital about a month ago suffering from a loss of appetite related to her condition.

A series of daily masses were held to pray for Mrs Aquino’s health, at least one of which was attended by her former political rivals, President Joseph "Erap" Estrada and former first lady Imelda Marcos.

Catapulted to the top

Mrs Aquino was catapulted into politics following the murder of her husband, the prominent Senator Benigno "Ninoy" Aquino, who had been preparing to run for president.

He had already spent seven years in prison following President Marcos’s declaration of martial law, with his wife as his only contact with the outside world.

Mrs Aquino said of her husband’s death: "What is more important is that he did not die in vain and that his sacrifice, certainly, awakened the Filipino people from their apathy and indifference."

After winning the presidential elections in 1986, she went on to run a country deeply divided after years of martial law and communist insurgency.

She battled several coup attempts against her rule, protected the country’s fledgling democracy and freed political prisoners.

In recent years, she campaigned against former President Estrada, but then reconciled with him to join protests against incumbent President Gloria Arroyo over allegations of vote-rigging and corruption.

She was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in 1986 and later received several awards and citations for her work to promote democracy and human rights.

Tribute from president

The current president of the Philippines, Gloria Arroyo, announced 10 days of national mourning.

"Cory Aquino helped lead a revolution that restored democracy and the rule of law to our nation at a time of great peril," she said.

"Our nation will mourn her passing. History was thrust upon her when her noble husband was cut down in the prime of his life, as he fought for democracy and the rule of law.

"She picked up the standard from the fallen warrior Ninoy and helped lead our nation to a brighter day…

"Our hearts go out to the family in this hour of grief and sorrow."

The US President, Barack Obama, has also paid tribute to Mrs Aquino.

His press spokesman Robert Gibbs said she had played a crucial role in Philippines history.

"Her courage, determination and moral leadership are an inspiration to us all and exemplify the best in the Filipino nation," he said.


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Philippine ex-leader Aquino dies

Former Philippine President Corazon Aquino (August 2008)

Former Philippines President Corazon Aquino has died at the age of 76, her family has said.

She had been suffering from colon cancer for more than a year and recently announced she was refusing further treatment.

Her family had said she was leaving her fate to God, prompting church services offering prayers for her health.

Mrs Aquino became president when the 1986 "people power" uprising deposed former dictator Ferdinand Marcos.

"Our mother peacefully passed away at 3.18 AM (1918 GMT Friday) of cardio-respiratory arrest," Mrs Aquino’s son, Senator Benigno Aquino Jr, told the media.

She had recently been admitted to hospital suffering from a loss of appetite related to her condition. </p


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

Joseph Freeman: Last Call for No Alcohol

The Gates and Crowley get-together Thursday night, Twyman said, distracts the president from more pressing issues such as health care and might encourage kids to experiment with booze.

People power

Cory Aquino

A political novice, Corazon Aquino was thrust to the forefront of opposition to President Ferdinand Marcos following the murder of her husband, a prominent senator.

Not only did she replace Marcos as president but went on to gain a worldwide reputation as a fighter for peace and democracy, and an advocate for her strong Catholic faith.

Maria Corazon Sumulong Cojuangco was born on 25 July 1933 in Tarlac province, the daughter of a wealthy family of Filipino, Chinese and Spanish descent.

Her father had extensive interests in banking as well as controlling a 15,000-acre sugar plantation.

After attending local schools she was sent, at the age of 13, to the US where she completed her education at Roman Catholic convent schools in Philadelphia and New York.

On her return to the Philippines she enrolled at Far East University to study law but left in 1954 to marry Benigno Aquino, a journalist and the son of a wealthy family from her home province.

During the following 20 years "Cory" Aquino remained in the background supporting her husband whose career in politics saw him become the youngest mayor, youngest governor and, eventually, the youngest senator ever elected in the Philippines.

A friend once described the Aquino marriage as one where "he was the warrior. She polished his sword and took care of his horse."

Assassination

Her baptism into politics followed the imprisonment of her husband in 1973 after the declaration of martial law by President Marcos.

During the next seven years she became her husband’s sole link with the outside world, conveying his thoughts and speeches to news conferences in an effort to keep his memory alive.

