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  • 3
    May
    2012
    4:05am, EDT

    'A little fixing up'? Philippines hides slum behind wall ahead of poverty conference

    Bullit Marquez / AP

    Residents walk past a wall covered with a tarpaulin poster of the ongoing bank conference discussing poverty.

    By The Associated Press

    MANILA, Philippines — Delegates attending an international conference in the Philippines capital may not see what they came to discuss: abject poverty. 

    A makeshift, temporary wall has been erected across a bridge on a road from the airport to downtown Manila that hides a sprawling slum along a garbage-strewn creek.

    Presidential spokesman Ricky Carandang defended the wall's installation, saying Thursday "any country will do a little fixing up before a guest comes."


    He expressed hope that this week's annual meeting of Asian Development Bank Board of Governors, which includes finance ministers and senior officials from 67 member states, will show the Philippines is open for business. The lending institution, which is headquartered in its own walled compound in Manila, aims to cut poverty in the Asia-Pacific region. 

    "We need to show our visitors that Metro Manila is orderly. We owe it to ourselves," said metropolital Manila chief Francis Tolentino.

    "I see nothing wrong with beautifying our surroundings. We are not trying to keep the poor out of the picture," he said.

    There was no immediate comment from ADB.  

    'Face reality'
    The Philippine Communist Party recalled that former first lady Imelda Marcos — notorious for ostentatious lifestyle — was ridiculed for trying to hide squatter colonies. She erected similar whitewashed walls along the route of foreign visitors to the Miss Universe pageant held in Manila in 1974, and other international events. 

    Romeo Ranoco / Reuters

    Homeless teenagers sleep under a bridge in Manila, Thursday.

    "The government should face reality. If they don't, how will they know the problem, how will they solve the problem," said Renato Reyes, secretary general of the largest left-wing group Bayan. "By covering the truth, they lose the energy or intention to resolve the problem."

    About a third of Manila's 12 million residents live in slums, and a third of 94 million Filipinos live below the poverty line of $1.25 a day. Overall, more than half the population in Asia remains poor. 

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Blind China activist: Officials threatened to kill my wife
    • Deadly suicide blast in Kabul after Obama leaves
    • Catholic priest: I've been secretly married for a year
    • New era as Aung San Suu Kyi joins Myanmar parliament
    • Bold move as Syria leader makes time for chess
    • N. Korea accused of jamming commercial flight signals

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

     

    © 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    119 comments

    This is the country which let the Catholic Church run the roost. Contraception is illegal, abortion is banned in this place. Now its a third world ****hole with overpopulated slums, rampant poverty and plenty of Jeebus sheeps. These Filippino religious fervour can only be compared that of the Islami …

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    Explore related topics: philippines, poverty, asia-pacific, asian-development-bank, featured, slum, manila
  • 2
    May
    2012
    9:57am, EDT

    The Hangover in real life? Drunken tourists fined for stealing penguin

    Two British tourists who stole a penguin from an Australian theme park after a drunken night out have been punished with a fine. TODAY.com's Dara Brown reports.

    By Alastair Jamieson, msnbc.com

    Two British tourists who broke into an Australian theme park and stole a penguin following a drunken night out have each been fined $1,030, according to reports.

    Rhys Owen Jones, 21, and Keri Mules, 20, appeared before magistrates in Brisbane Wednesday and pleaded guilty to trespassing, stealing and keeping a protected animal, Australia’s Department of Justice said.


    The two friends, from Wales, were arrested after breaking into Sea World on Queensland’s Gold Coast during an alcohol-fueled escapade on April 14.

    They also swam with dolphins and let off a fire extinguisher in a shark enclosure, according to a BBC News report.

    The pair were in the country on a working holiday visa when the incident took place.

    They sneaked into the animal park along with Australian James Vasilj, 18, after drinking vodka at a beach party, according to a report on news website Wales Online.

    They then snatched the fairy penguin, called Dirk, from an aquarium before waking up with the flightless bird in their apartment the following day, the report said.

    The friends’ lawyer Bill Potts told Southport Magistrates’ Court that they meant no harm to the animal and tried to care for it by feeding it and putting it in the shower when they woke up with hangovers, a situation reminiscent of the film, The Hangover.

    Jones and Mules took photo and video footage of the animal before releasing it into a canal, but were arrested after a friend saw updates they had posted about their antics on Facebook and reported them to police.

    After an alleged drunken rampage at a SeaWorld park, three young men panicked after they woke up the following morning to find they had brought a penguin back to their hotel. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    Magistrate Brian Kucks heard how the pair had written a letter of apology to Sea World and the Australian public, and deeply regretted their actions.

    He was reported to have told the pair, “You could have found yourselves in a morgue if you’d gone into the wrong enclosure. Perhaps next time you are at a party you will consider drinking a little less vodka.”

    Vasilj, who is facing a single charge of trespassing, had his case adjourned to June 27.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    • New era as Aung San Suu Kyi joins Myanmar parliament
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    • N. Korea accused of jamming commercial flight signals
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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

     

    30 comments

    Once again busted after posting it on facebook. It's like the younger generations version of the "Darwin Awards"

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    Explore related topics: drunk, australia, hangover, asia-pacific, penguin, prank, featured, dirk
  • 27
    Apr
    2012
    7:14am, EDT

    KFC told to pay $8.3 million to Australian girl poisoned by Twister wrap

    By Alastair Jamieson and msnbc.com news services

    SYDNEY - Fast-food chain KFC has been ordered to pay $8.3 million (AUS$8 million) in damages to the family of an Australian girl who was left severely brain damaged and in a wheelchair after being poisoned by a chicken meal. 

