Posts Tagged ‘Asien’

Schweden: Migrationsbehörde informiert über Bleiberecht

Donnerstag, Februar 17th, 2011

“Einwanderung nach Heirat

Die Migrationsbehörde verstärkt ihre an ausländische Ehepartner schwedischer Staatsbürger gerichteten Informationsbemühungen. Damit reagiert die Behörde auf einen Bericht des Dachverbandes der Frauenhäuser über die prekäre Lage ausländischer Frauen, die von ihren schwedischen Männern misshandelt und missbraucht werden, aus Angst vor Abschiebung im Falle einer Scheidung jedoch nichts unternehmen.

Die Behörde macht darauf aufmerksam, dass die schwedische Gesetzgebung eine weitere Aufenthaltserlaubnis vorsieht, wenn Ehen mit ausländischen Partnern aufgrund dokumentierter Gewalttaten geschieden werden.
Im Jahr 2009 wendeten sich nach Statistik des Dachverbandes 552 vornehmlich asiatische Frauen hilfesuchend an ein Frauenhaus. Von 54 Frauen, die nach einer Trennung eine Verlängerung der Aufenthaltserlaubnis beantragten wurden dem Verband zufolge 24 abgeschoben.”

 

(Quelle: Radio Schweden.)

Global: Bedenkliche Diskriminierung religiöser Minoritäten

Donnerstag, Juli 15th, 2010

“State of the World’s Minorities and Indigenous Peoples 2010


Links and Downloads


Use the Download menu to the right of this page to access a printable PDF of the full text, or download individual chapters by theme or region.

Read the full global press release, the Asia press release in English or the Europe press releases in EnglishHungarian (PDF), Czech (PDF) and Polish (PDF).


Summary


A decade into the new century sees religious minorities confronting serious violations of their rights around the globe. Following the violent attacks of 11 September 2001, governments of every political hue have used ‘war on terror’ rhetoric to justify the repression of religious communities.

Other religious minorities have faced a violent backlash, often unjustly accused of siding with belligerents. In Africa, the Middle East, Asia and Latin America, armed conflict and land seizures have forced minority and indigenous communities away from locations central to their religious beliefs. Europe has witnessed gains by extreme rightwing political parties which are targeting religious minorities with their inflammatory language.

In Central Asia, governments have introduced tough new registration requirements for religious communities and prevented the building of places of worship. In State of the World’s Minorities and Indigenous Peoples 2010, Minority Rights Group International offers a comprehensive overview of the situation faced by minorities in a world increasingly divided along religious lines. It includes:

• An analysis of government initiatives that contribute to the marginalisation of religious minorities, such as religious profiling and registration laws.
• First-hand accounts, from around the world, of the discrimination and exclusion faced by those belonging to minorities who wish to exercise their right to freedom of religion and belief.
• An exploration of grassroots efforts through interfaith dialogue to ease tensions, overcome conflicts, and promote peaceful and equitable development.
• An overview of the human rights situation of minorities and indigenous peoples in every major world region.
• The unique statistical ranking and analysis, Peoples under Threat 2010.”

 

(Quelle: Minority Rights Group International.)

BRD: Die blinden Flecken im “Piratenprozess”

Freitag, Juni 18th, 2010

“Questions Abound about EU’s ‘Combating’ of Piracy

By Julio Godoy

Credit: EU NAVFOR

German Warship FGS Emden patrolling the Indian Ocean

BERLIN, Jun 16, 2010 (IPS) – Modern German justice had never handled a case of piracy until Jun 11, when 10 Somali seafarers, including children, were presented at a tribunal in the city port of Hamburg, some 300 km west from Berlin, on charges of robbing cargo in the Indian Ocean.

The accused are the first Somali people to be prosecuted in Germany as part of Operation Atalanta, the European Union’s military surveillance of the Indian Ocean officially established ‘to help deter, prevent and repress acts of piracy and armed robbery off the coast of Somalia’.

According to the Hamburg prosecutor’s office, the Somali seafarers on Apr 5 attacked the German container ship Taipan. The cargo was liberated the same day by Dutch soldiers serving in Operation Atalanta.

The EU claims that the operation’s objectives are ‘the protection of vessels of the World Food Programme delivering food aid to displaced persons in Somalia, of vulnerable vessels cruising off the Somali coast, and the deterrence, prevention and repression of acts of piracy and armed robbery off the Somali coast’.

To that effect, since Dec 2008 EU war ships and planes and several hundred soldiers patrol the Indian Ocean to chase what the EU calls ‘Somali pirates’.

