Wednesday, 9 April 2014

Four-way Ukraine talks announced as 'hostages' freed

Pro-Russian activists the entrance of the regional Security Service building in the eastern Ukrainian city of Lugansk on April 9, 2014. PHOTO: AFP
KIEV: Ukraine said Wednesday that pro-Russian militants had freed 56 “hostages” after US and EU diplomats set up their first direct talks with Moscow and Kiev aimed at resolving the worst East-West standoff since the Cold War.
Ukraine’s SBU security service said the group walked free from its headquarters in Lugansk after separatists seized the building and other key government offices at the weekend in the mainly Russian-speaking eastern industrial heartland.
The separatist raids have drawn Western charges that Russia — its troops already massed along Ukraine’s border in response to its ouster of a Moscow-backed regime — is backing the separatists and plotting to grab more territory after annexing Crimea last month.
But US and EU diplomats also crucially agreed with Moscow that it was time to deescalate the worst European security crisis in decades by setting up a four-way round of negotiations involving Kiev next week.
EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton’s office confirmed she would meet US Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov along with his Ukrainian counterpart Andriy Deshchytsya in one of the European capitals.
A source in the Russian foreign ministry told Moscow’s state-run RIA Novosti news agency the talks would probably be held at the end of the week.
The breakthrough agreement was reached after hundreds of irate activists occupied a series of strategic buildings in the east at the weekend and declared independence for the bustling region of Donetsk.
Ukraine’s embattled leaders poured extra security forces into the flashpoint regions and regained control of the government seat in Kharkiv on Tuesday after a night of violence that included petrol bombs and stun grenades being hurled at police.
But the militants remain holed up behind barricades of razor wire and old tyres in the administration building in Donetsk and the SBU headquarters in Lugansk — the site of the alleged hostage taking.
The SBU had accused the Kalashnikov-wielding separatists of rigging the building with explosives and refusing to let 60 people already inside “leave the building and return home”.
The claim sparked fears that Kiev’s Western-backed leaders had run out of patience and were preparing to storm the occupied offices after labelling the separatists “terrorists”.
But the SBU said Wednesday that 56 people had walked free thanks to two rounds of negotiations led by unidentified lawmakers from Ukraine’s parliament.
The agency did not specify how many people were still allegedly being held against their will.
“No one was injured,” the SBU said in a statement.
“In order to minimise the risks to the lives and safety of citizens, the negotiations process is continuing.”
Yet Ukraine’s Interior Minister Arsen Avakov stressed that the “anti-terrorist operation” in cities along Russia’s border continued.
“We have two options: political — in other words, negotiations — or the use of force,” Avakov told reporters.
“I think that a resolution to this crisis will be found within the next 48 hours.”
Months of deadly political turmoil threaten not only to break up the vast nation on the European Union’s eastern frontier along its ethnic divisions but also plunge Moscow’s relations with the West to a low that may take decades to repair.
Kerry appeared to cast aside the last vestiges of diplomatic decorum Tuesday by explicitly accusing the Kremlin of sending operatives into eastern Ukraine to foment unrest.
“Everything that we’ve seen in the last 48 hours, from Russian provocateurs and agents operating in eastern Ukraine, tells us that they’ve been sent there determined to create chaos,” Kerry told US lawmakers.
British Foreign Secretary William Hague backed up that message by noting the flareup bore “all the hallmarks of a Russian strategy to destabilise Ukraine”.
And NATO chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen reaffirmed on a visit to Paris that Moscow would be making a “historic mistake” if it were to intervene in Ukraine any further.
But the Russian foreign ministry argued on Wednesday that “the United States and Ukraine have no reason to worry” because Moscow had no intention to invade its ex-Soviet neighbour.