    In 2005, Monika Samaan, then aged seven, her parents and her brother were hospitalized with salmonella poisoning after eating a "Twister" chicken wrap at a KFC restaurant near Sydney. 


    KFC, owned by Kentucky-based Yum! Brands, said it was a tragic case but was "deeply disappointed and surprised by the decision" and would appeal against it. 

    It had denied being responsible for the girl’s illness, challenging her family's claims during a four-week trial.

    Last week, a New South Wales Supreme Court judge ruled in favor of the family, saying KFC had breached its duty of care to the girl. On Friday, it awarded the family A$8 million in damages, as well as court costs. 

    Coma
    Australian media quoted their lawyer, George Vlahakis, as saying the girl's illness had "exhausted the very limited resources of the family". 

    "The compensation ordered is very much needed," Vlahakis said. 

    The Sydney Morning Herald reported that, during a four-week trial in 2010, Monika's father Amanwial Samaan said he and his wife Hanna, son Abanou and Monika all fell ill with vomiting and diarrhea after sharing the Twister.

    Unlike Monika, who was in a coma for six months and in hospital for seven months, they recovered.

    Monika took the court action through her father, the newspaper reported.

    'Unsettling'
    KFC's lawyer, Ian Barker, QC, argued during the trial that there "never was a shared Twister" because there was no sales data to prove the family purchased it.

    "You did not tell anyone at the hospital, when you were there between October 27 and 29, that you had shared a KFC Twister that Monday," Barker said in court in July 2010.

    However, it reported that the trial also heard of hygiene practices at the restaurant that the family’s barrister described as "disturbing and unsettling."

    News site news.com.au reported that the girl’s grandmother had been the only member of the family not to have shared the Twister and was not taken ill.

    Experts at Westmead Hospital found Monika, her parents and older brother had a common strain of salmonella in their stools, although Monika's case was very rare.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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    • Analysts say North Korea's new missiles are fakes
    • Israeli military chief: I doubt Iran's 'rational' leadership will make nuclear bomb

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

     

    662 comments

    I feel for this family. The illness their daughter has suffered is horrendous. If they did indeed purchase this food from KFC, then they should be liable.

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  • 25
    Apr
    2012
    4:21am, EDT

    China wary as US, Philippines stage war games

    American and Philippine troops waded ashore in a mock assault to retake the island of Palawan against a background of rising tension in the South China Sea.  NBC's Ian Williams reports. 

    By Reuters

    ULUGAN BAY, Philippines - Hundreds of American and Philippine troops waded ashore on Wednesday in a mock assault to retake a small island in energy-rich waters disputed with China, a drill Beijing had said would raise the risk of armed conflict.

    The exercises, part of annual U.S.-Philippine war games on the western island of Palawan, coincide with another standoff between Chinese and Philippine vessels near Scarborough Shoal in a different part of the South China Sea.


    China has territorial disputes with the Philippines, Vietnam, Brunei, Malaysia and Taiwan across the South China Sea, each searching for gas and oil while building up their navies and military alliances.

    China said last week the drill would raise the risk of confrontation. On Wednesday, Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Cui Tiankai said China was committed to dialogue and diplomacy to resolve the dispute.

    "We are certainly worried about the South China Sea issue," Cui told a news briefing in Beijing, saying "some people tried to mix two unrelated things, territorial sovereignty and freedom of navigation."

    Historical records
    The comments come before high-level talks with the Obama administration. China, which claims the South China Sea based on historical records, has sought to resolve disputes bilaterally but its neighbors worry over what some see as growing Chinese assertiveness in its claims in the region.

    "Location (of the drill) is irrelevant," Ensign Bryan Mitchell, spokesman for the U.S. Marines, told reporters.

    "These exercises take place on a regular basis. This year it happens to be in Palawan. The planning for this took place months ago prior to any events that are currently in the headlines."

    China, Russia begin naval war games

    President Barack Obama has sought to reassure regional allies that Washington would serve as a counterbalance to China in the South China Sea, part of his campaign to "pivot" U.S. foreign policy towards Asia after wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    Philippine military officials sought to play down the exercise. Lieutenant General Juancho Sabban, military commander for the western Philippines, said the drill "simply means we want to work together, improve our skills."

    Romeo Ranoco / Reuters

    U.S. Marines and Filipino troops participate in a joint military exercise in Ulugan Bay on the western coast of the Philippines on Wednesday.

    Sabban's area of command includes Reed Bank and the Spratlys, a group of 250 mostly uninhabitable islets spread over 165,000 sq miles west of Palawan.

    The Spratlys are claimed entirely by China, Taiwan and Vietnam and in part by Malaysia, Brunei and the Philippines.

    Huge oil reserves
    Proven and undiscovered oil reserve estimates in the South China Sea range as high as 213 billion barrels of oil, the U.S. Energy Information Administration said in a 2008 report. That would surpass every country's proven oil reserves except Saudi Arabia and Venezuela, according to the BP Statistical Review.