Benigno Aquino

Exposure to the glare of the media – and the regular strip searches when she visited the jail – had a immense effect on a woman who had, until then, been an intensely private person.

Following pressure from the Carter administration Benigno was released in 1980, and the family moved to Boston where Cory Aquino resumed her role as a housewife.

In August 1983 Benigno returned to the Philippines to prepare for the following year’s presidential elections but, as he stepped from his plane at Manila airport, he was gunned down.

The Philippine opposition accused President Marcos of arranging the killing and there were mass anti-government demonstrations across the country.

Cory Aquino led more than a million mourners in her husband’s funeral procession and, standing by his grave, vowed to carry on his work.

Moral message

She led calls for Marcos’s resignation and, ignoring calls to boycott the May 1984 elections, saw the opposition win a third of the seats.

Fearful of a growing communist influence in the Philippines, Ronald Reagan put pressure on Marcos to carry out sweeping social and political reforms.

In what was seen as a bid to prove to the US that he was still in control, Marcos called a snap presidential election and Cory Aquino came under pressure to stand against him.

Ferdinand Marcos

For some time she wavered but, following the decision of a court to release army officers implicated in her husband’s murder, she decided to contest the election.

Skilfully uniting the two major opposition parties, she emphasised her lack of political experience as a virtue and, in a predominantly Roman Catholic country, her deeply moral message was well received by people fed up with the corruption of the Marcos regime.

As voters went to the polls, reports began to come in of bribes, intimidation and missing ballot boxes, as the Marcos government desperately tried to retain power.

With conflicting results both candidates claimed victory and held rival inaugurations in February 1986.

A combination of key defections from the Marcos camp, public demonstrations and pressure from the US, forced Marcos to flee the country and Aquino became president.

Nobel nomination

In the face of doubts about her ability to govern she swiftly set about dismantling the worst excesses of the Marcos regime.

Cory Aquino

She released political prisoners, reinstated habeas corpus and forced a number of pro-Marcos judges and generals to resign.

Faced with an entrenched Marcos faction in the national assembly and provincial administrations, she took a major gamble and announced that she would rule by decree until a new constitution was written; it finally came into force in 1987.

Despite her personal popularity, her government faced a series of coup attempts from Marcos loyalists and disgruntled military officers and she decided not to run for a second term in 1992.

She remained active in politics and played a major role in the ousting of President Joseph Estrada in 2001 and his replacement by Gloria Arroyo.

Nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in 1986 (she lost to Elie Wiesel) she subsequently received a number of awards and citations for championing democracy and human rights.</p


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Shipping in the downturn: Sea of troubles

The recession is buffeting the world of shipping—with even rougher waters ahead

FROM the sheltered waters of Subic Bay in the Philippines to Falmouth on the south coast of England, a vast, swelling armada lies idle. In Asia’s deep-sea havens 750 vessels—container ships, bulk carriers, tankers, car carriers and others—are laid up. A further 280 are sheltering in European waters. According to Lloyd’s Marine Intelligence Unit, nearly 10% of the world’s merchant ships are swaying gently at anchor because of a collapse in global trade.

Since the recession bit hard last autumn a lot of attention has been paid to the plunge in the Baltic Dry Index, a composite measure of the cost of shipping bulk cargoes such as iron ore and coal. It fell by over 90% between June and October last year, although it has since recovered slightly and is hovering at just above a quarter of its peak. World trade in general remains in its worst slump for generations, although it too is no longer falling. Two of the biggest shipping banks (RBS and HBOS) are in state-backed rehab. The parlous state of the world economy could mean more shipping companies following Eastwind Maritime, which went bankrupt in June. On July 28th Hapag-Lloyd, Germany’s largest container-shipping company, secured a €330m ($468m) bail-out from its shareholders while it seeks up to €1.75 billion to keep it from sinking altogether. …

Suu Kyi awarded Amnesty’s highest honor

YANGON, Myanmar (AP) — Myanmar’s democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi has won Amnesty International’s highest award for her defense of human rights, underscoring international support for the Nobel laureate whose trial is ending Tuesday.
She is widely expected to be convicted of violating the terms of her house arrest and faces a possible five years [...]

