Archive for December, 2009

Funeral held in Hong Kong for HK’s richest woman Nina Wang Kung Yu-sum

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009

Hundreds of business and political celebrities and company staff bid their farewell to Hong Kong’s richest woman Nina Wang Kung Yu-sum here Wednesday at her lavish funeral.

The elite who turned out at Wang’s funeral service included Rita Fan, President of Hong Kong’s Legislative Council, the richest Chinese tycoon Li Ka-shing and representative officials from the central government’s liaison office in Hong Kong.

Tung Chee-hwa, vice chairman of the National Committee of the Chinese Political Consultative Conference, China’s top political advisory body, Hong Kong chief executive Donald Tsang and director of the Liaison Office of the Central People’s Government in Hong Kong Gao Siren had already paid their respects to Wang on Tuesday.

Wang, chairwoman of Chinachem Group, died of illness on April 3.

Born in 1937 in Shanghai, Wang was one of the world’s richest people listed by the Forbes magazine and known among the Hong Kong public for her symbolic pigtails.

She was once under the media spotlight for also 10 years because of a lengthy sensational legal battle with her father-in-law Wang Din-shin over her missing husband Teddy Wang’s estate worth billions.

The Court of Final Appeal of Hong Kong ruled in 2005 that Nina Wang was the sole beneficiary of her husband’s estate.

Teddy Wang, who was kidnapped on April 10, 1990, and never seen again, was declared legally dead on Sept. 22, 1999.

Indonesian Muslims ask Taliban to release hostages

Tuesday, December 29th, 2009

Indonesia’s two biggest Muslim organizations — Nahdlatul Ulama (NU) and Muhammadiyah — have called for the immediate release of the South Korean hostages being held by the Taliban in Afghanistan.

Muhammadiyah chairman Din Syamsuddin said he would ask the Taliban to release all 21 hostages.

“Muhammadiyah will send a letter through the Foreign Ministry, the Muslim organizations in Afghanistan and also to the South Korean government,” Din was quoted Saturday by major national newspaper The Jakarta Post as saying.

Muhammadiyah is Indonesia’s second biggest Islamic organization.

He said he would ask other Muslim organizations to urge the release of the hostages. Muhammadiyah, he added, strongly condemned the act of kidnapping and the killing of two South Koreans of the group.

“It is contradictory to the teachings of Islam and the universal principles of humanity,” Din said.

In a separate event, NU chairman Hasyim Muzadi earlier this week met South Korean Ambassador to Indonesia Lee Sun-jin, Pakistani Ambassador Maj. Gen. Ali Baz, and Sherzamin Kunary from the Afghanistan Embassy.

Hasyim said the NU would seek the help of Taliban clerics who had attended an NU event previously in Indonesia to release the hostages. However, Hasyim said he would not make any contact with the Taliban.

“We have no access to the Taliban, because it is difficult to track them. They are a movement, not an institution,” Hasyim said.

He said the acts of the Taliban had no connection with religion or racial issues. “Their action was purely for their interest and political power,” he said.

Malaysia deeply regrets on assault of Indonesian referee

Saturday, December 26th, 2009

Malaysia expressed a deep regret over the attacks on an Indonesian referee policemen last week in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysian Ambassador to Indonesia Dato Zainal Abidin Muhammad Zain said here Thursday.

“We deeply regret about it. It can be interpreted as an apology,” the ambassador made the statement after meeting with Indonesian House Speaker Agung Laksono at the parliament building here.

Regarding to the anniversary of the 50th independent day of Malaysia, Agung Laksono said that the parliament hoped governmental leaders can meet Malaysia’s invitation to attend the ceremony on Friday.

However, Din Syamsuddin, chairman of Muhammadiyah, which is Indonesia’s second biggest Muslim Organization, canceled his plan to give a sermon at the Malaysian embassy office here on the Malaysia’s independent day.

Indonesian karate referee, Donald Luther Kolopita, was physically assaulted by four Malaysian police officers without cause in Kuala Lumpur last Friday when he joined a karate competition.

The incident sparked a wave of protests from various quarters in major Indonesian cities.

Unknown armed men abduct 4 employees of foreign company in Afghanistan

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009

Unknown personnel have abducted four Afghan employees of a Turkish road construction company in eastern Afghan province of Paktia, a provincial administration spokesman said Wednesday.