    A Philippine exploration firm, Philex Petroleum Corp, said on Tuesday its unit, Forum Energy Plc, had found more natural gas than expected around Reed Bank, where Chinese navy vessels tried to ram one of Forum Energy's survey ships last year.

    The Philippines is due to open oil-and-gas exploration bids in Reed Bank on Friday.

    NYT: Signs of an Asian arms buildup in India missile test

    Vietnam reasserted its claim to the Spratlys and the Paracel islands, known in Chinese as the Xisha islands, further west of Scarborough Shoal in what it calls the East Sea.

    Self-ruled Taiwan, which China considers a renegade province, reiterated its claims over territories in the South China Sea and urged "countries concerned to exercise self-restraint so that peaceful resolutions can be reached through consultation".

    Sabban said the military drill was not focused on China.

    "Never was China ever mentioned in our planning and execution," he told reporters. "China should not be worried about Balikatan (shoulder-to-shoulder) exercises."

    Amphibious assault
    Nearly 7,000 American and Philippine troops were launched from U.S. and Philippine ships in the simulated amphibious assault to recapture an island supposedly taken by militants.

    Commandos came ashore from U.S. and Philippine ships in a simulated amphibious assault to recapture an island supposedly taken by militants.

    Jumping from rubber boats as they hit the shore, the commandos engaged in a mock firefight, making their way inch by inch from the beach to a navy facility to rescue "hostages" and recapture the base.

    Read more China coverage on our Behind The Wall blog

    Four days ago, commando teams rappelled from U.S. helicopters and landed from rubber boats in a mock assault to retake an oil rig in northern Palawan, 11 miles off the town of El Nido on the South China Sea.

    The annual war games come under the 1951 Mutual Defense Treaty, part of a web of security alliances the United States built in the Asia-Pacific region during the Cold War.

    The drills are a rehearsal of a mutual defense plan by the two allies to repel any aggression in the Philippines.

    Hundreds of kilometers to the north, a Philippine coast guard ship patrols near Scarborough Shoal, a group of half-submerged rock formations 124 nautical miles west of the Philippines' main island of Luzon.

    Philippine and Chinese ships are often in the same areas of the South China Sea, with two Chinese maritime surveillance ships a few miles away from the coast guard vessel and five Chinese fishing boats working the waters nearby.

    Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    147 comments

    China is the Japan of the 30'-40's. Better believe they should be watched. Their goal is to be global dominator. The sad thing is American greed for quick profits and cheap goods have empowered them while weakening us.

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  • 24
    Apr
    2012
    7:51am, EDT

    North Korea nuclear test ready 'soon'

    NBC's Richard Engel spent two weeks in North Korea and got a rare and revealing look inside this very closed country.

    By Reuters

    BEIJING - North Korea has almost completed preparations for a third nuclear test, a senior source with close ties to Pyongyang and Beijing told Reuters, which will draw further international condemnation following a failed rocket launch if it goes ahead.

    The isolated and impoverished state sacrificed the chance of closer ties with the United States when it launched the long-range rocket on April 13 and was censured by the U.N. Security Council, including the North's sole major ally, China.


    Critics say the rocket launch was aimed at honing the North's ability to develop an intercontinental ballistic missile capable of hitting the United States, a move that would dramatically increase its military and diplomatic heft.

    Now the North appears to be about to carry out a third nuclear test after two in 2006 and 2009.

    "Soon. Preparations are almost complete," the source said when asked whether North Korea was planning to conduct a nuclear test.

    North Korea threatens to reduce South Korea's government 'to ashes'

    This is the first time a senior official has confirmed the planned test and the source has correctly predicted events in the past, telling Reuters about the 2006 test days before it happened.

    The rocket launch and nuclear test come as Kim Jong-un, the third in his family line to rule North Korea, seeks to cement his grip on power.

    Kim took office in December and has lauded the country's military might, reaffirming his father's "military first" policies that have stunted economic development and appearing to dash slim hopes of an opening to the outside world.

    Washington, Seoul and Tokyo, which have most to fear from any North Korean nuclear threat, are watching events anxiously and many observers say that Pyongyang may have the capacity to conduct a test using highly enriched uranium for the first time.

    Defense experts say that by successfully enriching uranium, to make bombs of the type dropped on Hiroshima nearly 70 years ago, the North would be able to significantly build up stocks of weapons-grade nuclear material.

    It would also allow it more easily to manufacture a nuclear warhead to mount on a long-range missile.

    The source did not specify whether the test would be a third test using plutonium, of which it has limited stocks, or whether Pyongyang would use uranium.

    South Korean defense sources have been quoted in domestic media as saying a launch could come within two weeks and one North Korea analyst has suggested that it could come as early as the North's "Army Day" on Wednesday.

    Other observers say that any date is pure speculation.

    The rocket launch and the planned nuclear test have exposed the limits of China's hold over Pyongyang. Beijing is the North's sole major ally and props up the state with investment and fuel.

    "China is like a chameleon toward North Korea," said Kim Young-soo, professor of political science at Sogang University in Seoul. "It says it objects to North Korea's provocative acts, but it does not participate in punishing the North."

