continent:asia

  • Wasted rice in Asia emits over 600 million tonnes of greenhouse gases a year
    _That’s because decomposing leaves, stalks and other organic matter decompose in rice paddies, giving off methane. Degrading rice in landfills also contributes to emissions.
    +
    Why does all this rice go to waste? Poor processing, transportation or storage result in rice being spilled or spoiled before getting to consumers. Some waste also happens on the consumer side as people simply throw uneaten rice away. The UN estimates that 80 kilograms of cereals, mostly rice, are wasted per person in the region every year._

    http://qz.com/123456

  • These maps show how Asia is taking over the oil markets

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2013/08/26/these-maps-show-how-asia-is-taking-over-the-oil-markets/?wprss=rss_social-postbusinessonly&Post+generic=%3Ftid%3Dsm_twitter_

    The U.S. Energy Information Administration has created a fascinating short animation showing how the world’s appetite for oil has changed over the past three decades.

    Here’s how much petroleum different regions used back in 1980, when the whole world burned about 63.1 million barrels a day of gasoline, diesel fuel, jet fuel, heating oil and other products:

    #énergie #pétrole #asie #consommation_pétrole #consommation_énergie

  • No maritime agreement at ASEAN meeting - World Socialist Web Site

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2013/08/08/asen-a09.html

    No maritime agreement at ASEAN meeting
    By John Chan
    8 August 2013

    In another sign of mounting tensions fuelled by the Obama administration’s “pivot to Asia,” China ruled out any immediate commitment to a “Code of Conduct” in the South China Sea at a meeting with Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) foreign ministers meeting in Bangkok last week.

    #frontières #frontières_maritimes #asean #asie #différends_frontaliers

  • #Haile_Selassie, Speech to #UN October 6 1963 - YouTube
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wszwI1E24eM

    H.I.M. Haile Selassie address to the #Unted_Nations Oct 6, 1963
    http://www.nazret.com/history/him_un.php

    Mr. President, Distinguished Delegates:
    Twenty-seven years ago, as Emperor of #Ethiopia, I mounted the rostrum in Geneva, Switzerland, to address the League of Nations and to appeal for relief from the destruction which had been unleashed against my defenseless nation, by the Fascist invader.I spoke then both to and for the conscience of the world. My words went unheeded, but history testifies to the accuracy of the warning that I gave in 1936.

    Today, I stand before the world organization which has succeeded to the mantle discarded by its discredited predecessor. In this body is enshrined the principle of collective security which I unsuccessfully invoked at Geneva. Here, in this Assembly, reposes the best - perhaps the last - hope for the peaceful survival of mankind.

    In 1936, I declared that it was not the Covenant of the League that was at stake, but #international_morality. Undertakings, I said then, are of little worth if the will to keep them is lacking. The Charter of the United Nations expresses the noblest aspirations of man: abjuration of force in the settlement of disputes between states; the assurance of human rights and fundamental freedoms for all without distinction as to race, sex, language or religion; the safeguarding of international peace and security.

    But these, too, as were the phrases of the Covenant, are only words; their value depends wholly on our will to observe and honor them and give them content and meaning. The preservation of peace and the guaranteeing of man’s basic freedoms and rights require courage and eternal vigilance: courage to speak and act - and if necessary, to suffer and die - for truth and justice; eternal vigilance, that the least transgression of international morality shall not go undetected and unremedied. These lessons must be learned anew by each succeeding generation, and that generation is fortunate indeed which learns from other than its own bitter experience. This Organization and each of its members bear a crushing and awesome responsibility: to absorb the wisdom of history and to apply it to the problems of the present, in order that future generations may be born, and live, and die, in peace.

    The record of the United Nations during the few short years of its life affords mankind a solid basis for encouragement and hope for the future. The United Nations has dared to act, when the League dared not in Palestine, in Korea, in Suez, in the Congo. There is not one among us today who does not conjecture upon the reaction of this body when motives and actions are called into question. The opinion of this Organization today acts as a powerful influence upon the decisions of its members. The spotlight of world opinion, focused by the United Nations upon the transgressions of the renegades of human society, has thus far proved an effective safeguard against unchecked aggression and unrestricted violation of human rights.

