Saturday, August 10, 2013

[batavia-news] Pollution Economics

 

 
Op-Ed Contributors

Pollution Economics

WITH more than a million people in China dying prematurely each year from breathing its dirty air, and with warming temperatures portending rising sea levels and disruptions to food production, the centrally planned Communist country is experimenting with a capitalist approach to address the problem: it is creating incentives so that the market — and not the government — will force reductions in emissions.

For Op-Ed, follow @nytopinion and to hear from the editorial page editor, Andrew Rosenthal, follow @andyrNYT.

The United States invented this approach in the 1990s to deal with acid rain. The effort was tremendously successful in reducing sulfur dioxide emissions that were poisoning lakes and streams, contaminating soils and accelerating the decay of buildings, at a cost lower than even its advocates anticipated.

But the United States has taken a policy detour that has hurt its efforts to reduce greenhouse gases. Congress has spurned the cap-and-trade approach China is trying, even though it is widely recognized as a cheaper way to lower emissions. As a result, President Obama has had little choice but to turn to government regulation to reduce these pollutants. Consumers will pay a higher price for electricity as a consequence.

China, the world's largest emitter of carbon dioxide, has begun its effort in the southern city of Shenzhen, paving the way for a national Chinese market in a few years. Like Europe, which voted to extend and improve its emissions market, and Australia and New Zealand, Shenzhen chose a carbon market as the most efficient way to lower its greenhouse gas emissions.

Under the Shenzhen program, the government will set limits on carbon dioxide discharges for 635 industrial companies and 197 public buildings that together account for about 40 percent of the city's emissions. Polluters whose emissions fall below the limit can sell the difference in the form of pollution allowances to other polluters. These companies must decide whether it is cheaper to reduce emissions or pollute above their limit by buying allowances, whose price will be set by supply and demand. But the pressure will be on, because the limits will decrease over time. Six more regional pilot programs are planned over the next year.

More than 20 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions are now subject to carbon pricing systems. About 60 other states, provinces or countries are considering similar approaches, according to a recent World Bank report.

Carbon cap-and-trade programs align environmental goals with market incentives. Conventional regulatory approaches "cannot ensure achievement of emissions targets, create problematic unintended consequences, and are very costly for what they achieve," says the economist Robert N. Stavins, director of the Harvard Environmental Economics Program.

So how did America detour away from emissions markets, which are the preferred approach of many economists, climate and consumer advocates, and many electric utility companies that own and operate power plants?

It all comes down to politics. Before the last recession, political support was building for a carbon market, with various Republicans, including Senator John McCain, his party's 2008 presidential nominee, supporting a market-based approach. After House Democrats approved a cap-and-trade bill in 2009 that put a price on fossil-fuel emissions, the issue became a target of the Tea Party. In the midst of the worst economy in 75 years, the Senate declined to take up the measure, and cap and trade became a dirty term on Capitol Hill.

Even so, several states already have turned to this approach. California's effort began in January. Nine mid-Atlantic and Northeast states use it under the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative.

In Washington, faint whispers of a carbon tax are still occasionally heard as a solution for budget and environmental problems in a single policy. But even if that were to happen, the tax would probably be small and would not guarantee the reduction in emissions needed. Like a tax, carbon markets can also generate revenue that can be rebated to consumers or used to lower other taxes.

The United States can still move back into a leadership position in the effort to reduce carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Learning from the experiences of the European Union and other programs, America can avoid the hiccups that hampered early efforts.

As the effects of a warming climate become increasingly apparent and the costs of adaptation rise, inaction will become an untenable political position. Markets play to America's strengths. As the first President Bush said about his policy of emissions markets for controlling acid rain, markets "harness the creativity and ingenuity of the private sector." What could be more American than that? Just ask the Chinese.

Dirk Forrister is president and chief executive officer of the International Emissions Trading Association. Paul Bledsoe is a senior fellow in the energy and climate program at the German Marshall Fund of the United States.

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[batavia-news] Three Chinese murdered in Afghan capital, one missing: embassy

 

 
 

KABUL: Three Chinese citizens were found murdered in an apartment in Afghanistan's capital, according to a statement issued by China's embassy in Kabul carried on a Chinese state-run news agency whereas two others were reported as missing.

The statement said that the five were all self-employed business people and the two women were killed accidentally when they stopped at the apartment while criminals were inside, the agency reported.