Aung San Suu Kyi ‘preparing for worst’

• Closing arguments due in trial of Burma’s pro-democracy leader
• Verdict not expected for at least a fortnight

The trial of Burma’s pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi entered its final phase today, with both sides expected to present closing arguments before a verdict is delivered in two to three weeks.

Aung San Suu Kyi is charged with breaking the terms of her house arrest by allowing an American man spend two nights at her home in early May. She faces up to five years in prison if found guilty.

John Yettaw, a Vietnam veteran who was described by his wife as eccentric, said he swam across a lake to her home because he wanted to warn her that she was about to be assassinated by “terrorists.”

Aung San Suu Kyi, who has been in detention for 14 of the past 20 years, pleaded with Yettaw to leave and relented only after he claimed to be too ill to swim back.

Reports said Yettaw’s lawyer was due to defend his client today against a trespassing charge, which carries a sentence of up to three months in prison.

Khin Maung Oo, said at the weekend he would attempt to win Yettaw, 53, a lenient sentence. “I will try my best to defend my client. I will argue that he did not violate the restriction order and I will try my utmost to get him lesser punishment,” he said.

Although the prosecution was expected to wind up its case against the Nobel prize winner today, her lawyer said a verdict was not imminent. “I expect all the arguments will be made today but I think the verdict might take as long as two or three weeks,” Nyan Win told Reuters.

Nyan Win said his client was “preparing for the worst” at the end of a trial that the junta’s critics have denounced as an excuse to keep Suu Kyi incarcerated during national elections next year.

Statements were expected from Aung San Suu Kyi’s longtime companions, Khin Khin Win and her daughter Win Ma Ma. The women, members of the National League for Democracy (NLD), also face up to five years in prison.

The NLD won a landslide victory in elections in 1990, but the ruling generals refused to recognise the result.

The junta has so far resisted international calls for Aung San Suu Kyi’s immediate release. Last week, the state-controlled media accused the US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, of “interference” after she said a satisfactory conclusion to the trial could lead to better economic ties with Washington.

In demanding her release, western critics of the regime were showing “reckless disregard for the law”, the New Light of Myanmar newspaper said. “The court will hand down a reasonable term to her if she is found guilty, and it will release her if she is found not guilty,” it added.

Most of the trial has been conducted behind closed doors since it began on 18 May.

Diplomats have been allowed to witness four hearings, with observers from the US, Singapore, Australia, Japan, the Philippines and Malaysia reportedly granted access to this morning’s proceedings.

A diplomatic source said Aung San Suu Kyi, who is being held at Insein prison in the capital, Rangoon, had appeared “fit, healthy and in sparkling form” when she appeared in court last Friday.

The defence does not deny that Yettaw visited her compound, but argues that she cannot be charged under laws that were abolished in 1988. It blames her bodyguards for failing to apprehend Yettaw, who remained undetected inside the compound for several hours.

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Closing arguments in Burma trial

Poster of Aung San Suu Kyi in Seoul, South Korea - 21/6/2009

The prosecution in the military government’s trial of the Burmese pro-democracy leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, is to deliver its closing arguments.

Ms Suu Kyi faces five years in prison if she is convicted of having violated her house arrest when a American man swam to her lakeside home uninvited.

Her lawyers – who delivered their final statement on Friday – say they expect a verdict in two to three weeks.

Unusually, diplomats have been allowed into the court for this session.

Lawyers read closing arguments for the other defendants, two of Ms Suu Kyi’s housemaids and John Yettaw, the American intruder.

The prosecution may wrap up its case against Suu Kyi later on Monday, court officials said.

Poll ploy

A verdict is not expected yet, however.

"I expect all the arguments will be made today but I think the verdict might take as long as two or three weeks," said Ms Suu Kyi’s lawyer, Nyan Win.

Timeline: Aung San Suu Kyi trial

Poster of Aung San Suu Kyi in a cage, in a protest in Tokyo

The trial has been held mostly behind closed doors, but diplomats from the United States, Singapore, Australia, Japan, the Philippines and Malaysia were allowed to attend the session, one of the diplomats told reporters.