    The United Nations continues to sense as the forum where nations whose interests clash may lay their cases before world opinion. It still provides the essential escape valve without which the slow build-up of pressures would have long since resulted in catastrophic explosion. Its actions and decisions have speeded the achievement of freedom by many peoples on the continents of Africa and Asia. Its efforts have contributed to the advancement of the standard of living of peoples in all corners of the world.

    For this, all men must give thanks. As I stand here today, how faint, how remote are the memories of 1936.How different in 1963 are the attitudes of men. We then existed in an atmosphere of suffocating pessimism. Today, cautious yet buoyant optimism is the prevailing spirit. But each one of us here knows that what has been accomplished is not enough.

    The United Nations judgments have been and continue to be subject to frustration, as individual member-states have ignored its pronouncements and disregarded its recommendations. The Organization’s sinews have been weakened, as member-states have shirked their obligations to it. The authority of the Organization has been mocked, as individual member-states have proceeded, in violation of its commands, to pursue their own aims and ends. The troubles which continue to plague us virtually all arise among member states of the Organization, but the Organization remains impotent to enforce acceptable solutions. As the maker and enforcer of the international law, what the United Nations has achieved still falls regrettably short of our goal of an international community of nations.

    This does not mean that the United Nations has failed. I have lived too long to cherish many illusions about the essential highmindedness of men when brought into stark confrontation with the issue of control over their security, and their property interests. Not even now, when so much is at hazard would many nations willingly entrust their destinies to other hands.

    Yet, this is the ultimatum presented to us: secure the conditions whereby men will entrust their security to a larger entity, or risk annihilation; persuade men that their salvation rests in the subordination of national and local interests to the interests of humanity, or endanger man’s future. These are the objectives, yesterday unobtainable, today essential, which we must labor to achieve.

    Until this is accomplished, mankind’s future remains hazardous and permanent peace a matter for speculation. There is no single magic formula, no one simple step, no words, whether written into the Organization’s Charter or into a treaty between states, which can automatically guarantee to us what we seek. Peace is a day-to-day problem, the product of a multitude of events and judgments. #Peace is not an “is”, it is a “becoming.” We cannot escape the dreadful possibility of catastrophe by miscalculation. But we can reach the right decisions on the myriad subordinate problems which each new day poses, and we can thereby make our contribution and perhaps the most that can be reasonably expected of us in 1963 to the preservation of peace. It is here that the United Nations has served us - not perfectly, but well. And in enhancing the possibilities that the Organization may serve us better, we serve and bring closer our most cherished goals.

    I would mention briefly today two particular issues which are of deep concern to all men: disarmament and the establishment of true equality among men. Disarmament has become the urgent imperative of our time. I do not say this because I equate the absence of arms to peace, or because I believe that bringing an end to the nuclear arms race automatically guarantees the peace, or because the elimination of nuclear warheads from the arsenals of the world will bring in its wake that change in attitude requisite to the peaceful settlement of disputes between nations. Disarmament is vital today, quite simply, because of the immense destructive capacity of which men dispose.

    Ethiopia supports the atmospheric nuclear test ban treaty as a step towards this goal, even though only a partial step. Nations can still perfect weapons of mass destruction by underground testing. There is no guarantee against the sudden, unannounced resumption of testing in the atmosphere.

    The real significance of the treaty is that it admits of a tacit stalemate between the nations which negotiated it, a stalemate which recognizes the blunt, unavoidable fact that none would emerge from the total destruction which would be the lot of all in a nuclear war, a stalemate which affords us and the United Nations a breathing space in which to act.

