South Sudan’s Two Warring Leaders Arrive for First Meeting Since Outbreak

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Both leaders of the South Sudan conflict have arrived in Ethiopia Friday to meet face-to-face for the first time since the breakout of fighting after a government row in Juba, the capital of South Sudan, December 16.

President Salva Kiir and the leader of the SPLM-SPLA in the Opposition, Dr. Riek Machar, and are scheduled to each meet separately with Ethiopian Prime Minister, Hailemariam Dessalegn, before they meet eachother in Addis Abada, Ethiopia.

After months of fighting and many abandoned opportunities to meet or otherwise resolve the conflict, the two leaders are finally meeting after a visit by UN Secretary Genral Ban Ki-moon and the beginnings of economic sanctions by the US.

Ki-moon arrived in South Sudan Monday and met with Kiir and talked to Machar by satellite phone, garnering promises to meet from both parties.

US Secretary of State, John Kerry also visited South Sudan and threatened economic sanctions if the two warring parties did not desist. The US began the first sanctions earlier this week, affecting one army general from each side of the conflict.

From the government side, a member of the presidential guard, Marial Chunuong, was singled out by the US for leading attacks against civilians in and around the capital, Juba, and from the rebel side leader Peter Gadet was targeted for leading an April 17 assault on the city of Bentiu in which 200 civilians were killed.

Also Friday, a delegation from the government and from rebel leader David Yau Yau’s Democratic Movement-Cobra Faction signed a final agreement in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, which will end the conflict in Greater Pibor County of Jonglei State. The signatories were Canon Clement Janda, the chairperson of Political and Foreign Relations Committee in the Council of States on behalf of the Government of South Sudan, and General Boutros Khalid, from the Cobra-Faction.

General Boutros Khalid signed on behalf of the Cobra-Faction.

Other progress was made this week, when the two sides signed a recommitment to allow much needed humanitarian provided food supplies to be delivered to people in conflict affected areas. South Sudan is currently facing a major food crisis due to the onset of the rainy season, by which time all crops that will be harvested for next year must be planted, and upon which South Sudan’s scant road system will become mud.

By Day Blakely Donaldson

Source:

Eye Radio

Russian Economist Calls Transdniestria “First Liberated Part of ‘New Russia,'” as Russia Increases Troops in Transdniestria

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Transdniestria is “the first liberated part of Novorossiya,” according to Russian Economist Sergei Lebedev. Levedev also said that he saw a new state forming between Russia and Moldova, which spreads across Ukraine.

The statements were published on the website Ruskline.ru Tuesday.

Lebedev said that although “the New Russian Transdniestr Moldovan Republic (PMR),” born in 1990, was the “first liberated territory” and has been maintaining the hope of re-uniting with “Great Russia” since its beginnings, “now the situation has changed radically due to the crisis in Ukraine as well as the complicated situation in Moldova and Romania.”

pridnestrov_e1_200_autoLebedev went on to reference Russian President Vladimir Putin, who spoke of Transdniestria in his April 17 public talk, stating that the people of the region “should be allowed to resolve their own fate” and that Russia would support them. Lebedev says that these words by Putin “instantly aroused a tantrum from the Kiev junta, which started to build fortified lines on the border of Ukraine and PMR.”

Putin also told students in April that Odessa–a crucial city to Ukraine as a transit port for liquid gas from Qutar and Turkey, without which Ukraine would depend totally on Russian gas–was once Russian.

Russia has recently been increasing its military force in Transdniestria.

The Ukrainian “blockade” of PMR, which desires reunification with Russia, only serves, according to Lebedev, as “an illustration of [Kiev’s] inadequacy.”

Lebedev went on to say of the situation regarding Transdniestria, “Simultaneously, once again, the Romanian authorities, headed by the ambitious and not entirely sane President Traian Basescu, launched a campaign for the annexation of the Republic of Moldova, which, under the unsettled relations between Moldova and Transdniestria, again exacerbated the conflict on the Dniester.”

Lebedev placed the current situation in the context of historical peoples and lands dating back to the Scythians, Sarmatians and Alans.

Lebedev is a professor of Economics in Russia, although his tract was mainly written framed within historical rhetoric.

By James Haleavy

Source:

Ruskline

Art of Camera Design: Masazumi Imai on X-T1

Fujifilm X-T1
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Masazumi Imai, the designer of Fujifilm’s X-series cameras, spoke recently about his philosophy and techniques working on the X-T1, which consider heavily the relationship between progression and tradition in design.