Hundreds of NLD members and supporters of Ms Suu Kyi rallied outside Insein Prison where she has been held since May. About 10 truckloads of security personnel were seen in the area.

Ms Suu Kyi, 64, has spent nearly 14 of the last 20 years in detention, much of it at her Rangoon home.

Polls are planned by the military government for some time next year. Ms Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy won the last elections in 1988 but was never allowed to take power.

The trial, which had been expected to wrap up in days when it started, has dragged on for more than two months.

Prosecutors argue that Aung San Suu Kyi must be held responsible for the midnight swim to her home by the American well-wisher, John Yettaw, in early May.

Her lawyers have argued that the law she has been charged under is part of a constitution abolished 25 years ago.

In any case, they say, she cannot be responsible for the incident as she was living under tightly-guarded house arrest at the time.

BBC South East Asia correspondent Jonathan Head says the fact that some defence witnesses and foreign observers have been allowed shows that the government belatedly recognised the anger stirred up around the world by trying Ms Suu Kyi on such bizarre charges.

But, our correspondent adds, all the indications are that she will still be found guilty. Burma’s ruling generals fear her popularity, and do not want her to play any role in next year’s election.

Police vehicles parked near Insein Prison, Burma, 10 July


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Protest in Philippines ahead of Arroyo speech

Hundreds of protesters marched on the Philippines Congress on Monday as President Gloria Arroyo prepared to defend her record in her last state of the nation address before elections next year.  Arroyo, who came to power in 2001 following the ouster of Joseph Estrada, was expected to use theHundreds of protesters marched on the Philippines Congress on Monday as President Gloria Arroyo prepared to defend her record in her last state of the nation address before elections next year. Arroyo, who came to power in 2001 following the ouster of Joseph Estrada, was expected to use the

Voice technology firm under fire

By Rory Cellan-Jones
Technology correspondent, BBC News

SpinVox speech recognition system

A UK firm that turns mobile messages into text faces questions over its privacy standards, technology and finances following a BBC investigation.

Spinvox’s service aims to convert voice messages into text messages using advanced speech recognition software.

But claims to the BBC suggest that the majority of messages have been heard and transcribed by call centre staff in South Africa and the Philippines.

The firm declined to comment on how many messages are ‘read’ in this way.

"Speech algorithms do not learn without human intervention and all speech systems require humans for learning – Spinvox does this in real-time," the firm said in a statement.

"The actual proportion of messages automatically converted is highly confidential and sensitive data," it added.

"It may be helpful if the company is clearer about the likelihood that people will be used to translate messages"

Information Commissioner’s Office

The Spinvox website claims its technology "captures spoken words and feeds them into a Voice Message Conversion System, known as ‘D2′ (the Brain)".

The company said that, when necessary, parts of messages can be sent to a "conversion expert".

The part sent is anonymised so that there is no way of tracking back a particular number or person. It will be just one of millions of messages going through the automated system on a particular day, the company said.

A Facebook group created by staff at an Egyptian call centre, which used to work for Spinvox, includes a picture of one transcribed message containing what appears to be sensitive commercial information.

It also includes an audio recording of one call, and pictures of staff at the call centre.

Spinvox said that the pictures relate to a training session, and that the call centre did not meet its stringent standards and never handled live calls.

Data protection

However, the BBC has spoken to Mohammed Mustafa, who worked at the centre.

He insisted that he and his colleagues did handle live messages, and that Spinvox computers only played a small part in transcribing them.

"The machine doesn’t understand anything," he explained. "You have to start typing when you hear the message."

Other call centre staff in South Africa and the Philippines have discussed on blogs how they have also transcribed calls for Spinvox.

A source at the company has told the BBC that the vast majority of messages are in fact converted into text by staff at call centres.

"We are going through enormous growth as a business"

Daniel Doulton
Spinvox co-founder

The fact that messages appear to have been read by workers outside of the European Union raises questions about the firm’s data protection policy.

The firm’s entry on the UK Data Protection Register says it does not transfer anything outside the European Economic Area.

The Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) told the BBC that it has contacted Spinvox "to ensure that its entry on the data protection register is both accurate and complete, especially with regards to the transfer of personal data outside the European Economic Area".