Police said that the murder victims included two women and a man, who were shot late on Thursday along with their Afghan guard, adding that their deaths were only reported by a neighbour on Friday.

The identity of the victims and motive for the killings were also unclear.

No one has claimed responsibility for the attack though both the Taliban and criminal groups have been involved in the kidnapping and killing of foreign nationals in Afghanistan in the past.

Earlier the embassy had said two Chinese were missing after the murder but it was later quoted by China's state news agency Xinhua as saying that one has been found and taken to a safe place. A search was going on for the other missing person.

Afghan officials did not respond to calls on Saturday, the last day of the three-day Eidul Fitr public holiday.

The Chinese embassy also did not respond to repeated calls or email.

Pictures of the crime scene showed a cluttered double bed with pink pillows in a dingy room, with bare walls and very little furniture. The worn red carpet was also littered with items like clothes and what appeared to be a power cable.

The attack did not appear to be linked to the huge Aynak copper deposit in Logar province south of Kabul, Afghanistan's largest foreign investment project run by a Chinese consortium.

In November, Afghanistan's mining mister said about 150 Chinese workers had returned to the mine after earlier fleeing because of rockets attacks on the project.

Hundreds of Chinese are working on different projects in Afghanistan.

China, which shares a 76-kilometre border with Afghanistan's far northeast, has secured major oil and copper mining concessions in Afghanistan, which is believed to have more than $1 trillion worth of minerals.

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[batavia-news] There can be no lasting peace without development, without combating poverty, hunger and inequality

 

 

Havana.  August 8, 2013

There can be no lasting peace without development, without combating poverty, hunger and inequality

Statement by H.E. Mr. Bruno Rodríguez Parrilla, Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Cuba, on behalf of the Pro Tempore Presidency of CELAC, at the UN Security Council session, August 6, 2013

Madam President:

Allow me, first of all, to thank you and the government of the Republic of Argentina for the invitation conveyed to the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC), which Cuba is honored to preside, to participate for the first time in the UN Security Council debates.

The history of Latin America and the Caribbean has changed.  Two hundred years after our independence, the ideas of "a Nation of Republics" and of "Our America" envisaged by Bolivar and Martí are taking shape.

Thus, our Heads of State and Government decided that, and I quote, "in accordance with the original mandate of our Liberators, CELAC must move forward in the process of political, economic, social and cultural integration, based on a wise equilibrium between the unity and diversity of our peoples, so that the regional integration mechanism can become the ideal space to express our rich cultural diversity and also the forum to reaffirm the Latin American and the Caribbean identity, our common history and our ongoing struggles for justice and liberty."

They also agreed that, "recognizing the right of each nation to build freely and peacefully its own political and economic system, in the framework of the corresponding institutions according with the sovereign mandate of its people; the processes of dialogue, exchange and political negotiation carried out by CELAC must be done taking into account the following common values and principles: respect for International Law, peaceful settlement of disputes, and the prohibition of the use and the threat of use of force, the respect for self-determination, respect for sovereignty and territorial integrity, the non-interference in the internal affairs of each country, the protection and promotion of human rights and democracy."

The Latin and Caribbean America has resolved to"walk in close ranks, like the silver in the roots of the Andes".

We have provided ourselves with institutions which allow us to promote unity within our diversity; integrate ourselves and cooperate; discuss, among ourselves, the issues that are germane to us; and be in solidarity to one another to solve the pressing problems that still encumber Latin America and the Caribbean.  We intend to develop ourselves, live in peace, protect human dignity and preserve and enrich our culture.

We congratulate ourselves on the fact that CELAC has managed to reach common views in areas such as social development, education, health, environmental protection, energy and finances, among others, and now is preparing to work together in the areas of cooperation, nuclear disarmament, the combat of corruption, agriculture, science and technology.

I hereby pay tribute to President Hugo Chávez Frías, one of the founders and principal architects of CELAC.  I can feel his presence among us.

Madam President:

Upon founding CELAC, our Heads of State and Government reiterated, and I quote, "our commitment to the building of a more just, equitable and harmonious international order based on respect for International Law and the principles of the Charter of the United Nations, including the sovereign equality of States, the peaceful settlement of disputes, respect for territorial integrity and non-intervention in the internal affairs of States". .

They reaffirmed "our commitment to the defense of sovereignty and the right of any State to establish its own political system, free from threats, aggressions and unilateral coercive measures and in an environment of peace, stability, justice, democracy and respect for human rights."