    Here is our opportunity and our challenge. If the nuclear powers are prepared to declare a truce, let us seize the moment to strengthen the institutions and procedures which will serve as the means for the pacific settlement of disputes among men. Conflicts between nations will continue to arise. The real issue is whether they are to be resolved by force, or by resort to peaceful methods and procedures, administered by impartial institutions. This very Organization itself is the greatest such institution, and it is in a more powerful United Nations that we seek, and it is here that we shall find, the assurance of a peaceful future.

    Were a real and effective disarmament achieved and the funds now spent in the arms race devoted to the amelioration of man’s state; were we to concentrate only on the peaceful uses of nuclear knowledge, how vastly and in how short a time might we change the conditions of mankind. This should be our goal.

    When we talk of the #equality of #man, we find, also, a challenge and an opportunity; a challenge to breathe new life into the ideals enshrined in the Charter, an opportunity to bring men closer to freedom and true equality. and thus, closer to a #love of #peace.

    The goal of the equality of man which we seek is the antithesis of the exploitation of one people by another with which the pages of history and in particular those written of the African and Asian continents, speak at such length. Exploitation, thus viewed, has many faces. But whatever guise it assumes, this evil is to be shunned where it does not exist and crushed where it does. It is the sacred duty of this Organization to ensure that the dream of equality is finally realized for all men to whom it is still denied, to guarantee that exploitation is not reincarnated in other forms in places whence it has already been banished.

    As a free Africa has emerged during the past decade, a fresh attack has been launched against exploitation, wherever it still exists. And in that interaction so common to history, this in turn, has stimulated and encouraged the remaining dependent peoples to renewed efforts to throw off the yoke which has oppressed them and its claim as their birthright the twin ideals of liberty and equality. This very struggle is a struggle to establish peace, and until victory is assured, that brotherhood and understanding which nourish and give life to peace can be but partial and incomplete.

    In the United States of America, the administration of President Kennedy is leading a vigorous attack to eradicate the remaining vestige of racial discrimination from this country. We know that this conflict will be won and that right will triumph. In this time of trial, these efforts should be encouraged and assisted, and we should lend our sympathy and support to the American Government today.

    Last May, in Addis Ababa, I convened a meeting of Heads of African States and Governments. In three days, the thirty-two nations represented at that Conference demonstrated to the world that when the will and the determination exist, nations and peoples of diverse backgrounds can and will work together. in unity, to the achievement of common goals and the assurance of that equality and brotherhood which we desire.

    On the question of racial discrimination, the Addis Ababa Conference taught, to those who will learn, this further lesson: That until the philosophy which holds one race superior and another inferior is finally and permanently discredited and abandoned: That until there are no longer first-class and second class citizens of any nation; That until the color of a man’s skin is of no more significance than the color of his eyes; That until the basic human rights are equally guaranteed to all without regard to race; That until that day, the dream of lasting peace and world citizenship and the rule of international morality will remain but a fleeting illusion, to be pursued but never attained; And until the ignoble and unhappy regimes that hold our brothers in Angola, in Mozambique and in South Africa in subhuman bondage have been toppled and destroyed; Until bigotry and prejudice and malicious and inhuman self-interest have been replaced by understanding and tolerance and good-will; Until all #Africans stand and speak as free beings, equal in the eyes of all men, as they are in the eyes of Heaven; Until that day, the African continent will not know peace. We Africans will fight, if necessary, and we know that we shall win, as we are confident in the victory of good over evil.

    The United Nations has done much, both directly and indirectly to speed the disappearance of discrimination and oppression from the earth. Without the opportunity to focus world opinion on Africa and Asia which this Organization provides, the goal, for many, might still lie ahead, and the struggle would have taken far longer. For this, we are truly grateful.

    But more can be done. The basis of racial discrimination and colonialism has been economic, and it is with economic weapons that these evils have been and can be overcome. In pursuance of resolutions adopted at the Addis Ababa Summit Conference, African States have undertaken certain measures in the economic field which, if adopted by all member states of the United Nations, would soon reduce intransigence to reason. I ask, today, for adherence to these measures by every nation represented here which is truly devoted to the principles enunciated in the Charter.