Iran nuclear talks to 'move to next phase' in May

EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton and Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif give a press statement on the second day of talks at the UN headquarters in Vienna, Austria on April 9, 2014. PHOTO: AFP
VIENNA: Iran and world powers will in May “move to the next phase” of their talks aimed at clinching a definitive nuclear deal, they said in a joint statement Wednesday after their latest meeting in Vienna.
“We will now move to the next phase in the negotiations in which we will aim to bridge the gaps in all the key areas and work on the concrete elements of a possible comprehensive agreement,” said EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton who is the chief negotiator for the world powers.
In a statement repeated in Farsi by Iran’s foreign minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, Ashton said a “lot of intensive work will be required to overcome the differences which naturally still exist at this stage in the process.”
Both described the latest round between Iran and the five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany as “substantive and detailed … covering all the issues which will need to be part of a comprehensive agreement.”
The permanent council members are the United States, Russia, China, Britain and France.
The fourth and next round will be held in Vienna again from May 13, they said.
A senior US administration official involved in the talks had said last week that the negotiators hoped to make enough progress in this round to begin drafting a deal in May.
In November the two sides reached an interim deal under which Iran froze certain parts of its nuclear activities in return for minor relief from painful Western sanctions.
But Iran has not permanently dismantled any of its nuclear equipment and can fully reactivate its facilities if it wishes when the deal expires on July 20.
US Secretary of State John Kerry told US lawmakers Monday that the theoretical period needed for Iran to produce a weapon’s worth of bomb material — if it chose to do so — was “about two months”.
In order to greatly extend this “break-out” time, the six powers want the final deal to see Iran reduce permanently, or at least long-term, the scope of its programme.
The deal may involve Iran slashing the number of centrifuges — used to enrich nuclear material — changing the design of a new reactor at Arak and giving UN inspectors more oversight.
Other outstanding thorny issues include Iran’s continued research and development of ever more advanced centrifuges and the Islamic republic’s ballistic missile programme.
Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said Wednesday “that Iran’s activities in nuclear research and development as well as its nuclear achievements will never be stopped.”
Iran’s lead negotiator at the talks said late Tuesday that on “certain questions” both sides were narrowing their differences but that the negotiations remain “difficult and complicated”.
Any agreement will need to be sold to sceptical hardliners both in the United States and Iran as well as to Iran’s arch enemy Israel, widely assumed to have a nuclear arsenal itself.
US-Iran spat
Threatening to throw a spanner in the works is the crisis over Ukraine which has led to the biggest standoff between Russia and the West since the Cold War.
Russia’s chief negotiator, Sergei Ryabkov, fired a warning shot last month, saying Moscow might “take the path of counter-measures” on Iran if pushed too far.
On Tuesday however Ryabkov sounded a more conciliatory note, telling ITAR-TASS it would “not be wise” to turn Iran into a “bargaining chip”.
Moscow and Iran are said to be negotiating an oil-for-goods barter deal that would undermine Washington’s sanctions efforts, a strategy the US credits with getting Tehran to the talks in the first place.
Another issue casting a cloud over the talks is the spat between Tehran and Washington over Iran’s selection of a new UN ambassador allegedly linked to the 1979 American embassy hostage crisis.
The White House said Tuesday Hamid Aboutalebi was “not viable” and on Monday the US Senate passed a resolution that would deny the veteran diplomat a US visa.

Indonesia opposition tops legislative polls: unofficial tallies

A young family leaves a polling station during legislative elections in Jakarta on April 9, 2014. PHOTO: AFP
Indonesia’s main opposition party won the most votes in legislative elections Wednesday, unofficial tallies showed, boosting the chances of their presidential candidate, the Jakarta governor, becoming the country’s next leader.
A tally, known as a “quick count”, by think-tank CSIS put the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P) on 19 per cent, while another by pollster Indonesia Survey Circle gave the party almost 20 per cent

Assault: Arvind Kejriwal suspects Modi hand in latest slap

Arvind Kejriwal. PHOTO: AFP
DELHI: 
“If you rise fast, you also fall fast” – this was the cryptic observation of a political activist in a chai shop as he watched on Tuesday TV footage of a man reaching up to garland Aam Admi Party leader Arvind Kejriwal only to deliver a resounding slap on his face.
The leader was quick to direct his anger at the BJP.
“I do not understand why do some people resort to violence for becoming the Prime Minister? If you think by attacking us, we will keep quiet then you are wrong. We will fight this battle till the last breath,” he said in a clear reference to Bharatiya Janata Party’s prime ministerial nominee Narendra Modi.
Later the former Delhi CM posted to Twitter, “I am just thinking –  why am I being repeatedly attacked? Who are the masterminds? What do they want? What do they achieve?”
“Is violence an answer to country’s problems? Let them tell me the place and time. I will come there. Let them beat me as much as they want…but will that solve the problems?”
This is not the first time Kejriwal has been assaulted. In the first incident, a 19-year-old young man in Delhi’s lower middle class Dakshinpuri area struck. Thought to be Kejriwal’s pool of political endorsement, this area is inhabited by auto rickshaw drivers’ tenements. Tuesday’s assault also came from the resident of another such area, Sultanpuri.
Auto rickshaw drivers have been the mainstay of AAP’s support base. They were seduced with the promise of regularisation, or ownership of their vehicles (which typically they have to rent at high rates and run to ensure they earn a daily wage) and rapacious policemen who find them the best avenue for extortion.
However, during its 49-day tenure, the AAP government was unable to do very much for this section of its core supporters. The latest assault is seen as an attack from such a disillusioned supporter.
Kejriwal’s rival Kapil Sibal, telecom minister and candidate from the Chandni Chowk constituency, however, said neither he nor his party supported such tactics and were quick to condemn it.
The BJP said Kejriwal had got just desserts for making false promises.
All eyes are now on the seven constituencies in Delhi and how AAP will fare