They expressed their conviction that "unity and political, economic, social and cultural integration of Latin America and the Caribbean constitute (…) a requirement for the Region to successfully confront the challenges before us", and determined "to promote and project a unified voice for Latin America and the Caribbean in the discussion of the principal issues, and in the positions of the Region on the relevant global events at international meetings and conferences, as well as in the dialogue with other regions and countries."

Likewise, they reiterated that "CELAC is an important mechanism to promote the interests of developing countries in multilateral organizations to reinforce our capacity to react coordinately to the challenges of a world in the process of a deep economic and political change" as well as "our commitment to strengthen CELAC to promote and project the interests and concerns of Latin America and the Caribbean on the main issues of the international agenda" and "to bring together positions and coordinate ourselves, when possible, at international meetings and conferences of global reach. In that regard, we highlight the efforts developed by the Permanent Representatives of CELAC member States to the United Nations Organization, who have agreed on an internal mechanism for concerted participation in the discussions at the various committees to which the consensual position of CELAC has been put forward. As a result, we commit to strengthen coordination efforts at the United Nations Headquarters, including encouragement of joint initiatives on issues of interest to the region."

On several occasions, CELAC has put forward before the UN its common vision about some of the main challenges faced by the maintenance of international peace and security and the prevention of conflicts.

In relation to the current UN peace-keeping efforts, CELAC believes that, with the purpose of achieving stability in the long term, as well as to prevent the recurrence of conflicts, it is necessary to strengthen the strategic, comprehensive and coordinated presence of the United Nations in the field, not only in the peace-keeping area, which is essential, but also by strengthening national institutions and promoting reconstruction and economic and social development in the areas of conflict.  In this regard, CELAC is calling for greater interaction and coordination between member States and all UN relevant organs.  Regional and sub-regional organizations have an essential role to play in conformity with Chapter VIII of the UN Charter.  On this matter, CELAC recognizes in particular the contribution made by the African Union, which has proved to be most useful in some peace-keeping operations, where this cooperation has complemented the UN efforts.

CELAC reiterates that there can be no lasting peace without development and the eradication of poverty, hunger and inequality.  This principle is the essence of the solidarity and cooperation of the CELAC members countries towards the sister nation of Haiti –a nation whose heroic role in the independence of the countries of the region continues to inspire our present integration efforts. While recognizing the fundamental role of the UN presence in Haiti through the United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH) and the efforts of the international community to support Haiti, CELAC reaffirms that those efforts would be effective as long as they are part of a long-term sustainable project under the leadership and guidance of the Haitian Government, with full respect for its sovereignty.

It is high time for our region to contribute to the "equilibrium of the world" with all the might of its almost 600 million inhabitants who are seeking equal opportunities; its abundant natural resources, over which we shall permanently exercise our sovereignty; its economic capabilities, even in circumstances of global economic crisis; its extraordinary and ancestral culture and the unyielding determination of our peoples to achieve peace, development, justice and progress.

The fact that numerous countries and organizations have found in CELAC a valid interlocutor with Latin America and the Caribbean is a source of satisfaction.

We are pleased that the Community of Latin America and Caribbean States is able to participate in this Security Council debate.  CELAC has already started to appear before the United Nations as a united force.  Our common stands in numerous topics of interest for the international community portend our possibilities.

At the First CELAC Summit "… we renewed our countries' commitment to multilateralism and to a comprehensive reform of the United Nations system, and to democratization of international decision making instances, in particular, the Security Council."

Latin America and the Caribbean is a Zone of Peace, Free from Nuclear Weapons.  CELAC has adopted a unanimous position with regard to some far-reaching topics of the international agenda, such as, for example, Argentina's legitimate claim in the dispute on the sovereignty over the Malvinas Islands and the so-called nuclear disarmament.  About Cuba, which keeps up with its struggle, I should say nothing on this occasion in which I am speaking on behalf of CELAC.

Now we must continue to move on.  Do not allow any of our differences to stop us.  Let us keep united.  Do not allow anything to prevent us from honoring the legacy of the Liberators of Our America.

Thank you, very much.

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[batavia-news] Tajikistan's missing men

 

Ref: Untuk  melihat video footage, click :
 
 
 

Tajikistan's missing men

Seasonal migration from Tajikistan to Russia is destroying families and leaving thousands to grow up without fathers.