    I do not believe that Portugal and South Africa are prepared to commit economic or physical suicide if honorable and reasonable alternatives exist. I believe that such alternatives can be found. But I also know that unless peaceful solutions are devised, counsels of moderation and temperance will avail for naught; and another blow will have been dealt to this Organization which will hamper and weaken still further its usefulness in the struggle to ensure the victory of peace and liberty over the forces of strife and oppression. Here, then, is the opportunity presented to us. We must act while we can, while the occasion exists to exert those legitimate pressures available to us, lest time run out and resort be had to less happy means.

    Does this Organization today possess the authority and the will to act? And if it does not, are we prepared to clothe it with the power to create and enforce the rule of law? Or is the Charter a mere collection of words, without content and substance, because the essential spirit is lacking? The time in which to ponder these questions is all too short. The pages of history are full of instances in which the unwanted and the shunned nonetheless occurred because men waited to act until too late. We can brook no such delay.

    If we are to survive, this Organization must survive. To survive, it must be strengthened. Its executive must be vested with great authority. The means for the enforcement of its decisions must be fortified, and, if they do not exist, they must be devised. Procedures must be established to protect the small and the weak when threatened by the strong and the mighty. All nations which fulfill the conditions of membership must be admitted and allowed to sit in this assemblage.

    Equality of representation must be assured in each of its organs. The possibilities which exist in the United Nations to provide the medium whereby the hungry may be fed, the naked clothed, the ignorant instructed, must be seized on and exploited for the flower of peace is not sustained by poverty and want. To achieve this requires courage and confidence. The courage, I believe, we possess. The confidence must be created, and to create confidence we must act courageously.

    The great nations of the world would do well to remember that in the modern age even their own fates are not wholly in their hands. Peace demands the united efforts of us all. Who can foresee what spark might ignite the fuse? It is not only the small and the weak who must scrupulously observe their obligations to the United Nations and to each other. Unless the smaller nations are accorded their proper voice in the settlement of the world’s problems, unless the equality which Africa and Asia have struggled to attain is reflected in expanded membership in the institutions which make up the United Nations, confidence will come just that much harder. Unless the rights of the least of men are as assiduously protected as those of the greatest, the seeds of confidence will fall on barren soil.

    The stake of each one of us is identical - life or death. We all wish to live. We all seek a world in which men are freed of the burdens of ignorance, poverty, hunger and disease. And we shall all be hard-pressed to escape the deadly rain of nuclear fall-out should catastrophe overtake us.

    When I spoke at Geneva in 1936, there was no precedent for a head of state addressing the League of Nations. I am neither the first, nor will I be the last head of state to address the United Nations, but only I have addressed both the League and this Organization in this capacity. The problems which confront us today are, equally, unprecedented. They have no counterparts in human experience. Men search the pages of history for solutions, for precedents, but there are none. This, then, is the ultimate challenge. Where are we to look for our survival, for the answers to the questions which have never before been posed? We must look, first, to Almighty God, Who has raised man above the animals and endowed him with intelligence and reason. We must put our faith in Him, that He will not desert us or permit us to destroy humanity which He created in His image. And we must look into ourselves, into the depth of our souls. We must become something we have never been and for which our education and experience and environment have ill-prepared us. We must become bigger than we have been: more courageous, greater in spirit, larger in outlook. We must become members of a new race, overcoming petty prejudice, owing our ultimate allegiance not to nations but to our fellow men within the human community.

    #The_Lion_of_Judah #jah #Rastafari #War

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_%28Bob_Marley_song%29

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZCFHYyErkA0


    #Bob_Marley #musique #audio

  • Latvians as minority in 37 years

    In interview with Leons Taivāns, professors in University of Latvia, he admitted that Latvians are dying out, emigrating and in others ways leaving country, that can cause Latvians becoming minority in our own country. Internal affairs is only one part of this issue. Latvia is feeling stronger and stronger pressure from Asia, like Turkey and China. There is overpopulation in these countries so they seek the ways how to reduce it - one of the solutions is such countries as Latvia where they can go. Latvia has to work really hard to improve this situation, but at least for now we cannot see visible changes.