“If I want to play my favorite song, I want to choose my favorite guitar,” said Imai in a recent interview, in which he discussed the X-T1. “It’s the same with cameras. If I want to take a photograph of something important to me, I want to choose a special product.”

“Our X design is classic and authentic. I could have chosen an ergonomic style but our X design is completely different. It’s flat and straight and based on ‘good-old-days’ camera style.”1974st901s

“Late ’70s to ’80s SLRs were very cool to me. The ST901 was very small with a very characteristic finder, so this was very close to the X-T1 concept. Very simple, not so ergonomic — this was the basic inspiration.”

Imai also spoke about the functional aspect of the camera while designing. “Cameras are capturing machines,” said Imai, “but they also express peoples’ minds.”

The question of the return of the center-mounted viewfinder hump, which Imai said was a physical necessity as much as anything else, caused Imai to relate, “We really wanted to break through the barrier of the viewfinder. The EVF is always regarded as something inferior to the OVF, but we really wanted to change that perception.”Art of Camera Design: Masazumi Imai on X-T1

Of the X-series’ dial-heavy control scheme, which Fujifilm believes is a more efficient and enjoyable way to shoot than the abstracted, context-sensitive wheels used by most competitors, Imai said, “The X series is a new combination, the dials and digital. At first, film cameras with dials were common, then it changed to PASM with automatic cameras. Next came digital cameras with PASM that were also automatic. But now, we should be coming back to the standard.”

Imai traced the design shift back to 1985 and Minolta’s Alpha 7000 camera, the first use autofocus and automatic film advance, which designers compare to the shift in automobiles transmission toward automatic.

Imai designed the camera not for everyone. As is expressed on the Finepix X-100 website, “Beyond the praise of a million people, we wanted to design a camera that would be loved by 100,000.”

Imai said, “These are cameras designed to be used manually by people who know what each physical control is for; there are no automatic sports or portrait modes as found on almost all competing models. Nowadays we don’t need special technique, the camera does everything. We think we should go back to basics. The photographer can control the camera, the camera doesn’t control the photographer.”

Imai talked about the question of pleasing everyone. “Basically we asked a lot of professional photographers, and if we asked a hundred people, we’d probably get a hundred different answers. Maybe in the future we can provide some kind of a service where the customer can come to our support center and we can customize that sort of thing. Because there is no perfect answer.”Art of Camera Design: Masazumi Imai on X-T1

A few design mistakes in the X-T1 were commented on by the designer. The buttons on the back of the camera, flush with the body and bearing little tactile response, Imai said were so designed partly because of the camera’s weather-sealing, and partly because raised buttons can be susceptible to accidental presses. “But it is a little difficult to control — especially the focus point. For example, the movie button — many customers say that this is too easy to press. So that is the kind of thing that we should improve as soon as possible.”

The consideration of the experience of the camera as a familiar and understood tool, or “metaphor”–as it is described on the Finepix site–is something Imai has commented on before. When asked about the Sony RX1 in 2012, Imai said “I think many customers want a bigger sensor with first rate design. Sony’s answer is the RX1. Of course, I like that kind of camera but it is completely different to our series because the design is too modern.‘

On the Finepix X100 site, Imai’s design philosophy is described personally: “We wanted to communicate both the nostalgic ‘vintage’ feeling of the exterior and the authentic cutting-edge qualities inside the camera.”Art of Camera Design: Masazumi Imai on X-T1

“The aim of the product design team is to inspire people to identify with the product and encourage them to enjoy using it. In the case of the X100, I drew on my own personal experience and tried to imagine how people felt when they first encountered a camera – the sensation when they held it and felt the first stirring of the desire to frame and shoot a photo, and then I aimed to translate this comfortable intimacy inherent to a camera into a concrete design.”

It is a philosophy expressed by others on the X-100 team. “At a glance, anyone knows it’s a tool for taking photos,” according to Kazuhisa Horikiri Design Manager at the X-100 Design Centre. “Anyone who sees it, immediately associates it with capturing high-quality photos.’ The transformation of impressions such as these into a concrete form is where the design team started.”

The design team spent time considering every detail of the camera. One of the most concerning choices was that between real and synthetic leather. “Right up to the end of the design process, the team agonised over the choice between the experience when the material is displayed or touched versus the functionality of long-term use, but on final analysis, the priority on the concept of the camera as ‘a tool for taking photos’ determined the selection of the high practicality of synthetic leather.”

