Kerry Urges Indonesia to Help Stem Climate Change

Kerry on Climate Change

On Sunday, Secretary of State John Kerry delivered remarks on climate change to an audience of students in Jakarta, Indonesia. He accused climate change deniers of burying their heads in the sand.
JAKARTA, Indonesia — Secretary of State John Kerry on Sunday urged Indonesia to take steps to combat climate change, warning that failure to act would jeopardize the nation’s resources and damage its economy.

Warming sea temperatures, he said, could deal a severe blow to Indonesia’s fishing industry, while powerful storms could buffet the country and rising seas put much of Jakarta, the capital, under water.

“This city, this country, this region is really on the front lines of climate change,” Mr. Kerry said in a speech. “It’s not an exaggeration to say to you that your entire way of life that you live and love is at risk.”

Mr. Kerry, who has long been outspoken concerning climate change, hopes to make it a signature issue of his tenure as secretary of state. He aims, in particular, to be the lead broker of a 2015 United Nations treaty committing the world’s economies to significant cuts in carbon emissions and sweeping changes in the global energy economy.

The deliberations over climate change, however, have long been marked by disputes over which nations should bear major responsibility for limiting greenhouse gas emissions.

China, India and other developing Asian economies have resisted American urging to commit to reductions in their own carbon emissions, arguing that the United States, the world’s largest economy, should shoulder most of the economic burden.

Mr. Kerry has pointed out, however, that unilateral action by the United States will not slow the rate of global warming significantly unless other large economies commit to carbon cuts, as well.

China recently surpassed the United States as the world’s largest emitter of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, and emissions across Asia are projected to surge in the coming decades, as millions more people in the developing economies there begin to drive automobiles and gain access to electric power.

Indonesia is in third place, after China and the United States. The chief source of the country’s emissions is deforestation, but as its growing population depends increasingly on electricity from cheap coal-fired power plants, the country’s emissions are expected to grow rapidly in coming decades.

Mr. Kerry’s speech was delivered at a cultural center in Jakarta sponsored by the American Embassy, and was transmitted to similar centers on the islands of Borneo and Sumatra. It was one of a series of addresses in which the secretary of state will try to convince developing nations that they have an economic stake in addressing the problem.

Mr. Kerry did not say what specific steps Indonesia should take. But he cast the problem in near-apocalyptic terms, comparing the severity of the threat to that from weapons of mass destruction.

Warmer and more acidic seawater could reduce Indonesian fish catches by 40 percent, he said, while a three-foot rise in the sea level would be “enough to put half of Jakarta under water.” He cited a World Bank report warning of $1 trillion a year in flood damage by 2050 unless major efforts are made to improve Asian ports.

Mr. Kerry said the scientific debate over climate change was settled, with 97 percent of scientists saying the problem is real.

Combating climate change was also a main agenda item during Mr. Kerry’s visit to Beijing on Friday and Saturday.

After Chinese and American officials met there, the Americans announced agreement on joint initiatives to reduce emissions from heavy-duty vehicles, to promote improved technology for power grids and carbon capture, to collect and manage greenhouse gas data and to make buildings more energy-efficient. A senior State Department official said the statement was noteworthy because it was agreed on by “the two biggest emitters.”

Mr. Kerry asserted on Sunday that the United States had made strides in dealing with climate change. But he made no mention of the Obama administration’s pending decision on whether to approve construction of the Keystone XL Pipeline, which American environmentalists oppose.

The pipeline would carry carbon-heavy tar-sands oil from Canada to the United States; a recent State Department report concluded that if the pipeline was not built, the oil would still be extracted at the same rate but would be shipped by rail, so building the pipeline would not exacerbate carbon emissions significantly.

Indonesia is the third stop on Mr. Kerry’s diplomatic swing through Asia. His planned meeting with President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, scheduled for Monday, was canceled before Mr. Kerry arrived Saturday night, a senior State Department official said, because the Indonesia leader was focusing on coordinating assistance efforts following the recent deadly eruption of a volcano.

source : The New York TImes
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Happy Chinese New Year 2565

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A Movie Date, a Text Message and a Fatal Shot




WESLEY CHAPEL, Fla. — There’s a sticker on the door of the Grove 16 Theater just outside Tampa: no weapons.

Curtis J. Reeves Jr. must have walked right past it on Jan. 13 when he went to a matinee with his wife, carrying a .380 handgun.
Judging by later events, Mr. Reeves, a 71-year old retired police captain, seemed more interested in another notice that flashed across the movie screen, the one that warned against talking on the phone or texting during the movie. That message was announced a few times, once by on-screen M&Ms that walked and talked, and again in a way that made clear that using a phone could get a patron ejected from the cinema.
Before the movie “Lone Survivor” had even begun, Mr. Reeves had killed a phone user, was in handcuffs and faced the prospect of spending the rest of his life in prison. In a moment that instantly sparked a national debate about legal firearms in public spaces, a former homicide detective had snuffed the life from a Desert Storm veteran on a movie date with his wife.


The police outside the Cobb chain’s Grove 16 Theater in Wesley Chapel, Fla., on Jan. 13 after one patron killed another during an argument over texting. Cliff Mcbride/The Tampa Tribune, via Associated Press

The tale as told by the Pasco County sheriff’s office, a witness and the victim’s friends is of a fatal clash between two Navy veterans who happened to sit near each other in a movie theater. A woman would later come forward and tell prosecutors that two weeks earlier at the movies, Mr. Reeves had menaced her for texting as well, describing a man in sharp contrast to the generous and kind neighbor the people on his block describe.
“What’s he bringing a gun to the movies for?” said Charles Cummings, a 68-year-old former Marine who was in the row ahead of Mr. Reeves and described him as “aggressive.” “That’s a happy place. No one is going to kill you there, except that he did go there and kill someone.”
“Lone Survivor,” a movie about a covert Navy SEAL operation, was set to start at 1:20 that Monday afternoon. The lights had dimmed halfway. The previews were being shown while stragglers made their way to the plush seats.
Only about 25 people attended the showing, among them a nurse and an off-duty sheriff’s deputy.
In front of Mr. Reeves was Chad W. Oulson, 43, of Land O’ Lakes, Fla., a finance manager at a local motorcycle dealership. Mr. Oulson was a 6-foot 4-inch motorcycle enthusiast, whose 22-month-old daughter, Alexis, was at home with a babysitter and not feeling well. So Mr. Oulson defied technology etiquette and texted the sitter. The light from his phone was visible in the semidarkness.
Mr. Cummings remembers Mr. Reeves kicking the seat in front of him.
“He was agitated,” Mr. Cummings said.
Mr. Reeves asked Mr. Oulson to quit texting. Mr. Oulson kept at it, explaining that he was just communicating about a preschooler. Mr. Reeves left in a huff to get a manager, but he returned alone.
Mr. Oulson complained about being tattled on, and the two men exchanged more words. The words got louder. That’s when Mr. Oulson made what would turn out to be a fatal move.
“He stood up,” said Joseph Detrapani, a friend of Mr. Oulson’s, who heard the story later. “That was it.”
This was a boutique theater with rows of large seats that are elevated from one another, with a foot and a half of legroom between them. Mr. Oulson turned to face Mr. Reeves and swung the popcorn bag at his side; kernels struck Mr. Reeves’ face.
Mr. Reeves, a co-founder of the Tampa Police Department’s first tactical response team, reacted. Struck in the face by what he told police was a “dark object,” he reached for his .380 and fired, just as his son, Matthew, also a police officer, entered the theater. Mr. Oulson’s wife, Nicole, had placed her hand on her husband’s chest and was struck in the finger.