In a statement, the ICO explained there was nothing to prevent Spinvox from using people rather than machines to translate messages.

However, it said that "it may be helpful if the company is clearer about the likelihood that people will be used to translate messages".

"This is particularly important if customers are using the service for transmitting sensitive or secure information," it added.

Spinvox, which has raised more than $200m (£120m) from investors, was founded in 2004.

The company source told the BBC that operating large numbers of call centres is putting a huge financial burden on the business.

Last week the company’s co-founder Christina Domecq appealed to staff to take all or part of their pay for the months of July and August in the form of share options.

‘Cost-cutting measures’

In an e-mail to staff she explained that the target was to raise £1m to see the company through to profitable status.

But she warned that "should we not achieve the uptake we need, unfortunately, we may have to explore further cost-cutting measures".

Daniel Doulton, the firm’s other co-founder, told the BBC that it was true that the company had suffered some growing pains because of the exponential growth it was enjoying – bringing it 100 million customers around the world.

"The business now operates profitably," he said. "We are going through enormous growth as a business."

The BBC has also learned that Spinvox has been locked out of one of its London data centres, leaving it unable to get access to its servers after a dispute about payments.

A spokesman at ANLX, the company which runs the data centre, said "their access has been suspended. We are reviewing our options on a day-to-day basis."

Spinvox said it cannot comment on the dispute, but said its main data storage locations are not affected.

The company says it works with some of the world’s biggest telecoms companies and institutional investors who, following due diligence and audit, have gone on to sign contracts with the voice-to-text firm.</p


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

US piles pressure on Burma regime

The flags of nations attending the Asean conference

US officials have had a rare meeting with representatives of Burma’s regime.

Unnamed officials told reporters that efforts to improve ties depended partly on the outcome of democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi’s trial.

The US also pressed Burma to enforce a United Nations resolution imposing an arms embargo on North Korea.

The US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has been on the diplomatic offensive ahead of a regional meeting now under way in Thailand.

Earlier in her trip to Thailand, she issued warnings about how a nuclear North Korea was unacceptable to the United States, and expressed concerns about the possible transfer of nuclear technology from North Korea to Burma.

The wrong road

Mrs Clinton called for the release of Ms Suu Kyi from many years of detention.

"If she were released, that would open up opportunities… for my country to expand our relationship with Burma, including investments in Burma," Mrs Clinton said.

Hillary Clinton arrives in Phuket (22.7.09)

This point was reinforced in the face-to-face meeting between US and Burmese officials on Wednesday night, US officials said.

They said they had told Burma that "the outcome of the trial of Aung San Suu Kyi would affect our willingness and ability to take positive steps in our bilateral relationship".

Mrs Clinton was not present at the meeting with Burmese officials, and said she did not intend to appear at a possible meeting with North Korean officials either.

She told reporters that the US is convinced that Burma is taking the wrong road by associating with North Korea.

Mrs Clinton also told reporters that North Korea must completely and irreversibly end its nuclear weapons program or face further isolation and "the unrelenting pressure" of international sanctions.

She said there were more positive ways ahead if the North chooses, and she is expected to announce conditions in which the North will be welcomed back into international discussions later on Thursday.

Symbols matter

Meanwhile, Mrs Clinton signed a symbolically important treaty with members of Asean.

The Treaty of Amity and Co-operation binds the US more closely into the regional security architecture – something previous US administrations had fought shy of.

"I want to send a very clear message that the United States is back, that we are fully engaged and committed to our relationships in South East Asia," she said before the signing the treaty in the resort of Phuket.

Mrs Clinton’s predecessor Condoleezza Rice skipped two Asean forums, leading analysts to remark on how China was gaining friends and influencing people in the perceived US absence.

Mrs Clinton also said the Obama administration would soon appoint a permanent ambassador to Asean headquarters in Jakarta.

Asean comprises Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Burma, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.</p


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Filipinos killed in Afghan crash

Russian-built Mi-8. File photo

Ten civilians from the Philippines were among 16 people killed in a weekend helicopter crash at a military base in southern Afghanistan, officials said.