The design team set out to create a question with a question asked at the outset: “What kind of camera would we really want to own?’ The answer was a design that not only meshed with every one of our senses; from the manual operating systems of the viewfinder and other functions to the feel of the body materials, but one that also put a priority on fine details that accented its true nature as a camera and its comfort as a tool.”Art of Camera Design: Masazumi Imai on X-T1

“Our aim has been not to find a generic standard that would appeal to any person around the world, but to focus on people for whom the camera held a special place in their hearts and evoked strong feelings, and to appreciate the lifestyle and the word spread by the owners of such a camera. We have put importance on the interaction (communication) that occurs between the camera and people when they pick a camera up and hold it to their eye, when they operate the aperture ring and dials, when they hear the sound of the shutter, or when it is just adorning a shelf. At such a moment, I am certain that your own unique ‘X100 Story’ will begin.”

 

By Joseph Reight

 

Sources:

Finepix X-100

First East Ukraine Referendums to Be Held

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The People’s Council of the People’s Republic of Donetsk (DNR) has scheduled a referendum for May 11, according to Council Chairman Denis Pushkin, despite warnings from Kiev and a request by Russian President Vladimir Putin. The referendum will concern the status of the region–whether it wishes to remain Ukrainian or become Russian. The council moved forward with the referendum after a unanimous vote that the referendum would not be postponed.

“The referendum will be the eleventh of May,” began the ” Interfax ” announcement of the vote by the co-chair of the DNR government, Miroslav Rudenko.

The public council in Lugansk also made the decision to hold a referendum, reportedly, according to spokespeople for that organization.

In recent days, Putin asked pro-Russian separatist forces in Southeastern Ukraine to postpone referendums.

Pro-Russian separatists have been demanding referendums since March, purposing unification with Russia.

By James Haleavy

Source:

Vesti

NSA Reform Begins: US House Revises USA Freedom Act to End Bulk Data Collection and Telephone Metadata

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American mass surveillance programs, such as those carried out by the NSA, have begun to change, as Wednesday the US House Judiciary Committee unanimously approved a revision of the USA Freedom Act, Human Rights Watch reported Thursday.

The rewrite purposes to prohibit government bulk data collection of records, including phone and internet metadata. The data collection currently takes place under several US laws, such as Section 215 of the Patriot Act, which allows collection of all phone and other business records.

The rewrite includes many of the proposals suggested by President Barack Obama earlier this year. The revision aims to end the massive sweeping style of records collection, instead creating “specific selection terms” for collection.

The rewrite also places new reporting requirements on the government, provides a mechanism for emergency requests, and allows companies to report limited information about orders receives. The rewrite also creates an expert panel that will be able to intervene in FISA court in some instances.

The revised version of the Act is one step toward bulk data and telephone metadata collection reform, but Human Rights Watch says there is still work to be done. Cynthia Wong, senior internet researcher at the organization, said, “The USA Freedom Act revision would help end one of the most problematic programs Edward Snowden revealed last year. However, the bill does not address needed reforms to surveillance programs that affect millions of people outside US borders.”

Also, several provisions that had been included in the earlier draft of the revision were removed or weakened, according to Human Rights Watch. A special advocate to represent the public’s interest in FISA trials is no longer included. In the earlier draft version, there was also a provision for challenging government gag orders, but it was removed.

A further criticism of the revision is that other laws and regulations, such as Section 702 of the FISA Amendments Act and Executive Order 12333, also allow mass surveillance and bulk data collection, and these laws, which affect more people than the US Freedom Act and include actual content–not just metadata–are not affected by the current actions of the House.

Thursday, the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence is scheduled to review the US Freedom Act, and is expected to pass the revised Act without further modifications, after which the revision will move to Congress.

By James Haleaey

Source:

Human Rights Watch

Azerbaijan Takes Chair for Council of Europe

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Azerbaijan has assumed the Council of Europe chair amid a dire human rights situation within the country. The taking over of the chairmanship of the decision-making human rights institution takes place in light of Azerbaijan’s unseemly track record of human rights abuse, as highlighted in Amnesty International’s report Behind Bar’s: Silencing dissent in Azerbaijan, released recently.

The report finds an trend of increased repression in Azerbaijan since the October 2013 elections, and documents “how harassment, beatings, and unfair trials, detention and imprisonment are routinely used in Azerbaijan to control and curb the voices of opposition parties, independent media outlets, and any other individuals critical of the government.”

Just last week a court in the capital, Baku, sentenced eight NIDA activists to prison terms of between six and eight years. The charges–drug possession, explosives and intention to “cause public disorder”–
Outside the courthouse after the reading of the sentence, police broke up NIDA supporters and others gathered there, detaining at least 26 activists and journalists.