Curtis J. Reeves Jr. appearing via video conference before a judge on Jan. 14, the day after he shot and killed Chad W. Oulson. 
Mr. Oulson was hit once in the chest. The people nearby laid him down on the floor and rested his head on Mr. Cummings’s foot. Mr. Cummings’s son called for help while the nurse in the audience rendered aid.Police said Mr. Reeves sat down calmly, put the gun on his lap and stared ahead. A sheriff’s deputy from nearby Sumter County who saw the muzzle flash snatched the weapon from him. Police said Mr. Reeves resisted at first and then acquiesced.
The gun was jammed.
At 1:30, a call came over the police radio that someone had been shot at the theater. The police feared the worst and prepared to respond to mass casualties.
“When you hear this come over the radio, I can tell you, your heart drops,” Sheriff Chris Nocco told reporters.
Mr. Reeves’s clothes were taken for evidence, and he was taken to jail in a hazmat suit. TV cameras showed him walking up to the police cruiser as if it were his own, with no officer escorting him close behind.
His lawyer, Richard Escobar, said Mr. Reeves, who is charged with second-degree murder, acted in self-defense. He suggested that Mr. Reeves was hit in the face with something other than popcorn, and had every right to defend himself with deadly force.
Mr. Escobar in court described his client as a person who attends Bible study and has been married to the same woman since 1967. Mr. Reeves, he said, was a commander in the Police Department for almost 17 years and has health problems including bursitis and respiratory ailments.
“He has been protecting the community from individuals that do commit crimes,” Mr. Escobar told the judge at a bond hearing last week.
Mr. Escobar has said that because of his age, Florida law supports Mr. Reeves’ self-defense claim. In Florida, a misdemeanor assault against anyone 65 or older is a felony. And in Florida, a person who has a reasonable fear of great bodily injury or death is not obligated to retreat.
“He’s throwing spaghetti against the wall to see which noodle sticks,” said TJ Grimaldi, a lawyer representing Mr. Oulson’s widow, Nicole.
Mr. Escobar suggested that he is likely to seek immunity under the hotly debated Stand Your Ground law, which became a household term in 2012 when the police in Sanford, another Central Florida city, cited it as the reason a neighborhood watch volunteer, George Zimmerman, was able to go home after killing an unarmed teenager, Trayvon Martin, who he said attacked him.
Mr. Oulson, his wife, Nicole, and daughter, Alexis. 

But even Mr. Zimmerman’s defense lawyer said that given what is known so far, it would be difficult to come up with a Stand Your Ground defense in these circumstances.
“A felony in and of itself does not justify deadly force,” said Mark O’Mara, who successfully defended Mr. Zimmerman at his trial this summer. “I would call that a Hail Mary pass.”
The use of deadly force is justified only if the fear of bodily harm is reasonable and if the felony is dangerous, regardless of the shooter’s age, Mr. O’Mara said.
A judge agreed and held Mr. Reeves without bond. Another extended bond hearing originally set for Wednesday was scheduled for Feb. 5.
The shooting and Mr. Reeves’ appearance in court, looking dazed in his dark green antisuicide smock, shocked those who know him and describe him as generous and friendly.
“He always had a smile on his face,” said Bill Costas, his next-door neighbor in Brooksville, a small town 55 miles north of Tampa. “He is always very decent and very kind to my wife and myself.”
Although he stressed that he was not present for the dispute and the shooting, Mr. Costas suspects the victim must have been aggressive enough to put Mr. Reeves in fear.
“If everybody would just treat each other with respect,” he said.
Mr. Reeves’s family declined to comment, as did the management of the theater, part of the Cobb chain.
Mr. Oulson’s friends worry that the killer’s strong community ties mean he will never face justice.Mr. Oulson, originally from Illinois, lived in Florida for about a decade and was married for almost seven years. He was known as a doting father who always found a way to bring any conversation back to whatever adorable thing his daughter Alexis had last done. He loved motorbike racing. His Facebook page is full of pictures of him and his daughter — on Halloween, at the beach, the child on a pony.
His widow, who had surgery on her finger on Thursday, has declined to speak to reporters, but is expected to make a public statement on Wednesday. Mr. Detrapani has set up a Facebook page and organized a memorial motorcycle ride for February to raise money for the family.
“If you knew him for two minutes or 20 years, he touched everybody’s life. You wanted to be in his gravitational pull,” Mr. Detrapani said. “In my mind I can’t see anything that happened in that theater that justifies a bullet to the chest. He doesn’t carry weapons. He doesn’t threaten with weapons. He doesn’t threaten.”