    TVNET :: Viedokļi - Biedējoši: Pēc 37 gadiem latvieši būs izteikta minoritāte
    http://www.tvnet.lv/zinas/viedokli/470778-biedejosi_pec_37_gadiem_latviesi_bus_izteikta_minoritate

    « Skaidrs, ka imigrācija būs, jo iedzīvotāji pasaulē ir sadalīti ļoti neproporcionāli. Latvija ir viena no tukšākajām vietām. Varbūt nav pati tukšākā. Mums ir 35 cilvēki uz kvadrātkilometru. Somijā tas skaits ir vēl mazāks – tie ir 15 cilvēki uz kvadrātkilometru, bet Somijā ir teritorijas, kas nav apdzīvojamas. Latvijā visas teritorijas ir apdzīvojamas.

    #Demography #Population #Latvia

  • Global Attitudes toward Homosexuality » Sociological Images
    http://thesocietypages.org/socimages/2013/06/17/global-attitudes-toward-homosexuality

    http://static.thesocietypages.org/socimages/files/2013/06/PG_13.06.04_HomosexualityAccept_620.png

    The Pew Research Global Attitudes Project recently released data on attitudes about homosexuality in 39 countries. Generally, those living in the Middle East and Africa were the least accepting, while those in the Americas, Europe, and parts of Asia (the Philippines, Australia, and to a lesser extent Japan) were most accepting:

    #homosexualité

  • Success of China-India Dialogue Depends on Resolving Border Dispute | United States Institute of Peace

    http://www.usip.org/publications/success-china-india-dialogue-depends-resolving-border-dispute

    May 2013 | Olive Branch Post by Namrata Goswami

    May 23, 2013

    The future of Asia will depend on how India and China work out their bilateral relations: The dynamic could either tend toward cooperation based on mutual trust or be infused by competition for power and influence.

    Cooperation, rather than competition with India, was the primary theme of the recent visit of Chinese Premier Li Keqiang to India from May 19 to May 21. In an op-ed published by a major Indian newspaper, Li Keqiang highlighted the enduring connection between Chinese and Indian civilizations and the urgent need to hinge the bilateral relationship on common cultural reference points, which include the 5th/6th century Buddhist monk Bodhidharma, among others.

    #inde #chine #frontières

  • Far-right Japan Restoration Party defends wartime abuse of “comfort women” - World Socialist Web Site

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2013/05/23/osak-m23.html

    Osaka Mayor Toru Hashimoto, a leader of the far-right Japan Restoration Party (JRP), set off a firestorm in Asia and within Japan last week, by declaring that the Japanese army’s policy of keeping thousands of women as sex slaves throughout Asia during World War II was necessary.

    #extrême-droite #japon

  • US seeks defence agreement with Maldives - World Socialist Web Site

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2013/05/21/mald-m21.html

    US seeks defence agreement with Maldives
    By K. Ratnayake
    21 May 2013

    The US is pushing the Maldivian government to sign a Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA) to build military bases in the island country, which is in the middle of the Indian Ocean. It is another significant move by the Obama administration in its aggressive “pivot to Asia” to militarily encircle China in the vast Indo-Pacific theatre.

    et New Zealand to increase military presence in South Pacific - World Socialist Web Site

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2013/05/21/paci-m21.html

    New Zealand to increase military presence in South Pacific
    By John Braddock
    21 May 2013

    New Zealand is preparing to increase its military presence in the South Pacific, in close collaboration with the Australian government. The moves further align the two regional imperialist powers with the US Obama administration’s “pivot” to the Asia-Pacific and its aggressive confrontation of China.

