Shark carcass found in Makaha Beach

Shark carcass found in Makaha Beach
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Despite being one of the most feared inhabitants of marine life, it seems like even sharks are not exempt from becoming the victimized party deep within the ocean.

Leilani Tresize, a local resident of Hawaii, reported to have found the butchered remains of a 12-foot shark at the ocean floor of Makua Beach, Oahu several weeks ago, when she went for a swim to photograph dolphins.

Tresize recounted the gruesome sight in detail, saying that the shark had a “cut mark on the back, like someone had sliced him through him.” Its stomach “had been cut open” and its jaws were “missing.” She also noted that the shark’s fins were cut off from the body and that she found it floating in the water about thirty feet away from the rest of the carcass.

While there are no state laws in Hawaii that pertain to the outright killing of sharks, there is a bill that was passed in 2010 that banned the practice of shark finning in an effort to save the shark population from being depleted due to the popularity of shark fin soup.

Former State Senator Clayton Hee, who authored the bill, said that it is not limited only to the unlawful possession of shark fins, but extends also to any part of the shark.

It demonstrates an ignorance of the law and, unfortunately, it demonstrates that who ever did it got away with it,” Hee said. “It doesn’t make sense that you kill it in the first place because it’s unlawful to do so, and then leave it there.”

Many speculated that the culprit was most likely after the shark’s teeth, as the only things that appears to be taken from it would be its jaw. Shark teeth are known to be a very valuable resource for making weapons and jewelry.

Oriana Kalama, founder and CEO of Hawaii’s marine life supporter group Ocean Defender, said that a proper protocol should have been observed in killing the shark, so as to honor Hawaiian traditions and values.

Tresize has also shown the same sentiments as Kalama, stating that a Hawaiian would have taken the whole shark rather than mutilate it, take only a few parts and leave everything else to rot.

Currently, Tresize has already brought it to the attention of the local authorities, sharing the photos that she took of the shark’s remains to the lifeguards of Makaha. However, nothing has been heard from any authority figure as far as the matter is concerned.

By Antonio Torrijos

Missing South Korean teen expressed desire to join IS on social media

Missing South Korean teen expressed desire to join IS on social media
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SEOUL, South Korea — A South Korean teenager who disappeared in Turkey this month is believed to have joined the Islamic State (IS). Authorities are basing this suspicion on the teen’s social media communications, which consistently included sentiments of longing to join the Muslim militant group.

Kim’s disappearance

The 18-year-old, whose surname was given as Kim, went missing in Kilis near the Syrian border with Turkey on Jan. 10. Kim had traveled to Turkey with a pastor on Jan. 8.

Although Kim had originally planned to take the trip alone last October, his mother had asked a pastor who was introduced by a church friend to accompany Kim.

The pair moved to Kilis the following day, because Kim wanted to visit. He disappeared in the morning around 8 a.m. The pastor said that Kim left in the middle of breakfast. He thought that Kim went back to the hotel room, but was not there.

The pastor reported his disappearance to the Embassy of South Korea in Turkey on Jan. 12.

Kim’s whereabouts

Hotel CCTV showed footage that Kim went out of the hotel and met a man who beckoned to him from the opposite side of the road. They disappeared together in a black car.

According to South Korean Ministry of Foreign Affairs, it has been discovered that the vehicle number plate of the black car was that of an illegal taxi, run by Syrian nationals. The man’s face was not clearly recognized on the CCTV footage.

The ministry has not confirmed whether Kim crossed the Syrian border after the car stopped at a Syrian refugee town in Besiri, Turkey.

Gathering information via social media

Social media was the main medium to gain information about Kim’s being a member of IS.

Missing South Korean teen expressed desire to join IS on social media

Kim was called “sunni mujahideen” on Twitter. “Sunni” refers to Sunni Muslims, which are the largest branch of the religion. “Mujahideen,” the plural of mujahid in Arabic, refers to “guerrilla fighters in Islamic countries.” Kim followed 90 accounts relevant to IS.