source : the New York Times

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Ketulusan dan Kesungguhan

Ketulusan dan Kesungguhan
Namo Sakyamuni Buddhaya 3x
Terpujilah Guru kami, Sakyamuni Buddha yang telah menunjukan jalan dan menjadi teladan untuk melenyapkan peneritaan, mencapai kebahagiaan sejati…
Namo Amitofo …
Pada kesempatan kali ini saya akan coba membahas “Ketulusan dan Kesungguhan”.
Kenapa pada topik yang akan saya bawakan ini tidak saya tambahkan kalimat “dalam Agama Buddha” ?
Saudara-saudara yang berbahagia, alasandan opini saya, perlu kita tanyakan lagi bahwa, apakah Buddha pada masanya pernah mengatakan/mengklaim bahwasanya apa yang belia babarkan ini adalah miliknya, dan bukan milik orang lain ? Jawabannya adalah tidak…
Buddha bahkan tidak pernah berkata “ini ajaranku, bukan milik yang lain”.
Jika Buddha mengatakan hal seperti itu, Maka seseorang termasuk sang Buddha sendiri tidak dapat kita katakan sebagai Buddha, kenapa demikian ? karena arti Buddha itu sendiri adalah “Yang tercerahkan sepenuhnya”.
Kita semua tahu bahwa sang Buddha mengajarkan kita ada 3 corak yang tidak terlepas dari kehidupan kita semua, yaitu salah satunya adalah anatman (Sanskrit)/anatta(Pāli)/ 无我 yang artinya adalah tiada diri/tiada aku/tiada inti. Ini berarti jika Buddha sendiri masih mengakui ini dan itu adalah miliknya, bagaimana Beliau bisa menjadi buddha(成佛), dan begitu juga dengan kita. Ajaran Buddha tidak mengenal perbedaan(佛教的是平等), tidak ada istilah untuk si “A” dan bukan untuk si “B”. Buddha selalu mengajarkan kesamaan yang universal(平等).
Ketulusan dan Kesungguhan, apa ini sebetulnya ? Saudara-saudara, kita sehari-hari tidak terlepas dari yang namanya rutinitas, ketika semua lancar kita bahagia, ketika ada masalah kita mengeluh, tetapi malah sebenarnya malah mempersulit diri kita. Kita semua tau, hidup ini tidak kekal adanya, tidak ada kepastian yang termasuk salah satu corak kehidupan yang Buddha ajarkan, yaitu anitya(sanskrit)/anicca(pali)/ , yang artinya tidak ada yang pasti, semua akan berubah seiring waktu. Saudara sekalian, kita tahu bahwasanya hidup memang tidak mudah, kalau hidup ini mudah untuk apa kita usaha, untuk apa kita belajar, dan untuk apa juga kita sembahyang(拜佛) dan berbuat baik. Hidup tidak mudah, tetapi tak sepantasnya kita mengeluh. Tetapi masalahnya disaat ini, bahkan dalam melakukan hal yang berguna, kita juga mengeluh. Nah mengeluh inilah yang disebut sebagai tidak adaketulusan dan kesungguhan. Kita tidak tulus(真誠) kepada siapa ? yang pertama adalah kepada diri kita sendiri. Jika kita tidak tulus kepada diri kita sendiri, bahkan ketika yang kita lakukan adalah hal yang berguna, kita malah mengeluh, perlu kita tanyakan apa artinya yang kita lakukan itu ? Ketika kita tidak tulus pada diri sendiri bagaimana kita akan tulus kepada yang lain, bagaimana kita akan membalas 4 budi luhur(四重恩) : Orang tua, Guru/Buddha, Negara, dan Semua Makhluk ?.
Saudara sekalian, sadarkah kita selama ini ketika kita melakukan suatu hal tanpa ketulusan dan kesungguhan, itu hanya menambah kelelahan kita, lelah tubuh dan lelah pikiran, seperti ada beban. Tidak menyenangkan melakukan susuatu dengan ada beban. Ketika kita tulus dan bersungguh-sungguh, beban berkurang, hidup lebih menyenangkan, bahkan kebaikan yang kita lakukan akan bernilai lebih. Ketika hidup berguna, tanpa beban dan menghasilkan nilai lebih, siapa yang tidak mau ? siapa yang bahagia ?
Saudara-saudara sekalian, dalam mencapai tujuan kita, hingga tujuan akhir kita, yaitu pantai seberang, perlu adanya ketulusan dan kesungguhan(真誠). Tulus melakukan rutinitas kita, tulus melaksanakan kewajiban kita, tulus dalam melakukan hal berguna dan melatih diri, dan tulus tanpa mengharap imbalan balik.Nah ketika kita tulus dan bersungguh-sungguh, apakah Tuhan akan memberkati kita ? kita sedang tidak membahas hal demikian. Ketika kita tulus dan bersungguh-sungguh, apakah Buddha akan senang ? saya juga tidak bilang begitu. Ketika kita tulus dan bersungguh-sungguh kita yang memperoleh banyak keberuntungan/benefit, kita akan lebih berbahagia, kita yang membuat diri kita lebih beruntung dan berbahagia.Baik ketika menjalankan kewajiban maupun melatih diri dengan landasan tulus dan sungguh-sungguh, katakanlah “tujuan saya lebih penting dari masalah dan beban saya”. Melatih diri dalam ajaran Buddha, ketulusan dan kesungguhanlah yang akan menjadi senjata kita melewati beban dan rintangan untuk mencapai kebahagiaan sejati pantai seberang dan untuk menjadi Buddha.
Demikian yang dapat saya sampaikan/sharing, mohon maaf atas kesalahan saya, semoga membawa manfaat bagi kita semua, dan semua makhluk.
Semoga semua makhluk hidup beruntung dan berbahagia…
Om santi santi santi… svaha…
Namo Amitofo….Amitofo…
———————————————————————————————————-
Kritik, saran, dan masukan dari anda sangat berarti bagi saya
Dapat anda kirimkan ke : wira_xie@ymail.com
Dengan menyertakan nama anda
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Biography : Mark Cuban

scrolling=”no” src=”http://servicesaetn-a.akamaihd.net/pservice/embed-player/?siteId=bio&tPid=30956611755″ style=”background-color: white; color: #343b40; font-family: times, serif; font-size: 14.399999618530273px;”> line-height: 21px;”>Born in Pittsburgh in 1958, entrepreneur Mark Cuban has ventured into many diverse businesses, from theater chains to Internet startups. In 1990, Cuban sold the firm CompuServe for $6 million, one of his largest early business ventures. He is most famous, however for for his zealous management of the Dallas Mavericks, which he purchased from Ross Perot, Jr. in 2000. In addition to his wise business decisions,Cuban is also known for his controversial and statements. He also began a television career on the reality series Shark Tank in 2009.

Early Life

Entrepreneur and professional sports team owner Mark Cuban was born on July 31, 1958, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Cuban had a typically middle-class childhood. His father, Norton, spent nearly half a century working at a car upholstery shop. His grandfather, Morris Chobanisky, emigrated from Russia and fed his family by selling merchandise out of the back of a truck.
Like his grandfather before him, though, Cuban inherited a tenacity for making a deal and carving out a better life for himself. He was a hard worker, too. At the age of 12, he sold sets of garbage bags to save up for a pair of shoes he liked. In high school he earned extra dollars any way he could, mainly by becoming a stamp and coin salesman.
His go-getter attitude extended to the classroom as well. He started taking psychology classes at the University of Pittsburgh his junior year in high school. He then skipped his senior year and enrolled full time at the college.
After his freshman year at the University of Pittsburgh Cuban, transferred to Indiana University. His understanding of supply and demand extended far outside the classroom. Needing to make money to continue on in college (he was paying his own tuition) Cuban started giving dance lessons. That endeavor soon led him to hosting lavish disco parties at the Bloomington National Guard armory.