NIDA–which is the Azerbaijani word for “exclamation”–was founded in 2011 by a small group of young people purposing to enact democratic and social changes in the country. The group currently has 350 members, including several politicians.
At the time, Amnesty International’s Deputy Director of the Europe and Central Asia Programme, Denis Krivosheev, said, “This verdict is an affront to human rights and a timely reminder of Azerbaijan’s continued refusal to respect basic freedoms.”

The Council of Europe is comprised of 47 member states. It is a decision-making human rights institution, based on the principles of the European Convention on Human Rights.

Azerbaijan, the oil-rich country bordering Russia, Georgia, Armenia and Iran between the Black and Caspian seas, assumed the chairmanship of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe on Wednesday, May 14 2014.

By James Haleavy

Sources:

Amnesty International

New Russian Internet Law Against All Bloggers and Providers Passed, Thanks to Edward Snowden and the CIA?

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Further strictening of Russian internet law passed the legislature Monday, and is expected to further cool Russian internet expression, while Russian President Vladimir Putin explained the law in terms of “the way its done everywhere” to deal with the CIA-initiated internet, and thanked Edward Snowden for playing his part.

Under the law, commonly refereed to as the “bloggers law” because the owner of any website–referred to as a “blog” in the language of the bill–with a daily following of 3,000 or more, including social media followers such as those on Twitter and Facebook, will be forced to register a real identity and address with the government, and will be responsible for any content posted on the site, including its accuracy. Henceforward, no internet user with a basic amount of social media clout will be anonymous legally in Russia, and will be held to the same standards as mass media outlets, but without the protections granted regular media. The law is expected to have a cooling effect on expression on the internet in Russia.

Recently, two of Russia’s largest blogging services, Yandex and LiveJournal–announced that publicly visible counters would stop below the 3000 number.

The law also requires all online platforms–search engines and social networks–to maintain records of everything posted online for the previous six months. The records must be kept inside Russia. In is not clear in the law whether this provision covers Google, Twitter, Facebook, and other international social media.

The new internet regulations will take force August 1.

The legislature also ruled Monday that as of July 1, common swearing will no longer be allowed in movies, television, theater or music. The four words that were banned are those crudely denoting male and female genitalia, sex and prostitutes.

Russian President Vladimir Putin expressed his views of the internet a few weeks ago on a live national TV broadcast, saying, “You know that it all began initially, when the Internet first appeared, as a special C.I.A. project.” “Special services are still at the center of things,” Putin continued, and thanked American fugitive exile in Russia, whistleblower Edward Snowden, for showing the world the efficiency of NSA data collection.

Putin explained the new law, saying that anyone affecting thousands or more people with their opinions should be considered a media outlet, and said that this was “the way it is done all over the world.”

Comparing the new internet laws to the Chinese model, one prominent critic said, “It is part of the general campaign to shut down the Internet in Russia. They have not been able to control it until now, and they think they should implement the Chinese model. But they don’t understand how it works. The Chinese model also stimulates the development of local platforms, while the Russian laws are killing the local platform.”

China employs a policy of tightening censorship of the internet, and has banned all Western social media, including Google, Facebook, YouTube and twitter.

By Day Blakely Donaldson

Sources:

The Wire

Land and Sea Journal

US Orders Sanctions Against South Sudan, Following Up on Threat

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Following up on threats made Monday, the US has imposed the first sanctions against South Sudan, where the president has not come to the table to discuss peace with the rebels after over four months of fighting has disrupted the nation and displaced over a million South Sudanese.

On Monday, US Secretary of State John Kerry threatened sanctions against the country’s government if they continued to evade peace talks, and on Tuesday Kerry announced travel bans and asset freezes against two participants in the ongoing conflict. The sanstions come under an executive order signed by President Barack Obama last month.

The sanctions were imposed on one individual from each side of the conflict. From the government side, a member of the presidential guard, Marial Chunuong, was singled out by the US for leading attacks against civilians in and around the capital, Juba, and from the rebel side leader Peter Gadet was targeted for leading an April 17 assault on the city of Bentiu in which 200 civilians were killed.

An unidentified Obama administration official commented on the sanctions, saying, “The primary purpose is to isolate and apply pressure to change the decision-making calculus of the key actors involved.”

The leaders of the two main groups at conflict, President Salva Kiir and the rebel leader, former vice president, Riek Machar, agreed Tuesday to requests by UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon to hold the first face-to-face talks this Friday in Ethiopia.

By Day Blakely Donaldson

Source:

BBC

Protest of Azerbaijan Chairmanship of Council of Europe by Amnesty International and Activists

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In Azerbaijan Tuesday, European Amnesty International members and activists gathered from 2.00 to 3.00 o’clock outside the Council of Europe Chairmanship ceremony to protest human rights abuses in Azerbaijan–the country that will assume the chairmanship of the human rights decision-making institution May 14.