Last Modified: 02 Aug 2013 06:58
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Our journey begins at a wedding in southern Tajikistan, where a young bride is getting married. But what should be a day of joy, is tinged with sadness as her groom will soon have to leave the country.

Every year a million men leave Tajikistan to find work in Russia. Many find new families abroad, divorce their wives or simply never return.

The women often left destitute are forced to do what would have been men's jobs or in some cases, are so desperate, they have to put their children into institutions.

Tajikistan was once the breadbasket of the Soviet Union; today, the country's farms are worked by women.
About 100,000 men were killed in a civil war that raged through the 1990s, but the gender imbalance has worsened as more and more men leave the country to find work on Russian construction sites.

Back home, after the secularism of Soviet rule, Islam is enjoying a resurgence and many Tajiks are married via a Nikah, a traditional Muslim ceremony.

These marriages can be dissolved by the utterance of the word "Talak" three times. Talak is supposed to be said in front of witnesses and with the approval of an imam, but migration has led to a wave of divorces communicated by text message.

Divorce by SMS has become such a problem that the country's religious leader Saidmukaram Abduqodirzoda regularly uses sermons to chide men on the subject.

For the women abandoned, some are forced to send their children to work, or to live in institutions. Increasing numbers are joining polygamous marriages.

While polygamy is illegal in Taijikistan, the numbers are climbing as migrant men choose to stay in Russia indefinitely and the choice of eligible men in Tajikistan declines. As polygamy is against the law, second and third wives cannot be registered so whilst it can make financial sense in the short term, the women are financially vulnerable again in the event of a breakup.

What happens when Tajikistan's husbands and fathers leave for work in Russia, sometimes never to return? @AJ101East #TJMissingMen

101 East airs each week at the following times GMT: Thursday: 2230; Friday: 0930; Saturday: 0330; Sunday: 1630.

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[batavia-news] Deadly car bombs rock Iraqi cities

 

 
 

Deadly car bombs rock Iraqi cities

At least 91 dead in string of explosions in Baghdad and other cities during Eid al-Fitr celebrations.

Last Modified: 10 Aug 2013 21:16
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Bomb damage in the city of Nasiriyah, where four people were killed [Reuters]

At least 91 people have been killed and hundreds injured in a series of car bombs that rocked Baghdad and other Iraqi cities amid Eid al-Fitr celebrations.

Al Jazeera's Imran Khan, reporting from the Iraqi capital, said 50 people had been killed in nine blasts in seven areas of the city on Saturday evening, with targets including cafes, markets and restaurants.

The attack sites were mainly Shia areas, although two were in predominantly Sunni neighbourhoods.

Khan said attacks in Shia neighbourhoods were likely to be the work of Al-Qaeda in Iraq, which has been resurgent in recent months.

 

In other attacks on Saturday, at least eight people were killed and 47 injured when a car bomb exploded in the town of Tuz Khurmato, 170km north of Baghdad.

And at least five people were killed and 12 injured when a car bomb detonated amid a traffic jam on the central commercial street in the holy Shia city of Karbala, 110km south of Baghdad.

Four more were killed in two bomb blasts in Nasiriyah, 375km south of Baghdad.

The blasts are the latest in spiralling violence, with bloodshed at its worst since 2008 amid worries of a return to the all-out sectarian war that blighted Iraq years ago.

They come just weeks after brazen assaults on prisons near Baghdad by al-Qaeda linked groups that freed hundreds of fighters.

More than 800 people were killed in attacks during the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan, which ended this week.

The Interior Ministry has said the country faces an "open war" fuelled by Iraq's sectarian divisions and has attempted to boost security in Baghdad, closing roads and sending out frequent helicopter patrols.

Our correspondent said the withdrawal of American combat troops from Iraq 18 months ago has hit security efforts and emboldened Sunni fighters to step up attacks.

"People in the Iraqi security services will tell you ... that the Iraqi army is now on its own. They do not have the intelligence from the Americans that they had before. That has caused Sunni groups to go on the offensive.

"Then you have Shia groups taking revenge against them, in a classic tit-for-tat situation."

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[batavia-news] Nine killed in attack on mosque

 

 

Nine killed in attack on mosque

Date  August 9, 2013
An injured boy is taken to a hospital in Quetta following the attack on the mosque.