    North Korea's Kim Jong Un speaks publicly for first time, urges 'final victory'

    Reports have suggested that a Chinese company may have supplied a rocket launcher shown off at a military parade to mark this month's centenary of the birth of Kim Il-sung, the state's founder, something that may be in breach of UN sanctions.

    China has denied breaching sanctions.

    The source said there was debate in North Korea's top leadership over whether to go ahead with the launch in the face of U.S. warnings and the possibility of further U.N. sanctions, but that hawks in the Korean People's Army had won the debate.

    The source dismissed speculation that the failed launch had dealt a blow to Kim Jong-un, believed to be in his late 20s, who came to power after his father Kim Jong-il died following a 17-year rule that saw North Korea experience a famine in the 1990s.

    "Kim Jong-un was named first secretary of the (ruling) Workers' Party and head of the National Defence Commission," the source said, adding that the titles further consolidated his grip on power.

    North Korean media has recently upped its criticism of South Korean President Lee Myung-bak, who cut off aid to Pyongyang when he took power in 2008, calling him a "rat" and a "bastard" and threatening to turn the South Korean capital to ashes.

    Pyongyang desperately wants recognition from the United States, the guarantor of the South's security. It claims sovereignty over the entire Korean peninsula, as does South Korea.

    "North Korea may consider abandoning (the test) if the United States agrees to a peace treaty," the source said, reiterating a long-standing demand by Pyongyang for recognition by Washington and a treaty to end the 1950-1953 Korean War, which ended in a truce. 

     

    Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    75 comments

    Maybe America should stop feeding the people that want to kill us. If a child is acting up, you should ignore her. Instead, the world gives North Korea attention and the cycle continues. It is time to let North Korea cry itself to sleep.

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  • 23
    Apr
    2012
    5:27am, EDT

    North Korea threatens to reduce South Korea's government 'to ashes'

    By NBC News, msnbc.com staff and news services

    North Korea's military has threatened to reduce South Korea’s conservative government "to ashes" in "three or four minutes" – an escalation of its recent belligerent language.

    It vowed Monday to launch unspecified "special actions" of "unprecedented peculiar means," an unusually specific warning.


    North Korea regularly criticizes Seoul and just last week renewed its promise to wage a "sacred war," saying South Korean President Lee Myung-bak had insulted the North's April 15 celebrations of the birth centennial of national founder Kim Il Sung.

    Kim Jong Il's 'last will' to son: Make peace, build more weapons

    Its latest threat follows U.N. condemnation of North Korea's launch of a long-range rocket that exploded shortly after liftoff April 13. Washington, Seoul and others called the launch a cover for testing long-range missile technology. Pyongyang said the launch was meant to put a satellite into orbit.

    Despite launch failure, North Korea celebrates military-style

    The North's special actions "will reduce all the rat-like groups and the bases for provocations to ashes in three or four minutes, (or) in much shorter time, by unprecedented peculiar means and methods of our own style," according to the statement by the special operation action group of the Korean People's Army's Supreme Command.

    Slideshow: Daily life in North Korea

    Elizabeth Dalziel / AP

    From work to play, see pictures from inside the secretive country.

    Launch slideshow

    Terrorist attacks?
    Some South Korean analysts speculated the North's statement was meant to unnerve Seoul; others that the North could be planning terrorist attacks.

    It seemed unlikely that North Korea would launch a large-scale military attack against Seoul, which is backed by nearly 30,000 U.S. troops stationed in the South, said Kim Young-soo, a professor at Sogang University in Seoul.

    However, Dr. Cheon Seong-whun, of the Korean Institute for National Unification, told NBC News that he "wouldn’t be surprised if the North takes some military actions against the South soon given the concrete words announced by the North today.”   

    “I believe the North’s statements have passed the rhetoric stage,” he added.

    Slideshow: North Korea continues celebrations

    /

    Pyongyang refuses to let failed rocket launch dampen tone of festivities.

    Launch slideshow

    The North's latest threat, which was carried by its state media, comes amid rising tensions on the Korean peninsula, with both Koreas recently unveiling new missiles.

    The animosity has prompted worries that North Korea may conduct a new nuclear test — something it did after rocket launches in 2006 and 2009. South Korean intelligence officials have said that recent satellite images show North Korea has been digging a new tunnel in what appears to be preparation for a third nuclear test.

    We may never know why North Korea rocket failed

    South Korea's Unification Ministry said it was examining North Korea's intentions behind the statement; the Defense Ministry said no special military movement had been observed in the North. Officials spoke on condition of anonymity, citing office rules.

    Relations between the Koreas have been abysmal since Lee took office in 2008 with a hard-line policy that ended unconditional aid shipments to the North.

    In Beijing, North Korea's biggest ally, China's top foreign policy official met Sunday with a North Korean delegation and expressed confidence in the country's new young leader, Kim Jong Un. 

    NBC News' Julie Yoo, msnbc.com staff and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Iran says it is building a copy of downed US spy drone
    • Anglican official: Front-runner for top church job victim of 'naked racism'
    • Poachers attack rhinos featured in Rock Center report
    • Attack foiled? Afghanistan arrests five with 11 tons of explosives
    • Russian ships arriving in China for naval war game
    • American in Cuban prison: 'Get me the hell out of here'

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

     


     

    406 comments

    You know, some times when someone runs off at the mouth, the only way to give them pause for their spewing and threatening is a good rap in the mouth.