Minority report: A matter of faith

Alarming statistics released by a report highlight forced conversions of women. ILLUSTRATION: FAIZAAN DAWOOD
KARACHI: 
As he cites the example of that case that happened in 2008 when two young Christian girls were abducted, the voice of Nadeem Anthony breaks with emotion. “During the last ten years, the Christian community has seen an increasing number of abductions of young girls and they being forcefully converted.
A big number of these girls are poor child labourers who work in brick kilns or as domestic help. Abductions from schools have also happened,” said Anthony, a lawyer, a Christian rights’ activist and council member of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP).
The case mentioned by Anthony was of the abduction of ten year old A and 13 year old S from Muzaffargarh district in Punjab. Both were converted forcefully, and one of them was forcefully married. Despite the case being highlighted, Anthony says only the younger girl could be recovered.
The issue of forced conversions is once again in the spotlight due to the findings of a report released on Monday by the Movement for Solidarity and Peace in Pakistan (MSP). The report titled “Forced marriages and forced conversions in the Christian community of Pakistan” states that an estimated 1,000 women from Christian and Hindu communities are forcibly converted and made to marry Muslim men in Pakistan every year. The report estimates that up to 700 of these women are Christian and 300 Hindu.
As 42 per cent of Pakistan’s minority population, the Christian community stands at over two million in number, mostly settled in Punjab. The report mentions that according to the National Commission of Justice and Peace (NCJP), 80 per cent of the minority community is poor while 40 per cent lives below the poverty line. Poverty, as always, makes them more vulnerable.
The pattern
The report describes a predictable pattern of what happens to these women. “Christian girls — usually between the ages of 12 and 25 — are abducted, converted to Islam, and married to the abductor or a third party. The victim’s family usually files a First Information Report (FIR) for abduction or rape with the local police station. The abductor, on behalf of the victim girl, files a counter FIR, accusing the Christian family of harassing the willfully converted and married girl, and for conspiring to convert the girl back to Christianity. Upon production in the courts or before the magistrate, the victim girl is asked to testify whether she converted and married of her own free will or if she was abducted,” states the report.
By the time they come to the court, if at all, intimidation has taken its toll. “We have followed up a lot of cases. By the time the girls are produced in court, they say under pressure that they have converted of their own free will, because in a lot of cases they are living with the abductor during court proceedings. Survival becomes tough under pressure,” says Zohra Yusuf, chairperson of the HRCP.
The report raises valid concerns about the future of these women. “Once in the custody of the abductor, the victim girl may be subjected to sexual violence, rape, forced prostitution, human trafficking and sale, or other domestic abuse,” states the report.
Willful conversions
Providing recommendations that can help solve the problems, the report also touches upon the societal attitudes that end up granting immunity to the perpetrators of crimes.
“If the girl is an adult and converts out of her own will, then it is her choice. Then that is not forced. However in most cases even if the husband accepts her wholeheartedly, the family of the boy never accepts her. They taunt her with titles like choori (sweeper) for life. In many cases they send the girl back to her parents,” says Anthony.
The entire social context has to be seen when analysing the issue, and the MSP report does that.  Touching upon the historical and social contexts, the report discusses the grievances of Pakistan’s Christian community.
Yusuf is of the opinion that “even if the girl is willfully converting, the issue is actually connected to the broader issue of tolerance for minorities in Pakistani society. We have to give minorities the space to practise their faith.”
Anthony appreciates the efforts of voices like that of Maulana Abdul Khabeer Azad, the Khateeb of Badshahi Masjid, among others, who support what is just and fair. In the opinion of Anthony, one of the reasons for the recent spike in migrations of the Christian community members to countries like Thailand and Malaysia is that they feel scared for their girls.
“What is happening is unacceptable. The findings of the report should be taken seriously and the government should take notice of this,” says Anthony.
Along with the report, an appeal was issued by the MSP. An inclusive coalition is being mobilised by the MSP to sensitise people about this important issue.