The incident occurred in Zurmat district of Paktia on Tuesday evening and some unknown armed men entered houses of the four and took them away to unknown places, Din Mohammad Darwish, spokesman for Paktia governor told Xinhua.

No one or group claimed responsibility for the incident yet but the spokesman accused the Taliban for the kidnapping.

Afghanistan has witnessed several kidnappings targeting foreign nationals or local employees of international institutions over the past months.

The Taliban, after being toppled by the U.S. invasion in late 2001, has waged a war against the Afghan administration and international troops.

Taliban insurgency-related violence and

Israeli killed in Gaza rocket attack

Sunday, December 20th, 2009

A Palestinian rocket struck a college campus in southern Israel on Wednesday, killing one person and lightly wounding a second, local daily Yedioth Ahronoth quoted medics as reporting.

Twenty-two Qassam rockets were fired towards the southern town of Sderot and communities in vicinity of the Gaza Strip on Wednesday afternoon, the report said, adding that 11 of them were launched within several minutes and landed in and outside Sderot.

One of the rockets hit factories in the Shaar Hanegev industrial zone, causing damage.

Israel’s Magen David Adom rescue services reported that four people suffered from shock. The Color Red alert system was activated in the city three times at around 2:50 p.m.(1250 GMT).

Hamas’ military wing, the Izz al-Din al-Qassam Brigades, claimed responsibility for firing the rockets.

Protesters drive gas tankers into residential area in Bangkok

Friday, December 18th, 2009

Residents of Din Daeng area in Bangkok began to evacuate when protesters drove two tanker trucks fueled by NGV (Natural Gas for Vehicles) gas into the compound.

Reporters saw two NGV cylinders on the trucks and the red-shirted protesters shouted that the flat residents there should leave immediately, prompting speculation that the protesters would explode the gas tanks.

Many residents smelt the odor of the gas and began to flee away, TV footage showed.

Din Daeng is a key entrance to Bangkok as well as a major residential area, where the clash between anti-government protesters and the army took place hours ago.

Red-shirted leaders ready to surrender

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

Leaders of an anti-government movement announced on rally stage at Government House Tuesday that they all are ready to surrender to face charges.

The announcement came as soldiers were moving towards the rally site on Tuesday. The leaders included Jakrapob Penkair, Veera Musikapong, Nuttawut Saikua.

Around 11:00 a.m. Tuesday, Veera Musigapong, a red-shirted leader told the protesters at the Government House to disperse, Channel 11 reported. The crowd said that the voluntarily dispersing was not a defeat of the red-shirted movement but was aimed at protecting the life of the protesters, he said.

“The story is not yet over as we can return later,” Veera said. He vowed to use international stage to continue the rally movement.

Weng Tojitrakan, another red-shirted leader, asked soldiers to move back by 20 meters so that the protesters could pick up their belongings and disperse.

Thai anti-gov’t group demands lifting state of emergency, vow to continue rally

Monday, December 14th, 2009

Representatives of the Thai anti-government group, United Front of Democracy Against Dictatorship (UDD), demanded Monday the government to lift the state of emergency imposed earlier, while they had vowed to continue their anti-government rally.

Several anti-government protestors participated in the press conference held at a hotel in central Bangkok.

Sudanese gov’t, AL, AU and OIC meet in Khartoum

Saturday, December 12th, 2009

The Sudanese government, the Arab League (AL), the African Union (AU) and the Organization of Islamic Conference (OIC) started a consultative meeting in Khartoum on Sunday evening to discuss ways to end the conflict in Darfur and to improve the humanitarian situation in the restive region.

The Sudanese delegation included Presidential Advisers Mustafa Osman Ismail and Ghazi Salah al-Din, and Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Ali Karti while the three regional organizations were represented respectively by AL Secretary General Amr Moussa, AU Chairperson Jean Ping and OIC Secretary General Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu.

Abdallah al-Azrag, the director of the Arab Department in the Sudanese Foreign Ministry, told reporters that the consultative meeting was held at an invitation of the Sudanese government, adding that the participants in the meeting would discuss the coordination of positions on the humanitarian situation in Darfur and the political efforts to solve the problem of Darfur,

He said that the meeting would deal with the latest developments in the peace talks between the Sudanese government and the rebel Justice and Equality Movement, which were hosted by Qatar, and a recent arrest warrant issued by the International Criminal Court (ICC) against Sudanese President Omer al-Bashir and the arrangements to suspend the decision.