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  • 17
    Apr
    2012
    11:15am, EDT

    Japanese island man lives as naked hermit

    Reuters/Stringer

    Seventy-six-year-old naked hermit Masafumi Nagasaki washes untensils on the beach on Sotobanari island, Okinawa prefecture, April 14.

    By Reuters

    Dangerous currents swirl around Sotobanari island, which has not a drop of natural water, and local fishermen rarely land there.

    But 76-year-old Masafumi Nagasaki has made this kidney-shaped island in Japan's tropical Okinawa prefecture his retirement home, with an unusual dress code: nothing at all.


    Naked, he braves lashing typhoons and biting insects as a hermit in the buff.

    "I don't do what society tells me, but I do follow the rules of the natural world. You can't beat nature so you just have to obey it completely," he said.

    "That's what I learned when I came here, and that's probably why I get by so well."

    The wiry Nagasaki, his skin leathered by the sun of two decades on the island, worked briefly as a photographer before spending years on the murkier side of the entertainment industry. When retirement came, he wanted to get far away from it all.

    He chose Sotobanari, which is roughly a 1,000 meters across and means "Outer Distant island" in the local dialect. It lies off the coast of Iriomote island, far closer to Taiwan than to Tokyo.

    His resolve was tested relatively soon into his stay when a massive typhoon swept over the island, scouring away most of the scrub he had counted on for shade, as well as carrying away the simple tent he lived in.

    "I just scorched under the sun," he said. "It was at that point I thought this was going to be an impossible place to live."

    For the first year he lived on Sotobanari, he threw on clothes whenever boats passed his way. But slowly the island stripped away his embarrassment.

    "Walking around naked doesn't really fit in with normal society, but here on the island it feels right, it's like a uniform," he said. "If you put on clothes you'll feel completely out of place."

    He does throw on clothes once a week for a trip to a settlement an hour away by boat, where he buys food and drinking water. He also collects the 10,000 yen ($120) sent to him by his family, on which he lives.

    His staple food is rice cakes, which he boils in water, eating whenever hunger strikes - sometimes four or five times a day. Water for bathing and shaving comes from rainwater caught in a system of battered cooking pots.

    Each day is conducted according to a strict timetable, starting with stretches in the sun on the beach. The rest is a race against time as he prepares food, washes and cleans his camp before the light fails and insects come out to bite.

    It isn't the healthiest of lifestyles, he concedes - but that isn't the point.

    "Finding a place to die is an important thing to do, and I've decided here is the place for me," he said.

    "It hadn't really occurred to me before how important it is to choose the place of your death, like whether it's in a hospital or at home with family by your side. But to die here, surrounded by nature - you just can't beat it, can you?" 

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    Norway mass killer Anders Breivik: I 'would do it all again'

    Tunisia still wants sun lovers, new Islamist government says

    Sources: Briton killed after threat to expose Chinese leader's wife

    US prepares for last major Afghanistan offensive

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

     

    In Bangkok, people armed with water guns and pails, soak each other with water as part of the annual Songkran water festival celebrations. Msnbc.com's Dara Brown reports.

    Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    46 comments

    At least it sounds peaceful. No one bothers him and he gets to have peace and quiet. He gets to see people once a week when he buys his necessities. No one lives on his island and he isn't bothering anyone by being naked. It's no one's business but his, how he chooses to live.

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    Explore related topics: japan, life, asia-pacific, featured, weird-news, hermit
  • 13
    Apr
    2012
    10:19am, EDT

    Rogue bus driver takes Vietnam cop on wild ride

    Traffic police Second Lt. Nguyen Manh Phan ordered bus driver Phung Hong Phuong to pull over the 39-seat passenger coach Monday, but the driver allegedly refused to show his paperwork and tried to drive off, but Phan managed to leap onto the front of the bus.

    By Alastair Jamieson, msnbc.com

    Video footage of a Vietnamese traffic policeman clinging to the windshield wipers of a moving bus, whose driver was trying to avoid a ticket, has been released by cops in Hanoi.

    The bus travelled for more than half a mile at speeds of up to 31mph with Lt. Nguyen Manh Phan hanging on to the front, a police spokesman told the Associated Press.


    Follow @alastairjam

    It reported that the video was filmed by another officer.

    The driver, Phung Hong Phuong, allegedly refused to show his paperwork and drove off, but not before Phan leaped onto the front, the spokesman added.

    The driver was eventually pulled over after being chased by police and residents. He was arrested for allegedly acting against public officials, an offense that carries a maximum three-year prison sentence, the Associated Press said.

    It reported that Phuong previously served nearly four years in prison for a fatal traffic accident, and was released in 2010.

    The Associated Press report could not be independently verified with Hanoi police.

    32 comments

    The cop was crazy to jump on that bus! What the heck was he expecting to accomplish... Block the driver's vision?

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  • 10
    Apr
    2012
    11:18am, EDT

    Newborn girl rescued from toilet pit in China

    Jhphoto / jhphoto - Imaginechina

    A sanitation worker shows the squat toilet dug out to save the newborn, in Beijing, China

    By msnbc.com staff

    A newborn girl who fell into a toilet pit when her mother gave birth in a public bathroom is in good condition, according to media reports in China.