However, critics of the operation suggest that its hidden mission is to protect European vessels accused by Somali seafarers and international organisations of another form of piracy: illegal fishing and the dumping of toxic waste, including radioactive material, in Somali waters.

One example of the EU’s protection of vessels fishing illegally in the waters of the Horn of Africa is the Spanish tuna fishing boat Alakrana. In Oct 2009, Somali pirates seized the boat, arguing that it was fishing illegally in Somali waters.

Almost two months later, the Somali pirates released the boat for a ransom of some four million dollars after several attempts by the Spanish army to free the Alakrana had failed.

The Somali allegations that the Alakrana was illegally fishing in the Indian Ocean were never investigated. For Jack Thurston, a London-based activist monitoring EU subsidies for European companies, ‘it is almost certain that the Alakrana was fishing for species that are on the endangered list or not far from it’.

Thurston, founder and managing director of Fishsubsidy.org, a watchdog group that researches the EU’s subsidies for fisheries, told IPS that ‘the construction of Alakrana was part-funded by EU taxpayers to the tune of more than 4.2 million euro’.

Allegations that EU companies have been fishing illegally and dumping toxic waste in Somali waters have been frequent since a tsunami in Dec 2004 washed ashore containers full with medical, radioactive and chemical waste on the coast of Somalia.

This casual discovery was later confirmed by the UN Environment Programme (UNEP). ‘Initial reports indicate that the tsunami waves broke open containers full of toxic waste and scattered the contents. We are talking about everything from medical waste to chemical waste products,’ Nick Nuttal, UNEP spokesperson, said at the time.

‘We know this material is on the land and is now being blown around and possibly carried to villages.’

Evidence gathered by the European Green party and environmental organisations show that Swiss and Italian companies have dumped toxic waste in the Indian Ocean.

The UN Special Representative for Somalia, Ahmedou Ould-Abdallah, has also repeatedly raised the issue of illegal fishing and the dumping of toxic waste in Somali waters. During a UN conference in July 2008, he told the press, ‘because there is no (effective) government (in Somalia), there is so much irregular fishing from European and Asian countries’.

Ould-Abdallah also denounced illegal fishing in the Somali waters before EU authorities. During a 2009 meeting with the high command of the EU’s Atalanta mission in Mombassa, Kenya, Ould-Abdallah said that ‘there is no doubt that there is illegal fishing by Asia and Europe’.

There is no doubt indeed. European boats have been caught fishing illegally practically all over the world, as prosecutions in Canada, Norway, the U.S. and elsewhere show. In addition, given the depletion of fish in European waters, European vessels are forced to go fishing further away – in West African waters, from the Canary Islands in the North to Angolan waters in the south, or in the Indian Ocean.

The waters off Somalia’s shore are still rich with several tuna varieties – all highly priced in international markets. A 2005 report from the marine resources assessment group (MRAG) estimated that the Somali economy loses some 90 million dollars a year due to illegal fishing. Estimates by the UNEP put the figure as high as 300 million dollars a year.

Such figures led the German retired admiral Lutz Feldt to urge the EU authorities to extend the Operation Atalanta mandate to the fight of illegal fishing. ‘For many, illegal fishing is a quick way to make money but for most people in Somalia it represents a heavy loss,’ Feldt told the German news television programme Fakt.

Feldt recalled that, ‘according to international law illegal fishing is a crime and it should be treated as such’.

Even European fishing companies admit that they are exploiting the Indian Ocean waters and involved in illegal fishing.

During a hearing on Operation Atalanta at the European Parliament in April 2009, representatives from French and Spanish ship-owner organisations told deputies that there were about 40 EU fishing boats operating in the Indian Ocean to catch three or four species of tuna fish.

So far, no illegal fishing in the Indian Ocean has been reported as part of Operation Atalanta, let alone European ships being caught doing it.

‘The French and Spanish boats fishing in the Indian Ocean operate in international waters,’ a spokesperson of the mission told IPS. ‘If they were fishing illegally in the area, it would be up to the national authorities of their countries of origin to see that they stop doing it.’ ”

(Quelle: IPS News.)

Philippinen: Arme Frauen wollen weniger Kinder – katholische Kirche gegen Verhütungsmittel

Montag, Juni 14th, 2010

“PHILIPPINES: Poor women pay for contraception

MANILA, 11 June 2010 (IRIN) – Insufficient public funding for family planning services means poor women have to buy contraceptives from pharmacies rather than getting them free from clinics.
 
‘Social disparities and lack of access to services make the poorest of our women suffer,’ said Alberto Romualdez, vice-president of Forum for Family Planning, a local the NGO. Nearly half the population lives on US$2 a day or less, and spending $1 on a pack of condoms is not an option.