Business Ventures

After graduating in 1981, Cuban moved back to Pittsburgh and took a job with Mellon Bank, just as the company was ready to switch over to computers. Cuban immersed himself the study of machines and networking. But he had no real desire to hang out in his home city for too long, and in 1982 he left Pittsburgh for Dallas.
Cuban eventually landed a job selling software but, deciding he could do better on his own, formed his own consulting business, MicrosSolutions. Cuban was soon an expert in the field of computers and computer networking. He also had a knack for building a smart, profitable company. In 1990, Cuban sold the firm to CompuServe for $6 million.
His fortune making, however, was far from done. Sensing that a new world awaited with the development of the Internet, Cuban and a business partner, Indiana alum Todd Wagner, started AudioNet in 1995. Its formation was rooted in a desire to be able to listen to Indian Hoosier basketball games online. The company, despite its early critics, proved to be a smash success. Renamed Broadcast.com, the firm went public in 1998 and soon saw its stock reach $200 a share.A year later, Wagner and Cuban sold out to Yahoo! for nearly $6 billion.

Purchasing an NBA Team

In 2000, Mark Cuban introduced himself to the NBA community when he purchased the Dallas Mavericks for $285 million from Ross Perot, Jr. For Cuban, a longtime season ticketholder, the chance to be a part of the professional sports world was a dream. The Mavericks, however, were far from a dream franchise.
Plagued by poor personnel decisions and mediocre players and coaches, the club experienced more than a decade of non-playoff basketball games. Cuban used his new role as owner to immediately change that. With his trademark enthusiasm and doggedness, he revamped the culture of the team and its roster, erecting a new stadium and pampering his players.
Cuban showed himself to be the club’s biggest booster. Choosing to sit with the fans, Cuban egged on opponents and derided refs with the best of them. The Mavericks responded positively to the new owner’s zeal. The franchise qualified for the playoffs in 2001, set a team record for wins (57) the following year, made it to the 2006 NBA Finals before losing to the Miami Heat, then eventually won the NBA title in June of 2011 against the Heat.
Cuban also brought a touch of innovation to his ownership of the team. He was the first owner to launch his own blog, a swirling mix of his own tech insights and thoughts on NBA basketball. The blog became wildly popular, receiving thousands of emails a day from his readers.

Controversy

Online and off, Cuban is an unfiltered force of opinion, a bombastic personality among the rather stodgy inner circle of NBA ownership. He made waves when he called Kobe Bryant’s sexual assault case “great for the NBA. It’s reality television, people love train-wreck television, and you hate to admit it, but that is the truth, that’s the reality today.”
In another instance, he attacked former director of NBA of officiating Ed Rush, saying that he “might have been a great ref, but I wouldn’t hire him to manage a Dairy Queen.” The statement eventually found the chagrined billionaire putting in a day’s shift at a Dairy Queen in Coppell, Texas.
In all, Cuban has amassed more than $2 million in NBA fines for his controversial comments over the years. Yet not a dollar of these fines has done anything to edit what comes out of his mouth. “Who lives their lives worried about what someone else thinks?” Cuban once told reporters. “Before you guys were writing about me in the sports page, people were calling me crazy in the computer industry. People were calling me crazy in the systems integration industry. People said I was lucky…The more people think I’m crazy and out of my mind, typically, the better I do.”
In 2004, Cuban caught the attention of the Security and Exchange Commission (SEC), which charged him with insider trading in regards to an Internet search engine website. Cuban claimed he was innocent, and in July 2009 the case was dismissed. However, the case was reinstated the following year. It was also during this time that Cuban joined the series Shark Tank as a venture capitalist, allowing for the trial to be put on hold.In March of 2013, Judge Sidney A. Fitzwater let the case go to trial once again. The trial began on October 1, 2013. Later that month, he was officially cleared of all charges of insider trading by a Texas jury.

Recent Projects

While Cuban has every reason to go into retirement mode, he’s done anything but that. He’s made a big foray into the high-definition TV market with a new startup, HDNet; launched his own reality TV series; and on the advice of his young daughter, was a contestant on Dancing with the Stars. He’s further augmented his own celebrity with small screen and television appearances, and has brought his business acumen to the world of film and TV production. He’s listed as an executive producer on big movie hits such as Goodnight and Good Luck, and Gonzo: the Life and Work of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson. In 2003, he purchased the Landmarks Theatre chain, and he also owns a stake in Lions Gate Entertainment.
An active voice in the athletic community, Cuban spoke out about Alex Rodriguez’s 211 game suspension, which he was given for a drug related scandal in August 2013. The sports team owner said he thought Rodriguez’s ban was “horrible” and that the prolonged suspension—first-time offenders receive a 50 game suspension and second-time offenders are suspended for 100—inflicted on him was “personal” during an appearance on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno. Cuban went on to comment on Major League Baseball as a whole, claiming that he has no chance of buying a baseball team with MLB Commissioner Bud Selig running the sport like a “mafia.”
Cuban married his longtime girlfriend Tiffany Stewart in 2002. They have two young daughters and live in the Dallas area.
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Saving Relics, Afghans Defy the Taliban

KABUL, Afghanistan — Every piece of antiquity that is restored to the halls of the bombed, pillaged and now rebuilt National Museum of Afghanistan sends a message of defiance and resilience.

These are messages to the Taliban, who in 2001 smashed every museum artifact that they could find that bore a human or animal likeness. But these are messages for others as well: to the warlords who looted the museum, some of whom are still in positions of power in Afghanistan; to corrupt custodians of the past who stood by while some 70,000 objects walked out the door.

Just a few years ago, the National Museum here was defined by how much it had lost — some 70 percent of its collection destroyed or stolen, including precious objects dating back to the Stone and Bronze Ages, through Zoroastrianism and Buddhism to early Islam, and documenting some of the world’s most mysterious ancient cultures.

The looted objects have also been returning, as word has gotten around to customs agents worldwide about how to identify Afghan artifacts. In recent years, Interpol and Unesco have teamed up with governments around the world to interdict and return at least 857 objects — some of them priceless, like 4,000-year-old Bactrian princess figurines that had disappeared from the National Museum. Another 11,000 objects have been returned after being seized by the border authorities at Afghanistan’s own frontiers.

A recent security upgrade at the museum financed by the United States government was just completed, at least some hedge against the kind of pillaging that has plagued the institution over the past three and a half decades.

And a team of archaeologists from the University of Chicago’s Oriental Institute are halfway through a three-year-long grant from the American government to register every object in the museum’s collections, creating a digital record. Intended to guard against future theft, the project will also help with restorations, and serve as a resource for scholars worldwide.

“If you don’t know what you have, you can’t protect it,” said Michael T. Fisher, the American archaeologist heading the Chicago team. “When you do, the whole story opens up, and it’s incredible what you can see. A lot of the collection is world class.”

