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Australia Faces Compensation Bill For Wrongful Detentions: Lawyer

Tuesday, October 21st, 2008 AddThis Social Bookmark Button

SYDNEY (AFP) – The Australian government may compensate as many as 191 people for wrongfully holding them in immigration detention centres, a parliamentary hearing was told Tuesday.

A government ombudsman last year reported that 247 Australian citizens, permanent residents and legal visa holders were incorrectly detained by the Immigration Department between 1993 and 2007.

The inquiry was sparked by the illegal detention of mentally ill Australian resident Cornelia Rau for more than 10 months in 2004 and 2005 and the wrongful deportation of Australian citizen Vivian Alvarez Solon to the Philippines.

The chief lawyer for the department, Robyn Bicket, said Tuesday the department had now reviewed all the cases.

“Currently we are at 191 cases (where) we believe there is risk of legal liability for compensation and 56 cases where we believe there is no compensatable risk involved,” she told a Senate estimates hearing.

Bicket said that the department had offered compensation in 40 cases and settlements had been reached in 17 instances.

Australia’s previous conservative government adopted a tough policy towards asylum seekers and illegal immigrants, making immigration detention mandatory even for children. That policy has since been scrapped.

Source — Yahoo!

Tigers In Suicide Attack Against Two Merchant Ships: Sri Lanka

Tuesday, October 21st, 2008 AddThis Social Bookmark Button

COLOMBO (AFP) – Tamil Tiger rebels carried out a suicide attack against two merchant ships off Sri Lanka’s northern peninsula of Jaffna early Wednesday, the defense ministry said in a statement.

The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) targeted the MV Ruhuna and MV Nimalawa just outside the port of Kankesanthurai on the northern edge of the peninsula, the statement said.

Jaffna is controlled by the government, but cut off from the rest of the island by LTTE-held territory and supplied entirely by ship or plane.

“The attack is viewed as another cowardly attempt by the terrorists to deny essential supplies to the civilians living in war-affected areas,” the statement said.

The number of casualties was not immediately clear.

Defence sources said initial reports suggested that one ship was sinking and there was fighting between naval troops and a unit of Tamil Tiger rebels.

A defence official said naval reinforcements had been rushed to the area.

The attack came as the military kept up a major ground offensive against the Tigers in the northern mainland.

Source — Yahoo!

India Launches Moon Mission In Asian Space Race

Tuesday, October 21st, 2008 AddThis Social Bookmark Button

NEW DELHI – Scientists have better maps of distant Mars than the moon where astronauts have walked. But India hopes to change that with its first lunar mission.

Chandrayaan-1 — which means “Moon Craft” in ancient Sanskrit — launched from the Sriharikota space center in southern India early Wednesday morning in a two-year mission aimed at laying the groundwork for further Indian space expeditions.

Chief among the mission’s goals is mapping not only the surface of the moon, but what lies beneath. India joined what’s shaping up as a 21st century space race with Chinese and Japanese crafts already in orbit around the moon.

The United States, which won the 1960s race to send men to the moon, won’t jump in this race with its new lunar probe until next spring, but it is providing key mapping equipment for India’s mission.

As India’s economy has boomed in recent years, it has sought to convert its new found wealth — built on its high-tech sector — into political and military clout and stake a claim as a world leader. It is hoping that a moon mission — coming just months after it finalized a deal with the United States that recognizes India as a nuclear power — will further enhance that status.

“It is a remarkable technological achievement for the country,” said S. Satish, a spokesman for the Indian Space Research Organization, which plans to use the 3,080-pound lunar probe to create a high-resolution map of the lunar surface and what minerals are below. Two of the mapping instruments are a joint project with NASA.

Until now, India’s space launches have been more practical, with weather warning satellites and communication systems, said former NASA associate administrator Scott Pace, director of space policy at the George Washington University.

“You’re seeing India lifting its sights,” Pace said.

To date only the U.S., Russia, the European Space Agency, Japan and China have sent missions to the moon.

While much of the technology involved in reaching the moon has not changed since the Soviet Union and the U.S. did it more than 4 decades ago, analysts say current mapping equipment allows the exploration of new areas, including below the surface.

In the last year, Asian nations have taken the lead in exploring the moon. In October 2007, Japan sent up the Kaguya spacecraft. A month later, China’s Chang’e-1 entered lunar orbit.

Those missions took high resolution pictures of the moon, but aren’t as comprehensive as Chandrayaan-1 will be or NASA’s upcoming half-a-billion-dollar Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, Pace said. The most comprehensive maps of the moon were made about 40 years ago during the Apollo era, he said.

“We don’t really have really good modern maps of the moon with modern instrument,” Pace said. “The quality of the Martian maps, I would make a general argument, is superior to what we have of the moon.”

NASA has put probes on Mars’ frigid polar region, but not on the rugged poles of the moon. Yet the moon’s south pole is where NASA is considering setting up an eventual human-staffed lunar outpost, Pace said.

The moon’s south pole is “certainly more rugged than where Neil Armstrong landed. It’s more interesting. It’s more dangerous,” Pace said. “We need better maps.”

And while the moon race in the 1960s was a two-country sprint between the United States and the U.S.S.R, more countries are involved this time. China, in particular, has been forging ahead in space.

Beijing sent shock waves through the region in 2003, when it became the first Asian country to put its own astronauts into space. It followed that last month with its first spacewalk.

More ominously, last year China also blasted an old satellite into oblivion with a land-based anti-satellite missile, the first such test ever conducted by any nation, including the United States and Russia.