Former Pakistani bus driver's son appointed as new culture secretary in UK

In his new post, he will be responsible for policy on broadcasting, sport, media, tourism, telecoms and the arts. PHOTO: ONLINE
LONDON: British Prime Minister David Cameron appointed former banker Sajid Javid as the country’s new culture secretary, replacing Maria Miller who resigned earlier on Wednesday over an expenses scandal.
Javid, considered a rising star in the Conservative Party, has served as financial secretary to the Treasury since last year.
BBC News noted that he is the first Asian male conservative cabinet minister.
In his new post, Javid will be responsible for policy on broadcasting, sport, media, tourism, telecoms and the arts.
His appointment has been praised by Conservative MPs – George Freeman describing him as “a new model Conservative for our times whose done great work at Treasury”.
Cameron also said on Twitter that lawmaker Nicky Morgan will step up to the financial secretary post at the Treasury — key to the government’s relationship with the financial services industry — from her current role as economic secretary.
Biography
Javid’s father, Abdul, a bus driver, came to the UK from Pakistan in 1961, reportedly with just £1 in his pocket. He settled in Rochdale, where Sajid Javid was born in 1969, according to BBC News.
After graduating from university, Javid worked for Chase Manhattan Bank and Deutsche Bank before starting his career in politics. He was elected as a member of parliament in 2010.

Danish experts arrive to identify openings for agri-business

According to some estimates, Denmark's dairy industry exports two-thirds of the milk it produces after meeting the demand of its 5.6 million citizens. PHOTO: FILE
ISLAMABAD: Denmark is looking to identify opportunities for cooperation between Pakistani and Danish businesses in the sectors of agriculture and dairy.
To this end, the Danish embassy has invited two agricultural consultants from Denmark for a week-long tour of the country, Danish Ambassador Jesper Moller Sorensen told The Express Tribune.
Sorensen said they would help suggest steps to establish bilateral business and research linkages.
Denmark is a global agricultural powerhouse. According to some estimates, its dairy industry exports two-thirds of the milk it produces after meeting the demand of its 5.6 million citizens.
Pakistan’s agri-businesses suffer from technological and value-addition weaknesses that need to be tackled to achieve the full potential.
The Danish delegation consists of Henry Jorgensen and Werner Kofoed Nielsen from the Knowledge Centre for Agriculture, a Danish company that provides professional knowledge about agriculture.
The experts would meet Pakistan’s agri-business community and visit research institutions in Islamabad, Faisalabad, Lahore and Karachi, said Aslam Perwaiz, the embassy’s commercial adviser.
The delegation kicked off its tour from Islamabad on Monday, with visits to agriculture research centres in the capital. Later, they interacted with the business community from twin cities at a dinner hosted by the Danish ambassador.
Nielsen, a dairy and agricultural consultant, said they would present a set of recommendations to the embassy. “The recommendations will most likely highlight areas of interest in agriculture in Pakistan and identify companies and institutions in Denmark that might be interested in working in those areas.”
Jorgensen, who has expertise in the business side of agriculture, said growth in agriculture should be market-driven. “Any changes made to facilitate growth should follow some sort of financial analysis which indicates that those changes will benefit the farmers.”
He also supported incentives for improving product quality. “I think the best way to develop the agricultural sector is to pay farmers something extra if they fulfil the requirements.”
Pakistani businessmen, who attended the reception, said the agricultural industry was full of potential, but they underlined the need for investments in agricultural infrastructure. They did, however, welcome technological and technical support from Danish firms to help enhance quality and efficiency of products and processes.
To focus more on trade and commercial affairs, Sorensen said the Danish embassy opened its first-ever commercial section in Pakistan in December 2013. “That move has led the embassy to reach out to businesses in Pakistan and Denmark.”
The real challenge, the Danish envoy admitted, was to convince companies to do business with Pakistan. Some companies from Denmark had shown interest in working in the areas of energy and energy efficiency, Sorensen added.
“We think that increasing our bilateral trust on the trade side and doing more commercial activities are very much linked with policy objectives we have with Pakistan, which are to create opportunities for every single citizen, create jobs and growth and ultimately reduce poverty.”