Presiding over this institution is Omara Khan Masoudi, who does not have a degree in archaeology, but has even more impeccable credentials: He is one of the key keepers. These are the men who kept the keys to the vaults where some of the museum’s greatest treasures were hidden, including theBactrian Hoard, a collection of exquisite gold and silver artifacts dating back more than 2,000 years.

Through guile and deception, Mr. Masoudi and his fellow key keepers kept many such valuables — the ones most easily melted down — safe during the country’s wrenching civil war and the following stretch of Islamist rule.

They hid some of the best statues in rooms at the Ministry of Culture, or in obscure corners of the storerooms scattered around the museum, preserving many before the Taliban’s rampage in March 2001. In those few weeks of fury, Islamist fighters raced to destroy images of people or animals, which they considered sacrilegious, including the giant ancient Buddha statues of Bamian Province.

Afterward, people like Abdullah Hakimzada, a restorer who has spent the past 33 years working at the museum, were on hand to sweep up the fragments of the objects that the Taliban smashed — sorting many of them hurriedly into sacks and boxes that later would help the reassembly work.

“If we had enough time and resources at our disposal, we could restore everything,” he said.From such efforts, they reassembled objects like the cross-legged, second- or third-century A.D. Bodhisatva Siddhartha, which now has pride of place at the top of the museum’s staircase. Larger than life-size, it had been reduced by the Taliban to a pile of shards.

Mr. Hakimzada’s favorite restoration, though, was the statue of King Kanishka, from the Kushan empire that ruled much of South Asia from its Afghan base in the first through fourth centuries A.D.

“During that time, Afghanistan was at peace, and society was very tolerant and religiously inclusive,” he said.

A series of restored statues from the centuries after Alexander the Great’s invasion look like perfectly muscled Greek gods — except they are Greco-Bactrian Buddhas, among the earliest representations of the Buddha in human form. They are compelling evidence that ancient Afghanistan was not just a crossroads for the cultures of its powerful neighbors — China, India, Persia — but also contributed greatly in its own right. Two of them have deep gouges from hammer blows, and missing faces, but remain exquisite.

“Archaeological artifacts are our national identity,” said the museum’s archival head, Mohammad Yahyeh Muhibzada. “It’s our national responsibility to protect them so future generations will know who we are and who we were.”

While the emphasis is on the ancient, there are more modern artifacts as well — including several rusting steam locomotives in the gardens. “We have them to remind people that at the end of the 19th century, Afghanistan had railroads, while at the end of the 20th, it did not,” Mr. Masoudi said.

Hardly a day goes by that the Chicago archaeologists do not discover some intriguing new object in the storerooms — like a clay lid, with an inscription from the extinct Kharoshti language, found in December.

“There are so many things that are very, very, very beautiful,” said Mr. Masoudi, the museum director. “First we need a new building.”

The crown jewels of the museum’s collections are the Bactrian Hoard, recovered from ancient burial mounds in northern Afghanistan in 1978 by Russian archaeologists.They have been on tour since 2007, seen in France, the Netherlands, Britain, North America and Australia, and have provided the museum with an important source of revenue, $3.5 million so far.

But as the war against the Taliban has stretched on, some here see another good reason to keep them on tour.

“I personally hope they never return,” Mr. Hakimzada said. “At least where they are now, we know they are safe.”

source : The New York Times

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New Test Could Predict Heart Attacks

blood test, drawing blood, needle, heart attack(ISNS) — A new medical test that looks for rare cells circulating in the blood could help identify patients at high risk of heart attacks, according to a new study.

The technique, which is detailed in the current issue of the journalPhysical Biology, works by measuring circulating endothelial cells in a patient’s bloodstream. These cells normally line the interior of blood vessels.
The ability to “measure and characterize [endothelial cells] in the blood of specific patient populations is a beautiful way of diagnosing disease and early intervention,” said study co-author Peter Kuhn, a cell biologist at the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, Calif.


Endothelial cells can come loose and get circulated in the blood when diseased plaques — buildups of cholesterol that can lead to blood clots — rupture and ulcerate during a heart attack, also known as a myocardial infarction, which can cause inflammation in the arteries.
Kuhn and his team used the test they developed, called the High-Definition Circulating Endothelial Cell assay, to detect and characterize endothelial cells in the blood samples of 79 patients who had experienced a recent heart attack. The assay is painless and requires only a blood sample, which can be obtained using conventional techniques.
The team also used the assay on two control groups, which consisted of 25 healthy patients and seven patients undergoing treatment for vascular disease.
The test successfully identified circulating endothelial cells by their morphological features and their reactions with specific antibodies, or proteins produced by the body’s immune system. The test showed that endothelial cell levels are significantly elevated in the blood of heart-attack patients compared to the healthy controls.
The team’s data suggests that healthy individuals have fewer than one endothelial cell in a millimeter of blood. “Patients with heart attacks have on average more than 20 [endothelial cells] in a milliliter of blood,” said Kuhn.
Ulrika Birgersdotter-Green, a cardiologist at the University of California, San Diego, said she could envision an assay based on circulating endothelial cells as a biomarker could become a good additional tool for diagnosing myocardial infarctions.
“A good biomarker needs to be reproducible, easy to obtain, and accurate. From what I can tell, this particular assay meets those requirements,” said Birgersdotter-Green, who was not involved in the study.
Whether doctors adopt the new assay will also depend on the turnaround time for results, she added. “If you get the results back quickly, then I think this could be a really nice additional tool” for diagnosing myocardial infarctions, Birgersdotter-Green said.
Kuhn said the test currently requires a few hours for results — sufficient for an overnight turnaround time — but that he believes that duration could be shortened.
“The industrialization of the assay is really what will drive turn around times to where these need to be clinically,” he said.
Kuhn and his team also hypothesize that circulating endothelial cells might be created during the plaque rupturing process that leads up to heart attacks. If their hunch is correct, then their assay could prove to be a valuable “pre-heart attack” test for identifying patients who are at risk of suffering a heart attack, but have not yet experienced one.
This would distinguish it from other tests that look for “post-heart attack” biomarkers in the blood such as tropinins, proteins that are released when heart muscles become damaged.
“The next study now needs to focus on patients at risk to see how predictive [the new test] is,” Kuhn said.
The goal “is to predict heart attacks in patients who are at risk, those that show up in the emergency room with chest pain but don’t have a diagnosis yet.”

source : live science
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Biography:Nelson Mandela

Synopsis

Nelson Mandela was born on July 18, 1918, in Mveso, Transkei, South Africa. Becoming actively involved in the anti-apartheid movement in his 20s, Mandela joined the African National Congress in 1942. For 20 years, he directed a campaign of peaceful, nonviolent defiance against the South African government and its racist policies. In 1993,Mandela and South African President F.W. de Klerk were jointly awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for their efforts to dismantle the country’s apartheid system. In 1994, Mandela was inaugurated as South Africa’s first black president. In 2009, Mandela’s birthday (July 18) was declared “Mandela Day” to promote global peace and celebrate the South African leader’s legacy. Mandela died at his home in Johannesburg on December 5, 2013, at age 95.