The demonstrators called on the Azerbaijani government to assume a leadership position as Chairman in protecting human rights national and internationally. Activists also called on the Committee of Ministers to pressure Azerbaijan release its detained prisoners of conscience immediately, including NIDA activists.

NIDA–which is the Azerbaijani word for “exclamation”–was founded in 2011 by a small group of young people purposing to enact democratic and social changes in the country. The group currently has 350 members, including several politicians. Eight NIDA activists were sentences recently to jail terms of six to eight years for spurious crimes.

By Cheryl  Bretton

Source:

Amnesty International

South Sudan Top Rivals President Kiir and Rebel Leader Riek Machar Both Answer Ki-moons Requests to Hold Face-to-Face Talks

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Ban Ki-moon, secretary general of the UN, announced Tuesday that rebel SPLM/A leader Dr. Riek Machar has agreed to face-to-face talks with South Sudanese President Salva Kiir. Ki-moon spoke with Machar via satellite telephone shortly after his arrival in South Sudan. Last Friday, Kiir also agreed to attend the face-to-face meeting.

“He [Machar] said that he has been invited by Prime Minister of Ethiopia Hailemariam Desalegn in his capacity as a chair of IGAD to come to Addis Ababa and he responded positively that he will be in Addis Ababa for meeting in time,” the secretary general stated, “but he said he will try his best because he is now in a very remote area.”

Ki-moon arrived in Juba, capital of South Sudan Tuesday, with plans to meet with President Salva Kiir in order to push for a ceasefire, as well as hold discussions with the leaders of South Sudanese civil society groups, especially women’s and religious groups. Ki-moon will also visit the UN Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) protection compounds on his visit, where thousands of South Sudanese are currently seeking shelter, and where Ki-moon will meet with community leaders as well as UN staff and peacekeepers.

Monday US U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry threatened sanctions against South Sudan’s government if they should continue to evade peace talks.

By Day Blakely Donaldson

Sources:

Eye Radio

 

Wikileaks Leaks Vatican Supported 1973 Pinochet Coup in Chile

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Italian newspaper La Repubblica has published a Wikileaks cable that shows that the Vatican communicated with US diplomats in October, 1973, and expressed support for the Pinochet coup in Chile.

In the communication, between Vatican second in command, Secretary of State Giovanni Benelli, and US diplomats, Benelli expressed, “grave concern, and to Pope Paul VI regarding the successful leftist international campaign to completely distort the realities of the situation in Chile”.

Benelli also expressed concern about an alleged terrorist leftist campaign purposing to demoralize the Board of Governors in charge of the country after the September 11 coup.

Of the aftermath of the coup, Benelli said, “we must admit that there has been bloodshed in cleansing operations in Chile, but the embassy in Santiago, Cardinal Silva and Chilean bishops in general have assured Pope Paul that the board is doing everything possible to bring the situation back to normal and that the international media stories that speak of a brutal crackdown are unfounded”.

Benelli also stated, “The Vatican is convinced, and the Nunciature has confirmed that during the last months of the Allende government, the Embassy of Cuba was serving as arsenal to distribute weapons made in Eastern Europe to the Chilean workers.”

La Repubblica is a newspaper related to Wikileaks in its function of spreading previously secret cables throughout the world.

By Day Blakely Donaldson

Source:

The Clinic

Ukraine Acting Defense Minister Explains Why Anti-Terrorist Operations Are Going So Slowly

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Mykhailo Koval, the acting defense minister of Ukraine, made statements Tuesday explaining that anti-terrorism operations taking place in Southeastern Ukraine–based on “liquidation” of diversionists and terrorists–are not performed with haste in order to prevent casualties among the civilian population.

The defense minister told a story explaining the situation Tuesday at the briefing after the closed session of parliament.

“One of the ambassadors of the Central European State asked me why the anti terrorism operation goes so slow,” said Koval. “I answered that we have two options. The first option involves the use of heavy artillery. We could raze this settlement to the ground, put a yellow-and-blue flag and report on the performance of tasks. The second option–which is what we do–is block, step by step, and liquidate the diversionists and terrorists, as well as avoid involvement in the fighting of the civilian population. I asked the diplomat ‘What option would you chose,’ and he said, ‘I select your Ukrainian variant.’ So you should understand that our participants of the counter-terrorism operation work according to this option.”

By Day Blakely Donaldson

Source:

Puterak Olexandr at the Ukrainian Ministry of Defense