He had asked advice on how to become a part of the Islamist group on Twitter by sending tweets of “I want to join isis” to those accounts, and one of users, “H. abodou afriki” tweeted back to him. This user advised him to go to Turkey.

Missing South Korean teen expressed desire to join IS on social media

“H. abdou afriki” even suggested that Kim should contact “Hassan” through mobile messaging application Surespot.

According to his mother, Kim said that he would meet a Turkish pen pal friend during the trip. The pastor also told police that he was going to see his friend called “Hassan” in Kilis.

Officials of the ministry said that they have not identified who “Hassan” is, as this is a common Arabic name.

Moreover, the Seoul Metropolitan Police Agency found out from information on Kim’s home computer that he bookmarked articles regarding IS. The officials added that he often accessed the websites which explain that IS members’ benefits include good salaries and the provision of a luxury car.

He also wrote that “I want leaving my country and families to get a new life” in English on Facebook, a day before traveling away.

Who is Kim?

The 18-year-old was a home-schooled student since he dropped out of middle school due to bullying. Kim was preparing a qualification exam as a high school graduate.

He spent most of time at home after quitting school. Internet was the only means for him to communicate with the outside world. His parents worried about his lack of a social life.

His mother said that he wanted to go to Turkey. “My son promised me to concentrate on studying for the exam if I allow him to go to a trip in Turkey,” his mother told the Korean police authorities.

His father flew to Turkey on Jan. 16, and came back to Korea after being interviewed by the Turkish police on Jan. 18.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs is still tracing his whereabouts by investigating Turkey as well as Syrian refugee town with the aid of Turkish authorities.

By EJ Monica Kim

Sources:

The Korea Herald

SBS News

The Hankyoreh

Kukminilbo

Chosun Media

Chosun Media

“The Face of Charlie” – Photo document of the Paris Charlie Hebdo rally

“The Face of Charlie” – Photo document of the Paris Charlie Hebdo rally
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In the wake of the shooting deaths of 12 French cartoonists at the Charlie Hebdo headquarters in Paris earlier this month, rallies and protests erupted in several nations around the globe, involving millions of participants who took to the streets to express their reactions to the attack and to the cartoon itself — calling out for both for the right to freedom of expression and for censorship of Muslim sacrilege.

In Paris, the largest rally since the liberation of the city during the second world war took place within one week of the attack, involving over 3.7 million people and including world leaders such as British Prime Minister David Cameron, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, in addition to French President Francois Hollande.

In this series, “The Face of Charlie,” Parisian photographer Andrea Peter Fly captures in vivid detail the individual face of those protesters who took part in the January response to what many considered to be an attack against France itself and human rights in general.


 


 

Andrea Peter Fly is a Paris-based photographer whose driving passion is documenting with photography issues that involve humanitarian concerns. She is also active in the domains of fashion, events and celebrity photography.

China to increase urban population in Tibet 30% by 2020

China to increase urban population in Tibet 30 by 2020
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During a government meeting on urbanization this week, the administration of Tibet stated their decision to increase the permanent urban population of Tibet by 30 percent by 2020 — a figure that represents roughly 280,000 new Chinese immigrants to Tibet.

The urban population of Tibet has risen dramatically since the 1980s, when China launched a “National Strategic Project to Develop the West” following the end of the Cultural Revolution.

Before the campaign, under 300,000 people lived in 31 towns and cities in Tibet. According to Chinese estimates for 2013, over 740,000 people now live in 140 towns and cities in Tibet. The new push will bring that number to over one million.

Because the majority of new residents in Tibet are ethnic Chinese, many Tibetans have expressed concern about a threat to their distinct cultural, religious and national identity. The Chinese population has increased in all Tibetan regions since China invaded Tibet in 1959.

In the administrative capital of the Tibetan Autonomous Region, Lhasa, Chinese outnumber Tibetans three to one, while in 1990 there were only 81,200 Chinese in all of TAR.

In addition to the Chinese resident population measured in government figures, there are also an additional 300,000 to 500,000 (150,000 to 250,000 in TAR) ethnic Chinese stationed in Tibet as cadres, administrative staff, and ordinary and military police.