Early Life

Nelson Mandela was born Rolihlahla Mandela on July 18, 1918, in the tiny village of Mvezo, on the banks of the Mbashe River in Transkei, South Africa. “Rolihlahla” in the Xhosa language literally means “pulling the branch of a tree,” but more commonly translates as “troublemaker.”
Nelson Mandela’s father, who was destined to be a chief, served as a counselor to tribal chiefs for several years, but lost both his title and fortune over a dispute with the local colonial magistrate. Mandela was only an infant at the time, and his father’s loss of status forced his mother to move the family to Qunu, an even smaller village north of Mvezo. The village was nestled in a narrow grassy valley; there were no roads, only foot paths that linked the pastures where livestock grazed. The family lived in huts and ate a local harvest of maize, sorghum, pumpkin and beans, which was all they could afford. Water came from springs and streams and cooking was done outdoors. Mandela played the games of young boys, acting out male rights-of-passage scenarios with toys he made from the natural materials available, including tree branches and clay.
At the suggestion of one of his father’s friends, Mandela was baptized in the Methodist Church. He went on to become the first in his family to attend school. As was custom at the time, and probably due to the bias of the British educational system in South Africa, Mandela’s teacher told him that his new first name would be Nelson.
When Mandela was 9 years old, his father died of lung disease, causing his life to change dramatically. He was adopted by Chief Jongintaba Dalindyebo, the acting regent of the Thembu people—a gesture done as a favor to Mandela’s father, who, years earlier, had recommended Jongintaba be made chief. Mandela subsequently left the carefree life he knew in Qunu, fearing that he would never see his village again. He traveled by motorcar to Mqhekezweni, the provincial capital of Thembuland, to the chief’s royal residence. Though he had not forgotten his beloved village of Qunu, he quickly adapted to the new, more sophisticated surroundings of Mqhekezweni.Mandela was given the same status and responsibilities as the regent’s two other children, his son and oldest child, Justice, and daughter Nomafu. Mandela took classes in a one-room school next to the palace, studying English, Xhosa, history and geography. It was during this period that Mandela developed an interest in African history,from elder chiefs who came to the Great Palace on official business. He learned how the African people had lived in relative peace until the coming of the white people. According to the elders, the children of South Africa had previously lived as brothers, but white men had shattered this fellowship. While black men shared their land, air and water with whites, white men took all of these things for themselves.

When Mandela was 16, it was time for him to partake in the traditional African circumcision ritual to mark his entrance into manhood. The ceremony of circumcision was not just a surgical procedure, but an elaborate ritual in preparation for manhood. In African tradition, an uncircumcised man cannot inherit his father’s wealth, marry or officiate at tribal rituals. Mandela participated in the ceremony with 25 other boys. He welcomed the opportunity to partake in his people’s customs and felt ready to make the transition from boyhood to manhood. His mood shifted during the proceedings, however, when Chief Meligqili, the main speaker at the ceremony, spoke sadly of the young men, explaining that they were enslaved in their own country. Because their land was controlled by white men, they would never have the power to govern themselves, the chief said. He went on to lament that the promise of the young men would be squandered as they struggled to make a living and perform mindless chores for white men. Mandela would later say that while the chief’s words didn’t make total sense to him at the time, they would eventually formulate his resolve for an independent South Africa.
From the time Mandela came under the guardianship of Regent Jongintaba, he was groomed to assume high office, not as a chief, but a counselor to one. As Thembu royalty, Mandela attended a Wesleyan mission school, the Clarkebury Boarding Institute and Wesleyan College, where, he would later state, he achieved academic success through “plain hard work.” He also excelled at track and boxing. Mandela was initially mocked as a “country boy” by his Wesleyan classmates, but eventually became friends with several students, including Mathona, his first female friend.
In 1939, Mandela enrolled at the University College of Fort Hare, the only residential center of higher learning for blacks in South Africa at the time. Fort Hare was considered Africa’s equivalent of the University of Oxford or Harvard University, drawing scholars from all parts of sub-Sahara Africa. In his first year at the university, Mandela took the required courses, but focused on Roman Dutch law to prepare for a career in civil service as an interpreter or clerk—regarded as the best profession that a black man could obtain at the time.
In his second year at Fort Hare, Mandela was elected to the Student Representative Council. For some time, students had been dissatisfied with the food and lack of power held by the SRC. During this election, a majority of students voted to boycott unless their demands were met. Aligning with the student majority, Mandela resigned from his position. Seeing this as an act of insubordination,the university’s Dr. Kerr expelled Mandela for the rest of the year and gave him an ultimatum: He could return to the school if he agreed to serve on the SRC. When Mandela returned home, the regent was furious, telling him unequivocally that he would have to recant his decision and go back to school in the fall.