A consular official is on the way to Afghanistan to get more details, the Philippines foreign ministry said.

Investigations would also be made into how the Filipinos were in the country, despite a government ban.

The civilian-contracted helicopter crashed on Sunday on take-off from Kandahar airfield.

The Nato-led International Security Assistance Force (Isaf) said the helicopter was not shot down by insurgents.

The crash was the second in a week. Six passengers died when a helicopter came down in Helmand province on Tuesday.

RECENT HELICOPTER CRASHES

  • 14 Jul 2009: Six Ukrainian civilians and Afghan girl die in crash in Helmand. Suspected enemy fire
  • 6 Jul 2009: One UK and two Canadian soldiers die in crash in Zabul province. Enemy fire not suspected
  • 15 Jan 2009: Afghan general and 12 other soldiers die in crash in Herat province. Bad weather blamed
  • 30 May 2007: Seven killed as Nato Chinook crashes in Helmand. Cause unclear

Russian news agencies reported the aircraft was an Mi-8 helicopter belonging to Russian company Vertikal-1.

About 1,000 Filipinos worked and lived in Afghanistan before Manila banned its nationals from working there in the wake of the 2001 US-led invasion.

Vice President Noli de Castro has said about 1,500 Filipinos are working in Afghanistan, attracted by the high wages.

Foreign Affairs Undersecretary Esteban Conejos said the victims’ next of kin are being informed.

A Filipino carpenter at Kandahar Air Base was killed in a rocket attack in March.</p


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

Indira Gandhi’s message of world peace still lies on the Moon

The details of the messages of peace from world leaders left on the Moon in a tiny silicon disk on the lunar surface in 1969 have been released, which includes late Indian Prime minister Indira Gandhi’s message as well.
According to a report in the Telegraph, the silicon disk was left underneath the US flag that [...]

China warns workers after al-Qaida threat

Embassy in Algeria issues advice in response to call by al-Qaida affiliate for vengeance over Muslim Uighur deaths in Urumqi

China’s embassy in Algeria has urged Chinese companies and workers to be on guard after reports that al-Qaida’s north African affiliate has called for retaliation for the deaths of Muslim Uighurs in Urumqi.

Stirling Assynt, a British-based risk analysis firm, warned yesterday that al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) – based in Algeria – had issued a call for vengeance, basing its statement on information from people who have seen the instruction.

Postings on an Islamist website have also suggested killing Han Chinese in the Middle East, the Associated Press reported.

A notice posted on the embassy website late last night said: “In light of the [riots], the Chinese embassy in Algeria reminds Chinese-funded companies and personnel to enhance security awareness and strengthen security measures.”

Stirling Assynt stressed its report that it was not suggesting any direct link between Uighurs in Xinjiang province and al-Qaida, and said it was unlikely the central leadership of Osama bin Laden’s terrorist network has decided to stage attacks within China.

Justin Crump, head of terrorism and country risk at the firm, said such a move would be counter-productive strategically because their main assets are in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Last week’s inter-ethnic violence in Urumqi, capital of China’s north-western Xinjiang province, left at least 184 dead. Officials say 137 were Han Chinese, 46 Uighurs and one a Hui man, but Uighurs have claimed far more of them died – either in a crackdown by security forces or at the hands of Han Chinese retaliating for brutal assaults by Uighurs.

Muslim Uighurs make up almost half the 21-million population of Xinjiang, but many resent strict cultural and religious controls.

China’s foreign ministry yesterday rejected suggestions that the Urumqi riots would affect Beijing’s relations with Muslim countries.

“If they have a clear idea about true nature of the incident, they would understand China’s policies concerning religion and religious issues and understand the measures we have taken,” said a spokesman, Qin Gang, at the ministry’s regular news conference.

Wolfram Lacher, a north Africa analyst at another firm, Control Risks, downplayed the impact of events in Urumqi. He said although there was a “significant and credible threat” against Chinese firms, that threat had existed for some time and was not likely to change.

“Almost all foreign companies operating in Algeria – and the security forces who escort and protect foreign personnel – are regarded as legitimate and attractive targets by AQIM … Companies are targeted to attract public and international attention with the goal of demonstrating the inability of the authorities to fully protect foreign companies and thereby disrupt foreign investment and political stability,” said Lacher.