The chairman of the Tibetan regional government, Losang Jamcan, said at the meeting that Tibet still lagged behind many regions of China, and that urbanization especially was lagging behind the rest of China.

Losang said that Tibet wanted to improve public services in urban areas in order to attract more people to move to Tibet, and to boost local economies.

Analysis by James Haleavy

Wealth of 1% greater than all the rest of the world next year

Wealth of 1% greater than all the rest of the world next year
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According to a report by anti-poverty charity organization Oxfam America, the wealthiest 1 percent of people will possess global assets in excess of assets possessed by the rest of earth’s 7.12 billion people by next year.

The percentage of global wealth owned by the richest 1 percent rose from 46 percent in 2009 to 48 percent in 2014, and it will rise to over 50 percent by 2016, Oxfam reported.

“The scale of global inequality is quite simply staggering and despite the issues shooting up the global agenda, the gap between the richest and the rest is widening fast,” said Oxfam Executive Director Winnie Byanyima, who is a co-chair of the upcoming World Economic Forum meeting in Davos, Switzerland, which will be attended by a record 300 heads of state.

Oxfam also reported that 80 percent of the world’s population currently owns just 5.5 percent of global wealth. This equates to under $4,000 per person, while the average wealth of the top 1 percent is $2.7 million. Further down the line, 1 in 9 people cannot afford enough food for themselves, and over 1 billion people have less than $1.25 per day to live on.

The wealth of the richest people continues to rise, Oxfam reported. In 2014, the 80 richest people had the same wealth as the poorest 3.5 billion people, representing a doubling of the wealth of the richest 80 since 2009.

“Do we really want to live in a world where the 1 percent own more than the rest of us combined?” Byanyima asked.

“The scale of global inequality is quite simply staggering and despite the issues shooting up the global agenda, the gap between the richest and the rest is widening fast.”

Oxfam’s report comes just ahead of the annual World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

By Sid Douglas

Photo: Oxfam

Under Xi Jinping, repression in China has increased – Freedom House Report

china, repression in china, freedom house, freedom house china, freedom house report on china, xi jinping human rights, Under Xi Jinping, repression in China has increased - Freedom House Report
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Freedom House, a prominent US-based human rights organization which monitors and rates various global freedoms, has found that under President Xi Jinping repression has increased in China. Of the 17 categories assessed by Freedom House in their China Report, repression has increased in 11 since 2012 when Xi took power, indicating an overall intensification of repression.

“The current leaders appear to be increasing repression, expanding the targets and reach of the security agencies even more than their predecessors,” wrote Sarah Cook, senior research analyst for East Asia at Freedom House and author of the report.

The categories in which repression had increased since Xi took power in 2012 include grassroots rights activists, online opinion leaders, ordinary internet users, civic-minded businesspeople, CCP cadres, labor leaders, scholars and professors, print and television journalists, Christians, Buddhist Tibetans, and Muslim Uighurs.

Since 2012, the Chinese government has begun to targeted new entities as well, Cook found. CCP authorities conducted detention, imprisonment, public humiliation and physical abuse on individuals who had previously been safe in the nation, including a pastor from a state-sanctioned church, a highly popular businessman, an acclaimed lawyer, an internet entrepreneur, and several middle class professionals. Party cadre had also suffered increased physical abuse — to the point of death — Freedom House reported.

Five categories maintained a level of repression consistent with pre-2012 findings: political dissidents, human rights lawyers, formal nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), protest participants, and Falun Gong practitioners.

Freedoms in China increased in only one category, according to Freedom House: petitioners, and the increase was minor, involving the abolition of the “reeducation through labor” camp system.

Freedom House noted that particularly prevalent in China since Xi took office was the incidence of religious persecution. Falun Gong adherents, Muslim Uighurs and Tibetan Buddhists were more likely than other classes of people to suffer prison sentences of over 10 years, systemic torture and death while in custody.

The Chinese government has shifted tactics since Xi entered office, Freedom House found. The government began using less overtly political charges — instead using public assembly- and disturbance-related charges for arrests. Bribery, illegal business offences and prostitution were also used against politically-involved actors in China, including journalists, according to the report.