    Cai Qulin, 36, went into labor early on Saturday afternoon, nine days ahead of her due date, and said she urgently needed to use the bathroom before going to the hospital in Beijing, the English-language China Daily reported.


    Unexpectedly, the child was born as Qulin squatted at the public toilet, and the infant girl fell into the pit, it said.

    "My sister-in-law and niece are both OK now. As soon as doctor permits it, we'll bring the baby home," said Zhang Zhenghua, the baby’s aunt.

    "It's not often that a mother will give birth to a baby in an unexpected place like the toilet, but older mothers who have already given birth before may have a bigger chance of doing so," Wang Linhong, head of National Center for Women and Children's Health, told China Daily.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    76 comments

    Looks like a squat toilet, and studies have shown that the squat position is one of the most effective positions for giving birth. She clearly didn't realize how far her labor had progressed. Biteme-3031029 Actually girls are starting to become more desired since there is a huge surplus of males. Me …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: china, health, children, baby, asia-pacific
  • 6
    Apr
    2012
    8:24am, EDT

    Worker at Apple-supplier Foxconn in China: 'We're humans, we're not machines'

    By Reuters

    ZHENGZHOU, China -- In the eight years since Zhang Shuxiang first left her village in the poor interior of central China, she worked in 20 factories before coming to the assembly line of a Foxconn plant making products for tech firms including Apple. She wants it to be her last.

    The 26-year-old has worked in factories making products as varied as coffee makers, jewelry and Apple's LED screens. Each time, she quit, blaming low wages and unreasonable supervisors, then joined another factory.


    Reuters

    In eight years, Zhang Shuxiang -- seen posing for a photograph at her home in Zhengzhou, China, on Wednesday -- has worked in 20 factories. She wants the Foxconn plant to be her last.

    "Factory work is too tiring," she said when asked about life after Foxconn, which she plans to leave by June. "Since last year, I've kept on telling myself I would never want to enter a factory ever again, but I'm still doing it in spite of myself."

    She embodies the shifting expectations and opportunities of tens of millions of young Chinese workers from the countryside who have turned their country into a workshop of the world.

    Their changing attitudes pose a deep challenge for thousands of manufacturers, such as Foxconn and its big customer Apple, which have relied on what they once thought was a virtually endless stream of inexpensive, compliant workers.

    Foxconn Chairman Terry Gou has pledged to keep on increasing worker salaries and cutting the hours of work, after it came under fire for poor working conditions for employees making Apple iPhones and iPads.

    Online coup rumors spark China social media crackdown

    Zhang now works on an assembly line for computer motherboards, in a factory inside a mammoth industrial complex on the outskirts of Zhengzhou, which Apple Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook visited in late March during a trip to China.

    CNBC's Jon Fortt takes a closer look at the Foxconn violations noted by the Fair Labor Association.

    Before finally deciding whether to quit, Zhang said she will wait to see what changes come from the agreement signed by Foxconn and Apple to improve working conditions.

    Workers more aware of rights
    Meeting the aspirations of Zhang and other migrant workers who power China's economy -- officially estimated at 159 million -- is crucial for the government. Younger, better educated and more tech-savvy, many migrant workers grew up as the sole children in their families and are less accepting than their parents were of tough working conditions.

    They are also becoming more aware of their rights and of the widening growing range of available jobs, including services, that has come with rapid economic growth and which offer a way out of the relentless tedium of factory work.

    Rev. Serene Jones, New York University law professor Cynthia Estlund, and Columbia University visiting scholar Obery Hendricks discuss the legacy left by Apple founder Steve Jobs and the controversy over the working conditions of his company's supplier, Foxconn.

    "They are willing to take collective action, strikes, work stoppages, protests when they feel their rights have been violated or what they are owed has not been given to them," said Geoffrey Crothall, a spokesman for Hong Kong-based workers' rights group China Labor Bulletin.

    "Workers know that if they stand their ground and ask for better pay and conditions, employers ... have to agree to some of their demands," he added.

    Apple, supplier pledge to improve conditions

    Duncan Innes-Ker, senior China analyst for the Economist Intelligence Unit, said there is a "perfect storm of factors" coming together to support workers as they push for higher wages: sustained economic growth, government policy support for a higher minimum wage and demographics.

    Joe Tan / Reuters, file

    Employees eat their meal on a guardrail of a bridge near the Foxconn recruitment center in Shenzhen, Guangdong province in this Feb. 22 file photo.

    The number of young Chinese workers aged 15-24 years of age will likely fall by a third in the next 12 years, giving more bargaining power to this younger blue-collar generation, Beijing-based consultancy Dragonomics has projected.

    Advocates decry Foxconn treatment of student interns

    The average monthly wage of China's migrant workers in 2011 rose 21.2 percent from 2010 to 2,049 yuan ($320), with wages higher in the more developed coastal areas like Guangdong. Even so, despite the recent increases, such wages are still many times lower than in Western developed economies.

    On a recent afternoon outside a labor market in Zhengzhou, the provincial capital of Henan, a scattering of people were scrutinizing recruitment placards on a fence. Companies were looking for store managers, retail assistants and accountants. Some were offering salaries that range from 1,200 to 6,000 yuan.