    #asie_pacifique #etats-unis #défense #géostratégie #nouvelle-sélande #maldives

  • Boston Review — Wajahat Ali: Against the Brahmins (#Pankaj_Mishra)
    http://www.bostonreview.net/BR38.3/wajahat_ali_pankaj_mishra.php

    Wajahat Ali : Reflecting on recent events, could an argument be made that the disastrous Iraq War and the 2008 financial crisis have shifted the axis of power from the United States to rising Asia?

    Pankaj Mishra : I don’t think Asians and South Asians have much cause for celebration if power is indeed shifting to the East due to the disastrous blunders of the United States. One still has to ask, whose power? And to whom is it shifting and who in Asia will it eventually benefit? We Asians have shown ourselves very capable of making the same kind of mistakes. I write from Japan, which has its own history of militarism and imperialism, and where the ghost of nationalism is yet to be exorcised. And we know about South Asia’s inability to defuse its toxic nationalisms or provide a degree of social and economic justice to its billion-plus populations.

    • WA: The Economist has labeled you the “heir to Edward Said.” How do you respond to the comparison?

      PM: These kinds of intellectual genealogies are very superficial—sound bites, essentially. I think that the important work of Edward Said—the examination and overcoming of degraded and degrading representations of the non-West—is being carried on by many writers, and it is far from finished. Indeed, it has suffered serious setbacks in the post-9/11 era, which has seen an exponential rise in violence and bigotry, so we need many more people with his intellectual capacity and moral courage to challenge mainstream and conventional ideas and prejudices. I would be very suspicious if anyone was described as his heir by the mainstream press. The description pigeonholes cheaply—even caricatures—and conveniently shifts the responsibility of saying unpopular truths onto a single individual. Now that the quota of non-conformism has been taken care of, the token gestures to dissent made, everyone can return to spouting conventional wisdom.

  • Australia’s Defence White Paper and the US “pivot” to Asia - World Socialist Web Site

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2013/05/10/pers-m10.html

    Australia’s Defence White Paper and the US “pivot” to Asia
    10 May 2013

    The 2013 Defence White Paper, which defines the Australian government’s strategic military orientation, codifies its unconditional support for the Obama administration’s “pivot” to Asia. The document asserts that “the relationship between the United States and China will determine the outlook for our region”, over the coming decades, and foreshadows that Australia will serve as the military adjunct and physical base for US efforts to dominate the entire “Indo-Pacific”. It stresses the importance of collaboration with the US, as well as states such as India, in controlling the key maritime trade passages between

    #asie_pacifique #australie #géostratégie_américaine #asie #géopolitique

  • Japanese retail giant introduces Third World wages - World Socialist Web Site

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2013/05/06/japa-m06.html

    Japanese retail giant introduces Third World wages
    By John Watanabe
    6 May 2013

    Fast Retailing, the biggest retailer in Asia and the fourth largest in the world, is in process of setting a uniform pay scale for its employees worldwide. This represents an escalation in the attacks on the already impoverished retail employees in Japan and other so-called developed countries, with their wages being cut to the levels imposed on the super-exploited workers of China, India and South East Asia.

    #japon #travail #entreprise #emploi

  • Mapping the #H7N9 avian flu outbreaks | Declan Butler (Nature)
    http://www.nature.com/news/mapping-the-h7n9-avian-flu-outbreaks-1.12863

    Flight routes from the outbreak regions would quickly carry any human-transmissible virus to huge population centres in Europe, North America and Asia. Estimated numbers of people residing within two hours’ travel time of destination airport calculated using gridded population-density maps and a data set of global travel times. Map supplied by A. J. Tatem, Z. Huang and S. I. Hay (2013). Unpublished data. (A.J.T., University of Southampton, UK; Z.H., University of Florida, Gainesville; S.I.H., University of Oxford, UK.)

    #cartographique #santé #épidémie #chine #avions #vols

  • Focus: Dash for cash | The Economist

    http://www.economist.com/blogs/graphicdetail/2013/03/focus-6?fsrc=scn/fb/wl/bl/dashforcash

    IN THE race to become rich, several of Asia’s economies have set records for long-run growth. Over the 30 years from 1982 to 2011 China achieved annual growth in GDP per person of nearly 10%.