The CPC also increased it’s use of short detention terms and high monetary fines, and revived televised forced confessions.

“On the one hand, there seems to be a greater emphasis on more formal types of punishment — such as administrative detention, brief criminal detention, and full prosecutions — and on punishments that discredit or humiliate the target, most likely a bid to enhance the legitimacy of the crackdown. On the other hand, this has not translated into an actual reduction in the use of extralegal detention, since the abolition of the discredited RTL system has led to the reported proliferation of less visible alternative facilities,” wrote Cook in the report.

“Repression has increased under the new leadership, yet fear of the regime appears to be diminishing,” she concluded.

The data from which Freedom House completed their study included that from their own interviews (conducted for the purposes of their research), media reports, Chinese human rights groups, the China Labor Bulletin, the Duihua Foundation and the Congressional-Executive Commission on China.

The report, “The Politburo’s Predicament,” was completed by Sarah Cook and was published on the Freedom House website.

By James Haleavy

South Sudan government says Chinese initiative will bring peace

JUBA, South Sudan -- The government has hailed the just concluded meeting with the rebels and mediators in Khartoum as a step towards the attainment of lasting peace.
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JUBA, South Sudan —  The government has hailed the just concluded meeting with the rebels and mediators in Khartoum as a step towards the attainment of lasting peace.

South Sudan’s Foreign Minister, Benjamin Marial, praised the initiative by the Chinese government to mediate between the warring parties in an effort to restore peace to the country.

“The fact that China, People’s Republic of China, got involved in trying to push forward the peace process also shows the commitment of the Chinese government to peace in South Sudan. We endorsed it because it does not deviate from the IGAD peace process.”

Marial spoke to journalists in Juba upon arrival from the Sudanese capital of Khartoum on Wednesday, saying the meeting would boost the IGAD brokered peace negotiation in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

“The safety of personnel who are involved in important economic institutions in the Republic of South Sudan; that of course includes economic installations and I think is very important thing – that they wanted the assurance that these institutions are properly protected and not to be destroyed in any form.”

The foreign minister said that they and the SPLA opposition rebels have agreed to allow access to those displaced by the war.

Aid agencies earlier raised the issue of access to those in dire need of assistance by both sides of the conflict by placing numerous roadblocks in place and demanding money.

Marial added that the two sides had agreed to allow aid workers access to hundreds of thousands of internally displaced people in need of humanitarian assistance.

According to the minister, the two sides recommitted to ending the conflict peacefully and to respect the cessation of hostilities agreement JUBA, South Sudan --  The government has hailed the just concluded meeting with the rebels and mediators in Khartoum as a step towards the attainment of lasting peace.signed nearly a year ago between the government and rebels.

However, accusations of attacks have been occurring recently, according to SPLA spokespeople.

He further said that the Chinese foreign minister, Wang Yi, who mediated in the talks between the two warring parties, met the two sides’ delegates, Sudanese and Ethiopian, separately and held discussions with the IGAD mediators.

On the talks, Marial said the government hopes to resume peace talks in Addis Ababa at the end of this month with new momentum to reach a permanent peace deal.

China is sending 750 combat troops to South Sudan as part the UN peacekeeping mission by next March.

Marial supported the Chinese troops adding that they adhere to the UN Mission in South Sudan mandate and will not side with either party to the conflict.

China is the main investor in South Sudan’s oil industry, which contributes more than 90 percent of government revenues.

This is the second time that another country has come and held talks on ending the one year conflict that has ravaged the country. Last year, Tanzania invited the two sides of the conflict to try to unify their factions in an intra-party dialogue, wherein President Salva Kiir and opposition leader Riek Machar accepted responsibility for the current crisis facing the nation.

By Moi Julius

Leader of minority party suggests national dialogue to resolve issues, rather than elections, in South Sudan

Leader of minority party suggests national dialogue to resolve issues, rather than elections, in South Sudan
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JUBA, South Sudan — The leader of the minority party in the National Legislative Assembly, Onyoti Adigo, has suggested convening a national consensus dialogue to resolve critical issues rather than conducting partial elections in June.