Mandela’s Imprisonment

A few weeks after Mandela returned home, Regent Jongintaba announced that he had arranged a marriage for his adopted son. The regent wanted to make sure that Mandela’s life was properly planned, and the arrangement was within his right, as tribal custom dictated. Shocked by the news, feeling trapped and believing that he had no other option than to follow this recent order, Mandela ran away from home. He settled in Johannesburg, where he worked a variety of jobs, including as a guard and a clerk, while completing his bachelor’s degree via correspondence courses. He then enrolled at the University of Witwatersrand in Johannesburg to study law.
Mandela soon became actively involved in the anti-apartheid movement, joining the African National Congress in 1942. Within the ANC, a small group of young Africans banded together, calling themselves the African National Congress Youth League. Their goal was to transform the ANC into a mass grassroots movement, deriving strength from millions of rural peasants and working people who had no voice under the current regime. Specifically, the group believed that the ANC’s old tactics of polite petitioning were ineffective. In 1949, the ANC officially adopted the Youth League’s methods of boycott, strike, civil disobedience and non-cooperation, with policy goals of full citizenship, redistribution of land, trade union rights, and free and compulsory education for all children.
For 20 years, Mandela directed peaceful, nonviolent acts of defiance against the South African government and its racist policies, including the 1952 Defiance Campaign and the 1955 Congress of the People. He founded the law firm Mandela and Tambo, partnering with Oliver Tambo, a brilliant student he’d met while attending Fort Hare. The law firm provided free and low-cost legal counsel to unrepresented blacks.
In 1956, Mandela and 150 others were arrested and charged with treason for their political advocacy (they were eventually acquitted). Meanwhile, the ANC was being challenged by Africanists, a new breed of black activists who believed that the pacifist method of the ANC was ineffective. Africanists soon broke away to form the Pan-Africanist Congress, which negatively affected the ANC; by 1959, the movement had lost much of its militant support.
In 1961, Mandela, who was formerly committed to nonviolent protest, began to believe that armed struggle was the only way to achieve change. He subsequently co-founded Umkhonto we Sizwe, also known as MK, an armed offshoot of the ANC dedicated to sabotage and guerilla war tactics to end apartheid. In 1961, Mandela orchestrated a three-day national workers’ strike. He was arrested for leading the strike the following year, and was sentenced to five years in prison. In 1963,Mandela was brought to trial again. This time, he and 10 other ANC leaders were sentenced to life imprisonment for political offenses, including sabotage.
Nelson Mandela was incarcerated on Robben Island for 18 of his 27 years in prison. During this time, he contracted tuberculosis and, as a black political prisoner, received the lowest level of treatment from prison workers. However, while incarcerated, Mandela was able to earn a Bachelor of Law degree through a University of London correspondence program.
A 1981 memoir by South African intelligence agent Gordon Winter described a plot by the South African government to arrange for Mandela’s escape so as to shoot him during the recapture; the plot was foiled by British intelligence. Mandela continued to be such a potent symbol of black resistance that a coordinated international campaign for his release was launched, and this international groundswell of support exemplified the power and esteem that Mandela had in the global political community.
In 1982, Mandela and other ANC leaders were moved to Pollsmoor Prison, allegedly to enable contact between them and the South African government. In 1985, President P.W. Botha offered Mandela’s release in exchange for renouncing armed struggle; the prisoner flatly rejected the offer. With increasing local and international pressure for his release, the government participated in several talks with Mandela over the ensuing years, but no deal was made. It wasn’t until Botha suffered a stroke and was replaced by Frederik Willem de Klerk that Mandela’s release was finally announced—on February 11, 1990. De Klerk also unbanned the ANC, removed restrictions on political groups and suspended executions.

Prison Release and Presidency

Upon his release from prison, Nelson Mandela immediately urged foreign powers not to reduce their pressure on the South African government for constitutional reform. While he stated that he was committed to working toward peace, he declared that the ANC’s armed struggle would continue until the black majority received the right to vote.
In 1991, Mandela was elected president of the African National Congress, with lifelong friend and colleague Oliver Tambo serving as national chairperson. Mandela continued to negotiate with President F.W. de Klerk toward the country’s first multiracial elections. White South Africans were willing to share power, but many black South Africans wanted a complete transfer of power. The negotiations were often strained and news of violent eruptions, including the assassination of ANC leader Chris Hani, continued throughout the country.Mandela had to keep a delicate balance of political pressure and intense negotiations amid the demonstrations and armed resistance.
In 1993, Mandela and President de Klerk were jointly awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for their work toward dismantling apartheid. And due in no small part to their work, negotiations between black and white South Africans prevailed: On April 27, 1994,South Africa held its first democratic elections. Nelson Mandela was inaugurated as the country’s first black president on May 10, 1994, at the age of 77, with de Klerk as his first deputy.
Also in 1994, Mandela published an autobiography, Long Walk to Freedom, much of which he had secretly written while in prison. The following year, he was awarded the Order of Merit.
From 1994 until June 1999, Mandela worked to bring about the transition from minority rule and apartheid to black majority rule. He used the nation’s enthusiasm for sports as a pivot point to promote reconciliation between whites and blacks, encouraging black South Africans to support the once-hated national rugby team. In 1995, South Africa came to the world stage by hosting the Rugby World Cup, which brought further recognition and prestige to the young republic.
Mandela also worked to protect South Africa’s economy from collapse during his presidency. Through his Reconstruction and Development Plan, the South African government funded the creation of jobs, housing and basic health care. In 1996, Mandela signed into law a new constitution for the nation, establishing a strong central government based on majority rule, and guaranteeing both the rights of minorities and the freedom of expression.

Retirement and Later Career

By the 1999 general election, Nelson Mandela had retired from active politics. He continued to maintain a busy schedule, however, raising money to build schools and clinics in South Africa’s rural heartland through his foundation, and serving as a mediator in Burundi’s civil war. He also published a number of books on his life and struggles, among them No Easy Walk to FreedomNelson Mandela: The Struggle is my Life; and Nelson Mandela’s Favorite African Folktales.
Mandela was diagnosed and treated for prostate cancer in 2001. In June 2004, at the age of 85, he announced his formal retirement from public life and returned to his native village of Qunu.
On July 18, 2007, Mandela convened a group of world leaders, including Graca Machel (whom Mandela would wed in 1998),Desmond Tutu, Kofi Annan, Ela Bhatt, Gro Harlem Brundtland,Jimmy Carter, Li Zhaoxing, Mary Robinson and Muhammad Yunus, to address some of the world’s toughest issues. Aiming to work both publicly and privately to find solutions to problems around the globe, the group was aptly named “The Elders.” The Elders’ impact has spanned Asia, the Middle East and Africa, and their actions have included promoting peace and women’s equality, demanding an end to atrocities, and supporting initiatives to address humanitarian crises and promote democracy.
In addition to advocating for peace and equality on both a national and global scale, in his later years, Mandela remained committed to the fight against AIDS—a disease that killed Mandela’s son, Makgatho, in 2005.Nelson Mandela made his last public appearance at the final match of the World Cup in South Africa in 2010. He remained largely out of the spotlight in his later years, choosing to spend much of his time in his childhood community of Qunu, south of Johannesburg. He did, however, visit with U.S. first lady Michelle Obama, wife of President Barack Obama,during her trip to South Africa in 2011. 
After suffering a lung infection in January 2011, Mandela was briefly hospitalized in Johannesburg to undergo surgery for a stomach ailment in early 2012. He was released after a few days, later returning to Qunu. Mandela would be hospitalized many times over the next several years—in December 2012, March 2013 and June 2013—for further testing and medical treatment relating to his recurrent lung infection. Following his June 2013 hospital visit, Mandela’s wife, Graca Machel, canceled a scheduled appearance in London to remain at her husband’s his side, and his daughter, Zenani Dlamini, Argentina’s South African ambassador, flew back to South Africa to be with her father. Jacob Zuma, South Africa’s president, issued a statement in response to public concern over Mandela’s March 2013 health scare, asking for support in the form of prayer: “We appeal to the people of South Africa and the world to pray for our beloved Madiba and his family and to keep them in their thoughts,” Zuma said.