    In doing so it overtook Japan to become the world’s second-largest economy in 2010 and also graduated from lower to higher middle-income status, according to the World Bank’s classification system. All of the other economies in our chart that maintained 6% growth or faster over 30 years can now be classified as high-income. If China wants to join them, it will have to keep up the pace a bit longer. The OECD, in a new survey of China, reckons it might get there by 2020.

    #économie #croissance

  • Entre la Chine et la Russie, c’est le grand amour (militaire et économique)

    Chinese president’s “historic visit” to Russia - World Socialist Web Site
    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2013/03/26/chin-m26.html

    Chinese president’s “historic visit” to Russia
    By John Chan
    26 March 2013

    Less than a week after the National Peoples Congress (NPC) installed Xi Jinping as Chinese president, he made his first state visit on March 22-24—to Russia. The trip was designed to boost the “strategic partnership” between the two countries, whose economic and strategic interests are threatened by the aggressive policies of the US and its allies in Asia, the Middle East and Africa.

    #chine #russie #le-grand-amour

  • The Ottoman Age of Exploration: Giancarlo Casale

    Oxford University Press

    Chaudement recommandé par @alaingresh

    http://www.oup.com/us/catalog/general/subject/HistoryWorld/India/?ci=9780195377828

    Recognition of Excellence Award, Cundill Prize in History
    Honorable Mention, British-Kuwait Friendship Society Book Prize
    Description
    In 1517, the Ottoman Sultan Selim “the Grim” conquered Egypt and brought his empire for the first time in history into direct contact with the trading world of the Indian Ocean. During the decades that followed, the Ottomans became progressively more engaged in the affairs of this vast and previously unfamiliar region, eventually to the point of launching a systematic ideological, military and commercial challenge to the Portuguese Empire, their main rival for control of the lucrative trade routes of maritime Asia.

    #cartographie #cartographie-ancienne #turquie #empire-ottoman

  • Japanese PM prepares for war - World Socialist Web Site

    Ce titre est tout à fait rassurant

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2013/03/05/pers-m05.html

    Japanese PM prepares for war
    5 March 2013

    Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s appeal last week to the example of the Falklands war to justify his tough stance in the island dispute with China is a chilling warning that the fault lines of a new and terrible global conflict are being drawn in Asia.

    #japon #chine #senkaku #frontières

  • Japan’s Shifting Strategic Discourse

    http://web.mit.edu/cis/editorspick_samuels_020713.html

    Japan’s Shifting Strategic Discourse
    By Richard Samuels

    As Narushige Michishita and I have argued, after decades of accepting U.S. supremacy in Asia as the foundation of its foreign and security policies, finding the right distance between the U.S. and China is the most important strategic choice facing Japan today.1 “Getting it just right” with these two powers will require both military and economic readjustments. But it will not be easy. Some in Japan fret about a Washington–Beijing “G–2” condominium. Others doubt U.S. capabilities and commitments going forward. There are also those who insist that unless Japan accommodates to Chinese power, it will lose influence in the region and globally. Still others are concerned that rivalry with China is unavoidable. Because the debate is often so clamorous, and because the Sino–Japanese relationship is so frequently punctuated by tension, the possibility that improved relations with China might be compatible with sustained close relations with the United States is often lost in the noise.

    #japon #géopolitique

  • Afghan forces ’are just like criminals’ - Asia - World - The Independent
    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/afghan-forces-are-just-like-criminals-8508260.html

    But the despair of the US marines advising Afghan forces is laid bare in scenes being broadcast on BBC1’s Panorama tomorrow evening.

    It reveals how three boys were shot dead escaping from police commanders who were sexually abusing them.