“The Government should call all political parties, civil society organizations, faith-based groups and people to decide the way forward,” Onyoti told the New Nation.

According to the minority leader, if the government is accepted by all, the mandate should be to bring peace, reconcile and unite people, build trust, and afterwards elections could be organized — “After census and geographical constituencies is known,” said Onyoti.

“Supposing the government goes for elections in June and in July there is peace, you might have wasted time by establishing another transitional period again. If you think about elections, it means the government is not for peace.”

The warring parties in the IGAD-brokered talks have agreed on the formation of a transitional government as a final deal is negotiated to end the war.

They have agreed on a 27 cabinet ministers, but the most sticky issue is who heads the government, as the rebels propose their leader, Riek Machar, and Juba insists on South Sudanese President Salva Kiir as the leader of the transitional government of national unity.

“They brought the example of Sudan, Syria and Afghanistan, which ran elections. Are those countries peaceful now? They are killing their own citizens,” he said.

The minority leader added that those dying in both sides of the conflict are South Sudanese, so the example of Syria and Iraq holding elections during turmoil are irrelevant to the country.

He further said partial elections are not democratically acceptable, and in the case of South Sudan there maybe four states: Jonglei, Upper Nile, Unity and Lakes.

“How can the government talk of elections when thousands are in IDP camps and those in towns experience hunger even in Juba? Instead of thinking of the people — for them to eat — you talk of an election. Money should have been for the suffering people. The displaced are in dire need of food, sanitation, water and medical care, and you want to take billions for elections.”

According to the leader of minority, the money allocated for elections is not within the law as it is not reflected in the budget and appropriation bill endorsed by Parliament when the national budget was passed last year.

“When we approved the budget, the amount was not there. It should have been approved by Parliament. They want to use it, as previous billions were lost. It is a violation of the law,” said Onyoti.

By Moi Julius

The Rise of Podemos

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“We are not the solution; we are a tool in order to create a new situation.” – Pablo Iglesias, political spokesperson for Podemos

The traditional bipartisan state of Spanish politics is now under threat. A party and a political movement originating from the 15-M indignant protests of 2011 is gaining ground on the political battlefield to a point where Podemos has found itself at the top of the polls according to a survey recently conducted by El Pais newspaper.

Nearly 28.2 percent of people asked said they would be voting for the new party, five percentage points ahead of the two main parties, the left-wing Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party (PSOE) and the right-wing party People’s Party (PP).

Since the death of the prolific Spanish dictator Francisco Franco, these two main parties have interchanged on a consistent basis.

But the parties have recently found themselves losing votes in droves and their image being eroded away by the current climate of economic austerity, with increasing cuts and high employment on one hand and political corruption of an unmeasurable scale on the other.

The people of Spain are becoming increasingly disillusioned with the traditional two-party system, and Podemos has come along at just the right time (“Podemos” being the Spanish for, “We can,” a tag-line lifted from US President Barack Obama´s campaign).

The party is headed up by political science professor Pablo Iglesias, who has links to Cuban and Equatorial political parties with which he shares some common ground. Iglesias has been clever not to position himself in either the right or left of the political spectrum, allowing the party to gain votes from disenchanted supporters from all sides.

Podemos´s rise to popularity over the years has been due to  corruption scandals that have damaged the main bipartisan parties, along with the fact that neither party has been able to control spiraling employment figures or aggressive banks that are becoming increasingly heavy-handed with mortgage defaulters.

Podemos seeks to manage the austerity by renegotiating Spain´s debt-paying commitments and stopping evictions on mortgage defaulters, as well as reducing retirement age to 60.

Along with successful online media campaigns, Podemos have used anti-elitism rhetoric to their advantage, repeatedly enforcing the idea of the self-interests of the two main parties and the “ caste” idealism that has led to the current state of affairs.

Podemos has decided to use a transparency system regarding its finances, publishing its expenses and salaries on a webpage.