While this is India’s first space expedition beyond Earth’s orbit, the head of India’s space agency believes it can quickly catch China, its rival for Asian leadership.

“Compared to China, we are better off in many areas,” Indian Space Research Organization chairman G. Madhavan Nair said in an interview with India’s Outlook magazine this week, citing India’s advanced communication satellites and launch abilities.

India lags behind only because it has chosen not to focus on the more expensive manned space missions, he said. “But given the funds and necessary approvals we can easily catch up with our neighbor in this area.”

The mission is not all about rivalry and prestige. Analysts say India stands to reap valuable rewards from the technology it develops and, according to Pace, it already shows increased confidence in difficult engineering and quality control.

“Each nation is doing its own thing to drive its research technology for the well-being of that nation,” said Charles Vick, a space analyst for the Washington think tank GlobalSecurity.org.

“Traditionally, for every dollar put into space research, we get that much more back,” he said.

India is also collaborating closely with other countries on the mission.

Of the 11 instruments carried by the satellite, five are Indian, three are from the European Space Agency, two from the U.S. _including radar that can search for ice under lunar poles — and one from Bulgaria.

Beyond 3-D mapping the moon and scanning for mineral deposits, the $80 million mission will test systems for a future moon landing, the Indian space agency said.

India plans to follow this mission with landing a rover on the moon in 2011 and eventually a manned space program, though this has not been authorized yet.

And the Indian space agency was already dreaming of more.

“Space is the frontier for mankind in the future. If we want to go beyond the moon, we have to go there first,” said Satish.

(This version CORRECTS that two of the mapping instruments are joint project with NASA).)

Source — Yahoo!

Zimbabwe Power-Sharing Deal Reached

Thursday, September 11th, 2008 AddThis Social Bookmark Button

HARARE, Zimbabwe - Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe, after nearly three decades as the country’s unchallenged leader, has agreed to share power with opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai, officials announced Thursday.

South African President Thabo Mbeki, who mediated the talks, did not immediately offer details but said the agreement would be signed and made public Monday.

“I am absolutely certain that the leadership of Zimbabwe is committed to implementing these agreements, Mbeki said. “This is an outcome that comes out of decisions arrived at by the leadership of Zimbabwe.”

Tsvangirai earlier also told reporters the parties “have got a deal.” There was no immediate statement from Mugabe.

The agreement follows two months of negotiations between Mugabe, 84, who has ruled with an iron hand since the country’s independence from Britain in 1980, and former union leader Tsvangirai, 56, his fiercest opponent for the past decade.

They had been deadlocked over how to share power after Mugabe’s unopposed re-election in a June ballot that was boycotted by Tsvangirai’s Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) and condemned around the world.

“In the end, out of all of that process, has come an agreement that is a unanimous agreement, arrived at without any reservation by all the negotiating parties,” said Mbeki.

Violence after disputed election
Tsvangirai had been refusing to back down on his insistence that he should be head of government and preside over Cabinet meetings, relegating Mugabe to a ceremonial position. Mugabe had shown little willingness to relinquish much power.

Mbeki has been in Zimbabwe since Monday trying to resolve the impasse. For a year, he has been trying to bring Mugabe and Tsvangirai closer together, insisting — despite accusations he was biased in favor of Mugabe — that his policy of refusing to confront or publicly criticize either party was the best approach.

“The agreement has once more underlined our often-stated view that only the people of Zimbabwe, acting with the support of the international community, can author their own destiny,” Mbeki’s government said in a statement.

Others, including African leaders traditionally reluctant to criticize one of their own, had been increasingly impatient with Mugabe, who has been accused of trampling on Zimbabwean’s political rights and ruining the economy of what had once been the region’s breadbasket. Neighboring countries coping with Zimbabwean refugees were among the sharpest critics.

Tsvangirai’s party won the most votes in legislative and presidential elections in March, but he did not win enough to avoid a runoff against Mugabe. An onslaught of state-sponsored violence against Tsvangirai’s supporters forced him to drop out of the presidential runoff.

Mugabe kept Tsvangirai’s name on the ballot and was declared the overwhelming winner of a runoff that was widely denounced as a sham.

Economy in ruins

Much of Mugabe’s popularity at home and across the continent is linked to his image as a proud African leader unafraid to defy the West. Tsvangirai, who lacks Mugabe’s anti-colonial credentials, has said Zimbabwe needs to work with the West to overcome its economic and political crises.

A political settlement would free the leaders to address Zimbabwe’s severe economic problems — which include having the world’s highest inflation rate and chronic food and fuel shortages. Millions of people have fled to neighboring countries in search of work.

Foreign investors have been wary because of the political uncertainty. Western governments are poised to help with grants and loans, but will not deal with Mugabe, who they denounce as a dictator.

Source — MSNBC

France Convicts Former U.N. Employee Of Rape

Thursday, September 11th, 2008 AddThis Social Bookmark Button

PARIS - A Paris court convicted a former U.N. employee for the rape of young Africans during his posting in Central African Republic and Congo.

Didier Bourguet was sentenced to nine years in prison for having committed about 20 rapes of teenage girls between 1998 and 2004 during his postings as a mechanic for the United Nations in the two countries.

Prosecutors sought a 12-year sentence. In the trial that ended Thursday, Bourguet had claimed that the girls had consented to the sexual activity.

Save the Children UK reported in May that it had evidence of widespread sexual abuse of children at the hands of peacekeepers and international aid workers in war zones and disaster areas.

Source — MSNBC