An injured boy is taken to a hospital in Quetta following the attack on the mosque. Photo: AFP

Pakistan's troubled south-western city of Quetta, focus of a surge in sectarian bloodshed, was hit by its second attack in two days as gunmen shot dead at least nine people outside a mosque on Friday.

The worshippers were gunned down as they left prayers for Eid al-Fitr, the festival marking the end of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, which was marred in Pakistan this year by at least 11 attacks that killed 120 people.

On Thursday a suicide bomber struck at a police funeral in the city, killing 38 people. The dead included nearly half the top police commanders in Baluchistan province who were attending the funeral of a police inspector killed earlier.

The attack, claimed by the Taliban, will raise yet more concerns about the violence that has continued unabated since the newly-elected government took office.

The move came as the US evacuated all non-emergency staff from its consulate in Lahore, citing "specific threats" amid a worldwide alert over al-Qaeda intercepts.

The closure of the US consulate in Pakistan's second-largest city and cultural capital came amid heightened security measures in Islamabad, where police and soldiers were maintaining a highly visible presence on the streets.

The US State Department also reiterated a longstanding warning to US citizens to avoid all non-essential travel to Pakistan.

"On August 8, 2013, the Department of State ordered the departure of non-emergency US government personnel from the US Consulate General in Lahore, Pakistan," the State Department statement said.

"The Department of State ordered this drawdown due to specific threats concerning the US Consulate in Lahore."

Meghan Gregoris, spokeswoman for the US embassy in Islamabad, said the evacuation was not linked to a terrorist threat that prompted the closure of 19 diplomatic missions in the Middle East and Africa.

"We received information regarding a threat to our consulate in Lahore. As a precautionary measure we have undertaken a drawdown for all but emergency personnel in Lahore," she told AFP.

The US embassy and consulates in Karachi and Peshawar were closed on Friday for the Eid public holiday, but are expected to open again on Monday, she said. The Lahore mission was likely to remain closed and there was currently "no indication" of when it might reopen.

"We will continue to evaluate threat reporting and take decisions as appropriate," she said.

Despite Pakistan's fractious alliance with the United States in the "war on terror", anti-American sentiment runs deep in the restive, nuclear-armed country, fuelled in part by the CIA's campaign of drone strikes against militants in the tribal northwest.

Washington maintains the strikes are an important and effective weapon in the fight against Taliban and al-Qaeda extremists, but Pakistan denounces them publicly as a violation of sovereignty.

US diplomatic missions have been the target of violence in the past.

A suicide car bomber rammed a US diplomatic vehicle in the north-western city of Peshawar last September, killing two people – at least the third time the mission and its staff had been attacked by Taliban and Al-Qaeda-linked militants since April 2010.

AFP

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[batavia-news] Chinese doctor held over baby trafficking

 

 

Chinese doctor held over baby trafficking

Some parents in Shaanxi province in northwestern China were told their healthy newborns had congenital problems.

Last Modified: 10 Aug 2013 11:56
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Local authorities have detained nine people, including an obstetrician, on suspicion of baby trafficking at a hospital in northwestern China, according to state media.

Three government officials and three hospital managers at Fuping County Maternal and Child Health Care in Shaanxi province were also dismissed over the baby trafficking scandal, Xinhua News Agency reported.

The obstetrician has been named as Zhang Shuxia and it is alleged that she abducted newborns after sometimes falsely claiming healthy infants were born with congenital problems.

It is not clear whether the other eight held worked at the hospital.

Xinhua said police had received 55 reports of child abductions and that Zhang allegedly was involved in 26 of them. It said police had rescued twin baby girls and located a third child, all taken from the Fuping hospital.

Al Jazeera's Harry Fawcett, reporting from the village of Xue Chen in Shaanxi, said the case has gripped China with the country's media descending on the small hamlet to record the reunion of the twin girls and their parents.

He said that one of the twins had already been sold to another female doctor who says that she was told the girl was the unwanted child of a young student.

Despite severe punishments, including the death penalty, child trafficking is common in China. The trade is very profitable, and demand is strong, driven partly by the preference for male heirs and a strict one-child policy.

"A lot of adoptions go abroad, a lot of adoptions go to the United States. And, while a lot of that is understood to be well regulated, there is a network of child trafficking that's proved very difficult to get rid of," our correspondent said.

Given the number of cases Zhang is charged with, she could face the death penalty.

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