Podemos´s rise to political power is being fuelled by younger voters, aged 25-34, who feel disenfranchised by the political system and the current unmitigated corruption scandals and mismanagement which is coming out in the press on a daily basis. Even once revered and stable political figures such as the Catalan politian Jordi Pujol have been exposed for siphoning off public funds to offshore fiscal paradises.

Podemos released an anti-corruption propaganda video using the words of JordiPuyol against him: “It isn´t just the apples, it is the entire tree that is rotten, they all will fall.”

Analysis by Anthony Bain

New wave of insecurity hits Western Equatoria State

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Since mid December 2013, South Sudan has been experiencing a political crisis that erupted within the ruling party’s top leadership. The crisis started in the national capital, Juba, in Central Equatoria state and engulfed other states like Unity, Upper Nile and Jonglei.

Western Equatoria state has been one of the states that has experienced relative peace compared with other states in the country, with the exception of smaller insecurity problems caused by Ugandan Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) rebels in some parts of the state like Ezo, Nzara and Tombura counties that border Central African Republic–CAR and Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) respectively.

However, last year parts of Mundri West, Mundri East, Mvolo and Maridi Counties have been invaded my cattle keepers from Lake State. The coming of these cattle keepers into the area is causing tension with the local who are mostly farmers. The pastoralist communities often graze on the farms of the host communities in almost all the counties mentioned above.

Apart from this problem, the host communities accused the invading communities from Lakes States of cattle rustling. Cattle are often raided from other communities, either in Jonglei or in Lakes states, and being driven to Western Equatoria State. This conflict has caused the death of a large but unrecorded number of people on both sides.

The cattle keepers have also started raiding the cattle of the locals. On Dec. 26, 2014 at midnight cattle raiding occurred in an area called Modubai Boma, about 20 km north of Maridi town. Three locals were killed and one injured. Many herds of cattle were driven to unknown areas towards Lakes State.

Apart from the insecurity of cattle raiding, the evading communities have been accused of taking part in ambushing and looting vehicles travelling within the states.

Last week, the police in Maridi County intercepted a plan by the suspected cattle raiders who staged an ambush along Mambe-Yei road. One suspect was killed.

This new development in the state has caused worry to the governor, Mr. Joseph Bangasi Bakasoro, and the whole population, who know nothing about warlike situations.

In an effort to defuse the worrying situation, the state government is organizing for a peace conference to take place soon in the most affected areas of Mundri East and West as well as Mvolo and Maridi Counties. The conference is targeting both the cattle keepers and the host communities.

By Stanley Puji Dagule

17-year-old woman with newborn found drowned in Lithuanian river

17-year-old woman with newborn found drowned in Lithuanian river
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A never-before incident has taken place in Lithuania, and  a 49-year-old woman named Irena from the city of Panevėžys, in the region of Raguva, had to face justice for her crime. The woman left her 17-year-old pregnant daughter without help when her life was in danger.

17-year-old woman with newborn found drowned in Lithuanian river (4)Earlier this year police inPanevėžys found the body of a young woman–known to the public only as Kristina–and a newborn baby 2 meters from the riverside in the valley of Nevėžis.

The officers later found that the young lady had given birth at home, and had even herself cut the umbilical cord. The scissors were laid on the ground in blood. After Kristina had given birth she took the newborn baby in her arms and went to the river. She jumped off the bridge with her baby in her arms.

17-year-old woman with newborn found drowned in Lithuanian river (5)Later in the court her mother pleaded, “I am not guilty of what happened with my daughter. I beg you to let me leave the court. I loved my daughter, but she herself chose her way.”

A few years ago Kristina’s father died tragically. Until then he and the mother had been habitual alcoholics. Kristina was the youngest child in the family. Her teacher said that she was a calm girl but since the 5th grade she was usually absent from school. It seemed that she would come to school only to eat, as the food was provided free.

There are two other children in the family, a sister and a brother. The sister is studying and the brother is working for living. The mother has already been in court in the past for not taking care of the children. Social workers and children’s right defenders were usual guests at their home. The mother never changed her lifestyle.