Despite the cost, a recent study by the Guttmacher Institute, a reproductive health think-tank, and the Likhaan Center for Women’s Health, found that more women – 40 percent in 2008, up from 17 percent in 2003 – were buying contraceptives.

Women want smaller families

According to the 2008 National Demographic Health Survey (NDHS), women desired a family size of 2.4 children on average, but actually had an average of 3.3 children; only 41 percent of poor women used contraceptives, and had an average of one or two more children than they wanted.
 
The lack of contraception was hampering the already dismal progress in reducing maternal mortality; the government’s 2006 Family Planning Survey indicated no significant decline in maternal mortality ratio (MMR) between 1998 and 2006.

In 2006 there were 162 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births, compared to 172 per 100,000 in 1998. The UN Development Programme Millennium Development Goal (MDG) for the Philippines is to reduce maternal deaths to 52.2 per 100,000 live births by 2015.
 
‘There is no way that the Philippines will meet their MDG on MMR unless this unmet need for contraception is addressed,’ said Sharon Camp, president of the Guttmacher Institute.
 
Extending modern contraceptive use to all women at risk of unintended pregnancy would prevent 2,100 maternal deaths each year, the Guttmacher Institute study noted.

Contraception branded as immoral

The Philippines had depended on US Agency for International Development (USAID) for free contraceptives since the 1970s, but as part of the Philippines government’s self-reliance initiative from 2002 to 2008, USAID phased out donated contraceptives, including condoms, pills and intrauterine devices.
 

A Manila resident with four of her 10 children However, the government has not picked up where USAID left off. ‘The government has been unable to cope with the cutbacks,’ Junice Melgar, executive director of the Likhaan Center told IRIN.
 
Reproductive health has been a highly contentious issue in the largely devout Catholic Philippines, where Bishops routinely label modern forms of contraception, like condoms and pills, as immoral.
 
The outgoing administration of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo acquiesced to the pressure of the Catholic hierarchy and supported only natural family planning methods – like the rhythm method of abstinence on certain days of a woman’s menstrual cycle – which experts say has high failure rates.
 
‘Reproductive health is a public health concern,’ said Department of Health Secretary Esperanza Cabral. ‘It’s time the discussion was brought to the plane of economics and social development, rather than morality.’

New administration brings hope

President-elect Benigno Aquino III, who will take office on 30 June 2010, promised responsible parenthood and government funding for contraceptives during his election campaign.
 
Health advocates hope he will make good on his promise by passing the Reproductive Health (RH) Bill, which has been stalled for nearly 20 years. If passed, the bill will ensure that funds for universal access to contraceptive services and information are allocated in the national budget.
 
Congressman Edcel Lagman, principal author of the bill, is confident it will be passed. ‘There are no less than 75 RH advocates who have been elected; we have the numbers on our side.’”

(Quelle: IRIN News.)

China und Indien auf “Schmusekurs”

Donnerstag, Juni 10th, 2010

“A ‘zhengyou’ relationship with China

During Pratibha Patil’s recent visit to China, both sides celebrated the Copenhagen spirit and affirmed to take the relationship beyond bilateral to global cooperation

By VIDYA SUBRAHMANIAM

At the Asia Hotel in Beijing, Ma Jisheng, an official with the information department of the Foreign Ministry, was declaiming on millennia-old India-China relations. Suddenly he flung aside the prepared text and announced that he would speak straight from the heart: ‘Would the media on both sides please give India and China a chance to develop normal relations?’

The official’s point was simple. Attitudes hardened when the media sensationalised issues, and the events of 2009, when bilateral relations reached a precipitous low following media frenzy and scare-mongering, proved as much. ‘This constant harping on border, visa and other things, is it not like eating the same food everyday?’ Mr. Ma asked plaintively, adding, ‘I cannot help but think sometimes that China and India would solve their problems if only the media kept quiet a bit.’

The Indian media delegation accompanying President Pratibha Patil had looked upon the Asia Hotel lunch as little more than an interlude in an itinerary packed with ceremonial welcomes, meetings, inaugurations, receptions and so forth. Ornamental phraseology and practised rhetoric are the stuff of such visits, and we were naturally taken aback by Mr. Ma’s plain speaking. Perhaps he was being free and frank because we were not officials but the media?