“Also, some Chinese companies – particularly in infrastructure and construction [industries] – operate in areas known as strongholds of AQIM.”

The Philippines national police directorate said it had tightened security around the Chinese embassy and consulates after a request from China’s defence attache in Manila.

In a statement, the Uighur American Association (UAA) and the World Uighur Congress (WUC) said they were “extremely disturbed” by the threats, which they condemned. They said terrorist groups such as al-Qaida did not represent the aspirations of the Uighur people.

“I abhor violence,” said Rebiya Kadeer, leader of the exiles. “I do not believe violence is a solution to any problem. Global terrorists should not take advantage of the Uighur people’s legitimate aspirations and the current tragedy in East Turkestan [Xinjiang] to commit acts of terrorism targeting Chinese diplomatic missions or civilians.”

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China warns workers after al-Qaida threat

Embassy in Algeria issues advice in response to call by al-Qaida affiliate for vengeance over Muslim Uighur deaths in Urumqi

China’s embassy in Algeria has urged Chinese companies and workers to be on guard after reports that al-Qaida’s north African affiliate has called for retaliation for the deaths of Muslim Uighurs in Urumqi.

Stirling Assynt, a British-based risk analysis firm, warned yesterday that al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) – based in Algeria – had issued a call for vengeance, basing its statement on information from people who have seen the instruction.

Postings on an Islamist website have also suggested killing Han Chinese in the Middle East, the Associated Press reported.

A notice posted on the embassy website late last night said: “In light of the [riots], the Chinese embassy in Algeria reminds Chinese-funded companies and personnel to enhance security awareness and strengthen security measures.”

Stirling Assynt stressed its report that it was not suggesting any direct link between Uighurs in Xinjiang province and al-Qaida, and said it was unlikely the central leadership of Osama bin Laden’s terrorist network has decided to stage attacks within China.

Justin Crump, head of terrorism and country risk at the firm, said such a move would be counter-productive strategically because their main assets are in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Last week’s inter-ethnic violence in Urumqi, capital of China’s north-western Xinjiang province, left at least 184 dead. Officials say 137 were Han Chinese, 46 Uighurs and one a Hui man, but Uighurs have claimed far more of them died – either in a crackdown by security forces or at the hands of Han Chinese retaliating for brutal assaults by Uighurs.

Muslim Uighurs make up almost half the 21-million population of Xinjiang, but many resent strict cultural and religious controls.

China’s foreign ministry yesterday rejected suggestions that the Urumqi riots would affect Beijing’s relations with Muslim countries.

“If they have a clear idea about true nature of the incident, they would understand China’s policies concerning religion and religious issues and understand the measures we have taken,” said a spokesman, Qin Gang, at the ministry’s regular news conference.

Wolfram Lacher, a north Africa analyst at another firm, Control Risks, downplayed the impact of events in Urumqi. He said although there was a “significant and credible threat” against Chinese firms, that threat had existed for some time and was not likely to change.

“Almost all foreign companies operating in Algeria – and the security forces who escort and protect foreign personnel – are regarded as legitimate and attractive targets by AQIM … Companies are targeted to attract public and international attention with the goal of demonstrating the inability of the authorities to fully protect foreign companies and thereby disrupt foreign investment and political stability,” said Lacher.

“Also, some Chinese companies – particularly in infrastructure and construction [industries] – operate in areas known as strongholds of AQIM.”

The Philippines national police directorate said it had tightened security around the Chinese embassy and consulates after a request from China’s defence attache in Manila.

In a statement, the Uighur American Association (UAA) and the World Uighur Congress (WUC) said they were “extremely disturbed” by the threats, which they condemned. They said terrorist groups such as al-Qaida did not represent the aspirations of the Uighur people.

“I abhor violence,” said Rebiya Kadeer, leader of the exiles. “I do not believe violence is a solution to any problem. Global terrorists should not take advantage of the Uighur people’s legitimate aspirations and the current tragedy in East Turkestan [Xinjiang] to commit acts of terrorism targeting Chinese diplomatic missions or civilians.”

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