Neighbors and other locals reported seeing the youngest daughter with a young man who was from another village walking together and holding hands shortly before rumors of Kristina’s pregnancy began to circulate. Kristina, however, had always denied the rumors.

A social worker from the Kristina’s school offered to provide her with a pregnancy test, after which the test result was announced to be negative. But before long it became difficult for the skinny young woman to hide the pregnancy.

Oksana, a neighbor, said, “I took all the clothes from my baby. I thought Kristina’s newborn would need them as there is no one who could 17-year-old woman with newborn found drowned in Lithuanian river (5)help and take care of her. Kristina was always a calm girl. She never kept in contact with others. Her alcoholic mother never loved Kristina.”

When her mother found out about her daughter’s pregnancy, she called her bad names, beat her and left her homeless. When Kristina gave birth at home, her mother was drinking alcohol in another room. She did not want to know and hear anything about her daughter or the baby.

17-year-old woman with newborn found drowned in Lithuanian river (5)The young mother and child were buried in the same coffin. Kristina was wearing a wedding dress and the newborn was laid on her chest.

Several week after the funeral of Kristina and her newborn, we went to see her her mother, Irena. There was a bad smell and dirt all over her house. In the middle of the day, the woman laid in the dirty bed and slept. She woke up crying, “I loved my daughter so much. I never did or said anything wrong to her. I’ll take care of her grave.

17-year-old woman with newborn found drowned in Lithuanian river (3)The woman does not hide her addiction to alcohol. “It is my fault that when she was giving birth I was drunk laying in my be.” When her daughter cried and yelled because of labor pains her mother never heard it. When Kristina cut the umbilical cord she put 17-year-old woman with newborn found drowned in Lithuanian river (5)the newborn baby in a bed-sheet so the baby would not get cold. She was holding the baby when she left the house with no shoes in the cold weather. The footprints of blood were seen there.

A big heart of red flowers was put on the grave of these girls to represent the love of a family which they have never felt.

by Sniegė Pilypienė

Villagers in Cambodia kicked off land as military moves in

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A potential humanitarian crisis is unfolding in rural Cambodia, as over 550 families have been ejected from land that they claim to have purchased during the reign of Pol Pot. It is unknown if they have the physical documentation proving that they properly bought the land, and are thus at the mercy of the military, who have physically removed them from their village. So far, three of the village leaders have been arrested and the road leading to the area has been blockaded.

According to a source who has been in contact with displaced villagers from the area, about three weeks ago the military reclaimed the village of Phnom Tebang Bantay Sreyand and the land on which it sits.  The village is approximately 20 kilometers north of  Siem Reap and near the Angkor Wat temple complex. The villagers at this point are homeless and have little if any food and water, and are apparently reluctant to accept outside aid.

The source, who wished to remain anonymous and who we will refer to as Mr. White, went on to say that they possibly have a local that can assist in getting resources to the displaced villagers.  “We are trying to work through a monk who may be able to find a way to get the food and water to them, [however] we will need to fund the supplies ourselves.”

He also said that the villagers themselves were frustrated and angry over the handling of the matter, as  reported by Radio Free Asia (RFA).  “Apparently [the radio station] have said that they [the villagers] are occupying illegally. They believe the government is behind this.”

Most of the confusion seems to originate in the current inability to locate the paperwork stating that the land has been properly paid for. This, according to Mr. White, is “part of the problem. The villages claim they have paid for the land but it seems no one can find the deeds.”

Solina, one of the displaced villagers, told Mr. White that they are “all hungry and scared.  We have nowhere to go… We have no food or water.”

Mr. White expressed frustration that there has been little to no global response to the dire needs of the villagers, and attributes that to Cambodia’s being “on the back burner” of the world’s attention. “This is a humanitarian crisis and anywhere else in the world [this] would be front page news. Unfortunately no one really cares abut Cambodia.”

He is hopeful, however, that even though “human rights has been dragging their feet to get food on the ground,” eventually awareness of the villager’s situation will increase and more assistance will be on the way.

Mr. White offered that anyone who wants additional information about the situation, updates or to help could contact him at through this reporter.

By Brett Scott

(Email Brett Scott at [email protected])