Yet as the tour — organised to coincide with the landmark 60th anniversary of the establishment of India-China diplomatic relations — progressed, it was evident that even at the highest level of the Chinese leadership there was a degree of candour and responsiveness that took the Indian side by surprise. As the presidential outing drew to a close, both sides seemed to concur that Ms Patil’s visit had gone beyond the perimeter of goodwill ambassadorship to generate tangible positives for the future. A highly placed Indian official told The Hindu: ‘I read the visit as a clear Chinese signal to have better relations with us.’

It certainly helped that Ms Patil arrived in Beijing at a time when India-China relations were seen to be on the mend after a difficult year characterised by intense mistrust on both sides. The irritants seemed daunting enough on their own: China’s angst over the Dalai Lama’s visit to Arunachal Pradesh, and the Indian unhappiness at stapled visas, not to mention apprehensions over Chinese-assisted construction in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK). But aided by irresponsible speculation on an upcoming war, they began to look insurmountable. In July 2009, the editor of an Indian defence magazine prophesied that China would attack India by 2012. A month later, a so-called Chinese strategist posted a web article that argued that China with some effort could indeed balkanise India.

Neither of the articles was officially authorised. Yet, together, they assumed a life of their own with commentators in India hyperventilating about China’s hidden agenda, and the Chinese media and think tanks contributing their bit to the rising hysteria.

While it may be difficult to locate the precise point when tensions began to ease up, analysts on both sides agree that India and China were well served by the ‘Copenhagen spirit.’ This is a euphemism for the exemplary cooperation witnessed in the Danish capital during the December 2009 Climate Change summit. India and China so finely coordinated their negotiating positions at the talks that the online edition of the German magazine, Der Spiegel, was provoked to put out an article, ‘How India and China sabotaged the UN Climate Summit.’

The summit revealed the humongous potential of India-China cooperation on international platforms. Given the size of either country’s population and economy, India and China are intimidating enough individually. Together their might could be staggering. Not surprisingly, Copenhagen became a metaphor for forward movement at the 2010 India-China Beijing talks. Ms Patil and President Hu Jintao agreed that the Asian neighbours were now ready to move beyond bilateral engagement to consider cooperation at international groupings and venues, among them G-20, Doha and BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India, China).

The enlarged scope of cooperation was brought up again on the last day of talks by Vice-President Xi Jinping, who made several significant points. First, he declared that India and China were ripe for a ‘new start.’ Second, he reiterated the prospects for global cooperation between the Asian neighbours. Third, he pointed out that between them China and India boasted a combined population of 2.6 billion. The imagery would overawe anyone: Two fastest growing economies with close to 40 per cent of the global population acting in tandem. That Mr. Xi followed this up by attending the 60th anniversary celebrations of India-China relations held at a local hotel was not missed by the Indian side. Mr. Xi is not just any Vice-President. Though currently fifth in the Chinese leadership hierarchy, he is widely tipped to succeed Mr. Hu, which invests his words with weight and value. Mr. Xi’s presence at the reception was noteworthy because the usual practice is to send Ministers to such functions.

Indian Foreign Ministry officials counted other factors which lent that special touch to the presidential visit. Ms Patil had an audience with each member of the leadership hierarchy — besides Mr. Hu and Mr. Xi, she met Chairman of the National People’s Congress Wu Bangguo, Premier Wen Jiabao and Chairman of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference Jia Qinglin. This is considered a rare honour for a visiting head of state.

Through the visit, the two sides seemed to have firmed up a formula, slowly evolving over meetings between Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and the Chinese leadership, and now held up as the way forward: Manage the areas of conflict so that the relationship, rather than being held hostage to ‘one or two persisting issues,’ could move forward to explore areas of global and bilateral cooperation.

Inevitably India’s growing trade with China — China is India’s largest trading partner with volumes targeted to reach $ 60 billion this year — figured prominently in the talks as did the fact that it was adversely balanced against India. President Patil missed no opportunity to speak for wider Indian access to Chinese markets. India’s exports are currently restricted to primary and resource-based products such as iron ore and copper, with little opening available to core competence sectors like IT, pharma and engineering. In her speeches, Ms Patil stressed these as thrust areas for market development, and according to Indian officials, the Chinese team agreed that the trade imbalance was not sustainable. Said an Indian official: ‘The Chinese are minimal with their promises because they see them as commitment. The fact that at almost every forum they agreed to import more from us shows that they are very serious about trade.’

Yet with all the positives, the tour also showed how delicately poised the relationship is and how easily views can be shaped for or against China. So far, the Indian public opinion has alternated between exultation over Chindia and paranoia over imagined war threats. Chindia is an inappropriate coupling notwithstanding the growing prospects for India-China global joint action. China is far ahead of us on all indicators. On infrastructure and organising capacity, we must abandon all hopes of catching up — a truth that hit home when we saw the woefully inadequate Indian pavilion at the Shanghai expo.