Death and Legacy

On December 5, 2013, at the age of 95, Nelson Mandela died at his home in Johannesburg, South Africa. Zuma released a statement later that day, in which he spoke to Mandela’s legacy: “Wherever we are in the country, wherever we are in the world, let us reaffirm his vision of a society … in which none is exploited, oppressed or dispossessed by another,” he said. For decades to come, Nelson Mandela will continue to be a source of inspiration for civil rights activists worldwide.
In 2009, Mandela’s birthday (July 18) was declared Mandela Day, an international day to promote global peace and celebrate the South African leader’s legacy. According to the Nelson Mandela Centre of Memory, the annual event is meant to encourage citizens worldwide to give back the way that Mandela has throughout his lifetime. A statement on the Nelson Mandela Centre of Memory’s website reads: “Mr. Mandela gave 67 years of his life fighting for the rights of humanity. All we are asking is that everyone gives 67 minutes of their time, whether it’s supporting your chosen charity or serving your local community.”

Personal Life

Mandela was married three times, beginning with Evelyn Ntoko Mase (m. 1944-1957). The couple had four children together: Madiba Thembekile, Makgatho (d. 2005), Makaziwe and Maki. Mandela wed Winnie Madikizela in 1958; the couple had two daughters together, Zenani and Zindziswa, before splitting in 1996. Two years later, Mandela married Graca Machel, with whom he remained until his death in 2013.
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Grasping for Clues in North Korean Execution


Jang Song-thaek in Beijing in 2012. North Korea’s state-run news agency said he was killed after being convicted of treason.

SEOUL, South Korea — As he was confessing to crimes that would lead to his execution, the doomed uncle of North Korea’s leader suggested that he hoped the country’s many economic woes would drive the military to overthrow the Kim dynasty, the state-run news agency said.
The statement, if true, was shocking for a country that normally hides any hint of disloyalty, has not publicized a coup attempt in decades and has not released a detailed explanation of a purge to its people — much less to the world. But even if the uncle, Jang Song-thaek, did not utter such treason, the laundry list of alleged crimes the North Koreans published is notable for its admission of instability in the hermetic nation and suggests that at least some see flaws in its debilitated state-run economy.


“I was going to stage the coup by using army officers who had close ties with me or by mobilizing armed forces under the control of my confidants,” the North’s Korean Central News Agency on Friday quoted Mr. Jang as having said during his court-martial. “I thought the army might join in the coup if the living of the people and service personnel further deteriorate in the future.”

As analysts scrambled Friday to make sense of the execution — many had doubted that the leader, Kim Jong-un, would kill a relative — and the highly unusual way the news rolled out, they advanced myriad theories for why Mr. Kim killed the man who was supposed to be his mentor. The biggest divide was whether the purge suggested Mr. Kim had fully taken charge of his country two years after his father’s death or, instead, was severely weakened by the reported betrayal.

Most officials and experts cautioned that the opaque inner-workings of the North Korean government were notoriously hard to analyze. Still, many of them said the demise of Mr. Jang, considered a champion of Chinese-style economic reform, could set back such efforts. And they said that nuclear-armed North Korea appeared to be mired in an intense power struggle over economic and other policies that could become bloodier if Mr. Kim turns his ire on those referred to in the North Korean report as Mr. Jang’s “followers.”

“If Kim Jong-un was sure of his control of power, he would not have needed to execute his uncle,” said Lee Byong-chul, a senior fellow at the Institute for Peace and Cooperation in Seoul. “There will be big and small bloody purges, and at a time like this, desperate extremists may lash out. Pyongyang is no longer safe.”

On Friday, North Korea hinted at such retaliation by condemning “undesirable and alien elements” in “important posts of the party and state,” in “ministries and national institutions,” and in agencies dealing with foreign trade. It also indicated that a purge might reach the North’s powerful military and the secret police, saying that Mr. Jang had worked to “stretch his tentacles even to the People’s Army.”

Mr. Jang, 67, was executed Thursday immediately after being convicted of treason, North Korea said. Suh Sang-kee, a governing party lawmaker in Seoul, quoted South Korean intelligence officials as saying that he was likely killed by a machine-gun firing squad.

According to the North Korean state news agency, Mr. Jang had built a “little kingdom” of his own in the ruling Worker’s Party. Mr. Jang dreamed of first becoming premier “when the economy goes totally bankrupt,” then solving “the problem of people’s living at a certain level” by spending an enormous amount of funds he had stashed away, the report said.

“Jang dreamed such a foolish dream that once he seizes power by a base method, his despicable true colors as ‘reformist’ known to the outside world would help his ‘new government’ get ‘recognized’ by foreign countries in a short span of time,” it said.

The state-directed economy has been falling apart for years, especially since the Soviet Union collapsed and stopped propping it up with subsidized fuel and other aid. Mr. Jang was considered a force behind new efforts to open up special economic zones that would give preferential treatment for Chinese and other investors.

Some experts say Mr. Kim, or hard-liners influencing him, might have worried about giving away too much to China, even though the country is the North’s benefactor, or about Mr. Jang and his allies cashing in on the growing trade with China; Mr. Kim has indirectly criticized selling North Korean minerals too cheaply to China.

Analysts said it was possible for the North to have faked or exaggerated the charges against Mr. Jang to keep him from posing a challenge to Mr. Kim’s power. But they also noted how unusual it was for the ruling family to pull back the curtain on its machinations.

“Although high-ranking leaders, including members of the Kim family, have been deposed before, we haven’t seen anything this public or dramatic since Kim Jong-un’s grandfather Kim Il-sung purged his last major rivals in the late 1950s,” said Prof. Charles K. Armstrong, a North Korea expert at Columbia University and the author of “Tyranny of the Weak: North Korea and the World, 1950-1992.”

“This seems to indicate the divisions within the Kim regime were more serious than previously thought,” Professor Armstrong said.

Kim Yong-hyun, a North Korea expert at Dongguk University in Seoul, said the 30-year-old Mr. Kim had declared an end to his father’s era with the execution. “And he did it with a bang, sort of a shock therapy against anyone who still might have doubts about his authority. The speedy way he did it actually shows his daring and confidence.”

But other analysts had lingering questions about who was running the country behind Mr. Kim.

Mr. Jang “was the Kim family regime’s No. 1 revenue generator,” said John S. Park, a Northeast Asia security specialist at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government, adding that that revenue “went directly into Kim family slush funds.”

Chang Yong-seok, a senior researcher at the Institute for Peace and Unification Studies at Seoul National University, said Mr. Jang was “the only one in the North who could talk about economic change.”


“So, when I heard of Mr. Jang’s execution, my first thought was that it was a death notice for those of us who have hoped for economic reform in the North.”

source : the New York Times

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