  • Pakistan transfers strategic Gwadar port to China - World Socialist Web Site

    Où l’on reparle du «collier de perles» chinois qui sert, en partie, à «ceinturer» l’Inde

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2013/02/26/gwad-f26.html

    Pakistan transfers strategic Gwadar port to China
    By Sampath Perera
    26 February 2013

    On February 18, the Pakistani government transferred operational control of its strategically-located deep-sea port at Gwadar, Balochistan province to China. India, a rival of Pakistan and of China, has expressed concerns over the deal—highlighting the increasingly complex geo-political rivalries stoked by the Obama administration’s policy of “pivot” to Asia.

    http://www.wsws.org/asset/725031d5-fd7c-4a70-aae9-55cfdc42ab7E/asia-map.PNG?rendition=image480

  • The danger of war in Asia - World Socialist Web Site

    Bruits de bottes en Asie

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2013/02/12/pers-f12.html

    The danger of war in Asia
    12 February 2013

    Two recent commentaries highlight the growing nervousness in ruling circles internationally about the danger of a new world war erupting in Asia. Both point to the region’s extremely tense maritime disputes, especially between China and Japan, and draw parallels with the build-up of competing interests and alliances that led inexorably to the eruption of World War I in 1914.

  • Counterfeit medicine from Asia threatens lives in Africa | The Guardian
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/dec/23/africa-counterfeit-medicines-trade

    Though it may seem like an immense amount of trouble to counterfeit a £3 packet of malaria pills, Lulukay noted that the global trade was estimated at £46bn a year. Counterfeiters know their markets well and target medications accordingly. Efforts to combat the activity are in their infancy. (...) India has stepped up oversight, “China is only now just catching on”

    #pharma #médicaments #contrefaçon #malaria #paludisme

    • China rejects claims of producing fake medicine for Africa | World news | guardian.co.uk
      http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/dec/28/china-rejects-fake-medicine-africa

      China has denied allegations that it has been exporting huge amounts of counterfeit medication to Africa, threatening public health in east Africa, five days after the Guardian published a front page exposé on the phenomenon.

      The official Xinhua news agency said a foreign ministry spokeswoman rejected the accusation, but “called on foreign traders to procure medicines from legitimate companies through standardised channels”.

      #réfutation

    • India rejects claims it exported fake medicine to Africa | World news | guardian.co.uk
      http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/jan/02/india-rejects-fake-medicine-africa

      India has denied claims that it has exported large quantities of counterfeit medication to Africa, after the Guardian published a front-page exposé on the phenomenon.

      “No fake medicines have been sent from India to the continent of Africa,” a spokesman for the ministry of external affairs in Delhi said.

  • The U.S. Army’s Experiments with #LSD in the Cold War : The New Yorker
    http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/newsdesk/2012/12/us-army-experiments-with-lsd-in-the-cold-war.html?mobify=0

    For decades, the U.S. Army conducted secret clinical experiments with psychochemicals at Edgewood Arsenal. In the nineteen-sixties, Army Intelligence expanded the arsenal’s work on LSD, testing the drug as an enhanced-interrogation technique in Europe and Asia. This companion piece to “Operation Delirium,” which ran in the December 17th issue of The New Yorker, documents the people who were involved and what they did.

    et aussi http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2012/12/17/121217fa_fact_khatchadourian
    http://seenthis.net/messages/93685

  • New Japanese government marks dangerous turn to militarism - World Socialist Web Site

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2012/12/19/pers-d19.html
    19 December 2012

    The return of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) to power in last Sunday’s election in Japan marks a sea change not only in Japanese, but also in international politics. The nationalism and militarism that pervaded the election campaign signal the determination of the Japanese ruling class to reassert its interests in Asia and globally by every means, including military force.

    LDP leader Shinzo Abe, who will be installed next week as prime minister, has already signalled a hard line response in the territorial dispute with Beijing over the islands known as Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China. Speaking to Japan’s national broadcaster NHK, Abe declared that the Senkakus were part of “Japan’s inherent territory” and warned that “our objective is to stop the challenge” from China.