As the presidential entourage flew into Beijing, the media mood was set by a report in the Guardian indicating huge Chinese diversion projects on the Brahmaputra. But thanks to excellent background briefing by the Indian side, which pointed to lack of evidence for the report, the accompanying media were prevented from blowing it up into ‘yet another Chinese threat.’

As against this, the media mood swing was overly positive on India’s aspirations for a United Nations Security Council seat. Ms Patil did seek China’s backing for it during her summit meeting with President Hu, and China did broadly indicate its support but the phraseology was far more nuanced than understood by the Indian media which drummed it up as ‘China backs India on UNSC seat.’ Indeed, the omission of the ‘promised’ UNSC seat from the Chinese Foreign Ministry statement issued the same day underscored the pitfalls of overinterpreting what Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao described as ‘a gradually developing relationship.’ What official sources did convey later was that on the UNSC seat, ‘the Chinese were far more positive than they have been so far.’

Tibet provided some more media excitement on the last day of talks. Ms Rao and Ambassador S. Jaishankar were bombarded with questions: Did China raise Tibet? Just when we thought things were going fine, they brought up this irritant. Is this not unfair to us? MP Raghuvansh Prasad Singh, who was on the tour, added to the panic: ‘Heard they are singing the Tibet tune.’ Tempers cooled down only after the Indian side explained that Tibet was on a checklist of queries China always raised in talks with India. The Indian side had a checklist too, and it was routine for both countries to go through the motions and allay each other’s fears.

A top member of the Indian official delegation summed up India-China relations in terms of ‘pengyou’ and ‘zhengyou.’ ‘Pengyou’ is a superficial friend. ‘Zhengyou’ is a serious, real friend who will frankly admit to problems and work at overcoming them: ‘We have a zhengyou relationship with China.’”

(Quelle: The Hindu.)

Afrika: Aus der Traum vom freien Welthandel mit dem Westen

Montag, Juni 7th, 2010

“Africa: Developed World Inhibits African Trade – Report

Cape Town — Developed countries have responded to the global financial crisis by adopting protectionist measures which have damaged Africa’s chances of boosting its exports, according to a major new report.

The report, African Economic Outlook 2010, was released recently at the annual meetings of the African Development Bank group and is being
launched in South Africa on Tuesday.

It says packages introduced by rich countries in 2009 to stimulate economic growth have often been geared to favour domestic interests, by supporting their capacity to export goods, or to favour buying, hiring or investing in local goods and services.

‘Such measures clearly discriminate against developing countries, including those in Africa, on two levels.

‘First, African governments lack the resources to curb the domestic impact of the crisis with the same type of measures.

‘Second, African firms face unfavourable treatment precisely in those markets where additional spending is being promoted.

‘Hence, with these new measures African products could easily face discriminatory treatment in relation to similar domestic products and
services in developed countries, despite the general agreements about preferential treatment they may enjoy
.’

The report adds that protectionism is on the rise ‘despite repeated assurances in the context of the G20 meetings in London and later in
Pittsburgh, as well as in the context of World Trade Organization talks
.’

It calls for a rapid conclusion to the Doha Round of international trade talks, and to negotiations on regional Economic Partnership Agreements, saying this is ‘crucial’ to Africa’s medium-term trade prospects.

It also notes that African countries benefitted from the exponential growth in world trade which preceded the global crisis but that their
exports still amount to only three percent of the world total.

While protectionism by developed countries accounts partly for this, there were also constraints within Africa which inhibited trade, the report says.

‘Most African economies depend on very few primary agricultural and mining commodities for their exports and mainly import manufactured
goods from advanced countries. As the traditional markets in advanced countries are expected to grow less than markets in emerging Asian and
Middle East countries as well as markets within Africa, enhancing trade relations with these more dynamic markets is key
.’

The report also identifies poor transport infrastructure, political instability and lack of security, and intra-African trade barriers as imposing constraints on trade.

It says trade between African countries is still low, representing on average about 10 percent of their total exports.

‘Only 29.7 percent of the African road network is paved,’ according to the report. ‘The continent’s railway network is also very poor …
Shipping a car from Japan to Abidjan costs U.S.$1,500, while shipping that same vehicle from Addis Ababa to Abidjan would cost $5,000.’

African Economic Outlook 2010 is published jointly by the African Development Bank, the Development Centre of the Organisation for
Economic Co-operation anda Development and the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa.”

(Quelle: allAfrica.com.)