    'All menial work'
    Xie Wen, 22, an unemployed former nurse, looked horrified when asked whether she was considering a job at a factory.

    "It sounds good, but it's all menial work. If you want to earn a lot, you have to work a lot of overtime," she said, adding that she does not want her next job "to be too tough. I don't want any night shifts and I don't do overtime."

    Her friend, Jin Jin, 27, who has been looking for work since she quit her job at a pharmacy a month ago, said she resigned because it was "meaningless" work. Since 2004, she has held four to five jobs and is now seeking one in sales that pays about 2,000 yuan, with about 4-6 days off a month, subsidized meals and overtime fees.

    Chinese oil company surpasses Exxon as world's largest

    Clad in a black blazer, jeans and pink sequined shoes, Dou Jing, 20, said she worked in the quality control department in an electronics factory for a year after high school.

    "It was very tiring. I had to work night shifts that lasted 12 hours," Dou said. She later found a job as a receptionist for a small company, greeting guests and pouring tea for them.

    "I didn't feel I could learn anything," she said, adding she wanted to learn some skills in her next job and open a shop.

    Probe links corporate spying to Chinese government

    Walking through the crowd, a man surnamed Yang was trying to recruit telemarketers. He was distributing flyers that offered wages of 3,000 to 5,000 yuan a month, but not many people expressed interest.

    "Workers are more choosy, they want a high salary, a job that's close to home and work that has very little responsibility," he said. "I think that's unrealistic."

    Although the younger, more finicky cohort of migrant workers could pose a challenge for China's exporters, Innes-Ker said "we're still a long way away from the idea that foreign companies are moving out of China because it's too expensive."

    "It's very difficult to find somewhere with the similar strengths of China," he said. "When it comes down to it, China has massive clusters that allow a very high degree of specialization to occur, and that helps to push down costs quite dramatically."

    'Eat bitterness'
    Zhang's elder brother, Zhang Junfeng, 30, who also works at Foxconn, said turnover is particularly rampant among younger factory workers, particularly those born in the 1990s.

    "They'll resign the minute they get angry," Junfeng said. "Very few of them can eat bitterness."

    Reuters

    Zhang Junfeng (left), picks vegetables with his relatives at their home in Zhengzhou, Henan province Wednesday.

    Eating bitterness is an expression used by Chinese who have endured decades of natural and man-made hardships throughout China's tumultuous history -- a term that also applies to Zhang's parents, who are both 61 and were farmers their whole lives.

    On a recent afternoon, the pair sat in the courtyard of their home in Yezhang village, an hour's drive from Zhengzhou along several unpaved roads that cut through fields of wheat. They were picking through freshly harvested spinach from their fields to sell in Zhengzhou.

    Zhang laughed when asked how her life is different from her parents, whose faces are brown and wrinkled from the sun. "At that time how can there be factories? That time, there were communes," she said.

    China tells activist Ai Weiwei to turn off webcams

    The round-faced Zhang, clad in a red tunic and black sweatpants, knows a thing or two about eating bitterness.

    She was 18 when her mother paid a middleman 600 yuan to find her a factory job in Dongguan, a gritty city in Guangdong. When she arrived after a two-day rickety bus ride in 2004, she called home and cried to her mother after only a few days.

    Unreasonable quotas?
    In a Foxconn factory in Longhua in a suburb of Shenzhen, Zhang said she was hospitalized for two weeks in late 2011, blaming her supervisor for setting unreasonable quotas. She finally protested with her feet, quitting after about three months.

    In one day, Zhang is required to paste 5,000 round dots by hand on a component for motherboards.

    Yet even with the tedious work, Zhang says conditions at the Zhengzhou factory are better than at the previous Foxconn factories where she's worked. Her workday is about eight hours and she is given eight days off a month.

    Foxconn pays her a base salary of 1,550 yuan a month, an increase from 1,320 yuan the year before, and extra for overtime duty. She lives four to a room in her dormitory, which she pays 150 yuan a month to rent and is Spartan with just two metal bunk beds and a desk.

    Back at the Foxconn factory in Shenzhen where Zhang worked in 2010, workers on the assembly line were banned from talking to one another and taking toilet breaks that exceed 10 minutes, according to Zhang.

    "At that time, that made me think of the phrase: 'We're humans, we're not machines'," she said.

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    129 comments

    For all of you that worship at the feet of Jobs, this so called visionary had no problem with slave labor and the misery that it creates. Its no wonder Apple is the richest company in the world when they treat their manufacturers like dogs.

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  • 5
    Apr
    2012
    5:35am, EDT

    'I've got snakes on a plane': Pilot makes emergency landing

    An Australian pilot was forced to make an emergency landing after a snake slithered into his cockpit. Msnbc.com's Dara Brown reports.

    By Ian Johnston, msnbc.com

    A pilot made an emergency landing during a flight in Australia, reportedly telling air traffic controllers, "Look, you're not going to believe this. I've got snakes on a plane."

    Australia's ABC News reported that Braden Blennerhassett, 26, swiftly put the Air Frontier plane on the ground after making the unusual mayday call during a flight from Darwin to the remote town of Peppimenarti on Tuesday. Air Frontier offers charter and scenic flights throughout Australia’s northern territory.