“It is natural for the three organizations to hold a consultative meeting,” the Sudanese official said, denying any previous arrangement to form a joint delegation by the three organizations in order to take coordinated moves in the United Nations to defer the ICC arrest warrant against the Sudanese president.

The representatives of the three regional organizations will visit the North Darfur State on Monday to inspect the humanitarian situation on the ground and hold talks with local authorities there before returning to Khartoum to have a meeting with Sudanese Vice President Ali Osman Taha.

Global flu, economic downturn hinder Canadian’s charity project

Friday, December 11th, 2009

Rheal Desy, a 68-year-old Canadian, had planned to admit two more people this month to his “Home of Harmony and Joy” for handicapped people in the suburbs of the northeast Chinese city Jilin. But now, he realized it would not come true.

“I never thought things would turn out like this,” Desy sighed.

The home, a charity project initiated in 2004 to accommodate and train poor and handicapped people, is have a serious financial problem amid the global A/H1N1 influenza prevalence and economic downturn.

Benefactors had cut their donations since last December, “those who used to donate 1,000 yuan (147 U.S. dollars) monthly only gives 300 now,” he said.

Desy, along with his Chinese partner Zhang Lianghua, 32, started the home after receiving a piece of land in Fengman District, Jilin City, Jilin Province, from a local rich man.

The home, nestling against a beautiful hill, will house about 140 handicapped people upon completion, but it now only has nine such people.

Construction went smoothly until the end of 2008 when the global financial was worsening, Zhang told Xinhua.

“We still need one million yuan to finish the work,” said Desy, pointing to the empty square in front of the yellow building with a blue roof. Many rooms in the building are not fitted out, and the 3,000-square-meter yard even did not have something that can be called a door.

Desy and Zhang have spent 10 million yuan on the home so far. The money comes from the donations of friends, mostly ordinary people, and a few rich men in Canada and Hong Kong.

Desy has a doctorate in psychology and had worked in the Philippines, Indonesia and Hong Kong before he came to the Chinese mainland in 1994.

The A/H1N1 flu, which broke out in Mexico last month and has spread to 46 other countries and region with 12,954 confirmed cases as of Wednesday, put the home in an even more difficult position.

The 40 pigs that took the home almost eight months to raise were ready for sale, but they no longer mean profit as the flu, more commonly known as “swine flu”, had triggered a public scare over pork consumption leading to a pork price plunge.

The pigs’ price fell from 12 yuan to about 8 yuan per kilogram and the estimated profit of 20,000 yuan was not realized. Desy and Zhang believed the other 50 pigs yet to reach market weight would not bring in a fortune either.

“I wanted the home to be financially independent within two or three years, but it looked as though this would not be possible in even four to five years,” Desy said.

His dream of opening branches elsewhere also seemed farther off now than before.

He borrowed one million Canadian dollars (about 887,490 U.S. dollars) from his friend for the home. Now, he has only paid off half of that.

Nine people who are mentally or physically challenged and have no relatives to count on now stay at the home for free.

Desy wants the home to operate with the idea that “every person, no matter how handicapped they are, can do a lot of things by themselves.” So, each handicapped person is “accompanied” by a home employee who is paid 700 yuan per month.

Desy preferred the word “accompany” because the employees teach the handicapped people how to do housework or they just work together, instead of “doing something for them” which is the common practice at Chinese senior citizens’ homes.

“It’s more like a family,” Desy said.

Cai Shuzhen, 65, mentally handicapped, is the first member of this special family. She massaged the shoulders of an employee named He Yong after they clean the dinning table together, in her own way to express gratitude.

“When Cai came here early last year, she did not talk and was afraid of people. She did not know how to do housework,” said He.

She is now friendly to visitors to the home. “She is the first one of us to pull a chair over to a guest,” He added.

In order to keep the home running, Desy and Zhang are working on two mills to make bean curd and grind peanuts. These will add to the home’s property that includes three cattle and a vegetable garden.

A mineral water bottling factory had been also on agenda, but was rejected by Desy who believed the factory would cause pollution.