    "My blood pressure and heart rate was a bit elevated -- it was an interesting experience," Blennerhassett told Nine News. "As the plane was landing, the snake was crawling down my leg, which was frightening."

    On the ground, a firefighter discovered that the snake that crawled down Blennerhassett's leg was not alone -- a green tree frog was also on the aircraft, Nine News reported. No other wildlife was found, and both animals had disappeared by the time a wildlife ranger came for them.

    Frog hunted?
    It is thought the snake, believed to be a non-venomous green tree snake, may have been hunting the frog, Nine News said.

    Geoffrey Hunt, director of Air Frontier, which owns the plane, clearly hadn't seen the Hollywood film "Snakes on a Plane."

    "I have heard of crocodiles being loose in planes, but not snakes," he told ABC News.

    He added that the plane was grounded "until we find the snake," expressing the hope that the aircraft would not have to be taken apart.

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    • 'I've got snakes on a plane': Pilot makes emergency landing
    • PhotoBlog: Wife held at knifepoint for 6 hours

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    58 comments

    "I'm tired of these mother f-ing snakes... on this mother f-ing plane". It had to be said... and I would have told the air traffic controller that. :P Samuel L Jackson will be grinning when he reads this story... who would have thought that snakes would make it onto a plane to terrorize the pilot in …

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    Explore related topics: australia, plane, pilot, snake, asia-pacific, darwin, featured, ermergency-landing
  • 2
    Apr
    2012
    6:11am, EDT

    Suu Kyi hails 'triumph of the people' after Myanmar election win

    Aung San Suu Kyi spoke to crowds of cheering supporters saying she hoped it would be a new beginning for the country. NBC's Ian Williams reports.

    By msnbc.com news services

    Updated 11:21 a.m. ET: Aung San Suu Kyi claimed victory Monday in Myanmar's historic by-election, saying she hoped it would mark the beginning of "a new era" for the long-repressed country.

    Suu Kyi spoke to thousands of cheering supporters who gathered outside her opposition party headquarters a day after her party declared she had won a parliamentary seat in the closely watched vote.


    The Election Commission has not yet confirmed the results, but government officials have commented on Suu Kyi's victory and the people of Myanmar, also known as Burma, have reacted with jubilation.

    "The success we are having is the success of the people," Suu Kyi said, as a sea of supporters chanted her name and thrust their hands into the air to flash "V" for victory signs.

    In Myanmar, Suu Kyi wins parliament seat, raises hopes for democracy

    "It is not so much our triumph as a triumph of the people who have decided that they have to be involved in the political process in this country," she said. "We hope this will be the beginning of a new era."

    If confirmed, Suu Kyi will take public office for the first time and lead a small bloc of lawmakers from her opposition National League for Democracy in Myanmar's military-dominated Parliament.

    The victory would mark a major milestone in the Southeast Asian nation, which is emerging from a ruthless era of military rule, and also an astonishing reversal of fortune for a woman who became one of the world's most prominent prisoners of conscience.

    Suu Kyi wins seat in historic Myanmar election

    The U.S. on Monday hailed the result as an important step in the country's "democratic transformation".

    "We hope it is an indication that the government of Burma intends to continue along the path of greater openness, transparency, and reform,'' Jay Carney, press secretary for U.S. President Barack Obama, said in a statement.

    The United States and European Union had hinted they could lift some sanctions - imposed over the past two decades in response to human rights abuses - if the election were free and fair.

    Nay Zin Latt, an adviser to President Thein Sein, told The Associated Press he was "not really surprised that the NLD had won a majority of seats" in the by-election.

    Party wins 43 out of 45 seats
    Asked if Suu might be given a Cabinet post, he said: "Everything is possible. She could be given any position of responsibility because of her capacity."

    Unofficial counts continued to trickle in Monday from poll watchers within Suu Kyi's party, and spokesman Han Than said the opposition had won at least 43 of the 44 parliament seats it had contested. Those included all four seats up for grabs in the capital, Naypyitaw, which is populated by civil servants and would be an embarrassing sign of defeat for the government.

    The NLD did not contest one of the 45 by-elections.

    Khin Maung Win / AP

    Myanmar pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi talks to supporters at the headquarters of her National League for Democracy party in Yangon, Myanmar Monday.

    Suu Kyi had complained last week of "irregularities", though none seemed significant enough to question the vote.

    Voters had filed into makeshift polling stations from dawn on Sunday, some gushing with excitement after casting ballots for the frail-looking Suu Kyi, or "Aunty Suu" as she is affectionately known.

    Among supporters who voted in her rustic constituency of bamboo-thatched homes in Kawhmu, there was little doubt she would win.

    "Almost everyone we asked voted for Aunty Suu," Ko Myint Aung, a 27-year-old shop owner told Reuters.

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • In Myanmar, Suu Kyi wins parliament seat, raises hopes
    • Iraqi woman killed in US buried back home; hate crime feared
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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    10 comments

    I hope this is the first step toward a democratic Burma. Hopefully Myanmar will fade into the history books.....

    Show more
    Explore related topics: election, myanmar, asia-pacific, suu-kyi, featured, burma
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